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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Albert Ballin, by Bernhard Huldermann
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-Title: Albert Ballin
-
-Author: Bernhard Huldermann
-
-Translator: Wilhelm Johann Eggers
-
-Release Date: November 8, 2013 [EBook #44135]
-
-Language: English
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ALBERT BALLIN ***
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44135 ***
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Albert Ballin, by Bernhard Huldermann
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Albert Ballin
-
-Author: Bernhard Huldermann
-
-Translator: Wilhelm Johann Eggers
-
-Release Date: November 8, 2013 [EBook #44135]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ALBERT BALLIN ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Albert Ballin]
-
-
-
-
- ALBERT BALLIN
-
- By
- Bernhard Huldermann
-
- _Translated from the German
- by
- W. J. EGGERS, M.A. (London)_
-
- [Illustration: decoration]
-
- Cassell and Company, Limited
- London, New York, Toronto and Melbourne
- 1922
-
- To the Memory of
- ALBERT BALLIN
- in true veneration and heartfelt gratitude
-
- "_He was a man; take him for all in all,
- I shall not look upon his like again._"
-
- SHAKESPEARE, _Hamlet_ (_Act I, Scene 2_).
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-My principal reason for publishing the information contained in this
-volume is to keep alive the memory of Albert Ballin. I particularly
-desire to show what was his share in bringing about the economic advance
-of Germany during the golden age of the Empire's modern history, and to
-relate how he--unsuccessfully, alas!--strove to prevent the proud
-structure which he had helped to raise, from falling to ruin in the time
-of his country's distress. I believe that much that concerns the latter
-aspect of his work will be new to most readers. In spite of all that has
-been said and written concerning the political activities which Ballin
-displayed (and is alleged to have displayed) both before and during the
-war, their object--and, more important still, their intimate connexion
-with his economic activities--is scarcely known. Eminently successful
-though Ballin had been in creating an atmosphere of mutual understanding
-between the various nations in the economic sphere, his attempts to
-reconcile the contending ambitions of those same nations where politics
-were concerned ended in failure. And yet it is impossible to understand
-his failure in one respect without first understanding his success in
-the other; indeed, the connexion between the two sides of his work forms
-the key to the character of the man and to the historical significance
-of his achievements.
-
-It is possible that this volume may shed some new light on the causes of
-Germany's collapse; this idea, at any rate, was before my mind when I
-decided upon publication. Frederick the Great somewhere remarked that,
-to the great loss of mankind, the experiences gained by one generation
-are always useless to the next, and that each generation is fated to
-make its own mistakes. If this is true, it is nevertheless to be hoped
-that Germany, considering the magnitude of the disaster that has
-overtaken her, will not allow the spirit of resignation implied by this
-remark to determine her actions in the present case.
-
-In thus submitting to the public the information contained in this book,
-I am carrying out the behest of the deceased, who asked me to collect
-his papers, and to make whatever use I thought fit of them. Moreover,
-the fact that I had the privilege of being his collaborator for more
-than ten years gives me perhaps a special right to undertake this task.
-
-My best thanks are due to Director A. Storm for supplying me with
-material illustrative of Ballin's early career; to Chief Inspector Emil
-F. Kirchheim for assistance with the technical details, and to Professor
-Francke, who was on intimate terms of friendship with Ballin during a
-number of years, for information concerning many matters relative to
-Ballin's personal character.
-
-My constant endeavour has been to describe persons and events _sine ira
-et studio_, and to refrain from stating as a fact anything for which no
-documentary evidence is available.
-
-THE AUTHOR.
-
-_October, 1921._
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
-CHAPTER PAGE
-
-1. MORRIS AND CO. 1
-
-2. GENERAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE CARR LINE 12
-
-3. HEAD OF THE PACKETFAHRT'S PASSENGER DEPARTMENT 21
-
-4. THE POOL 28
-
-5. THE MORGAN TRUST 40
-
-6. THE EXPANSION OF THE HAMBURG-AMERIKA LINIE 69
-
-7. THE TECHNICAL REORGANIZATION OF THE HAMBURG-AMERIKA LINIE 121
-
-8. POLITICS 131
-
-9. THE KAISER 193
-
-10. THE WAR 213
-
-11. PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS 287
-
-EXTRACT ANNOTATED BY WILLIAM II 316
-
-INDEX 317
-
-
-
-
-ALBERT BALLIN
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-MORRIS AND CO.
-
-
-Albert Ballin was a native of Hamburg. Before the large modern harbour
-basins of the city were built, practically all the vessels which
-frequented the port of Hamburg took up their berths along the northern
-shore of the Elbe close to the western part of the town. A long road,
-flanked on one side by houses of ancient architecture, extended--and
-still extends--parallel to this predecessor of the modern harbour.
-During its length the road goes under different names, and the house in
-which Ballin was born and brought up stood in that portion known as
-Steinhöft.
-
-A seaport growing in importance from year to year is always a scene of
-busy life, and the early days which the boy Ballin spent in his father's
-house and its interesting surroundings near the river's edge left an
-indelible impression on his plastic mind.
-
-Those were the times when the private residence and the business
-premises of the merchant and of the shipping man were still under the
-same roof; when a short walk of a few minutes enabled the shipowner to
-reach his vessel, and when the relations between him and the captain
-were still dominated by that feeling of personal friendship and personal
-trust the disappearance of which no man has ever more regretted than
-Albert Ballin. Throughout his life he never failed to look upon as
-ideal that era when every detail referring to the ship and to her
-management was still a matter of personal concern to her owner. He
-traced all his later successes back to the stimulating influence of
-those times; and if it is remembered how enormous was then the capacity
-for work, and how great the love of it for its own sake, it must be
-admitted that this estimate was no exaggeration. True, it is beyond
-doubt that the everyday surroundings in which his boyhood was spent, and
-the impressions gained from them, powerfully influenced his imagination
-both as boy and growing youth. It may, however, also be regarded as
-certain that the element of heredity was largely instrumental in
-moulding his character.
-
-Ballin belonged to an old Jewish family, members of which--as is proved
-by ancient tombstones and other evidence--lived at Frankfort-on-Main
-centuries ago. Later on we find traces of them in Paris, and still later
-in Central and North Germany, and in Denmark. Documents dating from the
-seventeenth century show that the Ballins at that time were already
-among the well-to-do and respected families of Hamburg and Altona. Some
-of the earliest members of the family that can be traced were
-distinguished for their learning and for the high reputation they
-enjoyed among their co-religionists; others, in later times, were
-remarkable for their artistic gifts which secured for them the favour of
-several Kings of France. Those branches of the family which had settled
-in Germany and Denmark were prominent again for their learning and also
-for their business-like qualities. The intelligence and the artistic
-imagination which characterized Albert Ballin may be said to be due to
-hereditary influences. His versatile mind, the infallible discernment he
-exercised in dealing with his fellow-men, his artistic tastes, and his
-high appreciation of what was beautiful--all these are qualities which
-may furnish the key to his successes as a man of business. His sense of
-beauty especially made him extremely fastidious in all that concerned
-his personal surroundings, and was reflected in the children of his
-imagination, the large and beautifully appointed passenger steamers.
-
-Ballin always disliked publicity. When the Literary Bureau of his
-Company requested him to supply some personal information concerning
-himself, he bluntly refused to do so. Hence there are but few
-publications available dealing with his life and work which may claim to
-be called authentic. Nevertheless--or perhaps for that very
-reason--quite a number of legends have sprung up regarding his early
-years. It is related, for instance, that he received a sound business
-training first in his father's business and later during his stay in
-England. The actual facts are anything but romantic. Being the youngest
-of seven brothers and sisters, he was treated with especial tenderness
-and affection by his mother, so much so, in fact, that he grew up rather
-a delicate boy and was subject to all sorts of maladies and
-constitutional weaknesses. He was educated, as was usual at that time,
-at one of the private day-schools of his native city. In those days,
-when Hamburg did not yet possess a university of her own, and when the
-facilities which she provided for the intellectual needs of her citizens
-were deplorably inadequate for the purpose, visitors from the other
-parts of Germany could never understand why that section of the
-population which appreciated the value of a complete course of higher
-education--especially an education grounded on a classical
-foundation--was so extremely small. The average Hamburg business man
-certainly did not belong to that small section; and the result was that
-a number of private schools sprang up which qualified their pupils for
-the examination entitling them to one year's--instead of three
-years'--military service, and provided them with a general education
-which--without any reflection on their principals--it can only be said
-would not bear comparison with that, for instance, which was looked upon
-as essential by the members of the higher grades of the Prussian Civil
-Service. Fortunately, the last few decades have brought about a great
-improvement in this respect, just as they have revolutionized the
-average citizen's appreciation of intellectual culture and refinement.
-
-Albert Ballin did not stand out prominently for his achievements at
-school, and he did not shine through his industry and application to his
-studies. In later life he successfully made up for the deficiencies of
-his school education by taking private lessons, especially in practical
-mathematics and English, in which language he was able to converse with
-remarkable fluency. His favourite pastime in his early years was music,
-and his performances on the 'cello, for instance, are said to have been
-quite excellent. None of his friends during his later years can furnish
-authoritative evidence on this point, as at that time he no longer had
-the leisure to devote himself to this hobby. Apart from music, he was a
-great lover of literature, especially of books on _belles lettres_,
-history, and politics. Thanks to his prodigious memory, he thus was able
-to accumulate vast stores of knowledge. During his extended travels on
-the business of his Company he gained a first-hand knowledge of foreign
-countries, and thus learned to understand the essential characteristics
-of foreign peoples as well as their customs and manners, which a mere
-study of books would never have given him. So he became indeed a man of
-true culture and refinement. He excelled as a speaker and as a writer;
-although when he occasionally helped his adopted daughter with her
-German composition, his work did not always meet with the approval of
-the teacher, and was once even returned with the remark, "newspaper
-German."
-
-In 1874, at the age of seventeen, Ballin lost his father. The business,
-which was carried on under the firm of Morris and Co., was an Emigration
-Agency, and its work consisted in booking emigrants for the
-transatlantic steamship lines on a commission basis. Office premises and
-dwelling accommodation were both--as already indicated--located in the
-same building, so that a sharp distinction between business matters and
-household affairs was often quite impossible, and the children acquired
-practical knowledge of everything connected with the business at an
-early age. This was especially so in the case of young Albert, who loved
-to do his home lessons in the office rooms. History does not divulge
-whether he did so because he was interested in the affairs of the
-office, or whether he obtained there some valuable assistance. The whole
-primitiveness of those days is illustrated by the following episode
-which Ballin once related to us in his own humorous way. The family
-possessed--a rare thing in our modern days--a treasure of a servant who,
-apart from doing all the hard work, was the good genius of the home, and
-who had grown old as the children grew up. "Augusta" had not yet read
-the modern books and pamphlets on women's rights, and she was content to
-go out once a year, when she spent the day with her people at Barmbeck,
-a suburb of Hamburg. One day, when the young head of Morris and Co. was
-discussing some important business matters with some friends in his
-private office, the door was suddenly thrust open, and the "treasure"
-appeared on the scene and said: "Adjüs ook Albert, ick gah hüt ut!"
-("Good-bye, Albert, I am going out to-day!") It was the occasion of her
-annual holiday.
-
-The firm of Morris and Co., of which Ballin's father had been one of the
-original founders in 1852, had never been particularly successful up to
-the time of his death. Albert, the youngest son, who was born on August
-15th, 1857, joined the business when his father died. He had then just
-finished his studies at school. The one partner who had remained a
-member of the firm after Ballin's death left in 1877, and in 1879 Albert
-Ballin became a partner himself. The task of providing for his widowed
-mother and such of his brothers and sisters as were still dependent on
-his help then devolved on him, and he succeeded in doing this in a very
-short time. He applied himself to his work with the greatest diligence,
-and he became a shining example to the few assistants employed by the
-firm. On the days of the departure of the steamers the work of the
-office lasted until far into the night, as was usually the case in
-Hamburg in former years. An incident which took place in those early
-days proves that the work carried on by Morris and Co. met with the
-approval of their employers. One day the head of one of the foreign
-lines for which the firm was doing business paid a personal visit to
-Hamburg to see what his agents were doing. On entering the office young
-Albert received him. He said he wanted to see Mr. Ballin, and when the
-youthful owner replied that he was Mr. Ballin the visitor answered: "It
-is not you I want to see, young man, but the head of the firm." The
-misunderstanding was soon cleared up, and when Ballin anxiously asked if
-the visitor had come to complain about anything connected with the
-business, the reply was given that such was by no means the case, and
-that the conduct of the business was considered much more satisfactory
-than before.
-
-To arrive at a proper understanding of the conditions ruling in Hamburg
-at the end of the 'seventies, it is necessary to remember that the
-shipping business was still in its infancy, and that it was far from
-occupying the prominent position which it gained in later years and
-which it has only lost again since the war. The present time, which also
-is characterized by the prevalence of foreign companies and
-foreign-owned tonnage in the shipping business of Hamburg, bears a
-strong likeness to that period which lies now half a century back. The
-"Hamburg-Amerikanische Packetfahrt-Actien-Gesellschaft," although only
-running a few services to North and Central America, was even then the
-most important shipping company domiciled in Hamburg; but it counted for
-very little as an international factor, especially as it had just passed
-through a fierce struggle against its competitor, the Adler Line, which
-had greatly weakened it and had caused it to fall behind other lines
-with regard to the status of its ships. Of the other Hamburg lines which
-became important in later times, some did not then exist at all, and
-others were just passing through the most critical period of their
-infancy. The competitors of the Packetfahrt in the emigrant traffic were
-the North German Lloyd, of Bremen; the Holland-America Line, of
-Rotterdam, and the Red Star Line, of Antwerp. Apart from the direct
-traffic from Hamburg to New York, there was also the so-called indirect
-emigrant traffic _via_ England, which for the most part was in the hands
-of the British lines. The passengers booked by the agents of the latter
-were first conveyed from Hamburg to a British port, and thence, by a
-different boat, to the United States. It was the time before the
-industrialization of Germany had commenced, when there was not
-sufficient employment going round for the country's increasing
-population. The result was that large numbers of the inhabitants had to
-emigrate to foreign countries. That period lasted until the 'nineties,
-by which time the growth of industries required the services of all who
-could work. Simultaneously, however, with the decrease of emigration
-from Germany, that from Southern Europe, Austria-Hungary, and the
-Slavonic countries was assuming huge proportions, although the
-beginnings of this latter were already quite noticeable in the
-'seventies and 'eighties. This foreign emigrant traffic was the mainstay
-of the business carried on by the emigration agencies of the type of
-Morris and Co., whereas the German emigrants formed the backbone of the
-business on which the German steamship lines relied for their passenger
-traffic. Either the companies themselves or their agencies were in
-possession of the necessary Government licences entitling them to carry
-on the emigration business. The agencies of the foreign lines, on the
-other hand, either held no such licence at all, or only one which was
-restricted to certain German federal states or Prussian provinces--such,
-for instance, as Morris and Co. possessed for the two Mecklenburgs and
-for Schleswig-Holstein. This circumstance naturally compelled them to
-tap foreign districts rather than parts of Germany; and since the German
-lines, in order to keep down their competition, refused to carry the
-passengers they had booked, they were obliged to work in conjunction
-with foreign ones. They generally provided the berths which the
-sub-agencies required for their clientèle, and sometimes they would book
-berths on their own account, afterwards placing them at the disposal of
-the agencies. They were the connecting link between the shipping
-companies and the emigrants, and the former had no dealings whatever
-with the latter until these were on board their steamers. The Hamburg
-emigration agents had therefore also to provide accommodation for the
-intending emigrants during their stay in Hamburg and to find the means
-for conveying them to the British port in question. A number of taverns
-and hostelries in the parts near the harbour catered specially for such
-emigrants, and the various agents found plenty of scope for a display of
-their respective business capacities. A talent for organization, for
-instance, and skill in dealing with the emigrants, could be the means of
-gaining great successes.
-
-This was the sphere in which the youthful Albert Ballin gave the first
-proofs of his abilities and intelligence. Within a few years of his
-entering the firm the latter acquired a prominent position in the
-"indirect" emigration service _via_ England, a position which brought
-its chief into personal contact with the firm of Richardson, Spence and
-Co., of Liverpool, who were the general representatives for Great
-Britain of the American Line (one of the lines to whose emigration
-traffic Morris and Co. attended in Hamburg), and especially with the
-head of that firm, Mr. Wilding. An intimate personal friendship sprang
-up between these two men which lasted a lifetime. These close relations
-gave him an excellent opportunity for studying the business methods of
-the British shipping firms, and led to the establishment of valuable
-personal intercourse with some other leading shipping people in England.
-Thus it may be said that Ballin's connexions with England, strengthened
-as they were by several short visits to that country, were of great
-practical use to him and that, in a sense, they furnished him with such
-business training as until then he had lacked.
-
-How successfully the new chief of Morris and Co. operated the business
-may be gauged from the fact that, a few years after his advent, the firm
-had secured one-third of the volume of the "indirect" emigration traffic
-_via_ England. At that time, in the early 'eighties, a period of grave
-economic depression in the United States was succeeded by a trade boom
-of considerable magnitude. Such a transition from bad business to good
-was always preceded by the sale of a large number of "pre-paids," i.e.
-steerage tickets which were bought and paid for by people in the United
-States and sent by them to those among their friends or relatives in
-Europe who, without possessing the necessary money, wished to emigrate
-to the States. A few months after the booking of these "pre-paids" a
-strong current of emigration always set in, and the time just referred
-to proved to be no exception to the rule. The number of steerage
-passengers leaving Hamburg for New York increased from 25,000 in 1879 to
-69,000 in 1880, and 123,000 in 1881.
-
-It was quite impossible for the biggest Hamburg shipping company--the
-Packetfahrt--to carry successfully this huge number of emigrants. And
-even if this had been possible, the Packetfahrt would not have
-undertaken it, because it intentionally ignored the stream of non-German
-emigrants. Besides, the Company had neglected for years to adapt its
-vessels to the needs of the times, and had allowed its competitors to
-gain so much that even the North German Lloyd, a much younger
-undertaking, had far outstripped it. The latter, under its eminent
-chairman, Mr. Lohmann, had not only outclassed the Packetfahrt by the
-establishment of its service of fast steamers--"Bremen-New York in 9
-days"--which was worked with admirable regularity and punctuality, but
-had also increased the volume of its fleet to such an extent that, in
-1882, 47 of the 107 transatlantic steamers flying the German flag
-belonged to this Company, whereas the Packetfahrt possessed 24 only. For
-all these reasons it would have been useless for Morris and Co. to
-suggest to the Packetfahrt that they should secure for it a large
-increase in its emigrant traffic; and even if they had tried to extend
-their influence by working in co-operation with the Packetfahrt, such an
-attempt would doubtless have provoked the liveliest opposition on the
-part of the firm of August Bolten, the owner of which was one of the
-founders of the Packetfahrt, and which, because they were acting as
-general agents for the North American cargo and passenger business,
-exercised a powerful influence over the management of the Packetfahrt.
-The firm of August Bolten, moreover, had, like the line they
-represented, always consistently refused to have any dealings with the
-emigrant agencies.
-
-Ballin, knowing that the next few years would lead to a considerable
-increase in the emigrant traffic, therefore approached a newly
-established Hamburg shipping firm--which intended to run a cargo service
-from Hamburg to New York--with the proposal that it should also take up
-the steerage business. His British friends, when they were informed of
-this step, expressed the apprehension lest their own business with his
-firm should suffer from it, but Ballin had no difficulty in allaying
-their fears.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-GENERAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE CARR LINE
-
-
-The new shipping line for which Morris and Co. contracted to act as
-General Passenger Agents was the privately owned firm of Mr. Edward
-Carr. The agreement concluded between the two firms shows distinct
-traces of Ballin's enterprising spirit and of the largeness of his
-outlook. Morris and Co. undertook to book for the two steamships of the
-Carr Line then building, viz. the _Australia_ and the _America_, as many
-passengers as they could carry, and guaranteed to pay the owners a
-passage price of 82 marks per head, all the necessary expenses and
-commissions, including those connected with the dispatch of the
-passengers, to be paid by Morris and Co. The steerage rate charged by
-the Packetfahrt at that time was 120 marks. It was agreed that, if this
-rate should be increased, a corresponding increase should be made in the
-rates of the Carr Line. The number of trips to be performed by each
-steamer should be about eight or nine per annum. If a third boat were
-added to the service, the agreement entered into should be extended so
-as to cover this boat as well. For every passenger short of the total
-capacity of each steamer Morris and Co. were to pay a compensation of 20
-marks, if no arrangements had been made for the accommodation of the
-passenger, and 35 marks in case such accommodation had been arranged. It
-was expected that each boat would carry from 650 to 700 passengers. The
-actual number carried, however, turned out to be slightly less, and
-amounted to 581 when the first steamer left Hamburg on June 7th, 1881.
-Morris and Co. also undertook to hand over to the Carr Line all the
-through cargo they could secure. From the very start the work done by
-Ballin seems to have met with the unqualified approval of the Carr Line
-people; because the latter waived their claim to the compensation due to
-them for the sixty passengers short of the total number which were to be
-carried on the first trip, as Morris and Co. could prove that these
-passengers had failed to arrive, although the firm had been advised from
-Denmark that they were to come. On how small a scale the firm's business
-was conducted may be gauged from the circumstance that the whole staff
-consisted of nine employees only, who were paid salaries aggregating
-20,302 marks.
-
-In one essential feature the service of the new line differed from those
-of its old-established competitors. The _Australia_ and the _America_
-were ordinary cargo boats, but, in addition to a moderate amount of
-cargo, they also carried steerage passengers. They thus had not much in
-common with the usual passenger steamers by which both cabin and
-steerage passengers were carried. The advantage of the new type to the
-emigrants was that it gave them much more space than was at their
-disposal on the older boats. Whereas on the cabin steamers they were
-practically confined to a very small part of the boat, the Carr Line
-steamers made no restriction whatever as to their movements on board;
-all the available space, especially on deck, was thrown open to them.
-This type was not entirely a novelty, the sailing vessels of the older
-period used for the emigrant traffic being run on similar lines. The
-advantages accruing to the owners from their new type of steamers were
-obvious. The arrangements for the accommodation and provisioning of the
-emigrants, compared with what was needed in the case of cabin
-passengers, were of the simplest kind, and thus the cost price of the
-steamers was considerably less than that of vessels of the usual type.
-This also meant a saving in the wages bill, as it led to a reduction in
-the number of hands on board; and since the speed of the new boats was
-also less than that of the older ones, the working expenses were reduced
-in proportion. The financial results of the service, therefore, were
-better, in spite of the low rates charged to the steeragers, than those
-obtainable by running cabin steamers with steerage accommodation, and
-than those obtainable by running cargo steamers without any passenger
-accommodation.
-
-The new line soon made itself felt as a serious competitor to the
-Packetfahrt, especially so as by 1885 its fleet had increased from two
-to five steamers. The lower steerage rates charged by the Carr Line led
-to a general decrease of rates in the New York service, which was not
-confined to the lines running their services from Hamburg. The passage
-prices charged from the various ports are naturally closely related to
-each other, because each port tries to attract as much traffic as
-possible to itself, and this can only be brought about by a carefully
-thought-out differentiation. The struggle between the various lines
-involved which had started in Hamburg quickly extended to other seaports
-and affected a great many lines in addition to those of Hamburg. The
-rate-cutting process began in May, 1882. In the following October the
-Packetfahrt and the Lloyd had reduced their rates to 90 and in June,
-1883, to 80 marks, whilst the British lines in February, 1884, charged
-so little as 30s. The Carr Line, of course, had to follow suit. It not
-only did so, but in proportion reduced its own rates even more than the
-other lines. The rates were even lower in practice than they appeared to
-be, owing to the constantly growing commissions payable to the agents.
-The agents of the competing lines, by publishing controversial articles
-in the newspapers, soon took the general public into their confidence;
-and in order to prevent such publicity being given as to their internal
-affairs, the managements of the various steamship lines entered into
-some sort of mutual contact. The worst result of the rate-slashing was
-that the agreements which the older lines had concluded amongst
-themselves for the maintenance of remunerative prices soon became
-unworkable. First those relating to the Westbound rates had to go down
-before the new competitor; and in 1883, when this competition had really
-commenced to make itself appreciably felt, the Packetfahrt found itself
-compelled to declare its withdrawal from the New York Continental
-Conference by which the Eastbound rate had been fixed at $30 for the
-passage from New York to the Continent, a rate which was so high that
-the Carr Line found it easy to go below it.
-
-The Packetfahrt made great efforts to hold its own against the newcomer,
-but, as the following figures show, its success was but slight. In 1883
-the Packetfahrt carried 55,390 passengers on 76 voyages, against 16,471
-passengers carried on 29 voyages by the Carr Line, so that the traffic
-secured by the latter amounted to about 30 per cent. of that of the
-former. The figures for 1884 show that 58,388 passengers were carried by
-the Packetfahrt on 86 voyages, against 13,466 steeragers on 30 voyages
-by the Carr Line. If the figures relative to the direct and the indirect
-emigrant traffic from Hamburg are studied, it will be seen that a
-considerable decrease had taken place in the volume of the latter kind
-within a very few years, thus leading to an improvement in the position
-of the German lines as compared with that of their British competitors.
-These figures are as follows:
-
- _Number of Emigrants carried_
- _Packetfahrt_ _Carr Line_ _via British ports_
-
- 1880 47,000 -- 20,000
- 1881 68,000 4,000 47,600
- 1882 68,000 11,000 31,000
- 1883 55,000 16,000 13,000
- 1884 58,000 13,000 16,000
-
-At the same time the Packetfahrt, in order to prevent French competition
-from becoming too dangerous on the Havre-New York route, had to reduce
-its rates from Havre, and a little later it had to do likewise with
-regard to the Eastbound freight rates and the steerage rates. The keen
-competition going on between the lines concerned had led to a lowering
-of the Eastbound rate to Hamburg from $30 to $18; and as the commission
-payable to the agents had gone up to $5, the net rate amounted to $13
-only. At last the shareholders of the Packetfahrt became restless, and
-at the annual general meeting held in 1884 one of their representatives
-moved that the Board of the Company should be asked to enter into an
-agreement with the competing firm of Edward Carr. The motion, however,
-was lost; and the further proposal that a pool should be established
-among the Hamburg emigrant agents fared no better.
-
-It was clear that the rate-war, which continued for a long period, would
-considerably affect the prosperity of the Carr Line in common with the
-other shipping companies. This circumstance prompted the proposal of
-Edward Carr, when the discussions were renewed in the spring of 1885, to
-carry them on upon a different basis altogether. He proposed, in fact,
-that the Carr Line itself should be purchased by the Packetfahrt. In the
-course of the ensuing negotiations Albert Ballin, as the representative
-of Edward Carr, who was absent from Hamburg for a time, played a
-prominent part. The Packetfahrt, in the meantime, had received advices
-from its New York office to the effect that the latter had reconsidered
-its attitude towards the claims of the Carr Line, that it looked upon a
-successful termination of the struggle against this Line as hopeless,
-and that it therefore recommended the granting of the differential rates
-which formed the obstacle to peace. Nevertheless, it was not until July,
-1885, that, at a conference held in Hamburg, an agreement was concluded
-by the Packetfahrt, the Lloyd, the Carr Line, the Dutch, Belgian, and
-French lines, and the representative of the British lines. All these
-companies bound themselves to raise their rates to 100 marks, except
-that the Carr Line should be entitled to fix theirs at 90 marks. Thus
-the latter had at length received the recognition of its claim to a
-differentiation, and of its right to exist side by side with the older
-Company, although its steamers were not of an equal quality with those
-of the latter. An agreement was also concluded by which the rates of
-commission due to the Hamburg emigrant agents were fixed, and at the
-continued negotiations with the other lines Albert Ballin, from that
-time onward, in his capacity of representative of the Carr Line, was
-looked upon as on an equal footing with the representatives of the other
-lines.
-
-The principal subject of the discussions was the question of
-eliminating, as far as possible, British influence from the emigrant
-traffic _via_ Hamburg. The competition of the British was, naturally,
-very detrimental to the business of all the Continental, but more
-especially the German lines, because the interests of the respective
-sides were utterly at variance with each other. The firm foundations of
-the business transacted by the British lines were laid in England, and
-the Continental business was merely a source of additional profit; but
-to the German lines it was the mainstay of their existence, and to make
-it pay was of vital importance to them. The German lines, therefore,
-did not rest until, as the result of the continued negotiations among
-the Continental companies, it was agreed that the uniform rates just
-fixed should not apply to the traffic which was carried on by the two
-Hamburg lines from that city. Towards the end of 1885 the first object
-aimed at by this step was realized: the conclusion of an agreement
-between the two Hamburg lines and the representatives of the British
-lines settling the rates and the commissions; but apart from this, no
-changes of fundamental importance were made in this business until after
-Albert Ballin, under an agreement proposed by the Packetfahrt, had
-entered the service of the Packetfahrt, as head of their passenger
-department. An important exception, however, was the amalgamation
-suddenly announced in March, 1886, of the Carr Line and the Union Line,
-which latter company was operated by Rob. M. Sloman and Co., of Hamburg.
-The fact of this amalgamation considerably weakened the position of the
-Packetfahrt in its dealings with the Carr Line, because it gave
-additional strength to the latter.
-
-The details of the five years' agreement between Ballin and the
-Packetfahrt were approved by the Board of Trustees of that Company about
-the middle of May, 1886. It was stipulated that, in conformity with the
-pool agreement concluded between the two lines on May 22nd, the
-Packetfahrt should appoint Mr. Albert Ballin sole and responsible head
-of its North American passenger department (Westbound as well as
-Eastbound services); that his work should include the booking of
-steeragers for the Union Company's steamers (which, in accordance with
-the pool agreement, the Packetfahrt had taken over), that he should
-appoint and dismiss the clerks employed by his department; that he
-should fix their salaries and commissions; that he should sign passage
-agreements on behalf of the Company, and that he should issue the
-necessary instructions to the agents and officers of the Company. All
-letters and other documents were to be signed "by proxy of the
-Hamburg-Amerikanische Packetfahrt-Actien-Gesellschaft," and he was
-required annually to submit to the directors a draft estimate of the
-expenses of his department. On how modest a scale the whole arrangement
-was drawn up may be inferred from the figures given in the first year's
-draft estimate, viz. Salaries, 35,000 marks; advertisements, 50,000
-marks; posters and printed matter, 25,000 marks; travelling expenses,
-6,000 marks; postage and telegrams, 10,000 marks; extras and sundries,
-10,000 marks. Equally modest was the remuneration of the new head who
-was to receive a fixed salary of 10,000 marks per annum, plus a
-commission under the pool agreement, allowing the inference that the
-total annual income of the newly appointed head of the department would
-work out at something like 60,000 marks, which goes to show that the
-Company had a high opinion of his capacity for attracting traffic to its
-services. The conclusion of this agreement meant that the Packetfahrt
-henceforth took entire control of its passenger business--which, until
-then, had been looked after by the firm of Aug. Bolten--and that a
-passenger department had to be specially created. Thus an important step
-forward was made which could only be undertaken by the firm because such
-a well-qualified man as Ballin happened to be at their service just
-then.
-
-If the course of the negotiations between the Packetfahrt and the Carr
-Line had not already shown it, this agreement would prove without a
-shadow of doubt that the then head of Morris and Co. had, at the age of
-twenty-nine, and after twelve years of practical work, gained the
-premier position in the emigrant business of his native city and also a
-leading one in the general European emigrant business which in itself is
-one of the most important branches of the shipping trade. The
-correspondence between Edward Carr and Ballin furnishes no indication
-that the latter himself had insisted upon his being taken over by the
-Packetfahrt or that he had worked with this object.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-HEAD OF THE PACKETFAHRT'S PASSENGER DEPARTMENT
-
-
-On May 31st, 1886, Albert Ballin first took part in a joint meeting of
-the Board of Trustees and the Board of Directors of the Packetfahrt. On
-this occasion two proposals were put forward by him: one, to provide new
-premises for the work connected with the booking of passengers at an
-annual rent of 5,000 marks; the other, to start a direct service from
-Stettin to New York _via_ Gothenburg. This latter proposal was prompted
-by the desire to reduce the influence of the British lines competing for
-the Hamburg business. Such a reduction could only be brought about if it
-were proved to the British lines that their position was by no means
-unassailable. The Scandinavian emigrant business to the United States
-which for long had been a source of great profit to the British, lent
-itself admirably to such purposes. Ballin's proposal was agreed to by
-the Company's management, with the result that in July, 1886, a pool
-agreement was concluded between the Packetfahrt (on behalf of a Stettin
-Line of steamers) and the Danish Thingvalla Line. Steamers now began to
-call at Gothenburg and Christiansand on their voyages from Stettin to
-the United States. The new line was known as the "Scandia Line"; and in
-later years, when a similar object was aimed at, it was called into
-existence once more. The aim was not to establish a new steamer service
-for its own sake, but rather to create an object for compensation which,
-in the negotiations with the British lines, could be given up again in
-exchange for concessions on the part of the latter regarding the
-Hamburg business. If this plan failed, Ballin had another one mapped
-out: he threatened to attack the British in their own country by
-carrying steerage passengers either from Liverpool _via_ Havre, or from
-Plymouth _via_ Hamburg. People in England laughed at this idea.
-"Surely," they said, "no British emigrant will travel on a German
-vessel." The British lines replied to Ballin's threat by declaring that
-they would again reduce to 30s. their rates from Hamburg to New York
-_via_ a British port. However, the negotiations which Ballin entered
-into with them in England during the month of September, 1886, soon
-cleared the air, and led to the conclusion of an agreement towards the
-end of the year. The Packetfahrt promised to withdraw its Scandia Line,
-and the British lines, in return, agreed to raise their steerage rates
-from Hamburg to 85 marks gross, and those from Liverpool, Glasgow, and
-London to £2 10s. net. A clearing house which should be under the
-management of a representative of the British lines, and which was also
-to include the business done by the Bremen agents of the latter, was to
-be set up in Hamburg. This clearing house was kept on until other and
-more far-reaching agreements with the British lines made its continued
-existence superfluous.
-
-The arrangements which Ballin made with the agents represented in the
-clearing house show his skill in his dealings with other people. The
-whole agreement, especially the fixing of the terms governing the share
-to be assigned to the agents--which amounted to 55 per cent, of the
-Hamburg business--was principally aimed at the realization of as high a
-rate as possible. This policy proved to be a great success. Another step
-forward was that the Packetfahrt now consented to accept passengers
-booked by the agents, thus reversing their previous policy of ignoring
-them altogether.
-
-The agreement with the British lines also provided that the Union Line
-should raise its rates to 90 marks, the Packetfahrt to 95 marks, and the
-Lloyd those charged for its services to Baltimore and New York to 100
-and 110 marks respectively. Henceforward both competing groups were
-equally interested in obtaining as high a rate as possible.
-
-The practical working of the agreement did not fail to give
-satisfaction, and the Continental lines could, undisturbed by external
-interference, put their own house in order. A few years later, in 1890,
-the British lines complained that they did not succeed in getting the
-percentage of business to which they were entitled. Negotiations were
-carried on at Liverpool, during which Ballin was present. He pointed out
-that, considering the whole Continental position, the British lines
-would be ill-advised to withdraw from the agreement, and he stated that
-he would be prepared to guarantee them their share (33 per cent.) of the
-Hamburg business. The outcome was that the British lines declared
-themselves satisfied with these new stipulations. A few years later,
-when the British lines joined the Continental Pool, the Hamburg
-agreement ceased to be necessary, and in 1893 the clearing house was
-abolished.
-
-The new Emigration Law of 1887--due to the exertions of the North German
-Lloyd and the Packetfahrt--strengthened the position of the lines
-running direct services from German ports. Another step forward was the
-increase of the passage rates which was agreed upon after negotiations
-had taken place at Antwerp and in England, and after the German, Dutch,
-and Belgian lines had had a conference at Cologne. Contact was also
-established with the chief French line concerned.
-
-The improvement, however, was merely temporary. The termination of the
-struggle for the Hamburg business did not mean that all the differences
-between all the transatlantic lines had been settled. On the contrary,
-all the parties concerned gradually realized that it would be necessary
-to institute quite different arrangements; something to ensure a fairer
-distribution of the traffic and a greater consolidation of their common
-interests. A proposal to gain these advantages by the establishment of a
-pool was submitted by the representative of the Red Star Line at a
-conference held in the autumn of 1886, and a memorandum written by
-Ballin, likewise dating from 1886, took up the same idea; but an
-agreement was not concluded until the close of 1891.
-
-That, in spite of Ballin's advocacy, five years had to elapse before
-this agreement became perfect is perhaps to some extent due to the fact
-that Ballin--who at that time, after all, was only the head of the
-Passenger Department of his Company--could not always speak with its
-full authority where his own personal views were concerned. Moreover,
-the influence of his Company was by no means very considerable in those
-early days. The only passenger boat of any importance which the Company
-possessed in the early 'eighties, before Ballin had entered its
-services, was the _Hammonia_, and she was anything but a success. She
-was inferior both as regards her efficiency and her equipment. At last,
-however, Ballin's desire to raise the prestige of the Company triumphed,
-and the building of several fast boats was definitely decided upon. In
-addition to a comparatively large number of passengers--especially those
-of the first cabin--they were to carry a moderate amount of cargo. In
-size they were subject to the restrictions imposed upon them by the
-shortcomings of the technical knowledge of that time, and by the absence
-of the necessary improvements in the fairway of the lower Elbe. Speed,
-after all, was the main consideration; and it was the struggle for the
-blue riband of the Atlantic which kept the attention of the travelling
-public riveted on these boats.
-
-A statement giving details of the financial results obtained by the
-first four of the new fast steamers which were entered into the service
-of the Company between 1889 and 1891 showed that the earnings up to and
-including the year 1895 did not even cover the working expenses, and
-that those up to 1899 were not sufficient to allow for an interest of 4
-per cent, on the average book values of the steamers. It must be
-remembered, however, that the first of these two periods included the
-disastrous season of 1892-93, when Hamburg was visited by an epidemic of
-cholera. And a different light is shed on the matter also if we further
-remember that depreciation had been allowed for on a generous scale, no
-less than 50 per cent, of the cost price plus the expenditure incurred
-through an enlargement of the _Auguste Victoria_, the oldest of the
-boats, having been deducted on that account. The Packetfahrt, like all
-the other German shipping companies, has always been very liberal in
-making ample provision for depreciation. When, therefore, these steamers
-were sold again at the time of the Spanish-American and Russo-Japanese
-wars, a considerable profit was realized on the transactions which
-enabled the Company to replace them by a very high-grade type of vessel
-(the _Deutschland_, _Amerika_, and _Kaiserin Auguste Victoria_). It must
-be admitted in this connexion that perhaps no shipowner has ever been
-more favoured by fortune than Ballin where the sale of such difficult
-objects as obsolete express steamers was concerned. The value which
-these boats had in relation to the prestige of the Company was very
-considerable; for, as Ballin expressed it to me one day: "The possession
-of the old express steamers of the Packetfahrt certainly proved to be
-something like a white elephant; but just consider how greatly they
-have enhanced the prestige of the Company." They attracted thousands of
-passengers to the Line, and acted as feeders to its other services.
-
-The orders for the first two of these steamers were given towards the
-close of 1887 to the Vulkan yard, at Stettin, and to the firm of Laird
-respectively, at a price of £210,000 each, and the boats were to be
-completed early in 1889. They were the first twin-screw steamers, and
-were provided with the system of "forced draught" for the engines. This
-system had just been introduced in British yards, and Ballin's attention
-had been drawn to it by his friend Wilding, who was always ready to give
-him valuable advice on technical matters. In order to find the means for
-the construction of these and of some other boats, the general meeting
-of the shareholders, held on October 6th, 1887, voted a capital increase
-of 5,000,000 marks and the issue of 6,250,000 marks of debentures.
-Knowing that an improvement of the services was the great need of the
-time, Ballin, since the time of joining the Company, had done all he
-could to make the latter a paying concern again, and in this he
-succeeded. For the year 1886 a dividend of 5 per cent. was paid, and
-thus it became possible to sanction an increase of the joint-stock
-capital.
-
-Further foundations for later successes were laid by the reform of the
-organization and of the technical services of the Company. His work in
-connexion with the Carr Line had taught the youthful head of the
-passenger department that careful attention to the material comfort of
-the steerage passengers could be of great benefit to the Company. He
-continued along lines such as these, and at his suggestion the steerage
-accommodation on two of the Packetfahrt's steamers was equipped with
-electric light, and provided with some single berths as well. This
-latter provision was extended still further during the succeeding year.
-In addition to the fast steamers, some ordinary ones were also ordered
-to be built. In 1888 two steamers were ordered for the Company's West
-Indies service, and shortly afterwards eight units of the Union Line
-were bought at a price of 5,200,000 marks. All these new orders and
-purchases of steamers led to the joint-stock capital being raised from
-20 to 30 million marks. Two more boats were laid down in the Stettin
-Vulkan yard, and a third with the firm of Laird. The express steamer
-then building at the Vulkan yard was named _Auguste Victoria_ in honour
-of the young Empress.
-
-During the summer months of 1887 Ballin, together with Mr. Johannes
-Witt, one of the members of the Board of Trustees, went to New York in
-order to discuss with the agents a reorganization of the New York
-representation, which was looked after by Edward Beck and Kunhardt. In
-consequence of the negotiations which Ballin carried on to that end, the
-agents undertook to submit their business for the Company to the control
-of an officer specially appointed by the Packetfahrt. This small
-beginning led, in later years, to the establishment in New York of the
-Company's direct representation under its own management.
-
-When Ballin joined the Packetfahrt, he did not strictly confine his
-attention to matters connected with the passenger services. When, for
-instance, the head of the freight department was prevented from
-attending a meeting called by the Board of Trustees, Ballin put forward
-a proposal for raising the rates on certain cargo. It was therefore only
-but fit acknowledgment of his many-sided talents, and recognition that
-his energetic character had been the guiding spirit in the Company's
-affairs, that the Board of Trustees appointed Ballin in 1888 a member of
-the Board of Directors after two years with the Packetfahrt. This
-appointment really filled a long-felt gap.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER FOUR
-
-THE POOL
-
-
-The term "pool" may be defined in a variety of ways, but, generally
-speaking, the root idea underlying its meaning is always the same, both
-in its application to business and to betting. A pool, in brief, is a
-combination of a number of business concerns for their own mutual
-interests, all partners having previously agreed upon certain principles
-as to the distribution of the common profits. In other words, it is a
-community of interests concluded upon the basis of dividing the profits
-realized in a certain ratio. I have been unable to discover when and
-where this kind of combination was first used in actual practice. Before
-the transatlantic steamship companies did so, the big trunk lines of the
-United States railway system are said to have used it in connexion with
-the westbound emigrant traffic, and possibly for other purposes also.
-
-When Ballin wrote his memorandum of February 5th, 1886, the steamship
-lines must already have been familiar with the meaning of the term, for
-the memorandum refers to it as something well known. Ballin begins by
-stating that the "Conference of the Northern European Lines" might be
-looked upon as having ceased to exist, seeing that two parties were
-represented on it whose claims were diametrically opposed to each other.
-Whereas the North German Lloyd insisted on the right to lower its rates,
-the Red Star Line claimed that these rates should be raised, so that it
-might obtain a better differential rate for itself. A reconciliation of
-these mutually contradictory views, the memorandum went on to say,
-appeared to be impossible, unless all parties agreed upon an
-understanding which would radically alter the relations then existing
-between their respective interests; and a way leading out of the
-_impasse_ would be found by adopting the pooling system proposed by the
-representative of the Red Star Line. If we take the number of steeragers
-carried to New York from 1881 to 1885 by the six lines concerned as a
-basis, the respective percentages of the total traffic are as follows:
-
- _Percentage_
-
- North German Lloyd 33·45
- North German Lloyd (Baltimore Line) 14·80
- Packetfahrt 27·00
- Union Line 5·53
- Red Star Line 12·26
- Holland American Line 6·96
-
-It was, however, justly pointed out at a meeting of the Conference that
-the amount of tonnage must also be taken into account in laying down the
-principles which were to govern the distribution of the profits. The
-average figures of such tonnage employed by the six lines during the
-same period were:
-
- _Tons_ _Percentage_
-
- North German Lloyd 275,520 33·91
- North German Lloyd (Baltimore
- Line) 63,000 7·76
- Packetfahrt 199,500 24·55
- Union Line 42,840 5·27
- Red Star Line 149,600 18·41
- Holland American Line 82,080 10·10
- ------- -----
- Total tonnage 812,540
-
-The average of both sets of percentage figures worked out as follows:
-
- _Percentage_
-
- North German Lloyd 33·68
- North German Lloyd (Baltimore Line) 11·28
- Packetfahrt 25·77-1/2
- Union Line 5·40
- Red Star Line 15·33-1/2
- Holland American Line 8·53
-
-"It would be necessary," the memorandum continued, "to calculate each
-Company's share annually on the basis of the average figures obtained
-for the five years immediately preceding, so that, for instance, the
-calculation for 1887 would be based on the figures for the five years
-from 1882 to 1886; that for 1888 on those for the period from 1883 to
-1887, and so on. Uniform passage rates and uniform rates of commission
-would have to be agreed upon. To those lines which, like the North
-German Lloyd, maintained a service which was run by fast steamers
-exclusively, would have to be conceded the right to charge in their
-separate accounts passage money up to 10 marks in excess of the normal
-rates, seeing that their expenses were heavier than those of the other
-lines. Those Companies, however, claiming differential rates below the
-general ones agreed upon would have to make up the difference
-themselves, which was not to exceed the amount of 30 marks--i.e. they
-would have to contribute to the common pool a sum equal to the general
-rate without deduction."
-
-The two cardinal principles lying at the root of this proposal were (1)
-the assigning to each line of a definite percentage of the total traffic
-on the basis of the average figures ascertained for a definite period of
-time, and (2) the possibility of further grading these percentages by
-taking into account the amount of tonnage which each line placed at the
-disposal of the joint undertaking. This latter provision--which was
-known during the early stages of the movement as the tonnage clause--was
-intended to prevent any single line from stagnation, and to give scope
-to the spirit of enterprise.
-
-The tonnage clause was not maintained for the whole time during which
-the pool agreement was in force. It was afterwards abolished at the
-instance of the North German Lloyd. This event led, in the long run, to
-the last big crisis which the pool had to pass through by the notice of
-withdrawal given by the Hamburg-Amerika Linie. When this Company
-proposed to considerably enlarge its steerage accommodation through the
-addition to its service of the three big boats of the _Imperator_ class,
-it demanded a corresponding increase of its percentage figure, and, when
-this claim fell through owing to the opposition of the North German
-Lloyd, it gave formal notice of its withdrawal from the pool.
-Precautions taken to counteract this led to negotiations which had to be
-discontinued when the war broke out. Nevertheless, the pool, which was
-first proposed in 1886, and which came into existence in 1892, did a
-great deal of good. More than once, however, the agreement ceased to be
-effective for a time, and this was especially the case on the occasion
-of the struggle with the Cunard Line which followed upon the
-establishment of the Morgan Trust in 1903.
-
-The secretary of the pool was Heinrich Peters, the former head of the
-passenger department of the Lloyd. The choice of Mr. Peters is probably
-not unconnected with the fact that it was he who, at a moment when the
-negotiations for establishing a pool had reached a critical stage,
-appeared on the scene with a clearly-defined proposal, so that he, with
-justice, has been described as "the father of the pool." Shortly before
-his death in the summer of 1921 Mr. Peters wrote to me concerning his
-proposal and the circumstances of its adoption:--
-
-"The history of the events leading up to the creation of the 'North
-Atlantic Steamship Lines Association,'" he wrote in his letter, "was not
-without complications. So much so that after the Conference at Cologne,
-at which it had been found impossible to come to an understanding, I
-went to bed feeling very worried about the future. Shortly afterwards--I
-don't know whether I was half awake or dreaming--the outline of the plan
-which was afterwards adopted stood out clearly before my mind's eye, its
-main features being that each line should be granted a fixed percentage
-of the traffic on the basis of 'Moore's Statistics' (reports issued
-periodically and showing the number of passengers landed in New York at
-regular intervals), and that the principle of compensation should be
-applied to adjust differences. When I was fully awake I found this plan
-so obviously right that, in order not to let it slip my memory, I jotted
-down a note concerning it on my bedside table. Next morning, when
-Ballin, Reuchlin (of the Holland American Line), Strasser (of the Red
-Star Line), and myself met again in the smoking-room of the Hotel du
-Nord, I told them of my inspiration, and my plan was looked upon by them
-with so much favour that Ballin said to me: 'Well now, Peters, you have
-discovered the philosopher's stone.' We then left, previously agreeing
-amongst ourselves that we would think the matter over at our leisure,
-and that we should refrain from taking any steps leading to a conflict,
-at least for the time being. On my return to Bremen I went straight to
-Lohmann (who was director general of the Lloyd at that time), but he
-immediately threw a wet blanket over my enthusiasm. His objection was
-that such an agreement would interfere with the progressive development
-of the Lloyd. A few days later a meeting of the Board of Trustees was
-held at which I entered into the details of my proposal; but I am sorry
-to say that my oratorical gifts were not sufficient to defend it against
-the objections that were raised, nor to prevent its rejection. I can
-hardly imagine what the representatives of the other lines must have
-felt on hearing that it was the Lloyd itself which refused to accept the
-proposal which had been put forward by its own delegate, although the
-share allotted to it was very generous. Thus the struggle went on for
-another eighteen months, and it was not until January, 1892, that the
-principal lines concerned definitely concluded a pool agreement closely
-resembling the draft agreement I had originally proposed.
-
-"The North Atlantic Steamship Lines Association was originally intended
-to remain in existence for the period of five years; but as it was
-recognized by all parties that it was necessarily a step in the dark,
-people had become so doubtful as to the wisdom of what they had done
-that a clause was added to the effect that it could be cancelled after
-the first six months provided a fortnight's notice was given by any
-partner to it. Nevertheless, the agreement successfully weathered a
-severe crisis during the very first year of its existence, when the
-disastrous cholera epidemic paralysed the Hamburg trade and shipping."
-
-That this account is correct is confirmed by the minutes of the Cologne
-meeting of February 6th, 1890.
-
-The British lines definitely declined in March, 1892, to join the pool.
-Thus the plan finally agreed upon in 1892 was subscribed to by the
-Continental lines alone, with the exception of the French line. In
-contrast with previous proposals, the eastbound traffic was also to be
-parcelled out by the lines forming the pool.
-
-This so-called North Atlantic Steamship Lines Association, the backbone
-of the later and greater pool, was built up on the following
-percentages:
-
- _Westbound_ _Eastbound_
- _traffic_ (_p.c._) _traffic_ (_p.c._)
-
- North German Lloyd 46·16 44·53
- Packetfahrt (including the Union
- Line) 28·84 18·47
- Red Star Line 15·70 20·68
- Holland American Line 9·30 16·32
-
-These percentages were subject to the effect of the tonnage clause by
-which it was provided that 50 per cent. of the tonnage (expressed in
-gross registered tons) which any line should possess at any time in
-excess of that possessed in 1890 should entitle such line to an increase
-of its percentage.
-
-It has already been stated that Mr. Heinrich Peters was appointed
-secretary of the pool. He, in compliance with the provision that the
-secretariat should be domiciled at a "neutral" place, chose the small
-university town of Jena for his residence. Thus this town, so famous in
-the literary annals of Germany, became, for more than twenty years, the
-centre of an international organization with which few, if any, other
-places could vie in importance, especially since the four lines which
-had just concluded the original pool were joined, in course of time, by
-the British lines, the French line, the Austrian line, and some
-Scandinavian and Russian lines as well. Later on a special pool was set
-up for the Mediterranean business which, in addition to the German,
-British, and Austro-Hungarian lines, also comprised the French
-Mediterranean, the Italian, and the Greek lines, as well as one Spanish
-line. The business of all these lines was centred at Jena.
-
-Of considerable importance to the smooth working of the pool was the
-court of arbitration attached to its organization. On account of the
-prominent position occupied by the German companies, German law was
-agreed to as binding for the decisions, and since at the time when the
-pool was founded, Germany did not possess a uniform Code of Civil Law
-for all parts of the Empire, the law ruling at Cologne was recognized to
-be applicable to such purposes. Cologne was the city at which the
-establishment of the pool was decided upon, and there all the important
-meetings that became necessary in course of time were held. The chairman
-of the Cologne Association of Solicitors was nominated president of the
-arbitration court, but later on this office devolved on President
-Hansen, a member of the Supreme Court for the Hanseatic cities, who
-filled his post for a long term of years--surely a proof of the
-confidence and esteem with which he was honoured by all parties
-concerned. Numerous awards issued by him, and still more numerous
-resolutions adopted at the many conferences, have supplemented the
-original pool agreement, thus forming the nucleus of a real code of
-legislation affecting all matters dealing with the pool in which a large
-number of capable men drawn from the legal profession and from the world
-of business have collaborated.
