SMS Dresden (1917)

SMS Dresden in Scapa Flow
History
German Empire
NameDresden
NamesakeDresden
BuilderBlohm und Voss
Laid down1916
Launched25 April 1917
Commissioned28 March 1918
FateScuttled in Scapa Flow in 1919
NotesWreck remains in Scapa Flow
General characteristics
Class and typeCöln-class light cruiser
Displacement
Length155.5 m (510 ft)
Beam14.2 m (47 ft)
Draft6.01 m (19.7 ft)
Installed power
Propulsion
Speed27.5 knots (50.9 km/h; 31.6 mph)
Range5,400 nmi (10,000 km; 6,200 mi) at 12 kn (22 km/h; 14 mph)
Complement
  • 17 officers
  • 542 enlisted men
Armament
Armor

SMS Dresden was the second and final ship of the Cöln class of light cruisers to be completed and commissioned in the Kaiserliche Marine (Imperial Navy). The ship was laid down in 1916 and launched on 25 April 1917; she was commissioned into the High Seas Fleet on 28 March 1918. She and her sister Cöln were the only two of her class to be completed; eight of her sisters were scrapped before they could be completed. The ships were an incremental improvement over the preceding Königsberg-class cruisers.

Dresden was commissioned into service with the High Seas Fleet eight months before the end of World War I; as a result, her service career was limited and she did not see action. She participated in a fleet operation to Norway to attack British convoys to Scandinavia, but they failed to locate any convoys and returned to port. Dresden was to have participated in a climactic sortie in the final days of the war, but a revolt in the fleet forced Admirals Reinhard Scheer and Franz von Hipper to cancel the operation. The ship was interned in Scapa Flow after the end of the war and scuttled with the fleet there on 21 June 1919, under orders from the fleet commander Rear Admiral Ludwig von Reuter.