Castles of Steel

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Castles of Steel Page 124

by Robert K. Massie


  679 “A British squadron was worsted”: Bacon, Scandal, 97.

  679 “A want of tactical competence”: Ibid., xv.

  679 “Beatty now made a decision”: Harper, Truth, 50–51.

  679 “Then, full of ardor”: Bacon, Scandal, 90.

  679 “It is unpalatable”: Harper, Truth, 69–70.

  679 “Lord Beatty’s political power”: Jellicoe Papers, II, 462.

  680 “the absence of even approximately”: Marder, III, 90, 93.

  680 “the consequences to Britain”: Churchill, III, 110.

  681 “the standpoint”: Ibid., 112.

  681 “The dominant school”: Ibid., 111.

  681 “The attempt to centralise”: Ibid., 169.

  681 “the Royal Navy must find”: Ibid., 169–70.

  681 “Mr. Churchill as he sits”: Bacon, Scandal, 194.

  682 “He beckoned me over”: Gordon, 519.

  682 “stayed on deck”: Ibid., 521.

  683 “High Seas Fleet may be sighted”: Marder, III, 292.

  683 “Scouting by airships”: Ibid., 298.

  CHAPTER 35: AMERICA ENTERS THE WAR

  686 “Where does incompetence”: Jarausch, 294.

  686 “As you wish”: Görlitz, 199.

  686 “I am ready”: Hindenburg, 81.

  687 “When the Quartermaster General”: Kürenburg, 325.

  687 “Every day is important”: Jarausch, 344.

  688 “America had better”: Gerard, Four Years, 252.

  688 “nothing more than a sieve”: Ludendorff, General Staff, 278.

  689 “the decision for an unrestricted”: Ibid., 281.

  689 “directly affects our relations”: Ibid.

  689 “He kept us out of war”: Ritter, III, 301.

  691 “Charles E. Hughes”: Heckscher, 415.

  691 “the election of Mr. Hughes”: Baker, VI, 296.

  691 “It was a little moth-eaten”: Heckscher, 415.

  692 “if Germany won”: Charles Seymour, House Papers, I, 293.

  692 “He holds no office”: Ibid., II, 113.

  693 “Mr. House is my second personality”: Ibid., I, 115.

  693 “You are the only person”: Ibid., 116.

  693 “personal friend of the President”: Ibid., 247.

  693 “Instead of sending”: Ibid., II, 113.

  693 “My Dear Theodore”: Spring-Rice, II, 252.

  693 “My Dear Cabot”: Ibid., 291.

  693 “Uncle Henry”: Ibid., 180.

  693 “a little book by a Jew-boy”: Ibid., 170.

  693 “Jew bankers”: Ibid., 248.

  693 “Jews capturing”: Ibid., 245.

  693 “feeling a sympathy”: Charles Seymour, House Papers, II, 99.

  693 “At one time”: Ibid., 76.

  693 “I would be glad”: Ibid.

  693 “Sir Cecil’s nervous temperment”: Ibid., 57.

  693 “There is a strong sense”: Spring-Rice, II, 343.

  694 “Our blockade measures”: Ibid., 354.

  694 “The President rarely”: Ibid., 366.

  694 “I have been in Russia”: Ibid., 372.

  694 “Here [in Washington]”: Ibid., 368.

  694 “The president’s great talents”: Ibid., 374.

  694 “There would come days”: Wilson, 116.

  694 “There was one mistake”: Grey, II, 160.

  695 “If Wilson wins”: Bernstorff, 244.

  695 “The whole situation”: Ibid., 246.

  695 “Demand for unrestricted”: Ibid., 254–55.

  695 “Desirable to know”: Ibid., 260.

  695 “We are thoroughly”: Ibid., 266.

  695 “Urge no change”: Ibid., 260.

  696 “The German people wish”: Tuchman, Zimmermann Telegram, 126.

  696 “a man broken”: Ibid., 121.

  696 “Boiled Crow”: Curtain, 152.

  696 “We are all gaunt”: Blücher, 158.

  697 “To propose to make peace”: Cecil, II, 242.

  697 “Intensified submarine war”: Jarausch, 297.

  697 “was threatened by a peace move”: Tuchman, Zimmermann Telegram, 127.

  697 “In a deep moral”: Gerard, Four Years, 353–54.

  698 “Soldiers!”: Ibid., 354.

  698 “it was not unknown”: Chamberlain, 111.

  698 “visibly flabbier”: Lloyd George, II, 411.

  698 “to enter into a conference”: Cowles, 375.

  698 “Since I do not believe”: Jarausch, 297.

  699 “diplomatic and military preparations”: Ludendorff, General Staff, 294.

  699 “It may be”: Charles Seymour, House Papers, II, 404.

  699 “we do not want”: Bernstorff, 275.