-
-The knowledge of these regulations gradually developed into a science of
-its own, and each line had to possess one or more specialists who were
-experts in these questions among the members of its staff. I am sure
-they will unanimously agree that Albert Ballin surpassed them all in his
-knowledge of the intricate details. His wonderful memory enabled him,
-after a lapse of more than twenty years, to recall every phase in the
-history of the pool, so that he acquired an unrivalled mastery in the
-conduct of pool conferences. This is abundantly borne out by the fact
-that in 1908, when negotiations were started in London for the
-establishment of a general pool--i.e. one comprising the whole of
-Northern Europe, including Great Britain--Ballin, at the proposal of the
-British lines, was selected chairman of the conference which, after
-several critical phases had been passed through, led to a complete
-success and an all-round understanding.
-
-In 1892 the normal development of business was greatly handicapped by
-the terrible epidemic of cholera then raging in Hamburg. For a time the
-United States completely closed her doors to all emigrants from the
-Continent, and it was not until the following year that conditions
-became normal again. Nevertheless Ballin, in order to extend the various
-understandings between the Northern European lines, took an important
-step, even before the close of 1892, by falling back upon a measure
-which he had already once employed in 1886. His object was to make the
-British lines more favourably inclined towards an understanding, and to
-this end he attacked them once more in the Scandinavian business. The
-actual occasion which led to the conflict was that the British lines,
-owing to differences of opinion among themselves, had given notice of
-withdrawal from the Hamburg agreement and from the Hamburg clearing
-house. This gave the Packetfahrt a free hand against its British
-competitors, and enabled it to carry as many as 2,500 Scandinavian
-passengers via Hamburg in 1892. The position of the Packetfahrt during
-the ensuing rate war was considerably improved by the agreement which it
-had concluded with the Hamburg agents of the British lines, who,
-although their principals had declared their withdrawal from the pool,
-undertook to maintain the rate which had been jointly agreed upon by
-both parties.
-
-Some time had to elapse before this move had its desired effect on the
-British lines. Early in 1894 they declared themselves ready to come to
-an understanding with the Continental lines on condition that they were
-granted 7 per cent. of the Continental traffic (in 1891 they had been
-offered 14 per cent.), and that the Packetfahrt was to discontinue its
-Scandia Line.
-
-This general readiness of the British companies, however, did not
-preclude the hostility of some of their number against any such
-agreement, and so the proposal fell through. The proposed understanding
-came to grief owing to the refusal of the Cunard Line to join a
-Continental pool at the very moment when the negotiations with the
-British lines had, after a great deal of trouble, led to a preliminary
-understanding with them. A letter which Ballin received from an English
-friend in January, 1894, shows how difficult it was to make the British
-come round to the idea of a pool. In this letter it was said that the
-time was not ripe then for successfully persuading the British lines to
-join any pool or any other form of understanding which would necessitate
-agreement on a large number of details. All that could be expected to be
-done at the time, the writer continued, was a rate agreement of the
-simplest possible kind, and he thought that if such an understanding
-were agreed to and loyally carried out, that would be an important step
-forward towards arriving at a general agreement of much wider scope.
-
-To such vague agreements, however, the Continental lines objected on
-principle, and the opposition of the Cunard Line made it impossible to
-agree upon anything more definite. Thus the struggle was chiefly waged
-against this line. The Continental lines were assisted by the American
-Line, which had sailings from British ports, and with the management of
-which Ballin had been on very friendly terms ever since the time when
-he, as the owner of the firm of Morris and Co., had worked for it. After
-the conflict had been going on for several months, it terminated with a
-victory of the Continental lines. Thus the road was at last clear for
-an attempt to make the whole North Atlantic business pay.
-
-The first step in that direction was the conclusion, in 1896, of an
-agreement concerning the cabin business. The Packetfahrt's annual report
-for that year states that the results obtained through the carrying of
-cabin passengers could only be described as exceedingly unfavourable,
-considering that the huge working expenses connected with that kind of
-business had to be taken into account. Nevertheless, this traffic, which
-had reached a total of more than 200,000 passengers during the preceding
-year, could be made a source of great profit to the companies if they
-could be persuaded to act in unison. The agreement then concluded was at
-first restricted to the fixing of the rates on a uniform scale.
-
-Both these agreements--the one dealing with the steerage and the one
-dealing with the cabin business--were concluded, in 1895, for three
-years in the first instance. In May, 1898, discussions were opened in
-London, at which Ballin presided, with a view to extending the period of
-their duration, and these proceedings, after a time, led to a successful
-conclusion, but in June, Ballin again presiding, the desired
-understanding was reached. A few weeks later an agreement concerning the
-second cabin rates was also arrived at, and towards the close of the
-year negotiations were started with a view to the extension of the
-steerage agreement. In 1899 the pool was extended to run for a further
-period of five years, under percentages:
-
- _Westbound_ _Eastbound_
- _traffic_ (_p.c._) _traffic_ (_p.c._)
-
- North German Lloyd 44·14 41·53
- Packetfahrt 30·71 26·47
- Red Star Line 15·37 18·68
- Holland American Line 9·78 13·32
-
-To the Packetfahrt these new percentages meant a step forward, although
-the omission of the tonnage clause was a decided hindrance to its
-further progress.
-
-The next important event in the development of the relations between the
-transatlantic lines was the establishment of the so-called Morgan Trust
-and the conclusion of a "community of interest" agreement between it and
-the German lines.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE MORGAN TRUST
-
-
-Speaking generally, the transatlantic shipping business may be said to
-consist of three great branches, viz. the cargo, the steerage, and the
-cabin business. The pool agreements that were concluded between the
-interested companies covered only the cargo business and the steerage
-traffic. The condition which alone makes it possible for the owners to
-work the shipping business on remunerative lines is that all needless
-waste of material must be strictly banned. The great advantage which was
-secured by concluding the pool agreement was that it satisfied this
-condition during the more than twenty years of its existence, to the
-mutual profit of the associated lines. Each company knew that the
-addition of new steamers to its fleet would only pay if part of a
-carefully considered plan, and if, in course of time, such an increase
-of tonnage would give it a claim to an increase of the percentage of
-traffic allotted to its services.
-
-Much less satisfactory was the state of things with regard to the third
-branch of the shipping business, viz. the cabin traffic. A regular
-"cabin pool," with a _pro rata_ distribution of the traffic, was never
-established, although the idea had frequently been discussed. All that
-was achieved was an agreement as to the fares charged by each company
-which were to be graded according to the quality of the boats it
-employed in its services. Owing to the absence of any more far-reaching
-understandings, and to the competition between the various
-companies--each of which was constantly trying to outdo its competitors
-as regards the speed and comfort of its boats, in order to attract to
-its own services as many passengers as possible--the number of
-first-class boats increased out of all proportion to the actual
-requirements, and frequent and regular services were maintained by each
-line throughout the year. There was hardly a day on which first-class
-steamers did not enter upon voyages across the Atlantic from either
-side, and the result was that the boats were fully booked during the
-season only, i.e. in the spring and early part of summer on their
-East-bound, and in the latter part of summer and in the autumn on their
-Westbound, voyages. During the remaining months a number of berths were
-empty, and the fares obtainable were correspondingly unprofitable.
-Ballin, in 1902, estimated the unnecessary expenditure to which the
-companies were put in any single year owing to this unbusinesslike state
-of affairs at not less then 50 million marks. The desire to do away with
-conditions such as these by extending the pool agreement so as to
-develop it into a community-of-interest agreement of comprehensive scope
-was one of the two principal reasons leading to the formation of the
-Morgan Trust. The other reason was the wish to bring about a system of
-co-operation between the European and the American interests.
-
-This desire was prompted by the recognition of the cardinal importance
-to the transatlantic shipping companies of the economic conditions
-ruling in the United States. The cargo business depended very largely on
-the importation of European goods into the United States, and on the
-exportation of American agricultural produce to Europe which varied from
-season to season according to the size of the crop and to the consuming
-capacity of Europe. The steerage business, of course, relied in the main
-on the capacity of the United States for absorbing European immigrants,
-which capacity, though fluctuating, was practically unlimited. The
-degree of prosperity of the cabin business, however, was determined by
-the number of people who travelled from the States to Europe, either on
-business, or on pleasure, or to recuperate their health at some European
-watering-place, at the Riviera, etc. Social customs and the attractions
-which the Paris houses of fashion exercised on the American ladies also
-formed a considerable factor which had to be relied on for a prosperous
-season. In the transatlantic shipping business, in fact, America is
-pre-eminently the giving, and Europe the receiving, partner. Thus it was
-natural to realize the advisability of entering into direct relations
-with American business men.
-
-To the Packetfahrt, and especially to Ballin, credit is due for having
-attempted before anybody else to give practical shape to this idea. His
-efforts in this direction date far back to the early years of his
-business career. We possess evidence of this in the form of a letter
-which he wrote in 1891 to Mr. B. N. Baker, who was at the head of one of
-the few big American shipping companies, the Atlantic Transport Company,
-the headquarters of which were at Baltimore, and which ran its services
-chiefly to Great Britain. Mr. Baker was a personal friend of Ballin's.
-The letter was written after some direct discussions had taken place
-between the two men, and its contents were as follows:--
-
- "I replied a few days ago officially to your valued favour of the
- 4th ult. to the effect that in consonance with your expressed
- suggestion one of the Directors will proceed to New York in
- September with a view to conferring with you about the matter at
- issue.
-
- "Having in the meantime made it a point to go more fully into your
- communication, I find that the opinions which I have been able to
- form on your propositions meet your expressed views to a much
- larger extent than you will probably have supposed. I have not yet
- had an opportunity of talking the matter over with my colleagues,
- and I therefore do not know how far they will be prepared to fall
- in with my views. But in order to enable me to frame and bring
- forward my ideas more forcibly here, I think it useful to write to
- you this strictly confidential letter, requesting you to inform
- me--if feasible by cable--what you think of the following project:
-
- "(1) You take charge of our New York Agency for the freight, and
- also for the passage business, etc.
-
- "(2) You engage those of our officials now attached to our New York
- branch whom we may desire to retain in the business.
-
- "(3) You take over half of our Baltimore Line in the manner that
- each party provides two suitable steamers fitted for the transport
- of emigrants. To this end I propose you should purchase at their
- cost price the two steamers which are in course of construction in
- Hamburg at present for our Baltimore Line (320 feet length, 40 feet
- beam, 27 feet moulded, steerage 8 feet, carrying 3,500 tons on 22
- feet and about 450 steeragers, guaranteed to steam 11 knots, ready
- in October this year), and we to provide two similar steamers for
- this service. The earnings to be divided under a pool system.
-
- "(4) Your concern takes up one million dollars of our shares with
- the obligation not to sell them so long as you control our American
- business. I may remark that just at present our shares are
- obtainable cheaply in consequence of the general depression
- prevailing in the European money market, and further, owing to the
- fact that only a small dividend is expected on account of the very
- poor return freight ruling from North America. I think you would be
- able to take the shares out of the market at an average of about 7
- per cent. above par. We have paid in the last years since we
- concluded the pool with the Union Line, viz. in 1886 4 per cent.,
- 1887 6 per cent., 1888 8-1/2 per cent., 1889 11 per cent., 1890 8
- per cent. in the way of dividends, and during this time we wrote
- off for depreciation and added to the reserve funds about 60 per
- cent.
-
- "The position of our Company is an excellent one, our fleet
- consisting of modern ships (average age only about five years), and
- the book values of them being very low.
-
- "I should be obliged to you for thinking the matter over and
- informing me--if possible by cable--if you would be prepared to
- enter into negotiations on this basis. I myself start from the
- assumption that it might be good policy for our Company to obtain
- in the States a centre of interest and a position similar to that
- held by the Red Star Line and the Inman Lines in view of their
- connexion with the Pennsylvania Railroad, etc. It further strikes
- me that if this project is brought into effect one of your concern
- should become a member of our Board. I should thank you to return
- me this letter which, as I think it right expressly to point out to
- you, contains only what are purely my individual ideas."
-
-It may be assumed that the writing of this letter was prompted not only
-by the Packetfahrt's desire to strengthen its position in the United
-States, but also by its wish to obtain a foothold in Great Britain. This
-would enable it to exercise greater pressure on the competing British
-lines, which--indirectly, at least--still did a considerable portion of
-the Continental business. Ballin's suggestion did not lead to any
-practical result at the time, but was taken up again eight years later,
-in 1899, on the advice of Mr. (now Lord) Pirrie, of Messrs. Harland and
-Wolff, of Belfast. Important interests, partly of a financial character,
-linked his firm to British transatlantic shipping; and his special
-reason for taking up Ballin's proposal was to prevent an alliance
-between Mr. Baker's Atlantic Transport Company and the British Leyland
-Line, a scheme which was pushed forward from another quarter. He induced
-Mr. Baker to come to Europe so that the matter might be discussed
-directly. The attractiveness of the idea to Ballin was still further
-enhanced by the circumstance that the Atlantic Transport Line also
-controlled the National Line which maintained a service between New
-York and London, and was, indeed, the decisive factor on the New
-York-London route. Ballin, accordingly, after obtaining permission from
-the Board of Trustees, went to London, where he met Mr. Baker and Mr.
-Pirrie.
-
-It soon became clear, however, that the Board of Trustees did not wish
-to sanction such far-reaching changes. When Ballin cabled the details of
-the scheme to Hamburg, it was seen that 25 million marks--half the
-amount in shares of the Packetfahrt--would be needed to carry it
-through. Thus the discussions had to be broken off; but the attitude
-which the Board had taken up was very much resented by Ballin.
-Subsequent negotiations which were entered into in the early part of
-1900 in Hamburg at the suggestion of Mr. Baker also failed to secure
-agreement, and shortly afterwards the American company was bought up by
-the Leyland Line.
-
-At the same time a movement was being set on foot in the United States
-which aimed at a strengthening of the American mercantile marine by
-means of Government subsidies. This circumstance suggested to Mr. Baker
-the possibility of setting up an American shipping concern consisting of
-the combined Leyland and Atlantic Transport Company lines together with
-the British White Star Line, which was to profit by the expected
-legislation concerning shipping subsidies. Neither the latter idea,
-however, nor Mr. Baker's project assumed practical shape; but the
-Atlantic Transport-Leyland concern was enlarged by the addition of a
-number of other British lines, viz. the National Line, the
-Wilson-Furness-Leyland Line, and the West Indian and Pacific Line, all
-of which were managed by the owner of the Leyland Line, Mr. Ellerman,
-the well-known British shipping man of German descent. The tonnage
-represented by these combined interests amounted to half a million tons,
-and the new combine was looked upon as an undesirable competitor, by
-both the Packetfahrt and the British lines. The dissatisfaction felt by
-the latter showed itself, among other things, in their refusal to come
-to any mutual understanding regarding the passenger business. In the
-end, Mr. Baker himself was so little pleased with the way things turned
-out in practice that he severed his connexion with the other lines
-shortly afterwards, and once more the question became urgent whether it
-would be advisable for the Packetfahrt--either alone, or in conjunction
-with the White Star Line and the firm of Messrs. Harland and Wolff--to
-purchase the Atlantic Transport Line.
-
-That was the time when Mr. Pierpont Morgan's endeavours to create the
-combine, which has since then become known as the Morgan Trust, first
-attracted public attention. Ballin's notes give an exhaustive
-description of the course of the negotiations which lasted nearly
-eighteen months and were entered into in order to take precautions
-against the danger threatening from America, whilst at the same time
-they aimed at some understanding with Mr. Morgan, because the
-opportunity thus presented of setting up an all-embracing organization
-promoting the interests of all the transatlantic steamship concerns
-seemed too good to be lost. Ballin's notes for August, 1901, contain the
-following entry:
-
-"The grave economic depression from which Germany is suffering is
-assuming a more dangerous character every day. It is now spreading to
-other countries as well, and only the United States seem to have escaped
-so far. In addition to our other misfortunes, there is the
-unsatisfactory maize-crop in the States which, together with the other
-factors, has demoralized the whole freight business within an
-incredibly short space of time. For a concern of the huge size of our
-own such a situation is fraught with the greatest danger, and our
-position is made still worse by another circumstance. In the States, a
-country whose natural resources are wellnigh inexhaustible, and whose
-enterprising population has immensely increased its wealth, the creation
-of trusts is an event of everyday occurrence. The banker, Pierpont
-Morgan--a man of whom it is said that he combines the possession of an
-enormous fortune with an intelligence which is simply astounding--has
-already created the Steel Trust, the biggest combination the world has
-ever seen, and he has now set about to lay the foundations for an
-American mercantile marine."
-
-A short report on the position then existing which Ballin made for
-Prince Henckell-Donnersmarck, who had himself called into being some big
-industrial combinations, is of interest even now, although the situation
-has entirely changed. But if we want to understand the position as it
-then was we must try to appreciate the views held at that time, and this
-the report helps us to do. Ballin had been referred to Prince
-Henckell-Donnersmarck by the Kaiser, who had a high opinion of the
-latter's business abilities, and who had watched with lively interest
-the American shipping projects from the start, because he anticipated
-that they would produce an adverse effect on the future development of
-the German shipping companies. The report is given below:--
-
- "In 1830 about 90 per cent. of the United States sea-borne trade
- was still carried by vessels flying the American flag. By 1862 this
- percentage had gone down to 50 per cent., and it has shown a
- constant decrease ever since. In 1880 it had dwindled down to 16
- per cent., and in 1890 to as low a figure as 9 per cent. During
- recent years this falling off, which is a corollary of the customs
- policy pursued by the United States, has given rise to a number of
- legislative measures intended to promote the interests of American
- shipping by the granting of Government subsidies. No practical
- steps of importance, however, have been taken so far; all that has
- been done is that subsidies have been granted to run a North
- Atlantic mail service maintained by means of four steamers, but no
- success worth mentioning has been achieved until now.
-
- "Quite recently the well-known American banker, Mr. J. Pierpont
- Morgan, conjointly with some other big American capitalists, has
- taken an interest in the plan. The following facts have become
- known so far in connexion with his efforts:
-
- "Morgan has acquired the Leyland Line, of Liverpool, which,
- according to the latest register, owns a fleet of 54 vessels,
- totalling 155,489 gross register tons. This purchase includes the
- West India and Pacific Line, which was absorbed into the Leyland
- Line as recently as a twelvemonth ago. The Mediterranean service
- formerly carried on by the Leyland Line has not been acquired by
- Morgan. He has, however, added the Atlantic Transport Company.
- Morgan's evident intention is to form a big American shipping
- trust, and I have received absolutely reliable information to the
- effect that the American Line and the Red Star Line are also going
- to join the combine. The shares of the two last-named lines are
- already for the most part in American hands, and both companies are
- being managed from New York. Both lines together own 23 steamers
- representing 86,811 tons.
-
- "A correct estimate of the size of the undertaking can only be
- formed if the steamers now building for the various companies, and
- those that have been added to their fleets since the publication of
- the register from which the above figures are taken, are also taken
- into account. These vessels represent a total tonnage of about
- 200,000 tons, so that the new American concern would possess a
- fleet representing 430,000 gross register tons. The corresponding
- figures for the Hamburg-Amerika Linie and for the Lloyd, including
- steamers building, are 650,000 and 600,000 tons respectively.
-
- "The proper method of rightly appreciating the importance of the
- American coalition is to restrict the comparison, as far as the two
- German companies are concerned, to the amount of tonnage which they
- employ in their services to and from United States ports. If this
- is borne in mind, we arrive at the following figures: German
- lines--390,000 G.R.T.; American concern--about 430,000 G.R.T. These
- figures show that, as regards the amount of tonnage employed, the
- Morgan Trust is superior to the two German companies on the North
- Atlantic route. It can also challenge comparison with the regular
- British lines--grand total, 438,566 G.R.T.
-
- "In all the steps he has taken, Morgan, no doubt, has been guided
- by his confidence in his ability to enforce the passing of a
- Subsidy Act by Congress in favour of his undertaking. So long as he
- does not succeed in these efforts of his he will, of course, be
- obliged to operate the lines of which he has secured control under
- foreign flags. Up to the present only four steamers of the American
- Line, viz. the _New York_, _Philadelphia_, _St. Louis_, and _St.
- Paul_, are flying the United States flag, whereas the remaining
- vessels of the American Line, and those of the Leyland, the West
- India and Pacific, the American Transport, the National, and the
- Furness-Boston lines, are sailing under the British, and those of
- the Red Star Line under the Belgian flag.
-
- "The organization which Mr. Morgan either has created, or is
- creating, is not in itself a danger to the two German shipping
- companies; neither can it be said that the Government
- subsidies--provided they do not exceed an amount that is justified
- by the conditions actually existing--are in themselves detrimental
- to the German interests. The real danger, however, threatens from
- the amalgamation of the American railway interests with those of
- American shipping.
-
- "It is no secret that Morgan is pursuing his far-reaching plans as
- the head of a syndicate which comprises a number of the most
- important and most enterprising business men in the United States,
- and that the railway interests are particularly well represented in
- it. Morgan himself, during his stay in London a few months ago,
- stated to some British shipping men that, according to his
- estimates, nearly 70 per cent. of the goods which are shipped to
- Europe from the North Atlantic ports are carried to the latter by
- the railroads on Through Bills of Lading, and that their further
- transport is entrusted to foreign shipping companies. He and his
- friends, Morgan added, did not see any reason why the railroad
- companies should leave it to foreign-owned companies to carry those
- American goods across the Atlantic. It would be much more logical
- to bring about an amalgamation of the American railroad and
- shipping interests for the purpose of securing the whole profits
- for American capital.
-
- "This projected combination of the railroad and sea-borne traffic
- is, as I have pointed out, a great source of danger to the foreign
- shipping companies, as it will expose them to the possibility of
- finding their supplies from the United States _hinterland_ cut off.
- This latter traffic is indispensable to the remunerative working of
- our North American services, and it is quite likely that Morgan's
- statement that they amount to about 70 per cent. of the total
- sea-borne traffic is essentially correct."
-
-The negotiations which Ballin carried on in this connexion are described
-as follows in his notes:--
-
- "When I was in London in July (1901), I had an opportunity of
- discussing this American business with Mr. Pirrie. Pirrie had
- already informed me some time ago that he would like to talk to me
- on this subject, but he had never indicated until then that Morgan
- had actually instructed him to discuss matters with me. A second
- meeting took place at which Ismay (the chairman of the White Star
- Line) was present in addition to Pirrie and myself, and it was
- agreed that Pirrie should go to New York and find out from Morgan
- himself what were his plans regarding the White Star Line and the
- Hamburg-Amerika Linie.
-
- "Shortly after Pirrie's return from the States I went to London to
- talk things over with him. He had already sent me a wire to say
- that he had also asked Mr. Wilding to take part in our meeting; and
- this circumstance induced me to call on Mr. Wilding when I passed
- through Southampton _en route_ for London. What he told me filled
- me with as much concern as surprise. He informed me that the
- syndicate intended to acquire the White Star Line, but that, owing
- to my relations with the Kaiser, the acquisition of the
- Hamburg-Amerika Linie was not contemplated. Morgan, he further told
- me, was willing to work on the most friendly terms with us, as far
- as this could be done without endangering the interests of the
- syndicate; but the fact was that the biggest American railroad
- companies had already approached the syndicate, and that they had
- offered terms of co-operation which were practically identical with
- a combination between themselves and the syndicate.
-
- "In the course of the discussions then proceeding between Pirrie,
- Wilding, and myself the situation changed to our advantage, and I
- was successful in seeing my own proposals accepted, the essence of
- which was that, on the one hand, our independence should be
- respected, that the nationality of our company should not be
- interfered with, and that no American members should be added to
- our Board of Trustees; whilst, on the other hand, a fairly close
- contact was to be established between the two concerns, and
- competition between them was to be eliminated."
-
-The draft agreement, which was discussed at these meetings in London
-(and which was considerably altered later on), provided that it should
-run for ten years, and that a mutual interchange of shares between the
-two concerns should be effected, the amount of shares thus exchanged to
-represent a value of 20 million marks (equivalent to 25 per cent. of the
-joint-stock capital of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie). Mutual participation
-was provided for in case of any future increase in the capital of either
-company; but the American concern was prohibited from purchasing any
-additional shares of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie. The voting rights for
-the Hamburg shares should be assigned to Ballin for life, and those for
-the American shares to Morgan on the same terms. Instead of actually
-parting with its shares, the Hamburg company was to have the option of
-paying their equivalent in steamers. The agreement emphasized that,
-whilst recognizing the desirability of as far-reaching a financial
-participation as possible, Ballin did not believe that, with due regard
-to German public opinion and to the wishes of the Imperial Government,
-he was justified in recommending an interchange of shares exceeding the
-amount agreed upon. The American concern was prohibited from calling at
-any German ports, and the Hamburg company agreed not to run any services
-to such European ports as were served by the other party. A pool
-agreement covering the cabin business was entered into; and with respect
-to the steerage and cargo business it was agreed that the existing
-understandings should be maintained until they expired, and that
-afterwards a special understanding should be concluded between both
-contracting parties.
-
-Immediately after Ballin's return to Hamburg the Board of Trustees
-unanimously expressed its agreement in principle with the proposals.
-
-"For my own part," Ballin says in his notes on these matters, "I
-declared that I could only regard the practical execution of these
-proposals as possible if they receive the unequivocal assent of the
-Kaiser and of the Imperial Chancellor. Next evening I was surprised to
-receive two telegrams, one from the Lord Chamberlain's office, and one
-from the Kaiser, commanding my presence on the following day for dinner
-at the Hubertusstock hunting lodge of the Kaiser, where I was invited to
-stay until the afternoon of the second day following. I left for Berlin
-on the same evening, October 16th (1901); and, together with the
-Chancellor, I continued my journey the following day to Eberswalde. At
-that town a special carriage conveyed us to Hubertusstock, where we
-arrived after a two-hours' drive, and where I was privileged to spend
-two unforgettable days in most intimate intercourse with the Kaiser. The
-Chancellor had previously informed me that the Kaiser did not like the
-terms of the agreement, because Metternich had told him that the
-Americans would have the right to acquire 20 million marks' worth of our
-shares. During an after-dinner walk with the Kaiser, on which we were
-accompanied by the Chancellor and the Kaiser's A.D.C., Captain v.
-Grumme, I explained the whole proposals in detail. I pointed out to the
-Kaiser that whereas the British lines engaged in the North Atlantic
-business were simply absorbed by the trust, the proposed agreement would
-leave the independence of the German lines intact. This made the Kaiser
-inquire what was to become of the North German Lloyd, and I had to
-promise that I would see to it that the Lloyd would not be exposed to
-any immediate danger arising out of our agreement, and that it would be
-given an opportunity of becoming a partner to it as well. The Kaiser
-then wanted to see the actual text of the agreement as drafted in
-London. When I produced it from my pocket we entered the room adjacent
-to the entrance of the lodge, which happened to be the small bedroom of
-Captain v. Grumme; and there a meeting, which lasted several hours, was
-held, the Kaiser reading out aloud every article of the agreement, and
-discussing every single item. The Kaiser himself was sitting on Captain
-v. Grumme's bed; the Chancellor and myself occupied the only two chairs
-available in the room, the Captain comfortably seating himself on a
-table. The outcome of the proceedings was that the Kaiser declared
-himself completely satisfied with the proposals, only commissioning me,
-as I have explained, to look after the interests of the North German
-Lloyd.
-
-"On the afternoon of the following day, after lunch, the Chancellor and
-I returned to Berlin, this giving me a chance of discussing with the
-former--as I had previously done with the Kaiser--every question of
-importance. On October 18th I arrived back in Hamburg."
-
-The negotiations with the North German Lloyd which Ballin had undertaken
-to enter upon proved to be very difficult, the Director General of that
-company, Dr. Wiegand, not sharing Ballin's views with respect to the
-American danger and the significance of the American combination. After
-Ballin, however, had explained the proposals in detail, the Lloyd people
-altered their previously held opinion, and in the subsequent London
-discussions, which were resumed in November, the President of the Lloyd,
-Mr. Plate, also took part. Nevertheless, it was found impossible to
-agree definitely there and then, and a further discussion between the
-two directors general took place at Potsdam on November 13th, both of
-them having been invited to dinner by the Kaiser, who was sitting
-between the two gentlemen at the table. Ballin's suggestion that he and
-Dr. Wiegand should proceed to New York in order to ascertain whether the
-shipping companies and the American railroads had actually entered into
-a combination, was heartily seconded by the Kaiser, and was agreed to by
-Dr. Wiegand. The Lloyd people, however, were still afraid that the
-proposed understanding would jeopardize the independence of the German
-lines; but Ballin, by giving detailed explanations of the points
-connected with the financial provisions, succeeded in removing these
-fears, and the Board of Trustees of the Lloyd expressed themselves
-satisfied with these explanations. They insisted upon the omission of
-the clauses dealing with the financial participation, but agreed to the
-proposals in every other respect.
-
-The arrangements for such mutual exchange of shares were thereupon
-dropped in the final drafting of the agreement, and were replaced by a
-mutual participation in the distribution of dividends, the American
-concern guaranteeing the German lines a dividend of 6 per cent., and
-only claiming a share in a dividend exceeding that figure. This change
-owed its origin to a proposal put forward by Mr. v. Hansemann, the
-Director of the Disconto-Gesellschaft, who had taken an active interest
-in the development of the whole matter.
-
-In the course of the negotiations the Lloyd made a further proposal by
-which it was intended to safeguard the German national character of the
-two great shipping companies. It was suggested that a
-corporation--somewhat similar to the Preussische Seehandlung--should be
-set up by the Imperial Government with the assistance of some privately
-owned capital. This corporation should purchase such a part of the
-shares of each company as would defeat any attempts at destroying their
-national character. Ballin, however, to whom any kind of Government
-interference in shipping matters was anathema, would have nothing to do
-with this plan, and thus it fell through.
-
-Ballin thereupon having informed the Kaiser in Kiel on board the
-battleship _Kaiser Wilhelm II_ regarding the progress of the
-negotiations, a further meeting with the Lloyd people took place early
-in December, which led to a complete agreement among the two German
-companies as to the final proposals to be submitted to the American
-group; and shortly afterwards, at a meeting held at Cologne, agreement
-was also secured with Mr. Pirrie. The final discussions took place in
-New York early in February, Ballin and Mr. Tietgens, the chairman of the
-Board of Directors, acting on behalf of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie, and
-President Plate and Dr. Wiegand on that of the Lloyd. Meanwhile,
-Morgan's negotiations with the White Star Line and other British
-companies had also led to a successful termination. Concerning the New
-York meetings we find an interesting entry in Ballin's diary:
-
- "In the afternoon of February 13th, 1902, Messrs. Griscom, Widener,
- Wilding, and Battle, and two sons of Mr. Griscom met us in
- conference. Various suggestions were put forward in the course of
- the proceedings which necessitated further deliberations in private
- between ourselves and the Bremen gentlemen, and it was agreed to
- convene a second general meeting at the private office of Mr.
- Griscom on the 15th floor of the Empire Building. This meeting was
- held in the forenoon of the following day, and a complete agreement
- was arrived at concerning the more important of the questions that
- were still open. I took up the position that the combine would only
- be able to make the utmost possible use of its power if we
- succeeded in securing control of the Cunard and Holland American
- Lines. I was glad to find that Mr. Morgan shared my view. He
- authorized me to negotiate on his behalf with Director Van den
- Toorn, the representative of the Holland American Line, and after a
- series of meetings a preliminary agreement was reached giving
- Morgan the option of purchasing 51 per cent. of the shares of the
- Holland American Line. Morgan undertook to negotiate with the
- Cunard Line through the intermediary of some British friends. It
- has been settled that, if the control of the two companies in
- question is secured to the combine, one half of it should be
- exercised by the American group, and the other half should be
- divided between the Lloyd and ourselves. This arrangement will
- assure the German lines of a far-reaching influence on the future
- development of affairs.
-
- "On the following Thursday the agreements, which were meanwhile
- ready in print, were signed. We addressed a joint telegram to the
- Kaiser, informing him of the definite conclusion of the agreement,
- to which he sent me an exceedingly gracious reply. The Kaiser's
- telegram was dispatched from Hubertusstock, and its text was as
- follows:
-
- "'Ballin, Director General of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie, New York.
- Have received your joint message with sincere satisfaction. Am
- especially pleased that it reached me in the same place where the
- outlines gained form and substance in October last. You must be
- grateful to St. Hubertus. He seems to know something about shipping
- as well. In recognition of your untiring efforts and of the success
- of your labours I confer upon you the Second Class of my Order of
- the Red Eagle with the Crown. Remember me to Henry.--WILHELM I.R.'
-
- "Morgan gave a dinner in our honour at his private residence which
- abounds in treasures of art of all descriptions, and the other
- gentlemen also entertained us with lavish hospitality. Tietgens and
- I returned the compliment by giving a dinner at the Holland House
- which was of special interest because it was attended not only by
- the partners of Morgan, but also by Mr. Jacob Schiff, of Messrs.
- Kuhn, Loeb & Co., who had been Morgan's opponents in the conflict
- concerning the Northern Pacific. During the following week the
- Lloyd provided a big dinner on board the _Kronprinz Wilhelm_ for
- about 200 invited guests.
-
- "Prince Henry of Prussia was one of the passengers of the
- _Kronprinz Wilhelm_ which, owing to the inclemency of the weather,
- arrived in New York one day behind her scheduled time. On the day
- of her arrival--Sunday, February 23rd--I had dinner on board the
- _Hohenzollern_. We also took part in a number of other celebrations
- in honour of the Prince. Especially memorable and of extraordinary
- sumptuousness was the lunch at which Mr. Morgan presided, and at
- which one hundred captains of industry--leading American business
- men from all parts of the States--were present. On the evening of
- the same day the press dinner took place which 1,200 newspaper men
- had arranged in honour of the Prince. Mr. Schiff introduced me to
- Mr. Harriman, the chairman of the Union Pacific, with whom I
- entered into discussions concerning our participation in the San
- Francisco-Far East business."
-
-At the request of the American group the publication of the agreement
-was delayed for some time, because it was thought desirable to wait for
-the final issue of the Congress debates on the Subsidies Bill. A report
-which Ballin, after some further discussion with Morgan and his London
-friends had taken place, made for the German Embassy in London,
-describes the situation as it appeared in April, 1902. It runs as
-follows:
-
- "(1) Acquisition of the joint control of the Cunard Line by the two
- German companies and the American syndicate. On this subject
- discussions have taken place with Lord Inverclyde, the chairman of
- the Cunard Line. Neither Lord Inverclyde nor any of the other
- representatives of British shipping interests objected in any way
- to the proposed transaction for reasons connected with the national
- interest. He said, indeed, that he thought the syndicate should not
- content itself with purchasing 51 per cent. of the shares, but that
- it should rather absorb the whole company instead. The purchase
- price he named appeared to me somewhat excessive; but he has
- already hinted that he would be prepared to recommend to his
- company to accept a lower offer, and it is most likely that the
- negotiations will lead to a successful issue, unless the British
- Government should pull itself together at the eleventh hour.
-
- "(2) Public announcement of the formation of the Combine. Whereas
- until quite recently the American gentlemen maintained that it
- would be advisable to wait for the conclusion of the negotiations
- going on at Washington with respect to the proposed subsidy
- legislation, Mr. Morgan now shares my view that it is not desirable
- to do so any longer, but that it would be wiser to proceed without
- any regard to the intentions of Washington. The combine,
- therefore--unless unexpected obstacles should intervene--will make
- its public appearance within a few weeks.
-
- "(3) The British Admiralty. An agreement exists between the British
- Admiralty and the White Star Line conceding to the former the right
- of pre-emption of the three express steamers _Oceanic, Teutonic,_
- and _Majestic._ This agreement also provides that the White Star
- Line, against an annual subsidy from the Government, must place
- these boats at the disposal of the Admiralty in case of war. The
- First Lord has now asked Mr. Ismay whether there is any truth in
- the report that he wants to sell the White Star Line; and when he
- was told that such was the case, he declared that, this being so,
- he would be compelled to exercise his right of pre-emption.
-
- "It would be extremely awkward in the interests of the combine if
- the three vessels had to be placed at the service of the Admiralty,
- especially as it is probable that they would be employed in
- competition with the combine. Therefore a compromise has been
- effected in such a form that Mr. Morgan is to take over the
- agreement on behalf of the combine for the three years it has still
- to run. This means that the steamers will continue to fly the
- British flag for the present, and that they must be placed at the
- disposition of the Admiralty in case of war. The Admiralty
- suggested an extension of the terms of the agreement for a further
- period of three years; but it was content to withdraw its
- suggestion when Mr. Morgan declined to accept it. The agreement
- does not cover any of the other boats of the line which are the
- biggest cargo steamers flying the Union Jack, and consequently no
- obligations have been incurred with respect to these.
-
- "(4) Text of the public announcement. A memorandum is in course of
- preparation fixing the text of the announcement by which the public
- is to be made acquainted with the formation of the combine. In
- compliance with the wishes emanating from prominent British
- quarters, the whole transaction will be represented in the light of
- a big Anglo-American 'community of interest' agreement; and the
- fact that it virtually cedes to the United States the control of
- the North Atlantic shipping business will be kept in the
- background, as far as it is possible to do so."
-
-The first semi-official announcement dealing with the combine was
-published on April 19th by the British Press, and at an Extraordinary
-General Meeting of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie on May 28th, the public was
-given some carefully prepared information about the German-American
-agreement. At that meeting Dr. Diederich Hahn, the well-known chairman
-of the _Bund der Landwirte_ (Agrarian League), rose, to everybody's
-surprise, to inquire if it was the case that the national interests, and
-especially the agricultural interests of Germany, would be adversely
-affected by the agreement. The ensuing discussion showed Ballin at his
-best. He allayed Dr. Hahn's fears lest the American influence in the
-combination would be so strong as to eliminate the German influence
-altogether by convincing him that the whole agreement was built up on a
-basis of parity, and that the German interests would not be jeopardized
-in any way. The argument that the close connexion established between
-the trust and the American railroad companies would lead to Germany
-being flooded with American agricultural produce he parried by pointing
-out that the interests of the American railroads did not so much require
-an increased volume of exports, but rather of imports, because a great
-disproportion existed between their eastbound and their westbound
-traffic, the former by far exceeding the latter, so that a further
-increase in the amount of goods carried from the western part of the
-country to the Atlantic seaports would only make matters worse from the
-point of remunerative working of their lines.
-
-What Ballin thought of the system of Government subsidies in aid of
-shipping matters is concisely expressed by his remarks in a speech which
-he made on the occasion of the trial trip of the s.s. _Blücher_, when he
-said: "If it were announced to me to-day that the Government subsidies
-had been stolen overnight, I should heave a sigh of relief, only
-thinking what a pity it was that it had not been done long ago."
-
-In Great Britain the news that some big British shipping companies had
-been purchased by the American concern caused a great deal of public
-excitement. In Ballin's diary we find the following entry under date of
-June 5th:
-
- "In England, in consequence of the national excitement, a very
- awkward situation has arisen. Sir Alfred Jones and Sir Christopher
- Furness know how to make use of this excitement as an opportunity
- for shouldering the British nation with the burden which the
- excessive tonnage owned by their companies represents to them in
- these days of depression. King Edward has also evinced an
- exceedingly keen interest in these matters of late, which goes to
- show that what makes people in England feel most uncomfortable is
- not the passing of the various shipping companies into American
- hands, but the fact that the German companies have done so well
- over the deal. Mr. Morgan has had an interview with some of the
- British Cabinet ministers at which he declared his readiness to
- give the Government additional facilities as regards the supply of
- auxiliary cruisers. We are hopeful that such concessions will take
- the wind out of the sails of those who wish to create a
- counter-combination subsidized by grants-in-aid from the
- Government."
-
-An outcome of the German-American arrangements was that Morgan and his
-friends were invited by the Kaiser to take part in the festivities
-connected with the Kiel Week. The American gentlemen were treated with
-marked attention by the Kaiser, and extended their visit so as to
-include Hamburg and Berlin as well.
-
-At a conference of the transatlantic lines held in December, 1902, at
-Cologne, Ballin put forward once more his suggestion that a cabin pool
-should be established. The proposal, however, fell through owing to the
-opposition from the Cunard Line.
-
-The depression in the freight business which had set in in 1901, and
-which was still very pronounced towards the close of 1902, seriously
-affected the prospects of the transatlantic shipping companies,
-especially those combined in the Morgan Trust, who were the owners of a
-huge amount of tonnage used in the cargo business, and whose sphere of
-action was restricted to the North Atlantic route. "Experience now
-shows," Ballin wrote in his notes, "that we were doing the right thing
-when we entered into the alliance with the Trust. If we had not done
-this, the latter would doubtless have tried to invade the German market
-in order to keep its many idle ships going."
-
-Meanwhile the Cunard Line had concluded an agreement with the British
-Government by which the Government bound itself to advance to the
-company the funds for the building of its two mammoth express liners,
-the _Mauretania_ and the _Lusitania_, while at the same time granting it
-a subsidy sufficient to provide for the payment of the interest on and
-for the redemption of the loan advanced by the Government for the
-building of the vessels.
-
-Further difficulties seemed to be ahead owing to the aggressive measures
-proposed by the Canadian Pacific Company, which was already advertising
-a service from Antwerp to Canada. To ward off the danger threatening
-from this quarter, Ballin proceeded to New York to take up negotiations
-with Sir Thomas Shaughnessy, the president of the Canadian Pacific. He
-went there on behalf of all the Continental shipping companies
-concerned, and the results he arrived at were so satisfactory to both
-parties that Ballin corresponded henceforth on terms of close personal
-friendship with Sir Thomas, who was one of the leading experts on
-railway matters anywhere. These friendly relations were very helpful to
-Ballin afterwards when he was engaged in difficult negotiations with
-other representatives of Sir Thomas's company, and never failed to
-ensure a successful understanding being arrived at.
-
-On the occasion of this trip to America Ballin had some interesting--or,
-as he puts it, "rather exciting"--discussions with Morgan and his
-friends. He severely criticized the management of the affairs of the
-Trust, and tried to make Morgan understand that nothing short of a
-radical improvement--i.e. a change of the leading personages--would put
-matters right. "Morgan," he writes, "finds it impossible to get the
-right men to take their places, and he held out to me the most alluring
-prospects if I myself should feel inclined to go to New York as
-president of the Trust, even if only for a year or two; but I refused
-his offer, chiefly on account of my relations with the Kaiser."
-
-Ballin's suggestions, nevertheless, led to a change in the management of
-the Trust. This was decided upon at meetings held in London, where
-Ballin stayed for a time on his way back to Hamburg. Mr. Pirrie also
-took part in these meetings.
-
-In the meantime the relations between the Cunard Line and the other
-transatlantic shipping companies had become very critical. The Hungarian
-Government, for some time past, had shown a desire to derive a greater
-benefit from the considerable emigrant traffic of the country--a desire
-which was shared by important private quarters as well. The idea was to
-divert the stream of emigrants to Fiume--instead of allowing them to
-cross the national frontiers uncontrolled--and to carry them from that
-port to the United States by direct steamers. Ballin had repeatedly
-urged that the lines which were working together under the pool
-agreement should fall in with these wishes of the Hungarian Government;
-but his proposals were not acted upon, mainly owing to the opposition of
-the North German Lloyd, which company carried the biggest share of the
-Hungarian emigrants.
-
-To the great surprise of the pool lines it was announced in the early
-part of 1904 that the Hungarian Government was about to conclude an
-agreement with the Cunard Line--the only big transatlantic shipping
-company which had remained outside the Trust--by which it was provided
-that the Cunard Line was to run fortnightly services from Fiume, and by
-which the Hungarian Government was to bind itself to prevent--by means
-of closing the frontiers or any other suitable methods--emigrants from
-choosing any other routes leading out of the country. Such an agreement
-would deprive the pool lines of the whole of their Hungarian emigrant
-business. Discussions between Ballin and the representatives of the
-Cunard Line only elicited the statement on the part of the latter that
-it had no power any longer to retrace its steps. An episode which took
-place in the course of these discussions is of special interest now, as
-it enables us to understand why the amalgamation of the Cunard Line with
-the Morgan Trust never took place.
-
-Ballin asked Lord Inverclyde why the attitude of the Cunard Line had
-been so aggressive throughout. The reply was that the Morgan Trust, and
-not the Cunard Line, was the aggressor, because Morgan's aim was to
-crush it. When Ballin interposed that this had never been intended by
-the Trust--that the Trust, indeed, had attempted to include the Cunard
-Line within the combination, that Lord Inverclyde himself had also made
-a proposal towards that end, and that the project had only come to grief
-on account of the strong feeling of British public opinion against
-it--Lord Inverclyde answered that, far from this being the case, the
-Trust had never replied to his proposal, and that he had not even
-received an acknowledgment of his last letter.
-
-In a letter to Mr. Boas, the general representative of his company in
-New York, in which he described the general situation, Ballin stated
-that the statement of Lord Inverclyde was indeed quite correct.
-
-The Hungarian situation became still more complicated after the receipt
-of some information that reached Ballin from Vienna to the effect that
-the Austrian Government intended to imitate the example set by the
-Hungarian Government by running a service from Trieste. After prolonged
-discussions the Austrian Government also undertook not to grant an
-emigration licence to the Cunard Line so long as the struggle between
-the two competing concerns was not settled.
-
-Thereupon this struggle of the pool lines--both the Continental and the
-British ones--against the Cunard Line was started in real earnest, not
-only for the British but also for the Scandinavian and the Fiume
-business. After some time negotiations for an agreement were opened in
-London in July on the initiative and with the assistance of Mr. Balfour,
-who was then President of the Board of Trade. These, however, led to no
-result, and a basis for a compromise was not found until August, 1904,
-when renewed negotiations took place at Frankfort-On-Main. A definite
-understanding was reached towards the close of the same year, and then
-at last this struggle, which was really one of the indirect consequences
-of the establishment of the Morgan Trust, came to an end.
-
-Looked upon from a purely business point of view, the Morgan Trust--or,
-to call it by its real name, the "International Mercantile Marine
-Company," which in pool slang, was simply spoken of as the "Immco
-Lines"--was doubtless a failure. Only the World War, yielding, as it
-did, formerly unheard-of profits to the shipping business of the neutral
-and the Allied countries, brought about a financial improvement, but it
-is still too early to predict whether this improvement will be
-permanent. The reasons why the undertaking was bound to be
-unremunerative before the outbreak of the war are not far to seek, and
-include the initial failure of its promoters to secure the adhesion of
-the Cunard Line--a failure which, as is shown by Ballin's notes, was to
-a large extent due to the hesitating policy of the Hamburg company. To
-make business as remunerative as possible was the very object for which
-the Trust was formed, but the more economical working which was the
-means to reach this end could not be realized while such an essential
-factor as the Cunard Line not only remained an outsider, but even became
-a formidable competitor.
-
-It can hardly be doubted that the adhesion of the Cunard Line to the
-Morgan Trust--or, in other words, the formation of a combine including
-all the important transatlantic lines without exception--would have
-brought about such a development of the pool idea as would have led to a
-much closer linking-up of the financial interests of the individual
-partners than could be achieved under a pool agreement. Under such a
-"community of interest" agreement, every inducement to needless
-competition could be eliminated, and replaced by a system of mutual
-participation in the net profits of each line. This was the ideal at
-which Ballin, taught by many years of experience, was aiming.
-
-Over and over again the pool lines had an opportunity of finding out
-that it paid them better to come to a friendly understanding, even if it
-entailed a small sacrifice, than to put up a fight against a new
-competitor. Sometimes, indeed, an understanding was made desirable owing
-to political considerations. However, the number of participants
-ultimately grew so large that Ballin sarcastically remarked: "Sooner or
-later the pool will have to learn how to get along without us," and he
-never again abandoned his plan of having it replaced by closely-knit
-community of interest agreements which would be worked under a
-centralized management, and therefore produce much better results. In
-other branches of his activities--e.g. in his agreements with the other
-Hamburg companies and in the one with the Booth Line, which was engaged
-in the service to Northern Brazil, he succeeded in developing the
-existing understandings into actual community of interest agreements,
-and it seems that these have given all-round satisfaction. The
-negotiations between himself and the North German Lloyd shortly before
-the outbreak of the war were carried on with the same object.
-
-Throughout the endless vicissitudes in the history of the pool the
-formation of the Morgan Trust decidedly stands out as the most
-interesting and most dramatic episode. At the present time the position
-of the German steamship companies in those days seems even more imposing
-than it appeared to the contemporary observer. To-day we can hardly
-imagine that some big British lines should, one after the other, be
-offered for purchase first to some German, and then to the American
-concerns. Such a thing was only possible because at that time British
-shipping enterprise was more interested in the employment of tramp
-steamers than in the working of regular services, the shipowners
-believing that greater profits could be obtained by the former method.
-The result was a noticeable lack of leading men fully qualified to speak
-with authority on questions relating to the regular business, whereas in
-Germany such men were not wanting. The transatlantic business
-threatened, in fact, to become more and more the prerogative of the
-German-American combination. To-day, of course, it is no longer possible
-to say with certainty whether the Cunard Line could have been induced to
-join that combination, if the right moment had not been missed. The
-great danger with which British shipping was threatened at that time,
-and the great success which the German lines achieved, not only stirred
-British public opinion to its depths, but also acted as a powerful
-stimulus on the shipping firms themselves. This caused a pronounced
-revival of regular line shipping, which went so far that tramp shipping
-became less and less important, and which ultimately led to a
-concentration of the former within the framework of a few large
-organizations which exercise a correspondingly strong influence on
-present-day British shipping in general. These organizations differ from
-the big German companies by the circumstance that they represent close
-financial amalgamations and that they have not, like the German
-companies, grown up slowly and step for step with the expanding volume
-of transatlantic traffic.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE EXPANSION OF THE HAMBURG-AMERIKA LINIE
-
-
-The principal work which fell to Ballin's share during the period
-immediately following his nomination in 1888 on the Board of his company
-was that connected with the introduction of the fast steamers and the
-resulting expansion of the passenger business. Offices were established
-in Berlin, Dresden, and Frankfort-On-Main in 1890, and arrangements were
-made with the Hamburg-South American S.S. Co., the German East Africa
-Line, and the Hansa Line--the latter running a service to Canada--by
-which these companies entrusted the management of their own passenger
-business to the Packetfahrt. Thus, step by step, the passenger
-department developed into an organization the importance of which grew
-from year to year.
-
-The expansion of the passenger business also necessitated an enlargement
-of the facilities for the dispatch of the Company's steamers. This work
-had been effected until then at the northern bank of the main Elbe, but
-in 1888 it was transferred to the Amerika-Kai which was newly built at
-the southern bank; and when the normal depth of the fairway of the Elbe
-was no longer sufficient to enable the fast steamers of considerable
-draught to come up to the city, it was decided to dispatch them from
-Brunshausen, a small place situated much lower down the Elbe. In the
-long run, however, it proved very inconvenient to manage the passenger
-dispatch from there, and the construction of special port facilities at
-Cuxhaven owned by the Company was taken in hand. The accommodation at
-the Amerika-Kai, although it was enlarged as early as 1889, was soon
-found to be inadequate, so that it was resolved to provide new
-accommodation at the Petersen-Kai, situated on the northern bank of the
-Elbe, and this project was carried out in 1893.
-
-The number of services run by the Company was augmented in those early
-years by the establishment of a line to Baltimore and another to
-Philadelphia. In 1889 a new line starting from New York was opened to
-Venezuelan and Colombian ports. The North Atlantic services were
-considerably enlarged in 1892, when the Company took over the Hansa
-Line.
-
-The desire to find remunerative employment for the fast steamers during
-the dead season of the North Atlantic passenger business prompted the
-decision to enter these boats into a service from New York to the
-Mediterranean during the winter months. The same desire, however, also
-gave rise to one of the most original ideas carried into practice
-through Ballin's enterprise, i.e. the institution of pleasure trips and
-tourist cruises. It may perhaps be of interest to point out in this
-connexion that, about half a century earlier, another Hamburg shipping
-man had thought of specially fitting out a vessel for an extended cruise
-of that kind. I do not know whether this plan was carried out at the
-time, and whether Ballin was indebted to his predecessor for the whole
-idea; in any case, the following advertisement which appeared in the
-_Leipziger Illustrierte Zeitung,_ and which I reprint for curiosity's
-sake, was found among his papers.
-
- "AN OPPORTUNITY FOR TAKING PART IN A VOYAGE
- ROUND THE WORLD
-
- "The undersigned Hamburg shipowner proposes to equip one of his
- large sailing vessels for a cruise round the world, to start this
- summer, during which the passengers will be able to visit the
- following cities and countries, viz. Lisbon, Madeira, Teneriffe,
- Cap Verde Islands, Rio de Janeiro, Rio de la Plata, Falklands
- Islands, Valparaiso, and all the intermediate ports of call on the
- Pacific coast of South America as far as Guayaquil (for Quito), the
- Marquesas Islands, Friendly Islands (Otaheite), and other island
- groups in the Pacific, China (Choosan, Hongkong, Canton, Macao,
- Whampoa), Manilla, Singapore, Ceylon, Île de France or Madagascar,
- the Cape of Good Hope, St. Helena, Ascension Island, the Azores,
- and back to Hamburg.
