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INDEX
- Cruisers, number of British, 12 et seq.; number of German, 15 et seq.
- Defending force (British), strength of, 64, 65
- Destroyers, number of British, 12 et seq.; number of German, 15 et seq.; use of, in repelling invasion, 143
- Dewar, Lieutenant A. C.,R.N., on boats required for landing forces, 104 n.; on landingplace for invading force, 114–6
- Displacement of British and German Fleets in North Sea compared, 20
- Dockyards (for Dreadnought class) of Great Britain and Germany compared, 23
- Embarkation, operation discussed, 107–11
- England, invasion scare, 35–59; presumable conditions under which invasion will be undertaken, 60. See also Great Britain
- English Channel, statistics of British Fleet in, 14, 16, 62
- Fleet, British, strength and disposition in European waters, 10–34; in Mediterranean Sea, 12; in Atlantic Ocean (Irish waters), 13, 16, 62; in English Channel, 14, 16, 62; in North Sea, 14, 16; displacement and average tonnage of, in North Sea, 20; broadside fire of, in North Sea, 21; its object, 141. See also Navy, British
- Fleet, German, strength and disposition in European waters, 10–34; in Baltic Sea, 15, 17, 62; in North Sea, 15, 17, 62; displacement and average tonnage of, in North Sea, 20; broadside fire of, in North Sea, 21. See also Navy, German.
- Fogs in North Sea, 120
- Furse, Colonel G. A., C.B., on tonnage allowance for sea-transport of troops, 88, 90; on sufferings of horses at sea, 102 n.; on fresh-water supply, 108 'n.