Note: This is the final chapter in an account of a game that happily dominated my life for much of last year. It was great fun and I am indebted to the players who were the authors of this story, which I just edited and lightly embellished. Many of the characters, players and NPCs, became quite real to me and I couldn't resist adding an epilogue at the end to imagine what became of them. If you've read this far, thank you for following along. Cheers, Michael
Part Seven: The Luck of the Emden
Before war came to these waters, everyone knew of Emden. Her crew referred to her as “The Swan of the East”, and the name was well deserved, Graceful and fast, with her crack crew, she turned heads in every port of call. Slim, correct, and dapper, Kapitan Muller was well known as a good host, and his wardroom was often full of visiting officers and grandees of all nations.
As a raider, she lived a charmed life. Whereas her colleagues captured ships bearing cargoes of grains, livestock, and machine parts, Emden captured not one but two merchants carrying luxury goods. Georg Heintzelman, a gunner, quipped that “We could scarcely move through the gangways or along upper decks without tripping over crates of whiskey”.
In the last week of August, prowling around the Philippines, Emden captured four merchant ships, including the Sophie, out of Southhampton, full of luxury products for high end shops in Australia. A handsome grandfather clock soon adorned Emden’s wardroom, and many sailors chose fancy dresses and frocks in the hopes that they could be posted home to sweethearts. On 18 September she intercepted the Manxman, whose holds included boxes of fine Cuban cigars. Heintzelman again: “For a few days, clouds of blue cigar smoke competed with the smoke from our funnels”.
To be sure, Emden took her share of risks. On 16 August, she was moving through the islands of the Dutch East Indies accompanied by her prize, the Diplomat, whenshe encountered the light cruiser HMAS Sydney. The prize crew steered an evasive course opposite to that of Emden, and Captain Glossop of the Sydney was later asked by the Admiralty to explain why he did not use his superior speed to pursue Emden and secure the prize later. His answer, that he prioritized the freedom of British merchant sailors, was considered weak but was allowed to stand given the successful outcome of the campaign.
Emden had a more remarkable escape on 2 September, when she was hiding in a secluded cove on the Siamese coast, her crew laboriously transferring coal from the captured Sophie. Another prize, the St Osmund, was anchored nearby. A small passenger ship, St Osmund's manifest included four Royal Navy officers, two young midshipmen, a paymaster, and the afore mentioned Commander the Rt Hon Sykes Willoughby. As one of the midshipmen, Timothy Jukes, remembered, “The Hun were quite decent, we were taking air and exercising above decks aft. It was overcast and had rained earlier, but suddenly all was in commotion.”
Captain Muller had wisely posted lookouts on a high promotory above the cove, with a good view seaward, and they gave the signal by bugle and flag that warships were approaching. Seaman Heintzelman recalled that “We were fortunate that the old man had ordered us to keep up steam just in case. Some of us cut ropes to the Sophie while the rest of the coaling detail scrambed aboard. Anyone who was free raced below to shovel coal. Ensign Meyer and a clerk got the anchor up and I remember seeing our two cooks helping Torps get the tarps off the torpedo tubes.
Jukes saw his chance and took it. “At first our guard was confused and then tried to herd us below, but the Commander was giving him stick and so I did a swan dive, hoping I’d miss the propellers which were just starting to turn. I suppose the guard decided it wasn’t worth a shot, so i made it to the beach just as the two Hun signalman stumbled out of the jungle and watched their ship departing. They ignored me, and eventually I was picked up. It was all rather exciting”. Anxious to make a hero early in the war, and eager to disguise the escape of Emden, Churcill saw that Jukes received the Conspicuous Gallantry Medal. Jukes went on to command a destroyer with some distinction.
HMAS Sydney was approaching from the north, in company with the armoured cruiser Duke of Edinburgh, their suspicious aroused by the smoke visible from the cove, which was still sheltered from their view by the surrounding heights. Captain Glossop and his bridge crew could scarce believe their eyes as Emden glided into view and turned south, rapidly working to flank speed. Glossop ordered fire from the forward 6” gun but the Emden was just out of range. The chase continued for an hour, both ships straining their boilers to the utmost, but finally Glossop called off the pursuit, concerned about the gathering rainsqualls, and their rudimentary charts which did not have all the local reefs marked. He returned to the cove, where Edinburgh was taking stock of the situation and reassuring the passengers of St Osmund.