-
- "The cruise is not intended for business purposes of any kind; but
- the whole equipment and accommodation of the vessel, the time spent
- at the various ports of call, and the details of the whole cruise,
- are to be arranged with the sole object of promoting the safety,
- the comfort, the entertainment, and the instruction of the
- passengers.
-
- "Admission will be strictly confined to persons of unblemished
- repute and of good education, those possessing a scientific
- education receiving preference.
-
- "The members of the expedition may confidently look forward to a
- pleasant and successful voyage. A first-class ship, an experienced
- and well-educated captain, a specially selected crew, and a
- qualified physician are sufficient guarantees to ensure a complete
- success.
-
- "The fare for the whole voyage is so low that it only represents a
- very slight addition to the ordinary cost of living incurred on
- shore. In return, the passenger will have many opportunities of
- acquiring a first-hand knowledge of the wonders of the world, of
- the beautiful scenery of the remotest countries, and of the manners
- and customs of many different nations. During the whole voyage he
- will be surrounded by the utmost comfort, and will enjoy the
- company of numerous persons of culture and refinement. The sea air
- will be of immeasurable benefit to his health, and the experience
- which he is sure to gain will remain a source of pleasure to him
- for the rest of his life.
-
- "Full particulars may be had on application to the undersigned, and
- a stamped envelope for reply should be enclosed.
-
-"ROB. M. SLOMAN,
-
-"_Hamburg, January_, 1845. _Shipowner in Hamburg._"
-
-Ballin's idea of running a series of pleasure cruises did not meet with
-much support on the part of his associates; the public, however, took it
-up with enthusiasm from the very start. Early in 1891 Ballin himself
-took part in the first trip to the Far East on board the express steamer
-_Auguste Victoria_. Organized pleasure trips on a small scale were by no
-means an entire novelty in Germany at that time; the Carl Stangen
-Tourist Office in Berlin, for instance, regularly arranged such
-excursions, including some to the Far East, for a limited number of
-participants. To do so, however, for as many as 241 persons, as Ballin
-did, was something unheard-of until then, and necessitated a great deal
-of painstaking preparation. Among other things, the itinerary of the
-intended cruise, owing to the size and the draught of the steamer used,
-had to be carefully worked out in detail, and arrangements had to be
-made beforehand for the hotel accommodation and for the conveyance of
-passengers during the more extended excursions on shore. All these
-matters gave plenty of scope to the organizing talents of the youthful
-director, and he passed the test with great credit.
-
-The first Far Eastern cruise proved so great a success that it was
-repeated in 1892. In the following year it started from New York, surely
-a proof that the Company's reputation for such cruises was securely
-established not in Germany alone, but in the States as well. Meanwhile,
-however, Hamburg had been visited by a terrible catastrophe which
-enormously interfered with the smooth working of the Company's express
-steamer services. This was the cholera epidemic during the summer of
-1892. It lasted several weeks, and thousands of inhabitants fell victims
-to it. Those who were staying in Hamburg in that summer will never
-forget the horrors of the time. In the countries of Northern Europe
-violent epidemics were practically unknown, and the scourge of cholera
-especially had always been successfully combated at the eastern frontier
-of Germany, so that the alarm which spread over the whole country, and
-which led to the vigorous enforcement of the most drastic measures for
-isolating the rest of Germany from Hamburg, may easily be comprehended,
-however ludicrous those measures in some instances might appear. There
-are no two opinions as to the damage they inflicted on the commerce and
-traffic of the city. The severest quarantine, of course, was instituted
-in the United States, and the passenger services to and from Hamburg
-ceased to be run altogether, so that the transatlantic lines decided to
-temporarily suspend the steerage pool agreement they had just concluded.
-The Packetfahrt, in order not to stop its fast steamer services
-completely, first transferred them to Southampton, and afterwards to
-Wilhelmshaven, thus abstaining from dispatching these boats to and from
-Hamburg. The steerage traffic had to be discarded entirely, after an
-attempt to maintain it, with Stettin as its home port, had failed.
-Financially this epidemic and its direct consequences brought the
-Company almost to the verge of collapse, and the Packetfahrt had to stop
-altogether the payment of dividends for 1892, 1893, and 1894.
-
-Business was resumed in 1893, but at first it was very slow. Every means
-were tried to induce the United States to rescind her isolation
-measures. An American doctor was appointed in Hamburg; disinfection was
-carried out on a large scale; with great energy the city set herself to
-prevent the recurrence of a similar disaster. The Packetfahrt, in
-conjunction with the authorities, designed the plans for building the
-emigrants' halls situated at the outskirts of the city, which are unique
-of their kind and are still looked upon as exemplary. These plans owe
-their origin to the extremely talented Hamburg architect, Mr. Thielen,
-whose early death is greatly to be regretted.
-
-An important innovation was the establishment of regular medical control
-and medical treatment for the emigrants from the East of Europe on their
-reaching the German frontier, a measure which was decided upon and taken
-in hand by the Prussian Government. The expansion of the Packetfahrt's
-business, of course, was most adversely affected by the epidemic and its
-after-effects; and several years of consolidation were needed before the
-latter could be overcome. Consequently, hardly any new services were
-opened during the years immediately following upon the epidemic.
-
-An important step forward, which greatly strengthened the earning
-capacities of the Company's resources, was taken in 1895, when the
-building orders for the steamers of the "P" class were given. These
-vessels were of large size but of moderate speed. They were extremely
-seaworthy, and were capable of accommodating a great many passengers,
-especially steeragers, as well as of carrying large quantities of cargo.
-The number of services run by the Company was added to in 1893 by a line
-from New York to Italy, and in the following year by one from Italy to
-the River Plate. Pool agreements were concluded with the Lloyd and the
-Allan Line with respect to the first-named route, and with the Italian
-steamship companies with respect to the other. The agreement with the
-Italians, however, did not become operative until a few years
-afterwards.
-
-In 1897 the Packetfahrt celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of its
-existence--an event in which large sections of the public took a keen
-interest. Perhaps the most noteworthy among the immense number of
-letters of congratulation which the Company received on that occasion is
-the one sent by the chairman of the Cunard Line, of which the verbatim
-text is given below. It was addressed to one of the directors in reply
-to an invitation to attend the celebrations in person.
-
- "It is with great regret I have to announce my inability to join
- with you in celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of the foundation
- of your Company, to be held on board your s.s. _Auguste Victoria_.
-
- "I the more regret this as I have the greatest possible admiration
- of the skill and enterprise which has directed the fortunes of your
- Company, especially in recent years.
-
- "You were the first to give the travelling public the convenience
- of a speedy and reliable transit between the two great continents
- of the world by initiating a regular service of twin-screw steamers
- of high speed and unexceptionable accommodation.
-
- "You also set the shipping world the example of the great economy
- possible in the transit of the world's commodities in vessels of
- greatly increased capacity and proportionate economy, which other
- nations have been quick to follow and adopt to their great
- advantage.
-
- "Your Company had furthermore met a felt want in giving most
- luxurious and well-appointed accommodation for visiting scenes,
- both new and old, of world-wide interest, and making such
- journeyings, hitherto beset with anxiety and difficulty, as easy of
- accomplishment as the ordinary railway journey at home.
-
- "You have succeeded in this, not through any adventitious aids,
- such as Government subsidies, but by anticipating and then meeting
- the wants of the travelling and commercial public; and no one, be
- his nationality what it was, can, in the face of such facts,
- abstain from offering his meed of praise to the foresight, acumen,
- and ability that have accomplished such great results in such a
- comparatively small time as the management and direction of the
- Hamburg-American Packet Company.
-
- "I would venture, therefore, to thus congratulate you and your
- colleagues, and whilst reiterating my regret at being prevented
- from doing so at your forthcoming meeting, allow me the expression
- of the wish that such meeting may be a happy and satisfactory one,
- and that a new era of, if possible, increased success to the
- Hamburg-American Packet Company may take date from it."
-
-Towards the latter end of the 'nineties, at last, a big expansion of the
-Company's activities set in. In 1897 the Hamburg-Calcutta Line was
-purchased, but the service was discontinued, the steamers thus acquired
-being used for other purposes. Shortly before the close of the same year
-a suggestion was put forward by some Hamburg firms that were engaged in
-doing business with the Far East that the Packetfahrt should run a
-service to that part of the world.
-
-Just then the steamship companies engaged in the Far Eastern trade were
-on the point of coming to a rate agreement among themselves; and the
-management of the Packetfahrt which, owing to the offer held out to it
-by Hamburg, Antwerp, and London firms, could hope to rely on finding a
-sure basis for its Far Eastern business, did not consider it wise to let
-the favourable opportunity slip. Quick decision and rapid action, before
-the proposed agreement of the interested lines had become an
-accomplished fact, were necessary; because, once the gates were closed,
-an outsider would find it difficult to gain admission to the ring.
-
-Hence the negotiations with a view to the Packetfahrt joining in the Far
-Eastern business, which had only been started during the second half of
-December, 1897, came to a close very soon; and in the early days of
-January, 1898, the Packetfahrt advertised its intention of running
-monthly sailings to Penang, Singapore, Hongkong, Shanghai, Yokohama, and
-Hiogo. Six cargo steamers of 8,000 tons burden were entered into the new
-service; and simultaneously an announcement was made to the effect that
-large fast passenger boats would be added to it as soon as the need for
-these should make itself felt.
-
-The participation in the Far Eastern business, and the consequent taking
-over of competing lines or the establishment of joint services with
-them, was not the only important event of the year 1898 as far as the
-development of the Packetfahrt is concerned. In the spring of that same
-year an agreement was made with the Philadelphia Shipping
-Company--which, in its turn, had an agreement with the Pennsylvania
-Railroad Company--by which the Packetfahrt undertook to run a regular
-service of cargo steamers between Hamburg and Philadelphia.
-
-An event of still greater importance, however, was the outbreak of war
-between the United States and Spain which also took place in that year.
-The Spanish Government desired to strengthen the fighting power of its
-navy by the addition of several auxiliary cruisers; and even some time
-before the war broke out an offer reached the Packetfahrt through the
-intermediary of a third party to purchase its two express steamers,
-_Columbia_ and _Normannia_, which were among the fastest ocean-liners
-afloat. Before accepting this offer, the Packetfahrt, in order to avoid
-the reproach of having committed a breach of neutrality, first offered
-these two steamers to the United States Government; but on its refusal
-to buy them, they were sold to the British firm acting on behalf of the
-Spanish Government, and re-sold to the latter. As the Packetfahrt had
-allowed a high rate of depreciation on the two boats, their book-value
-stood at a very low figure; and the considerable profit thus realized
-enabled it to acquire new vessels for the extension of its passenger
-services.
-
-Meanwhile a new express steamer, the _Kaiser Wilhelm der Grösse_, had
-been added to the fleet of the North German Lloyd. Ballin, having made a
-voyage on board this vessel to New York, reported to the Trustees of his
-Company that he considered her a splendid achievement. Owing to the
-heavy working expenses, however, she would not, he thought, prove a
-great success from a financial point of view. He held that the
-remunerativeness of express steamers was negatived by the heavy working
-expenses and, as early as 1897, had projected the construction of two
-steamers of very large proportions, but of less speed. This, however,
-was not carried out. Instead, the Packetfahrt decided to build a vessel
-which was to be bigger and faster still than the _Kaiser Wilhelm der
-Grösse_. The new liner was built by the Stettin Vulkan yard, and
-completed in 1900. She was the _Deutschland_, the famous ocean
-greyhound, a great improvement in size and equipment, and she held the
-blue riband of the Atlantic for a number of years.
-
-About the same time, the express service to New York had been
-supplemented by the inauguration of an additional passenger service on
-the same route, which proved a great success in every way. The steamers
-employed were the combined passenger and cargo boats of moderate speed
-of the "P" class referred to above; and, their working expenses being
-very low, they could carry the cargo at very low rates, so that they
-proved of great service to the rapidly expanding interchange of goods
-between Germany and the United States. Their great size made it
-necessary to accelerate their loading and discharging facilities as much
-as possible. This necessity, among other things, led to the introduction
-of grain elevators which resulted in a great saving of time, as the
-grain was henceforth no longer discharged in sacks, but loose. The
-Company also decided to take the loading and discharging of all its
-vessels into its own hands. To accelerate the dispatch of steamers to
-the utmost possible extent, it was decided in 1898 to enlarge once again
-the Company's harbour facilities, and an agreement was concluded with
-the Hamburg Government providing for the construction of large harbour
-basins with the necessary quays, sheds, etc., in the district of
-Kuhwärder on the southern banks of the Elbe.
-
-It was typical of Ballin's policy of the geographical distribution of
-risks and of the far-sighted views he held concerning the international
-character of the shipping business that he attempted at the end of the
-'nineties to gain an extended footing abroad for the Company's
-activities. The Packetfahrt therefore ordered the building of two
-passenger boats in Italian yards, and it was arranged that these vessels
-should fly either the German or the Italian flag. In the end, however, a
-separate Italian shipping company, the Italia, was set up, which was to
-devote itself more particularly to the River Plate trade. When the
-financial results of the new enterprise failed to come up to
-expectations, the shares were sold to Italian financiers in 1905.
-
-The closing years of the nineteenth and the opening years of the
-twentieth century represented a period of extraordinary prosperity to
-shipping business all over the world--a prosperity which was caused by
-the outbreak of the South African war in 1899. An enormous amount of
-tonnage was required to carry the British troops, their equipment,
-horses, etc., to South Africa, and the circumstance that this tonnage
-temporarily ceased to be available for the needs of ordinary traffic
-considerably stiffened the freight rates. The favourable results thus
-obtained greatly stimulated the spirit of enterprise animating the
-shipping companies everywhere.
-
-About the same time the business of the Company experienced a notable
-expansion in another direction. A fierce rate war was in progress
-between the Hamburg-South American S.S. Co. and the firm of A. C. de
-Freitas & Co., and neither party seemed to be able to get the better of
-the other. As early as 1893 Ballin, on behalf of the Hamburg-South
-American S.S. Co., had carried on some negotiations with the firm of de
-Freitas with the object of bringing about an amalgamation of the two
-companies with respect to their services to Southern Brazil. In 1896 he
-had done so again in compliance with the special request of Mr. Carl
-Laeisz, the chairman of the former company, and in 1898 he did so for
-the third time, but in this case on his own initiative. No practical
-results, however, were reached, and as Ballin was desirous of seeing an
-end being put to the hopeless struggle between the two rival firms, he
-took up those negotiations for the fourth time in 1900, hoping to
-acquire the de Freitas Line for his own Company. He was successful, and
-an expert was nominated to fix the market value of the fourteen steamers
-that were to change hands. As the valuation took place at a time when
-the shipping business was in an exceedingly flourishing state, the price
-which he fixed worked out at so high an average per ton as was never
-again paid before the outbreak of the war. The valuer told me that he
-himself considered the price very high, so that he felt in duty bound to
-draw Ballin's attention to it beforehand. Ballin tersely replied: "I
-know, but I want the business," thus making it perfectly clear that he
-attached more than ordinary importance to the deal.
-
-As soon as the purchase of the de Freitas Lines had become an
-accomplished fact, arrangements were made with the Hamburg-South
-American S.S. Company, which provided for a joint service to South
-America, a service which was still further extended when the Packetfahrt
-bought up a British line trading from Antwerp to the Plate, thus also
-securing a footing at Antwerp in connexion with its South American
-business. The necessity for taking such a step grew in proportion as
-Antwerp acquired an increasing importance owing to the increasing German
-export business.
-
-Perhaps there is no country which can be served by the seaports of so
-many foreign countries as Germany. Several Mediterranean ports attract
-to themselves a portion of the South German trade; Antwerp and some of
-the French ports possess splendid railway connexion with Southern and
-Western Germany, and both Antwerp and Rotterdam are in a position to
-avail themselves of the highway of the Rhine as an excellent means of
-communication with the whole German hinterland. Finally, it must be
-remembered that the Scandinavian seaports are also to a certain extent
-competing for the German business, especially for the trade with the
-hinterland of the Baltic ports of Germany. All this goes to show that
-the countries surrounding Germany which have for centuries striven to
-exercise a kind of political hegemony over Germany--or, rather,
-generally speaking, over Central Europe--are not without plenty of
-facilities enabling them to try to capture large portions of the
-carrying trade of these parts of Europe. This danger of a never-ending
-economic struggle which would not benefit any of the competing rivals
-was the real reason underlying Ballin's policy of compromise. He clearly
-recognized that any other course of action would tend to make permanent
-the existing chaos ruling in the realm of ocean shipping.
-
-In this struggle for the carrying trade to and from Central Europe the
-port of Antwerp occupied a position all by itself. The more the
-countries beyond the sea were opened up by the construction of new
-railways and the establishment of industrial undertakings, and the more
-orders the manufacturers in the Central European countries received in
-consequence of the growing demand, the greater became the value of
-Antwerp to the shipping companies in every country. In this respect the
-early years of the twentieth century witnessed an extraordinary
-development, which, in its turn, benefited the world's carrying trade to
-an ever-increasing extent. Never before had so much European capital
-been invested in overseas countries. Again, as a result of the Spanish
-war the political and economic influence of the United States had
-enormously expanded in the West Indian islands, whilst, at the same
-time, the Monroe doctrine was being applied more and more thoroughly and
-systematically. Consequently the attention of the American investors was
-also increasingly drawn towards those same countries. In Central America
-new railway lines were constructed by British and American capital,
-including some right across the country from the Atlantic to the
-Pacific, thus considerably facilitating trade with the Pacific coast of
-America. Other lines were built in Brazil and in the Argentine, and
-harbour and dock facilities were constructed in nearly all the more
-important South American ports. French and Belgian capital shared in
-these undertakings, and some German capital was also employed for the
-same purpose. The Trans-Andine railway was completed, and numerous
-industrial works were added to the existing ones. The great economic
-advance was not exclusively restricted to South America; it extended to
-the Far East, to the great British dominions beyond the sea, especially
-to Canada and Australia, and--after the close of the South African
-War--to Africa also. Russia built the great Trans-Siberian railway, and
-Germany commenced to exploit the resources of her colonies. As a result
-of all these activities the iron and steel manufacturers were
-overwhelmed with export orders. This applies particularly to the German
-iron and steel manufacturers, whose leading organization, the
-Stahlwerks-Verband, largely favoured the route _via_ Antwerp, because it
-was the cheapest, to the great detriment of the German ports. Thus the
-German shipowners were compelled to follow the traffic, and the
-importance of Antwerp increased from year to year. The Hamburg-Amerika
-Linie met this development by opening a special branch office for
-dealing with the Antwerp business.
-
-In 1899, a year before the Hamburg-Amerika Linie established itself in
-the services to Brazil and the River Plate, a line had been started by
-the Company to Northern Brazil and the Amazon River. The conflict with
-the Booth Line which resulted from this step was amicably settled in
-1902 through negotiations conducted by Ballin. Later on, indeed, the
-relations between the two companies became very cordial, and even led to
-the conclusion of a far-reaching community of interest agreement, the
-Booth Line being represented in Hamburg by the Hamburg-Amerika Linie,
-and the latter in Brazil by the British company. An agreement of such
-kind was only feasible when a particularly strong feeling of mutual
-trust existed between the two contracting partners, and Ballin
-repeatedly declared that he looked upon this agreement with the Booth
-Line as the most satisfactory of all he had concluded.
-
-In 1900 the West Indian business was extended by opening a passenger
-service to Mexico, and another noteworthy event which took place during
-the same year was the conclusion of an agreement with the big German
-iron works in the Rhenish-Westphalian district by which the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie undertook to ship to Emden the Swedish iron ore
-needed by them from the ports of Narvik and Lulea. Two special steamers
-were ordered to be exclusively used for this service. Henceforth Emden
-began to play an important part in connexion with the German ore supply,
-and the real prosperity of that port dated from that time.
-
-Early in 1901 Ballin decided to embark on a trip round the world. He
-thought it desirable to do so in order to acquire a first-hand knowledge
-of the Far Eastern situation, which had become of special interest to
-the country owing to the acquisition by Germany of Tsingtau, and to the
-unrest in China. His special object was to study the questions that had
-become urgent in connexion with the organization of the passenger
-service of which the Packetfahrt, in consequence of the agreement with
-the Lloyd, had just become a partner. There was, in addition, the
-project of starting a Pacific service, which engaged his attention. All
-these important details could only be properly attended to on the spot.
-It became necessary to acquire a business footing in the various ports
-concerned, to organize the coast transport services which were to act as
-feeders to the main line, etc. Besides, the Packetfahrt, and the Lloyd
-as well, had special reasons for being interested in Far Eastern
-affairs, as both companies had been entrusted with troop transports and
-the transport of equipment needed for the German contingent during the
-troubles in China. During his Far Eastern trip Ballin wrote detailed
-accounts dealing with the business matters he attended to, and also
-describing his personal impressions of persons and things in general,
-the former kind addressed to the Board of his Company, the latter to his
-mother. These letters are full of interest; they present a more faithful
-description of his character as a man, and as a man of business, than
-could be given in any other way. I shall therefore quote a few extracts
-from the comprehensive reports, commencing with those he wrote to his
-mother:--
-
-"_On board the I.M.S._ '_Kiautschou_'
-"_January 16th, 1901._
-
-
- "The weather was cold and windy when we arrived late at night
- outside Port Said, and midnight was well past when we had taken up
- the pilot and were making our way into the port. The intense cold
- had caused me to leave the navigating bridge; and as I did not
- think it likely that our agent would arrive on board with his
- telegrams until the next morning, I had followed the example of my
- wife and of nearly all the other passengers and had gone to bed.
- However, if we had thought that we should be able to sleep, we soon
- found out our mistake. The steamer had scarcely taken up her
- moorings when several hundreds of dusky natives, wildly screaming
- and gesticulating, and making a noise that almost rent the skies,
- invaded her in order to fill her bunkers with the 800 tons of coal
- that had been ordered. Perhaps there is no place anywhere where the
- bunkers are filled more rapidly than at Port Said, and certainly
- none where this is done to the accompaniment of a more deafening
- noise. Just imagine a horde of natives wildly screaming at the top
- of their voices, and add to this the noise produced by the coal
- incessantly shot into the bunkers, and the shouting of the men in
- command going on along with it. You will easily understand that it
- was impossible for anyone to go to sleep under conditions such as
- these.... After trying for several hours, I gave up the attempt,
- and, on entering the drawing-room, I found that willy-nilly (but,
- as Wippchen would have said, more nilly than willy) practically all
- the other passengers had done the same thing. There I was also
- informed that those who were in the know had not even made an
- attempt to go to sleep, but had gone ashore at 2 A.M. Port Said is
- a typical brigands' den, and relies for its prosperity on the mail
- packets calling there. The shops, the taverns, the music-halls, and
- the gambling places are all organized on lines in accordance with
- the needs of modern traffic. So it was not surprising to see that
- the proprietors of these more or less inviting places of
- entertainment had brightly lit up their premises, and hospitably
- opened their doors despite the unearthly hour, being quite willing
- to try and entice the unwary passengers into their clutches."
-
-"_Between_ ADEN _and_ COLOMBO.
-"_January 24th_, 1901.
-
- " ... We did not stop long at Aden; and as the quarantine
- regulations for all vessels arriving from Port Said were very
- strict, it became impossible for the passengers on board the
- _Kiautschou_ to land on the island. Aden, which the British would
- like to turn into a second Gibraltar, is situated in a barren,
- treeless district, and is wedged in between hills without any
- vegetation. Small fortifications are scattered all over the island.
- It must be a desolate spot for Europeans to live at. The British
- officers call it 'The Devil's Punch Bowl,' and to be transferred to
- Aden is equivalent to them to being deported."
-
-"_January 28th_, 1901.
-
- " ... In the meantime we have spent a most enjoyable and
- unforgettable day at Colombo. The pilot brought the news of Queen
- Victoria's death, which filled us with lively sympathy, and which
- caused a great deal of grief among the British passengers. Shortly
- before 9 o'clock we went ashore: and as the business offices do not
- open until an hour later--thus preventing me from calling on my
- business friends at that hour--I took a carriage-drive through the
- magnificent park-like surroundings of the city. The people one
- meets there are a fit match to the beautiful scenery; but whilst in
- former times they were the rulers of this fertile island, they are
- now, thanks to the blessings of civilization, the servants of their
- European masters....
-
- "When we reached the old-established Oriental Hotel where we had
- our lunch, we met there a number of our fellow-passengers busily
- engaged in bargaining with the Singhalese and Indian dealers who
- generally flock to the terraces of the hotel as soon as a mail
- packet has arrived. The picture presented by such Oriental
- bargaining is the same everywhere, except that the Colombo dealers
- undeniably manifest an inborn gracefulness and gentlemanly bearing.
- When I tried to get rid of an old man who was pestering me with his
- offers to sell some precious stones, he said to me, in the
- inimitable singing tone of voice used by these people when they
- speak English: 'Just touch this stone, please, but do not buy it: I
- only wish to receive it back from your lucky hands.' In spite of
- their manners, however, these fellows are the biggest cheats on
- earth. Another dealer wanted to sell me a sheet of old Ceylon
- stamps for which he demanded fifteen marks--a price which, as he
- stated, meant a clean loss of five marks to him. When I offered him
- two marks instead, merely because I had got tired of him, he handed
- me the whole sheet, and said: 'Please take them; I know that one
- day I shall be rewarded for the sacrifice which I bring.' Later on
- I discovered that the same man had sold exactly the same stamps to
- a fellow-passenger for 50 pfennigs, and that he had told the same
- story to him as to me. Such are the blessings of our marvellous
- civilization....
-
- " ... In the afternoon we went for a magnificent drive to the Mount
- Lavinia Hotel, which is beautifully situated on a hill affording an
- extensive view of the sea. Boys and girls as beautiful as Greek
- statues, and as swift-footed as fallow deer, pursued us in our
- carriage, begging for alms. It was curious to see with what
- unfailing certainty they managed to distinguish the German from the
- English passengers, and they were not slow in availing themselves
- of this opportunity to palm off what little German they knew on us.
- 'Oh, my father! My beautiful mother! You are a great lady! Please
- give me ten cents, my good uncle!' We were quite astonished to meet
- such a large progeny...."
-
-"_February 2nd_, 1901.
-
- ".... The entrance to Singapore is superbly beautiful. The steamer
- slowly wended her way through the channels between numerous small
- islands clad with the most luxurious vegetation, so that it almost
- took us two hours to reach the actual harbour.... The food question
- is extremely complicated in this part of the tropics, which is
- favoured by kind Nature more than is good. The excessive fertility
- of the soil makes the cultivation of vegetables and cereals quite
- impossible, as everything runs to seed within a few days, so that,
- for instance, potatoes have to be obtained from Java, and green
- vegetables from Mulsow's, in Hamburg. I am sure my geography master
- at school, who never ceased to extol the richness of the soil of
- this British colony, was not aware of this aspect of the matter.
-
- "Singapore is a rapidly developing emporium for the trade with the
- Far East. It has succeeded in attracting to itself much of the
- commerce with the Dutch Indies, British North Borneo, the
- Philippines, and the Federated Malay States. To achieve this, of
- course, was a difficult matter, even with the aid of the shipping
- companies, but its clever and energetic business community managed
- to do it. We Germans may well be proud of the fact that our
- countrymen now occupy the premier position in the business life of
- the city....
-
- " ... We spent about thirty-six hours at Saigon. This city has been
- laid out by the French with admirable skill, and there is no doubt
- but that Indo-China is a most valuable possession of theirs. As
- regards the difference in the national character of the French and
- the British, it is interesting to note that the former have just
- erected a magnificent building for a theatre at Saigon, at a cost
- of 2-1/2 million francs. The British would never have dreamt of
- doing such a thing; I am sure they would have invested that money
- in the building of club-houses and race-courses...."
-
-"_February 16th_, 1901.
-
- " ... As far as social life and social pleasures are concerned, it
- must be said that the German colony at Hongkong is in no way
- inferior to that at Singapore. Premier rank in this respect must be
- assigned to the Siebs family. Mr. Siebs, the senior member of the
- Hamburg firm of Siemssen and Co., has been a resident in the East
- for a long term of years--forty-two, if I remember rightly; and he
- now occupies an exceedingly prominent position both in German and
- British society. That this is so is largely due--apart from his
- intimate knowledge of all that concerns the trade and commerce of
- China, and apart from his own amiability and never-failing
- generosity--to his charming wife, who, by means of the hospitality,
- the refinement, and the exemplary management characterizing her
- home, has been chiefly instrumental in acquiring for the house of
- Siebs the high reputation it enjoys. Whoever is received by Mrs.
- Siebs, I have been told, is admitted everywhere in Hongkong
- society.
-
- "Even though I only give here an outline of my impressions, I
- cannot refrain from adding a few details dealing with some aspects
- of everyday life at Hongkong, this jewel among the crown colonies
- of Britain. The offices of the big firms and of the shipping
- companies' agencies, most of them housed in beautiful buildings,
- flank the water's edge; farther back there is the extensive
- shopping quarter, and still more in the rear there is the Chinese
- quarter, teeming with an industrious population. Being myself so
- much mixed up with the means of communication, I am surely entitled
- to make a few remarks concerning this subject in particular. Horses
- are but rarely seen, and are only used for riding, and sporting
- purposes generally. Their place is taken by the coolies, who no
- doubt represent the most pitiable type of humanity--at least, from
- the point of view of a sensitive person. In the low-lying part of
- the town the jinrikishas, which are drawn by coolies, predominate;
- but the greater part of Hongkong is situated on the slopes of a
- hill, and nearly all the private residences are built along the
- beautifully kept, terrace-like roads leading up to the summit of
- the peak. In this part the chair coolies take the place of the
- jinrikisha coolies; and in the low-lying parts also it is
- considered more stylish to be carried by chair coolies. The
- ordinary hired chairs are generally carried by two coolies only,
- but four are needed for the private ones. The work done by these
- poor wretches is fatiguing in the extreme. They have to drag their
- masters up and down the hill, which is very steep in places, and it
- is a horrid sensation to be carried by these specimens of panting
- humanity for the first time. In the better-class European
- households each member of the family has his own chair, and the
- necessary coolies along with it, who are paid the princely wage of
- from 16 marks to 17 marks 50 pfennigs a month. They also receive a
- white jacket and a pair of white drawers reaching to the knee, but
- they have to provide their own food. The poor fellows are generally
- natives from the interior parts of the island. They spend about one
- mark a week on their food; the rest they send home to their
- families. They are mostly married, and the money they earn in their
- capacity as private coolies represents to them a fortune. They
- rarely live longer than forty years; in fact, their average length
- of life is said not to exceed thirty-five. As many as eight coolies
- were engaged to attend to the needs of my wife and myself for the
- time of our stay. The poor creatures, who, by the way, had quite a
- good time in our service, spent the whole day from early in the
- morning to late at night lying in front of a side entrance to our
- hotel, except when they had to do their work for us....
-
- " ... The Chinese have only one annual holiday--New Year. They are
- hard at work during the whole year; they know of no Sundays and of
- no holidays, but the commencement of the New Year is associated
- with a peculiar belief of theirs. To celebrate the event, they take
- their best clothes out of pawn (which, for the rest of the year,
- they keep at the pawnbroker's to prevent them from being stolen).
- To keep the evil spirits away during the coming twelvemonth, they
- burn hundreds of thousands of firecrackers when the New Year
- begins, and also during the first and second days of it,
- accompanied by the noise of the firing of guns. One must have been
- through it all in order to understand it. For the better part of
- two days and two nights one could imagine a fierce battle raging in
- the neighbourhood; crackers were exploding on all sides, together
- with rockets and fireballs, and the whole was augmented by the
- shouting and screaming of the revellers. It was a mad noise, and we
- could scarcely get any sleep at night.
-
- "The houses in the Chinese quarter were decorated up to the roofs
- with bunting, beautiful big lanterns, paper garlands with religious
- inscriptions, and a mass of lovely flowers.
-
- "On such days--the only holidays they possess--the Chinese
- population are in undisputed possession of their town, and the
- British administration is wise enough not to interfere with the
- enjoyment of these sober and hard-working people. I really wonder
- how the German police would act in such cases...."
-
-"SHANGHAI, _March 6th, 1901_.
-
- " ... It is surely no exaggeration to describe Shanghai as the New
- York of the Far East. The whole of the rapidly increasing trade
- with the Yangtse ports, and the bulk of that with the northern
- parts of the country, passes through Shanghai. The local German
- colony is much larger than the one at Hongkong; and here, too, it
- is pleasant to find that our countrymen are playing an extremely
- important part in the extensive business life of the town...."
-
-"_Between_ TSINGTAU _and_ NAGASAKI,
-_on board the s.s_ _'Sibiria_.'
-"_March 18th, 1901._
-
- "Our s.s. _Sibiria_ had arrived in the harbour about ten days ago,
- and was now ready for our use. I had decided first of all to make a
- trip up the Yang-tse-Kiang on board the _Sibiria_, because I wanted
- to get to know this important river, which flows through such a
- fertile tract of country, and on the banks of which so many of the
- busiest cities of China are situated. The Yangtse--as it is usually
- called for shortness' sake--is navigable for very large-sized
- ocean-going steamers for a several days' journey. During the summer
- months it often happens that the level of the water in its upper
- reaches rises by as much as 50 feet, which--on account of the
- danger of the tremendous floods resulting from it--has made it
- necessary to pay special attention to the laying-out of the cities
- situated on its banks. The object of our journey was Nanking. This
- city, which was once the all-powerful capital of the Celestial
- Empire, has never again reached its former importance since its
- destruction during the great revolution of 1862, and since the
- choice of Peking as the residence of the Imperial family. Two years
- ago it was thrown open to foreign commerce; and the Powers
- immediately established their consulates in the city, not only
- because a new era of development is looked forward to, but also
- because Nanking is the seat of a viceroy.
-
- "Our amiable consul, Herr v. Oertzen, received us with the greatest
- hospitality. The German colony which he has to look after consists
- of only one member so far. This young gentleman, who holds an
- appointment in connexion with the Chinese customs administration,
- feels, as is but natural, quite happy in consequence of enjoying a
- practical monopoly of the protection extended to him by the home
- government. He has helped himself to the consul's cigars and to his
- moselle to such good effect that the _Sibiria_ arrived just in time
- to prevent the German colony at Nanking from lodging a complaint
- regarding the insufficiency of the supplies put at its disposal by
- the Government. The consul told us that we should never have a
- chance of coming across another Chinese town that could compare
- with the interior of Nanking, and so we had to make up our minds
- to pay a visit to these parts.
-
- "I had seen plenty of dirt and misery at Jaffa and Jerusalem, but I
- have never found so much filth and wretchedness anywhere as I
- noticed at Nanking. My wife and a charming young lady who
- accompanied us on our Yangtse expedition were borne in genuine
- sedan chairs as used for the mandarins, preceded by the interpreter
- of the consulate, and followed by the rest of us, who were riding
- on mules provided with those typically Chinese saddles, which,
- owing to their hardness, may justly claim to rank among the
- instruments of torture.
-
- "Our procession wended its way through a maze of indescribably
- narrow streets crowded with a moving mass of human beings and
- animals. Everywhere cripples and blind men lay moaning in front of
- their miserable hovels, and it almost seemed that there were more
- people suffering from some disease or other than there were healthy
- ones. When we stopped outside the big temple of Confucius, where
- the ladies of our party dismounted from their chairs, the people,
- in spite of their natural timidity, flocked to see us, because they
- had probably never seen any European ladies until then. We were
- thankful when at last we reached the consulate building again, and
- when, after having had a good bath, we are able to enjoy a cup of
- tea.
-
- " ... In the early hours of March 13th our steamer arrived at
- Tsingtau. I was surprised and delighted with what I saw. There, in
- spite of innumerable difficulties, a city had sprung up in an
- incredibly short space of time.
-
- "Rooms had been reserved for us at the handsome, but very cold,
- Hotel Prinz Heinrich; and in the afternoon of the day of our
- arrival we strolled up the roads, which were still somewhat dusty,
- and in parts only half finished, to the summit of the hill where
- the acting Governor and the officers of higher rank had their
- homes. Even though it is true that up to now military necessities
- have taken precedence in the laying-out of the town, so that the
- needs of trade and traffic have not received due attention, it must
- be admitted that a wonderful piece of constructive work has been
- achieved. All the members of our party--especially those who, like
- Dr. Knappe, our consul-general at Shanghai, had known the place two
- years ago--were most agreeably surprised at the progress that had
- been made.
-
- "Our first few days at Tsingtau were spent much as they were
- everywhere else--plenty of work during the day-time, and plenty of
- social duties in the evenings. But things began to look different
- on Saturday morning, when my old friend and well-wisher,
- Field-Marshal Count Waldersee, arrived on board H.M.S. _Kaiserin
- Auguste_. He had announced that his arrival would take place at 9
- A.M., and his flagship cast anchor with military punctuality. The
- Governor and I went on board to welcome the old gentleman, who was
- evidently greatly touched at meeting me out here, and it was plain
- to see that my presence in this part of the world made him almost
- feel homesick. The Field-Marshal very much dislikes the
- restrictions imposed on his activities; and judging from all he
- told me, I must confess that a great military leader has hardly
- ever before been faced with a more thankless task than he. On the
- one hand he is handicapped through the diplomatists, and on the
- other through the want of unanimity among the Powers. Thus, instead
- of fulfilling the soldier's task with which he is entrusted, he is
- compelled to waste his time in idleness, and to preside at endless
- conferences at which matters are discussed dealing with the most
- trivial questions of etiquette. He really deserves something better
- than that...."
-
-"TOKIO. _March 31st, 1901._
-
- " ... What a difference between Japan and the cold and barren north
- of China! There everything was dull and gloomy, whilst this country
- is flooded with sunshine. Here we are surrounded by beautifully
- wooded hills, and a magnificent harbour extends right into the
- heart of the city. From the windows of our rooms we overlook big
- liners and powerful men-of-war, and our own _Sibiria_ has chosen
- such a berth that the Hapag flag merrily floating in the breeze
- gives us a friendly welcome.
-
- "The difference in the national character of the Chinaman and the
- Japanese clearly proves the great influence which the climate and
- the natural features of a country can exercise on its inhabitants.
- The one always grave and sulky, and not inclined to be friendly;
- the other always cheerful, fond of gossip, and overflowing with
- politeness in all his intercourse with strangers. But it must not
- be forgotten that the integrity of the Chinese, especially of the
- Chinese merchants, is simply beyond praise, whereas the Japanese
- have a reputation for using much cunning and very little sincerity,
- so that European business men cannot put much faith in them.
-
- "The women of Japan are known to us through 'The Mikado' and 'The
- Geisha.' They make a direct appeal to our sympathies and to our
- sense of humour. In one week the stranger will become more closely
- acquainted with the womenfolk and the family life of Japan than he
- would with those of China after half a dozen years of residence in
- their midst. In China the women are kept in seclusion as much as
- possible, but the whole family life of the Japs is carried on with
- an utter indifference to publicity. This is due to a large extent
- to the way their homes are built. Their houses are just as dainty
- as they are themselves; and it is really quite remarkable to see
- that the Japs, who closely imitate everything they see in Europe,
- still build them exactly as they have done from time immemorial.
- They are practically without windows, and in place of these the
- openings in the walls are filled with paper stretched on to frames.
- Instead of doors there are movable screens made of lattice-work;
- and since everything is kept wide open during the day-time one can
- look right into the rooms from the street. In the summer the
- Japanese make their home in the streets, and we are told that then
- the most intimate family scenes are enacted in the open air. I am
- of opinion that this, far from pointing to a want of morality, is
- really the outcome of a highly developed code of morals. Things
- which are perfectly natural in themselves are treated as such, and
- are therefore not hidden from the light of day....
-
- " ... At 9 A.M. on March 23rd we arrived at Kobe, where we had to
- spend several days.
-
- "Our trip is now approaching its end; at least, we now experience
- the pleasant feeling that we are daily nearing home. What will it
- look like when we get back? At almost every port of call some sad
- news has reached us, and our stay at Kobe was entirely overshadowed
- by my grief at the loss of my old friend Laeisz. Even now I cannot
- realize that I shall find his place empty when I return...."
-
-The brief statement in which Ballin summarized the results of his trip
-from a business point of view is appended:--
-
- "Among the business transacted during my trip the following items
- are of chief importance:
-
- "(1) The establishment of a branch of our Company at Hongkong.
-
- "(2) The acquisition of the Imperial Mail Packet Service to
- Shanghai, Tsingtau, and Tientsin, formerly carried on by Messrs.
- Diedrichsen, Jebsen and Co.
-
- "(3) The acquisition of the Yangtse Line, hitherto carried on by
- the firm of Rickmers.
-
- "(4) The joint purchase with the firm of Carlowitz and Messrs.
- Arnhold, Karberg and Co. of a large site outside Shanghai harbour
- intended for the building of docks and quays, and the lease of the
- so-called Eastern Wharf, both these undertakings to be managed by a
- specially created joint-stock company.
-
- "(5) The establishment of temporary offices at Shanghai.
-
- "(6) In Japan discussions are still proceeding concerning the
- running of a line from the Far East to the American Pacific coast.
-
- "(7) In New York negotiations with the representative of the firm
- of Forwood are under way regarding the purchase of the Atlas Line."
-
-This list summarizes the contents of a long series of letters from all
-parts of the world where Ballin's keen insight, long foresight, and
-business acumen suggested to his alert mind possibilities of extending
-Packetfahrt shipping interests. Time translated many of his suggestions
-into flourishing actualities, some of which survived the 1914-18 years;
-others disappeared in the cataclysm; others, again, by the lapse of time
-have not the keen general interest that appertained to the ideas when
-they fell fresh-minted from his pen. The following, however, in regard
-to China and Japan, are worthy of record:
-
-"_Shanghai._
-_March 4th, 1901._
-
- "I am not quite satisfied with the course which the negotiations
- concerning the possible inauguration of a Yangtse line have taken
- so far.
-
- "The vessels employed are of the flat-bottomed kind, some being
- paddle boats, others twin-screw steamers. In their outward
- appearance the Yangtse steamers, owing to their high erections on
- deck, greatly resemble the saloon steamers plying on the Hudson.
- Their draught rarely exceeds 12 feet, and those which occasionally
- go higher up the river than Hankau draw even less. Most of the
- money earned by these boats is derived from the immense Chinese
- passenger traffic they carry.... The chief difficulty we have
- experienced in our preparations for the opening of a Yangtse line
- of our own consists in the absence of suitable pier
- accommodation...."
-
-"_On board the s.s. Sibiria on the Yangtse._
-_March 10th, 1901._
-
- " ... After what I have seen of Nanking, I am afraid that the
- development of that place which is being looked forward to will not
- be realized for a fairly long time to come. Matters are quite
- different with respect to Chin-kiang where we are stopping now, a
- port which is even now carrying on a thriving trade with the
- interior parts of the country. It can scarcely be doubted that, if
- the Celestial Empire is thrown open to the Western nations still
- more than has been done up to now, the commerce of the Yangtse
- ports is bound to assume large proportions. During the summer
- months, i.e. for practically two-thirds of the year, the Yangtse is
- navigable for ocean-going steamers of deep draught, even more so
- than the Mississippi. At that time of the year the volume of water
- carried by the river increases enormously in certain reaches. This
- increase has been found to amount to as much as 38 feet, and some
- of the steamers of the Russian Volunteer Fleet going up to Hankau
- possess a draught which exceeds 25 feet...."
-
-"_On board the Sibiria between_
-TSINGTAU AND JAPAN.
-_March 19th, 1901._
-
- " ... We arrived at Tsingtau on the morning of March 14th. The
- impression produced by this German colony on the new-comer is an
- exceedingly favourable one. Everywhere a great deal of diligent
- work has been performed, and one feels almost inclined to think
- that the building activity has proceeded too fast, so that the
- inevitable reaction will not fail to take place. Looked at from our
- shipping point of view, it must be stated that the work
- accomplished looks too much like Wilhelmshaven, and too little like
- Hongkong. It was, of course, a foregone conclusion that in the
- development of a colony which is completely ruled by the Admiralty
- the naval interests would predominate. However, there is still time
- to remedy the existing defects, and I left Kiautschou with the
- conviction that a promising future is in store for it. Only the
- landing facilities are hopelessly inadequate at present; and as to
- the accommodation for merchant vessels which is in course of being
- provided, it would seem that too extensive a use has been made of
- the supposed fact that mistakes are only there in order to be
- committed, and that it would be a pity not to commit as many as
- possible...."
-
-"_On board the s.s. Empress of China between_
-YOKOHAMA AND VANCOUVER.
-_April 17th, 1901._
-
- " ... In the meantime I have had opportunities of slightly
- familiarizing myself in more respects than one with the conditions
- ruling in Japan.
-
- "The country is faced with an economic crisis. Encouraged by a
- reckless system of credit, she has imported far more than
- necessary; she is suffering from a shortage of money, which is sure
- to paralyse her importing capacities for some time to come.
-
- "It seems pretty certain too, that future development will be
- influenced by another and far more serious factor, viz.: the
- ousting of the German by the American commerce from the Japanese
- market. The exports from the United States to Japan have increased
- just as much as those to China.... I cannot help thinking that in
- the coming struggle America will enjoy immense advantages over us;
- but you must permit me to postpone the presentation of a detailed
- statement showing my reasons for thinking so until my return to
- Hamburg.... I believe we shall be well advised to establish as soon
- as possible a service between the Far East and the Pacific coast of
- America...."
-
-In 1903 far-reaching alterations were made in the relations existing
-between the Hamburg-Amerika Linie and the North German Lloyd, which had
-become somewhat less friendly than usual in more respects than one; and
-in particular the agreement concerning the Far Eastern services of both
-companies was subjected to some considerable modifications.
-
-The year 1903 is also remarkable for an event which, although not of
-great importance from the business point of view, is of interest in
-other respects. This event was the establishment of business relations
-with a Danish company concerning, in the first place, the West Indian
-trade, and later that with Russia also. The Danish concern in question
-was the East Asiatic Company, of Copenhagen. The founder of this company
-was a Mr. Andersen, one of the most successful business men known to
-modern commercial enterprise, and certainly not only the most successful
-one of his own country, but also one of high standing internationally.
-When still quite young he founded a business in Further India which,
-although conducted at first on a small scale only, he was able to
-extend by the acquisition of valuable concessions, especially of
-teak-wood plantations in Siam. In course of time this business developed
-into a shipping firm which, owing to the concessions just mentioned, was
-always in a position to ship cargo of its own--an advantage which proved
-inestimable when business was bad and no other freight was forthcoming.
-When Mr. Andersen returned to Europe he continued to enlarge his
-business, making Copenhagen its centre. He enjoyed the special patronage
-of the Danish Royal Family, and afterwards also that of the Imperial
-Russian family. His special well-wisher and a partner of his firm was
-the Princess Marie of Denmark, who became known in the political world
-because she incurred the enmity of Bismarck, chiefly on account of her
-attempt to stir up ill feeling between the Iron Chancellor and Tsar
-Alexander III. Bismarck, in the second volume of his memoirs, describes
-how he succeeded in circumventing her plans through a personal meeting
-with the Tsar. It was the exceptional business abilities of the Princess
-Marie which brought Mr. Andersen into contact with the Russian Imperial
-family. It is typical of the common sense of the Princess and of her
-unaffected manners that she arrived at the offices of the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie one day without having been previously announced;
-and as she did not give her name to the attendant outside Ballin's
-private office, he could only tell him that "a lady" wanted to see him.
-The two letters addressed to Ballin which are given below are also
-illustrative of her style.
-
- "MY DEAR SIR,
-
-"_January 17th_, 1904.
-
- "I hope you will excuse my writing in French to you, but you may
- reply to me in English. I have had a chat with Director Andersen,
- who told me that your discussions with him have led to nothing. I
- greatly regret this, both for personal reasons and in the interests
- of the business. I am convinced that your negotiations would have
- had the desired result if it had not been for some special
- obstacles with which this new company had to contend. It is such a
- pity that Mr. Andersen had to attend to so many other things. If
- you and he alone had had to deal with it, and if it had been purely
- a business matter, the agreement would certainly have been
- concluded at once. Perhaps you and Andersen will shortly discover a
- basis on which you can co-operate. I personally should highly
- appreciate an understanding between my company and yours if it
- could be brought about, so that you could work together hand in
- hand like two good friends. You _must_ help me with it. Mr.
- Andersen was so charmed with your amiability when he came back. One
- other thing I must tell you, because I possess sufficient business
- experience to understand it, and that is that both he and I admire
- you as a man of business. I should be delighted if you could come
- here; but I request you to give a few days' notice of your arrival.
- Wishing you every success in your undertakings and the best of luck
- during the new year,
-
-"I remain, Yours faithfully,
-(_signed_) "MARIE."
-
-
-
- "MY DEAR DIRECTOR,
-
-"_February 10th, 1905._
-
- "I am so delighted to hear from Mr. Andersen that his company and
- yours intend to co-operate in the Danish West Indies and in Russia
- to your mutual interest. I have always held that such an
- understanding between you and Mr. Andersen would lead to good
- results, and you may feel convinced that I shall extend to you not
- only my personal assistance and sympathy, but also that of my
- family, and that of my Russian family, all of whom take a great
- interest in this matter. I am looking forward to seeing you in
- Hamburg early in March on my way to France. With my best regards,
-
-"Yours faithfully,
-(_signed_) "MARIE."
-
-In June, 1904, after the close of Kiel Week, Ballin paid a visit to
-Copenhagen. There he met the Princess Marie and the King and Queen of
-Denmark, and was invited to dine with them at Bernstorff Castle. The
-business outcome of the negotiations was that in 1905 a joint service to
-the West Indies was established between the Hamburg-Amerika Linie and
-the Danish West Indian Company. Four of the big new steamers of the
-latter were leased to the Packetfahrt, and operated by that company,
-which thus not only increased the tonnage at its disposal, but also
-succeeded in eliminating an unnecessary competition.
-
-At the same time the Packetfahrt bought the larger part of the shares of
-the Russian East Asiatic S.S. Company owned by the Danish firm. The
-object of the purchase was to establish a community of interests with
-the Russian Company. The Kaiser took great interest in this scheme, and
-during his visits to Copenhagen in 1903 and 1905 Mr. Andersen reported
-to him on the subject. It was intended to bring about close business
-relations between Germany, Russia, and Denmark for the special purpose
-of developing Russian trade, and to organize the Russian East Asiatic
-S.S. Company on such lines as would make it a suitable instrument to
-this end. It is to be regretted that the community of interest agreement
-then concluded was not of long duration. The Russian bureaucracy made
-all sorts of difficulties, and it is possible that the representatives
-of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie in Russia did not display as much
-discretion in their dealings with these functionaries as they ought to
-have done. At any rate, the Packetfahrt was so little satisfied with its
-participation in this Russian concern that it re-sold its rights to the
-interested Copenhagen parties in 1906, not without incurring a
-considerable loss on the transaction. The West Indies agreement
-automatically lapsed when the Packetfahrt acquired sole possession of
-the four Danish steamers.
-
-Later on some sort of co-operation with the Russian company was brought
-about once more by the admission of that company to the transatlantic
-steerage pool. The Packetfahrt also had an opportunity of profiting from
-the technical experience gained by the Danish East Asiatic Company,
-which was the first shipping concern to specialize in the use of
-motor-ships. It was enabled to do so by the support it received from the
-shipbuilding firm of Messrs. Burmeister and Wain, of Copenhagen, who had
-applied the Diesel engine, a German invention, to the propulsion of
-ships, and who subsequently built a fleet of excellent motor-ships for
-the East Asiatic Company. One of these vessels was afterwards acquired
-by the Hamburg-Amerika Linie for studying purposes. The new type of
-vessel proved exceedingly remunerative during the war, as it made the
-owners independent of the supply of British bunker coal, and relieved
-them of the numerous difficulties connected with obtaining it. This
-great practical success of the Danish shipbuilders became possible only
-because they applied themselves consistently to the development of one
-particular type of engine, whereas in Germany endless experiments were
-made with a great variety of different types which led to no tangible
-results. It was only when the war came, and when the building of
-numerous submarines became necessary that German engineering skill
-obtained a chance of showing what it could do, and then, indeed, it
-proved itself worthy of the occasion.
