Onderzeeboot Nekt Navalisme - Or: The Dutch Submarine Service during World War 2

Chapter 1: The Man on a Mission
The Man on a mission

The weather was far from uncharacteristically for Scotland in November. It was cold and it was wet, exactly what the Man did not want, as it was plainly obvious that he was comfortable in neither his civilian clothes nor the European climate. Of course, a five-year stint in the Indies would do that with a man. These circumstances did nothing however, to diminish his cocky – if not arrogant – facial expressions.

The Man could certainly have decided to wear his uniform, there was no law against it. On the contrary, regulations stipulated that he should in fact be wearing his uniform right now. The decision to wear this well-tailored – and yet ill-sitting – black suit did probably save him from quite some harassment though, or worse. The Dutch government’s decision to grant the Kaiser asylum had turned the Netherlands from a questionably neutral power into practically an enemy! No, this situation called for a bit of camouflage, as it had been out of the question from him to miss this momentous occasion.

And momentous it promised to be, for this would be the largest gathering of warships in the history of modern warfare. Seventy of the most modern German warships would be escorted into internment by no less than 370 ships from the victors of the Great War. As if it had been preordained, right when the news of this coming event reached his billeting, so did the news of his promotion to Luitenant-ter-zee der 1ste Klasse [1], the later coming with a complementary two weeks of leave! It had not been easy to placate his wife after he broke the news that he was in fact not spending that leave with her in Amsterdam’s luxurious Amstel Hotel but that he was instead going to travel to Scotland, by himself.

The Man did not really have much of a choice though, as he was a (or the) man with a mission. This mission wasn’t ordered by his superiors, nor officially sanctioned by the Ministry of the Navy. Not yet anyway. The past ten years had made him realise how weak the Koninklijke Marine’s[2] position in the East Indies actually was. From what the Man had seen there wasn’t much his comrades and he would be able to do in case of an attack, besides die that is. This would not do. Not for the Royal Netherlands Navy and certainly not for Johannes Theodorus Furstner. He was determined to find a way the Netherlands would be able to defend its ‘Emerald Empire’, a defence he would – naturally – lead himself.

What bothered Furstner more than the cold and the wetness was the fog, as it obstructed his view of things to come. The shores of Edinburgh and surroundings were now useless as vantage point. Resourceful as always, Furstner wasn’t going to let trivial forces such as weather stop him from achieving his goals. If he could not see the ships from the shore, he would take to the sea. After all, he was a man of the sea, baptised by Neptune and all! To actually take to the sea the enterprising Dutchman required a boat or ship though. After first finding the weather gods against him, now he faced a more ferocious adversary: Scottish skippers. Anti-German and anti-Dutch sentiment worked against him once more, as he was brusquely dismissed by several skippers who were going to tour civilians around the harbour and the assembled fleets, in once case Furstner even had to leg it to avoid a physical altercation. Undaunted, Furstner would at the end get what he wanted. It took a passionate – though not entirely sincere – plea on the historical bonds between the Dutch and Scottish people and their religious similarities dating back to John Knox, to convince the staunchly Presbyterian skipper Douglas Alcorn to allow this peculiar Dutchman to board his ship, the Britannia.

S1511-54-Britannia-1918.jpg

The 629 ton Britannia [3] was supposed to be build as an patrol frigate but delays in construction meant that the decision was made to finish her as a cargo ship. Though ill-fitted to be a pleasure-cruise, the armistice threw transportation plans in disarray, leaving Britannia without cargo but more than capable of touring curious spectators around the Firth of Forth and the mighty fleets there assembled. There was no detailed list of passengers, but if there had been it would have shown a wide variety of characters: officers from both the army and navy, wearing their uniforms and also the triumphant smile of victors; older gentlemen and ladies, feelings of vengeance and sorrow over lost ones precluding celebrations; teenagers overawed with the sensations and slumbering disappointment that this great adventure was over before they could have made their mark on it. And Furstner of course. All upper-class, as Alcorn was both a Presbyterian and a businessman.

