CHAPTER 2: GOEBEN IS YOUR OBJECTIVE
   27 “would easily be able to avoid the French”: Churchill, I, 222–23.
   27 “A droop-jawed, determined little man”: Robert James, 9.
   29 “We did not plead much”: McLaughlin, 54.
   30 “the African coast”: Kopp, 23.
   30 “like an armadillo”: Marder, I, 55.
   31 “Your first task”: Churchill, I, 222–24.
   31 “Goeben must be shadowed”: Ibid., 223.
   31 “Watch on mouth of Adriatic”: Ibid., 224.
   31 “Very good. Hold her”: Ibid.
   31 “to prevent Goeben leaving”: McLaughlin, 49.
   32 “a backstairs cad . . . a sneak”: Fisher, FGDN, II, 360.
   32 “a serpent of the lowest type”: Ibid., 418.
   32 “Sir Berkeley Mean”: Ibid., 447.
   32 “went to Balmoral”: Ibid., 418.
   32 “Winston has sacrificed the country”: Ibid., 458.
   32 “I fear this must be my last communication”: Ibid., 451–52.
   33 “Use Malta as if it were Toulon”: Churchill, I, 229.
   33 “break in upon”: Ibid., 222.
   33 “in quest of his colleague”: Hough, Great War, 71.
   34 “The idea of turning about”: McLaugh-lin, 56.
   34 “sowing death and panic”: Ibid.
   34 “Our trick succeeded brilliantly”: Kopp, 24.
   34 “like a giant azure bell”: Ibid., 27.
   35 “giant grey monsters”: Ibid., 28.
   35 “not French ships”: McLaughlin, 60.
   35 “The overheated air”: Kopp, 30.
   36 “Goeben . . . is evidently going to interfere”: Churchill, I, 224.
   36 “Winston with all his war paint on”: Asquith, Letters to Venetia, 150–51.
   36 “no act of war”: Churchill, I, 225.
   36 “the tortures of Tantalus”: Ibid., 226.
   36 “unable to utter a word”: Ibid., 227.
   36 “Sent hands to tea”: McLaughlin, 59.
   37 “Goeben out of sight”: Hough, Great War, 74.
   37 “for the last time”: McLaughlin, 67.
   37 “With a heavy heart”: Ibid., 68.
   38 “Numerous Sicilians”: Ibid.
   38 “At present time”: Ibid., 69.
   38 “It was impossible for me”: Ibid.
   39 “Italian government have declared neutrality”: Churchill, I, 226.
   40 “Had it been put to me”: Ibid., 250.
   40 “Certainly if . . . [Milne]”: Ibid., 254.
   40 “Is Austria neutral power”: McLaughlin, 66.
   40 “First Cruiser Squadron and Gloucester”: Ibid.
   41 “Goeben altering course to southward”: Ibid., 71.
   42 the Silver King: Ibid., 32.
   42 “the handsomest officer”: Ibid., 105.
   42 “met Mrs. Troubridge in the Abbey”: Ibid., 30.
   42 “they must not be surprised”: Ibid., 74.
   43 For Troubridge’s conversations with Wray, see Ibid., 76–77.
   43 “I cannot turn away”: Marder, II, 26.
   43 “Being only able to meet Goeben”: McLaughlin, 78.
   44 “Why did you not continue”: Ibid.
   44 “With visibility at the time”: Ibid.
   45 “gradually . . . drop astern”: Corbett, I, 66.
   45 “Have engaged at long range”: Hough, Great War, 77.
   45 “Commence hostilities at once”: Marder, II, 30.
   46 “Negative my telegram”: Hough, Great War, 81.
   46 “Indispensable military necessity”: Tuchman, Guns of August, 157.
   47 “Enter. Demand surrender”: McLaugh-lin, 84.
   47 “Action Stations”: Kopp, 66.
   47 “Request pilot”: Ibid., 67.
   47 “Please follow me”: Ibid., 68.
   48 “They are to allow them to enter” and “Yes”: Kannengiesser, 26.
   48 “interesting,” but that “as we shall insist”: Asquith, Letters to Venetia, 168.
   48 “temporarily and superficially”: Tuchman, Guns of August, 159.
   49 “I have even more terrible news for you”: Morgenthau, 81.
   49 “we could not afford to do without”: Churchill, I, 29.
   49 “insolent,” “defiant,” and “openly fraudulent”: Ibid., 491.
   50 “more slaughter, more misery and ruin”: Churchill I, 252.
   50 “careful examination . . . their Lordships approved”: Milne, 146.
   51 “Your sole duty”: Churchill, I, 491.
   51 “amazing misconduct”: McLaughlin, 108.
   51 “signally failed”: Ibid., 107–8.
   51 “had a very fair chance”: Ibid., 111.
