The
action was over for the day.
The result had been the apparent silencing of several Turkish batteries,
and those terrific explosions at the forts at Chanak and Kilid Bahr, the
ultimate effect of which remains to be seen when the attack is renewed
tonight. For Chanak is burning.
Official Story of Two Sea Fights
[From The London Times, March 3, 1915.]
_Admiralty, March 3, 1915._
_The following dispatch has been received from Vice Admiral Sir David
Beatty, K.C.B., M.V.O., D.S.O., commanding the First Battle Cruiser
Squadron, reporting the action in the North Sea on Sunday, the 24th of
January, 1915:_
H.M.S. Princess Royal,
Feb. 2, 1915.
Sir: I have the honor to report that at daybreak on Jan. 24, 1915, the
following vessels were patrolling in company:
The battle cruisers Lion, Capt. Alfred E.M. Chatfield, C.V.O., flying my
flag; Princess Royal, Capt. Osmond de B. Brock, Aide de Camp; Tiger,
Capt. Henry B. Pelly, M.V.O.; New Zealand, Capt. Lionel Halsey, C.M.G.,
Aide de Camp, flying the flag of Rear Admiral Sir Archibald Moore,
K.C.B., C.V.O., and Indomitable, Capt. Francis W. Kennedy.
The light cruisers Southampton, flying the broad pennant of Commodore
William E.
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