-
-In 1904 war broke out between Russia and Japan, an event which exercised
-such an influence on the Packetfahrt that it is hardly an exaggeration
-to say that the rapid progress the company made during the next few
-years amounted to a re-birth. The war provided the company with a chance
-to sell a large number of its units at a considerable rate of profit,
-and the contract concluded with the Russian Government for the coal
-supply added enormously to its revenues. The Russian Government partly
-converted the purchased steamers into auxiliary cruisers for the purpose
-of checking and disorganizing Japanese sea-borne trade, and it partly
-used them to accompany its Baltic fleet on its way to the Far East. As
-an illustration of the magnitude and the complexity of this transaction,
-it may be permitted to quote a few extracts from Ballin's notes
-referring to it:
-
-"_May, 1904._
-
- "Much though my time has been occupied by the Hungarian affair (the
- competition of the Cunard Line in Hungary), and great though the
- strain on my nerves has been on that account, I must say that much
- bigger claims are made on my time and on my nerves by the
- negotiations we are now carrying on with the Russian Government
- concerning the sale of some of our steamers. On Christmas Day I
- sent some representatives to Petrograd who were to approach the
- government in case it intended to acquire any merchant vessels for
- purposes of war. These gentlemen are still staying at Petrograd,
- where they have been all the time with the exception of a few
- weeks, and we have carried on some extremely difficult negotiations
- by cable which so far have led to the definite sale of the _Fürst
- Bismarck_ and the _Belgia_. The _Auguste Victoria_, which is still
- in dock until the necessary repairs have been executed, has also
- been sold to Russia, and the prospects that the _Columbia_ will
- follow suit are extremely good.
-
- "The sales, of course, necessitate large alterations of the
- existing schedules, and they lead to a great deal of inconvenience.
- A particularly awkward situation has been brought about by the
- circumstance that the _Fürst Bismarck_ has been chartered to the
- firm of Thos. Cook and Sons for an excursion from Marseilles, in
- which 500 members of a Sunday school are to take part, so that, in
- order to release her, it has become necessary for the _Augusts
- Victoria_ to interrupt her usual trip to the Near East, and for the
- _Columbia_ to take her place....
-
- "Our big coal contract with the Russian Government has, in the
- meantime, been considerably added to. The execution of the
- contract, however, is causing me a great deal of anxiety, as the
- English press, notably _The Times_, is only too glad to make use of
- this circumstance as a pretext for rousing suspicions as to
- Germany's neutrality. As our government is not taking up a very
- firm attitude, the effect of these articles, of course, is highly
- disagreeable. On Friday, September 23rd, I had an opportunity of
- discussing this matter with the Imperial Chancellor at Homburg. The
- Chancellor did not disguise the anxiety he felt concerning these
- contracts, especially as he had just then received a long telegram
- from the German Ambassador in Tokio advising him to proceed with
- much caution. I told the Chancellor that he need not study in any
- way the damage which our company might suffer; that we did not ask
- that any regard should be paid to our business interests in case
- these should clash with those of the country, and that, if the
- Government were of opinion that the interests of the country
- necessitated the cancelling of the whole agreement, I should be
- glad to receive instructions from him to that effect. Failing such
- instructions, of course, I was not entitled to cancel a contract
- which was in every respect a properly drawn-up legal instrument. At
- the same time I pointed out to the Chancellor that Germany, if he
- thought that he had reason to adopt such an attitude, would run the
- risk of offending both antagonists; for it was but reasonable to
- expect that, owing to the agitation carried on by the British, no
- action on Germany's part would cause a change of feeling in Japan,
- but that it would be a fatal blow to Russia, whose Baltic fleet in
- that case would simply be unable to reach the Far East.
-
- "From Frankfort I went to Berlin in order to discuss the question
- of the coal contract with the Foreign Office, which the Chancellor
- had requested me to do. I had a long conference with Richthofen....
-
- " ... _October 1st, 1904._ Meanwhile our negotiations with the
- Russian Government have made good progress, and practically the
- whole of my time is taken up with these transactions, which have
- given us a very exciting time. They compel me to go to Berlin
- pretty frequently, as I consider it both fair to the Foreign
- Office and advisable in our own interests that the former should
- always be fully informed of all the steps I am taking. Several of
- our gentlemen are constantly travelling from Hamburg to Petrograd,
- and conferences of our directors are held nearly every morning,
- necessitated by the telegrams which arrive from Petrograd
- practically every day. In order to be in a position to carry out
- the coal contracts, we have been obliged to charter a large number
- of steamers, so that at times as many as 80 of these are employed
- in this Russian transaction. Besides the old express steamers and
- the _Belgia_ we have now sold to the Russians the _Palatia_ and the
- _Phoenicia_, as well as nine other boats of our company,
- including the _Belgravia_, _Assyria_, and _Granada_ (the remaining
- ones are cargo vessels, mostly taken out of the West Indies
- service), but as regards these latter, we have reserved to
- ourselves the right of redemption.... We have successfully
- accomplished the great task we had undertaken, although, owing to
- the absence of coaling stations, it was thought next to impossible
- to convey such a huge squadron as was the Baltic fleet all the way
- from European to Far Eastern waters. It safely reached its
- destination, because the previously arranged coaling of the vessels
- was carried out systematically and without a hitch anywhere,
- although in some cases it had to be done in open roadsteads. Its
- inglorious end in the Korea Straits cannot, and does not, diminish
- the magnitude of the achievement; and the experiences we have
- gained by successfully carrying out our novel task will surely
- prove of great value to the Government. This whole coaling business
- has been a source of considerable profits to our company, although
- if due regard is paid to the exceptional character of the work and
- to the unusual risks we had to run, they cannot be called
- exorbitant."
-
-A few statistics will show what the whole undertaking meant to the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie from a business point of view. During the years
-1904 and 1905 the company increased its fleet by no less than 21
-steamers--partly new buildings and partly new purchases--representing a
-value of 22-1/2 million marks. To these new acquisitions must be added
-the 19 steamers then building, of a value of 52 million marks, amongst
-them the two big passenger steamers _Amerika_ and _Kaiserin Auguste
-Victoria_ for the New York route, and other big boats for the Mexico,
-the River Plate, and the Far East services. A large fraction of the sums
-spent on this new tonnage--viz. no less than 24 million
-marks--represented the profits made on the sales of ships; another large
-portion was taken out of current earnings, and the remainder was secured
-by a debenture issue. Never again, except in 1913, has the company added
-such an amount of tonnage to its fleet in a single year as it did at
-that time. But the "re-birth" of the company did not only consist in
-this augmentation of tonnage, but also, and chiefly, in the entire
-reorganization of its New York service by the addition to its fleet of
-the _Amerika_ and the _Kaiserin Auguste Victoria_. This event meant that
-the era of the express steamers was being succeeded by one characterized
-by another type of vessel which, though possessing less speed, was
-mainly designed with a view to securing the utmost possible comfort to
-the passengers. The two steamers proved exceedingly remunerative
-investments, and added enormously to the clientèle of the company. The
-profits earned on the Russian transaction also made up to a large extent
-for the losses incurred in the keen rate war with the Cunard Line then
-in progress. In spite of this rate war the company was able to increase
-its dividend to 9 per cent. in 1904, and to 11 per cent. in 1905.
-
-Another event which took place in 1904 was the conclusion of a contract
-with the German Government concerning the troop transports to German
-South-West Africa, and the year 1905 witnessed the settlement of a
-short-lived conflict with the North German Lloyd. This conflict
-attracted a great deal of attention at the time, and the Kaiser himself
-thought fit to intervene with a view to terminating it.
-
-When it was seen that German commercial interests in the Middle East had
-considerably increased, the Hamburg-Amerika Linie opened a special line
-to the Persian Gulf in 1906. The year 1907 is chiefly remarkable for a
-rate war affecting the services from Hamburg to the West Coast of
-Africa, of which until then the Woermann Line had considered itself
-entitled to claim a monopoly.
-
-The African shipping business had been jealously nursed by its founder,
-Adolph Woermann, who had always tried hard to guard this special domain
-of his against the encroachments of all outsiders. However much Ballin
-and Adolph Woermann differed in character, they were akin to each other
-in one essential feature--viz. the jealous love they bore to the
-undertaking with which they had identified themselves. Both men, grown
-up in absolutely different environments, yet resembled each other in the
-daring and the fearlessness with which they defended the interests of
-their businesses. The one had trained himself to employ moderation and
-commonsense to overcome resistance where the use of forcible means
-promised no success; the other was a pioneer in the colonial sphere, a
-king in his African empire, the discoverer of new outlets, but broken in
-spirit and bereft of his strength when compelled by circumstances to
-share with others. When Adolph Woermann had died, Ballin honoured his
-memory by contributing to the public Press an appreciation of his
-character, which is perhaps the best that has been written, and which
-ought to be saved from being forgotten. This fact, it is hoped, will be
-sufficient justification for reproducing in this connexion a translation
-of Ballin's article:
-
- "The late Adolph Woermann was a man whom we may truly describe as
- the ideal of what a Hanseatic citizen should be. Secretary of State
- Dernburg himself once told me that he knew quite well that the work
- he was doing for the benefit of our colonies would never come up to
- what Adolph Woermann had achieved in the face of the greatest
- imaginable difficulties.
-
- "Never before, perhaps, has any private shipowner displayed so much
- daring as we see embodied in the business he has built up through
- his labours. Woermann has developed the means of communication
- between Germany and her African colonies to such perfection that
- even the similar work performed by British shipping men has been
- overshadowed. He has done this without receiving any aid from the
- Government; in fact, he had to overcome all sorts of obstacles
- which were put in his way by the bureaucracy. His confidence in his
- work was not shaken when losses had to be faced. Then, more than
- ever, he had his eyes firmly fixed on his goal; and practically
- every vessel which he had built to facilitate communication between
- the German mother country and her colonies represented a fresh step
- forward towards a higher type, thus increasing the immense personal
- responsibility with which he burdened himself. His patriotism was
- of the practical kind; he did his work without asking for the help
- of others, especially without that of the Government.
-
- "And now he has died in bitter disappointment. His striking outward
- appearance has always reminded us of the Iron Chancellor, but the
- similarity in the character of the two men has only become apparent
- during the last few years. It is well known that when the troubles
- in the colonies had been settled he was accused of having enriched
- himself at the expense of the country. He never lost his resentment
- of this accusation; and even though his accusers can point to the
- fact that the court which had to investigate the claims put forward
- by the Government gave judgment to the effect that some of these
- claims were justified, it must be said in reply that this statement
- of the case is inadequate and one-sided. All that was proved was
- that Woermann, who hated red tape, and who never had recourse to
- legal assistance when drawing up his agreements, did not use as
- much caution in this matter as would have been advisable in his
- own interest. The facts that have become known most clearly
- disprove the accusation that he had made large profits at the
- expense of the country, and that he had used the country's distress
- to enrich himself. To the task of carrying out the troop transports
- he devoted himself with his customary largeness of purpose, and he
- accomplished it magnificently. In order to be able to do so, he had
- enlarged his fleet by a number of steamers, and the consequence was
- that, when the work was achieved, he had to admit himself that he
- had over-estimated his strength. When my late colleague Dr.
- Wiegand, the Director-General of the North German Lloyd, and I were
- asked to express an expert opinion on the rates which Woermann had
- charged the Government, we found them thoroughly moderate; in fact,
- we added a rider to the effect that if either of our companies had
- been entrusted with those transports, we could only have carried
- out a very few expeditions at the rates charged by Woermann.
- Woermann, however, carried through the whole task; and when it was
- done he found himself compelled to pass on to the shoulders of the
- Hamburg-Amerika Linie part of the excessive burden which he had
- taken upon himself.
-
- "His iron determination would have enabled him to dispense with the
- assistance thus obtained. But by that time his accusers had
- commenced their attacks on his character, and when the Government
- had officially taken up an attitude against him, he became a prey
- to that resentment to which I have referred before. All those who
- had the privilege of being associated with him during the past few
- years must have noted with grief how this great patriot gradually
- became an embittered critic. The heavy blow also led to the
- breakdown of his health, and during the last years of his life we
- only knew him as a sick man.
-
- "If it is borne in mind how strong, how masterful, and how
- self-reliant a man has passed away with Adolph Woermann, it is sad
- to think that in the end he was not strong enough after all to bear
- on his own shoulders entirely the immense burden of responsibility
- which he had taken upon himself, and that he received nothing but
- ingratitude as the reward of his life's work, although he was
- actuated by truly patriotic motives throughout. Still, this shall
- not prevent us from acknowledging that he was the greatest, the
- most daring, and the most self-sacrificing private shipowner whom
- the Hanseatic cities have ever produced--a princely merchant if
- ever there was one. He was a true friend and an earnest well-wisher
- to the city in which he was born, and to the country which he
- served as a statesman. We are sincerely grateful to him for the
- work he has done, and in honouring his memory we know that we are
- paying tribute to the greatest Hanseatic citizen who had been
- living in our midst."
-
-To complete the enumeration of the many rate wars which occurred during
-the first decade of the twentieth century, we must make brief reference
-to the competition emanating in 1909 from the so-called "Princes' Trust"
-(Fürstenkonzern) and its ally, viz. a Hamburg firm which had already
-fought the Woermann Line. The object of the fight was to secure the
-business from Antwerp to the Plate. The struggle ended with the
-acquisition of the shipping interests of the Princes' Trust, the
-business career of which came to a sudden end shortly afterwards by a
-financial disaster causing enormous losses to the two princely families
-concerned--the house of Hohenlohe and that of Fürstenberg. The details
-connected with this affair are still in everybody's memory, and it would
-be beyond the scope of this volume to enter into them. It should be
-mentioned, however, that in connexion with the settlement arrived at the
-two big companies undertook to start some transatlantic services from
-the port of Emden, and in particular to establish a direct line for the
-steerage traffic to North America. The necessary arrangements to this
-end had just been made when the war broke out, and further progress
-became impossible.
-
-The transatlantic pool was considerably extended in scope during those
-years. More than once, however, after the rate war with the Cunard Line
-had come to an end, the amicable relations existing between the lines
-were disturbed, e.g. when the Russian Volunteer Fleet opened a competing
-service--a competition which was got rid of by the aid of the Russian
-East Asiatic S.S. Company; when some British lines temporarily withdrew
-from the steerage pool, and when some differences of policy arose
-between the Hamburg-Amerika Linie and the North German Lloyd. The
-Hamburg company demanded a revision of the percentages, contending that
-the arrangements made fifteen years ago no longer did justice to the
-entirely altered relative positions of the two companies. The
-discussions held in London in February, 1908, under Ballin's
-chairmanship, which lasted several days, and in which delegates of all
-the big Continental and British lines, as well as of the Canadian
-Pacific Railway Company took part, led to the formation of the Atlantic
-Conference (also known as the General Pool). It was supplemented in the
-following year by that of the Mediterranean Conference. Both these
-agreements were renewed in 1911, and further agreements were concluded
-with the Russian and Scandinavian lines to complete the system.
-Agreements on so large a scale had never before been concluded between
-any shipping companies.
-
-This network of agreements existed until it was destroyed through the
-outbreak of the war.
-
-During the fluctuating conditions which characterized the shipping
-business of those years the year 1908 witnessed a depression which, in
-its after-effects, is comparable only to that caused by the cholera
-epidemic sixteen years earlier. Business had been excellent for a fairly
-long time, but it became thoroughly demoralized in the second half of
-1907, and an economic crisis of a magnitude such as has seldom been
-experienced began to affect every country. No part of the shipping
-business remained unaffected by it; hundreds and hundreds of
-ocean-going liners lay idle in the seaports of the world.
-
-Very gradually prospects began to brighten up in the course of 1908, so
-that the worst of the depression had passed sooner than had been
-expected. Indeed, in one respect the crisis had proved a blessing in
-disguise, inasmuch as it had strengthened the inclination of the
-shipping concerns everywhere to compromise and to eliminate unnecessary
-competition--the formation of the general pool, in fact, being the
-outcome of that feeling. The subsequent recovery made up for the losses;
-and the succeeding years, with their very gratifying financial results,
-and their vast internal consolidation, represent the high-water mark in
-the development of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie.
-
-Shortly after the end of the depression a renewed spell of building
-activity set in. First of all a new cargo steamer, possessing a burden
-of 12,000 tons--which was something quite unusual at the time--was
-ordered to be built by Messrs. Harland and Wolff, at a price which was
-also unusually low. It almost created a record for cheapness; and the
-courage of the builders who accepted such an order at such terms was
-greatly admired. A German yard--the Vulkan, of Bremen--then came forward
-with a similar offer, because the German shipbuilders, too, were glad to
-provide their men with work. The result of the combined labour of both
-these firms was a type of cargo boat which proved extremely useful,
-especially in the Far Eastern trade, and which represented a good
-investment to the company.
-
-Gradually the other branches of the business began to increase their
-activity, and the service to North America especially received the close
-attention of the company's management. Meanwhile, other shipping
-companies had added some vessels of the very highest class to their
-fleets. The two big turbine steamers of the Cunard Line, the
-_Lusitania_ and the _Mauretania_, had attracted many passengers, and the
-White Star Line had the mammoth liner _Olympic_ building, which was to
-be followed by two others of the same type, the _Titanic_ and the
-_Gigantic_. The new Cunarder, the _Aquitania_, was to be of the same
-type, so that once more the public was offered the choice of steamers of
-a kind unknown until then. This competition compelled the Packetfahrt to
-follow suit, and Ballin commenced to evolve plans for the building of a
-new vessel which, of course, had to surpass the highest achievement of
-the competing lines, i.e. the _Olympic_. Thus, in co-operation with the
-Vulkan yard, of Stettin, and with Messrs. Blohm and Voss, of Hamburg,
-the plans for the three steamers of the "Imperator" class were designed.
-The competition among the various yards had been extremely keen, and the
-Vulkan yard secured the order for the building of the first unit of this
-class, the _Imperator_. From the point of view of speed, these new
-vessels resembled the fast steamers of the older kind; with regard to
-their equipment, they represented a combination of this type and that of
-the _Kaiserin_, but from the business point of view they were quite a
-novelty, as the basis of their remunerativeness was no longer the cargo
-and steerage business, but the cabin business. If the booking of a
-certain number of cabins could be relied on for each voyage an adequate
-return would be assured. Everything, therefore, was done to attract as
-many cabin passengers as possible. These vessels were a triumph of
-German shipbuilding and engineering skill; and the senior partner of
-Messrs. Blohm and Voss, when the _Vaterland_ was launched, stated with
-just pride that she was the biggest vessel in existence; that she was
-built on the biggest slip; that she had received her equipment under the
-biggest crane, and that she would be docked in the biggest floating dock
-in the world. The launching of the third and biggest of the three
-steamers, the _Bismarck_, represented a red-letter day in the life of
-Ballin and in the history of the company. Nominally she was christened
-by the granddaughter of the Iron Chancellor, but actually by the Kaiser.
-The bottle of champagne used for the purpose did not break when it left
-the young lady's hands; but the Kaiser seized it, and with a sweeping
-movement of the arm hurled it against the stem of the huge vessel. To
-remove as far as possible the last vestige of the unhappy estrangement
-between the Kaiser and the Chancellor had always been Ballin's earnest
-desire. So it filled him with great joy when he was enabled to dedicate
-the greatest product of his life-work to the memory of the Prince whom
-he admired intensely; and still more was he pleased when the Kaiser
-consented to take part in the ceremony. He had often expressed his
-regret at the unfortunate stage management in connexion with the
-Kaiser's visit to Hamburg after the unveiling of the Bismarck monument,
-when he was driven past it without an opportunity having been arranged
-for him to inspect it. Such a course, Ballin remarked, was bound to
-create the impression that the Kaiser had intentionally been led past
-it. "I wish I had been permitted to speak to the Kaiser about it
-beforehand," he told me afterwards. "I am sure he would have insisted
-upon seeing it." Proper stage management plays so prominent a part in
-the life of royalty, and it can be of such great use in avoiding certain
-blunders and in hiding certain shortcomings that it is much to be
-regretted that the Kaiser had so often to dispense with it.
-
-The entering into the Packetfahrt's service of the "Imperator" type of
-steamers represented an extraordinary increase in the amount of tonnage
-which the company employed on the New York route; and when the North
-German Lloyd refused to allow the Packetfahrt a corresponding addition
-to its percentage share under the pool agreement, which the Packetfahrt
-believed itself justified in asking for, a conflict threatened once more
-to disturb the relations existing between the two companies. As a result
-the position of both was weakened in Austria, where the Government
-cleverly used the situation to its own advantage. Apart from this,
-however, not much damage was done, as negotiations were soon started
-with the object of securing the conclusion of a far-reaching community
-of interest agreement which was not merely to be restricted to the
-transatlantic services of the two companies. If these negotiations could
-be brought to a successful issue, Ballin thought that this would be the
-dawn of a new era in the contractual relations existing between shipping
-firms everywhere, because he believed that such development would not be
-confined to the German lines, but would assume international
-proportions. The agreements actually in force seemed to him obsolete--at
-least in part. That this should be so is but natural, as the factor
-which it is intended to eliminate by the terms of such agreements--man's
-innate selfishness--is, after all, ineradicable. "Nature," in the words
-of the Roman poet, "will always return, even if you expel it with a
-pitchfork." Wherever a human trait like selfishness is to be kept within
-certain bounds by means of written agreements, it becomes necessary not
-only to make small improvements from time to time, but to subject the
-whole system to a thorough overhauling every now and then.
-
-Many events affecting the progress of the company's business have no
-reference in these pages, but the reader can visualize the importance of
-Albert Ballin's life-work if he keeps before his mind the fact that
-while in the early part of 1886 the Hamburg-Amerika Linie maintained but
-a mail service from Hamburg to New York and four lines to Mexico and
-the West Indies, from that date to 1913 fifty new services were added to
-the existing ones.
-
-The fleet possessed by the Hamburg-Amerika Linie in 1886 consisted of 22
-ocean-going steamers, totalling 60,531 G.R.T.[1] By the end of 1913
-these figures had increased to 172 steamers and 1,028,762 G.R.T.
-respectively. During the twenty-eight years 269 vessels of 1,388,206
-tons had been added, either by new building or by purchase, and 101
-steamers of 346,927 tons had been sold. At the end of 1913 19 steamers
-of 268,766 tons were building, so that, including these, the total
-tonnage amounted to 1,360,360 G.R.T. at that date.
-
-During the same period the joint-stock capital of the company had
-increased from 15 to 157-1/2 million marks, the debenture issues from
-5·6 to 69·5 million marks, and the visible reserves from 3,595,285 to
-58,856,552 marks.
-
-The working profits of the company during those twenty-eight years
-amounted to 521,727,426 marks, 2,735,700 of which were Government
-subsidies received during the temporary participation in the Imperial
-Mail Service to the Far East.
-
-The average dividend paid to the shareholders was 7·02 per cent. per
-annum. This figure, to my thinking, proves that the biggest steamship
-company the world has ever known was to a small extent only a
-"capitalist enterprise." Out of a total net profit of over 500 millions,
-no more than 140 million marks went to the shareholders as interest on
-their invested capital; by far the greater part of the remainder was
-used to extend the company's business, so that the country in general
-benefited by it.
-
-Concerning one matter which played an important part in Ballin's career,
-viz., the relations between his company and the North German Lloyd, the
-reader may perhaps desire a more exhaustive account. There certainly
-was no want of rivalry between the two companies. One notable reason for
-this was the fact that at the time when Ballin joined the Packetfahrt
-the latter had fallen far behind its younger competitor in its
-development, both from the business and the technical point of view. The
-Packetfahrt, in particular, had not kept pace with the technical
-progress in steamship construction, and the consequence was that, when
-the pool was set up, it had to content itself with a percentage which
-was considerably less than that allotted to the Lloyd. The enormous
-advance made under the Ballin régime naturally caused it to demand a
-larger share. At the same time the Lloyd also increased its efforts more
-than ever before, and thus a race for predominance was started between
-the two big companies, which greatly assisted them in obtaining the
-commanding position they acquired as the world's leading shipping firms.
-I do not think this is the place to go into all the details of this
-struggle, and I shall confine myself to reproducing an article which
-Ballin himself contributed in 1907 on the occasion of the fiftieth
-anniversary of the foundation of the North German Lloyd. As this article
-throws several interesting sidelights on the development of
-transatlantic shipping enterprise, it may furnish a suitable conclusion
-to the account given in the present chapter:
-
- "The year 1907 is one which will stand out prominently in the
- history of our transatlantic shipping on account of the two
- anniversaries which we are going to celebrate during its course. On
- May 27th it will be sixty years since the Hamburg-Amerika Linie was
- called into existence, and on February 20th the North German Lloyd
- will celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of its foundation. I
- suppose that a more competent pen than mine will present us on that
- day with a detailed account of the development of the great Bremen
- shipping firm, and my only object in writing this article is to
- review in brief the period of more than twenty years during which I
- have had the pleasure of working hand in hand with our Bremen
- friends.
-
- "Until the year 1885 the two big companies, the Lloyd and the
- Packetfahrt, scarcely had any mutually profitable dealings with
- each other; on the contrary, their relations were characterized by
- open enmity. It is true that the attempts at a _rapprochement_,
- which were made from time to time, did in some cases lead to the
- conclusion of an agreement concerning certain rates to which both
- companies bound themselves to adhere, but they never lasted more
- than a short time, and ultimately, far from causing an improvement
- of the existing state of things, they left matters worse than they
- had been before. I think I may congratulate myself on being the
- first to have brought about a better understanding between the two
- companies which, in the end, paved the way to the establishment of
- a lasting friendship which has grown closer and closer during the
- past twenty years.
-
- "In 1886, shortly after I had joined the Hamburg-Amerika Linie,
- when I went to Bremen in order to find out what could be done to
- lessen or, if possible, to remove altogether the competition
- between both companies, the conduct of the firm's business had
- passed from the hands of Consul Meier, who was getting on in years,
- into those of Director Lohmann. Mr. Lohmann was a man of unusual
- energy and possessed of a rare gift for organization. In the annals
- of international shipping his name will be for ever associated with
- the introduction into the North Atlantic route of fast steamers
- under the German flag. He had been fortunate enough to meet with a
- congenial mind on the technical side in the head of the firm of
- Messrs. John Elder and Co., the Glasgow shipbuilders. At their
- yard, starting in 1881, a series of fast steamers were built--the
- _Elbe_, the _Werra_, the _Fulda_, the _Saale_, the _Trave_, the
- _Aller_, and the _Lahn_--which opened up a new and memorable era in
- the progress of the means of communication between the Old World
- and the New. These boats proved of great benefit to the company
- financially, and they were also a considerable boon to the
- passengers owing to their speed and punctuality. I recollect
- talking to the chairman of a big British steamship company on
- board one of his steamers in New York harbour in 1888, when the
- s.s. _Lahn_, of the North German Lloyd, steamed in. My British
- colleague, filled with admiration, glanced at his watch, touched
- his hat by way of salutation, and said with honest enthusiasm:
- 'Wonderful boats; they are really doing clockwork.' He only
- expressed the sentiment felt by the travelling public generally;
- everybody appreciated their reliability and punctuality, and the
- excellence of their service.
-
- "Director Lohmann died very suddenly on February 9th, 1892; he had
- just concluded an address at a general meeting of the company held
- at the 'Haus Seefahrt' when he dropped down dead. During the last
- few years of his life he had not been well advised technically, and
- failed to adopt the twin-screw principle, as had been done by the
- Hamburg company. Thus, when the two fast single-screw steamers, the
- _Havel_ and the _Spree_, were built at Stettin in 1890, they were
- practically obsolete, because the travelling public by that time
- had come to prefer those of the twin-screw type, owing to the
- increased safety they afforded.
-
- "In 1888 Consul Meier retired from the chairmanship of the Lloyd,
- to be succeeded--after the short reign of Mr. Reck--by Mr. George
- Plate. To Mr. Plate, if I am rightly informed, great credit is due
- for having secured the services of Director-General Dr. Heinrich
- Wiegand on the board of the company.
-
- "What the Lloyd has achieved under the Wiegand régime far surpasses
- anything accomplished in the past.
-
- "The Hamburg-Amerika Linie, meanwhile, had been alive to the needs
- of the times; and the consequence was a healthy competition between
- these two steamship companies--by far the biggest the world has
- ever seen--practically on all the seven seas. This competition, by
- intelligent compromise, was restricted within reasonable limits,
- the guiding spirits of the two concerns consciously adopting the
- policy implied by the strategic principle: 'In approaching the
- enemy's position we must divide our forces; in attacking him we
- must concentrate them.'
-
- "It would not be correct to say that this atmosphere of friendship
- had never been clouded--it would, indeed, have been tedious had it
- been otherwise than it was. Up to now, however, Wiegand and I have
- always been able to maintain pleasant relations between our two
- concerns, and in the interests of both of them it is sincerely to
- be hoped that this spirit of mutual understanding will continue to
- animate them in the future."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE TECHNICAL REORGANIZATION OF THE HAMBURG-AMERIKA LINIE
-
-
-In another chapter of this book the big passenger boats of the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie have been described as the outcome of Ballin's
-imaginative brain. This they were indeed, and in many instances it is
-scarcely possible to say how far the credit for having built them is due
-to the naval architect, and how far it is due to Ballin. He was
-profoundly against employing _one_ system throughout, and on accepting
-the views of _one_ expert exclusively; and this aversion was so
-pronounced that he objected on principle to the nomination of any
-technical expert to the Board of his company. The company, he said, is
-surely going to last longer than a lifetime or two. Besides, it must try
-to solve the problem of perpetual youth, and therefore it cannot afford
-to run the risk of staking its fortune on the views held by one single
-man who is apt to ignore the progress of his science without noticing
-it. The same dislike of onesidedness induced him to encourage to the
-best of his capacity a healthy competition among the various shipyards,
-and to avail himself of the experiences gained not only by the German
-yards but by their British rivals also. At an early stage of his career
-close business relations were established between himself and Messrs.
-Harland and Wolff, of Belfast; and a personal friendship connected him
-with the owner of that firm, Mr. (now Lord) Pirrie. Acting upon the
-example set by the White Star Line, Ballin made an agreement with
-Messrs. Harland and Wolff as early as 1898, by which the latter bound
-themselves always to keep a slip at the disposal of the Packetfahrt. The
-reason which prompted Ballin to make this arrangement was, as he
-explained to the Board of Trustees, that the company's orders for new
-construction and repairs had nowhere been carried out more
-satisfactorily and more cheaply than by the Belfast yard, where all the
-new vessels ordered were built under a special agreement, i.e. at cost
-price with a definitely fixed additional percentage representing the
-profits and certain expenditure incurred by the builders. This
-arrangement enabled the Packetfahrt to become acquainted with whatever
-was latest and best in British shipyard production, and, as it were, to
-acquire models which it could improve upon in German yards after they
-had been tested on actual service. Some of the best and most important
-types of vessels which the Packetfahrt has produced owe their origin to
-this system; and it is only fair to say that it exercised an entirely
-beneficial influence on the progress of the German shipbuilding
-industry, the prosperity of which is largely due to the fact that it has
-profited from the century-old experience gained by the British yards and
-by British ocean-shipping.
-
-Ballin held the view that, just as the shipbuilding expert had to watch
-the progress of naval architecture and to make practical application of
-its results, and just as the merchant had to exploit this progress for
-the benefit of his business, the shipowner--especially the one who
-maintains a service of passenger boats--has the special task of making
-every step in the direction of further advance serviceable to the needs
-of the passengers. Being himself, as has been pointed out elsewhere,
-gifted with a strong faculty for appreciating things beautiful, and
-raising no less high demands as regards the beauty and the comfort of
-all his surroundings, Ballin constantly endeavoured to make use of all
-the results of his own observations and of his own experience for the
-greater comfort of the passengers. Those who saw the finished products
-of his imagination, the beautifully appointed "floating hotels," hardly
-realized how many apparently insignificant details--which, after all, in
-their entirety make what we call comfort--owe their origin to his own
-personal suggestions. Each time he made a sea voyage on board a steamer
-of his own, or of some other company, he brought home with him a number
-of new ideas, chiefly such as affected technicalities, and matters
-dealing with the personal comfort of the passengers. Numerous entries in
-the notebooks which he carried on such occasions are there to serve as
-illustrations; the following items, for instance, are selected from
-those which he jotted down, roughly, on a voyage to New York some time
-in the 'nineties. They speak for themselves, in spite of their
-sketchiness:
-
-"List of Moselle purveyors wants revision--notices on board to be
-restricted as much as possible, those which are necessary to be
-tastefully framed--sailing lists and general regulations to be included
-in passengers' lists--state cabin on board _Kaiser Friedrich_: key,
-latch, drawer; no room for portmanteaux and trunks; towels too
-small--_Deutschland_: soiled linen cupboard too small--stewards
-_Oceanic_ white jackets--celery glasses--butter dishes too small--large
-bed pillows--consommé cups--playing cards: Packetfahrt complete name of
-firm--Packetfahrt complete name on Wehber's wine bottles--toast to be
-served in a serviette (hot)."
-
-Rough notes such as these were used to serve Ballin as the material
-underlying the detailed reports and instructions to the company's
-servants which he composed during the voyage, so that not even a long
-sea voyage gave him the unbroken spell of leisure he so badly needed.
-Indeed, the longer it lasted the more chances did it provide for
-thoroughly inspecting the practical working of the steamer. Many other
-reports are in my possession, but the one given will serve to emphasize
-the meticulous quality of observation he possessed, and how practical
-was his mind in regard to details of comfort and convenience, and the
-special climatic needs of different routes.
-
-Even where the peculiar conditions obtaining in tropical climates were
-concerned--conditions with which he was personally quite
-unacquainted--he unfailingly discovered any defects that might exist,
-and also the means by which they could be remedied.
-
-Ballin's connexion with the Packetfahrt practically coincides with the
-whole of that period during which the immense progress of modern
-steamship building from humble beginnings to its present stage of
-development took place; with the only exception that the North German
-Lloyd had already, before Ballin joined the Packetfahrt, established its
-services of fast steamers which were far ahead of those maintained by
-other shipping companies owing to their punctuality and reliability, and
-which Ballin then set himself to improve upon and to excel. Apart from
-this one type of vessel, the science of steamship construction, as seen
-from our modern point of view, was still in its infancy.
-
-In 1886 the steamships owned by the Hamburg-Amerika Linie were mainly of
-two different types, viz., those used in the North Atlantic service
-(principally on the New York route), and those used in the Mexico-West
-Indies service.
-
-The expansion of the Packetfahrt's business after Ballin had joined the
-company, and especially the addition of new services together with the
-increase in the number of ports of departure and of destination, made it
-necessary constantly to increase the size and the carrying capacity of
-the cargo boats, and the size and the speed of the passenger steamers,
-as well as to improve and to modernize the passenger accommodation on
-board the latter. All this, of course, considerably added to the cost
-price of the vessels, so that, as a further consequence, the facilities
-for loading and discharging them had to be improved and extended. Four
-principal types of steamers may be distinguished in the development of
-the company's fleet, especially of that part of it which was engaged on
-the North Atlantic route, where the main development took place.
-
-_Type One_: Fast steamers--twin screws, 18 knots, 8,500
-G.R.T.--possessing accommodation for passengers of all classes and
-provided with comparatively little cargo space, but comfortably and
-luxuriously appointed throughout. The three leading ideas governing
-their construction were safety, speed, and comfort; and progress was
-made to keep abreast of competing lines, until it culminated in the
-vessels of the "Imperator" class. The _Imperator_ was built in 1913.
-They were quadruple screw turbine steamers, possessing no fewer than 42
-multitubular boilers each, and, as they were of a capacity of 52,000
-gross register tons, they were nearly three times the size of the
-_Deutschland_.
-
-_Type Two_: Ships of medium speed and of considerable size, and
-therefore providing a high standard of comfort for passengers combined
-with ample facilities for cargo accommodation.
-
-_Type Three_: Chiefly built as cargo boats, but in such a way that a
-part of their space could be utilized for the accommodation of a large
-number of steerage passengers.
-
-_Type Four_: Cargo steamers without any passenger accommodation.
-
-The difference between the floating palaces of type No. 1 in 1913 and
-those vessels which the Hamburg-Amerika Linie possessed when Ballin
-first entered upon his career as a shipping man was like that between
-day and night. A brief comparison of a few details will be the best
-means of illustrating the enormous progress achieved within less than
-the lifetime of a generation. The size of the vessels had increased from
-3,000 to more than 50,000 tons; the speed from 14 to nearly 25 knots;
-the height of the decks from 6-1/2 to 8 feet in the lower decks, whilst
-that of the upper ones, as far as the social rooms were concerned,
-amounted to as much as 20 feet. Large portions of the upper decks were
-reserved for the social rooms, the finest of which--the ball-room--could
-challenge comparison with almost any similar room in any hotel ashore
-with respect to its size and to the magnificence of its furnishings and
-of its decoration. From a technical point of view, too, the construction
-of such a huge room on board a vessel, which possessed a floor space of
-4,800 square feet, and a ceiling unsupported by any columns or pillars
-of any kind, was an unprecedented achievement. Besides, there were
-immense dining-rooms for each class, smoking-rooms, ladies' saloons, a
-restaurant, a winter garden, a swimming pool, and numerous smaller rooms
-suitable for the relaxation and amusement of the passengers.
-
-On the older boats the arrangement was that the small cabins were all
-grouped round the one and only social room on board, so that the
-occupants of the cabins could hear all that was going on in the social
-room, and _vice versa_. The superficial area at the disposal of each
-passenger was gradually increased from 43 square feet in the double
-cabins to 172 square feet in the cabins of the _Imperator_, so that the
-latter were really no longer mere cabins, but actual rooms. The
-suites-de-luxe comprised up to twelve rooms, the largest of which
-covered an area of 247 square feet.
-
-It must not be thought, however, that the first-class passengers were
-the only ones for whose comfort the company catered. The other classes
-progressed proportionately in added comfort, space, and social
-facilities, not excepting the steerage.
-
-But by far the greatest improvements made were those in connexion with
-the enormous progress of the purely technical side of shipbuilding
-during the whole period under review. The more the vessels increased in
-size, the less were they liable to the pitching and rolling motion
-caused when the weather was rough. Moreover, special appliances, such as
-bilge keels and bilge tanks, were employed to lessen these movements
-still more, even when the sea was high. The reciprocating engines
-gradually gave place to higher types, and later on turbines and
-oil-engines were also introduced. In addition to the propelling
-machinery a number of auxiliary engines were used which were of various
-kinds and for various purposes, such as the ventilation of the cabins
-and the other rooms, the generation of light, the services in connexion
-with the personal welfare of the passengers and with their safety whilst
-on board ship. Instead of single bottoms, double bottoms were used, and
-the additional safety resulting therefrom was still further enhanced by
-dividing the space between the two by means of a whole network of
-partitions. The vessels of the "Imperator" class, indeed, possessed
-practically a double shell, which formed an effective protection against
-the danger of collision. The lifeboats increased in size and in number,
-and their shape and equipment were improved. Emergency lighting stations
-were arranged which could generate a sufficient amount of electric
-current if the ordinary supply should break down at any time. The whole
-vessels were divided into self-contained compartments by water-tight
-bulkheads, the doors of which could be automatically closed. This
-division into many compartments proved an effective protection against
-the risk of fire; but a number of special devices were also adopted to
-serve the same purpose, e.g. an extensive system of steampipes by which
-each single room could be rapidly filled with steam, so that the fire
-could be automatically extinguished. Fire-proof material was used for
-the walls separating adjacent rooms and cabins, and, not content with
-all this, the company provided its mammoth liners with an actual fire
-brigade, the members of which were fully trained for their work. The
-most important improvements affecting the navigation of the steamers
-were the introduction of wireless telegraphy apparatus, the gyroscopic
-compasses, the system of submarine direction indicator signalling, and
-the substitution of two steering gears instead of one, not to mention a
-series of minor improvements of all kinds.
-
-The provisioning on board the German steamers was of proverbial
-excellence, the kitchen arrangements were modelled after those found in
-the big hotels, and were supplied with all manner of supplementary
-devices. The huge store rooms were divided into sections for those
-provisions that were of a perishable nature and for those that were not;
-and for the former refrigerating rooms were also provided in which the
-temperature could be regulated according to the nature of the articles.
-
-Perhaps the most interesting development of the various types of
-steamers is that which type No. 2 has undergone. It originated in Great
-Britain, whence it was taken over in 1894. The first unit of this type
-added to the fleet of the Packetfahrt was the _Persia_, of 5,800 G.R.T.,
-and a speed of 12 knots, built to accommodate a number of cabin and
-steerage passengers, and to carry a considerable amount of cargo as
-well. These boats possessed many advantages over similar ones,
-advantages which were due to their size, their shape, and the loading
-facilities with which they were equipped. Ballin immediately recognized
-the good points of this type, and he improved it until the vessels
-reached a size of 13,000 G.R.T., which still enabled them to travel at a
-speed of 13 knots. They were twin-screw steamers, and were provided with
-every safety device known at the time. A still further improvement of
-this type was represented by the _Amerika_ and the _Kaiserin Auguste
-Victoria_, built in 1905 and 1906 respectively, luxuriously equipped
-throughout; by their large size--they possessed a capacity of very
-nearly 25,000 G.R.T.--extremely seaworthy, and as they could travel at
-the rate of 17-1/2 knots, their speed was scarcely inferior to that
-possessed by the older type of fast steamers. From the point of view of
-actual remunerativeness they were far superior to the fast steamers,
-combining, as they did, all the earning possibilities of the passenger
-and of the cargo vessels.
-
-The development of the types comprising the cargo steamers went hand in
-hand with the expansion of international trade relations, and with the
-constant increase in the amount of goods exchanged between the nations.
-To a certain extent development was limited by the dimensions of the
-Suez Canal. Still, improvements became possible in this respect too when
-the depth of the Canal was increased to 27 feet in 1908, 29 feet in
-1912, and 30 feet in 1914.
-
-Ballin carefully watched this development, incessantly improving the
-existing types of his company's cargo boats, so that they should always
-meet the growing needs of sea-borne trade, and in some instances even
-anticipating them, until, when the war broke out, twin screw cargo boats
-of a capacity of 16,000 tons and possessing a speed of 13 knots were
-being built for the company.
-
-In a brief outline such as this, it is not possible to enter into
-details concerning the expansion of the other lines which became
-affiliated to or otherwise associated with the Packetfahrt in course of
-time. One special type, however, ought to receive a somewhat more
-detailed treatment in this connexion, viz., that of the excursion
-steamers. The running of pleasure cruises, originally nothing but a mere
-expedient to prevent the express steamers from lying idle during the
-dead season, gradually became an end in itself. The Northern and
-Mediterranean cruises were soon followed by others, e.g. those to the
-West Indies and the pleasure trips round the globe. Two special
-steamers, the _Prinzessin Victoria Luise_, and the somewhat smaller and
-less sumptuous _Meteor_, both of them equipped after the style of
-pleasure yachts, were built when it was found advisable to make this
-service independent of the fast steamers and the big passenger boats
-which had also been employed for this purpose. After the loss of the
-_Prinzessin Victoria Luise_ she was replaced first by a British
-passenger boat that had been purchased, and then by the _Deutschland_,
-specially reconditioned for her new purpose, and renamed _Victoria
-Luise_. Both vessels were extremely popular with the international
-travelling public, and year after year they carried thousands of
-tourists to countries and places distinguished for the beauty of their
-natural scenery or for their historical and artistic associations. They
-were largely instrumental in constantly augmenting the number of those
-who formed the regular clientèle of the company.
-
-"Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery." In the realm of shipping
-it has always been customary for each company to profit by the
-experience gained and the progress made by its competitors. This applies
-to the Packetfahrt and its management also; but in their case they have
-given infinitely more than they have received, and in the whole history
-of shipping there has never been one single person who has exercised a
-more stimulating influence on its technical progress than Albert
-Ballin.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-POLITICS
-
-
-Notwithstanding the many business controversies in which Ballin took an
-important part, it has occasionally been said that he was not really a
-"fighter." This statement may be allowed to pass quite unchallenged,
-provided that by the term "fighter" we mean a man whose habit it is to
-fight to the bitter end. Ballin never indulged in fighting for its own
-sake, nor was it ever his object to see his vanquished opponent lie
-prostrate before him. Such a mental attitude he, in his own drastic way,
-would have described as a "perverted pleasure." Always and everywhere it
-was his aim to secure to himself and to those he represented the maximum
-benefit obtainable consistent with the realities of the situation, so
-that he has been justly described as "a man of compromise."
-
-This feature of his personality, indeed, forms the key-note both to his
-policy and to the principles on which it was based. Perhaps in other
-spheres of economic activity it is possible for a struggle between two
-competing rivals to end in the complete victory of one of them; in the
-shipping business such an outcome is the exception but not the rule.
-There a really _weak_ opponent is never met with, unless one's rival
-happens to be exceptionally inexperienced or constitutionally unsound.
-The minor competitor, where shipping is concerned, is by no means always
-the less powerful of the two. On the contrary, the contest which
-inflicts small losses on him inflicts heavy losses on his big opponent,
-and may easily exhaust the latter first. The last few decades have
-witnessed the establishment of many new shipping firms under the
-auspices of national sentiment. Governments and whole peoples have
-backed them, and in such cases private undertakings have found it
-difficult to compete.
-
-During his early training Ballin had so thoroughly convinced himself of
-the necessity for co-operation and compromise in matters economic that
-this conviction became the corner-stone of his policy. He also made it
-his principle never to tie an unwilling partner to an agreement which
-the latter considered to be detrimental to his vital interests, and he
-would only approve of an agreement if both parties to it felt satisfied
-that they had done a good stroke of business by concluding it. The
-numerous "community of interest" agreements to which he signed his name
-established, the longer they lasted and the further they were extended,
-an increasingly intimate contact between the shipping firms all over the
-world, thus proving that the consistent application of his principles
-was justified by its success.
-
-In politics, too, he regarded this line of action as the only correct
-one. Over and over again he described the World War as a "stupid war" or
-as the "most stupid of all wars," because its origin, the conflict
-between Austria-Hungary and Serbia, was so utterly meaningless to the
-progress of the world. Its actual outbreak was caused by the strained
-economic relations between Hungary and Serbia, or--to put it quite
-plainly--by the boycott of the Serbian pig, a matter which was surely of
-no importance to the world's trade and traffic at large. "No Bismarck
-was needed to prevent _this_ war," he often said when speaking of its
-immediate origin.
-
-This attitude of his does not mean that he shut his eyes to the
-deep-seated antagonisms which were at the back of these local squabbles,
-viz., the Franco-Russian coalition against Germany, and the
-Anglo-German rivalry. The latter he regarded as sufficient to turn the
-scale; if it could be adjusted a World War, he felt sure, would be
-avoided. The possibility of a universal conflagration had been pointed
-out to him by no less an authority than Prince Bismarck on the occasion
-of the latter's visit to Hamburg, when he was shown over the express
-steamer of the Packetfahrt that was to bear his name. "I shall not live
-to see the World War," Bismarck told him; "but you will, and it will
-start in the Near East."
-
-With ever-increasing anxiety, Ballin noticed how, as a result of the
-German naval armaments, the Anglo-German antagonism came into existence,
-and how in time the position became worse and worse. When the
-Government, about the year 1900, embarked upon its propaganda for the
-creation of a big navy, he lent it his active assistance, but in later
-years he strongly opposed the naval race with Great Britain, trying to
-the best of his ability to circumvent its disastrous consequences.
-
-The British argument against Germany's naval programme was that a nation
-which owned one-third of the inhabited globe and intended to maintain
-its supremacy could not renounce its naval predominance. His knowledge
-of British mentality--gained, as it was, through many years of
-intercourse with the English--told him that this reasoning was certainly
-unassailable from the British point of view, and that England would
-fight for its recognition to the bitter end. Therefore, he considered
-the situation could only be met by an Anglo-German understanding. The
-failure of arriving at such a solution was probably caused--apart from
-personal motives--by the fact that in Germany the spirit of compromise
-was not the predominant one, but that its place was taken by an
-exaggerated opinion of the country's own strength combined with a
-certain ignorance regarding foreign countries.
-
-This mental attitude is typical of the two factions which were
-all-powerful in Germany at the time, viz., what might be called the Old
-Prussian aristocracy, and the representatives of the heavy industries.
-The common platform on which these two groups met was the policy to be
-pursued regarding customs tariffs, which, although it formed the basis
-of the economic greatness of Germany, also prepared the way for serious
-international conflicts. During the war these two groups were in charge
-of what was meant to be the political policy of the country, but which
-was, in fact, nothing but an inferior substitute for it.
-
-Ballin's international position is illustrated by the fact that he was
-the first to be approached in the matter of a projected Anglo-German
-rapprochement, an affair which reached its climax with Lord Haldane's
-visit to Berlin. Owing to its historical interest this episode is worth
-a detailed account.
-
-The first steps in this direction date back as far as the year 1908, and
-the ultimate breakdown of the project did not take place until the
-outbreak of the war. The British negotiator was Sir Ernest Cassel, who,
-a native of Germany, had settled in England when quite young, and who
-had become one of the world's most successful financiers. He was the
-intimate friend of King Edward from the time when the latter was Prince
-of Wales, and he also acted as his banker and as his political adviser.
-The King visited his home almost daily during the last few years of his
-life to take part in a game of bridge. The motives which may have
-prompted Sir Ernest to lend his assistance and his great influence to an
-endeavour which aimed at an understanding between his adopted country
-and the land of his birth need not, in the case of a man so clever and
-so experienced, be very far to seek. Sir Ernest repeatedly referred to
-himself as a German, and as such he was deprived of his
-privy-councillorship during the war. Thus it is quite likely that he
-might have been prompted no less by an inherited predilection for the
-one, than by an acquired preference for the other country. This very
-fact may also have enabled him to see matters with particular clearness
-of vision and without any prejudice. He and his friends reasoned
-somewhat along the following lines:
-
-The policy of King Edward having led to a considerable strengthening of
-the position of France on the Continent, there arose the danger of an
-armed conflict between the continental Powers, especially as many points
-of dispute threatened at the same time to disturb the relations between
-Germany and Great Britain. These differences were caused on the one hand
-by the political activities of Germany as a world power, and on the
-other by her commercial and industrial expansion which bid fair to
-relegate Great Britain to a subordinate position. People in England
-regarded the want of a system of protection similar to the German
-protective tariffs as the real cause of this development, a want which
-retarded the progress of British industrialism, and which prevented
-British financiers from taking an active interest in these matters. The
-German financiers, however, exerted all their influence on behalf of the
-industrial expansion of their country, thus emancipating it more and
-more from foreign capital. The time during which the financing of the
-German industries by French money (the so-called French "pensions"),
-i.e. the discounting by French capitalists of bills drawn by German
-industrialists, played an important part, and even represented a serious
-menace in days of political tension, had only just passed, but, thanks
-to the increasing capital strength of Germany, its effects had now quite
-ceased to make themselves felt.
-
-The advantage to Great Britain of an understanding with Germany was that
-it would guarantee her maritime supremacy which she was resolved to
-maintain at any price, whilst at the same time reducing the burden of
-her naval armaments which, in her case, too, had become wellnigh
-insupportable. The Liberal Government then in power was particularly
-interested in such financial retrenchment, being quite aware that the
-time had arrived for the State to enter upon an era of social
-legislation.
-
-Contact between Ballin and the above-mentioned British groups was
-established through the agency of some friends of his connected with
-German high finance. The fact that the British selected Ballin to start
-these negotiations is probably due to his well-known friendship with the
-Kaiser, which suggested the possibility of approaching the German
-Government--even if only by informal channels in the first instance.
-This first attempt, should it prove successful, might at any moment be
-followed up by direct negotiations between the two governments. In view
-of the traditional close connexion existing in England between business
-circles on the one hand, and the politicians, the parties, and the
-Government on the other, such proceedings did not by any means imply a
-policy of backstairs, but might be relied upon to open up a way for
-sounding German official quarters in the most natural manner.
-
-The general tenor of Anglo-German relations at that time was somewhat as
-follows.
-
-The visit of King Edward to Wilhelmshöhe and that of the German Emperor
-and Empress to Windsor Castle in the summer of 1907 had been of a very
-friendly character, and, together with other manifestations of
-friendship exchanged between various German and British societies, they
-had exercised a favourable impression on public opinion in both
-countries. But very soon this friendly feeling was replaced by one of
-irritation. Great Britain and Russia had concluded an agreement
-concerning their frontiers in the Middle East, and this led to questions
-in the Reichstag as to whether German interests had been properly
-safeguarded. At the same time (in the summer of 1907) the Hague
-Conference came to an end without having led to an understanding
-regarding the limitation of armaments, which many people in England
-would have liked to be brought about. Towards the end of the year the
-German Government submitted to the Reichstag a Navy Bill by which the
-life of the capital ships was to be reduced from 25 to 20 years. This
-was tantamount to asking for the cost of three new ships of the line.
-Simultaneously a powerful propaganda for the navy was started, and when
-Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria resigned the protectorate of the Bavarian
-section of the Navy League, because the League which at that time was
-presided over by the well-known General Keim had engaged in party
-politics, his withdrawal had the undesirable effect of focusing public
-attention on the League's share in this agitation. This step, as was but
-natural, brought about a change in the chairmanship of the League.