As the Britannia pulled up the gangplanks and cast off from it’s place on the quay, Furstner positioned himself on the rail near the prow of the ships, on starboard side. This way he made sure that he would have clear vision on both sides of the ship. The Dutch officer had hoped that Britannia would have been able to witness the meeting of Allied and German fleets, at the mouth of the Firth of Forth near May Island. Unfortunately this was out of the question. The Royal Navy considered the surrender a military operation, and the vicinity of May Island something like an active warzone, banning all non-naval shipping. It was at Inchkeith, an island in the centre of the Firth, that Furstner and his fellow passengers would meet the Hochseeflotte and its jailors.

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There! Through the light fog one could see the pride of the Royal Navy. The immensely powerful battleship HMS Queen Elizabeth to starboard, the light cruisers Pheaton and Cardiff (the last one towing an observation balloon of all things) to port, the battlecruisers led by HMS Lion, countless of other heavier and lighter units. For Johan Furstner (who had little trouble recognizing the ships, from the identification book he had practically memorized) it was like he was back to being ten years old and in a Jamin-shop [4]. Nearing Inchkeith, it became clear that the German fleet was corralled – in lack of a better word – at an anchorage in the form of a square. After having feasted on the Royal Navy, it was now the turn for the Kaiserliche Marine to be unabashedly ogled upon by the Dutchman. His eyes were immediately upon the Bayern, one of the newest battleships in the world even, clearly distinguishable because of her two funnels, being placed closed together. What a sight to see! Especially with the SMS Seydlitz next to her, a powerful battlecruiser that had had a very distinguished service during the war, fighting in at least four major engagements. As the first bouts of excitement subsided, Furstners mind turned away from these capital ships and to the ships of his own navy. In de Oost he had served on the Hr. Ms. De Zeven Provinciën. The most powerful Dutch vessel, named after the flagship of the famous admiral Michiel de Ruyter. Furstner had been proud to serve on the Zeven Provinciën but he knew that he could never be proud to serve on such a ship again. Compared to what he saw here in the Firth of Forth, the ships of the Koninklijke Marine were too under-gunned, under-armoured, understrength and, as far as he was concerned, too unbecoming. Not like the Seydlitz and the Bayern! If only Dutch government would build such ships for him to command! These kind ships would be able to defend the Dutch East Indies from the Japanese foe, these kind ships were worthy the Dutch history, these kind ships were….!

‘Useless.’ It was this word that pulled the young Dutch officer from his dream. Until that moment he hadn’t noticed the two men who stood to his right. They both wore the uniform of Royal Navy officers and clearly had an animated conversation with each other.

‘I’m telling you Jimmy, these vessels might look impressive, but they have been nothing but useless to the Germans.’

‘How the hell did you figure that? We have been fighting them for the past three years. Both of us have shed blood fighting them.’ Jimmy was obviously as rattled by the words of his companion as Furstner was.

‘Look old fellow, I’m not saying we fought for nothing. I’m also not saying we bled for nothing or our comrades died for nothing. I’m saying that these ships were useless to the Germans. The Kaiser invested millions of Marks in these ships, and what did he get in return for it?’

‘You and I both know that Jutland could have turned a whole lot worse than it did.’

‘Yes it could. But even if the Huns could have bloodied our nose, we would still have our fists ready to hammer them if they tried to get out. This is the faith of smaller navies. If you are outnumbered by this much you have two options: go out and fight and go down in a blaze of glory, or stay in and wait until the war is over. In both cases those ships are useless. Not that I’m complaining, imagine what the Kaiser could have done with all that money! He could have built hundreds more railguns, he could have built thousands of airplanes and zeppelins, hell he could have built a couple of hundred more submarines!’