   51 “did, from negligence”: Ibid., 112.
   51 “Do not be brought to action”: Churchill, I, 222.
   51 “fixed and unalterable opinion”: McLaughlin, 110.
   51 Troubridge and Milne: Marder, II, 34.
   51 “he had no intention to engage”: McLaughlin, 111.
   52 “All I could gain”: Ibid., 107.
   52 “deep conviction”: Ibid., 133.
   52 “a desperate one”: Ibid.
   52 “It was at this psychological moment”: Marder, II, 27.
   53 “the limited ammunition of Goeben”: Churchill, I, 251.
   53 “Up to the range of sixteen thousand yards”: McLaughlin, 120.
   53 “superior force . . . fully and honorably”: Ibid., 145.
   54 “Sir Berkeley Goeben”: Fisher, FGDN, III, 52.
   54 “this most disastrous event”: Ibid., 53.
   54 “an amateur on shore”: Milne, 16.
   54 “They pay me to be an admiral”: Hough, Great War, 84.
   55 “Even if all our ships had been sunk”: Pope, 197.
   CHAPTER 3: JELLICOE
   56 “the only man on either side”: Churchill, III, 112.
   56 “Jellicoe to be Admiralissimo”: Fisher, FGDN, II, 424.
   57 “If war comes before 1914”: Ibid., 443.
   57 “our beloved Commander-in-Chief”: Marder, II, 10.
   57 “really does too much”: Fisher, FGDN, II, 418–19.
   58 “one of the cleverest cadets”: Winton, 12.
   58 “Jellicoe was admired”: Goldrick, in The Great Admirals, ed. Sweetman, 365.
   58 “Property of Admiral Sir John Jellicoe”: Bacon, Jellicoe, 8.
   58 “swam with extraordinary vigor”: Bacon, Jellicoe, 53.
   59 “I felt the shock”: Jellicoe Papers, I, 10.
   60 “I don’t think I shall ever forget”: Bacon, Jellicoe, 113.
   61 “one of the five best brains”: Winton, 101.
   61 “far greater protection”: Jellicoe Papers, I, 13.
   61 “I had a decided admiration”: Ibid., 22.
   62 “On my way to Keil”: Ibid., 15.
   62 “I think it shows”: Ibid., 17.
   63 “If one asks English naval officers”: Marder, I, 410.
   63 “It did not take me very long”: Jellicoe Papers, 26–27.
   63 “He thanked me”: Ibid., 30.
   64 “certainly one of the future leaders”: Ibid.
   64 “brilliant and daring”: Ibid., 29.
   65 “War with Germany”: Bacon, Jellicoe, 190.
   65 “in certain circumstances”: Jellicoe, Grand Fleet, 3.
   66 “I had the most profound respect”: Ibid., 5.
   66 “the fleet might conclude”: Ibid.
   67 “These are not times”: Gilbert, I, 60.
   67 “respectfully and most earnestly”: Winton, 142.
   67 “We have absolute confidence”: Ibid.
   67 For the messages between Churchill and Jellicoe, see Jellicoe Papers, I, 41–42.
   68 “When I reported myself”: Jellicoe, Grand Fleet, 4.
   69 “as always, a most gallant officer”: Ibid., 5.
   70 “would cause unprecedented disaster”: Beatty Papers, I, 112.
   70 “We received the terrible news”: Beatty Papers, I, 113.
					     					 			br />
   70 “Your feelings do you credit”: Churchill, I, 218.
   70 “I hope I never have to live”: Jellicoe Papers, I, 48.
   70 “My dear Jellicoe”: Bacon, Jellicoe, 202.
   71 “Look here, old chap”: Ibid., 203.
   CHAPTER 4: FIRST DAYS
   72 “the principal object”: Marder, I, 367.
   73 “a steady and serious”: Ibid., 371.
   73 “In a war with Germany”: Ibid., II.3.
   73 “Great Britain cannot help”: Ibid., I, 431.
   73 “Owing to recent”: Ibid., 424.
   73 “so long as”: Ibid., II, 3.
   76 “As it is”: Ibid., I. 372–73.
   76 “Before the war”: Dewar, 152.
   76 “There was only one”: Scheer, 11.
   76 “equalization of forces”: Groos, I. 54.
   77 “dropping things overboard”: Patterson, Tyrwhitt, 46.
   77 “the first British shot in the war”: Keyes, Memoirs, I, 68.
   78 “if we go up on a mine”: Goldrick, 66.
   78 “The foremost half of the ship”: Ibid., 67.
   79 “stagger out of the chart house”: Keyes, Memoirs, I, 70.
   79 “the strong odor of petroleum”: Groos, I, 233.
   79 “Tomorrow, Sunday,”: Churchill, I, 256.
