German battleship Schleswig-Holstein

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Schleswig-Holstein in 1930
Career Kriegsmarine Jack
Ordered: 11 June 1904
Laid down: 18 August 1905
Launched: 7 December 1906
Commissioned: 6 July 1908
Fate: Scuttled
General Characteristics
Displacement: 13,200t standard; 14,218t full load
Dimensions: 127.6 m x 22.2 m x 7.7 m
Armament in 1939: Four 280 mm (2×2)
Two 88 mm
Four 37 mm (2×2)
Twenty-two 20 mm cannon
Aircraft: None
Propulsion: 19,330 hp = 19.1 kts
Crew: 743

The Schleswig-Holstein was a German battleship that fought in both World Wars. It is credited with firing the first shots of World War II by firing at the Polish base at Westerplatte on 1 September 1939.

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[edit] History

SMS Schleswig-Holstein was one of five pre-dreadnought, Deutschland-class battleships, not to be confused with a later class of pocket battleships of the same name. She was named for Schleswig-Holstein, Germany's most northern region. The ship was built at Germania Werft Shipyard in Kiel and commissioned into the Kaiserliche Marine on 6 July 1908.

Schleswig-Holstein fought in World War I at the Battle of Jutland, where she was hit once by gun fire from the 2nd British battle squadron. After the war, she was one of six obsolete battleships Germany was permitted to keep. During her refit ending in 1926, her first two smoke stacks were combined, reducing the total number from three to two. From 1926 to 1935 she was the flagship of the German navy. In 1936 Schleswig-Holstein was converted into a training ship.

[edit] World War II

Though obsolete by the outbreak of World War II she took part in some operations. At the end of August 1939, Schleswig-Holstein sailed to Danzig, under the pretext of a courtesy visit, and anchored in the channel near Westerplatte. On 1 September 1939, at 4.45 a.m. she began to shell the Polish garrison there - and as such can probably claim to have fired the first shots of WWII. The battle of Westerplatte lasted seven days. After the capitulation of Westerplatte, the Schleswig-Holstein battered Gdynia, Kepa Oksywska, and the Hel Peninsula. During the bombardment of the latter she was hit by a 152 mm shell from the Polish battery.

Schleswig-Holstein shelling the Westerplatte
Schleswig-Holstein shelling the Westerplatte
Officers inspecting damage to Schleswig-Holstein after the artillery duel with the Polish batteries on Hel Peninsula
Officers inspecting damage to Schleswig-Holstein after the artillery duel with the Polish batteries on Hel Peninsula
Schleswig-Holstein shelling Polish positions during the battle of Gdynia
Schleswig-Holstein shelling Polish positions during the battle of Gdynia

In April 1940, Schleswig-Holstein took part in the occupation of Denmark, and then served again as a training ship from 1941 to 1944. In September 1944 she returned to service as an anti-aircraft ship. On 19 December 1944, in Gdynia, she was struck by three bombs dropped by British planes, caught fire and sank in 39 feet of water. The ship was further damaged by her crew with scuttling charges in March, 1945. After World War II, she was raised by the Soviet Union and towed to Tallinn where she may have been renamed Borodino. She was scuttled near Osmussaar island in the Baltic Sea in 1948 and used as a target ship until the 1960s. The remains of the ship still exist.

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