LZ 104 (L 59)

LZ 104
Role Transport airship, later refittted for bombing
National origin Germany
Manufacturer Luftschiffbau Zeppelin at Staaken
First flight 30 October 1917
Primary user Imperial German Navy



Zeppelin LZ 104 (construction number, designated L 59 by the German Imperial Navy) and nicknamed Das Afrika-Schiff ("The Africa Ship"), was a World War I German dirigible, famous for attempting a long-distance resupply mission to the beleaguered garrison of Germany's East Africa colony.[1]

History

Africa flight

Jamboli airship hangar in Bulgaria
Route of the Africa flight

The L 59 was a naval airship ordered to prepare for the resupply of Generalmajor Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck’s troops.[2][3]

On 4 November 1917, after a 29 hour flight from Friedrichshafen under the command of Hugo Eckener, the airship arrived at Yambol (Jamboli) in Bulgaria, the last available airbase before flying over two thousand miles across the Mediterranean and Entente-held Africa.[4] At Jamboli Kapitänleutnant [Lieutenant Commander] Ludwig Bockholt, a regular German naval officer, met the zeppelin. He would be commander for the mission,[2] code named China-Sache, loosely translated as "China Show"[4] or "China Matter."[5]

Because it would be impossible to resupply the airship with hydrogen gas upon its arrival in Africa, it was decided that no return trip would be made. Instead, it was planned that every part of the ship be cannibalized for use by Lettow-Vorbeck's bush army. The outer envelope would be used for tents, muslin linings would become bandages, the duralumin framework would be used for wireless towers, and so on. In addition to its own structure, L 59 carried 15 tons of supplies.[6] The cargo included machine guns plus spares and ammunition, food, medical supplies, a medical team and Iron Cross medals.

L 59's two initial attempts at starting the journey were foiled by weather in the Mediterranean, but on 21 November 1917 her third departure was successful. The ship made good time over Adrianople, the Sea of Marmara and the coast of Asia Minor.[2] However, due to electrical storms over Crete, her wireless aerial was wound in and so the ship failed to receive messages from the German admiralty. She crossed over the African coast at 05:15 on 22 November near Mersa Matruh and, flying via the Dakhla Oasis set a dog-leg course up the Nile.[7] That afternoon, an engine malfunctioned when a reduction gear housing cracked; the loss of this powerplant eliminated the prospect of radio transmission, although wireless messages could be received.[7] The next morning she nearly crashed when heat turbulence from the dunes below and subsequent cooling reduced the buoyancy of her gas. The crew also suffered from headaches, hallucinations and general fatigue in the mid-day heat and freezing cold at night.[2]

Despite these difficulties, L 59 continued on over Sudan, only to be turned back on 23 November, with the ship 125 miles (201 km) due west of Khartoum when she received an "abort" message.[2] L 59's volunteer crew implored the commander to continue, but he ordered the ship turned back and returned to Bulgaria after averting another potential disaster due to loss of buoyancy over Asia Minor. She returned to base the morning of 25 November 1917, having traveled over 4,200 miles (6,800 km) in 95 hours, or nearly four days in the air. When she nosed into her shed at Jamboli, the Zeppelin had enough fuel remaining for another 64 hours flight.[8] Many years passed before her record-setting flight was surpassed.[9]

It was later claimed by Richard Meinertzhagen, the chief of British intelligence in the area based at Cairo, that the recall message reporting that Lettow-Vorbeck had surrendered was faked.[10] The British, having broken the German naval wireless code, were aware of the flight and mission. East Africa’s Royal Flying Corps (RFC) squadrons were alerted to watch for the approach of the ship. However, what turned the airship back was a signal relayed from Lettow-Vorbeck.[11] The weak signal was amplified and forwarded by stations in friendly or neutral territories, and after some hours it reached the German naval command. The signal informed headquarters not that Lettow had surrendered, but that the Schutztruppe had been unable to hold the flatlands around Mahenge, the planned destination of the airship, and had been forced by British artillery to retreat into jagged mountains where the airship would have no chance of touching down without risking explosion. With no hope of a place to safely land and with every likelihood of her being destroyed or falling into enemy hands, the German command had no choice but to order a return. The recall signal was sent from the Admiralty station at Nauen.[11] Despite its failure, "the adventure of L 59 was heroic both in scale and spirit."[12] Later a transcript of the radio message was reported to have been found in Germany's World War archives,[13] as well as a Turko-German wireless intercept (marked 'Secret') preserved in the files of the British Public Records office.[14]

Final fate

Since the airship was not expected to return from her Africa mission, no plans for any further missions had been made.[8] Another African flight was out of the question, so the ship was then offered for flights to supply the Ottoman army of Enver Pasha in Arabia, or to search for mines off Constantinople, but nothing came of these proposals. After several reconnaissance flights and bombing missions, L 59 took off from Jamboli to attack the British naval base at Malta, proceeding across the Balkans to the Strait of Otranto. On the evening of 7 April 1918 the surfaced German submarine UB-53 observed the airship approaching in its wake. Her commanding officer, Oberleutnant zur See Robert Sprenger, reported that he watched her fly past at about 210 m (700 ft), so "close in fact that the details of the gondola could be seen clearly." A few minutes later, Sprenger noted two bursts in the air, and shortly afterwards "a gigantic flame enveloped the airship and it nosed down into the water."[15] The airship’s destruction was not claimed by either the British or the Italians; her loss was officially attributed to an accident. None of the 21 crew survived the crash.

In popular culture

The airship and its long-distance resupply mission was featured in The Ghosts of Africa, a 1980 historical novel by British-born Canadian novelist William Stevenson set during the East African Campaign. The protagonist of O Olho de Hertzog, a 2010 novel by João Paulo Borges Coelho, set in post-WWI Mozambique, arrives in Africa by jumping from the airship in a parachute. The Wilbur Smith novel Assegai has plot elements inspired by the airship's journey.

Specifications

Data from Robinson 1971, p. 380

General characteristics

Performance


Notes

  1. Willmott, First World War, p. 192.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Die Fliegertruppe of the Imperial German Army. Military History Journal, Vol 12 No 2. South African Military History Society. (Accessed 2008-08-11.)
  3. L 57 (LZ 102), her sister ship and the primary airship for the mission, was destroyed during a trial flight. L 59 subsequently received the same 30 m (100 ft) expansion in length (for a total of 228) and in gas capacity (to 68,500 cubic meters) as the L 57 had
  4. 1 2 Miller, Battle for the Bundu, p. 288.
  5. Whitehouse, The Zeppelin Fighters, p. 254,
  6. Robinson 1973 p. 253.: Sources differ on what tonnage the ship carried. Authors Frank A. Contey, Brian Garfield and Charles Miller state 50 tons: clearly wrong since this is double the ship's possible load
  7. 1 2 Whitehouse, The Zeppelin Fighters, p. 255.
  8. 1 2 Whitehouse, p. 256
  9. Miller, p. 289
  10. Meinertzhagen claims in his diary to have sent the signal to abort, he also claims to have sighted L 59 southbound and northbound, although the airship's course did not take her within sight of the British-held coast and cloud cover even prevented RFC patrols from finding her [Garfield, p. 127.]
  11. 1 2 Garfield, The Meinertzhagen Mystery, p. 126.
  12. Garfield, p. 127.
  13. Contrary Winds - Zeppelins Over the Middle East - Saudi Aramco World, July/August 1994, pp. 8-17.
  14. Garfield, p. 281.
  15. Whitehouse, p. 257.

References

External links

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