As his gaze returned to the naval spectacle in front of him, for Johan Furstner this was the end of a dream for sure. Even if – and he knew how big, or better said, how small of an if that was – the Rambonnet-plan of 1914 would be followed, the Koninklijke Marine would only have five battleships. Once that had seen to him as more than excellent. Now he realized that those five battleships would have to fight more than double their numbers. Glorious, yes, but doomed.

Verdomme!’ The expletive was out before he knew it. The naval officers he had been listening to were to engrossed in their conversation to notice. This was very much so not the case for the two stokers (who had come up for a smoke and the sights) to his left though.

‘Verdomme? Verdammt? Did he say verdammt? I reckon he did mate! We got a bloody HUN over here!’

Verdomme indeed.​



1: Luitenant-Commander
2: Royal Netherlands Navy, KM
3: OTL The 629grt Britannia was built in 1918 by Smith’s Dock Co. at South Bank as the patrol frigate Killiney. She was rebuilt as the cargo ship Thropton for Joplin & Hull Shipping Co. in 1920. She joined the Leith, Hull & Hamburg SP Co. as Britannia in 1924. In 1960 she was sold to Biagio Mancino and renamed Angelina Mancino. She was broken up at Baia in 1976.
4: Jamin is a Dutch candy company founded in the 19th century and had over 100 shops at this point in history.



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And so, after decades of lurking, begins my first ATL!

I have always been interested in history and as a young Dutch boy there were two periods that piqued my interest especially: the Dutch Golden Age and the Second World War. The first was naturally the period where the Netherlands was at its top regards to military and economic power. The last was the great war which still can be seen in the streets of Amsterdam and even with witnesses to that war still alive.

Reading about the Golden Age I was fascinated by the exploits of the Dutch Navy who, led by the likes of DeRuyter, Tromp and van Galen, ruled the seas. Reading about the Second World War it always struck me that the Koninklijke Marine hardly seemed up to the task of defending the Dutch East Indies, doomed to fight a gallant but futile last stand, the fleet-commander going to down the ship. The history books I read at that age all lamented that this was all the fault of weak interbellum governments choosing to cut the defense-budgets time and time again. If only the Royal Netherlands Navy had had battleships, everything could have been different.

It was not until I was doing more in-depth reading for a response on @Astrodragons excellent timeline ‘The Whale has Wings’ that my view on the matter changed. I stumbled on J. Anten’s fantastic dissertation ‘Navalisme nekt onderzeeboot (Navalism kills submarine). In it Anten shows that for the larger part of the Interbellum the Netherlands wasn’t planning on fighting of a Japanese invasion with the light cruisers of OTL’s ABDACOM but with a fleet based primarily on submarines. For that purpose the Royal Netherlands Navy (RNN) build a relatively large force of submarines, with equipment and doctrine to support concerted, wolfpack-like, attacks on a hypothetical Japanese invasion-fleet. And yet, instead of a wolfpack attacking the two Japanese invasion fleets in 1942 we get the Combined Striking Force charging like the Light Brigade through the Java Sea. What happened?

After reading ‘Navalisme nekt onderzeeboot’ I began planning this TL. Thing is, it turned out to be a bit more complicated as Anten made it look. In his book he points at Furstner as the sole culprit, something which is false. Not only were there more factors in play within the RNN, there are also the circumstances of the Second World War which led to submarines playing a secondary role in the East Indies campaign.

What I want to explore in this alternative history, is what would have happened if the Royal Netherlands Navy had stuck to its submarine doctrine and used that to combat the IJN. Simply handwaving that feels wrong though, so we have to change history in such a way that this happens in 1942. Basically the TL will be somewhat of a alternative history challenge (AHC), meaning that sometimes the road taken is not because it’s more likely, but because it is necessary to get meet our challenge. That is not to say that I’m planning on making this anything like a wank though, so please hold me to that!

The format of the TL will mainly be history book-like, as it took me the better part of a year to write the first part in prose!

I very much welcome every comment. Especially because this is my first TL and English is not my first-language. So please give me all your feedback, nitpicks and grammar tips. They are very much appreciated!
 