   80 “In the years”: Tuchman, Guns of August, 121.
   80 “contemptible little army”: Patterson, Jellicoe, 61.
   80 “The more English”: Tuchman, Guns of August, 121.
   81 “We grudged every light cruiser”: Churchill, I, 286–87.
   81 “the mother country”: Bean, I, 16.
   82 “without the loss of a single ship”: Churchill, I, 305.
   CHAPTER 5: BEATTY
   84 “For no apparent reason”: Chalmers, 122–23.
   84 “observe the private unhappiness”: Barnett, 135.
   86 “free ranging”: Charles Beatty, 34.
   87 “Some months ago”: Chalmers, 75–76.
   87 “So great is the joy”: Ibid.
   87 “Dear Arthur”: Charles Beatty, 40.
   87 “wilful and beautiful”: Tree, 16.
   87 “divorce crushed my father’s spirit”: Ibid., 18.
   87 “Your mother has sent me”: Ibid., 26.
   88 “You have done a great deal of grumbling”: Beatty Papers, I, 11.
   88 “My darling Tata”: Ibid., 8.
   88 “Well, love”: Chalmers, 118.
   89 “J-aaack”: Charles Beatty, 42.
   89 “What? Court Martial my David”: Leslie, 211.
   89 “I have thought for a long time”: Beatty Papers, 15.
   89 “beautiful, opulent, ambitious”: Roskill, 36.
   89 “the most unhappy man”: Ibid.
   89 “We have eight admirals”: Beatty Papers, 23.
   89 “As you know, ‘Lion’ and I”: Ibid., 16–17.
   90 “I felt as if I was an ogre”: Beatty Papers, 30–31.
   90 “Rear Admiral Beatty”: Chalmers, 105.
   90 “David must have known”: Charles Beatty, 57.
   90 “Mum, Mum, come”: Chalmers, 111.
   90 “made no secret”: Charles Beatty, 57.
   90 “My little lady”: Roskill, 45.
   91 “David was threatening to leave the Navy”: Ibid., 43–44.
   91 “The fact is that the Admiralty”: Beatty Papers, 34.
   92 “The vessel was commanded”: Churchill, My Early Life, 178–79.
   92 “You are quite right”: Beatty Papers, 11–12.
   92 “I see in the papers”: Ibid., 28.
   92 “You seem very young”: Morgan, 322.
   92 “My first meeting”: Churchill, I, 88.
   92 “I had two hours solid conversation”: Beatty Papers, 35.
   92 “I hope to be able to squeeze”: Ibid., 65.
   93 “Oh dear, I am so tired”: Ibid., 46.
   93 “viewed naval strategy”: Churchill, I, 88.
   93 “I had no doubts”: Ibid.
   93 “a love of doing everything”: Chalmers, 116.
   93 “a nice old thing”: Ibid., 124.
   94 “You must not bother”: Beatty Papers, 66.
   95 “There seems to be something wrong”: Chatfield, 143.
   96 “I have often been asked”: Goodenough, 91.
   CHAPTER 6: THE BATTLE OF THE BIGHT
   97 “We are still wandering”: Beatty Papers, I, 120.
   97 “What is the Navy doing” and “offensive measures”: Roskill, Beatty, 82.
   97 “When are we going to make war”: Keyes, Memoirs, I, 76.
   98 “simple and daring”: Churchill, I, 308.
   98 “too fully occupied”: Keyes, Memoirs, I, 80.
   98 “gave me an opportunity”: Ibid., 81.
   99 “damned slow”: Patterson, Tyrwhitt, 41.
   99 “from the oldest and slowest”: Ibid., 54.
   100 “a destroyer sweep”: Chalmers, 142.
   100 “Propose to cooperate”: Goldrick, 85.
   100 “Until I know the plan of operations”: Ibid.
   100 “Cooperation by battle fleet”: Ibid., 86.
   100 “We are to rendezvous”: Chalmers, 143.
   101 “Are you taking part”: Ibid.
   101 The German defensive arrangements in the Heligoland Bight are described in Groos, I, 131–33.
   102 “Attacked by enemy cruisers”: Goldrick, 88.
   103 “hunt destroyers”: Ibid.
   104 “were in boiling water”: Groos, I, 150.
   105 “as a sample”: Corbett, II, 109.
   106 “Please chase westward”: Goldrick, 97.
   106 “Cruisers are our cruisers”: Ibid.
   106 “I was not informed”: Beatty Papers, I, 126.
   106 “I came under detailed orders”: Goldrick, 98.
   107 “to cut off the retreat”: Groos, I, 175.
   107 “We received a very severe and most accurate fire”: Chalmers, 145–46.
   108 “Am attacked by large cruiser”: Beatty Papers, I, 124.
   108 “a hornets’ nest”: Marder, II, 51.
