As a matter of interest the British battlecrusiers also took quite a pounding and a good number survived heavy damage. Their reputation has been scared by the three blowing up which was really caused by poor amunition handling and excessivly volatile cordite charges.
What is missing is a balanced perspective as the ships covers which would have showed how well the surviving battlecrusiers withstood comparable damage along with all the photographs were thrown out and destroyed in an act of administrative vandalism decades ago so there are few comparitive pictures.
Damage pictures I have seen on capital ships are:
Lion and Q turret also inside damage to Lion at Dogger bank and external picture of forecastle after DB.
Tiger hole in 6" side armour and Q turret
Collosus damage to superstraucture
Warspite damage to stern
Side view of Lion on way home from Jutland - this is interesting as the draft of the ship appears unchanged
There must have been a pictorial survey of the damaged ships Lion, Princess Royal, Tiger, Warspite, Barham, Valiant, Marlborough (torpedo) but they all seem to have disapeared. Maybe we could arrange for an internet search to see if any pictures can be found out there?
Geoff
Geoff
where did you hear about this (administrative vandalism)? I know why there's no photographs of some (all?) Devonport built dreadnaughts during their construction: apparently any that were taken were a victim of the blitz! Other than general side-view portraits of Lion that appeared as postcards, I know of no images of her "as completed", pre re-structuring appearence.
There was some sort of record* taken of the battlecruiser damage after Jutland: on Lion it appears to be a photo of each shell hit or area of damage. A couple of them appear in Fawcett and Hoopers book "Fighting at Jutland".
Warspites damage was well recorded and Tiger appears to have had photographers cover the damage. There's a very high-quality photograph of Princess Royals Jutland damage survive so I'd be very surpised if the cameraman arrived onboard and only took that solitary photograph.
So as you mention, it's not a question of what was taken, it's a question of what survives.
p.s. According to Cambell, Lion didn't have any under-water hits at Jutland, it was Dogger bank!
* This was most likely Admiralty inspired to record the damage for authoring reports, further research, etc,. There was a report compiled by Jellicoe on the damage each ship sustained along with a drawing of the ships outline with red & green highlights to illustrate the position of hits to either side, to back that up were a series of sketches of these damaged areas.
Several sketches are very close to surviving photographs which makes me wonder if someone drew or traced photographs? I'm not saying the Tiger photograph below was drawn, I wonder if a photograph taken a few days earlier, when the deck planks where still there, was drawn/traced? It's a thought...