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I'm interested. I think @Parma also made a TL with the premise of the dutch sticking to their doctrine, but it seems you plan the POD before the war, while I think he had it during the war

4: Jamin was Dutch candy company founded in the 19th century and had over 100 shops at this point in history.
They still do.
 
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I'm interested. I think @Parma also made a TL with the premise of the dutch sticking to their doctrine, but it seems you plan the POD before the war, while I think he had it during the war

They still do.
yes I did, I made a revise, didn't like somevparts, but got kicked
 
very nice start, love the POD, " the epiphany of Furstner"

waiting for updates :)
 
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J. Anten book was a relevation for me as well, and gave anwser on my question why the RNN had relative large number of submarines...
 

Sekhmet_D

Kicked
Given how vulnerable the Japanese were to submarine warfare, an improved RNN has the potential to utterly upset the apple cart for them during the early stages of the Pacific War. The Indies might hold yet. Watched.
 
I'm interested. I think @Parma also made a TL with the premise of the dutch sticking to their doctrine, but it seems you plan the POD before the war, while I think he had it during the war

They still do.
Thanks for your response and interest! Parma certainly did a TL some time ago. The first part of this TL will be a puzzle to actually get the KM (in the position) to execute the submarine tactics of late 1920s, with a lot of interesting pieces of the puzzle in my opinion! :)
very nice start, love the POD, " the epiphany of Furstner"

waiting for updates :)
Thanks for the kind words! There will be a second small PoD in the next update and then that will have to change Furstner enough to set things in motion!

Given how vulnerable the Japanese were to submarine warfare, an improved RNN has the potential to utterly upset the apple cart for them during the early stages of the Pacific War. The Indies might hold yet. Watched.
It will be quite some time until we get there but the early stages of the Pacific War will certainly be different from OTL. If that will be enough for the Indies to hold in the long run...we will have to find out!
 
I'm liking this! I've suggested in other threads that the RNN could have purchased one of the surplus RN battlecruisers post WWI, but that was always going to be pushing the bounds in terms of funding, manning and utility. This looks as if it could lead to a more affordable and sustainable outcome, with interesting butterflies for the NEI.
 
I'm liking this! I've suggested in other threads that the RNN could have purchased one of the surplus RN battlecruisers post WWI, but that was always going to be pushing the bounds in terms of funding, manning and utility. This looks as if it could lead to a more affordable and sustainable outcome, with interesting butterflies for the NEI.
In fact, when the Netherlands was conquered by Nazi-Germany the Dutch government had just before decided to order three battlecruisers, designed by that same Germany by the way. So totally out of the realm of possibilities they aren't, at least in the 1940s. Please don't mention this to the actors in this timeline though, Furstner will have a tough enough job as it is ;)
Very interested in the topic, and thought the opening post was written beautifully.
Thank you! Much appreciated :)
 
Chapter 2: Sumus et for speramus: we are and hope to be
Sumus et for speramus: we are and hope to be [1]

1280px-Den_Helder%2C_KIM%2C_175-01-01_%28J_David%29.jpg

Main building of the KIM at Willemsoord, with ‘Van Speijk’ flagpole (Jules David, 1894)

'Since its inception in 1829, the Koninklijk Instituut voor de Marine (KIM) has been the sole institute for the education of naval officers. It’s first location was at the West-Frisian city of Medemblik. The unhealthy climate of this region lead to a high rate of sickness among staff and pupils which lead to the decision to close the institute and merge it with the Koninklijke Militaire Academie [2] (KMA) in Breda. This situation was much to the chagrin of the Koninklijke Marine, not in the least place because the city of Breda is as landlocked as can be in the Netherlands. Because of this and other reason, the education of naval officers would soon be done independently and in a much more inspiring location: Willemsoord, the government wharf in Den Helder, epicenter of Royal Netherlands Navy in Europe. From 1870 on, the KIM has been permanently housed in its current building. '

