On commissioning,
G196 joined the 2nd Half Flotilla of the 1st Torpedo Flotilla, and remained part of the 2nd Half Flotilla in 1914.
First World War On 28 August 1914, the British
Harwich Force, supported by light cruisers and battlecruisers of the
Grand Fleet, carried out a
raid towards
Heligoland with the intention of destroying patrolling German torpedo boats. The German defensive patrols around Heligoland consisted of one flotilla (the 1st Torpedo Flotilla) of 12 modern torpedo boats forming an outer patrol line about North and West of Heligoland, with an inner line of older torpedo boats of the 3rd Minesweeping Division at about . Four German light cruisers and another flotilla of torpedo boats (the 5th Torpedo Boat Flotilla) was in the vicinity of Heligoland. G196, a member of the 2nd Half Flotilla of the 1st Torpedo Flotilla, formed part of the outer screen of torpedo boats. At about 06:00 on 28 August, , another member of the outer screen reported spotting the periscope of a submarine. As a result, the 5th Torpedo Boat Flotilla was ordered out to hunt the hostile submarine. At 07:57
G194 was fired on by British warships, and soon
G194 and
G196 were retreating towards Heligoland, pursued by four British destroyers. The 5th Flotilla and the old torpedo boats of the 3rd Minesweeping Division also came under British fire, and were only saved by the intervention of the German cruisers and , with the torpedo boats , and
T111 damaged. The Torpedo boat , leader of the 1st Flotilla, trying to return to Heligoland on hearing gunfire, ran into the midst of the Harwich force and was sunk. The intervention of the supporting British forces resulted in the sinking of the German cruisers , and . The British light cruiser and destroyers , and were badly damaged but safely returned to base.
G196 was undamaged. On 23 August 1915,
G196, along with and , escorted the newly commissioned battlecruiser from
Danzig to
Kiel, with the ships arriving at their destination on 24 August. On 11 September 1915, the German cruisers and set out from
Wilhelmshaven to lay a
minefield off the Swarte Bank in the
North Sea, with the
High Seas Fleet sailing in support. On the return trip, at 01:50 hr on 12 September, the High Seas Fleet ran into a newly laid British minefield.
G196, which was off the port beam of the battleship , struck one of the mines and was badly damaged, being towed into port by . Seven of
G196s crew were killed, with a further eight wounded. In 1918
G196 joined an Escort Flotilla, and she was renamed
T196 on 22 February 1918. She remained a member of the 1st Half-flotilla of the 1st Escort Flotilla at the end of the war.
Between the wars After the end of the First World War, the
scuttling of the German High Seas Fleet at
Scapa Flow on 21 June 1919 and the
Treaty of Versailles left Germany with a small navy of obsolete warships. The Versailles treaty limited the German Navy's torpedo forces to 16 destroyers and 16 torpedo boats, with only twelve of each in active service, with replacement of the existing ships not allowed until 15 years after they were launched. Replacements could not exceed 800 t displacement for destroyers and 200 t for torpedo boats.
T196 was retained as a destroyer under the treaty, and remained in active service in the new
Reichsmarine. In 1923
T196 was allocated to the North Sea station.
T196 was modernised in 1923, but was still obsolete and in the 1930s was transferred to subsidiary roles, being used for training and as a Fleet Tender,
Second World War On the outbreak of the
Second World War on 1 September 1939,
T196 was the flagship of the Officer Commanding Minesweepers and was deployed in support on the German
Invasion of Poland. On 4 September
T196, along with the pre-dreadnought battleship and the old minesweeper
Von der Groeben (formerly ), bombarded
Westerplatte. In late January 1945, the Germans began a
mass evacuation of soldiers and civilians from
East Prussia and
Danzig, which were threatened by the advance of Soviet forces. On 10 February
T196 and the torpedo recovery vessel
TF19 were escorting the liner
Steuben from
Pillau, when the
Soviet submarine S-13 torpedoed and sank
Steuben. Only about 300 of the more than 3000 aboard could be saved.
Soviet Union On 27 December 1945
T196 was transferred to the Soviet Union as a War Prize, ==Notes==