   108 “intercepting various signals”: Beatty Papers, I, 129.
   109 “What do you think we should do”: Chatfield, 134.
   109 “Am proceeding to your support”: Goldrick, 101.
   109 “heavy smoke clouds”: Groos, I, 176.
   109 “very wisely fled like a stag”: King-Hall, 54.
   109 “Even in the act”: Goldrick, 102.
   110 “furrowed”: King-Hall, 55.
   110 “The ship reared”: Groos, I, 179.
   110 “We closed down on her”: King-Hall, 55.
   110 “Mainz was incredibly brave”: Chalmers, 146.
   110 “The state of Mainz”: Groos, I, 178–79.
   110 “Sink the ship”: Ibid., 177.
   111 “A young German officer”: Keyes, Memoirs, I, 88.
   111 “I really was beginning to feel a bit blue”: Marder, II, 52.
   111 “Following in each other’s wake”: King-Hall, 57.
   111 “There straight ahead of us”: Chalmers, 146.
   112 “As we approached”: Chatfield, 125.
   112 “The turrets swung around”: Ibid.
   113 “A small German ship”: Ibid.
   113 “the first salvo fell”: Goldrick, 106.
   113 “completely enveloped”: Groos, I, 185.
   113 “The Admiral told me”: Chatfield, 126.
   113 “drifting among corpses”: Groos, I, 218.
   114 “not to engage”: Ibid., 193.
   114 “At 8:23 p.m.”: Ibid., 198.
   115 “It seems your anchor”: Chalmers, 152.
   115 “The end justified the means”: Marder, II, 52.
   115 “We had a great reception”: Ibid.
   116 “the only action which was possible”: Ibid.
   116 “It was good work”: Beatty Papers, I, 121.
   116 “Poor devils”: Chalmers, 152–53.
   116 “I had thought I should have received”: Ibid., 154.
   116 “It 
					     					 			 really was awfully fine”: Patterson, Tyrwhitt, 62–63.
   116 “I think an absurd fuss”: Keyes Papers, I, 19.
   117 “I think it right to tell you”: Ibid., 17–18.
   118 “a greater expenditure of ammunition”: Chatfield, 127.
   118 “The battle was of immense”: Marder, II, 54.
   118 “It was no great naval feat”: Chatfield, 126.
   118 “Enemy battle cruiser squadron”: Groos, I, 283.
   119 “the long-suppressed battle ardor”: Ibid., 210.
   119 “However heavy the losses”: Ibid., 216.
   120 “the larger part”: Ibid., 215.
   120 “hold itself back”: Bennett, Naval Battles, 151.
   120 “in his anxiety”: Goldrick, 115.
   120 “August 28”: Tirpitz, II, 91.
   120 “on the approach of the English”: Ibid., 92–93.
   121 “They knew we were coming”: Chalmers, 154.
   121 “[We] could not go messing about”: Marder, II, 55.
   121 “The Germans knew nothing”: Churchill, I, 309.
   CHAPTER 7: SUBMARINES AND MINES: “FISHER’S TOYS”
   122 “water conducts shock”: Keegan, The Price of Admiralty, 97.
   123 “Death near”: Fisher, Records, 177–78.
   123 “playthings” and “Fisher’s toys”: Marder, Anatomy, 559.
   123 “un-English”: Ibid., 368
   123 “underhanded method of attack”: Mackay, 298.
   124 “I shall be very disappointed”: Fisher, FGDN, I, 366.
   124 “the cleverest officer in the navy”: Marder, I, 83.
   124 “exercised an extraordinary influence”: Marder, Anatomy, 366.
   125 “dressed like North Sea fishermen”: Keyes, I, 47.
   125 “I note by examining”: Hough, Great War, 174.
   125 “the notoriously short, steep seas”: Keyes, Memoirs, I, 102.
   126 “Under the circumstances”: Goldrick, 121.
   126 “We have no money to waste”: Hough, Great War, 169.
   126 “for experiments connected with submarines”: Ibid., 170.
   126 “her employment”: Ibid.
   127 “Our submarine fleet”: Gray, 28.
   129 “Think of . . .”: Keyes, Memoirs, 76–77.
   129 “the ‘live bait’ squadron”: Churchill, I, 323.
   130 “My dear fellow”: Marder, II, 57.
   130 “The Bacchantes ought not to continue”: Churchill, I, 324.
   130 “I should not have given in”: Kerr, 248.
   130 “Still rather rough”: Goldrick, 127.
   132 “Oh, no. I have only broken one arm”: Hoehling, 42.
   133 “three cruisers”: Thomas, 18.
   133 “I could see their gray-black sides”: Hoehling, 48.
   133 “to make my aim sure”: Ibid.
   133 “a dull thud”: Thomas, 20.