Heinz Wunderlich (1967), From boys to officers: Educational institutes of Navies around the World

~~~~~~~~~~~~

25th August 1919

As Furstner walked into the library of the KIM, he couldn’t help himself but smile. He had always been more inclined towards the first part of the institutes adage ‘knowledge is power, character is more’. To the young officer knowledge had always been a way to rise above his peers and be heard by those who were older or more experienced than himself. Where others in his class had despised the stuffy library and, if pressed, would only study the books that were in the curriculum, Furstner had made a point out of reading the newest books on technology and naval or military theory. It was a strategy that had helped him immensely, this was the 20th century after all, either one rode the tiger of progress, or got devoured by it!

At the librarians desk, he cleared his throat to signal his arrival. On the clerks face a sequence of emotions. First there was irritation for he had been enthralled in his work, checking the due date of several loaned out books. Then there was recognition as he saw the familiar face of a commissioned officer and certainly not a lowly midshipman. This was concluded by slight horror. Which was the moment when Johan Furstner – somewhat – benignantly asked the clerk if he would be so kind and get his reservation.

‘G-Goodmorning Luitenant Commander Furstner. Your order sir?’ The clerk asked after the formal round of salutes.

‘Yes yes, my order. I reserved the only copy of Von Tirpitz memoires Erinnerungen. So where is it?’

‘Von Tirpitz….yes…of course…well I’m afraid there is a problem with that sir.’

The icy reply ‘I better hope not kwartiermeester [3]. I am spending the next two weeks on holidays with my wife and her family. This in itself is not a problem. I love my wife. I think she is the most beautiful creature in the world. And smart, you know she is a doctor?” And without waiting for a reply “So I am very happy to spend two weeks with her. What would make me very unhappy is if I can’t spend at least part of those two weeks to prepare for the classes of the Hogere Krijgsschool [4] and especially unhappy if I can’t do that because a book I specially reserved in advance isn’t there for me to pick up if I travel all the way from Amsterdam.’

By the end of this monologue the blood in the corporals veins was as cold as the tone in Furstners voice.

‘I am terribly sorry commander Furstner sir, one of my colleagues at the library loaned Erinnerungen out to adelborst Tulp [5] sir.’

‘And where is this midshipman corporal?’

‘Eh, aboard Hr. Ms. Zeeland sir.’

‘And where is the Zeeland berthed corporal.’

‘Bergen sir.’

‘Bergen?’ Furstner brought his hand to his brow out of sheer exhaustion from the conversation. ‘That would not be Bergen, Noord-Holland would it?’

‘Eh no sir, I’m sorry. Bergen, Norway.’

Maybe it was the summer weather, maybe it was nostalgia, but uncharacteristically, Furstner didn’t explode in anger.

‘All right corporal. What do you have that might interest me?’

‘Well, we got a copy of this book just this morning sir.’

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U-39 Auf Jagd im Mittelmeer [6], Walter Forstmann, 1918

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DutchEnglish
Adelborstenlied

Waar De Ruyter eens moest sneven
Waar een Tromp zijn roem behield
Staan wij aan ’t begin van t leven
Maar met hoop en moed bezield
Wordt nog eens in later dagen
Neêrlands vlag ten strijd ontplooid
Stervend zullen wij haar schragen
Stervend zullen wij haar schragen
Maar die vlag verlaten, nooit
Maar die vlag verlaten, nooit

Slaat de luipaard eens zijn klauwen
Naar het vrije Neêrland uit
Mocht de adelaar ’t beschouwen
Als gemakkelijke buit
Tromp, De Ruyter zal herleven
In ’t vrije Nederland
‘t Voorbeeld door Van Speijk gegeven
‘t Voorbeeld door Van Speijk gegeven
Volgen wij met hart en hand
Volgen wij met hart en hand

Ja, wij slaan het oog naar boven
Waar zij wappert dag aan dag
En wij zweren, wij beloven
Eeuw'ge trouw aan Neêrlands vlag
Wordt nog eens in later dagen
’t Rood wit blauw ten strijd ontplooid
Stervend zullen wij het schragen
Stervend zullen wij het schragen
Die gelofte schenden, nooit
Die gelofte schenden, nooit
Midshipmans song

Where De Ruyter[7] once fell
Where a Tromp[8] kept his fame
We stand at the beginning op live
But full of hope and courage
If once more in later days