-
-In England the agitation against Germany in general, and against her
-naval policy in particular, became very violent in the early part of
-1908. In February _The Times_ announced that the Kaiser, for the express
-purpose of interfering with the British naval budget, had sent a letter
-to that effect to Lord Tweedmouth, the First Lord of the Admiralty. His
-lordship categorically denied in Parliament that the document had any
-political character whatever, but in spite of this denial, and in spite
-of the support which he received from Lord Lansdowne and from Lord
-Rosebery, the matter produced a violent outburst of feeling on the part
-of the British Press and public. During March, 1908, both houses of
-Parliament discussed German and British naval policy in great detail. In
-an article published by the _National Review_, Lord Esher, the chairman
-of the Imperial Maritime League, demanded that for every keel laid down
-by Germany, Britain should lay down two, and General Baden-Powell
-described the danger of a German invasion as imminent. On the other
-hand, Sir Edward Grey, the Foreign Secretary, emphasized in one of his
-speeches the point of view referred to above, viz. that a reduction of
-the naval burdens would also be desirable in the interest of Britain,
-but that he could recommend such a policy only if the other governments
-consented to do the same.
-
-All these considerations might easily suggest to the clear-headed men of
-business on either side of the North Sea how greatly it would be to the
-mutual advantage of both if a way could be found towards a limitation of
-naval armaments.
-
-The first interview between Ballin and Sir Ernest Cassel took place in
-the summer of 1908, and Ballin afterwards gave the Kaiser a detailed
-account of it when the latter visited Hamburg and Kiel at the end of
-June. Another report, based on material supplied by Ballin, was composed
-by the chief of the Press Department of the Foreign Office, Geheimrat
-Hammann, for the use of the Imperial Chancellor and the Foreign
-Secretary, and in the absence of any original account by Ballin himself,
-it may be permitted to give an outline of its contents below.
-
-Sir Ernest opened the conversation by saying that for a long time back
-he had desired to discuss the political situation simply in his capacity
-as a private person, and that he felt qualified to do so because of his
-intimate acquaintance with some of the leading personages and with
-politics in general. He would like to contribute his share towards the
-prevention of a dangerous development of the existing rivalry. The King
-felt very keenly that the rapid increase of the German naval forces
-constituted a menace to Britain's maritime position. He was convinced,
-however, that his nephew would never provoke a wanton conflict, and
-that, in his heart of hearts, he loathed the horrors of war. Although,
-therefore, during his--the King's--lifetime the danger of an
-Anglo-German war was remote, it was nevertheless necessary that, when
-his son succeeded him, the latter should find Britain's maritime
-position so strong that the Kaiser's successor should be unable to
-assail it.
-
-When Ballin interposed at this stage that the British navy, because of
-its unchallenged superiority in numbers, need not be afraid of the newly
-created naval power of Germany, Sir Ernest replied that it was well
-known to British naval experts that the increase of the German navy was
-considerably greater than the official statements made in the Reichstag
-would let it appear. Undoubtedly the British navy would always preserve
-its superiority, not only numerically, but also technically with regard
-to material, construction, and armaments. Nevertheless, the advantages
-possessed by the German system of manning the ships and the great
-efficiency of German naval officers justified an apprehension lest the
-German superiority in the human factor might outweigh the British
-superiority in tonnage. The Boer war had taught England how difficult it
-was to conquer a high-spirited, though numerically weak enemy. He said
-that fear of the German danger formed the driving power of the whole
-policy of the Entente, and that this policy was only meant to guard
-against that menace. Therefore Russia had been advised at the Reval
-meeting to forgo the enlargement of her navy, and to concentrate all her
-energies on her army.
-
-Upon Sir Ernest's intimation that at some date Britain, together with
-France and Russia, might inquire of Germany when she intended to put a
-stop to her naval armaments, Ballin replied that his friend, if he was
-anxious to render a really valuable service to Britain and to the cause
-of peace, could do no better than make it perfectly plain that such an
-inquiry would mean war. Germany would resist with her whole strength any
-such attempt which unmistakably suggested the methods employed at
-Fashoda.
-
-During the progress of the interview Sir Ernest--who showed that he
-possessed excellent information concerning Germany's finances--observed
-that the state of the same would render it very difficult for her to
-make war. In that connexion he pointed out the intimate bearing of
-international finance on political relations, and he emphasized how much
-the borrowing countries were dependent on the lending ones. Still, even
-the creditor nations would sometimes be forced into an uncomfortable
-position, as was, for instance, the case with Great Britain after the
-United States had passed on to her the greater part of the Japanese
-debt. In Japan the disproportion between military burdens and economic
-strength was becoming more and more pronounced, and if the country were
-faced with the alternative of choosing between the total financial
-exhaustion of the people and a stoppage of the payment of interest, it
-would prefer to take the latter course.
-
-In London Ballin was present at the Constitutional Club when a Member of
-Parliament made a speech in which he stated, with the general approval
-of his audience, that the position of Britain was not really so good as
-the policy pursued by the Entente might lead one to believe. The
-national balance-sheet had been much more satisfactory during the reign
-of Queen Victoria; the items now appearing on the credit side being
-partly bad debts incurred by Spaniards, Portuguese, and Japanese, for
-whose political good behaviour Britain paid far too high a price, and
-one should not allow oneself to be misled as to the value of these
-ententes by balance-sheets which were purposely kept vague.
-
-Geheimrat Hammann told Ballin by letter that Prince Bülow, the Imperial
-Chancellor, and Herr v. Schön, the Foreign Secretary, were very grateful
-to him for his information, and that in the opinion of both gentlemen
-his reply to the suggestion concerning the stoppage of naval armaments
-was "as commendable as it was correct." Meanwhile the Kaiser had also
-supplied the Chancellor with a general résumé of Ballin's report to him.
-
-Ballin's visit gave rise to an exchange of letters which it may not be
-inappropriate to reproduce in this place. By way of explanation, it
-should first be said that the Sandjak Railway project, to which
-reference is made in Ballin's letter, had greatly agitated public
-opinion all over Europe during the spring of 1908. In February, Count
-Aehrenthal, the Austrian Foreign Minister, at a committee meeting of the
-delegations, had announced the Government's intention of constructing a
-railway line connecting the Bosnian system with the town of Mitrovitza
-in the Sandjak (or province) of Novi Bazar. This announcement led to a
-violent outburst of the Russian Press, which described this project as a
-political _démarche_ on the part of Austria in the Balkans and as an
-interference with the Macedonian reforms aimed at by the Powers. In
-Austria it was thought that Germany would support her ally as a matter
-of course, and Prince Bülow, in an interview given to a journalist,
-tried to pacify the _Novoie Vremia_. He declared that the Russian papers
-were absolutely mistaken when they alleged that the project was inspired
-from Berlin, and he stated that Austria, like her German ally, pursued
-none but commercial aims in the Balkans.
-
-These remarks will be a sufficient explanation of the allusions
-contained in Ballin's letter of July 13th, 1908, which, after an
-expression of thanks for the hospitality extended to him, reads as
-follows:
-
- "By the way, the views I expressed to you on the matter of the
- Sandjak Railway are now completely borne out by the facts. Both the
- Kaiser and, later, Prince Bülow have given me positive assurances
- that the German Government was just as much taken by surprise on
- hearing of this Austrian project as were the London and Petrograd
- Cabinets.
-
- "I hope that our respective monarchs may soon meet now. There is
- nothing that we on our side would welcome more heartily than the
- establishment and the maintenance of the most friendly and most
- cordial relations between the two sovereigns and their peoples. The
- Kaiser will not return home from his Northern cruise and from his
- visit to the Swedish Royal Court until the middle of August, but I
- think it is probable that the two monarchs may meet when King
- Edward returns from Marienbad, and that their Majesties will then
- fix the date for the official return visit to Berlin. I sincerely
- trust that this Berlin visit will be of the utmost benefit to both
- countries."
-
-Sir Ernest Cassel replied:
-
- "I also feel that the meeting of their Majesties must produce a
- great deal of good, and, as I now hear, it will after all be
- possible to arrange for this meeting to take place on the outward
- journey of the King. I am still as convinced as ever that our side
- is animated by the same friendly sentiments as yours."
-
-The meeting between the Kaiser and King Edward which was suggested in
-these letters actually took place on August 11th at Friedrichshof
-Castle, when the King was on his way to Ischl, and it was accorded a
-friendly reception in the German Press. It was followed up by an
-exchange of equally friendly manifestations on the part of the peoples
-of both countries. Mr. Lloyd George, then Chancellor of the Exchequer,
-went to Germany in August, 1908, to study the German system of workmen's
-insurance against disability and old age, and British workmen came to
-visit German trade unions, and to gather information about German
-industrial conditions. Official Britain also pronounced herself in
-favour of an understanding between the two countries which Mr. Lloyd
-George described as the only means of relieving the European tension,
-and Mr. Churchill professed similar sentiments.
-
-Shortly afterwards, however, at the end of October, an event took place
-which severely compromised the Kaiser's policy, viz. the incident of the
-_Daily Telegraph_ interview. In this the Kaiser, amongst other matters,
-bitterly complained that his friendship for England received such scant
-acknowledgment. As a proof of the friendly sentiments by which his
-actions were guided he stated that he, during the Boer war, had refused
-the humiliating suggestion put forward by France and Russia that the
-three Powers conjointly should compel Britain to put a stop to the war;
-that he had communicated this refusal to King Edward, and that he
-previously had presented Queen Victoria with a plan of campaign mapped
-out by himself, to which the one actually pursued by Britain bore a
-striking resemblance. With regard to Germany's naval programme, he
-emphasized that his country needed a big fleet in order to command
-attention when the question of the future of the Pacific was discussed.
-Finally, with regard to Anglo-German relations, the Kaiser said that the
-middle and lower classes in Germany did not entertain very friendly
-feelings towards England.
-
-The effect which this interview produced all over Germany was one of
-profound consternation. Its publication led to the well-known
-discussions in the Reichstag in November, 1908, during which the Kaiser,
-to the great dismay of the nation, was staying at Donaueschingen with
-Prince Fürstenberg, where he was hunting. In England, and abroad
-generally, people regarded this interview as proving a great want of
-consistency in the conduct of Germany's foreign policy, and this
-impression was by no means changed when it became known that its
-publication was only due to an unfortunate oversight. The Kaiser had
-sent the account of it, as he was bound to do by the Constitution, to
-Prince Bülow, who was then staying at Norderney. Bülow, however, did not
-read it himself, but passed it on to the Berlin Foreign Office to be
-examined. There, indeed, an examination took place, but only with a view
-to finding out whether it contained any errors of fact, and when this
-was proved not to be the case, it was marked to that effect, passed the
-various ministries without any further examination, and was published.
-This unfortunate chain of accidents did not, however, alter the fact
-that the Kaiser ought to have been aware of the great political
-importance of his utterances. It has always been a chief fault of his to
-speak out too impulsively when it would have been politically more
-expedient to be less communicative. Nor can the entourage of the
-sovereign be excused for not drawing his and the Chancellor's attention
-to the great political significance of his utterances. The Chancellor
-himself and the Foreign Office, profiting from their previous
-experiences with the Kaiser and his appearances in public, ought to have
-used a great deal more circumspection, and it would have been well if
-the permanent officials in the Foreign Office had shown rather more
-political insight.
-
-The endeavours of the official circles to remove the tension existing
-between the two countries were not affected by the incident. On February
-9th, 1909, King Edward and his Queen paid their visit to Berlin, thus
-bringing about the event which Ballin in his letter of July 13th, 1908,
-had described as so very desirable. To appreciate the importance of this
-strictly official visit, we must bear in mind the fact that it did not
-take place until the ninth year of the reign of King Edward. This long
-postponement was no doubt due to a large extent to the estrangement
-between uncle and nephew, and this, in its turn, had its origin in the
-natural dislike which the Kaiser felt for his uncle's mode of conducting
-his private life while still Prince of Wales. It would have been
-preferable, however, to relegate such personal likes and dislikes to the
-background where politics or business were concerned. British official
-comments emphatically underlined the significance of the visit, and the
-German Press followed suit, although voices were not wanting to warn
-against any over-estimation of such acts of courtesy. The reply given in
-the Reichstag by Herr v. Schön, the Foreign Secretary, to a question as
-to whether any suggestions had been put forward by Great Britain with
-respect to a reduction of naval armaments was very cool in its tone. His
-statement amounted to this: that no formal proposal for an understanding
-which might have served as a basis for negotiations had been received,
-probably for the reason that it was not customary among friendly Powers
-to put forward any proposals of which it was doubtful to say whether
-they would be entertained.
-
-In spite of this cold douche and in spite of other obstacles, the
-promoters of an understanding, Ballin and Sir Ernest Cassel, did not
-cease their efforts in that direction. In July, 1909, Ballin paid a
-second visit to Sir Ernest, during which the political discussions were
-continued. On these latter he reported to the Kaiser as follows:
-
- "My friend to whom I had intimated in a private letter written
- about a week earlier that it was my intention to visit him--at the
- same time hinting that, for my personal information, I should like
- very much to take up the threads of the conversation we had had a
- twelvemonth ago on the subject of the question of the navy--had
- evidently used the interval to supply himself at the proper
- quarters with authoritative information about this matter. During
- the whole of our long talk he spoke with extraordinary assurance,
- and every word seemed to be thought out beforehand.
-
- "At the commencement of our conversation I said to my friend that
- in view of the great excitement which reigned in England on account
- of the German naval armaments, and which was assuming a decidedly
- anti-German character, he would quite understand that I should
- desire to take up once more the interesting discussions which we
- had had on the same subject a year ago. I pointed out that this
- excitement--spread as it was by an unscrupulous press and fostered
- by foolish politicians--was apt to produce results altogether
- different from those which the Government might perhaps consider it
- desirable to bring about within the scope of its programme. I
- emphasized the fact that, of course, I was merely speaking as a
- private citizen, reading with interest the English papers and the
- letters of his English friends, so that all my knowledge of the
- subject was derived from private sources.
-
- "A year ago, I said, my friend, in the clear and concise manner
- that distinguished him, had explained to me the need for an
- understanding between Germany and Britain governing the future
- development of their naval forces, at the same time requesting me
- to exert myself in that sense. This suggestion of his had not been
- made in vain. The fact that I had been successful in establishing
- complete concord amongst Germans, British, French, Italians,
- Austrians, and a whole series of small nations on questions
- affecting their highly important shipping interests, and in
- replacing an unbridled and economically disastrous competition by
- friendly agreements to the benefit of each partner, was bound to
- make me sympathize with any measures that it was possible to take
- in order to bring about a similar result between the Governments if
- only they were met in the right spirit. I, therefore, had made up
- my mind to submit such a plan to our Government, but before doing
- so, it would be necessary for me to know whether Britain still
- adhered to the principles which my friend had enunciated to me at
- our previous meeting.
-
- "Sir Ernest's reply was that as far as Britain was concerned a
- great change had taken place during the interval, and that he was
- no longer able to endorse the views he had held at that time. The
- necessity for his country to maintain her supremacy on the sea at
- all hazards, and subject to no engagements of any kind, was now
- more clearly recognized than it had been a year ago. A one-sided
- understanding between Germany and Britain could no longer be
- thought of, since both Austria and France had now voted large sums
- for the enlargement of their respective navies. Austria would
- certainly be found on the German side, but France could by no means
- be said to be an asset on which it would be safe for Britain to
- rely, to say nothing about the two 'dark horses,' Russia and Italy.
- If Britain, in view of these uncertainties, were to permit Germany
- to nail her down to a fixed programme, she would dwindle down to a
- fifth-rate Power. Germany possessed her overwhelmingly large army
- with which she could keep in check Austria, Italy, Russia, and
- France, but Britain had nothing but her navy to guarantee her
- existence as a world power and to safeguard the roads that linked
- her to her colonies. For many decades Britain had enjoyed
- opportunities for accumulating big fortunes. These times, however,
- had now passed. During the reign of the Emperor William II, who,
- with a consistency which it would be difficult to praise too
- highly, had made his country a commercial power of world-wide
- importance, and who had raised German industrial enterprise and
- German merchant shipping to a condition of undreamt-of prosperity,
- Britain sustained immense losses in her overseas commerce. British
- trade was declining, and there was no doubt but that in the long
- run Britain would be compelled to abandon her principles of Free
- Trade.
-
- "The question of the Austrian naval armaments appeared to trouble
- my friend more than anything, and this circumstance, combined with
- the doubtful attitude of Russia and the uncertainty of the
- situation in France, was evidently a source of great anxiety to the
- King. My friend remarked in this connexion that in his opinion the
- moment chosen for the conclusion of an understanding was very
- favourable to German but very unfavourable to British interests. It
- was useless to talk of an agreement so long as an element of mutual
- fear had to be reckoned with. At present this fear manifested
- itself in Britain in a manner which was most inopportune, so that
- it was bound to make the German public believe that Britain would
- be ready to come to an understanding even if the terms of it were
- detrimental to her own interests. Britain had got behindhand both
- with her commerce and with her naval programme. To fight her
- competitors in the world's trade with a fair chance of success was
- impossible for more reasons than one, but the elimination of the
- disadvantage from which she suffered with respect to her naval
- armaments was merely a question of money. The funds that were
- required to bring the British Navy up to the necessities of the
- international situation would certainly be found, because they had
- to be found.
-
- "I told my friend that I was astonished to hear how completely his
- views had changed on these matters. Not what he did say, but what
- he had left unsaid, made me suspect that official circles in
- England--partly, perhaps, through the fault of the German
- Government--had arrived at the conclusion that the latter would
- refrain from a further strengthening of the navy after the existing
- naval programme had been carried out, and that it would merely
- content itself with the gradual replacement of the units as they
- became obsolete. Such a proceeding could be justified only if the
- same plan were adopted by Britain also. If, however, his remarks
- implied that in the opinion of his Government the moment had now
- arrived for altering the ratio of naval strength existing between
- both countries by a comprehensive programme of new building, it
- would soon become evident that there were some flaws in that
- calculation. In view of any such intentions it was my
- opinion--which, however, was quite personal and unofficial--that
- Germany would have to decide upon such an increase of her navy as
- would enable her to carry on a war of defence with the certainty of
- success. If, therefore, Britain meant to go on building warships on
- a large scale, this would merely lead to an aimless naval race
- between the two countries.
-
- "These remarks of mine concluded our first conversation, and I
- accepted my friend's invitation to dine with him that evening in
- company with some prominent men of his acquaintance.
-
- "In the evening I was greatly surprised to see that I was the only
- guest present. My friend told me that, in order to be alone with
- me, he had cancelled his invitations to the other gentlemen,
- stating that he did not yet feel well enough to see them. It was
- obvious to me that he had, meanwhile, reported on the outcome of
- our conversation, and that the atmosphere had changed. This change
- had without doubt been brought about by my remarks concerning the
- necessity for a further enlargement of the German Navy, if the
- action of Britain compelled our Government to take such a course.
- The long discussions that followed proved that this view of mine
- was correct in every detail.
-
- "Sir Ernest explained that the Liberal Cabinet had acted penny wise
- and pound foolish in dealing with the question of the navy. This
- was the conviction of the great majority of the British people, and
- this action had caused the feelings of apprehension and of
- hostility animating them. The Liberal Government had thus made a
- serious blunder, and had, in his opinion, prepared its own doom by
- doing so. He thought the days of the Liberal party were numbered,
- and another party would soon be in office. Anti-German feeling
- would be non-existent to-day if the Liberal cabinet had not,
- because of its preoccupation with questions of social policy,
- neglected the navy. The whole matter was further aggravated by
- other questions of a political kind. France, on account of the
- French national character, had always been a doubtful asset to
- Britain, and, considering the state of her internal politics, she
- was so now more than ever. Germany, on the other hand, possessed a
- great advantage in that her military preponderance enabled her to
- rely with absolute certainty on her Austrian ally. He would say
- nothing about Russia, because he had never regarded the
- Anglo-Russian _rapprochement_ as politically expedient.
-
- "If it was admitted--and he thought this admission was implied by
- my remarks--that her colonial and her commercial interests made it
- imperative for Britain to maintain an unchallenged supremacy on the
- seas, he felt certain that some reasonable men would, after all, be
- able to discover a formula which would make an understanding
- between both countries possible. A great difficulty, however, was
- presented by my often reiterated demand that Britain must not
- abandon her principles of Free Trade. In questions such as these,
- she could, indeed, speak for herself, but not for her great
- colonies. History had proved that she lost her American colonies as
- soon as she tried to foist her own commercial policy on the
- colonists. He had no doubt that Germany, despite the disagreeable
- surprises which she had experienced when adjusting the system of
- her Imperial finances, possessed sufficient wealth to go on
- increasing her navy in the same proportion as Britain. The great
- mistake committed by the Liberal cabinet and by the other advisers
- of the King had been their assumption that financial considerations
- would prevent Germany from carrying out her naval programme in its
- entirety. German prosperity had grown far more rapidly, he thought,
- than even the German Government and German financial experts had
- believed to be possible. Signs of it could be noticed wherever one
- went, and one would turn round in astonishment if, during the
- season, one heard the tourists in Italy or in Egypt talk in any
- language but German. He, at any rate, felt certain of Germany's
- ability to keep pace with Britain in the naval race, even if that
- pace was very greatly accelerated.
-
- "Reasons of internal policy had convinced him that Britain would
- not in any case abandon her Free Trade principles within a
- measurable period of time, and as it was not intended to conclude a
- perpetual agreement, but only one for a limited number of years, he
- thought it was not at all necessary that Germany should insist
- upon her demand in connexion with this question. As the colonies
- enjoyed complete independence in these as in other matters, the
- difficulties would be insurmountable. In return for such a
- concession on Germany's part, Britain would doubtless be willing to
- meet the views of the German Government in other respects. For
- these reasons he would be quite ready to change the opinion he had
- expressed in the morning, and to agree that it could produce
- nothing but good if either side were to appoint some moderate men
- for the purpose of discussing the whole question. Such a meeting
- would have to be kept absolutely secret, and both parties should
- agree that there should be no victor and no vanquished if and when
- an agreement was concluded. This condition would have to be a _sine
- qua non_.
-
- "I promised Sir Ernest that I would use my best endeavours to this
- end when an opportunity should present itself, and we arranged to
- have another meeting in the near future.
-
- "There is no doubt but that my friend is an extremely
- well-qualified negotiator. I do not recollect that during my long
- experience, extending over many years, I have ever come across a
- man who could discuss matters for hours at a time with so much
- self-reliance, deliberation, and fixity of purpose."
-
-This report was passed on by the Kaiser to Herr v. Tirpitz, the
-Secretary for the Navy, who not only expressed his approval of the
-project, but also recommended that the Imperial Chancellor, Herr v.
-Bethmann-Hollweg, who had succeeded Prince Bülow on July 14th should be
-kept informed of all that was done to bring about an understanding. The
-Chancellor, accordingly, was presented by the Kaiser himself with a copy
-of Ballin's report. This was the correct thing to do, as it avoided a
-_faux pas_ such as, during the chancellorship of Prince Bülow, had
-sometimes been made. Future developments, however, proved that this step
-deprived the whole action of its spontaneity, and its immediate effect
-was that the Secretary for the Navy was relieved of all responsibility
-in the matter. Ballin, in later days, summed up his views on this way of
-dealing with the subject by saying that if Herr v. Tirpitz had been left
-a free hand in the whole matter--if, for instance, _he_ had conducted it
-as Imperial Chancellor--it would hardly have turned out a failure. The
-main object of the negotiations that Ballin had carried on was to ensure
-that a number of "experts and men of moderate views," i.e. naval experts
-in the first instance, should join in conference in order to discuss
-how, without injury to their relative fighting efficiency, both
-countries could bring about a reduction of their naval armaments. This
-plan was so simple and so obviously right that, had it been carried out
-as a preliminary to something else, and had the attention of the experts
-been drawn to the enormous political importance of their decision,
-success would have been assured. The procedure, however, which the
-Chancellor adopted compelled him to combat the active opposition of the
-various departments involved even before a meeting of the naval experts
-could be arranged for, and this was a task which far exceeded the
-strength of Herr v. Bethmann-Hollweg, the most irresolute of all German
-chancellors, the man to whom Fate afterwards entrusted the most
-momentous decision which any German statesman has ever had to make.
-
-An interview between Ballin and the Chancellor was followed up, with the
-consent of the latter, by an exchange of telegrams between Ballin and
-Sir Ernest Cassel. From these it became clear that official circles in
-London were favourably disposed towards the opening of discussions in
-accordance with the terms laid down in Ballin's report, and Ballin
-approached the Chancellor with the request to let him know whether he
-should continue to work on the same lines as before, or whether the
-Chancellor would prefer a different method, by which he understood
-direct official negotiations. In a telegram to the Chancellor he
-explained that in his opinion Sir Ernest's reference to the friendly
-disposition of official London implied that he was authorized to arrange
-the details about the intended meeting of experts. If, therefore, he
-went to England again, he would have to know what were the views and
-intentions of the Chancellor. The reply of the latter, dated August
-11th, was as follows:
-
- "Many thanks for your welcome telegram, which has found my closest
- attention. I shall send you further details as soon as I have
- interviewed the gentlemen concerned, which I intend to do to-morrow
- and during the next few days."
-
-This reply clearly showed that the Chancellor had made up his mind to
-deal with the matter along official lines and in conformity with his own
-ideas.
-
-The subsequent course of events is indicated by a letter of the
-Chancellor to Ballin, dated August 21st, in which he says:
-
- "I have to-day taken the official steps of which I told you. As Sir
- Ernest Goschen[2] and I have agreed to observe absolute secrecy in
- this matter, and as a statement of your friend to the British
- Government to the effect that I had undertaken an official
- _démarche_, might possibly be regarded as an indiscretion, I
- suggest that if you inform your friend at all, you should word your
- reply in such a way that this danger need not be feared."
-
-This letter shows, and later events have also proved, that the guiding
-spirits of Germany's political destiny were unable to meet on such terms
-as expediency would dictate the overtures of a man like Sir Ernest
-Cassel, whose status and whose good intentions were beyond criticism.
-If, on receipt of this news, Sir Ernest, who had been working so hard
-for an understanding, was not entirely discouraged, it was no doubt due
-to the diplomatic skill with which Ballin--who was a master of this art,
-as of so many others--interpreted the Chancellor's rebuff when
-communicating it to his friend.
-
-That the latter's account of British feeling towards Germany was
-perfectly unbiased, may also be inferred from another piece of news
-which reached Ballin about the same time from a British source, and
-which reads as follows:
-
- "My only object in writing just now is to say that if there is any
- feeling in high quarters in your country favourable to coming to an
- understanding with this country concerning naval matters, I am
- quite satisfied from the inquiries I have made that the present
- would be an opportune time for approaching this question, and that
- the present Government of this country would be found entirely
- favourable to coming to such an arrangement."
-
-However, by that time, the matter was in the hands of the various
-departments, and they proved unable to make a success of it. Why they
-failed, and why the step which Herr v. Bethmann had taken with the
-British Ambassador produced no results, are questions which can only be
-answered by reference to the files of the Foreign Office.
-
-Mr. Asquith, in a speech dealing with the British naval programme
-delivered on July 14th, 1910, explained why no understanding with
-Germany had been arrived at.
-
- "The German Government told us--I cannot complain, and I have no
- answer to make--that their procedure in this matter is governed by
- an Act of the Reichstag under which the programme automatically
- proceeds year by year. That is to say, after the year 1911-12, the
- last year in which under that law four Dreadnoughts are
- constructed, the rate of construction drops in the two succeeding
- years to two each year, so that we are now, we may hope, at the
- very crest of the wave. If it were possible, even now, by
- arrangement to reduce the rate of construction no one would be more
- delighted than his Majesty's Government. We have approached the
- German Government on the subject. They have found themselves unable
- to do anything; they cannot do it without an Act of the Reichstag,
- repealing their Navy Law. They tell us--and no doubt with great
- truth--they would not have the support of public opinion in Germany
- to a modified programme."
-
-As these statements have never been contradicted, it must be assumed
-that the departments concerned sheltered themselves behind the formal
-objection that, owing to public feeling, a repeal or a modification of
-the Navy Law was out of the question. If this assumption is correct, it
-is evident that no touch of political genius was revealed in the
-treatment of this important question. Even the hope that the "crest of
-the wave" had been reached turned out a disappointment, as was proved by
-the introduction of the new Navy Bill in 1912.
-
-The objections which Herr v. Bethmann, on March 30th, 1911, raised to an
-international limitation of armaments can likewise only be described as
-formal ones. He said:
-
- "If it is the intention of the Powers to come to an understanding
- with regard to general international armaments, they must first of
- all agree upon a formula defining the relative position of each....
- Practically, it might be said, such an order of precedence has
- already been established by Great Britain's claim that,
- notwithstanding her anxiety to effect a reduction of her
- expenditure on armaments, and notwithstanding her readiness to
- submit any disputes to arbitration, her navy must under all
- circumstances be equal--or even superior--to any possible
- combination. Great Britain is perfectly justified in making this
- claim, and in conformity with the views I hold on the disarmament
- problem, I am the last person in the world to question her right to
- do so. But it is quite a different matter to use such a claim as
- the basis of an agreement which is to receive the peaceful consent
- of the other Powers. What would happen if the latter raised any
- counter-claims of their own, or if they were dissatisfied with the
- percentage allotted to them? The mere suggestion of questions such
- as these is sufficient to make us realize what would happen if an
- international congress--because one restricted to the European
- Powers alone could not be comprehensive enough--had to adjudicate
- on such claims."
-
-If this explanation is intended to be a reply to such statements from
-the British side as the one just quoted from Mr. Asquith, the fact had
-been disregarded that the most serious problem under discussion--viz.
-the Anglo-German rivalry--could quite well be solved without convening
-an "international congress."
-
-As early as December 10th, 1910, Herr v. Bethmann, in a speech delivered
-before the Reichstag, had enlarged on this same subject from the
-political point of view:
-
- "As to the relations between ourselves and Great Britain, and as to
- the alleged negotiations with the latter country concerning a
- mutual curtailment of naval armaments, I am bound to say that the
- British Government, as everybody knows, has more than once
- expressed its conviction that the conclusion of an agreement fixing
- the naval strengths of the various Powers would conduce to an
- important improvement of international relations.... We, too, share
- Great Britain's desire to eliminate the question of naval
- competition, but during the informal _pourparlers_ which have taken
- place from time to time, and which have been conducted in a spirit
- of mutual friendship, we have always given prominence to our
- conviction that a frank discussion of the economic and political
- spheres of interest to be followed up by a mutual understanding on
- these points would constitute the safest way of destroying the
- feeling of distrust which is engendered by the question of the
- respective strengths of the military and naval forces maintained by
- each country."
-
-The speech which Sir Edward Grey delivered in the House of Commons on
-March 14th, 1911, with special reference to this speech of Herr v.
-Bethmann shows unmistakably that the remarks of the latter did not
-reassure Great Britain with respect to the only point at issue in which
-she was interested, viz. the limitation of the German naval programme.
-Britain, according to Sir Edward, did not desire that her relations with
-any Power should be of such a nature as to impede the simultaneous
-existence of cordial relations with Germany. An Anglo-German agreement
-had been specially suggested. This suggestion required some careful
-thinking over. If he were to hold out any hope that Germany, in
-compliance with the terms of some such agreement would be willing to
-cancel or to modify her naval programme, he would be contradicted at
-once. Only within the limits of this programme would it be possible to
-come to some understanding between the two Governments. It might, for
-instance, be agreed to spread the expenditure voted for the navy over a
-longer term of years, or to arrange that the present German programme
-should not be increased in future. Matters such as these could form the
-subjects for discussion between the two Governments, and it would be
-desirable from every point of view that an understanding should be
-arrived at. To this speech the _North German Gazette_ replied that
-Germany would be quite prepared to fall in with Sir Edward's suggestions
-if agreements such as those outlined by him could in any way allay the
-feeling of distrust governing public opinion in Great Britain. If from
-this semi-official pronouncement it may be inferred that Herr v.
-Bethmann on his part was favourably disposed towards an agreement, the
-question arises: "Why was it not concluded?"
-
-In order to understand why the British Cabinet attached so much value to
-the settlement of the Anglo-German naval questions and to the
-pacification of public opinion, it must be remembered that the Liberal
-Cabinet, owing to its hostile attitude towards the House of Lords, had
-drifted into a violent conflict with the Conservative party, and that
-the latter, in its turn, during the election campaign had accused the
-Cabinet of having neglected the navy, driving home its arguments by
-constantly pointing out the "German danger." Moreover, King Edward had
-died in the meantime (May 6th, 1910), and of his son and successor it
-was said that he, at the time of his accession to the throne, was no
-longer a man of unbiased sentiment, that he was very anti-German, and
-that he was under the influence of a small group of Conservative
-extremists.
-
-It may not be out of place to reproduce in this connexion the text of
-two accounts dealing with the situation in England which Ballin wrote in
-the spring and in the summer of 1910 respectively, when he was staying
-in London, and which he submitted to the Kaiser for his information.
-
-In the early part of 1910 he wrote:
-
- "If I were to say that London was completely dominated by the
- election campaign, this would be a very mild way of characterizing
- the situation as it is. The whole population has been seized with a
- fit of madness. The City men who, until quite recently, had
- preserved an admirable calm, have now lost their heads altogether,
- and are the most ardent advocates of Tariff Reform. Every victory
- of a Conservative candidate is cheered by them to the echo. Under
- these circumstances, even in the City, the fear of war has grown.
- If we ask ourselves what it is that has brought about such an
- extraordinary change in the attitude of commonsense business
- people, we find that there are several reasons for it, viz. the
- general slump in business; the unfortunate policy cf Lloyd George
- with regard to the Irish Nationalists; the advances he made to the
- Labour Party, and the effects of his social legislation which are
- now felt with increasing seriousness.
-
- "Business is bad in England, and up to now very little has been
- seen of the improvement which is so marked in Germany. It is but
- natural that, in view of the extended trade depression which has so
- far lasted more than two years, a people endowed with such business
- instincts as the British should feel favourably disposed towards a
- change of the country's commercial policy. This disposition is
- further strengthened by the constant reiteration of the promise
- that it will be possible to provide the money needed for new
- warship construction and for the newly inaugurated social policy by
- means of the duties which the foreigner will be made to pay.
-
- "It seems pretty certain that the present Government, in spite of
- the great election successes gained by the Conservative party, will
- still retain a slight majority if it can rely on the Nationalist
- vote. That is what I had always predicted. But the majority on
- which the Liberal Cabinet depends will doubtless be a very
- uncomfortable one to work with, and the opinion is general that it
- will hardly take more than a twelvemonth before another dissolution
- of Parliament will be necessary. It is said that the elections that
- will then be held will smash up the Liberal party altogether, but I
- consider this is an exaggeration. In this country everything
- depends on the state of business. If, in the course of the year,
- trade prospects brighten up again, and if everything becomes normal
- once more, the Tariff Reformers in the City will turn Free Traders
- again and will take great care not to kill the goose that lays the
- golden eggs. I am quite convinced that everything hangs on the
- future development of trade and traffic. To-day, as I have said
- before, Tariff Reform and a Zollverein with the Colonies are the
- catchwords that are on everybody's lips, and the anti-German
- feeling is so strong that it is scarcely possible to discuss
- matters with one's oldest friends, because the people over here
- have turned mad and talk of nothing but the next war and the
- protective policy of the near future. Large crowds are spending
- hours every night in the principal squares such as Trafalgar
- Square, where they have come to watch the announcements of the
- election results in the provinces. Their behaviour is exemplary. It
- is a curious thing that in this country the election game is spread
- over several weeks, in consequence of which the political
- excitement of the masses is raised to boiling-point. Within a few
- months' time, I am sure, things will look entirely different
- again."
-
-From the second report, in the summer of 1910, the following is the
-salient extract:
-
- "I am now returned from England, and it may not be out of place to
- report the impressions I received of the political and economic
- conditions over there.
-
- "My previous visit to London coincided with the big election
- campaign, and I have already described the fit of mad excitement
- which had taken possession of the people, and which was directed
- against Germany.
-
- "The situation has now undergone a complete change, which is
- noticeable everywhere and which is caused by the close of the
- election campaign, by the death of the King, and, finally, by the
- visit of the Kaiser on the occasion of the Royal funeral. Everyone
- whom I met in London--Liberals and Conservatives alike--spoke in
- terms of the highest praise of the Kaiser's sympathetic attitude
- displayed during his stay in England, and which was all the more
- commendable as it was not denied that he had suffered many slights
- during the lifetime of his late uncle.
-
- "The attitude of the people towards the new monarch is one of
- reserve, but also--in conformity with the national character of the
- English--one of loyalty and good faith. The situation with regard
- to home politics is as difficult now as it has been all along.
- Unless a compromise between the parties is arrived at new elections
- will be unavoidable in the spring or even before. I have met a
- great many persons of political experience who are of opinion that,
- even if a compromise is made, it will be necessary to submit such
- an arrangement to the decision of the electorate by an appeal to
- the country. It is difficult to predict the result of such new
- elections. The views held by large sections of the Press and of the
- public bear out the truth of the remarks in my previous letter when
- I emphasized the fact that the British are a nation of business men
- who act on the principle of 'leave well alone,' and who will refuse
- to have anything to do with Tariff Reform as soon as there is an
- improvement in trade.
-
- "Business has, indeed, improved in the meantime, but only very
- slightly, and much less than in Germany. This slight improvement,
- however, has not failed to give a fillip to the cause of Free Trade
- among the City men. If elections in the spring are regarded as
- likely, much will depend on the further development of trade. I
- must confess that I take a very pessimistic view as to the future
- of Great Britain in this respect. The British can really no longer
- compete with us, and if it were not for the large funds they have
- invested, and for the sums of money which reach the small
- mother-country from her great dominions, their saturated and
- conservative habits of life would soon make them a _quantité
- négligeable_ as far as their competition with us in the world's
- markets is concerned.
-
- "Of course, their financial strength and their excellent system of
- foreign politics, in which they have now been trained for
- centuries, will always attract business to their country, the
- possession of which we shall always begrudge them (for is not envy
- one of the national characteristics of the German race?)."
-
-Up to the summer of 1911 the feeling remained friendly. Early in July
-Ballin wrote:
-
- "To-day the feeling, as far as the City is concerned, is thoroughly
- friendly towards Germany. The visit in the spring of the Kaiser
- and the Kaiserin, on the occasion of the unveiling of the monument
- to Queen Victoria, has created a most sympathetic impression--an
- impression which has been strengthened by the participation of the
- Crown Prince and Princess in the Coronation festivities. At present
- the Kaiser is actually one of the most popular persons in England,
- and the suggestion of bringing about an Anglo-German understanding
- is meeting with a great deal of approval from all sections of the
- population."
-
-However, this readiness to come to an understanding received a setback
-during the course of the year, when it was adversely affected by the new
-developments in the Morocco affair and by the dispatch of the _Panther_
-to Agadir, which led to fresh complications with France, and later also
-with Great Britain. The grievances of the latter found expression in a
-sharply worded speech by Lloyd George in July, 1911, the main argument
-of which was that Great Britain, in questions affecting her vital
-interests, could not allow herself to be treated as though she were
-non-existent. In Germany this pronouncement led to violent attacks on
-the part of the Conservative opposition against Herr v. Bethmann and
-against England, and it was the latter against whom Herr v. Heydebrand
-directed his quotation from Schiller, to the effect that a nation which
-did not stake her everything on her honour was deserving only of
-contempt. It is also well known that the outcome of the whole affair, as
-well as its sequel, the Franco-German Congo agreement, produced much
-indignation in Germany, where it was felt that the material results
-obtained were hardly worth the great display of force, and that it was
-still less worth while to be drifted into a big war in consequence of
-this incident.
-
-The measure of the anxiety which was felt at that time in business and
-financial circles all over the world may be gauged by reading the
-following letter from Ballin to the Secretary of State, Herr v.
-Kiderlen-Wächter, in which it is necessary to read between the lines
-here and there.
-
- "Baron Leopold de Rothschild has just sent me a wire from London in
- which he says that, on the strength of information he has received
- from the Paris Rothschilds, people there are greatly disappointed
- to see that the German answer--the details of which are still
- unknown there--leaves some important questions still unsolved.
- Public sentiment in the French capital, he says, is beginning to
- get excited, and it would be to the interest of everybody to settle
- matters as speedily as possible.
-
- "I felt it my duty to draw your attention to this statement, and
- you may take it for what it is worth.
-
- "I need not tell your Excellency that people here and, I suppose,
- all over Germany, are watching the progress of events with growing
- anxiety. In this respect, therefore, the desires of the German
- people seem identical with those of the French.
-
- "It would also be presumptuous on my part to speak to your
- Excellency about the feeling in England and the British armaments,
- as the information you derive from your official sources is bound
- to be better still than that which I can obtain through my
- connexions.
-
- "With best wishes for a successful solution of this difficult and
- important problem, I have the honour to remain,
-
-"Your Excellency's most obedient servant,
-(_Signed_) BALLIN."
-
-
-
-A most interesting document, and one which casts a clear sidelight on
-the divergence of opinion held in Germany and Great Britain, and on the
-chances of arriving at an agreement, is an article which dates from the
-latter part of 1911.
-
-This article deals with the Anglo-German controversy and was published
-by the _Westminster Gazette_. It was sent to Ballin by an English friend
-with the remark that it presented a faithful picture of the views on
-foreign affairs held by the great majority of British Liberals. Ballin
-forwarded it to Berlin for the Kaiser's information, with a note saying
-that he had received it from one of the most level-headed Englishmen he
-had ever met. It was subsequently returned to him, with the addition of
-a number of marginal notes and a lengthy paragraph at its close, all
-written in the Kaiser's own handwriting. The numerous underlinings, too,
-are the Kaiser's own work. On account of its historical interest a
-facsimile reproduction of this article is inserted at the end of the
-book. The following is a translation of the Kaiser's criticism at the
-conclusion of the article:
-
- "Quite good, except for the ridiculous insinuation that we are
- aspiring after the hegemony in Central Europe. We simply _are_
- Central Europe, and it is quite natural that other and smaller
- nations should tend towards us and should be drawn into our sphere
- of action owing to the law of gravity, particularly so if they are
- of our own kin. To this the British object, because it absolutely
- knocks to pieces their theory of the Balance of Power, i.e. their
- desire to be able to play off one European Power against another at
- their own pleasure, and because it would lead to the establishment
- of a united Continent--a contingency which they want to prevent at
- all costs. Hence their lying assertion that we aim at a predominant
- position in Europe, while it is a fact that they claim such a
- position for themselves in world politics. We Hohenzollerns have
- never pursued such ambitious and such fantastic aims, and, God
- granting it, we shall never do so.
-
-"(_Signed_) WILHELM I.R."
-
-
-
-The year 1912 opened with several pronouncements of the British Press in
-favour of an Anglo-German understanding. It was even hinted that Britain
-would raise no objections to a possible extension of Germany's colonial
-activities, or, as one paper put it, "to the foundation of a German
-African empire stretching from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean."
-Similar sentiments were expressed in a letter from Sir Ernest Cassel to
-Ballin, dated January 9th, 1912.
-
- "Since writing to you last," says Sir Ernest, "I have had the
- opportunity of a confidential chat with Mr. Winston Churchill. He
- is aware that the position which he has now occupied for some time
- ties him down to some special limitations which will not allow him
- to pay a visit of the kind you suggest so long as the situation
- remains what it is. Should the King go to Germany, and should he
- take Winston with him, he--Winston--would feel highly honoured if
- he were permitted to discuss the important questions that were
- demanding a solution. Such an opportunity would have to come about
- quite spontaneously, and Winston would have to secure the previous
- consent of the Prime Minister and of Sir Edward Grey.
-
- "Thus far Winston. His friendly sentiments towards Germany are
- known to you. I have been acquainted with him since he was quite a
- young man, and he has never made a secret of his admiration of the
- Kaiser and of the German people. He looks upon the estrangement
- existing between the two countries as senseless, and I am quite
- sure he would do anything in his power to establish friendly
- relations.
-
- "The real crux of the situation is that Great Britain regards the
- enormous increase of the German Navy as a grave menace to her vital
- interests. This conviction is a deep-rooted one, and there are no
- two opinions in London as to its significance.
-
- "If it were possible to do something which, without endangering the
- safety of Germany, would relieve Great Britain of this nightmare,
- it is my opinion that people over here would go very far to
- conciliate German aspirations."
-
-The striking fact that after a long interval, and in spite of the
-failure of the previous endeavours, a renewed attempt was made to arrive
-at a naval understanding, and that special pains were taken to ensure
-its success, may be due to various causes. For instance, the Morocco
-incident of 1911 had shown how easily a series of comparatively
-unimportant events might lead within reach of a dangerous catastrophe,
-unless the atmosphere of general distrust could be removed, and it was
-felt in Great Britain that this distrust was largely the result of the
-constant and regular increase of Germany's armaments. Moreover, it was
-known that a new Navy Bill was then forthcoming in Germany which, in its
-turn, would be bound to cause fresh alarm, and growing expenditure in
-Great Britain, and that the Liberal Cabinet would prefer to gain its
-laurels by bringing about a more peaceful frame of mind. Finally, Mr.
-Winston Churchill had been appointed First Lord of the Admiralty in
-October, 1911, and as he was known to be by no means anti-German, his
-entering upon office may have given rise to the hope that, while he was
-administering the affairs of the Navy, it would be possible to settle
-certain purely technical matters affecting his department, which could
-then furnish the conditions preliminary to an understanding with
-Germany. Ballin, at any rate, had cherished the hope--as is borne out by
-the letter quoted above--that Mr. Churchill could be induced to pay a
-visit to Germany, and that an opportunity might then be found to bring
-the naval experts of both countries face to face with each other. Ballin
-had always eagerly desired that such a meeting should take place,
-because his long experience in settling difficult business questions had
-taught him that there was no greater barrier between people, and
-certainly none that hampered their intellectual _rapprochement_ to a
-larger extent, than the fact of their never having come into personal
-contact with one another, and of never having had a chance to actually
-familiarize themselves with the mentality and the whole personality of
-the man representing the other side. It might also be assumed that, once
-the two really responsible persons--Churchill and Tirpitz--had met in
-conclave, the feeling of their mutual responsibility would be too strong
-to allow the negotiations to end in failure.
-
-Unfortunately, such a meeting never took place; all that was achieved
-was a preliminary step, viz. the visit of Lord Haldane to Berlin.
-
-Owing to the lack of documentary evidence it is not possible to say who
-first suggested this visit, but it is clear that the suggestion--whoever
-may have been its author--was eagerly taken up by Sir Ernest Cassel and
-Ballin, and that it also met with a warm welcome on the part of Herr v.
-Bethmann. In reply to a telegram which Ballin, with the approval--if not
-at the actual desire--of the Chancellor, sent to his friend in London, a
-message reached him on February 2nd, 1912, when he was in Berlin engaged
-on these very matters. This reply, which originated with the Foreign
-Office, expressed the sender's thanks for the invitation to attend a
-meeting of delegates in Berlin and his appreciation of the whole spirit
-which had prompted the German suggestion, and then went on to say that
-the new German Navy Bill would necessitate an immediate increase in the
-British naval estimates, because the latter had been framed on the
-supposition that the German programme would remain unaltered. If the
-British Government were compelled to find the means for such an
-increase, the suggested negotiations would be difficult, if not
-impossible. On the other hand, the German programme might perhaps be
-modified by spreading it out over a longer period of time or by some
-similar measure, so that a considerable increase of British naval
-construction in order to balance the German efforts could be avoided. In
-that case the British Government would be ready to proceed with the
-negotiations without loss of time, as it would be taken for granted that
-there was a fair prospect of the proposed discussions leading to a
-favourable result. If this suggestion was acceptable to Germany, the
-British Government thought the next step should be a private--and not an
-official--visit of a British Cabinet Minister to Berlin.
-
-Perhaps it is now permissible to give the text of some documents without
-any further comment, as these latter speak for themselves. The first is
-a letter of the Chancellor addressed to Ballin, and reads as follows:
-
-"BERLIN. _Febr. 4th, 1912._
-
-"DEAR MR. BALLIN,--
-
- "We are still busy wording the text of our reply, and I shall not
- be able to see you at 11 o'clock. As soon as the text is settled, I
- shall submit it to His Majesty for his approval. Under these
- circumstances I think it is doubtful whether we ought to adhere to
- the time fixed for our appointment. I rather fancy that I cannot
- tell you anything definite before 12 or 1 o'clock, and I shall ring
- you up about that time. You have already made such great sacrifices
- in the interest of our cause that I hope you will kindly accept
- this alteration as well.
-
- "In great haste.
-
-"(_Signed_) BETHMANN-HOLLWEG."
-
-
-
-The next document is a letter of Ballin to Sir Ernest Cassel, intended
-to explain the situation.
-
- "The demand raised by your official telegram rather complicates
- matters. The fact is that the Bill as it stands now only asks for
- half as much as was contained in the original draft. This reduced
- demand is much less than the nation and the Reichstag had expected.
- If after this a still further curtailment is decided upon, such a
- step will create the highly undesirable impression that, in order
- to pave the way for an understanding with London, it had become
- necessary to make very considerable sacrifices. This, of course,
- must be avoided at all costs, because if and when an understanding
- is arrived at, there must be neither victors nor vanquished.
-
- "I need not emphasize the fact that our Government is taking up the
- matter with the greatest interest and that it is keenly anxious to
- bring about a successful issue. The reception with which you have
- met on our side must have given you convincing and impressive
- proofs of this attitude.
-
- "I have now succeeded in making our gentlemen promise me--although
- not without much reluctance on their part--that they would not
- object to the formula proposed by your Government, viz. 'It is
- agreed to submit the question of the proposed increase of naval
- tonnage to a _bona fide_ discussion.' Thus there is now a fair
- prospect of reaching a favourable result, and the preliminary
- condition laid down by your Government has been complied with.
-
- "I think that the delegate sent should be accompanied by a naval
- expert. The gentleman in question should also understand that he
- would have to use the utmost frankness in the discussions, and that
- he must be able to give an assurance that it is intended to subject
- the British programme, too, to such alterations as will make it not
- less, but rather more, acceptable than it is now. Surely, your
- Government has never desired that we should give you a definite
- undertaking on our part, whereas you should be at liberty to extend
- your programme whenever you think fit to do so. A clearly defined
- neutrality agreement is another factor which will enter into the
- question of granting the concessions demanded by your Government.
-
- "'Reciprocal assurances' is a term which it is difficult to define;
- if, for instance, the attitude of Great Britain and her action last
- summer had been submitted to a court of law, it would hardly be
- found to have violated the obligations implied by such 'reciprocal
- assurances,' and yet we were at the edge of war owing to the steps
- taken by your people.
-
- "I thought it my duty, my dear friend, to submit these particulars
- to you, so that you, for the benefit of the great cause we are
- engaged in, may take whatever steps you consider advisable before
- the departure of the delegate.
-
- "Our people would appreciate it very much if you would make the
- great sacrifice of coming over to this country when the meeting
- takes place. I personally consider this also necessary, and it
- goes without saying that I shall be present as well.
-
- "P.S.--The Chancellor to whom I have shown this letter thinks it
- would be better not to send it, because the official note contains
- all that is necessary.
-
- "However, I shall forward it all the same, because I believe it
- will present a clearer picture of the situation to you than the
- note. Please convince the delegate that it is a matter of give and
- take, and please come. It entails a great sacrifice on your part,
- but the cause which we have at heart is worth it.
-
- "The bearer of this note is our general secretary, Mr. Huldermann.
- He is a past master of discretion, and fully acquainted with the
- situation."
-
-I was instructed to hand the following note by the German Government to
-Sir Ernest Cassel with the request to pass it on to the British
-Government, and at the same time I was to explain verbally and in
-greater detail the contents of Ballin's letter on the situation.
-
-The text of the official note is as follows:
-
- "We are willing to continue the discussion in a friendly spirit.
- The Navy Bill is bound to lead to a discussion of the naval plans
- of both countries, and in this matter we shall be able to fall in
- with the wishes of the British Government if we, in return, receive
- sufficient guarantees as to a friendly disposition of British
- policy towards our own interests. Any agreement would have to state
- that either Power undertakes not to join in any plans,
- combinations, or warlike complications directed against the other.
- If concluded, it might pave the way for an understanding as to the
- sums of money to be spent on armaments by either country.
-
- "We assume that the British Government shares the views expressed
- in this note, and we should be glad if a British Cabinet minister
- could proceed to Berlin, in the first instance for the purpose of a
- private and confidential discussion only."