Aboard Emden that night, the mood in the wardroom was one of nervous relief but sadness, as they toasted the absence of their Second Officer and Ensign who were lost with a dozen men of the prize crew (in fact they would make good their escape in a commandeered boat and after a long hike through the jungle, made their return to Germany on an American tramp steamer). In his memoir, von Mücke, the Executive Officer recalled that Captain Muller, who loved amateur theatre, was saddened that the variety show planned for the next night would not go ahead. “A pity about Ensign Franck, he had a lovely falsetto”.
Emden’s luck held course on the night of 11 October when she was discovered around 23:00 hrs by the patrolling armoured cruiser Duke of Edinburgh. Due to heavy rain and darkness, both ships encountered one another suddenly and at close range, and opened fire almost simultaneously, Emden launching a torpedo. Captain Danvers of the Edinburgh appears to have drawn the worst possible conclusion, that it was a heavier German vessel (Moltke fever still seems to have been infectious) and veered away after taking a penetrating hit to her engine spaces. Muller, undamaged, thanked his copious lucky stars and made another escape. Subsequent inspection revealed that a boiler space had been destroyed and a dozen men working there killed, leading Danvers to signal that he was making for Hong Kong and repairs. Sam Weller, Admiral Jerram’s steward, recalled that “There were some broken crockery when Old Man read that particular signal, I can tell you”. A subsequent Board of Inquiry held Danvers at fault for not engaging and destroying Emden, despite his damage, though reduced to half speed as she was, it is not clear that Edinburgh could have accomplished this.
It was about this time that the Norwegian merchant Gudrun arrived in Manila with an extraordinary story to tell. She had been, as Captain Muller slyly put it, “borrowed” to accompany Emden and at length she was sent on her way along with the captive crews of several vessels, including the three Royal Navy officers taken of St Osmund. Sven Trygvasson, Gudrun’s master, recalled that “The night before we parted company, the Germans treated us to a variety show, that had us laughing and crying at the cruel fate that makes ordinary seamen foes.” Heintzelman of Emden recalled that “The English midshipman had a lovely boy soprano, and treated us all to his rendition of “It’s a Long Way to Tipperary”. There was not a dry eye in the house.”
Muller knew from interrogating prisoners that there was now a massive dragnet looking for him, and he took the bold decision to make for Rabaul, which he knew, thanks to coded signals from the enterprising Ensign Brunner, was incredibly not blockaded. Emden arrived on 20 October, resupplied, and embarked all German personnel willing to leave with him fr South America. He also found Von Spee’s collier Markomania, and put Brunner in command. Muller could see that with only a handful of marines and some native levies, the German governor had no chance to resist a determined assault. In fact, such an expedition was at that moment being prepared in Cairns, after a long wrangle about whether a British or Australian officer would command the expedition. This impasse was settled by a compromise which gave command to Captain Juares of the French navy.
Emden’s last day in port was marked by a pig roast on the beach and another concert. On the night of October 28th, she left port accompanied by Markomania, and in a final display of luck, slipped between the patrolling ships of Jerram’s squadron. In late November, Emden arrived in Valparaiso, where she was soon blockaded by ships of Admiral Craddock’s squadron. Her engines badly worn, Muller agreed to have his crew interned. On 1 November, the French ships Dupleix and Montcalm led the Australian landing force into the harbour at Rabaul, where the German garrison surrended without a shot. Wearing his best uniform, Captain Juares had the French tricolour raised, but the surrender ceremony was delayed until someone could at last find a sword for the governor to hand over to Juares.
Thus ended the Great War in the Pacific. The German press had much to boast of: the chivalry of its captains, the brief weeks of terror that had gripped mercantile firms from Capetown to San Francisco, and the loss of Royal Navy ships including the proud Australia. Indeed, the sympathy for the Germans in the neutral press, particularly the cult of the Emden, may have had some influence on delaying America’s entry into the war. However, the Lords of the Admiralty knew better. A crack German squadron had been sunk or bottled up. Irreplaceable crews and talents, including Von Spee, would no longer trouble the Royal Navy. Mercantile traffic soon resumed. The vital Imperial Convoys had not been disrupted. Victory, however blemished, is still victory.
While Churchill privately fumed that Admiral Jerram had let Emden escape, and indeed the failure to blockade Rabaul indicates the lack of command and control among the allied forces, he could be satisfied with the final result. Indeed, Jerram had already been decorated and fêted in the press as “The Hero of the Macassar Strait”, so it would have been difficult to make him a scapegoat. Jerram, by now practically an invalid, was given command of the West Indies squadron.