  699 “I go to no conference”: Balfour, 371.

  699 “butt in”: Lloyd George, II, 280.

  699 “There had been”: Ibid.

  700 “There will be no war”: Charles Seymour, House Papers, II, 412.

  700 “Ich pfeife”: Herwig, Politics of Frustration, 121.

  700 “If it were not for”: Curtain, 120.

  700 “30,000 killed”: Ibid., 121.

  700 “An ambassador is supposed”: Gerard, Four Years, 219.

  701 “to tell the kaiser”: Ibid.

  701 “I have nothing”: Ibid.

  701 “Your Excellency”: Ibid., 250.

  701 “I said that”: Ibid., 366.

  701 “While you might invent”: Ibid.

  701 “Do you come”: Ibid., 339.

  701 “charged Germany”: Ibid., 340.

  701 “If two men”: Ibid., 341.

  701 “If the chancellor”: Ibid., 342–43.

  702 “Wilson and his press”: Ibid., 313.

  702 “ ‘You are the American’ ”: Ibid., 226–27.

  702 “We are fighting”: Balfour, 375.

  702 “We must resume”: Ludendorff, General Staff, 293–94.

  703 “for which I alone”: Ibid., 295–96.

  703 “Unfortunately, our military situation”: Ibid., 298–99.

  703 “A decision must be reached”: Scheer, 248.

  703 “The backbone of England”: Ibid.

  704 “We may reckon”: Ibid., 249–50.

  704 “After our peace feelers”: Görlitz, 229.

  704 “Oh, I am most unhappy”: Daisy of Pless, 256.

  704 Buzzie: Ibid., 31.

  705 “even if the chancellor”: Görlitz, 299.

  705 “agitated and depressed”: Ibid.

  705 “For two years”: Ibid.

  705 “If the military authorities”: Ludendorff, General Staff, 340.

  705 “in the course”: Tuchman, Zimmermann Telegram, 139.

  705 “I pledge on my word”: Reischach, 261.

  705 “We are in a position”: Ludendorff, General Staff, 305.

  705 “Of course, if”: Ibid., 306.

  705 “I command”: Ibid.

  706 “Have we lost”: Reischach, 260.

  706 “American intervention”: Bernstorff, 281.

  706 “This government”: Ibid., 280.

  707 “war inevitable”: Ibid., 306.

  707 “I do not care”: Görlitz, 232.

  707 “Remarkable as this may sound”: Bernstorff, 302.

  707 “Victory would mean”: Ibid., 310–14.

  707 “Peace without victory”: Knock, 113.

  707 “House suddenly”: Bernstorff, 319–20.

  707 “Please thank the president”: Ibid.,7320–22.

  708 “Agreed, reject”: Charles Seymour, American Neutrality, 24.

  708 “striped like a barber’s pole: Tuchman, Practicing History, 168.

  708 Handing the note: The Lansing-Bernstorff conversation is reported in Lansing, 211–12.

  708 “the German people”: Bernstorff, 344.

  708 “In America you wanted”: Ibid., 352.

  708 “He looked up”: Tumulty, 254–55.

  709 “You will see”: Gerard, Four Years, 376.

  709 “contempt and h
atred”: Herwig, Politics of Frustration, 124.

  709 “a fat, rich, race”: Trask, 44.

  709 “gruesome”: Görlitz, 237.

  709 “I refuse to believe”: Charles Seymour, House Papers, II, 442.

  709 “The main point”: Spring-Rice, 377–78.

  710 “He is endeavoring”: Tuchman, Zimmermann Telegram, 162.

  710 “leaking like a basket”: Wesley Frost, 88–91.

  710 “a very jolly”: Charles Seymour, House Papers, I, 186.

  711 “is filled with the best of intentions”: Bülow, III, 178.

  711 “The United States does not dare”: Gerard, Four Years, 237.

  711 “I told him”: Ibid.

  711 “Gentlemen, there is”: Tuchman, Zimmermann Telegram, 113.

  711 “relations between”: Gerard, Four Years, 363.

  711 “so long as such men”: Bülow, III, 301.

  712 “We intend”: The text of the Zimmermann telegram appears in Hendrick, III, 333.

  713 “Good Lord”: Lansing, 228.

  713 “Germany Seeks Alliance”: New York Times, March 1, 1917.

  713 “If he does not go to war”: Heckscher, 435.

  713 “a communication”: Ibid., 437.

  713 “fanatical pro-German”: Lansing, 239.

  713 “I shall never forget it”: Spring-Rice, 389.

  713 “The present German”: Baker, VI, 510–14.

  CHAPTER 36: THE DEFEAT OF THE U-BOATS

  715 “a veritable cemetery”: Churchill, IV, 362.

  717 “The shipping situation”: Jellicoe Papers, II, 125.