The Nederlands flag is unfolded for battle
Dying we will scaffold her
Dying we will scaffold her
But leave that flag, never
But leave that flag, never

If the leopard extends his claws
Towards the free Netherlands
If the eagle sees it
As an easy catch
Tromp, De Ruyter will be reborn
In the free Netherlands
The example given by Van Speijk[9]
The example given by van Speijk
We will follow with heart and hand
We will follow with heart and hand

Yes, we look upwards
Where she flutters every day
And we swear and we promise
Eternal loyalty to Netherlands Flag
If once more in later days
The Red White Blue unfurled for battle
Dying we will scaffold it
Dying we will scaffold it
Violate that promise, never
Violate that promise, never!
Song of the Corps of Midshipmen

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'In the aftermath of the tragedy that was the First World War, many in the German political and military leadership felt the understandable need to put their experiences to the pen and explain their role in the German defeat. The scale of the defeat and the short distance in time made it obviously difficult for the writers of these histories to be objective. There were certainly some that were indeed able to be so, Alfred von Tirpitz was certainly not one of them. For this Grossadmiral and - in essence - politician, his Erinnerungen (published in English as My Memories) was a way to defend his actions and opinions, instead of clear and objective analysis. In The American Historical Review, Christian Grauss called ‘[h]is work […] an astonishing mix of arrogance and childish petulance.’ [10] The omissions in the published correspondence are obviously aimed at painting the best picture of the architect of the Hochseeflotte. In that sense Grauss is right to dismiss Tirpitz’s memoires. More should not be expected from the reviewer as he was no military historian, let alone an expert on naval theory. Grauss was in fact a literary critic and can thus not be blamed from overlooking the fact that Tirpitz not only defended his actions but also his risk-theory. With profound consequences.

The Tirpitz Plan entailed a gigantic German naval building plan to create a fleet of battleships that would be so large, that defeating it in a defensive battle would damage the Royal Navy to such an extend that it would lose its supreme position on the seas of the world and thus its empire. The Britons wouldn’t allow that and come to terms with Germany instead. Through the use of nationalist agitation, and the far-reaching powers of the German emperor, by 1914 the Kaiserliche Marine was the second-largest naval force in the world, approximately 40% smaller than the Royal Navy. Millions and millions of goldmark had been thrown in an arms race with Great Britain, only for it to end in dismal failure. There were several problems with the Tirpitz Plan: a) it didn’t account for the fact that British diplomacy could and would (through the 1902 alliance with Japan and the Entente with France) be able to diminish it’s naval obligations outside the North Sea; b) the British industrial and financial potential to win the arms race outright and c) the geographical reality of the North Sea meant that the Royal Navy did not have to start an offensive towards the German coast (as Tirpitz expected) but could ‘close’ the German trade routes the Channel and what was later dubbed the GIUK Gap. In fact, it was Germany that was forced to an offensive to open those trade routes.

Militarily and diplomatically the Tirpitz plan was a disaster for Germany and a good case can be made that it indirectly caused Germany to loose the Great War. Where the German army was strictly analyzing it’s actions during the war, in an attempt to solve any shortcomings, the Navy does – under influence of Von Tirpitz and his Erinnerung – does not. It’s official position was that the Tirpitz Plan and it’s risk-theory were sound, but sabotaged by the civilian government which refused to allow a decisive battle. It is nothing short of impressive that Von Tirpitz was able to actually redeem this risk-theory in the eyes of not only the German navy but even abroad, as publications in the Dutch navy’s Marineblad show. The German-American naval historian Herbert Rosinski shows that this failure to truly analyze, precluded any real understanding of seapower within the German Navy. This caused the German naval policy of the Interbellum to be build on wrong and confused assumptions, just as it's predecessor. The result was the fundamentally unsound theory of 'anarchy at sea', which we will further discuss in the next chapter.'