Churchill’s hostile relationship with Admiral Patey only ended when he was removed as First Lord, and Beatty, who admired Patey’s fighting spirit, chose him for command of a battle cruiser squadron. Admiral King Hall accepted a knighthood and command of training establishments ashore in England, a post that he threw himself into. In addresses to young sailors, he liked to say that he had begun his career in the topmasts of sailing ships, and had lived to watch seaplanes loaded with bombs hunting for the Koenigsberg.
The allied naval contingents had all done well and burnished the reputations of their respective nations. Admiral Ivanov in particular was celebrated in the Russian press for his capture of Eitel Friedrich and was given command of the Vladivastock squadron. The Emperor of Japan could enjoy his new property in Tsingtao, and the Imperial Japanese Navy knew that they were now peers of the celebrated Royal Navy. Captain Juares accepted his Croix de Guerre on behalf of his ships, and never failed to tell the press what he could have done had he been unleashed by Les Rosbifs. As for those surviving Germans who fought on in Africa or who languished in captivity or internment, they could tell themselves that they had met Der Tag and won glory, even though glory alone does not command the sealanes.
Epilogue: What Became of Them?
Ensign Brunner: Escaped internment in Chile and made his way back to Germany where he commanded a submarine with distinction. After the war became an ardent Nazi. A UBoat ace in the Second World War, his boat was last seen leaving Brest in 1943, and his fate remains unknown.
Winston Churchill: Took credit for the conduct of the naval war in the Pacific, except for the parts where he blamed others. Went on to become rather famous.
Captain Glossop: His career never prospered because of his failures to sink the Emden. Left the navy after the war and became a shoe salesman in Brisbane.
Admiral King Hall: become a beloved mentor to a generation of officer cadets during and after the war, often called “the grandaddy of the Royal Navy”. After serving as Governor General of Trinidad and Tobago, he published his memoirs and settled down on his family estate in Shropshire.
Admiral Jerram: Commanded the West Indies Squadron with his headquarters in Bermuda, but spent most of his time ashore being treated for his war wound suffered at the Macassar Strait. Died of the Spanish Influenza in 1919.
Captain Juares: Became an Admiral but never decided who he hated more, the British or the Germans. During World War Two he commanded the last holdout Vichy garrison in Tunisia, and chose to surrender to an lone American sergeant in a jeep rather than surrender to the British Eighth Army. His memoirs, The Meaninglessness of My Life At Sea, are today regarded as an existentialist classic.
Timothy Jukes: Commanded a destroyer and won the Victoria Cross at Zeebrugge for his coolness under fire. In the next war led destroyer flotillas at Narvik and in the Mediterranean, won a second Victoria Cross for his actions during the Pedestal convoy to Malta. Ended the war as a Rear Admiral and served in the House of Commons.
Admiral Ivanov: During the Russian Civil War, commanded the White Russian forces in Siberia, in 1920 died in combat fighting the Reds.
Capitain Loof: Survived the war as one of Lettow Von Vorbeck’s ablest commanders. Never returned to Germany and ran a successful safari business in Kenya. His memoirs, The Pirate Turned Lion Tamer, became a bestseller and was turned into a silent movie by G.W. Pabst.
Captain Muller: Also never returned to Germany. After the war he and some of his theatre loving Emden colleagues settled in Rio de Janeiro and opened a nightclub called The Raider which attained fame for its variety shows. The musician son of one of his officers, Stanislaus Von Getz, changed his name, moved to America, and introduced the Bossa Nova sound to world audiences.
First Officer Mundt: After being a prisoner of war in Siberia, he was a successful hotel manager in Singapore and Shanghai. He sheltered numerous Chinese from the Japanese and is credited with saving many lives. Was arrested by Mao’s Communists in 1949 and never seen again.
Admiral Patey: Was given command of the 2nd Battle Cruiser Squadron of the Grand Fleet under Admiral Beatty. His flagship, Invincible, was last seen at Jutland signalling “Let’s go fuck up those German bitches” shortly before she exploded and sank with all hands.
Captain Tatsuo: Enjoyed a rapid rise through the Imperial Japanese Navy. Commanded a cruiser squadron in the Pacific, decorated for his actions at Guadalcanal, and survived the Second World War to become the first commander of the postwar Japanese naval forces.
Captain Thierichens: Spent the rest of the war as a prisoner in Siberia, where he became an increasingly bitter opponent of the Kaiser. Following the Treaty of Brest Litovsk he was repatriated to Germany and became a ringleader in the German naval revolt of 1918. Fled Germany for Canada and became a captain on Great Lakes ore freighters.







