on the eve of World War I In 1914, the East Asia Squadron numbered a total of five major warships under the command of Spee: • • • • • • • •
Königsberg-class cruiser • Also assigned to the squadron in 1914 were the old
Bussard-class unprotected cruisers and , torpedo boats
SMS S90 and SMS
Taku, and a variety of gunboats. At the outbreak of
World War I in August 1914, Spee found himself both outnumbered and outgunned by Allied navies in the region. He was especially wary of the
Imperial Japanese Navy and the
Royal Australian Navy — in fact he described the latter's flagship, the
battlecruiser , as being superior to his entire force by itself. Spee said of his predicament: "I am quite homeless. I cannot reach Germany. We possess no other secure harbor. I must plough the seas of the world doing as much mischief as I can, until my ammunition is exhausted, or a foe far superior in power succeeds in catching me." The initial successes by
Emden led to Spee allowing her captain, von Muller, to take his ship on a lone
commerce-raiding campaign in the
Indian Ocean, while the cruisers of the squadron would head towards the eastern
Pacific and the
South American coast, where there were neutral countries with pro-German sympathies (
notably Chile) where Spee could potentially obtain supplies. The cruiser
Cormoran was left behind due to the poor state of her engines, which had led her to be stripped to outfit the captured Russian vessel
Ryazan as a commerce raider renamed .
Raids by Emden during commerce raiding operations
Emden disrupted trade throughout the Indian Ocean, intercepting 29 ships and sinking those belonging to Britain or its allies. At the
Battle of Penang she sank the Russian protected cruiser and the French
destroyer Mousquet, catching the Russian ship by surprise while in harbor. At
Madras she destroyed oil-storage facilities through shelling. The ship finally met its end on 9 November 1914 after a prolonged struggle with
HMAS Sydney at the
Battle of Cocos.
Sailing the Pacific was a crushing defeat for the East Asia Squadron. At the outbreak of World War I, nearly all the ships of the East Asia Station were dispersed at various island colonies on routine missions; the armored cruisers
Scharnhorst and
Gneisenau were at anchor at
Ponape in the Carolines. The fleet then rendezvoused at
Pagan Island in the northern Marianas – the commanders planning the logistics of their long journey to Germany, with the ships coaling. The light cruiser
Nürnberg was dispatched to
Honolulu in the United States Territory of
Hawaii to gather war news since all German undersea cables through British controlled areas were cut. Spee headed for
German Samoa with
Scharnhorst and
Gneisenau, then east, conducting the
Bombardment of Papeete in French Polynesia. The East Asia Squadron coaled at
Easter Island from colliers that had been on station throughout the Pacific. The unprotected cruiser , which had failed to rendezvous at Pagan, tried to join Spee's squadron until forced to intern itself at Hawaii on 17 October 1914 due to mechanical breakdowns. Realizing that Allied activity in the Pacific had increased to such a level that he was vastly outnumbered and losing the element of surprise, Spee decided to move his fleet around
Cape Horn into the Atlantic and force his way north in an effort to reach Germany. While off the coast of Chile, the squadron met up with the light cruiser , which had been operating as a commerce raider in the Atlantic and had rounded Cape Horn in an effort to increase chances of success. At this point,
Dresden joined Spee's flag and set out with the rest of the East Asia Squadron. The main body of the squadron engaged the British
4th Cruiser Squadron on 1 November 1914 at the
Battle of Coronel, sinking two British cruisers, and . It was while attempting to return home via the Atlantic that most of the squadron was destroyed on 8 December 1914 in the
Battle of the Falkland Islands by a superior British force of battlecruisers and cruisers. SMS
Dresden and a few auxiliary vessels escaped destruction and fled back to the Pacific, where the auxiliaries were interned at Chilean ports and
Dresden was scuttled at the
Battle of Más a Tierra. The four small gunboats , , , and the torpedo boats SMS
Taku and of the East Asia Squadron that had been left at Tsingtao were scuttled by their crews just prior to the capture of the base by Japan in November 1914, during the
Siege of Tsingtao. Four small river gunboats and some two dozen merchantmen and small vessels evaded Allied capture in inland waters of China until 1917, when China seized most of them save for two river gunboats, which were destroyed by their crews. ==Notes==