  717 “The world’s ports”: Fayle, quoted by Marder, IV, 65.

  717 “The position is exceedingly grave”: Jellicoe Papers, II, 146.

  718 “dirty trick”: Kemp, 13.

  719 “barbarous” and “contrary to the rules”: Sims, 144.

  720 “Stand by”: Ibid., 185.

  722 “vermin”: Chatterton, Gallant Gentlemen, 175.

  722 “some of the most admirable”: Sims, 170.

  722 “a record of gallantry”: Jellicoe, The Crisis of the Naval War, 73.

  722 “A tramp steamer”: Campbell, 108.

  722 “should the Officer”: Chatterton, Q-Ships, 193–94.

  722 “Don’t speak”: Campbell, 187.

  724 “a terrific explosion”: Ibid., 271.

  726 “Mr. S. W. Davidson”: Sims, 4.

  726 “rely upon the last ship”: Ibid., 79.

  726 “Don’t let the British”: Klachko and Trask, 58.

  726 “a small man”: Sims, 7–8.

  726 Greeting his visitor: The Sims-Jellicoe conversation is reported in ibid., 9.

  727 “a big, exuberant boy”: Ibid., 15–16.

  728 “long and distant service”: Taffrail, 327.

  728 “Wherever possible”: Marder, IV, 121.

  728 “A submarine could remain”: Terraine, 53.

  728 controlled sailings: Marder, IV, 138.

  729 “totally insufficient”: Ibid., 122.

  729 “Absolutely impossible”: Sims, 107.

  730 “palsied and muddle-headed Admiralty”: Lloyd George, III, 95.

  730 “atmosphere of crouching”: Ibid., 83.

  730 “condition of utter despair”: Ibid., 81.

  730 “paralytic documents”: Ibid., 80.

  730 “fear-dimmed eyes”: Ibid., 85.

  730 “stunned pessimism”: Ibid., 86.

  730 “High Admirals”: Ibid., 108.

  730 “men whose caution”: Ibid., 81, 95.

  730 “announced his intent”: Ibid., 106.

  730 “and spent”: Hankey, II, 650.

  731 “On the 30th”: Beaverbrook, 155.

  731 “Apparently the prospect”: Lloyd George, III, 107.

  731 “a travesty”: Patterson, Jellicoe, 174.

  731 “virtually preclude”: Jellicoe Papers, II, 114.

  731 “My impression”: Marder, IV, 162.

  731 “was the result”: Jellicoe, The Submarine Peril, 130–31.

  731 “The little popinjay”: Bacon, Jellicoe, 388.

  731 “something between”: Dangerfield, 22.

  731 “My father”: Richard Lloyd George’s remarks are on pages 42 and 63 of his book, My Father, Lloyd George.

  732 “had enjoyed more sleep”: Marder, IV, 186.

  732 “too many eggs”: Ibid., 131.

  733 “establish a square mile”: Sims, 111.

  733 “The size of the sea”: Churchill, IV, 364.

  733 “The oceans at once”: Doenitz, 4.

  734 “the British nation”: Sims, 55.

  734 “Dine in undress”: Ibid., 56.

  734 “When will you be ready”: Ibid., 58.

  735 “He watched over”: Ibid., 65.

  735 Uncle Lewis: Ibid., 75.

  735 “attributed his success”: Marder, II, 12–13.

  735 “a peculiarly difficult man”: Anglo-American Naval Relations, 213.

  735 “I do not consider”: Ibid., 219.

  735 “I have a suggestion”: Ibid., 225.

  736 “To command you”: Bayly, 249.

  736 “First, the depth charge”: Sims, 153–54.

  737 “Then a propeller”: Ibid., 225.

  737 “There was a lumbering noise”: Ibid., 226.

  737 “All night long”: Ibid., 227.

  737 “a sharp, piercing noise”: Ibid.

  737 “In all, twenty-five shots”: Ibid.

  737 “We have thirty-seven destroyers”: Jellicoe Papers, II, 163.

  CHAPTER 37: JELLICOE LEAVES,BEATTY ARRIVES, AND THE AMERICANSCROSS THE ATLANTIC

  739 “uncrowned King”: Marder, IV, 54.

  739 “My only qualification”: Ibid., 55.

  739 “As long as I am”: Beaverbrook, 151.

  739 “I am overwhelmed”: Jellicoe Papers, II, 123.

  739 “I spent from 10.30 a.m.”: Ibid., 127.

  739 “The Imperial War Cabinet meets”: Ibid., 154.

  739 “seedy but indomitable”: Jellicoe Papers, II, 139.

  740 “You will remember”: Ibid., 156.

  740 “I have got myself”: Ibid., 173.

  740 “Wherever you read”: Beaverbrook, 162.