-
-On the evening of the same day (February 4th) I left for London. I
-arrived there the following evening and went straight to Sir Ernest
-Cassel. I prepared the following statement for Ballin at the time, in
-which I described the substance of our conversation and the outcome of
-my visit:
-
- "The note which I had brought with me did not at first satisfy our
- friend. He made a brief statement to the effect that we saw a fair
- prospect of reaching a successful solution of the problem was all
- that was needed, and that our answer was lengthy, but evasive. This
- opinion, however, he did not maintain after the close of our
- conversation, which lasted more than two hours. I pointed out to
- him that, as I understood it, the phrase 'We are willing to
- continue the discussion in a friendly spirit' amounted to a
- declaration on the part of the German Government that, in its
- opinion, there was a 'fair prospect,' and that an accommodating
- spirit was all one could ask at present. He thought that Lord
- Haldane had been asked to go to Berlin so that a member of the
- Cabinet should have an opportunity of ascertaining on the spot that
- Berlin was really disposed to discuss matters in a friendly spirit.
- On this point positive assurances were needed before Sir Edward
- Grey and Mr. Winston Churchill went across, who, if they did go,
- would not return without having effected the object of their visit.
- Sir Ernest always emphasized that he only stated his own private
- views, but it was evident that he spoke with the highest authority.
- The demand for three Dreadnoughts, he said, which the new German
- Navy Bill asked for, amounted to a big increase of armaments, and
- Great Britain would be compelled to counterbalance it by a
- corresponding increase, which she would not fail to do. If,
- however, Germany were prepared not to enlarge her existing
- programme, Great Britain would be pleased to effect a reduction on
- her part. When I referred to the apprehension of the German
- Government lest Great Britain should take advantage of the fact
- that Germany had her hands tied, in order to effect big armaments
- which it would be impossible for us to equal, our friend remarked
- that, for the reason stated above, such fears were groundless. In
- spite of this assurance, I repeatedly and emphatically drew his
- attention to the necessity for limiting the British programme just
- as much as the German one. He evidently no longer fancied the
- suggestion previously put forward that the question of agreeing
- upon a definite ratio of strength for the two navies should be
- discussed; because, if this was done, one would get lost in the
- details. Nevertheless, he did not, as the discussion proceeded,
- adhere to this standpoint absolutely. He agreed that the essential
- thing was to establish friendly political relations, and if, as I
- thought, Germany had reason to complain of British opposition to
- her legitimate expansion, one could not do better than discuss the
- various points at issue one by one, similar to the method which had
- proved so successful in the case of the Anglo-French negotiations.
- Great Britain would not raise any objections to our desire for
- rounding-off our colonial empire, and she was quite willing to
- grant us our share in the distribution of those parts of the globe
- that were still unclaimed.
-
- "By keeping strictly to the literal text of the German note, he
- found the latter quite acceptable as far as it referred to the
- question of a declaration of neutrality. He said there was a great
- difference between such declarations, and often it was quite
- possible to interpret them in various ways. I imagined that what
- was in his mind were the obligations which Britain had taken upon
- herself in her agreement with France, and I therefore asked him for
- a definition of the term 'neutrality.' His answer was very guarded
- and contained many reservations. What he meant was something like
- this: Great Britain has concluded agreements with France, Russia,
- and other countries which oblige her to remain neutral where the
- other partner is concerned, except when the latter is engaged in a
- war of aggression.
-
- "Applied to two practical cases, this would mean: If an agreement
- such as the one now under consideration had been in existence at
- the time of the Morocco dispute last summer, Great Britain would
- have been free to take the side of France if war had broken out
- between that country and ourselves, because in this case we--as he
- argued with much conviction--had been the aggressors. On the other
- hand, if we had severed our relations with Italy during the
- Turco-Italian war and had come to the support of Turkey, Great
- Britain would not have been allowed to join Italy in conspiring
- against us if we had an agreement such as the one in question.
-
- "In the interval between my first and my second visit Sir Ernest
- evidently had, by consulting his friend Haldane, arrived at a very
- definite opinion, and when I visited him for the second time he
- assured me most emphatically that Great Britain would concede to us
- as much as she had conceded to the other Powers, but not more. We
- could rely on her absolute loyalty, 'and,' he added, 'our attitude
- towards France proves that we can be loyal to our friends.'
-
- "For the rest, the manner in which he pleaded the British point of
- view was highly interesting. Great Britain, he argued, had done
- great things in the past, but owing to her great wealth a decline
- had set in in the course of the last few decades. ('Traces of this
- development,' he added, 'have also been noticeable in your
- country.') Germany, however, had made immense progress, and within
- the next fifteen or twenty years she would overtake Great Britain.
- If, then, such a dangerous competitor commenced to increase his
- armaments in a manner which could be directed only against Britain,
- he must not be surprised if the latter made every effort to check
- him wherever his influence was felt. Great Britain, therefore,
- could not remain passive if Germany attempted to dominate the whole
- Continent; because this, if successful, would upset the Balance of
- Power. Neither could she hold back in case Germany attacked and
- annihilated France. Thus, the situation being what it was, Britain
- was compelled--provided the proposed agreement with Germany was not
- concluded--to decide whether she would wait until her competitor
- had become still stronger and quite invincible, or whether she
- would prefer to strike at once. The latter alternative, he thought,
- would be the safer for her interests.
-
- "Our friend had a copy of the German note made by his secretary,
- and then forwarded it to Haldane. In the course of the evening the
- latter sent an acknowledgment of its receipt, from which Sir
- Ernest read out to me the words: 'So far very good.' It was evident
- that his friend's opinion had favourably influenced his own views
- on the German note.
-
- "On Tuesday Sir Ernest and Lord Haldane drove to the former's house
- after having attended Thanksgiving Service. Lord Haldane stayed for
- lunch, and was just leaving when I arrived at 3 o'clock. He did not
- want to be accompanied by a naval expert, for, although he did not
- pretend to understand all the technical details, he said that he
- knew all that was necessary for the discussion. He stated that he
- would put all his cards on the table and speak quite frankly.
-
- "Our friend spoke of our German politics in most disparaging terms,
- saying that they had been worth nothing since Bismarck's time. What
- Ballin had attained in his dealings with the shipping companies was
- far superior to all the achievements of Germany's diplomatists."
-
-The positive information which this report contained was passed on to
-the Chancellor.
-
-By way of explanation it may be added that the German Navy Bill, which
-later on, at the end of March, 1912, was laid before the Reichstag,
-provided for the formation of a third active squadron in order to adapt
-the increase in the number of the crews to the increase in the material.
-This third squadron necessitated the addition of three new battleships
-and of two small cruisers, and it was also intended to increase the
-number of submarines and to make provision for the construction of
-airships.
-
-The discussions with Lord Haldane took place at the Royal Castle,
-Berlin, on February 9th, the Kaiser being in the chair. The Chancellor
-did not attend, he had a separate interview with Haldane. The outcome of
-the conference is described in a statement from an authoritative source,
-viz. in a note which the Kaiser dispatched to Ballin by special
-messenger immediately after the close of the conference. It reads as
-follows:
-
-"THE CASTLE, BERLIN.
-"9.2.1912. 6 P.M.
-
-"DEAR BALLIN,
-
- "The conversation has taken place, and all the pros and many cons
- have been discussed. Our standpoint has been explained in great
- detail, and the Bill has been examined. At my suggestion, it was
- resolved to agree on the following basis (informal line of action):
-
- "(1) Because of its scope and its importance, the Agreement must be
- concluded, and it must not be jeopardized by too many details.
-
- "(2) Therefore, the Agreement is not to contain any reference to
- the size of the two fleets, to standards of ships, to
- constructions, etc.
-
- "(3) The Agreement is to be purely political.
-
- "(4) As soon as the Agreement has been published here, and as soon
- as the Bill has been laid before the Reichstag, I, in my character
- of commander-in-chief, instruct Tirpitz to make the following
- statement to the Committee: The third squadron will be asked for
- and voted, but the building of the three additional units required
- to complete it will not be started until 1913, and one ship each
- will be demanded in 1916 and 1919 respectively.
-
- "Haldane agreed to this and expressed his satisfaction. I have made
- no end of concessions. But this must be the limit. He was very nice
- and very reasonable, and he perfectly understood my position as
- commander-in-chief, and that of Tirpitz, with regard to the Bill. I
- really think I have done all I could do.
-
- "Please remember me to Cassel and inform him.
-
-"Your sincere friend,
-"(_Signed_) WILHELM I.R."
-
-
-
-After Lord Haldane's departure from Berlin there was a gap of
-considerable length in the negotiations which had made such a promising
-start, and unfortunately during that time Mr. Churchill made a speech
-which not only the German papers but also the Liberal Press in Great
-Britain described as wanting in discretion. The passage which German
-opinion resented most of all was the statement that, in contrast with
-Great Britain, for whom a big navy was an absolute necessity, to Germany
-such navy was merely a luxury.
-
-For the rest, the following two letters from the Chancellor to Ballin
-may throw some light on the causes of the break in the negotiations:
-
-"BERLIN.
-"2.3.1912.
-
-"DEAR MR. BALLIN,
-
- "Our supposition that it is the contents of the Bill which have
- brought about the change of feeling is confirmed by news from a
- private source. It is feared that the Bill as it stands will have
- such an adverse influence on public opinion that the latter will
- not accept a political agreement along with it. Nevertheless, the
- idea of an understanding has not been lost sight of, even though it
- may take six months or a year before it can be accomplished.
-
- "In consequence of this information the draft reply to London
- requires to be reconsidered, and it has not been dispatched so far.
- I shall let you know as soon as it has left.
-
-"Sincerely yours.
-"(_Signed_) BETHMANN-HOLLWEG."
-
-
-
-"BERLIN.
-"8.3.1912.
-
-"DEAR MR. BALLIN,
-
- "This is intended for your confidential information. Regarding the
- naval question Great Britain now, as always, lays great stress on
- the difficulty of reconciling public opinion to the inconsistency
- implied by a big increase in the Naval Estimates hand in hand with
- the conclusion of a political and colonial agreement. However, even
- if an agreement should not be reached, she hopes that the
- confidential relations and the frank exchange of opinions between
- both Governments which have resulted from Lord Haldane's mission
- may continue in future. The question of a colonial understanding is
- to be discussed in the near future.
-
- "It is imperative that the negotiations should not break down.
- Success is possible in spite of the Navy Bill if the discussions
- are carried on dispassionately. As matters stand, the provisions
- of the Bill must remain as they are. Great Britain has no right to
- interfere with our views on the number of the crews which we desire
- to place on board our existing units. As far as the building dates
- of the three battleships are concerned, I should have preferred--as
- you are aware--to leave our hands untied, but His Majesty's
- decision has definitely fixed 1913 and 1916 as the years for laying
- them down. This is a far-reaching concession to Great Britain.
-
- "Discreet support from private quarters will be appreciated.
-
- "Many thanks for your news. You know that and why I was prevented
- from writing these last few days.
-
-"Sincerely yours,
-"(_Signed_) BETHMANN-HOLLWEG."
-
-
-
-In order to find out whether any foreign influence might have been at
-work in London, I was commissioned to meet Sir Ernest Cassel in the
-South of Europe early in March. Ballin supplied me with a letter
-containing a detailed account of the general situation. Owing to a delay
-in the proposed meeting, I took the precaution of burning the letter, as
-I had been instructed to do, and I informed Sir Ernest of its contents
-by word of mouth.
-
-In this document Ballin gave a brief résumé of the situation as it
-appeared to him after his consultations with the various competent
-departments in Berlin, somewhat on the following lines:
-
-(1) After Lord Haldane's return Sir Edward Grey officially told Count
-Metternich that he was highly pleased with the successful issue of Lord
-Haldane's mission, and gave him to understand that he thought it
-unlikely that any difficulties would arise.
-
-(2) A few days later Mr. Asquith made a statement in the House of
-Commons which amply confirmed the views held by Sir Edward Grey, and
-which produced a most favourable impression in Berlin.
-
-(3) This induced the Chancellor to make an equally amicable and hopeful
-statement to the Reichstag.
-
-(4) In spite of this, however, there arose an interval of several weeks,
-during which neither Count Metternich nor anybody in Berlin received any
-news from the proper department in London. This silence naturally caused
-some uneasiness.
-
-(5) Count Metternich was asked to call at the Foreign Office, where Sir
-Edward Grey commenced to raise objections mainly in reference to the
-Navy Bill. "I must add in this connexion--as, no doubt, Lord Haldane has
-also told you verbally--that on the last day of his stay in Berlin an
-understanding was arrived at between the competent quarters on our side
-and Lord Haldane with regard to the building dates of the three
-battleships. As you will remember, it had been agreed not to discuss the
-proposed establishment of the third squadron on an active footing and
-the increase in the number of the crews connected with it, but to look
-upon these subjects as lying outside the negotiations." Quite suddenly
-and quite unexpectedly we are now faced with a great change in the
-situation. Grey, as I have said before, objects--in terms of the
-greatest politeness, of course--to the increase in the number of the
-crews, asks questions as to our intentions with regard to torpedo boats
-and submarines, and--this is most significant--emphasizes that the
-Haldane mission has at any rate been of great use, even if the
-negotiations should not lead to any definite result.
-
-(6) The next event was a further interview with Count Metternich during
-which it was stated that, according to the calculations of the First
-Lord of the Admiralty, the increase in the number of the crews amounted
-to 15,000 men, whilst it had been thought in England that it would be a
-question of from 4,000 to 5,000 men at the outset. It appeared that this
-large increase was looked upon with misgivings, and that it was desired
-to enter into fresh negotiations which would greatly interfere with the
-arrangements made by the German competent quarters with regard to the
-navy. Hence Metternich replied that, in his opinion, these explanations
-could only mean that the Cabinet did not agree to the arrangements made
-by Lord Haldane. Grey's answer was full of polite assurances couched in
-the language of diplomacy, but, translated into plain German, what he
-meant was: "You are quite right."
-
-Ballin's letter went on to say that the German Navy Bill had gradually
-been reduced to a minimum, and that it was not possible to cut it down
-any further. We could not, and we would not, give rise to the suspicion
-that great alterations had been made merely to meet British objections.
-Finally, Ballin requested his friend to go to London in order to make
-inquiries on the spot, and also declared his readiness to go there
-himself.
-
-My report on my conversations with Sir Ernest Cassel, which took place
-at Marseilles on March 9th and 10th, is as follows:
-
- "Our friend arrived about four hours late, but he received me all
- the same at 10 P.M. on that evening. I told him all about my
- journey and related to him verbally the contents of Ballin's
- letter. When I described the incident of how Grey had raised new
- objections at his interview with Metternich, and when I explained
- how, after that, the matter had come to a dead stop, so that
- nothing further was heard of it in Germany, our friend interrupted
- me by saying that since then the British Government had presented a
- memorandum containing the objections raised against the German Navy
- Bill. The latter, he suggested, was the only stumbling-block, as
- could be inferred from a letter which he had received _en route_
- from Haldane.
-
- "When I remarked that Ballin, in a postscript to his letter, had
- expressed an apprehension lest some foreign influence had
- interfered with the course of events, our friend positively denied
- this. France, he said, was on good terms with Great Britain, and
- had no reason for intriguing against an Anglo-German agreement
- destined, as it was, to promote the cause of peace.
-
- "When I then proceeded with my account, drawing his special
- attention to the reduction of the estimates contained in the Navy
- Bill, Sir Ernest interposed that he was not sufficiently _au
- courant_ as to the details. He himself, in his statement prepared
- for the British Government, had only referred to the battleships,
- and he thought he had perhaps given too cursory an account of the
- other factors of the case. He also threw out some fairly plain
- hints that Haldane had gone too far in Berlin, and that he had made
- statements on a subject with which he was not sufficiently
- conversant. Later on, he continued, the Navy Bill had been
- subjected to a careful examination by the British Admiralty, and
- before his departure from Cannes he, Sir Ernest, had received a
- letter from Mr. Churchill, the tone of which was very angry.
- Churchill complained that Germany had presented such a long list of
- the wishes with which she wanted Great Britain to comply, that the
- least one could hope for was an accommodating spirit in the
- question of the Navy. Everything now depended on Churchill; if he
- could be satisfied, all the rest would be plain sailing. He and
- Lloyd George were the greatest friends of the agreement. Sir Ernest
- also made it fairly clear that Great Britain would be content with
- a postponement of the building dates, or in other words with a
- 'retardation of the building programme.' The negotiations would be
- bound to fail, unless Ballin could secure such a postponement. It
- was necessary to strike whilst the iron was hot, and this
- particular iron had already become rather cool. He quite accepted
- Grey's statement that the Haldane mission had not been in vain, as
- the feeling had doubtless become more friendly since then. Some few
- individual indiscretions, such as Churchill's reference to the
- German Navy as an article of luxury, should not be taken too
- seriously. If the German Bill were passed into law in its present
- shape, the British Government would be obliged to introduce one
- asking for three times as much, but it could not possibly do this
- and declare at the same time that it had reached an understanding
- with Germany. Such a proceeding would be absurd. The argument that
- it is inconsistent with common sense to conclude an agreement and
- yet to continue one's armaments, is evidently still maintained in
- Great Britain, and is one which, of course, it is impossible to
- refute.
-
- "In the course of our conversation Sir Ernest produced the letter
- which he had received from Haldane _en route_. This letter stated
- that the discussions with Metternich were then chiefly on the
- subject of the Navy Bill, and that the Admiralty had prepared a
- memorandum for the German Government dealing with these questions.
- The letter was dated February 25th, and its tone was not
- pessimistic; Churchill, however, as stated above, had previously
- written him a 'very angry' letter. In this connexion it must not be
- forgotten that the man on whom everything depends is not the
- amiable negotiator Haldane, but Churchill."
-
-In order to make further inquiries about the state of things and to
-assist in promoting the good cause, Ballin, immediately after my return,
-proceeded to Paris and then to London. He reported to the Chancellor
-upon the impressions he had received in Paris. The following is an
-extract from his report:
-
- "Owing to the brief time at my disposal when I was in Paris, I
- could only learn the views of the members of the '_haute finance_.'
- It is well known that in France the attitude taken up by financial
- circles is always regarded as authoritative. They look upon the
- present situation as decidedly pacific; they are pleased that the
- Morocco affair is settled, and they feel quite sure that the
- political sky is unclouded by complications. They would gladly
- welcome an agreement between Germany and Great Britain. My friends
- assure me that the Government also does not view the idea of such
- an understanding with displeasure; on the contrary, it looks upon
- it as an advantage. It is, however, thought unlikely that an
- agreement will be reached, because it is believed that popular
- feeling in Germany is too much opposed to it. If, notwithstanding
- these pacific views held by influential and competent sections, the
- casual visitor to the French capital is impressed by a certain
- bellicose attitude of the nation as a whole, it is largely due to
- the propaganda carried on by the _Matin_ with the purpose of
- obtaining voluntary subscriptions for the furtherance of aviation.
- The French are enthusiastic over this idea, and as it has a strong
- military bearing, the man in the street likes to connect the French
- aviation successes with a victorious war."
-
-From London Ballin sent me some telegrams which I was instructed to pass
-on to the Chancellor. In these messages he stated that his conversations
-with the German Ambassador and with Haldane had convinced him that
-people in London believed that the increase in the number of the crews,
-if the proposed German Navy Bill became law, would be greater than the
-figures given by Berlin would make it appear. It would therefore be most
-desirable to arrange for a meeting of experts to clear up this
-discrepancy. Ballin's impression was that the British Cabinet, and also
-the King, were still favourably disposed to the whole plan, and that the
-Cabinet was unanimous in this view. A conversation with Churchill, which
-lasted several hours, confirmed these impressions. In London the
-increase in the number of the crews had previously been estimated at
-half of what it would really be, and alarm was felt about the large
-number of torpedo boats and submarines demanded; but since the German
-Government had explained that the figures arrived at in London--i.e.
-those stated in the memorandum which had been addressed to the German
-Government some time before--were not correct, Churchill had agreed that
-both sides should nominate experts who would check the figures and put
-them right. Churchill was anxious to see that the matter was brought to
-a successful issue, and he was still hoping that a neutrality agreement
-would induce the German Government to make concessions in regard to the
-Navy Bill.
-
-When Ballin had satisfied himself as to this state of things, he
-immediately returned to Berlin, as he did not consider it appropriate
-that any private person should do anything further for the time being,
-and as he thought that the conduct of the discussions concerning the
-neutrality agreement were best left to the Ambassador.
-
-Meanwhile, however, the German Government had definitely made up its
-mind that the Navy Bill would have to remain as it stood. This was the
-information Ballin received from the Kaiser and the Chancellor when he
-returned from London on March 16th.
-
-Sir Ernest Cassel then suggested to the British Government that the
-negotiations concerning the neutrality agreement should be re-opened as
-soon as the first excitement caused by the Navy Bill had subsided, which
-would probably be the case within a few months, and that the interval
-should be utilized for clearing up the details. In Berlin, however, the
-discussions were looked upon as having been broken off, as may be seen
-from the following telegram which the Kaiser sent to Ballin on March
-19th in reply to Ballin's information about his last exchange of
-telegrams with London:
-
- "Many thanks for letter. The latest proposals arriving here
- immediately after you had left raised impossible demands and were
- so offensive in form that they were promptly rejected. Further harm
- was done by Churchill's arrogant speech which a large section of
- the British press justly described as a provocation of Germany. The
- 'agreement' has thus been broken by Great Britain, and we have done
- with it. The negotiations must be started afresh on quite a
- different basis. What apology has there been offered to us for the
- passage in the speech describing our fleet as an article of luxury?
-
-"(_Signed_) WILHELM I.R."
-
-
-
-That the negotiations had actually been broken off was confirmed to
-Ballin by a letter of the Chancellor of the same date:
-
-"DEAR MR. BALLIN,
-
- "My cordial thanks for your letter of the 18th. What your friend
- told Metternich is identical with what he wired you. Churchill's
- speech did not come up to my expectations. He really seems to be a
- firebrand past praying for. The Army and Navy Bills will probably
- not go up to the Federal Council until the 21st, as the Army Bill
- requires some amendments at the eleventh hour. Their contents will
- be published simultaneously.
-
- "My opinion is that our labours will now have to be stopped
- altogether for some time. The problem before us suffers from the
- defect that, because of its inherent difficulties, it admits of no
- solution. I shall always remain sincerely grateful to you for your
- loyal assistance. When you come to Berlin next time, please don't
- forget to call at the Wilhelmstrasse.
-
-"With kindest regards,
-"Sincerely yours,
-"(_Signed_) BETHMANN-HOLLWEG."
-
-
-
-The conviction of the inherent impossibility of solving the problem was
-shared by many people in Germany--chiefly, of course, by those connected
-with the Navy; and some critics went so far as to say that Great Britain
-had never honestly meant to arrive at an understanding, or at any rate
-that Haldane--whose honesty and sincerity were beyond doubt--was
-disowned by his fellow-members in the Cabinet.
-
-When Ballin, in compliance with the wishes of the Foreign Office, went
-to London during the critical period before the outbreak of the war in
-1914, he wrote a letter from there to a naval officer of high rank with
-whom he had been on terms of friendship for years. This document is of
-interest now because it shows what Ballin's own standpoint was with
-regard to the views described in the previous paragraph:
-
- "People over here," he wrote, "do not believe that negotiations
- with Great Britain on the subject of a naval agreement could
- possibly be crowned with success, and you yourself contend that it
- would have been better if such negotiations had never been started.
- Your standpoint is that the failure of any efforts in that
- direction would merely tend to aggravate the existing situation, a
- point of view with which I entirely concur.
-
- "On the other hand, however, you cannot deny the soundness of the
- argument that, if the responsible leaders of British naval policy
- keep expressing their desire to enter into a discussion, the
- refusal of Germany to do so must cause the British to believe that
- we are pursuing aims far exceeding those we have openly avowed. My
- somewhat fatigued brain is unable to see whether the German
- contention is right or wrong. But naturally, I always look upon
- things from the business man's point of view, and so I always think
- it better to come to some kind of an agreement with a competitor
- rather than allow him an unlimited measure of expansion. Once,
- however, I have come to the conclusion that for financial or other
- reasons this competitor can no longer keep pace with me, his
- further existence ceases altogether to interest me.
-
- "Thus the views of the expert on these matters and those of the
- business man run counter to each other, and I am entitled to
- dismiss this subject without entering upon a discussion of the
- interesting and remarkable arguments which Winston Churchill put
- before me last night. I cannot, however, refrain from contradicting
- by a few brief words the contention that the motives which had
- prompted the Haldane mission were not sincere. A conversation with
- Sir Edward Grey the night before last has strengthened this
- conviction of mine still further. I regard Sir Edward as a serious,
- honest, and clever statesman, and I am sure you will agree with my
- view that the Haldane mission has cleared the atmosphere
- surrounding Anglo-German relations which had become very strained."
-
-It may be supposed that history, in the meantime, has proved whose
-standpoint was the correct one: that of the business man or that of the
-naval expert.
-
-Not much need be said about the subsequent development of events up to
-the outbreak of the war.
-
-The above-mentioned opinion which the Chancellor held regarding
-Churchill's speech of March 18th, 1912, was probably arrived at on the
-strength of the cabled reports only. Whoever reads the full original
-text of the speech must fail to find anything aggressive in it, and
-there was no harm in admitting that it was a perfectly frank and honest
-statement concerning the naval rivalry of the two Powers. Among other
-things it contained the suggestion that a "naval holiday" should be
-agreed upon, i.e. both countries should abstain from building new ships
-for a definite period. We, at any rate, looked upon Churchill's speech
-as a suitable means of making people see what would be the ultimate
-consequences of the interminable naval armaments. I made a German
-translation of it which, with the aid of one of the committees for an
-Anglo-German understanding, I spread broadcast all over the country.
-However, it proved a complete failure, as there were powerful groups in
-both countries who contended that the efforts to reconcile the two
-standpoints could not lead to any positive result, and that the old
-injunction, _si vis pacem, para bellum_, indicated the only right
-solution. Only a master mind could have overcome these difficulties. But
-Herr v. Bethmann, as we know, considered that the problem, for inherent
-reasons, did not admit of any solution at all, and the Kaiser's initial
-enthusiasm had probably been damped by subsequent influences of a
-different kind. Ballin himself, in later years, ascribed the failure of
-the mission to the circumstance that the Kaiser and his Chancellor,
-between themselves only, had attempted to bring the whole matter to a
-successful issue instead of entrusting this task to the Secretary of
-Foreign Affairs and to Admiral Tirpitz, the Secretary for the Navy.
-
-An interesting sidelight on the causes which led to the failure of this
-last important attempt to reach an understanding is thrown by the
-rumours which were spread in the German Press in March, 1912, to the
-effect that the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, Herr v.
-Kiderlen, wished to resign, because he felt that he had been left too
-much in the dark with regard to the Anglo-German negotiations. It was
-also reported that the Chancellor's position had been shaken, and that
-Admiral Tirpitz felt dissatisfied, because the Navy Bill did not go far
-enough. Probably there was some vestige of truth in all these rumours,
-and this may have been connected with the attitude which the three
-gentlemen concerned had taken up towards the question of the
-negotiations with Great Britain.
-
-Shortly after the visit of Lord Haldane Ballin received a letter from a
-personage belonging to the Kaiser's entourage in which it was said:
-
- "The impression which has taken root with me during the many hours
- which I spent as an attentive listener is that your broad-minded
- scheme is being wrecked by our official circles, partly through
- their clumsiness, and partly through their bureaucratic conceit,
- and--which is worse--that we have failed to show ourselves worthy
- of the great opportunity."
-
-When it had become certain that the last attempt to reach an
-understanding had definitely and finally failed, the ambassador in
-London, Count Metternich, did not shrink from drawing the only possible
-conclusion from it. He had always expressed his conviction that a war
-between Germany and a Franco-Russian coalition would find Great Britain
-on the side of Germany's opponents, and his resignation--which, as
-usual, was explained by the state of his health--was really due to a
-report of his in which he stated it as his opinion that a continuation
-of German armaments would lead to war with Great Britain no later than
-1915. It is alleged that the Kaiser added a very "ungracious" marginal
-note to this report. Consequently, the ambassador, who was a man of very
-independent character, did the only thing he could consistently do, and
-resigned his office. In taking this step he may have been influenced by
-the reception which the failure of the Haldane mission met with in
-Conservative circles in Great Britain, where no stone was left unturned
-to urge the necessity for continuing the policy of big armaments and to
-paint German untrustworthiness in the most glaring colours.
-
-Count Metternich's successor was Herr v. Marschall, a gentleman whose
-appointment the Press and the official circles welcomed with great
-cordiality, and from whose considerable diplomatic abilities, which were
-acknowledged on all sides, an improvement of Anglo-German relations was
-confidently expected. It was said that the Kaiser had sent "his best
-man," thus demonstrating how greatly he also desired better relations.
-But Herr v. Marschall's activities came to a sudden end through his
-early death in September, 1912, and in October his place was taken by
-Prince Lichnowsky, whose efforts in the direction of an improvement in
-the relations are familiar to everyone who has read his pamphlet. Apart
-from the work performed by the ambassadors, great credit is also due to
-the activities displayed by Herr v. Kühlmann, the then Secretary to the
-Legation and subsequent Secretary of State. The public did not see a
-deal of his work, which was conducted with skill and was consistent. His
-close personal acquaintance with some of the leading British
-politicians, especially with Sir Edward Grey, enabled him to do much
-work for the maintenance of good relations and in the interest of
-European peace, particularly during the time when the post of ambassador
-was vacant, and also during the Balkan War. He had, moreover, a great
-deal to do with the drafting of the two colonial agreements dealing with
-the Bagdad Railway and the African problems respectively, both of which
-were ready for signature in the summer of 1914. The former especially
-may be looked upon as a proof not only that a considerable improvement
-had taken place in Anglo-German relations, but also that Great Britain
-was not inclined to adjust the guiding lines of her policy in Asia Minor
-exclusively in conformity with the wishes of Russia. Anybody who takes
-an interest in the then existing possibilities of German expansion with
-the consent of Great Britain and on the basis of these colonial draft
-agreements cannot do better than read the anonymous pamphlet entitled
-"_Deutsche Weltpolitik und kein Krieg_" ("German World Power and No
-War"), published in 1913 by Messrs. Puttkamer & Mühlbrecht, of Berlin.
-The author is Dr. Plehn, the then representative of the _Cologne
-Gazette_ in London, and it partly reflects the views of Herr v.
-Kühlmann.
-
-In this connexion I should like to refer briefly to an episode which
-took place towards the close of 1912. The German periodicals have
-already discussed it, especially the _Süddeutsche Monatshafte_ in June,
-1921, in a review of the reports which Count Lerchenfeld, the Bavarian
-minister to the Court of Berlin, had made for the information of his
-Government. In these reports he mentions an event to which the Kaiser
-had already referred in a letter to Ballin dated December 15th, 1912.
-The Kaiser, in commenting on the state of tension then existing between
-Austria and Serbia, made some significant remarks concerning the policy
-of Germany towards Austria-Hungary. When the relations between Vienna
-and Petrograd, he wrote, had assumed a dangerous character, because it
-was recognized that the attitude of Serbia was based on her hope of
-Russian support, Germany might be faced with the possibility of having
-to come to the assistance of Austria.
-
- "The Slav subjects of Austria," the letter continued, "had become
- very restless, and could only be brought to reason by the resolute
- action of the whole Dual Monarchy against Serbia. Austria had
- arrived at the cross roads, and her whole future development hung
- in the balance. Either the German element would retain its
- ascendancy, in which case she would remain a suitable ally, or the
- Slav element would gain the upper hand, and she would cease to be
- an ally altogether. If we were compelled to take up arms, we should
- do so to assist Austria not only against Russian aggression, but
- also against the Slavs in general, and in her efforts to remain
- German. That would mean that we should have to face a racial
- struggle of the Germanic element against Slav insolence. It is
- beyond our power to prevent this struggle, because the future of
- the Habsburg monarchy and that of our own country are both at
- stake. (This was the real meaning of Bethmann's very plain
- speaking.) It is therefore a question on which depends the very
- existence of the Germanic race on the continent of Europe.
-
- "It was of great importance to us that Great Britain had so far
- supported the Austro-German standpoint in these matters. Now, since
- a war against Russia would automatically imply a war with France as
- well, it was of interest to us to know whether, in this purely
- continental case, Great Britain could and would declare her
- neutrality in conformity with her proposals of last February.
-
- "On December 6th, Haldane, obviously sent by Grey, called on
- Lichnowsky and explained to the dumbfounded ambassador in plain
- words that, assuming Germany getting involved in war against Russia
- and France, Great Britain would _not_ remain neutral, but would at
- once come to the assistance of France. The reason given for this
- attitude was that Britain could not and would not tolerate at any
- time that we should acquire a position of continental predominance
- which might easily lead to the formation of a united continent.
- Great Britain could therefore never allow France to be crushed by
- us. You can imagine the effect of this piece of news on the whole
- of the Wilhelmstrasse. I cannot say that I was taken by surprise,
- because I, as you know, have always looked upon Great Britain as an
- enemy in a military sense. Still, this news has decidedly cleared
- matters up, even if the result is merely of a negative character."
-
-Ballin did not omit to ask his friend for some details concerning the
-visit of Lord Haldane mentioned in the Kaiser's letter, and was
-furnished with the following explanation by Lord Haldane himself.
-
-Nothing had been further from his intentions, he said, than to call on
-Prince Lichnowsky for the express purpose of making any such
-declaration; and Balkan questions, to the best of his recollection, had
-not been touched at all. He had spent a very pleasant half-hour with the
-Prince, and in the course of their conversation he had seen fit to
-repeat the formula which had been discussed during his stay in Berlin,
-and which referred to Britain's interest in the preservation of the
-integrity of France. This, possibly, might have given rise to the
-misunderstanding.
-
-Prince Lichnowsky himself, in his pamphlet entitled "My London Mission,"
-relates the incident as follows:
-
- "In my dispatches sent to Berlin I pointed out again and again that
- Great Britain, being a commercial country, would suffer enormously
- through any war between the European Powers, and would prevent it
- by every means within her power. At the same time, however, she
- could never tolerate the weakening or the crushing of France,
- because it would disturb the Balance of Power and replace it by the
- ascendancy of Germany. This view had been expressed to me by Lord
- Haldane shortly after my arrival, and everybody whose opinion
- counts for anything told me the same thing."
-
-The failure of the negotiations aiming at an understanding led to a
-continuance of the increase in the British armaments, a concentration of
-the British battle fleet in the North Sea, and to that of the French
-fleet in the Mediterranean. The latter arrangement was looked upon in
-Germany as a menace directed against Italy, and produced a sharp
-semi-official criticism in the _Frankfurter Zeitung_. In spite of all
-this, however, friendly messages from London concerning the
-possibilities of an understanding, the "naval holiday," etc., reached
-Germany from time to time.
-
-How closely Ballin clung to his favourite idea that the naval experts of
-both countries should come to an understanding is demonstrated by the
-circumstance that in 1914, when the British squadron was present during
-the Kiel yachting week, he tried to bring about a meeting and a personal
-exchange of views between Churchill and Tirpitz.
-
-Churchill was by no means disinclined to come to Germany for this
-purpose, but unfortunately the desire was expressed by the German side,
-and especially by the Kaiser, that the British Government should make an
-official inquiry whether his visit would be welcomed. The Government,
-however, was not disposed to do so, and the whole thing fell through,
-although Churchill sent word that, if Tirpitz really wanted to see him,
-he would find means to bring about such a meeting.
-
-Thus the last attempt at an understanding had resulted in failure, and
-before any further efforts in the same direction could be made, Europe
-had been overtaken by its fate.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-THE KAISER
-
-
-The origin of the friendship between Ballin and the Kaiser, which has
-given rise to so much comment and to so many rumours, was traced back by
-the Kaiser himself to the year 1891, when he inspected the express
-steamer _Auguste Victoria_, and when he, accompanied by the Kaiserin,
-made a trip on board the newly-built express steamer _Fürst Bismarck_.
-Ballin, although he received the honour of a decoration and a few
-gracious words from His Majesty, did not think that this meeting had
-established any special contact between himself and his sovereign. He
-told me, indeed, that he dated their acquaintance from a memorable
-meeting which took place in Berlin in 1895, and which was concerned with
-the preparations for the festivities in celebration of the opening of
-the Kiel Canal.
-
-The Kaiser wanted the event to be as magnificent as possible, and his
-wishes to this effect were fully met by the Hamburg civic authorities
-and by the shipping companies. Although Ballin had only been a short
-time in the position he then held, his versatile mind did not overlook
-the opportunity thus offered for advertising his company. The Kaiser was
-keenly interested in every detail. After some preliminary discussions
-with the Hamburg Senate, all the interested parties were invited to send
-their delegates to Berlin, where a general meeting was to be held in the
-Royal Castle with the Kaiser in the chair. It was arranged that the
-North German Lloyd and the Hamburg-Amerika Linie should provide one
-steamer each, which was to convey the representatives of the Government
-departments and of the Reichstag, as well as the remaining guests,
-except those who were to be accommodated on board the _Hohenzollern_,
-and that both steamers should follow in the wake of the latter all the
-way down the Elbe from Hamburg to the Canal. When this item was
-discussed the Kaiser said he had arranged that the _Hohenzollern_ should
-be followed first by the Lloyd steamer and then by the Hamburg-Amerika
-liner. Thereupon Ballin asked leave to speak. He explained that, since
-the journey was to start in Hamburg territorial waters, it would perhaps
-be proper to extend to the Hamburg company the honour of the position
-immediately after the Imperial yacht. The Kaiser, in a tone which
-sounded by no means gracious, declared that he did not think this was
-necessary, and that he had already given a definite promise to the Lloyd
-people. Ballin replied that, if the Kaiser had pledged his word, the
-matter, of course, was settled, and that he would withdraw his
-suggestion, although he considered himself justified in making it.
-
-At the close of the meeting Count Waldersee, who had been one of those
-present, took Ballin's arm and said to him: "As you are now sure to be
-hanged from the Brandenburger Tor, let us go to Hiller's before it comes
-off, to have some lunch together." Ballin never ceased to be grateful to
-the Count for this sign of kindness, and his friendship with him and his
-family lasted until his death. The arrangements made by the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie for the reception of its guests were carefully
-prepared and carried out. It is not easy to give an idea to a non-expert
-of the great many minute details which have to be attended to in order
-to accommodate a large number of exacting visitors on a steamer in such
-a manner that nobody finds anything to complain of, especially if, as is
-but natural on an occasion such as this, an endless variety of
-questions as to precedence and etiquette have to be taken into account.
-Great pains and much circumspection are necessary to arrange to
-everybody's satisfaction all matters affecting the reception of the
-guests, the provision of food and drinks, the conveyance of luggage,
-etc. Thanks to the infinite care, however, with which Ballin and his
-fellow-workers attended to this matter, everything turned out eminently
-satisfactory. In the evening, when the guests of the Hamburg-Amerika
-Linie were returning to their steamer at the close of the festivities,
-the company agreeably surprised them by providing an artistically
-arranged collation of cold meats, etc., and the news of this spread so
-quickly that from the other vessels people who felt that the official
-catering had not taken sufficient account of their appetites, lost no
-time in availing themselves of this opportunity of a meal.
-
-This event, at any rate, helped to establish the reputation of the
-company's hospitality.
-
-It may be presumed that this incident had shown the Kaiser--who,
-although he did not object to being contradicted in private, could not
-bear it in public--that the Hamburg Company was animated by a spirit of
-independence which did not subordinate itself to other influences
-without a protest, and which jealously guarded its position. It must be
-stated that the Kaiser never bore Ballin any ill will on account of his
-opposition, which may be partly due to the great pains the Packetfahrt
-took in order to make the festivities a success. The event may also have
-induced the Kaiser to watch the progress of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie
-after that with particular attention. His special interest was centred
-round the provision for new construction, and in this matter he exerted
-his influence from an early time in favour of the German yards.
-
-The first occasion of the Kaiser's pleading in favour of German yards
-dates from the time previous to his accession to the throne. Ballin, in
-a speech which he delivered when the trial trip of the s.s. _Meteor_
-took place, stated the facts connected with this intervention as
-follows: The directors had just started negotiations with British
-shipbuilding firms for the building of their first express steamer when
-the Prussian Minister to the Free City of Hamburg called to inform them,
-at the request of Prince Bismarck, that the latter, acting upon the
-urgent representations of Prince Wilhelm, suggested that they should
-entrust the building of the big vessel to a German yard. The Prince was
-profoundly convinced that Germany, for the sake of her own future, must
-cease to play the part of Cinderella among the nations, and that there
-was no want of engineers among his countrymen who, if given a chance,
-would prove just as efficient as their fellow-craftsmen in England. The
-Packetfahrt thereupon entrusted the building of the vessel to the
-Stettin Vulkan yard. She was the fast steamer _Auguste Victoria_, and
-was christened after the young Empress. Launched in 1888, she
-immediately won "the blue riband of the Atlantic" on her first trip.
-
-Another and still more practical suggestion of the Kaiser was put
-forward at the time when the company were about to build an excursion
-steamer. The satisfactory results which their fast steamers had yielded
-during the dead season in the transatlantic passage business when used
-for pleasure cruises had induced them to take this step, and when the
-Kaiser's attention was drawn to this project, he, on the strength of the
-experience he had made with his _Hohenzollern_, designed a sketch and
-composed a memorandum dealing with the equipment of such a steamer. It
-was Ballin's opinion that this Imperial memorandum contained some
-suggestions worth studying, although it was but natural that the
-monarch could not be expected to be sufficiently acquainted with all the
-practical considerations which the company had to bear in mind in order
-to make the innovation pay, and that, therefore, some of his
-recommendations could not be carried out.
-
-If we remember what vivid pleasure the Kaiser derived from his own
-holiday cruises, it cannot surprise us to see that he took such a keen
-interest in the company's excursion trips. How keen it was may be
-inferred from an incident which happened early in his reign, and to
-which Ballin, when describing his first experiences on this subject,
-referred in his above-mentioned speech on the occasion of the trial trip
-of the _Meteor_. Ballin said: "Even among my most intimate associates
-people were not wanting who thought that I was not quite right in my
-mind when, at the head of 241 intrepid travellers, I set out on the
-first pleasure cruise to the Far East in January, 1891. The Kaiser had
-just inspected the vessel, and then bade farewell to the company and
-myself by saying: 'That's right. Make our countrymen feel at home on the
-open sea, and both your company and the whole nation will reap the
-benefit.'"
-
-In after years the Kaiser's interest in the company chiefly centred
-round those landmarks in its progress which marked the country's
-expansion in the direction of _Weltpolitik_, e.g. its participation in
-the Imperial Mail Service to the Far East, its taking up a share in the
-African trade, etc. In fact, after 1901, when the Kaiser had keenly
-interested himself in the establishment of the Morgan Trust and its
-connexion with German shipping companies, there was scarcely an
-important event in the history of the company (such as the extension of
-its services, the addition of a big new steamer, etc.) which he allowed
-to pass without a few cordial words of congratulation. He also took the
-liveliest interest in the personal well-being of Ballin. He always sent
-him the compliments of the season at Christmas or for the New Year,
-generally in the shape of picture post-cards or photographs from his
-travels, together with a few gracious words, and he never failed to
-remember the anniversaries of important events in Ballin's life or to
-inquire after him on recovering from an illness. Ballin, in his turn,
-acquainted the Kaiser with anything which he believed might be of
-interest to His Majesty, or might improve his knowledge of the economic
-conditions existing in his own as well as in foreign countries. He kept
-him informed about all the more important pool negotiations, e.g. those
-in connexion with the establishment, in 1908, of the general pool, and
-those referring to the agreements concluded with other German shipping
-companies, etc. Whenever he noticed on his travels any signs of
-important developments, chiefly those of a political kind, he furnished
-his Imperial friend with reports on the foreign situation.
-
-In 1904 the Kaiser's interest in Ballin took a particularly practical
-form. Ballin had suffered a great deal from neuralgic pains which, in
-spite of the treatment of various physicians, did not really and
-permanently diminish until the patient was taken in hand by Professor
-Schweninger, the famous medical adviser of no less a man than Bismarck.
-Ballin himself testified to the unvaried attention and kindness of Dr.
-Schweninger, and to the great success of his treatment. It is to be
-assumed that Schweninger, because of his energetic manner of dealing
-with his patients, was eminently suited to Ballin's disposition, which
-was not an easy one for his doctor and for those round him to cope with.
-
- "As early as January, 1904," Ballin remarks in his notes, "the
- Kaiser had sent a telegram inviting me to attend the _Ordensfest_
- celebrations in Berlin, and during the subsequent levee he favoured
- me with a lengthy conversation, chiefly because he wanted to tell
- me how greatly he was alarmed at the state of my health. His
- physician, Professor Leuthold, had evidently given him an
- unfavourable account of it. The Kaiser explained that he could no
- longer allow me to go on without proper assistance or without a
- substitute who would do my work when I was away for any length of
- time. This state of things caused him a great deal of anxiety, and,
- as it was a matter of national interest, he was bound to occupy
- himself with this problem. He did not wish to expose himself to a
- repetition of the danger--which he had experienced in the Krupp
- case--that a large concern like ours should at any moment be
- without a qualified steersman at the helm. He said he knew that of
- all the gentlemen in his entourage Herr v. Grumme was the one I
- liked best, and that I had an excellent opinion of him. He also
- considered Grumme the best man he had ever had round him, and it
- would be difficult to replace him. Nevertheless he would be glad to
- induce Grumme to join the services of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie, if
- I thought that this would solve the difficulty he had just referred
- to, and that such a solution would fall in with my own wishes. He
- was convinced that I should soon be restored to my normal health if
- I were relieved of some part of my work, and that this would enable
- me to do much useful service to the nation and himself; so he would
- be pleased to make the sacrifice. I sincerely thanked His Majesty,
- and assured him that I could not think of any solution that I
- should like better than the one he had proposed, and that, if he
- were really prepared to do so much for me, I would beg him to
- discuss the matter with Grumme. That very evening he sent for
- Grumme, who immediately expressed his readiness to enter the
- services of our company if such was His Majesty's pleasure."
-
-The lively interest which the Kaiser took in the development of our
-mercantile marine was naturally closely connected with the growth of the
-Imperial Navy and with our naval policy in general. The country's
-maritime interests and the merchant fleet were the real motives that
-prompted his own naval policy, whereas Tirpitz chiefly looked upon them
-as a valuable asset for propaganda purposes. During the first stage of
-the naval policy and of the naval propaganda--which at that time were
-conducted on quite moderate lines--Ballin, as he repeatedly told me,
-played a very active part. It was the time when the well-known
-periodical _Nautikus_, afterwards issued at regular annual intervals,
-was first published by the Ministry for the Navy, and when a very active
-propaganda in favour of the navy and of the country's maritime interests
-was started. Experience has proved how difficult it is to start such a
-propaganda, especially through the medium of a Press so loosely
-organized as was the German Press in those days. But it is still more
-difficult to stop, or even to lessen, such propaganda once it has been
-started, because the preliminary condition for any active propaganda
-work is that a large number of individual persons and organizations
-should be interested in it. It is next to impossible to induce these
-people to discontinue their activities when it is no longer thought
-desirable to keep up the propaganda after its original aim has been
-achieved. Germany's maritime interests remained a favourite subject of
-Press discussions, and the animation with which these were carried on
-reached a climax whenever a supplementary Navy Bill was introduced. Even
-when it was intended to widen the Kiel Canal, as it proved too narrow
-for the vessels of the "Dreadnought" type, the necessity for doing so
-was explained by reference to the constantly increasing size of the new
-steamers built for the mercantile marine; although, seeing that the
-shallow waters of the Baltic and of the channels leading into it made it
-quite impossible to use them for this purpose, nobody ever proposed to
-send those big ships through the canal. In later years Ballin often
-spoke with great bitterness of those journalists who would never leave
-off writing about "the daring of our merchant fleet" in terms of
-unmeasured eulogy, and whom he described as the greatest enemies of the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie.
-
-But it was not only the propaganda work for the Imperial Navy to which
-the Kaiser contributed by his own personal efforts: the range of his
-maritime interests was much wider. He gave his assistance when the
-problems connected with the troop transports to the Far East and to
-South West Africa were under discussion; he studied with keen attention
-the progress of the German mercantile marine, the vessels of which he
-frequently met on his travels; he often went on board the German tourist
-steamers, those in Norwegian waters for instance, when he would
-unfailingly make some complimentary remarks on the management, and he
-became the lavish patron of the sporting events known as Kiel Week, the
-scope of which was extending from year to year. The Kiel Week,
-originally started by the yachting clubs of Hamburg for the
-encouragement of their sport, gradually developed into a social event of
-the first order, and since 1902 it became customary for the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie to dispatch one of their big steamers to Kiel,
-where it served as a hotel ship for a large number of the visitors. From
-1897 Kiel Week was preceded by a visit of the Kaiser--and frequently of
-the Kaiserin as well--to Hamburg, where their Majesties attended the
-summer races and the yachting regatta on the lower Elbe. In 1897 the
-Kaiser had the intention of being present at a banquet which the
-Norddeutsche Regatta-Verein was giving on board the Packetfahrt liner
-_Columbia_, and he was only prevented from doing so at the last moment.
-In the following year the Hamburg-Amerika Linie sent their s.s.
-_Pretoria_ to Kiel. On this vessel the well-known "Regatta dinner" took
-place which the Kaiser attended, and which, on future occasions, he
-continued to honour with his presence. Ballin received a special
-invitation to visit the Kaiser on board his yacht _Hohenzollern_. He
-could not, however, avail himself of it, because the message only
-reached him on his way home to Hamburg. The year after, the Kaiser
-commanded Ballin to sit next to him at the table, and engaged him in a
-long conversation on the subject of the load-line which he wanted to see
-adopted by German shipping firms for their vessels. The Packetfahrt
-carried this suggestion into practice shortly afterwards, and in course
-of time the other companies followed suit.
-
-On the occasion of these festivities the Kaiser in 1904 paid a visit to
-the new premises of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie. In 1905 and in subsequent
-years he also visited Ballin's private home and took lunch with him. The
-speeches which he made at the regatta dinners given in connexion with
-the regatta on the lower Elbe frequently contained some political
-references. In 1908, for instance, he said:
-
- "Although we do not possess such a navy as we ought to have, we
- have gained a place in the sun. It will now be my duty to see to it
- that we shall keep this place in the sun against all comers.... I,
- as the supreme head of the Empire, can only rejoice whenever I see
- a Hanseatic citizen--let him be a native of Hamburg, or Bremen, or
- Lübeck--striking out into the world with his eyes wide open, and
- trying to find a spot where he can hammer a nail into the wall from
- which to hang the tools needed to carry on his trade."
-
-In 1912 he quoted the motto from the Lübeck Ratskeller:
-
- "It is easy to hoist the flag, but it costs a great deal to haul it
- down with honour."
-
-And in 1914, after the launch of the big steamer _Bismarck_, he quoted
-Bismarck's saying, slightly altered:
-
-"We Germans fear God, but nothing and nobody besides."
-
-Kiel Week never passed without a great deal of political discussion. The
-close personal contact on such occasions between Ballin and the Kaiser
-furnished the former with many an opportunity for expressing his views
-on politics. Much has been said about William II's "irresponsible
-advisers," who are alleged to have endeavoured to influence him in the
-interests of certain cliques, and it cannot, of course, be denied that
-the men who formed the personal entourage of the monarch were very far
-from representing every shade of public opinion, even if that had been
-possible. The traditions of the Prussian Court and of princely education
-may have contributed their share to this state of things. The result, at
-any rate, was that in times of crises--as, for instance, during the
-war--it was impossible to break through the phalanx of men who guarded
-the Kaiser and to withdraw him from their influence. Events have shown
-how strong this influence must have been, and how little it was suited
-to induce the Kaiser to apply any self-criticism to his preconceived
-ideas. Added to this, there was the difficulty of obtaining a private
-conversation with the Kaiser for any length of time--a difficulty which
-was but rarely overcome even by persons possessing very high
-credentials. It has already been mentioned that the Kaiser did not like
-to be contradicted in the presence of others, because he considered it
-derogatory to his sovereign position. Ballin repeatedly succeeded in
-engaging the Kaiser in private conversations of some length, especially
-after his journeys abroad, when the Kaiser invited him to lunch with
-him, and afterwards to accompany him on a walk unattended.
-
-Ballin's notes more than once refer to such conversations with the
-Kaiser, e.g. on June 3rd, 1901, when he had been a member of the
-Imperial luncheon party:
-
- "After lunch the Kaiser asked me to report on my trip to the Far
- East, and he, in his turn, told me some exceedingly interesting
- pieces of news relating to his stay in England, and to political
- affairs connected with it."
-
-The following passage, referring to the Kiel Week, is taken from the
-notes of the same year:
-
- "I received many marks of the Kaiser's attention, who, on July
- 27th, summoned me to Kiel once more, as he wished to discuss with
- the Chancellor and me the question of the Japanese bank."
-
-During his trip to the Far East Ballin had taken a great deal of trouble
-to bring about the establishment of a German-Japanese bank.
