Pre-First World War The
keel for
Goliath was
laid down on 4 January 1897, and the completed hull was
launched on 23 March 1898. The ship was
commissioned on 27 March 1900 by Captain Lewis Edmund Wintz to serve on the
China Station, where she arrived later the same year. She underwent a refit at
Hong Kong from September 1901 – April 1902. Captain Frank Hannam Henderson was appointed in command 11 July 1902. She left the China Station in July 1903 and returned home, where she paid off into the commissioned Reserve at
Chatham Dockyard on 9 October 1903. While in reserve,
Goliath underwent a refit at
Palmers on the
Tyne from January–June 1904, then participated in maneuvers later in the year. On 9 May 1905,
Goliath returned to full commission at Chatham to relieve her sister ship on the China Station. However, Great Britain and Japan ratified a treaty of alliance while she was on her outbound voyage, allowing the Royal Navy to reduce its presence on the China Station and recall all battleships from those waters; when
Goliath reached
Colombo,
Ceylon in June 1905, she was recalled, and was instead attached to the
Mediterranean Fleet. In January 1906, she was transferred to the
Channel Fleet. After being fitted with fire control,
Goliath transferred to the
Portsmouth Division of the new
Home Fleet on 15 March 1907. She was based at
Portsmouth, and underwent a machinery overhaul there from August 1907 – February 1908. Upon completion of her refit,
Goliath commissioned on 4 February 1908 for Mediterranean Fleet service. During her voyage to
Malta, one of her propeller shafts fractured, and she required four-month repair period before she could begin her service. On 20 April 1909, she paid off at Portsmouth. On 22 April,
Goliath recommissioned to serve in the 4th Division, Home Fleet, at the
Nore. During this service, she was refitted at Chatham in 1910–1911 and was sent to
Sheerness. In 1913, she was mothballed and joined the 3rd Fleet.
First World War When the
First World War broke out in August 1914,
Goliath returned to full commission and was assigned to the
8th Battle Squadron, Channel Fleet, operating out of
Devonport. She was sent to
Loch Ewe as guard ship to defend the
Grand Fleet anchorage, and then covered the landing of the
Plymouth Marine Battalion at
Ostend,
Belgium on 25 August 1914. For this operation, she and three other battleships—, , and —a
protected cruiser, and six
destroyers escorted the
troopships; at the same time, elements of the Grand Fleet
attacked the German patrol line off Heligoland to occupy the German
High Seas Fleet.
Operations off German East Africa Goliath transferred to the
East Indies Station on 20 September to support
cruisers on
convoy duty in the
Middle East, escorting an Indian convoy to the
Persian Gulf and
German East Africa through October. This included a major troop convoy that left India on 16 October, in company with the battleship .
Goliaths arrival allowed cruisers that had been occupied with escorting convoys to join the hunt for the German
light cruiser . The German cruiser, having sunk the British cruiser in the
Battle of Zanzibar, was trapped by three British cruisers in the
Rufiji River delta in late October.
Goliath arrived shortly thereafter and was to join the
blockade of the delta, but the news of the British defeat at the
Battle of Coronel on 1 November forced the Admiralty to transfer
Goliath to South Africa, as it was feared that the German
East Asia Squadron might attack the colony after it entered the southern Atlantic. To further complicate matters,
Goliath had engine problems on arriving in
Mombasa, Kenya, and was unable to proceed to South Africa, and instead the
armoured cruiser was sent in her place. After her engines were repaired,
Goliath resumed her previous assignment with the blockade force at the Rufiji delta. In November,
Goliath attempted to get close enough to neutralise
Königsberg, but the water was too shallow to permit her to get within range of the cruiser. As a result, she left to bombard
Dar es Salaam on 28 November and 30 November. In the former attack,
Commander Henry Ritchie,
Goliaths executive officer, won the
Victoria Cross.
Goliath and the protected cruiser destroyed the colonial governor's residence; the second bombardment proved to be less effective.
Goliath underwent a refit at
Simonstown, South Africa, from December 1914 to February 1915. She then returned to the Rufiji delta on 25 February, as it seemed from German activities that
Königsbergs commander intended to break out soon. During this period,
Goliath bombarded German positions at
Lindi, but she saw no action with
Königsberg. On 25 March,
Goliath was ordered to move to the Mediterranean to take part in operations off the
Dardanelles, her place being taken by the protected cruiser ; the battleship left East African waters a week later on 1 April.
Dardanelles campaign Upon arrival in the
Aegean Sea,
Goliath joined the First Squadron, which included seven other battleships and four cruisers, and was commanded by
Rear Admiral Rosslyn Wemyss. The First Squadron was tasked with supporting the
Landing at Cape Helles, which took place on 25 April. On the morning of the landings,
Goliath took up a position off
Y beach, some offshore to provide gunfire support. The protected cruisers and moved in closer, and all three ships opened fire at around 05:00, signalling the start of the attack. The Ottomans made no attempt to disrupt the landing, the Allied forces having successfully launched a surprise attack. By late in the day, however, an Ottoman counterattack had advanced from
Krithia to threaten the British flank, but gunfire from
Goliath and the cruisers broke up the attack. That night, the Ottomans launched another counterattack, this time against the centre of the British line, which was repulsed. Once the sun began to rise,
Goliath and the cruisers, which had by then been reinforced by the cruisers and , shelled the Ottomans, forcing them to retreat again. On the morning of 26 April, wounded soldiers began to be ferried off the beach, first to
Goliath and the cruisers off shore. A miscommunication with the men on shore led to an unintended, larger evacuation effort. In the course of the action, she sustained some damage from the gunfire of
Ottoman forts and shore batteries. Later in the day, order was restored on shore, and the Allied troops were able to occupy
Sedd el Bahr. The Allies landed reinforcements, which allowed the advance to push toward Krithia on 27 April.
Goliath and several other battleships shelled Ottoman defenders around the town to support the attack, which began the following morning at around 10:00.
Goliath moved as close to shore as possible, to employ all of her guns at very close range. Despite the heavy fire support, the Allied troops were unable to dislodge the Ottoman defenders, and the
First Battle of Krithia ended in an Allied defeat.
Goliath was damaged by Ottoman guns again on 2 May. By mid-May, the Allied fleet had developed a rotation of two battleships on station off Gallipoli every night to support the troops dug in on the peninsula. On the night of 12–13 May,
Goliath was on station with the battleship . The two ships were moored in
Morto Bay, with
Goliath ahead of
Cornwallis; five destroyers patrolled the area against Ottoman
torpedo boats. The Ottoman destroyer sortied late on 12 May under cover of a moonless night. By steaming very slowly, the Ottomans were able to slip past the destroyer patrols at about 01:00 on 13 May. Fifteen minutes later, lookouts aboard
Goliath spotted
Muâvenet-i Millîye and issued a challenge; the Ottomans replied to the challenge but very quickly increased speed and launched three
torpedoes at
Goliath. The British opened fire, but only managed to shoot three rounds before the first torpedo struck the ship. Two torpedoes hit almost simultaneously, the first abreast her fore turret and the second abeam the fore funnel, causing a large explosion.
Goliath began to
capsize almost immediately, and was lying on her side when a third torpedo struck near her after turret.
Muâvenet-i Millîye sped off and escaped unscathed in the darkness as the other British warships gathered to rescue survivors from
Goliath. Some 570 men, out of a crew of 750 were killed in the sinking, including the ship's commander,
Captain Thomas Shelford. The wreck lies upside down at a depth of , and is largely buried in sediment. Only part of the hull, which was badly mangled by the explosion, and one of her screws are visible. ==Notes==