  740 “the PM is hot”: Roskill, Hankey, 406.

  740 “had his knife”: Marder, IV, 327.

  740 “At one point”: The Carson-Jellicoe conversation is reported in Bacon, Jellicoe, 390.

  740 “reptile press”: Marder, IV, 110.

  740 “You kill him”: Ibid., 327.

  740 “No one can feel”: Ibid., 323.

  741 “The British Admiralty has done”: Anglo-American Naval Relations, 71.

  741 “extraordinary folly”: Ibid., 107.

  741 “It fell to me”: Marder, IV, 110.

  741 “One can gather”: Jellicoe, Submarine Peril, 36.

  741 “ambivalent”: Marder, IV, 327.

  741 “what the intriguers set”: Beatty Papers, II, 174.

  741 “J. J. was always”: Ibid., I, 426.

  741 “I telephoned Mr. Pollen”: Ibid., 422.

  741 “I talked to Pollen”: Ibid., 429.

  742 “unless I were present”: Lloyd George, III, 113.

  742 “a giant figure”: Sims, 258.

  742 “masquerading”: Marder, IV, 213.

  742 “a general today”: Ibid., 176.

  742 “We have been upside down”: James, A Great Seaman, 159–60.

  742 “used to bother me”: Ibid., 159.

  742 “I said that the organisation”: Jellicoe Papers, II, 240–41.

  743 “for his services”: Ibid., 243.

  743 “After very careful”: Ibid., 246.

  743 “I have received”: Ibid., 246–47.

  743 “It’s a good thing”: Marder, IV, 341.

  743 “Dear Sir”: Jellicoe Papers, II, 247.

  743 “a title usually reserved”: Bacon, Jellicoe, 386.

  743 “in the way I thought”: Jellicoe Papers, II, 246.

  744 �
��the change was not”: Ibid., 245.

  744 “We had full confidence”: Ibid., 248.

  744 “was the only man”: Ibid., 249.

  744 “I would remind you”: Ibid., 250.

  744 “we have realised”: Ibid., 254.

  744 “disgraceful”: Ibid.

  744 “mutinous”: Ibid., 255.

  744 “scandalous”: Ibid.

  744 “I cannot find words”: Ibid., 256.

  744 “Never a man”: Ibid., 257.

  744 “No one knows better”: Ibid., 260.

  744 “I look upon”: Ibid.

  744 “We want you back”: Ibid., 263.

  744 “Sack the lot!”: Bacon, Jellicoe, 389.

  745 “The whole time”: Beaverbrook, 181–82.

  745 “At sea, a figure”: Gordon, 523.

  745 “There was too much”: Roskill, Beatty, 206.

  746 “One of my difficulties”: Jellicoe, Submarine Peril, 159.

  746 “Only by keeping”: Beatty Papers, I, 462.

  746 “The torpedo menace”: Ibid., 460.

  747 “the correct strategy of the Grand Fleet”: Marder, V, 134.

  747 “Luck was against us”: Ibid., IV, 298.

  748 “We do have”: Ibid., 314.

  748 “out of control”: Ibid., V, 151.

  749 “because it is exercise”: Hunter, 17.

  749 “Here, we can’t let it stand”: Ibid., 21.

  749 “utterly unpredictable”: Marder, IV, 26.

  749 “worse than Jutland”: Ibid.

  750 “Darling Tata”: Roskill, Beatty, 203.

  750 “You accuse me”: Chalmers, 216–17.

  750 “You must give me”: Ibid.

  750 His reply: These letters from Beatty to Eugenie appear on pages 204, 205, 209, 211, 217, 221, 223, 226, 230, and 231 of Stephen Roskill’s biography, Earl Beatty: The Last Naval Hero. Roskill, a former Royal Navy captain, was the official historian of the Royal Navy in World War II.

  751 “You must know”: Beatty Papers, I, 449.

  751 Eugenie asked Beatty: The letters that follow (including Beatty’s verse) appear on pages 235, 254, 255, 263, and 266 of Roskill, Beatty.

  752 “dirty dog”: Beatty Papers, I, 386.

  752 “a demagogue”: Ibid., 431.

  752 Geddes a “dirty dog” and “weak as ditch water”: Ibid., 452.

  752 “The Jew Montagu”: Ibid., 451.

  752 Churchill “a dead dog” and “a disappointed blackguard”: Ibid., 445.

  752 “a selfish beast”: Roskill, Beatty, 281.

  752 “I am truly devoted”: Ibid., 265.

  752 “Heaps of love”: Beatty Papers, II, 35.

  752 “perpetual black despair” and “present dog’s life”: Roskill, Beatty, 304.

  752 “quite impossible” and “an interesting young man”: Ibid., 341.

  753 “The future position of the United States”: Jones, 6.

 

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