-
-The following extracts are taken from the notes of subsequent years:
-
- "On December 10th (1903) I received a wire asking me to see the
- Kaiser at the _Neues Palais_. To my infinite joy the Kaiser had
- quite recovered the use of his voice. He looked well and fit, and
- during a stroll through the park I had a long chat with him
- concerning my trip to America and other matters. In February the
- Kaiser intends to undertake a Mediterranean cruise on board the
- _Hohenzollern_ for the benefit of his health. He will probably
- proceed to Genoa on board one of the Imperial mail packets, which
- is to be chartered for him."
-
- (April 1904). "The Kaiser had expressed a wish to see me in Italy.
- On my arrival at Naples I found a telegram waiting for me in which
- I was asked to proceed to Messina if necessary. Owing, however, to
- the state of our negotiations with the Russian Government, I did
- not think it desirable to meet the Kaiser just then, and thus I had
- no opportunity of seeing him until May 3rd when I was in Berlin to
- attend a meeting of the _Disconto-Gesellschaft_, and to confer with
- Stübel on the question of some further troop transports to South
- West Africa. I received an invitation to join the Imperial luncheon
- party at which the birthday of the Crown Prince was to be
- celebrated in advance, since his Majesty would not be in town on
- May 6th. The Kaiser's health had much improved through his cruise;
- he had lost some of his stoutness, and the Kaiserin, too, was
- greatly pleased to see him looking so well. We naturally discussed
- the topics of the day, and the Kaiser, as always, was full of
- kindness and goodwill towards me."
-
- "On June 21st, 1904, the usual Imperial Regatta took place at
- Cuxhaven, and the usual dinner on board the _Blücher_. These events
- were followed by Kiel Week, which lasted from June 22nd to 28th. We
- stayed on board the _Victoria Luise_, and I was thus brought into
- especially close contact with the Kaiser. I accompanied him to
- Eckernförde on board the _Meteor_, and we discussed the political
- situation, particularly in its bearing on the Morocco question and
- on the attitude of Great Britain."
-
- "On June 19th, 1904, the Kaiser, the Kaiserin, and some of their
- sons were staying in Hamburg. I dined with them at Tschirschky's
- (the Prussian Minister in Hamburg), and we drove to the races. On
- June 20th we proceeded to Cuxhaven, where, on board the
- _Deutschland_, I heard the news--which the Kaiser had just
- communicated to Kaempff (the captain of the _Deutschland_)--that
- the North German Lloyd steamer _Kaiser Wilhelm II_, in consequence
- of her being equipped with larger propellers, had won the speed
- record. Late at night the Kaiser asked me to see him on board the
- _Hohenzollern_, where he engaged me in a long discussion on the
- most varied subjects. On June 21st the regatta took place at
- Cuxhaven. The Kaiser and Prince Heinrich were amongst the guests
- who were entertained at dinner on board the _Deutschland_. The
- Kaiser was in the best of health and spirits. Owing to the
- circumstance that Burgomaster Burchard--who generally engages the
- Kaiser in after-dinner conversation--was prevented by his illness
- from being present, I was enabled to introduce a number of Hamburg
- gentlemen to His Majesty. As the Kaiser had summoned me to dine
- with him on board the _Hohenzollern_ on the 22nd, I could not
- return to Hamburg, but had to travel through the Kiel Canal that
- same night on board a tug steamer. On the 22nd I stayed at the club
- house of the Imperial Yachting Club, whilst at my own house a
- dinner party was given for 36 persons. On the 23rd I changed my
- quarters to the _Prinzessin Victoria Luise_, and the other visitors
- arrived there about noon. A special feature of Kiel Week of 1904
- was the visit of King Edward to the Kaiser whom he met at Kiel. For
- the accommodation of the ministers of state and of the other
- visitors whom the Kaiser had invited in connexion with the presence
- of the King, we had placed our s.s. _Prinz Joachim_ at his
- disposal, in addition to the _Prinzessin Victoria Luise_. We also
- supplied, for the first time, a hotel ship, the _Graf Waldersee_,
- all the cabins of which were engaged. On June 27th my wife and I,
- and a number of other visitors from the _Prinzessin Victoria
- Luise_, were invited to take afternoon tea with the Kaiser and
- Kaiserin on board the _Hohenzollern_, and I had a lengthy
- conversation with King Edward."
-
-Whenever the Kaiser granted Ballin an interview without the presence of
-witnesses he cast aside all dignity, and discussed matters with him as
-friend to friend. Neither did he object to his friend's counsel and
-admonitions, and he was not offended if Ballin, on such occasions,
-subjected his actions or his opinions to severe criticism.
-
-On such occasions the Kaiser, as Ballin repeatedly pointed out, "took it
-all in without interrupting, looking at me from the depth of his kind
-and honest eyes." That he did not bear Ballin any malice for his
-frankness is shown by the fact that he took a lively and cordial
-interest in all the events touching the private life of Ballin and his
-family, his daughter's engagement, for instance--an interest which still
-continued after Ballin's death.
-
-In spite of this close friendship between Ballin and the Kaiser, it
-would be quite wrong to assume that Ballin exercised anything resembling
-a permanent influence on His Majesty. Their meetings took place only
-very occasionally, and were often separated by intervals extending over
-several months, and it happened only in rare cases that Ballin availed
-himself of the privilege of writing to the Kaiser in person. It is true
-that the latter was always pleased to listen to Ballin's explanations of
-his views, and it is possible that every now and than he did allow
-himself to be guided by them; but it is quite certain that he never
-allowed these views to exercise any actual influence on the country's
-politics. The events narrated in the chapter of this book dealing with
-politics show that in a concrete case, at any rate, Ballin's
-recommendations and the weight of his arguments were not sufficient to
-cope successfully with the influence of others who were the permanent
-advisers of the sovereign, and who had at all times access to His
-Majesty.
-
-If thus the effect of Ballin's friendship with the Kaiser has frequently
-been greatly overrated in regard to politics, the same holds good--and,
-indeed, to a still greater extent--in regard to the advantages which the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie is supposed to have derived from it. One of
-Ballin's associates on the Board of the company was quite right when he
-said: "Ballin's friendship with the Kaiser has done more harm than good
-to the Hamburg-Amerika Linie." Indirectly, of course, it raised the
-prestige of the company both at home and abroad. But there is no doubt
-that it had also an adverse effect upon it: at any rate, outside of
-Germany. It gave rise to all sorts of rumours, e.g. that the company
-obtained great advantages from the Government; that the latter
-subsidized it to a considerable extent; that the Kaiser was one of the
-principal shareholders, etc. It is also quite certain that these beliefs
-were largely instrumental in making the Hamburg-Amerika Linie, as Ballin
-put it, one of the war aims of Great Britain, and it is even alleged
-that, at the close of the war, the British Government approached some of
-the country's leading shipping firms with the suggestion that they
-should buy up the Hamburg-Amerika Linie or the North German Lloyd. This
-was at the time when it became desirable to secure the necessary
-organization for the intended commercial conquest of the Continent. It
-is quite possible--and, I am inclined to think, quite probable--that
-this suggestion was put forward because such a step would be in harmony
-with that frame of mind from which originated such stipulations of the
-Versailles treaty as deal with shipping masters, and with the assumption
-that German shipping--which was supposed to depend for its continuance
-mainly on the existence of the German monarchial system--would
-practically come to an end with the disappearance of the latter. It
-would, indeed, be difficult to name any historical document which pays
-less regard to the vital necessities of a nation and which actually
-ignores them more completely than does the treaty signed at Versailles.
-
-The allegation that Ballin should ever have attempted to make use of his
-friendship with the Kaiser for his own or for his company's benefit is,
-moreover, diametrically opposed to the established fact that he knew the
-precise limits of his influence, and that he never endeavoured to
-overreach himself. His "policy of compromise" was the practical outcome
-of this trait of his character.
-
-The opinion which my close observation of Ballin's work during the last
-ten years of his life enabled me to form was, as far as its political
-side is concerned, confirmed to me in every detail by no less a person
-than Prince Bülow, who, without doubt, is the most competent judge of
-German affairs in the first decade of the twentieth century. When I
-asked the Prince whether Ballin could be accused of ever having abused
-the friendship between himself and the Kaiser for any ulterior ends
-whatever, he replied with a decided negative. Ballin, he said, had never
-dreamt of doing such a thing. He had always exercised the greatest tact
-in his relations with the Kaiser, and had never made use of them to gain
-any private advantage. Besides, his views had nearly always coincided
-with those held by the responsible leaders of the country's political
-destinies. Once only a conflict of opinion had arisen between Ballin and
-himself on a political question, and this was at the time when the
-customs tariffs were under discussion. Ballin held that these were
-detrimental to the country's best interests, and it is a well-known fact
-that, at that time, there was a widespread feeling as to the
-impossibility of concluding any commercial treaties so long as those
-tariffs were in operation.
-
-During the most critical period of the existence of the monarchy--i.e.
-during the war--Ballin's influence on the Kaiser was but slight. Only on
-a very few occasions was he able to meet the Kaiser, and he never had an
-opportunity of talking to him privately, as in former times. It was the
-constant aim of the Kaiser's entourage to maintain their controlling
-influence over the Kaiser unimpaired. Even when they last met--in
-September, 1918--and when Ballin, at the instance of the Supreme Army
-Command, was asked to explain to the Kaiser the situation as it actually
-was, he was not permitted to see the Kaiser without the presence of a
-witness, so that his influence could not assert itself. The fact that
-the Kaiser was debarred from knowing the truth was the cause of his and
-of his country's ruin. "The Kaiser is only allowed to know the bright
-side of things," Ballin used to say, "and therefore he does not see
-matters as they really stand."
-
-This is all the more regrettable because, as Ballin thought, the Kaiser
-was not wanting in either the capacity or the independence of mind which
-would have enabled him to pursue a policy better than the one in which
-he actually acquiesced. More than once, Ballin said, the Kaiser's
-judgment on a political issue was absolutely sound, but he did not wish
-to act contrary to the recommendations of his responsible advisers.
-When, for instance, it was decided that the gunboat _Panther_ should be
-dispatched to Agadir, a decision which was arrived at during Kiel Week
-of 1911, the Kaiser exclaimed, with much show of feeling, that a step of
-such far-reaching importance could not be taken on the spur of the
-moment and without consulting the nation, and he only gave his consent
-with great reluctance. Moreover, Ballin stated, he was by no means in
-sympathy with Tirpitz, and the latter was not a man after his own heart,
-but he was content to let him have his way, because he believed that the
-naval policy of Tirpitz was right, so that he was not entitled to
-jeopardize the interests of his country by dismissing him. The Kaiser
-was not moved by an ambitious desire to build up a powerful navy
-destined to risk all in a decisive struggle against Great Britain, and
-the numerous passages in his public speeches which foreign observers
-interpreted as implying such a desire, must be regarded as the explosive
-outbursts of a strong character which was sometimes directed into wrong
-channels by a certain sense of its own superiority, and which, in
-seeking to express itself, would occasionally outrun discretion. His
-inconsistency which made him an easy prey to the influence of his
-entourage, caused him to be looked upon by foreign critics as
-vacillating and unstable, and this impression--as was discovered when
-too late--discredited his country immensely in the eyes of Great
-Britain, who, after all, had to be reckoned with as the decisive factor
-in all questions relative to world policy. Such a character could be
-guided in the right direction only if the right influence could be
-brought permanently to bear on it. But who was to exercise such
-influence on the Kaiser? Certainly his entourage did not include anyone
-qualified to do so, because it was not representative of all sections of
-the nation; neither was any of the successive Chancellors able to
-undertake such a task, since none of them succeeded in solving the
-questions of internal policy in a manner approved by a reliable and
-solid majority in the Reichstag. The Kaiserin also was not free from
-prejudice as to the war and the causes of its outbreak. Ballin relates
-how, on one of the few occasions when he was privileged to see the
-Kaiser during the war, Her Majesty, with clenched fists, exclaimed:
-"Peace with England? Never!" The Imperial family considered themselves
-betrayed by England and the English court. Why this should be so is
-perhaps still more difficult to say now than Ballin could understand in
-those days. Arguments, however, were useless in such a case, and could
-produce nothing but harm. The Kaiser did not bear Ballin any malice
-because of the frankness with which he explained his views that day; on
-the contrary, members of the Kaiser's entourage have confirmed that,
-after Ballin had left that evening, he even tried to make the Kaiserin
-see his (Ballin's) point of view. Putting himself into Ballin's
-position, he said, he could perfectly understand how he felt about it
-all; but he himself could not help thinking that his English relatives
-had played him false, so that he was forced to continue the struggle
-with England tooth and nail.
-
-When Ballin, during the summer of 1918, gave me a character sketch of
-the Kaiser, of which the account I have endeavoured to present in the
-preceding paragraphs is an outline, he added: "But what is the good of
-it? He is, after all, the managing director, and if things turn out
-wrong he is held responsible exactly as if he were the director of a
-joint-stock company."
-
-This comparison of the German Empire and its ruler with a joint-stock
-company and its board of directors used to form a frequent subject of
-argument in our inner circle, and even before the war these discussions
-regularly led to the conclusion that, what with the policy carried on by
-the Government and that carried on by the parties in the Reichstag, the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie would have gone bankrupt long ago if its affairs
-had been conducted on such lines as those of the German Empire. It was a
-never-ending cause of surprise to us to learn how completely the
-European situation was misjudged in the highest quarters, when, for
-instance, the following incident, which was reported to Ballin during
-the war, became known to us. One day, when the conversation at lunch in
-the Imperial headquarters turned to the subject of England, the Kaiser
-remarked: "I only wish someone had told me beforehand that England would
-take up arms against us," to which one of those present replied in a
-quiet whisper: "Metternich." It would have been just as proper, Ballin
-added, to have mentioned my own name, because I also warned the Kaiser
-over and over again. On another page in this book reference is made to
-the well-known fact that the reason why Count Metternich, the German
-ambassador at the Court of St. James, had to relinquish his post was
-that he, in one of his reports, predicted that Germany would be involved
-in war with Great Britain no later than 1915 unless she reduced the pace
-of her naval armaments. This was one of those numerous predictions to
-which, like so many others, especially during the war, no one wanted to
-listen. Even in the late summer of 1918, when Ballin saw the Kaiser for
-the last time, such warnings met with a deaf ear. This meeting, to which
-Ballin consented with reluctance, was the outcome of a friendship which,
-politically speaking, was devoid of practical results. A detailed
-account follows.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE WAR
-
-
-About the middle of the month of July, 1914, Ballin, when staying at
-Kissingen for the benefit of his health, received a letter from the
-Foreign Secretary, Herr v. Jagow, which made him put an immediate end to
-his holiday and proceed to Berlin. The letter was dated July 15th, and
-its principal contents were as follows:
-
-The _Berliner Tageblatt_, it said, had published some information
-concerning certain Anglo-Russian agreements on naval questions. The
-Foreign Office did not attach much value to it, because it was at
-variance with the general assumption that Germany's relations with Great
-Britain had undergone a change for the better, and also with the
-apparent reluctance of British statesmen to tie their country to any
-such agreements. The matter, however, had been followed up all the same,
-and through very confidential channels it had been ascertained that the
-rumours in question were by no means devoid of an actual background of
-fact. Grey, too, had not denied them point blank at his interview with
-Lichnowsky. It was quite true that Anglo-Russian negotiations were
-proceeding on the subject of a naval agreement, and that the Russian
-Government was anxious to secure as much mutual co-operation between the
-two countries as possible. A definite understanding had not, so far,
-been reached, notwithstanding the pressure exercised by Russia. Grey's
-attitude had become somewhat uncertain; but it was thought that he
-would ultimately give his consent, and that he would quieten his own
-conscience by arguing that the negotiations had not really been
-conducted between the Cabinets, but between the respective naval
-authorities. It was also quite likely that the British, who were adepts
-at the art of making nice distinctions, would be negotiating with the
-mental reservation that they would refrain from taking an active part
-when the critical moment arrived, if it suited them not to do so; and a
-_casus foederis_ would presumably not be provided for in the
-agreement. At any rate, the effect of the latter would be enormously to
-strengthen the aggressive tendencies of Russia. If the agreement became
-perfect, it would be useless for Germany to think any longer of coming
-to a _rapprochement_ with Great Britain, and therefore it would be a
-matter of great importance to make a last effort towards counteracting
-the Russian designs. His (v. Jagow's) idea was that Ballin, who had
-intimate relations with numerous Englishmen in leading positions, should
-send a note of warning across the North Sea. This suggestion was
-followed up by several hints as to the most suitable form of wording
-such a note, and the letter concluded with the statement that the matter
-was one of great urgency. A postscript dated July 16th added that a
-further article had been published by the _Berliner Tageblatt_,
-according to which the informants of the author also took a serious view
-of the situation.
-
-Ballin, in response to the request contained in the letter, did not
-content himself with sending a written note to his London friends, but
-he immediately went to Berlin for the purpose of gaining additional
-information on the spot, with special reference to the general political
-outlook. He learned that Austria intended to present a strongly worded
-note to Serbia, and that it was expected that in reply a counter-note
-dictated by Russia would be received. He was also told that the
-Government not only wanted some information regarding the matter which
-formed the special subject of Herr v. Jagow's letter, but also regarding
-the general political situation in London, as it was doubted whether the
-reports received from the ambassador were sufficiently trustworthy and
-complete. This was all that Ballin was told. Since then many facts have
-become known which throw a light on the way in which political questions
-were dealt with by the Berlin authorities during the critical period
-preceding the war, and if we, knowing what we know now, read the letter
-of Herr v. Jagow, we ask ourselves in amazement what was the object of
-the proposed action in London? Could it be that it was intended to
-intimidate the British Government? This could hardly be thought
-possible, so that some other result must have been aimed at. We can only
-say that the whole affair is still surrounded by much mystery, and we
-can sympathize with Ballin's bitter complaints in later days that he
-thought people had not treated him with as much openness as they should
-have done, and that they had abused his intimate relations with leading
-British personages.
-
-Ballin then left Berlin for Hamburg. He gave me his impressions of the
-state of political affairs--which he did not regard as critical--and
-went to London, ostensibly on business. In London he met Grey, Haldane,
-and Churchill, and there also he did not look upon the situation as
-critical--at least, not at first. When, however, the text of the
-Austrian note became known on Thursday, July 23rd, and when its full
-significance had gradually been realized, the political atmosphere
-became clouded: people asked what was Austria's real object, and began
-to fear lest the peace might be disturbed. Nevertheless, Ballin returned
-from London on July 27th with the impression that a fairly capable
-German diplomat might even then succeed in bringing about an
-understanding with Great Britain and France which, by preventing Russia
-from striking, would result in preserving the peace. Great Britain and
-the leading British politicians, he said, were absolutely in favour of
-peace, and the French Government was so much against war that its
-representatives in London seemed to him to be rather nervous on the
-subject. They would, he thought, do anything in their power to prevent
-war. If, however, France was attacked without any provocation on her
-part, Great Britain would be compelled to come to her assistance.
-Britain would never allow that we, as was provided for in the old plan
-of campaign, should march through Belgium. It was quite true that the
-Austrian note had caused grave anxiety in London, but how earnestly the
-Cabinet was trying to preserve peace might be gauged by the fact that
-Churchill, when he took leave of Ballin, implored him, almost with tears
-in his eyes, not to go to war. These impressions of Ballin are confirmed
-by the reports of Prince Lichnowsky and other members of the German
-Embassy in their observations during the critical days.
-
-Apart from these politicians and diplomatists on active service there
-were other persons of political training, though no longer in office,
-who did not think at that time that there was an immediate danger of
-war. In this connexion I should like to add a report of a very
-remarkable conversation with Count Witte, which took place at Bad
-Salzschlirf on July 24th. The Count--whose untimely death was greatly
-regretted--was without any doubt one of the most capable statesmen of
-his time--perhaps the only one with a touch of genius Europe
-possessed--and he certainly knew more about the complicated state of
-things in Russia than any living person. For these reasons his views on
-the events which form the first stage of the fateful conflict are of
-special interest. I shall reproduce the report of this conversation
-exactly as we received it at the time, and as we passed it on to Berlin.
-The authenticity of the statements of Count Witte as given here is
-beyond question.
-
- "Yesterday (on July 24th) I paid a visit to Count Witte who was
- staying at Bad Salzschlirf, and in the course of the day I had
- several conversations with him, the first of which took place as
- early as ten o'clock in the morning. After a few words of welcome,
- and after discussing some matters of general and personal interest,
- I said to the Count: 'I should like to thank you for your welcome
- letter and for your telegram. The question which you raise in them
- of a meeting between our two emperors appears of such fundamental
- importance to me that I may perhaps hope to be favoured with some
- details by you personally.'
-
- "Witte replied: 'In the first instance I wish to reaffirm what I
- have repeatedly told you, both verbally and by letter, viz. that I
- am not in the least anxious to be nominated Russian delegate for
- the proposed negotiations concerning a commercial treaty between
- Germany and Russia. Whoever may be appointed from the Russian side
- will gain no laurels. I think a meeting between the Kaiser and the
- Tsar some time within the next few weeks would be of very great
- importance. Have you read the French papers? The tone now assumed
- by Jules Hedeman is a direct challenge. I know Hedeman, and I also
- know that he only writes what will please Sasonov, Poincaré and
- Paléologue (the French ambassador in Petrograd). Now that the
- Peterhof meeting has taken place the language employed by all the
- French and Russian papers will become more arrogant than ever. It
- is quite certain that the Russian diplomatists and their French
- colleagues will now assume a different tone in their intercourse
- with the German diplomatists. The _rapprochement_ with Great
- Britain is making considerable progress, and whether a naval
- convention exists or not, Great Britain will now side with Russia
- and France. If even now a meeting could be arranged between the two
- Emperors, this would be of immense significance. The
- mischief-makers both in Russia and in France would be made to look
- small, and public opinion would calm down again."
-
- "I asked Witte: 'Do you think, Sergei Yulyevitch, that the Tsar
- would avail himself of a possible opportunity of meeting the
- Kaiser?'
-
- "Witte replied: 'I am firmly convinced of it; I may, indeed, state
- without hesitation that the Tsar would be delighted to do so. The
- personal relations between the Tsar and the Kaiser are not of an
- ordinary kind. They converse with each other in terms of intimate
- friendship, and each time the Tsar has had a chat with the Kaiser
- he has been in better spirits. Believe me, if this meeting comes
- off, the impression which the French visit has left on the Tsar
- will be entirely wiped out. The effect of the showy reception of
- the French visitors which the press agitators have not failed to
- use for their own ends will be obliterated. Such a meeting will
- express in unambiguous terms that, whatever value the Tsar attaches
- to the Franco-Russian alliance, he insists on the maintenance of
- amicable relations with Germany. The meeting will have to be
- arranged without loss of time, in about four or six weeks, because
- in two months from now the Tsar will be leaving for Livadia. The
- army manoeuvres will be held within the next few weeks, and the
- Tsar will then go to the Finnish skerries where, in my opinion, the
- meeting might take place without difficulty.'
-
- "I asked Witte: 'Do you not think that, if the meeting were
- officially proposed by Germany, it might be looked upon as a sign
- of weakness on her side, especially in view of the now existing
- tension between the two countries?'
-
- "Witte replied: 'By no means. One has always to take into account
- the fact that the relations between the Tsar and the Kaiser, as I
- explained before, are in the highest degree friendly and intimate.
- I do not know how the Kaiser would feel on the subject, but I am
- convinced that he is possessed of the necessary political sagacity
- to find the way that will lead to a meeting. He might, e.g., write
- to the Tsar quite openly that, as the relations between their two
- countries had lately been somewhat under a cloud in consequence of
- the inefficient diplomacy of their respective representatives, he
- would be particularly happy to meet him at this juncture. Or the
- suggestion might reach the Tsar _via_ the Grand Duke of Hesse and
- his sister, the Tsarina. But this is immaterial, because the Kaiser
- is sure to find the right way. I can only repeat that the effect of
- the meeting would be enormous. The Russian press and Russian
- society would change their whole attitude, and the agitation in the
- French press would receive a severe setback.'
-
- "I said to Witte: 'I shall communicate the gist of our conversation
- to Mr. Ballin. As it is quite possible that he will be ready to
- endorse this suggestion, I should like to know your answer to one
- more question, viz., whether, if Mr. Ballin were to submit the
- proposal to the proper quarters, you would allow him to refer to
- you as the originator of the suggestion.'
-
- "Witte replied: 'Certainly. He may say that I look upon this
- meeting as an event of the utmost importance to both countries at
- the present moment.'
-
- "I said: 'Seeing that you will be leaving Germany within five days
- from now, would you be prepared to go to Berlin if the Kaiser would
- receive you unofficially?'
-
- "Witte replied: 'Certainly. At any moment.'
-
- "When we went for a walk in the afternoon, Witte made reference,
- amongst other things, to various political questions. I shall
- confine myself to quoting only a few of his remarks.
-
- "'Practically speaking,' he said, 'I think that there will be no
- war, although theoretically the air is thick with difficulties
- which only a war can clear away. But nowadays there is nobody who,
- like William the First, would put his foot down and say: "Now I
- will not yield another inch!" The spot at Ems where this happened
- is now adorned with a monument. Within a few years when the
- armaments which for the present are on paper only, shall be
- completed, Russia will really be strong. But even then, one has
- still to reckon with the possibility of internal complications.
- France, however, need not fear any such difficulties, because
- countries possessing a constitution acknowledged by all their
- inhabitants are not liable to revolutionary movements, no matter
- how often their governments change.'
-
- "In speaking of Hartwig, Witte remarked: 'His death is the severest
- blow to Russian diplomacy. He was unquestionably the most gifted
- Russian diplomatist. When Count Lammsdorff, who was a great friend
- of mine, was Minister for Foreign Affairs, he used to do nothing
- without first asking my advice. Hartwig, at that time, was the
- chief of his departmental staff, and he often came to see me. Even
- in those early days I had an opportunity of admiring his eminent
- diplomatic gifts.'"
-
-The suggestion which formed the principal subject of the above
-conversations--viz. that a personal meeting of the two Emperors should
-be arranged in order to remove the existing tension--was not followed
-up, and the proposal would in any case have been doomed to failure,
-because the politicians who were responsible for the conduct of affairs
-at that time had done nothing to prevent the Kaiser from embarking on
-his customary cruise in Northern waters.
-
-The latter end of July was full of excitement for the directors and the
-staff of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie. We endeavoured to acquaint the
-vessels that were under way with the critical situation, and we
-instructed each captain to make for a neutral port in case war should
-break out. The naval authorities warned us not to allow any ships to put
-to sea, and we were particularly asked not to permit the sailing of the
-s.s. _Imperator_, which was fixed for July 31st, because the attitude of
-Great Britain was uncertain. At a midnight meeting held at Ballin's
-private residence it was decided to postpone the departure of the vessel
-"on account of the uncertain political situation." Every berth on the
-steamer was booked, and hundreds of passengers were put to the greatest
-inconvenience. Most of them proceeded to a neutral or to a British port
-from which they subsequently embarked for the United States.
-
-After this, events followed upon each other's heels in swift succession.
-When war broke out, most of the ships succeeded in reaching neutral
-ports, so that comparatively few of them were lost in the early part of
-the war. By August 5th the cables had been cut. This circumstance made
-it very difficult to keep up communications with New York, and compelled
-the majority of our agencies and branches abroad to use their own
-discretion as to what to do. The place of regular business was taken by
-the work involved in carrying out the various agreements which the
-company had entered into during peace time, viz. those for the
-victualling and bunkering of various units of the Imperial Navy, for the
-supply of auxiliary vessels, and for the establishment of an
-organization which was to purchase the provisions needed by the navy.
-
-In the meantime, the Ministry of the Interior had started to devise
-measures for provisioning the country as a whole, as far as that was
-still possible. It is well known that the responsible authorities had
-done far too little--indeed, hardly anything at all--to cope with this
-problem, because they had never taken a very serious view of the danger
-of war. Even the arrangements of the military authorities in connexion
-with the plans of mobilization were utterly deficient in this respect.
-
-The first who seriously studied the question as to what would have to be
-done for the provisioning of the military and civil population if
-Germany had to fight against a coalition of enemies, and if the overseas
-supplies were stopped, was General Count Georg Waldersee, who became
-Quartermaster General in 1912. In a letter which he wrote to Ballin
-about that time, he gave a very clear description of the probable state
-of things in such an emergency. He pointed out that the amount of
-foodstuffs required during a war would probably be larger than the
-quantities needed in peace time--a contingency which had escaped
-attention in Germany altogether--and that above all there would be an
-enormous shortage of raw materials. Therefore, he said, if it was
-desired to guard the country against disagreeable surprises, it was
-imperative to make certain preparations for an economic and a financial
-mobilization. The military authorities at least had studied this problem
-theoretically, but the civil authorities would not make any move at all.
-The general said he thought it desirable that this question should
-receive more attention in the future, and he asked Ballin to let him
-know his views on the matter, and to give him some practical advice. The
-anxiety felt in military quarters was largely augmented by the receipt
-of disquieting rumours about the increase of Russian armaments.
-
-In reply we furnished Count Waldersee with a brief memorandum written by
-myself in which, amongst other items, I referred him to some suggestions
-put forward by Senator Possehl, of Lübeck, in the course of a lecture
-delivered about the same time before a selected audience. In view of the
-fact that Germany depended for her food supply and for her raw materials
-to an increasing extent on foreign sources, there could be no doubt as
-to the necessity for making economic preparations against the
-possibility of a war, if a war was considered at all probable.
-
-Nevertheless, and in spite of the newly awakened interest on the part of
-the military authorities, these economic preparations had, before the
-war, made absolutely no progress worth mentioning. The only practical
-step which, as far as my knowledge goes, had been taken by the civil
-authorities, was the conclusion of an agreement entered into with a
-Dutch firm dealing with the importation of cereals in case of war. When,
-in the fateful summer of 1914, this contingency arose, the firm in
-question had chartered some British steamers, which instead of carrying
-their cargoes to Rotterdam took them to British ports.
-
-Thus, no serious efforts of any kind had been made to grapple with the
-problem. On Sunday, August 2nd, Geheimrat Frisch, who afterwards became
-the director of the _Zentral-Einkaufs-Gesellschaft_ (Central Purchasing
-Corporation), came to Hamburg, in order to inform Ballin, at the request
-of the Ministry for the Interior, that the latter felt very anxious in
-regard to the quantity of food actually to be found in Germany, which,
-it was feared, would be very small, and that it was expected that a
-great shortage would arise after a very brief period. He therefore asked
-him to use his best endeavours in order to secure supplies from abroad.
-A Hamburg firm was immediately requested to find out how much food was
-actually available in the country, and, although the figures obtained
-were not quite so bad as it was expected, steps were taken at once to
-remedy the deficiencies by importing food from neutral countries. A
-great obstacle to the rapid success of these efforts was the absolute
-want of any preparatory work. The very attempt to raise the necessary
-funds abounded with difficulties of every kind, because no money had
-been set aside for such expenditure in connexion with the scheme of
-mobilization, and the time taken by the attempts made in this direction,
-as well as the circumstance that communication with the United States
-could only be maintained _via_ neutral countries, were the causes of a
-great deal of serious delay.
-
-At Ballin's suggestion the _Reichseinkauf_ (Government Purchasing
-Organization) was then formed. For this organization the Hamburg-Amerika
-Linie was to do all the purchasing, and it was arranged that it should
-put at the disposal of the new body all those members of its staff who
-were not called up, and who were considered suitable for the work.
-Buyers were sent to every neutral country; but the mobilization then in
-progress led to a complete stoppage of railway travelling for the civil
-population, thus causing no end of difficulties to these buyers, and
-making personal contact with the Berlin authorities almost impossible.
-Added to all this, there was the inevitable confusion which the
-replacement of the civil administration by the army commands brought in
-its train. It had, in fact, been assumed that this war would resemble
-its predecessors in every respect, and no one was prepared for a world
-war. Hence, such important matters as the importation of foodstuffs from
-abroad and the work of supplying political information to neutral
-countries concerning the German standpoint were sadly neglected;
-everything had to be provided at a moment's notice, and had to be
-carried through in the face of a great deal of opposition. Funds and
-energy were largely wasted; the military, naval, and civil organizations
-were working against one another instead of co-operating; and it took a
-long time before a little order could be introduced into the chaos. It
-was also found that the German credits abroad were quite inadequate for
-such enormous requirements. An attempt to dispose of some treasury bills
-in New York was only moderately successful, and in consequence of this
-lack of available funds the supplies obtained from the United States
-were but small. Even the fact that the Hamburg-Amerika Linie immediately
-succeeded in establishing the necessary connexions with American
-shippers, and in securing a sufficient amount of neutral tonnage, did
-not improve matters in the least. To obtain the required funds in
-Berlin, as has been explained before, involved considerable loss of
-time; and as the months passed the British blockade became more and more
-effective. Thus, as the war continued, large quantities of food could
-only be procured from European countries.
-
-Ballin took a large personal share in the actual business transacted by
-the _Reichseinkauf_. He did so, if for no other reason, because he
-needed some substitute for the work connected with the real shipping
-business which was rapidly decreasing in extent. The only benefit his
-company derived from its new work was that it gave employment to part of
-the members of its staff, thus reducing in some measure the expenses.
-With the stoppage of the company's real business its principal source of
-income ran dry in no time, and the small profits made out of the supply
-of provisions to the navy was only a poor compensation.
-
-The world's economic activities in those days presented a picture of
-utter confusion. All the stock exchanges were closed; all dealings in
-stocks and shares had ceased, so that no prices could be quoted; several
-countries had introduced a moratorium, and numerous banks had stopped
-payment. Germany had no longer any direct intercourse with the overseas
-countries; the British censorship was daily increasing its hold on the
-traffic proceeding _via_ neutral ports. At first those foreign steamship
-companies which maintained passenger services to America did splendid
-business, because Europe was full of American tourists and business men
-who were anxious to secure a berth to get home, and numerous cabin
-passengers had to be content with steerage accommodation. When this rush
-was past, however, shipping business, like international commerce,
-entered upon its period of decline. The freight rates came down, the
-number of steamers laid up assumed large proportions, and the world's
-traffic, in fact, was paralysed.
-
-After a comparatively brief period it was found too difficult to conduct
-the _Reichseinkauf_ organization with its headquarters at Hamburg,
-because the intercourse with the Imperial Treasury at Berlin, which
-provided the funds, took up too much time, and also because it seemed
-highly advisable to purchase the foreign foodstuffs needed by the
-military as well as the civil population through one and the same
-organization. The state of things in respect to these matters was
-simply indescribable; indeed, if it had been purposely intended to
-encourage the growth of war profiteering, it would have been impossible
-to find a better method of setting about it. Numerous buyers,
-responsible to different centres, not merely purchased without regard to
-each other, but even outbid each other, thus causing a rise in prices
-which the public had to pay. Conditions such as these were brought about
-by the utter unpreparedness of the competent civil authorities and by
-the fact that the military authorities could dispose of the vast amounts
-of money placed at their command at the outbreak of the war. These
-conditions were doubtless the soil from which sprang all the evils which
-later on developed into the pernicious system we connect with the name
-of _Kriegswirtschaft_, and for which it will be impossible to demand
-reparation owing to the lost war and to the outbreak of the revolution.
-
-In order to facilitate the intercourse with the proper Government
-boards, and to centralize the purchasing business as much as possible,
-Ballin's suggestion that the seat of the organization should be removed
-to Berlin was adopted, and at the same time the whole matter was put on
-a sounder footing by its conversion into a limited company under the
-name of _Zentral-Einkaufs-Gesellschaft_ (Central Purchasing
-Corporation). The history of the Z.E.G. is well known in the country,
-and its work has been subject to a great deal of criticism, largely due
-to the fact that all the annoyance caused by the many restrictions which
-the Government found it necessary to impose, and which had to be put up
-with during the war, was directed against this body. Generally speaking,
-this attitude of the population was very unfair, because the principal
-grievances concerned the distribution of the foodstuffs, and for this
-part the Z.E.G. was not responsible. Its only task was to obtain the
-necessary supplies from abroad. If it is remembered that the
-transactions of the corporation reached enormous proportions, and that,
-after all, it was improvised at a time of war, we cannot be surprised to
-see that some mistakes and even some serious blunders did occur
-occasionally, and that the right people were not always found in the
-right places. Moreover, some of the really amazing feats accomplished by
-the Z.E.G--e.g. the supply of grain from Roumania, which necessitated
-enormous labour in connexion with the transhipment from rail to steamer
-and with the conveyance up the Danube--were only known to a few people.
-It is obvious that nothing could be published during the war about these
-achievements nor about the agreements concluded, after endless
-negotiations, with neutral countries and thus the management of the
-Z.E.G. was obliged to suffer in silence the criticisms and reproaches
-hurled at it without being able to defend itself.
-
-The volume of the work done by the Z.E.G. may be inferred from the fact
-that the goods handled by the organization during the four years from
-1915 to 1918 represented a value of 6,500 million marks, in which
-connexion it must not be forgotten that at that time the purchasing
-power of the mark was still nearly the same as before the war. When the
-Roumanian harvest was brought in the daily imports sometimes reached a
-total of 800 truck-loads. However, the greatest credit, in my opinion,
-is due to the Z.E.G. for putting a stop to the above-mentioned confusion
-in the methods of buying abroad and for establishing normal conditions.
-To-day it is scarcely possible to realize how difficult it was and how
-much time it required to overcome the opposition often met with at home.
-
-Not much need be said here about the activities of the Hamburg-Amerika
-Linie during the war. The longer the struggle lasted, and the larger the
-number of countries involved in the war against Germany became, the
-heavier became the company's losses of tonnage and of other property.
-All the shore establishments, branch offices, pier accommodation, etc.,
-situated in enemy countries, were confiscated, and the anxiety about the
-post-war reconstruction grew from month to month. Ballin never lost
-sight of this problem, and it is chiefly due to his efforts that the
-Government and the Reichstag passed a Bill (1917) providing the means
-for the rebuilding of the country's mercantile marine. Along with this
-he tried to keep the company financially independent by cutting down
-expenses, by finding work for the inland offices of the company, by
-selling tonnage, and by other means. The families and dependents of
-those employees who had been called to the colours were assisted as far
-as the funds at the company's disposal permitted. Of all these measures
-the company has already given the necessary information to the public,
-and I can confine myself to these brief statements. There is only one
-circumstance which requires special mention.
-
-It is universally acknowledged that no German industry has suffered so
-greatly through the action of the German Government as the shipping
-business. When the discussions as to the rebuilding of the merchant
-fleet were being carried on, the Government frankly admitted this fact.
-I am not thinking, in this connexion, of those measures which were
-imposed upon the Government by the Versailles Treaty, such as the
-surrender of the German mercantile marine, but what I have in mind is
-the steps taken whilst the war was in actual progress. These have one
-thing in common with those imposed by the enemy: their originators have,
-more or less, arrived at the belated conviction that they have
-sacrificed much valuable property to no purpose. In Great Britain it is
-admitted quite openly that the confiscation of the German merchant
-fleet has very largely contributed to the ensuing collapse of the
-world's shipping markets, and to the confusion which now prevails on
-every trade route. The war measures of the German Government--or,
-rather, of the German naval authorities--have sacrificed enormous values
-merely for the sake of a phantom, thus necessitating the compensation
-due to the shipowners--a compensation far from sufficient to make good
-even a moderate fraction of the loss. The vessels that can be built for
-the sums thrown out for this purpose will not be worth the twentieth
-part of the old ones, if quality is taken into account as well as
-quantity. This will become apparent when the compensation money has been
-spent, and when it will be possible to compare the fleet of German
-passenger boats then existing with what the country possessed previous
-to the war.
-
-The phantom just referred to was the foolish belief that it would be
-possible to eliminate all ocean tonnage from the high seas--a belief
-which was in itself used to justify the submarine war, and which was
-responsible for the assumption that the withdrawal of German tonnage
-from the high seas would affect the food and raw material supply of the
-enemy countries. This mistaken idea was also the reason for prohibiting
-the sale of the German vessels in neutral ports, and for ordering the
-destruction of their engines when it became impossible to prevent their
-confiscation. The latter measure, and in particular the manner in which
-it was carried out, prove the utter inability of the competent
-authorities to grasp the very elements of the great problem they were
-tackling, and in view of such lack of knowledge it is easy to understand
-the bitterness of tone which characterizes Ballin's criticism of these
-measures as contained in his memorandum to the Minister of the Interior
-(1917). He wrote:
-
- "When Your Excellency decided to permit the sale of our vessels in
- the United States it was too late to do so, because the U.S.
- Government had already seized them. Previous to that, when we saw
- that war would be inevitable, and when we had received an
- exceedingly favourable purchasing offer from an American group, we
- had asked permission to sell part of our tonnage laid up in that
- country.
-
- "Your Excellency, acting on behalf of the Chancellor, declined to
- grant this permission. I am quite aware that neither the Chancellor
- nor Your Excellency as his representative were responsible for this
- refusal, but that it was due to a decision of the Admiralty Staff.
- However, the competent authority to which the protection and the
- furtherance of the country's shipping interests are entrusted is
- the Ministry of the Interior. With the Admiralty Staff itself, as I
- need not remind Your Excellency, we have no dealings whatever, and
- we are not even entitled to approach that body directly in such
- matters.
-
- "Our company which was the biggest undertaking of its kind in the
- world, and which previous to the war possessed a fleet aggregating
- about 1,500,000 tons, has lost practically all its ships except a
- very few. The losses are not so much due to capture on the part of
- the enemy as to the measures taken by our own Government. If our
- Government had acted with the same foresight as did the
- Austro-Hungarian Government with respect to its ships in United
- States and Chinese waters, the German vessels then in Italy,
- Portugal, Greece, the United States, Brazil, and elsewhere, might
- have been either retained by us or disposed of at their full value.
-
- "The Austrian ships, with their dismantled engines were, at the
- instance of the Austrian Government, sold in such good time that
- the shipping companies concerned are not only in a position to-day
- to refrain from asking their Government to pass a Shipowners'
- Compensation Bill, as we are bound to do, but they have even
- enriched the Austrian national wealth by such handsome additions
- that their capital strength has reached a sum never dreamt of
- before, and that they are now able to rebuild their fleet by
- drawing upon their own funds, and to make such further additions to
- their tonnage that in future we shall not only be compelled to
- compete with the shipping companies of neutral and enemy
- countries--which have accumulated phenomenal profits--but with the
- Austrian mercantile marine as well.
-
- "From the point of view of our country's economic interests it is
- greatly to be regretted that the policy of the Government has not
- changed in this respect even now. We have received reliable news
- from private sources to the effect that the engines of the German
- vessels now in Argentine waters have been destroyed without Your
- Excellency having so far informed us of this action, and without
- Your Excellency having asked us to take steps to utilize the
- vessels, if possible, for the benefit of the country's economic
- interests and for that of the completely decimated German merchant
- fleet.
-
- "Moreover, a wire sent by His Excellency Herr v. Jonquières to the
- competent Hamburg and Bremen authorities states that the ships in
- Uruguayan waters are also in great jeopardy. The Government of that
- country, according to this report, would prefer to purchase them
- rather than confiscate them. After what has been done before, we
- fear that the Admiralty Staff will either not permit the sale at
- all, or only grant its permission when it is too late.
-
- "Your Excellency, I am sure, is fully aware of the fact that the
- methods of the Admiralty Staff--ignoring, as it does, all other
- considerations except its own--have caused one country after the
- other to join the ranks of Germany's enemies. In view of the
- shortage of tonnage which Great Britain and other of our enemies
- systematically try to bring about--evidently with the intention of
- inconveniencing neutral countries as much as possible--these latter
- feel compelled, for the very reason of this lack of tonnage, to
- declare war upon us, because the politics of our country are guided
- by a body of men who, unfortunately, shut their eyes to the
- economic and political consequences of their decisions.
-
- "Several months ago, at a time when nobody thought of unrestricted
- submarine warfare, an opportunity presented itself to us of
- concluding an agreement with the Belgian Relief Committee by which
- it would have been possible for us to withdraw our steamers, one
- after the other, from American ports and, under the flag of that
- committee, to bring them to Rotterdam. At that time, it was again
- the Admiralty Staff which prevented the conclusion of this
- agreement, because, for reasons best known to itself, it would
- grant permission for only three of these vessels, although Great
- Britain had agreed that the whole of our fleet interned in U.S.
- ports, representing 250,000 tons in all, could sail under the terms
- of the proposed agreement, and although the Allies as a whole had
- signed a written declaration to the effect that they would not
- interfere with our ships so long as they were used for the
- provisioning of Belgium. I took the liberty of pointing out to
- Captain Grashoff, the representative of the Admiralty Staff, that
- nothing could have prevented us from letting the ships remain at
- Rotterdam after they had completed their mission, and that
- afterwards, as has been borne out by later facts, they could have
- been safely taken to Hamburg.
-
- "I respectfully ask Your Excellency whether it is not possible to
- enter a protest against such unnecessary dismemberment of part of
- the German national assets....
-
- " ... I must also protest most emphatically against the
- insinuation--which is sure to be made--that I have no right to
- criticize any steps which the Admiralty Staff has regarded as
- necessary for reasons of our naval strategy. Without reservation
- the German shipowners agree to any measures which are strategically
- necessary, however greatly they may injure their interests. The
- criticism which I beg to make on behalf of German
- shipping--although possessing no formal mandate--concerns itself
- with those steps which might have been taken without jeopardizing
- the success of our naval strategy if the vital necessities of
- German mercantile shipping had been studied with as much
- consideration as this branch of the economic activities of our
- country has a right to claim.
-
- "What we principally take exception to in this connexion is that no
- information was sent to us before the decision to destroy the
- engines of our ships was arrived at, and that we were not assisted
- in making use of these dismantled vessels in the financial
- interests of our country. Nothing of this kind was done, although
- it was the most natural thing to do so, and although such action
- would have deprived many a country of a reason to declare war upon
- Germany."
-
-To a man of the type of Ballin--who had, throughout his life, been
-accustomed to perform a huge amount of successful work--a period of
-enforced inactivity was unbearable. The longer it lasted the more he
-suffered from its effects, especially because the preparatory work for
-the post-war reconstruction, the work connected with the war
-organization of the German shipowners, etc., was only a poor substitute
-for the productive labour he had been engaged in during more than thirty
-years of peace. There is no doubt but that the Government could have
-made better use of Ballin's gift of organization, but it must be
-remembered that there was really no effective central Government in
-Germany throughout the war. The civil administration was not exactly
-deposed, but it was subordinated to the military one from the very
-beginning, and the latter carried on its work along the guiding lines
-laid down in the scheme of mobilization. The authorities to whose care
-the economic aspects of the war were entrusted did not often--if at
-all--avail themselves of Ballin's advice; and to offer it unbidden never
-entered his mind, because he was cherishing the hope that the war would
-not last long, and because it was his belief that the world would be
-sensible enough to put an end to the wholesale destruction before long.
-It was a bitter disappointment to him to find how greatly he was
-mistaken, and to see that the forces of unreason remained in the
-ascendancy, especially as he was always convinced that Time would be on
-the side of Germany's enemies. The sole aim of his political activities
-during the war was to bring about peace as early as possible.
-
-Of all the attempts at mediation known to me, the one which seemed to be
-most likely to succeed passed through the hands of Ballin. To give a
-detailed account of it must be left to a time which need no longer pay
-regard to governments and individuals. Ballin's share in it was brought
-about through his former international connexions. Through him it
-reached the Kaiser and the Chancellor, and owing to his untiring
-efforts, which lasted for two years, the position in the early part of
-1917 was such that the establishment of direct contact between the two
-sides was imminent. Then the unrestricted submarine war began, the
-intended direct contact could not be established, and the carefully
-woven thread was definitely snapped asunder; because from that time on
-the Allies were certain that the United States would join them, and they
-felt assured of victory. No other mediation scheme with which I am
-acquainted has been pursued with so much unselfishness, devotion, and
-energy as this one. This attempt, however, no more than any other, could
-have procured for us that kind of peace which public opinion in Germany
-had been led for years to expect, thanks to the over-estimation of the
-country's strength, fostered by the military censorship and by the
-military reports.
-
-From such exaggerated opinions Ballin always held himself aloof. He
-recognized without reservation the immense achievements of Germany in
-the war, but he was fearful lest the strength of the country could not
-cope in the long run with the ever-increasing array of enemies, and he
-therefore maintained that, if it was desired to bring about peace, the
-Government would have to be moderate in its terms. A much discussed
-article which he contributed to the _Frankfürter Zeitung_ on January
-1st, 1915, under the heading of "The Wet Triangle," is not inconsistent
-with these views of his. In it he pointed out that Germany's naval
-power, in order to make a future blockade impossible, should no longer
-be content to be shut up in the "wet triangle," i.e. the North Sea, but
-ought to establish itself on the high seas. This statement has been
-alleged to refer to Belgium, and Ballin has been wrongly claimed a
-partisan by those who supported the annexation of that country. What he
-really meant was that Germany should demand a naval base on the
-Atlantic, somewhere in the northern parts of Africa, and this idea
-seemed to be quite realizable if taken in conjunction with the terms of
-peace he had in view, viz. no annexations, no indemnities, economic
-advantages, a permanent political and naval understanding with Great
-Britain, based on her recognition that a military defeat of Germany was
-impossible. All this would be somewhat on the lines of the article
-published by the _Westminster Gazette_, referred to in the eighth
-chapter and a facsimile of which is given at the end of the book. Ballin
-was firmly convinced that, even if a mere peace of compromise was the
-outcome, i.e. one which left Germany without any territorial gains and
-without any indemnities, the impression which the German achievements
-during the war would produce on the rest of the world would be so
-overwhelming that the country would secure indirectly far greater
-advantages than could be gained by means of the largest possible
-indemnity and the most far-reaching annexations. Besides, the
-experiences of former times had proved that Germany would be quite
-unable to absorb such large accessions of territory as certain people
-had in mind. These views of Ballin, of course, were looked upon as those
-of a "pacificist," and Ballin was classified among their number.
-
-In a letter which Ballin wrote to a friend of his, a naval officer, in
-April, 1915, he puts up a highly characteristic defence of himself
-against the accusations implied by describing him as "pacificist" and
-"pro-English."
-
- "If," he wrote, "the fact that I have been privileged to spend a
- considerable part of my life in close contact with you, entitles me
- to add a few personal remarks, I should like to say that I have
- made up my mind to retire from my post after the end of the war
- altogether. I told you shortly after the outbreak of the war that
- my life's work was wrecked. To-day I am convinced that it will soon
- come to life again, but my youth would have to be restored to me
- before I could ever dream of taking up again that position in
- international shipping which I held before the war. I cannot
- imagine that I would ever go to London again and take the chair at
- the conferences at which the great problems of international
- shipping would come up for discussion, and nobody, I think, can
- expect that I should be content to play second fiddle at my age.
- Indeed, I cannot see how I could ever re-enter upon intimate
- relations with the British, the French, the Italians, and
- especially with the Americans. Strangely enough, influential
- circles on our side, and even His Majesty himself, look upon me as
- 'pro-English,' and yet I am the only German who can say with truth
- that he has been fighting the English for supremacy in the shipping
- world during the last thirty years. During this long period I have,
- if I am allowed to make use of so bold a comparison, conquered one
- British trench after the other, and I have renewed my attacks
- whenever I could find the means for doing so."
-
-It is no secret that during the war many prominent politicians and
-economists--men of sound political training--viewed the question of the
-war aims which it was desirable to realize very much in the same light
-as did Ballin, but that the censorship made it impossible for anyone to
-give public expression to such opinions. Ballin's appreciation of the
-probable gain which Germany would derive from a peace by compromise has
-now been amply confirmed by the undeniable fact that the rest of the
-world has been tremendously impressed by Germany's achievements, an
-impression which has made foreigners regard her chances of recovery with
-much more confidence than she has felt herself, stunned as she was by
-the immensity of her _débâcle_.
-
-The following notes, which are largely based on Ballin's own diary, are
-intended to supplement the information given so far as to his political
-activities during the war.
-
-The outbreak of war, as may be inferred from what has already been
-related, took him completely by surprise, and he did not think that the
-struggle would last very long. "The necessities of the world's commerce
-will not stand a long war," was his opinion during the early days. For
-the rest, he tried to find work for himself which would benefit his
-country. "What we need to-day," he wrote to a friend, "is work. This
-will lift us up and keep us going, and will make those of us who are no
-longer fit to fight feel that we are still of some use after all." But
-in connexion with this thought another one began to occupy his mind. He
-anxiously asked: "Which of the men now at headquarters will have the
-strength and the wisdom required to negotiate a successful peace when
-the time comes?" All his thoughts centred round the one idea of how to
-secure peace; what advantages his country would derive from it; and how
-it would be possible to bring about an international grouping of the
-Powers which would be of the greatest benefit to Germany. On October
-1st, 1914, he wrote to Grand Admiral v. Tirpitz:
-
- " ... I quite agree with what you say in your welcome letter.
- Indeed, you could not view these matters[3] with graver anxiety
- than I do myself. I hope I shall soon have the opportunity I desire
- of discussing these things with you personally.
