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Page 1: World War I

World War IThe War at

Sea

Page 2: World War I

In The Beginning...• When World War I began,

Canada had two mid-sized cruisers in its navy

• The Royal Canadian Navy grew to 100 ships during the war and only one was lost at sea

• Canada’s main role was to ship food, troops and munitions to Europe

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Britain’s Plan• The British navy tried to

block goods going to Germany

• Britain mined the North Sea so neutral ships could not reach German ports

• Since Britain is an island, they also guarded their waters carefully since they required food and raw materials to survive.

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Germany’s Plan• The German navy wanted to

stop goods from reaching Britain

• They declared a war zone on the waters surrounding the British Isles

• The German plan was to use submarines or U-Boats and to sink Allied merchant ships heading to Britain on sight

• This is what happened to The Lusitania

Page 5: World War I

The Lusitania• In May 1915, the British luxury

liner was crossing the Atlantic Ocean

• It was an unarmed ship carrying 2000 passengers

• Suddenly, a torpedo streaked through the waves and struck the ship’s hull

• Moments later, there was an explosion

• More than half the passengers were American

• 1198 people died

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The Lusitania• The United States was

still neutral at this point, but the sinking of the helpless Lusitania swung public opinion against Germany

• Eventually, it helped bring the Americans into the war against Germany

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The Two Naval Powerhouses Come Face to Face

• Both Britain and Germany began the war with strong fleets of battleships

• Only once did these to fleets face each other

• In May 1916, at Jutland off the coast of Denmark

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The Two Naval Powerhouses Come Face to Face

• 99 British warships met 149 German warships head on

• Within a few hours, Britain suffered great losses of both ships and human life

• The Germans recognised the strength of the British navy and neither side risked another major sea battle

• The Germans responded by no longer producing surface ships and focused on submarines

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Germany’s Most Deadly Weapon

• The submarine or U-Boat required a crew of 35 and contained about twelve torpedoes

• Since torpedoes were expensive, U-boats often surfaced and sank enemy ships by gunfire

• Early U-boats could stay under water for 2 ½ hours

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Germany’s Most Deadly Weapon

• By 1917, the German navy introduced a policy of “unrestricted submarine warfare”

• This meant they would sink any neutral ship approaching Britain

• In four months, they sank 1074 ships

• An enormous amount of cargo and human lives were lost

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The Convoy System• Cargo ships now sailed

in fleets (not alone), escorted by armed destroyers

• The convoys now started getting through to Britain again

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Underwater Mines• Exploded on contact

with U-Boats

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Q-Ships• Battleships disguised as

unarmed harmless merchant vessels

• When U-boats surfaced to attack, they would open fire with hidden guns

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What Was The Point?• The German policy

backfired because the sinking of American boats by U-boats brought the USA into the war against Germany

• Their entrance in 1917 helped turn the tide in favour of an Allied victory

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ksVDe8znb5k

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World War I

The Halifax Explosion

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f5DYKobF7Ko

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The Halifax Explosion• Thursday, December 6, 1917• At 7:30am The Mont Blanc, a French ship started

making its way through the Narrows to the Bedford Basin loaded with benzene, picric acid and TNT

• At 8:00am, The Imo, a Norwegian ship containing relief supplies for the war also entered the narrows

• At 8:43am The Mont Blanc sailed across the Imo’s Bow and the two ships collided

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The Halifax Explosion• Halifax was a busy city and most people were

already at work or at school near the harbour• At 9:06, the Mont Blanc’s cargo blew up as a

result of a fire caused by the collision• Schools, factories, homes and businesses in a five

kilometre radius were completely destroyed by the explosion

• 2000 people were killed, 9000 were injured and 10000 were left homeless in the dead of winter

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The Halifax Explosion• Within days relief supplies started to pour in from across

Canada and the United States and from as far away as Jamaica and New Zealand

• The State of Massachusetts sent a relief committee to help out

• Halifax sends a Christmas tree every year to the city of Boston as a thank you for their help

• The Halifax Explosion was the biggest man made explosion to date (not surpassed until the dropping of the atomic bomb on Japan)

• Brought the full savagery of war home to Canadians


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