Bernard Henderson (1992), Ruling the Waves: Navalism in the Interbellum.

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Notes:
1: Motto of the Koninklijk Instituut voor de Marine (Royal Institute for the Navy)
2: Royal Military Academy
3: Corporal
4: Higher War College. Tertiary education for staff officers.
5. Midshipman, couldn’t help to insert myself as somewhat of an alien space bat 😉
6: U-39, Hunting in the Mediterranean. Commanding U-39 Forstmann sank five steamers (over 20,000 GRT) in two days in the Strait of Gibraltar and is the second highest scoring submarine commander in history.
7: Michiel Adrianszn De Ruyter is the greatest admiral in Dutch history, commanding the Dutch navy during the First and Second Anglo-Dutch Wars (during which he commanded the Raid on Chatham) and the Franco-Dutch War (during which he practically saved the Republic and would ultimately fall in battle).
8: Maarten Tromp was the commander of the Dutch navy at the end of the 80-years War (during which he destroyed the Second Spanish Armada in the battle of Downs) and the First Anglo-Dutch War (in which he was killed). His son Cornelis Tromp is also a (lesser) famous admiral who would be an adversary of De Ruyter.
9: Jan van Speijk (or Speyk) was a Dutch orphan turned naval officer. After serving in the Dutch East Indies for a few years he became the commander of gunboat No. 2, tasked with the blockade of the rebellious city of Antwerp. A strong north-western wind and a badly functioning anchor pushed his ship to the hostile shore. As rebels stormed his ship Van Speijk blew up the ship, with himself, his crew and a few Belgians, on it.
10: As OTL
 
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While looking in the Dutch Defense Academy image bank, I came across this picture of the midshipman football team in 1903:

72537d17-1a38-17be-fa86-2bf49f447e61.jpg


Player at the bottom center might be our protagonist, though I admit that this could very well be idle hope!

Johan_Furstner_%281941-45%29.jpg

Johan Furstner 40 years later.
 
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Fatboy Coxy

Monthly Donor
Hi HJ Tulp, loving it!, the photos really add to the storyline, and I so regret not providing a set of notes at the end of each post in my TL, it really helps the reader understand things better. Looking forward to reading more!
 
Hi HJ Tulp, loving it!, the photos really add to the storyline, and I so regret not providing a set of notes at the end of each post in my TL, it really helps the reader understand things better. Looking forward to reading more!
Thanks for the support Coxy! For me the choice is between using the occasional Dutch terms and using notes, or always using the English terms. I hope the Dutch terms help to give a bit more immersion.
This a very interesting premise. The RNN with decent submarines and doctrine to use them with torpedoes that worked.
And all those things were as OTL! Except that the doctrine was abolished a short time before the war started.
 
Sorry for the total lack of updates! The board of my school has decided that they want to close us, so my sparse free time has been spend trying to stop that from happening. The good news is that if I fail to do that, I will have loads and loads and loads of spare time for writing after the end of this schoolyear ;)
 
Sorry for the total lack of updates! The board of my school has decided that they want to close us, so my sparse free time has been spend trying to stop that from happening. The good news is that if I fail to do that, I will have loads and loads and loads of spare time for writing after the end of this schoolyear ;)
Now I'm torn between hoping you get loads of free time and hoping the school doesn't close. But in the end, the second option wins.
 
Sorry for the total lack of updates! The board of my school has decided that they want to close us, so my sparse free time has been spend trying to stop that from happening. The good news is that if I fail to do that, I will have loads and loads and loads of spare time for writing after the end of this schoolyear ;)
That is bad news for you. I wish you all the best and that your school remains open ....
 
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