Tondern raid
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Infobox military conflict".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The Tondern raid or Operation F.7, was a British bombing raid by the Royal Navy and Royal Air Force against the Imperial German Navy airship base at Tønder, Denmark, then a part of Germany. The airships were used for the strategic bombing of Britain. On 19 July 1918, seven Sopwith Camels took off from Script error: No such module "WPSHIPS utilities"., a converted battlecruiser, in the first attack in history by aircraft from an aircraft carrier. For the loss of one man and several aircraft, the British destroyed Zeppelins L 54, L 60 and a captive balloon.
Background
Britain, Japan, and Russia had conducted ship-based air raids since 1914 but these were by seaplanes lowered into the water by cranes.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Furious was designed for aircraft to take off from its forward flight deck.Template:Sfn
HMS Furious
In March 1918 the battlecruiser Script error: No such module "WPSHIPS utilities". joined the Grand Fleet at Scapa Flow, flying the flag of the Rear Admiral Commanding Aircraft (RAA), Richard Phillimore. Furious had been converted for use as an aircraft carrier during her construction, with a flight deck forward of her main superstructure. During 1917 the carrier had been equipped with Sopwith Camel 2F.1a, naval variant of the Sopwith Camel. These partially replaced the Sopwith 1½ Strutter.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In late 1917 a second flight deck was fitted aft, landing on which proved "almost as hazardous as ditching in the sea".Template:Sfn Until such need arose she was dispatched on reconnaissance missions off the Heligoland Bight, searching for minefields and looking for evidence of counter-mining by the Germans.Template:Sfn
Plan
An attack on the bases of the Naval Airship Division of the Imperial German Navy (Script error: No such module "Lang".) was suggested to Rear Admiral Phillimore by his Royal Air Force staff officer Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Clark-Hall and one of his pilots, Squadron Commander Richard Bell-Davies, VC. Clark-Hall received Phillimore's approval and that of the Commander-in-Chief of the Grand Fleet, Admiral David Beatty.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn It was originally planned to use Sopwith 1½ Strutters in an attack but these were too valuable for reconnaissance and Sopwith Camels were substituted, whose range meant an attack on the airship base at Tønder.Template:Sfn
Prelude
Operation F.6 was a plan for two waves of four aircraft, each pilot receiving special training.Template:Sfn Major Moore, was posted away before the scheduled date of 29 June 1918, by which time it was too late to train a replacement. Training consisted of bombing runs on the airfield at Turnhouse, where the outlines of Tondern's three airship sheds were marked. The pilots were Captains W. D. Jackson, William Dickson, Bernard Smart and T. K. Thyne and Lieutenants N. E. Williams, S. Dawson and W. A. Yeulett. On 27 June Furious sailed from Rosyth, escorted by the 1st Light Cruiser Squadron and eight destroyers from the 13th Destroyer Flotilla. On 29 June the ships reached the flying off point but with Force 6 [[[:Template:Cvt]]] winds blowing, flying was deemed impossible and the operation was called off.Template:Sfn
Operation F.7
Another attempt, Operation F.7 began when Furious sailed at 12:03 on 17 July. This time she was escorted by Force B, including a division of the 1st Battle Squadron (all the new Revenge-class battleships), the 7th Light Cruiser Squadron and a destroyer screen. Script error: No such module "WPSHIPS utilities".Template:'s "Y" turret guns had been loaded with a special shrapnel shell for use against airships. During the passage the destroyer Script error: No such module "WPSHIPS utilities". investigated a reported submarine contact but nothing came of it.Template:Sfn
At 03:04 in the morning of 18 July Furious was ready to fly off her Camels when a thunderstorm struck. Rather than cancel the operation, it was decided to delay it twenty-four hours and Furious and her destroyer screen fell back on Force B.Template:Sfn The combined squadron cruised out of sight off the Danish coast until the morning of 19 July and in worsening weather conditions Furious flew off her Camels between 03:13 and 03:21. The first flight consisted of Jackson, Dickson and Williams; the second of Smart, Dawson, Yeulett and Thyne. Thyne was forced to turn around with engine trouble before reaching the target and ditched his aircraft before being recovered.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn
The first three aircraft arrived over Tondern at 4:35, taking the base by surprise. There were three airship sheds, which the Germans had code-named Script error: No such module "Lang"., Script error: No such module "Lang". and Script error: No such module "Lang".. Script error: No such module "Lang"., the largest, was a double shed and housed the airships L.54 and L.60. Script error: No such module "Lang". contained a captive balloon and Toni was being dismantled. The first wave attacked Script error: No such module "Lang". and hit the shed with three bombs, detonating the gas bags of L.54 and L.60, destroying them by fire but not causing them to explode and destroy the shed. Another bomb from the first wave hit Script error: No such module "Lang". and damaged the balloon inside. The second wave destroyed the captive balloon afire and had several near misses on a wagon loaded with hydrogen cylinders. Despite the loss of the two airships only four men were injured.Template:Sfn
Ground fire was directed at both waves but the only damage was an undercarriage wheel shot off a Camel from the second wave. Williams, Jackson and Dawson, doubtful that they had sufficient fuel to reach the British squadron offshore, landed in Denmark. Dickson, Yeulett and Smart flew to sea to find the British ships. Dickson ditched at 5:55 and Smart, having suffered engine trouble, ditched at 06:30. Yeulett was not heard from again and presumed drowned; it was supposed that he had been forced to ditch prematurely through fuel exhaustion. The British squadron waited for the other pilots until the Camels would have run out of fuel and after 7:00 the ships took cruising formation and made for home.Template:Sfn
Aftermath
The German Naval Airship Division quickly had Script error: No such module "Lang". repaired but Tondern was abandoned, only to be used as an emergency landing site. Defences at the other bases were improved and a swathe of the countryside near Nordholz Naval Airbase was burned to prevent it being set alight by bombs.
Subsequent operations
From 1917 a raid on the German High Seas Fleet by using the new torpedo-carrying Sopwith Cuckoo was ready. The Cuckoo was not available in sufficient numbers until early 1919 and the plan was not carried out. The concept was revived during the Second World War and in 1940 in the Battle of Taranto the battleships of the Italian Script error: No such module "Lang". were attacked, three being sunk at their moorings.
Casualties and awards
Dickson and Yeulett were awarded the Distinguished Service Order and Smart received a bar to his DSO. Yeulett's body was later recovered from the sea and buried in the cemetery of Nørre Havrvig church in Denmark.Template:Sfn
See also
Notes
Footnotes
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References
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Further reading
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External links
- "The Raid on Tondern: July 19th, 1918" Template:Webarchive
- "King George Visits the Mystery Ship; Goes Aboard Airplane Carrier Which Figured in Raid on Zeppelin Hangars." New York Times 1918-07-25
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- Pages with script errors
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- Military operations of World War I involving the United Kingdom
- Military operations of World War I involving Germany
- Royal Navy in World War I
- History of the Royal Air Force during World War I
- Aerial operations and battles of World War I
- 1918 in Germany
- July 1918
- Zeppelins