-
- "To win the peace will be hardly less difficult than to win the
- war. My opinion is that the result of this world war, if it lasts
- 12 months, will be exactly the same as if it lasts six months. I
- mean to say that, if we do not succeed in acquiring the guarantees
- for our compensation demands within a few months, the further
- progress of events will not appreciably improve our chances in this
- direction.
-
- "What we must aim at is a new grouping of the Powers round an
- alliance between Germany, Great Britain and France. This alliance
- will become possible as soon as we shall have vanquished France and
- Belgium, and as soon as you shall have made up your mind to bring
- about an understanding with Great Britain concerning the naval
- programme.
-
- "I am aware that this idea will find but slight favour with you,
- but you will never secure a reasonable peace with Great Britain
- without a naval agreement.
-
- "By a reasonable peace I mean one which will enable both Germany
- and Britain to sheathe their swords in honour, and which will not
- burden either nation with a hatred which would contain within it
- the germs of future war.
-
- "We have had no difficulty in putting up with the French clamour
- for _revanche_ for a period of 44 years, because in this case we
- had only to deal with a small group of nationalist firebrands, but
- a British clamour for revenge would produce an exceedingly adverse
- effect on the future of our national well-being and of our share in
- the world's trade and commerce.
-
- "For a long time past it has been my conviction that the era of the
- super-Dreadnoughts has passed, and some time ago I asked Admiral
- von Müller if it was not possible to consider the question of a
- naval understanding simply on the basis of an agreement as to the
- sum of money which either Government should be entitled to spend
- annually on naval construction, leaving it to the discretion of
- each side how to make use of the money agreed upon for the building
- of the various types of ships.
-
- "Great Britain is putting up a fight for her existence just as much
- as we do, if not to an even greater extent. Her continuance as a
- world power depends on the superiority--the numerical superiority
- at least--of her navy.
-
- "I am convinced--always supposing that we shall succeed in
- conquering France and Belgium--that the British terms concerning
- her naval supremacy will be very moderate, and I cannot help
- thinking that a fair understanding regarding naval construction is
- just as important to Germany as it is to Great Britain.
-
- "The present state of things is the outcome of a _circulus
- vitiosus_, and is bound to produce a soreness which will never
- permit of a sound understanding....
-
- " ... And what about the further course of the war? I sincerely
- hope that your Excellency will not risk the navy. The expression
- 'The Fleet in being' which has never left my memory, and which has
- lately been heard of again, implies exactly all I mean.
-
- "The navy, in my opinion, has never been, and never ought to be,
- anything but the indispensable reserve of a healthy international
- policy. Just as a conscientious director-general would never dream
- of reducing the reserve funds of his company, unless compelled to
- do so by sheer necessity, we ought not to drag the navy into the
- war, if it could possibly be avoided.
-
- "What would it profit you to risk a naval battle on the high seas?
- Not only our own, but British experts as well, believe that our
- ships, our officers, and our crews are superior to the British, and
- King Edward emphasized at every opportunity that the crews on
- British warships are not a match to those on German vessels. But
- what are you going to do? Are you going to make them fight against
- a numerically superior enemy? Such a course would be open to great
- objections, and even, if the battle turned out successfully, the
- victors would not escape serious damage.
-
- "I do not know how your Excellency, and their Excellencies v.
- Müller and Pohl look upon these matters, but since you yourself
- have asked me to state my views, I hope you will not take it amiss
- if my zeal causes me to enlarge upon a subject which is not quite
- within my province. Besides, I have another reason for doing so.
-
- "It is our duty to prepare ourselves in good time for the peace
- that is to come. Does your Excellency believe it would augur well
- for the future peace if Germany succeeded in inflicting a naval
- victory on the British? I do not think so myself, but I rather
- fancy that the opposite effect would take place.... If the British
- should suffer a big naval defeat, they would be forced to fight to
- the bitter end. That is inherent in the nature of things; even
- those who can only argue in terms of a Continental policy must
- understand it.
-
- "Even a partial loss of her naval prestige would spell ruin to
- Great Britain. It would imply the defection of the great dominions
- which now form part of her world empire. The _raison d'être_ for
- Great Britain's present position ceases to exist as soon as she has
- lost her naval supremacy....
-
- " ... And, please, do not lose sight of one further consideration.
- We must find our compensation by annexing valuable territories
- beyond the seas; but for the peaceful enjoyment of such overseas
- gains we shall be dependent on the good will of Great Britain....
- At present, men of German blood occupy leading positions in the
- economic life of almost every British colony, and the open door has
- been the means by which we have acquired a great deal of that
- national wealth of ours which caused the smooth working of our
- financial mobilization when the war broke out.
-
- " ... For all these reasons I consider it a great mistake that the
- press should be allowed to excite German public opinion against
- Great Britain to the extent it is done. I was in Berlin during the
- week, and I was alarmed when I became acquainted with the wild
- schemes which are entertained not only by the people of Berlin, but
- also by distinguished men from the Rhineland and Westphalia."
-
-Apart from the peace problem there was another matter which gave Ballin
-grave cause for anxiety. This was the circumstance that the Kaiser,
-because of his long absences from Berlin, lost the necessary touch with
-the people, and could not, therefore, be kept properly informed of
-popular feeling. He expressed his fears on this account in a letter to a
-friend of his amongst the Kaiser's entourage in which he wrote:
-
- "I hope you will soon be able to induce His Majesty to remove his
- winter quarters to Germany. My common sense tells me that, if a war
- is waged on French and Russian soil, the headquarters ought to be
- situated in Germany. From the point of view of security also I
- consider this very desirable, and I feel a great deal of anxiety
- concerning His Majesty.... Whether it is wise to exercise the
- censorship of the press to the extent it is done, is a question on
- which more opinions than one are possible.... I have just had a
- call from a Mr. X., a former officer, and an exceedingly reliable
- and capable man. He complained bitterly of the rigid censorship,
- and he thought it would be a mistake from which we should have to
- suffer in days to come. It would certainly be a blessing if such a
- man who is highly esteemed by the Foreign Office could be given a
- chance of explaining his views at headquarters."
-
-Among the problems of foreign policy with which Germany saw herself
-faced in the early part of the war, those referring to Italy and
-Roumania were of special interest to Ballin. The question was how to
-prevent these two countries from joining the ranks of Germany's enemies.
-Ballin did all he could to bring about the Italian mission of Prince
-Bülow. He not only urged the Chancellor to select Bülow for this task,
-but he also tried hard to induce the Prince to undertake the thankless
-errand involved. In addition to the political importance of the mission,
-he laid great stress on its bearing on the food problem.
-
- "The question of provisioning the German people," he wrote in a
- letter to the Army Headquarters, "is closely connected with the
- solution of the Italian and Roumanian difficulties. No pressure is,
- in my opinion, too strong in order to make it perfectly clear to
- Austria that some sort of an agreement with Italy is a _sine qua
- non_ for the successful termination of this war. If it were argued
- that Italy would come forward with fresh demands as soon as her
- original claims had been satisfied, I think the German Government
- could combat this objection by insisting upon a written promise on
- the part of Italy to the effect that she would not extend her
- demands.
-
- " ... Political and military considerations make it plain beyond
- any question of doubt that Italy, who will be armed to the teeth in
- March, will not be able to lay down her arms again unless Austria
- arrives at an understanding with her. Thus our greatest danger is
- the uncertainty as to what these neutrals will do, and I hope that
- the ministerial changes in Austria will smooth the way for a
- reasonable attitude towards this regrettable but unavoidable
- necessity. Our aim should be to prevent the scattering of our
- forces, for the burden imposed upon ourselves because of the
- inadequacy of our allies is almost superhuman, and contains the
- danger of exhaustion."
-
-The German mission to Italy suffered through the vacillations of
-Austrian politics, and was therefore doomed to failure. Austrian feeling
-concerning a compromise with Italy was always dependent on the news from
-the Italian front; if this was favourable, people did not want to hear
-of it, and in the opposite case they would only discuss such an
-understanding most unwillingly. The proposed compromise was looked upon
-as a heavy sacrifice, and people were by no means favourably disposed
-towards German mediation. Prince Bülow was accused of having "presented
-Italy with the Trentino." Disquieting news which Ballin received from
-Vienna induced him to report to the Chancellor on the state of Austrian
-feeling, and to offer his services if he thought that his
-old-established relations with Vienna could be of any use. His offer was
-also prompted by his conviction that the German diplomatic
-representation in Vienna was not adapted to Austrian mentality.
-
-Thereupon Ballin, early in March, 1915, entered upon a semi-official
-mission to Vienna. He first acquainted himself with the actual state of
-the Austrian mind by calling on his old friend, his Excellency v.
-Schulz, the Vice-President of the Austrian Chief Court of Audits, who
-was regarded as one of the best informed personages in the capital, and
-who was one of the regular partners of the old Emperor Francis Joseph
-for his daily game of tarock. This gentleman told Ballin that the
-people of Austria felt a good deal of resentment towards Germany, who
-had stepped in far too early as the "advocate of Italy," at a time when
-Austria was still hoping to settle Serbia all by herself. This hope,
-indeed, had proved an illusion; but Germany's strategy had also turned
-out a failure, because she had misjudged the attitude of Great Britain,
-and had not finished with France as rapidly as she had expected to do.
-Now Austria, confronted by stern necessity, would have to make
-concessions to Italy which every true Austrian would view with bitter
-grief; and, to bring about the active assistance of Roumania, Count
-Tisza would consider a sacrifice in the Bukovina debatable, but never
-one in Transylvania. Ballin told his friend that, as far as Roumania was
-concerned, he would have to leave it to Austria to settle that question
-by herself; and that his mission with regard to Italy was so difficult
-that he preferred not to make it more so by trying to solve the
-Roumanian problem as well.
-
-Ballin's subsequent interviews with the Prime Minister, Count Stürgkh,
-and with the Minister v. Koerber, as well as those with other
-influential personages, confirmed these impressions, and he left Vienna
-buoyed up by the hope that the conference between German, Austrian, and
-Italian delegates which it was proposed to hold at Vienna would lead to
-a successful result. Such, however, was not the case, and it is quite
-probable that the possibility of arriving at an understanding with Italy
-had passed by that time, or, assuming the most favourable circumstances,
-that only immediate and far-reaching Austrian concessions could have
-saved the situation; but these were not forthcoming.
-
-The next subject which caused much anxiety to Ballin was the question as
-to what Roumania would do, a country to whose attitude, considering her
-importance to Germany as a food-producing area, he attached even more
-value than to that of Italy. In his notes dating from that time he said:
-
- " ... June 21st, 1915. The news which I received from X. regarding
- the political situation in Roumania and Bulgaria was so serious
- that I felt bound to send copies of these letters to the Chief of
- the General Staff, General v. Falkenhayn, and to inform him that,
- in my opinion, our Foreign Office had now done all it could
- possibly do, and that nothing but some forcible military pressure
- such as he and Baron Conrad could exercise on Count Tisza would
- induce this obstinate gentleman to settle his differences with the
- Balkan States...."
-
- " ... On this occasion X. expressed a great deal of contempt at the
- suggestion that we should draw upon the members of the old
- diplomacy for additional help. On the whole, he seemed to be very
- proud of the achievements of the Foreign Office, whereas I am of
- opinion that this body has entirely failed, and is of no practical
- use any longer. Things must be in a pretty bad state if Herr
- Erzberger, of all people, is looked upon as the last hope of the
- country. I suggested to the gentlemen that it would do some good if
- the Chancellor were to request the more virulent of the Pan-Germans
- to see him, and to ask Hindenburg to explain to them the military
- situation without any camouflage. This suggestion was favourably
- received, and it is to be passed on to the Chancellor....
-
- " ... The Chancellor informed me that he was considering whether,
- if Roumania remained neutral, and if the operations against the
- Dardanelles terminated successfully for us, he ought to submit any
- official proposals for peace to our enemies. I expressed my
- admiration of the plan, but told the Chancellor of my objections to
- its practical execution. The Entente, I feared, would refuse to
- entertain the proposals, and the German people would regard it as a
- sign of weakness. The Chancellor asked me to refrain from
- pronouncing a definite opinion for the present, but to think it
- over until our next meeting."
-
-In a letter of July 31st, 1915, Ballin wrote as follows:
-
- "I should like to express my heartfelt gratitude to you for sending
- on to me the report which contains some of the finest observations
- that have come to my knowledge since the outbreak of the war.
-
- " ... The writer lays great stress on the belief prevalent in enemy
- and neutral countries alike that Germany is making a bid for
- universal supremacy and for supremacy on the high seas--a belief
- which has spurred on the resistance of the enemy to the utmost, and
- has caused a good deal of bad feeling amongst the neutrals. I
- repeatedly brought this fact to the knowledge of the Chancellor and
- I urgently suggested to him that in some way--e.g., by an Imperial
- proclamation on the anniversary of the outbreak of war, or by some
- other suitable means--we should announce to all and sundry that
- such hare-brained schemes are not entertained by any responsible
- person or body of persons in Germany. I sincerely trust that some
- such steps will be taken at an early opportunity, because otherwise
- I do not see when the war will be over. Though not a pessimist I do
- not believe in taking too rosy a view of things. I envy the British
- because they have the courage openly to discuss in their press and
- parliament the reverses as well as the successes they have had.
-
- " ... You see I am not taking too cheerful a view of matters. I
- have nothing but the most enthusiastic admiration for the
- achievements of the German people, both at the front and at home.
- Although not gifted politically this people could do wonders if led
- by great statesmen and by great politicians."
-
- " ... August 10th, 1915. This morning I spent an hour with the
- Chancellor, who had requested me to call on him.... We had a long
- discussion as to the advisability of publishing a statement to the
- effect that Germany would be ready at any moment to discuss an
- honourable peace. She had achieved great successes in the field,
- she was in possession of important mortgages, her armies were
- occupying large tracts of the enemy's country, and she was not
- carrying on a war of aggression but one of defence: therefore such
- a step could not be regarded as a sign of weakness. The
- Chancellor, nevertheless, was afraid that such a step might after
- all be interpreted in that sense. I suggested to him that it might
- be of some use if the Pope could be induced to address a peace
- message to the rulers of the various countries.
-
- "I also called the Chancellor's urgent attention to the need for
- dealing with the food problem during the ensuing winter, especially
- with relation to the price of meat."
-
- " ... August 12th, 1915. The United States Ambassador, Mr. Gerard,
- had expressed the desire to discuss with me the question as to the
- advisability of suggesting that President Wilson should mediate
- between the belligerents. I therefore called on him on Tuesday,
- August 10th, and advised him to refrain from any official action in
- that direction, but said that I thought he might ask the President
- to sound opinion in Great Britain as to the chances of such peace
- proposals."
-
-In the early part of September, 1915, Admiral v. Holtzendorff was
-appointed Chief of the Admiralty Staff. This appointment gave rise to a
-conflict with Grand Admiral v. Tirpitz, who threatened to resign
-because, _inter alia_, the Kaiser had issued instructions to the effect
-that the Chief of the Admiralty Staff should no longer be subject to the
-authority of the Secretary for the Navy, but that he could communicate
-with the Kaiser and with the Chancellor direct. Ballin thought a
-possible resignation of Admiral v. Tirpitz would be fraught with serious
-consequences at that moment, as it would produce a bad impression on
-public opinion and be inimical to the position of the Kaiser. These
-considerations caused Ballin to intervene in person with Admiral v.
-Tirpitz and with the Chief of the Naval Cabinet, with the result that
-the Grand Admiral withdrew his intended resignation.
-
-The following extracts are taken from Ballin's notes during the next few
-months:
-
- " ... October 20th, 1915. I am annoyed at the importunity with
- which some interested parties, such as the Central Association of
- German Manufacturers and the representatives of agriculture, are
- pushing forward their views on the peace terms. Moreover, my
- alleged readiness to conclude a 'bad peace' with Great Britain is
- being talked about so widely that even His Excellency Herr v.
- Zimmermann has drawn my attention to the ill effects of such
- calumnies. All this has prompted me to avail myself of the
- opportunity presented by the annual meeting of the Association of
- Hamburg Shipowners of making a speech in which I have explained my
- views as to the freedom of the seas.
-
- "Prince Bülow will be leaving for Lucerne to-day where he intends
- to stay for some time, and the Prussian _chargé d'affaires_, Herr
- v. Mutius--of whom it has been alleged that the Chancellor
- appointed him to his post on the death of his predecessor (the
- excellent Herr v. Bülow, Prussian Minister to Hamburg) for the
- reason that he might have a watchful eye on Prince Bülow and
- myself--has been promptly transferred to Warsaw. Evidently the
- Berlin authorities now think the danger has passed, since Prince
- Bülow has left."
-
- " ... November 23rd, 1915. Hammann[4] asked me why I did not call
- on the Chancellor, and I told him that I thought the Chancellor
- might feel annoyed with me for my interference in favour of
- Tirpitz, which, however, would not affect me in any way, because I
- was convinced that I had acted in the best interests of the Kaiser,
- and that it would have been unwise to remove Tirpitz from his post
- so long as the war lasted."
-
- " ... The Chancellor asked me to see him on Wednesday at 6.30 p.m.,
- and I spent nearly two hours with him. I urgently advised him to
- make a frank statement in the Reichstag as to our readiness for
- peace, and to do so in such a form that it could not possibly be
- looked upon as a sign of weakness."
-
- " ... On January 10th, 1916, I was commanded to dine with Their
- Majesties at the _Neues Palais_. The only other guests apart from
- myself were the Minister of the Royal Household, Count Eulenburg,
- and the Minister of Agriculture, Herr v. Schorlemer. None of the
- suite were present so that the company consisted of five persons
- only. The Kaiser was in high spirits and full of confidence. The
- after-dinner conversation extended to such a late hour that we did
- not catch the train by which we intended to return, and we were
- obliged to leave by the last train that night.
-
- "A remark of mine concerning the possibility of an extension of
- submarine warfare had, as the Chancellor had been informed, caused
- the Kaiser to assume that I completely shared the point of view of
- Admirals v. Holtzendorff and v. Tirpitz, who now recommend a
- submarine campaign against Great Britain on a large scale. I
- therefore, at the Chancellor's request, addressed the following
- letter to the Kaiser:
-
- "'A few days ago I had occasion to discuss with Grand Admiral v.
- Tirpitz and Admiral v. Holtzendorff the question of a resumption of
- the submarine campaign.
-
- "'I was then given confidential information as to the number of
- submarines at our disposal, and I am bound to say that even if due
- allowance is made for the activity of the mine-seeking auxiliaries
- I regard the number of large submarines as insufficient for the
- purposes of such a finally decisive measure.
-
- "'The first attempt at submarine warfare proved unsuccessful on
- account of the insufficiency of the means employed to carry it
- through; and it is my humble opinion that a second attempt should
- only be undertaken if its success were beyond the possibility of a
- doubt. If this cannot be guaranteed the consequences of such a
- measure appear to me to be out of all proportion to the risks
- attached to it.
-
- "'I therefore beg to respectfully suggest to Your Majesty that the
- work of the mine-laying auxiliaries should be carried on as
- hitherto, and should even be extended. I also consider that the
- submarines should be made use of to the fullest extent of their
- capacity, with the proviso, however, that their employment against
- passenger steamers should be subject to the restrictions recently
- laid down by Your Majesty.
-
- "'When the number of the big submarines shall be sufficient
- effectively to cut off the British food supply, I think the time
- will have arrived for us to employ this weapon against Great
- Britain without paying regard to the so-called neutrals.
-
- "'At present about two hundred ocean steamers or more enter
- British ports every day, and an equal number leave for foreign
- ports. If we sink a daily average of 30 or 40 we can, indeed,
- greatly inconvenience England, but we shall assuredly not be able
- to compel her to sue for peace.
-
- "'I humbly apologize to Your Majesty for thus stating my views on
- this matter; but I am of opinion that the extreme importance of the
- proposed steps will be a sufficient excuse for me.'"
-
-In the early part of 1916 Ballin went on a second mission to Vienna, and
-afterwards he prepared a detailed report for the Chancellor dealing with
-the state of public feeling as he found it. This document presents a
-faithful picture of the precarious conditions in that capital which the
-German Government had constantly to reckon with, and may therefore be of
-interest even now. The following passages are extracts from it:
-
- "If we desire to keep the Austrian fighting spirit unimpaired we
- must avoid at all hazards suggesting the possibility of an
- understanding with Italy. The Italian war is popular down to the
- lowest classes of the people, and the successful stand against
- Italy is a subject of pride and hope to all Austrians.
-
- "Hence the circumstance that Prince Bülow has temporarily taken up
- his abode at Lucerne has roused a considerable amount of suspicion.
- Even the officials in the various ministerial departments fear that
- the Prince might intend to make unofficial advances to Italy when
- in Lucerne, and that these steps might be followed in Berlin by a
- movement in favour of a separate peace with Italy by which Austria
- would have to cede the Trentino. People were obviously pleased and
- relieved when I could explain to them that the Prince was greatly
- embarrassed on account of having lost his Villa Malta, and that the
- choice of a suitable residence during the winter had been very
- difficult. They were particularly gratified when I told them--what
- I had heard from the Prince's own lips--that he had had no official
- mission, and that he had not been engaged upon any negotiations.
-
- "People are especially proud of the Isonzo battles, but they do not
- shut their eyes to the uncertain prospects of a successful Austrian
- offensive. They really consider that Austria has gained her war
- aims, and the old Emperor described the military situation to Frau
- Kathi Schratt by saying that the war was in many respects like a
- game of tarock, in which the winner was not allowed to cease
- playing because the losers insisted upon him going on with the game
- so that they might have their revenge. Matters at first had been to
- the advantage of our enemies: the Russians had overrun Galicia, the
- Serbians had defeated the Austrians at Belgrade, and the French had
- looked upon the retreat from the Marne as a great success. Now,
- however, the war was all in favour of Germany and Austria, and
- therefore our opponents did not want to call a truce just yet.
-
- "If this comparison which the venerable old gentleman has borrowed
- from his favourite game of cards is correct, the war will not be
- over until one side has nothing further to stake, and the decision
- will be brought about by that side whose human and financial
- resources shall last longest.
-
- "Banking circles, of course, view the financial situation with the
- utmost gravity, but the general public--in spite of the high prices
- ruling here, and in spite of the great want of food which is much
- more noticeable than with us--regard matters a great deal more
- serenely. This is simply due to the greater optimism so
- characteristic of the Austrians, whose motto is: 'Life is so short,
- and death so very, very long.' They prefer to assign to future
- generations the worries which would spoil their sublunary
- existence.
-
- "The present Cabinet is looked upon as weak and mediocre. The old
- Emperor clings to Count Stürgkh because of the extensive use to
- which the latter puts the celebrated paragraph 14 of the
- Constitution, by which Parliament is eliminated altogether, and
- which provides the Government with every conceivable liberty of
- action. The all-powerful Tisza gives his support to Count Stürgkh
- just because of his weakness. Hence the attempt to replace the
- latter by Prince Hohenlohe, the present Minister of the Interior,
- is beset with much difficulty. The Emperor wants to avoid a break
- with Tisza at all costs. This state of things makes people feel
- very worried. The strain in the relations between Austria and
- Hungary has greatly increased since my last visit, whereas the
- friendly feelings for Germany are now more pronounced than ever.
-
- "Our Kaiser everywhere enjoys an unexampled veneration. Within the
- next few days he will be made the subject of great celebrations in
- his honour. Although the tickets of admission are sold at enormous
- prices, even General v. Georgi, the Chief of the National Defence
- Organization--whom I met last night--did not succeed in obtaining a
- box, notwithstanding his high connexions. This morning the
- well-known member of the Hofburg Theatre, Herr Georg Reimers, read
- to me two poems dedicated to the Kaiser which he is going to recite
- that night, and I feel bound to say that it can hardly be an
- unmixed pleasure to the members of the court to witness this act of
- enthusiastic homage paid to our ruler.
-
- "The Roumanian question, particularly in its bearing on the food
- supply, is regarded by people who are able to judge with great
- anxiety. It is believed that the only thing to do is to send to
- Bucharest experienced men connected with the supply and the
- distribution of food who must be properly authorized to purchase as
- much grain as possible for ourselves and for our allies.
-
- "The big Austro-German _Zollverein_--or by whatever other name it
- is intended to describe the proposed customs union--is looked upon
- with very mixed feelings. Last night Baron Skoda (the Austrian
- Krupp) explained to me after a dinner given at his house, with the
- lively consent of members of the court and of the big
- manufacturers, that the Austrian interests might indeed profit from
- such a union with the Balkan States, but that it would be better
- that Germany should remain an outsider for a period of fifteen
- years. This is evidently a case of _timeo Danaos, et dona
- ferentes_, and people feel that Austria, owing to her economic
- exhaustion, would be easily absorbed by Germany after the
- conclusion of the war. The Hungarians, naturally, view matters from
- a different angle, not only because the Hungarian farmers would
- like to sell their grain to Germany free of any duty, and because
- industry counts for very little in their country, but also because
- they dislike the Austrians.
-
- " ... I also dined with Count Tisza. He is a purely Magyar
- politician who regards the international situation from his
- Hungarian point of view, and in conformity with his Magyar
- inclinations. He is evidently a strong if obstinate character, and
- he does not impress me as a man who will give up his post without a
- protest. He, too, thinks the real war aims of Austria-Hungary have
- been accomplished. Serbia is crushed, Galicia liberated, and
- Russian supremacy in the Balkans--formerly viewed with so much
- apprehension--is a thing of the past. All that is wanting now is to
- bring the Italian campaign to a successful conclusion and the war
- may be regarded as over as far as Austro-Hungarian interests are
- involved.
-
- "Both Tisza and the Austrian society showed strong symptoms of an
- Anglophile leaning. Frau Schratt, who in such matters simply
- re-echoes the views of the old Emperor, seemed very pro-English,
- and had something to say about 'German atrocities.'
-
- "I mention these facts because I cannot help thinking that,
- notwithstanding the war, some friendly threads must have been spun
- across from England to Austria."
-
-The subject of an unrestricted submarine war, already touched upon by
-Ballin in his above-mentioned letter to the Kaiser written in January,
-1916, was discussed with much animation in the course of the year, and a
-powerful propaganda in its favour was started by certain quarters.
-Ballin's attitude towards this question, and particularly towards its
-bearing on the possible entry of the United States into the war, is
-described with great clearness in a letter addressed to a friend of his
-attached to the Army Headquarters. In this message he wrote:
-
- " ... You ask me to tell you something about the political and
- military situation as I see it, and I shall gladly comply with your
- wish.
-
- "The American danger seems to be averted for the moment at least. A
- severance of diplomatic relations with the United States would
- have been nothing short of fatal to Germany at the present stage.
- Just because the war may be looked upon as won in a military sense,
- we were obliged to avoid such a catastrophe at all costs. As far as
- military exertions are concerned, it is quite correct to say that
- Germany has won the war, because in order to turn the present
- position into a military defeat our enemies, in the first instance,
- would have to gain military victories in Russia, France, and
- Belgium. These would have to be followed up by our retreat from the
- occupied countries and by their invasion of ours, and they would
- have to defeat us at home. Every sensible critic must see that
- neither their human material nor their organizing powers are
- sufficient for such achievements. The fact is that we have reached
- the final stage of a progressive war of exhaustion, which nothing
- but the intervention of the United States could have prolonged.
-
- "The accession of Italy to the ranks of our opponents has shown
- what it means if an additional Power enters the war against us.
- From a military point of view the entry of Italy did not materially
- aggravate our position; but the whole aspect of the war, as viewed
- by our enemies, underwent a complete change, and Grey, who shortly
- before had announced that 'there is nothing between us and Germany
- except Belgium,' stated a few weeks subsequent to the Italian
- _volte-face_ that he could not find a suitable basis for peace
- negotiations anywhere.
-
- "The entry of the United States would have been of immeasurably
- greater effect on the imagination and the obstinacy of our enemies.
-
- "The very intelligent gentlemen who even now preach the
- unrestricted submarine war, especially the leading members of the
- Conservative and National Liberal parties, are misinformed about
- what the submarines can do. They not only regard it as possible,
- but even as practically certain, that the starvation of Great
- Britain could be achieved if the unrestricted submarine war were
- introduced. I need not tell Your Excellency that such an assumption
- fails to estimate things at their true value. Great Britain will
- always be able to maintain her connexion with the French Channel
- ports. Quite apart from that, she will always succeed in importing
- the 14,000 tons of cereals which she needs every day to feed her
- population even if the number of our submarines is trebled, because
- it must not be forgotten that the submarines cannot operate during
- the night.
-
- "Hence the whole problem is now, as ever, governed by the axiom to
- which I have over and over again drawn the attention of the heads
- of the Berlin economic associations, viz. that we can no more force
- the British into subjection through our submarines than they can
- hope to wear us out by their starvation blockade. Both the
- submarine war and the blockade are extremely disastrous measures,
- inflicting heavy losses on either side; but neither of them can
- determine the fate of the war nor bring about a fundamental
- improvement in the position of either of the belligerent groups of
- Powers. That, apart from all other considerations, the unrestricted
- submarine war would have exposed us to the open hostility of the
- neutral countries, and might even have caused them to join the
- ranks of our enemies, is an additional contingency which the
- submarine enthusiasts have found it most convenient to dismiss by a
- wave of the hand.
-
- "If after the war Germany remains isolated from the rest of the
- world, she cannot feed her population, and the doctrine of Central
- European brotherhood promulgated by some of our amiable poets has
- given rise to a movement which is apt to be of the greatest
- detriment to the interests of our country when the war is over.
-
- "If we had wished to invest large parts of our German national
- wealth in countries like Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, and Turkey,
- nothing could have prevented us from realizing such a plan at any
- time previous to the war, provided we had thought it economically
- sound.
-
- "Such a return to a continental policy, I maintain, would be a
- disaster to Germany. Our needs and our aspirations have increased
- to such an extent that we can no longer hope to satisfy them by
- economic isolation or within the framework of a Central European
- economic league of states.
-
- "It is not because I am at the head of the biggest German shipping
- concern that I tell you these things, but I do so with the
- disinterestedness of a man who hopes to be allowed to retire into
- private life when this terrible war is over. No one can perform
- his life's work more than once, and no one can make a fresh start
- at the age of sixty.
-
- "The war has considerably strengthened the moral fibre of the
- Chancellor; he has learnt to take upon his shoulders
- responsibilities which, I think, he would formerly have shirked. It
- is much to be regretted that the Conservative party cannot see eye
- to eye with him in so many questions. He is blamed for the fact
- that the Kaiser is so difficult of access, and that he does not
- every now and then receive the leaders of our political and
- economic life, as he should do considering the fateful time through
- which the Empire is passing.
-
- "If the Chancellor is to succeed in carrying through the huge tasks
- still before him, it is, in my opinion, imperative that he should
- not lose touch with Conservative circles, and I think there is no
- reason why the Kaiser should not ask men like Herr v. Wangenheim,
- Count Schwerin-Löwitz, etc., to visit him from time to time at
- headquarters, and to acquaint him with their wishes and anxieties.
-
- "I cannot help telling you that the whole nation views with
- profound regret the Kaiser's isolation. Since the outbreak of the
- war I have only once had an interview with His Excellency v.
- Falkenhayn, and the main purpose of my asking for it was to request
- him to bring about a change in this state of things by using his
- influence with the Kaiser. His Excellency frankly told me that he
- had some objections to doing this, but he promised me nevertheless
- that he would exercise his influence in this direction. I am only
- afraid that, because of the excessive burden of work he has to get
- through, the matter has slipped his memory...."
-
-Ballin was not the only one who, as early as 1916, regarded with such
-alarm the devastating effects of a possible entry of the United States
-into the war; other men of political training thought so too, although
-their number was not large. The following passages, taken from two
-letters which Ballin received from a member of the German diplomatic
-service, show that the feeling was there:
-
- "February 16th, 1916. My chief apprehensions are purely political.
- Although it seems that for the moment our differences with the
- United States will be smoothed over, there can be no doubt but that
- at times the tension has been so great that a wrong move at the
- critical moment would have caused America to take up arms against
- us. Contrary to what most people seem to think, I regard this
- danger as having by no means passed; in fact I look upon it as
- always lurking in the background. Those who, like myself, have seen
- that the secret ideal of British policy is an alliance and
- permanent co-operation with America, will agree with me that such
- an Anglo-American understanding for the period of this war would be
- of lasting detriment to our whole future. You know England, and you
- know that the course of events has turned the Entente automatically
- into an alliance, although the British, especially those who look
- beyond the actual present, have always felt a great deal of
- aversion towards such a development. The individual Frenchman,
- indeed, is mostly looked upon as a somewhat grotesque and slightly
- ludicrous character, but all the same there exists some sympathy
- with the French as a nation, however artificially this may have
- been brought about; but towards Russia the average Englishman never
- felt anything but an icy aloofness and a great deal of antipathy.
- Hence, the so-called allies of the British have never been the
- cause of unalloyed joy to them.
-
- "On the other hand, to establish permanent relations with that part
- of the Anglo-Saxon race inhabiting the huge continent across the
- Atlantic has at all times been the aim pursued by every really
- far-sighted British statesman. By means of such an alliance, it is
- hoped to consolidate and to strengthen for many generations the
- foundations on which the venerable but also slightly dilapidated
- structure of the United Kingdom rests. From a purely maritime point
- of view, such an alliance would be of overwhelming strength. In my
- opinion it would be perfectly hopeless for our country, constantly
- menaced as it is by serious Continental complications, to gain the
- trident of Neptune in opposition to these two Powers. I believe an
- Anglo-American league, whose object it would be to prevent us from
- becoming a commercial, naval, and Continental Power, would
- restrict us once more to a purely Continental policy, a policy
- which we have so successfully discarded since the accession of our
- present Kaiser.
-
- "To frustrate such an alliance must be our principal task. To call
- it into being or even to facilitate its conclusion would be the
- greatest crime against Germany's future which anyone could commit.
-
- "Let us by all means sink as much enemy tonnage as possible, let us
- lay mines, and let us proceed with our submarine warfare as
- hitherto, or even with more energy, but let the people who are at
- the head of the whole movement be aware of the immense
- responsibility that rests on their shoulders. If our leading men
- speak of a war with America just as cheerfully as though San Marino
- or Montenegro were involved, I cannot help viewing such an attitude
- with the utmost apprehension. The British will use all their
- astuteness and all their energy to exploit any mistakes committed
- by Germany. If they succeed in this, and if, in consequence, our
- relations with the United States become very strained again or
- drift towards a rupture, I fear that we shall not be able to bring
- this war to a successful close, or derive from it any security for
- our future development.
-
- "Berlin, February 26th, 1916. During the two days I have now been
- here it has greatly depressed me to see a number of fanatics who
- cannot gauge the consequences of their doings attempting to drive
- this splendid German people towards a new abyss. Alas! delusions
- and folly are rampant everywhere. If I were you, I should now
- disregard every other consideration, and explain to the Kaiser as a
- friend that everything is being gambled away: the existence of his
- Empire, his crown, and possibly the fate of the dynasty. It is like
- living in a madhouse; everyone talks about war with Holland,
- America, Denmark and Roumania as though a mere picnic were
- concerned."
-
-During the war Ballin tried over and over again to make the responsible
-authorities see the position in the same light as his own observations,
-and his repeated discussions with unprejudiced and clear-headed men had
-led him to see it himself. The letter reproduced below contains a
-description of the general situation at the time of writing (July,
-1916). It was addressed to a friend of his in the diplomatic service who
-was looking after German interests in one of the countries allied with
-Germany, and who had asked him for some information concerning the
-situation at home:
-
- "I am sorry that I can send you no good news at all. The conduct of
- the war and its probable outcome are more of a mystery now than
- ever, and with all that I cannot help feeling that our responsible
- quarters do not even now realize the profound gravity of the
- situation. The political and the military leaders are frequently at
- variance. There is a lack of proper co-operation between Berlin and
- Vienna. We imagine ourselves to be the rider, but we are only the
- horse. The road between Berlin and Vienna is studded with
- compromises of doubtful value, and incapable archdukes are given
- the most important positions.
-
- "The military situation was favourable until the Austrians thought
- their day of reckoning with Italy had come, and when our own
- Supreme Command set out to cover themselves with laurels in France.
-
- "Both these undertakings turned out to be political and military
- failures. For hundreds of reasons an early peace is imperative to
- us. As matters stand at present only Great Britain and Russia can
- conclude peace, because France and Italy must be regarded as mere
- British vassals.
-
- "Since the Cabinets of London and Petrograd remain absolutely deaf
- to our publicly expressed overtures for peace, we have no choice
- but to try to utterly defeat the one or the other of these, our
- principal enemies, either Russia or Great Britain.
-
- "We could have finished with Great Britain if we had had at least
- 300 first-class submarines, and in that case we might have regarded
- a war against America with complacency.
-
- "However, even if we possessed, as some optimists believe, as many
- as 150 first-class submarines, we could not strike a mortal blow at
- Great Britain and defy the United States as well. Therefore, we
- have only one choice left: we must force Russia, our second chief
- enemy, to her knees.
-
- "Russia has been badly hit through the loss of the industrial
- regions of Poland. If we had exerted all our strength in that
- direction, and if we had taken Kiev, the economic key to Russia,
- the Tsar would have had no alternative but to conclude a separate
- peace, and this would have settled the Roumanian question at the
- same time.
-
- "With less certainty, but also, perhaps, with less exertion, it
- might have proved possible to make peace _via_ Petrograd. But what
- have we done instead? We have squandered our forces. The Eastern
- theatre of war was denuded of troops, because at first Falkenhayn
- felt sure he could take Verdun in a fortnight, then by Easter, and
- finally by Whitsuntide. All our forces have been hurled at Verdun;
- rivers of blood have been spilt, and now, in July, we are still
- outside it. And what does it profit us if we do get it? We shall
- only find other and more formidable lines behind it.
-
- "In the meantime our good Austrians have transferred all their
- reliable officers and men to the Tyrol, and have left nothing but
- the rubbish and their inefficient generals to guard the points of
- danger. And what are the results? A graceful retirement for
- Salandra and the formation of an anti-German coalition government
- in Italy on the one hand, and a manifestation of Austrian
- superiority on the other, but a failure, nevertheless, because the
- Austrians were not strong enough numerically to get down into the
- plain. And even if they had compelled the evacuation of Venetia
- nothing would have been gained. The fate of Italy, as it happens,
- does not depend on Austria, but on Great Britain, who will rather
- watch her starve and perish for want of coal than permit her to sue
- for peace.
-
- "Although all this is perfectly plain to everyone, our Supreme
- Command seems to be undecided as to whether an offensive with all
- the means at our disposal should be started on the Western Front
- simultaneously with one against Russia, or whether it should be
- directed against Russia only. As far back as last year I exerted
- all my influence--small though it has become--in favour of an
- energetic and whole-hearted offensive against Russia.
-
- "Well-informed and far-seeing men have justly pointed out that, if
- fortune so wills it, the Kaiser, arm in arm with Hindenburg and
- Ludendorff, could risk a 'bad peace' without danger to himself and
- his dynasty, but it appears beyond doubt that the influence of
- Falkenhayn is all-powerful.
-
- " ... If we were to arrive at an understanding with Russia to-day,
- we should be able to go on with the war against Great Britain for a
- long time to come, and, by means of unimpeded submarine activity,
- to carry it to a successful issue. In that case we could also
- estimate the danger threatening us from America at as low a figure
- as many who are unacquainted with the position are putting it now.
-
- "Thus it is my view that it is necessary to abandon definitely the
- belief that the war can be brought to a successful issue on the
- Western Front, and without first defeating Russia. It is greatly to
- be deplored that many observers assert that the Western Powers will
- make peace when they have found out that the big offensive now in
- progress remains without any visible success. Only people who do
- not know Great Britain can put forward such a proposition, but how
- many people are there at the Wilhelmstrasse who do know Great
- Britain? Very few indeed, if any....
-
- " ... You said you would rejoice to hear from me, and I can only
- regret with all my heart that I have not been able to report
- anything to you in which it would really be possible to rejoice."
-
-A still more serious note is struck in the following letter written in
-September, 1916:
-
- "Very many thanks for your welcome letter of yesterday's date, with
- the contents of which I agree in every detail.
-
- "I quite share your belief that Hindenburg and Ludendorff must each
- feel like a great physician who is only called in when it is too
- late. Two declarations of war within 24 hours were necessary to
- bring about this change which the German people had been looking
- forward to for months and months. The Chancellor is justly
- reproached for not having had the courage to insist upon the
- appointment of these two men and on the resignation of Falkenhayn
- long ago. It is contended that he should have tendered his own
- resignation if his recommendations were refused, and his neglect to
- do so makes him principally responsible for the fate that is in
- store for us. For a long time back I have kept emphasizing the need
- for transferring our main activities to the Eastern theatre of war,
- and for definitely settling these personal questions.
-
- "The Chancellor clings to his post because he believes that there
- is no one better qualified than himself to be at the head of
- affairs. Such an attitude reminds me of the old gentleman who
- neither wanted to die nor to retire from his post as president of
- the Berlin Chamber of Commerce, and who bitterly complained to
- those who came to congratulate him on his ninetieth birthday that
- he was compelled to stick to his office, in spite of his advanced
- years, because he could not see a better man to succeed him.
-
- "It is very sad that we have arrived at such an _impasse_, and I am
- convinced that the present internal political situation is
- untenable. No German Chancellor can possibly carry the business of
- the country to a successful issue if, in the midst of a terrible
- war, he is obliged to fight against an opposition consisting of the
- Conservatives, the representatives of the Heavy Industries, and the
- majority of the National Liberals.
-
- "As far as I can make out, the Chinese wall surrounding the Kaiser
- has not disappeared with the exit of Falkenhayn from the scene. No
- one is granted access to him who knows something about the events
- that led up to this war, and who, in the interests of his dynasty
- as well as his own, would tell him the unvarnished truth. We are,
- after all, a constitutional country. It would doubtless be best to
- transfer General Headquarters to Berlin, but, of course, people are
- not wanting who object to such a proceeding, asserting that it
- would enable outside influences to acquire a hold on the conduct of
- affairs.
-
- "How badly people are informed with regard to the actual situation
- was brought home to me when I was in Berlin a short while ago, and
- when X. contended with great emphasis that we should have to attach
- more value to huge indemnities than to annexations. If it is
- possible that the men round the Kaiser count on heavy indemnities
- even now, it shows how sadly they misjudge the real state of
- affairs.
-
- "My feeling tells me that the present Cabinets, containing as they
- do men who are compromised by their actions since the outbreak of
- war, cannot give us peace. How can anyone imagine that men like
- Bethmann, Asquith and Grey, who have hurled such incredible insults
- at each other, can ever sit together at the same table?
-
- "The question as to who is to succeed them, of course, abounds with
- difficulties.
-
- "I recently met some Austrian gentlemen in Berlin. They are
- completely apathetic; they have lost all interest in the future,
- and they themselves suggest that Germany should no longer permit
- Austria to have a voice in the conduct of affairs. Her food supply
- will only last until March 1st. After that date she will depend on
- Hungary and ourselves for her food. She fears that she is not
- likely to get much, if anything, from Hungary; on the other hand,
- she feels sure that we are compelled for our own sake to save her
- from famine.
-
- "Constantinople, too, has only supplies for a few more weeks.
-
- "With us at home the paraffin question is becoming very serious. In
- country districts it may be possible to tell people to go to bed at
- curfew time, but the working population of our large cities will
- never consent to dispense with artificial light. Serious riots have
- already taken place in connexion with the fat shortage.
-
- "I am afraid that Great Britain is trying to bring about such a
- change in the situation as will enable her shortly to tell the
- small neutral countries that no one in Europe will be permitted any
- longer to remain neutral, and that they must make up their minds to
- enter one or the other of the two big syndicates. You see nothing I
- can write to you has even a semblance of comfort in it. I regard
- the future with the utmost apprehension."
-
-In contrast to such views as were expressed in the foregoing letters,
-the men who were at the head of affairs at that time maintained that
-nothing but the application of rigorous force, or, in other words, the
-unrestricted use of the submarine weapon against Great Britain, would
-lead to a successful termination of the world war. The propaganda in
-favour of that measure is still in everybody's memory. Whatever may be
-said in defence of the authors of this propaganda, there is one reproach
-from which they cannot escape, viz. that they left no stone unturned to
-prevent their opponents from stating their views, and this, on account
-of the strict censorship to which the expression of every independent
-opinion was subject, was not a difficult matter. Their one-sided policy
-went so far that, when a pamphlet on the question of submarine warfare
-was written by order of the Admiralty Staff and circulated among a
-number of persons, including leading shipping men, Ballin was purposely
-excluded, because it was taken for granted that he would not express
-himself in favour of the contents. It is not likely, however, that the
-methods of reasoning put forward in this document--which was much more
-like an academic dissertation than an unprejudiced criticism of a
-political and military measure affecting the whole national existence of
-Germany--would have induced Ballin to change his views on the submarine
-war. Once only, and then merely for a brief period, was he in doubt as
-to whether his views on that question were right, but he soon returned
-to his first opinion when he found that he had been misinformed
-regarding the number and the effectiveness of submarines available.
-
-The inauguration of unrestricted submarine warfare in January, 1917, not
-only put a sudden end to the peace movement in which Ballin, as has been
-explained on a preceding page, played an important part, but also to the
-attempt of President Wilson to bring the two sides together. The details
-of the President's endeavours have meanwhile become public property
-through the revelations of Count Bernstorff, the German ambassador in
-Washington. In both instances a few weeks would have sufficed to
-ascertain whether the proposed action was likely to bring about the
-desired end, and the former attempt had even led to the impending
-establishment of mutual contact between the belligerents. The inability
-of the German political leaders to avail themselves of this opportunity,
-or at least their failure to do so, has doubtless been the greatest
-misfortune from which Germany had to suffer during the whole war.
-
-Notwithstanding the successful exploits of the submarines, Ballin's
-apprehensions never left him, and they were not allayed by the
-development of the position at home. The letter published below, which
-he wrote to the Chief of the Kaiser's Civil Cabinet, believing that this
-gentleman would be most likely to assist him in laying his views before
-the Kaiser, admirably sums up his feelings, and testifies both to his
-real patriotism and to his presentiment of the fate that was to overtake
-his country:
-
- "YOUR EXCELLENCY,
-
-"_April 4th, 1917_.
-
- The internal conditions of our country fill me with grave alarm,
- and I therefore venture to approach Your Excellency privately with
- this expression of my apprehensions.
-
- "I do not doubt for a moment that our competent authorities intend
- to extract the utmost advantage to ourselves from the situation
- which is developing in Russia. This Russian revolution may enable
- us to bring the war to a close, and to obtain peace terms which,
- relatively speaking, are not unfavourable.
-
- "What Germany has achieved in this war is beyond all praise. A
- glance at the map shows how small she is compared with her
- opponents in the field; and yet she is bravely struggling against a
- world in arms in which even the few countries that have remained
- neutral are not our friends. It is, indeed, one grand epic. But
- unfortunately the position at home becomes more untenable every
- day.
-
- "If we find ourselves compelled to reduce the bread ration still
- more, you will, I am sure, agree with me that the bulk of the
- people will suffer enormously through being underfed. In Austria,
- conditions are said to be worse still, and I am afraid that we
- shall even have to part with some of our stores to feed her
- population.
-
- "At first sight the Chancellor's speech in the Prussian House of
- Deputies appeared to be somewhat too comprehensive in its range of
- vision; but a few days later, when the news of the Russian
- revolution arrived, it almost seemed that his words had been
- prompted by Divine inspiration. After this Russian news had become
- known, it would have been impossible for him to make this speech
- without giving rise to the suspicion that these events had cast
- their shadow in advance on the Prussian Parliament. Unfortunately,
- however, this favourable development was not followed up by the
- right steps. On the contrary, the Chancellor, after his breezy
- advance in the House of Deputies, has now retired from the position
- he then took up, thus creating the impression that our policy is
- constantly shaped by all sorts of mutually contradictory views and
- currents. Up to now, although the people have to suffer greatly
- through the shortage of food and fuel, their patriotism has put up
- with it because of their faith in the promised electoral reforms.
- It would have been so simple to reiterate this promise, and at the
- same time to point out that so many other things claimed precedence
- during the war, and that so much was at stake, that it would hardly
- be advisable to introduce this great reform at present, seeing that
- there was no time to give proper attention to the careful working
- out of all the details.
-
- "If now, however, such bills as those dealing with the entailed
- property legislation and with the repeal of the Polish laws are to
- be discussed, such a postponement is no longer justifiable.
-
- "It almost seems as if the Government is unable to read the signs
- of the times. The fate of the Prussian suffrage reform bids fair to
- resemble that of the sibylline books, of which it was said that
- the longer one hesitated to buy them the more expensive they
- became. To-day the people would still be content to agree to plural
- voting, but when the war is over, and when the Socialist leaders
- are demobilizing their men, inducing tens of thousands of them,
- decorated with the Iron Cross, to air their grievances, it will be
- too late to stop the ball from rolling. It is true that people say
- revolutions are impossible in the era of the machine-gun. I have no
- faith in this theory, especially since the events that have
- happened in Petrograd have become known to us. That, in a country
- like Russia, the reigning family could disappear from the scene
- without any opposition, and without a single Grand Duke or a single
- soldier attempting to prevent it, is certainly food for much
- reflection.
-
- "I hope Your Excellency will pardon me for thus frankly expressing
- my anxieties, but I considered it my duty to let Your Excellency
- know my feelings."
-
-In May, 1917, Ballin accepted an invitation received from the Supreme
-Army Command and paid a visit to General Headquarters, where he found a
-great deal of discontent prevailing with the policy of the Chancellor.
-He also met the Kaiser, and reports on his visit as follows:
-
- "After sharing the Kaiser's repast--which was plain and on a war
- diet--I had several hours' private conversation with His Majesty. I
- found him full of optimism, far more so than I thought was
- justified. Both he and Ludendorff seem to put too much faith in the
- success of the submarines; but they fail to see that this weapon is
- procuring for us the enmity of the whole world, and that the
- promise held out by its advocates, viz., that Great Britain will be
- brought to her knees within two months, is, to put it mildly,
- extremely doubtful of realization, unless we can sink the ships
- which carry ammunition and pit-props to England."
-
-In a letter addressed to a gentleman in the Kaiser's entourage he gave a
-further detailed account of his views on the optimism prevailing in high
-places:
-
- "I cannot help thinking of the enthusiastic and at the same time
- highly optimistic letter which you had the great kindness to show
- me last night. My opinion is that the gentlemen who form the
- entourage of His Majesty ought not to view matters as that
- interesting epistle suggests that they do.
-
- "You are a believer in the statistics of Mr. X. I took the liberty
- of telling you last night that statistics are a mathematical form
- of telling a lie, and that, to use the expression of a clever
- Frenchman, a statistical table is like a loose woman who is at the
- service of anyone who wants her. 'There are different ways of
- arranging figures,' as they say in England. I do not know Mr. X,
- neither do I know his statistics, but what I have been told about
- them seemed foolish to me. If we carry on the war, and particularly
- the unrestricted submarine war, on the basis of statistics such as
- he and other jugglers with figures have compiled, we are sure to
- fail in the ends we are aiming at.
-
- "As concerns the unrestricted submarine war itself, I still
- maintain the view I have always held, viz., that we shall never
- succeed in starving out Great Britain to such an extent as to force
- her Government to sue for a peace of our dictation.
-
- "I have just had a visit from a Danish friend whom His Majesty also
- knows quite well, and who, together with a committee of delegates
- sent by the Danish Government, will be leaving for England
- to-night. The two members of this committee who represent the
- Ministry of Agriculture have been instructed, _inter alia_, to
- complain that Great Britain now imports much less bacon, butter,
- and other articles from Denmark than she had undertaken to do, and
- that the prices she pays for these imports are much below those
- originally stipulated.
-
- "Apart from the cargo carried by two small steamers that have been
- torpedoed, Denmark has been able, notwithstanding our submarines,
- to supply Great Britain with all the food required of her. The
- vessels remain in territorial waters until a wireless message
- informs them of the spot where they will meet the British convoy
- which is to take them safely to England. They have to pass through
- only a small danger zone which, as I have said, has hitherto proved
- fatal to no more than two vessels.
-
- "This fact, to my mind, points to the limits of the success
- obtainable by our submarines. I have constantly explained,
- especially to the Chief of the Admiralty Staff, that I can only
- regard the submarine as a successful weapon if it enables us to cut
- off the British supplies of ore from Spain and Sweden, and also
- those of pit-props, because without the possession of these two
- necessities, Great Britain is no longer able to continue the war. I
- have been assured that our submarines would achieve this task, even
- if torpedo boats were employed as convoys; but the experiences
- gained so far do not bear out these predictions. We succeed,
- indeed, in sinking a few vessels out of many; but suppose there are
- ten ships in a convoy, it still means that nine of them, with their
- supplies of ore and pit-props, safely reach their destination.
-
- "Let me repeat, the starvation of Great Britain is impossible;
- because, in addition to her own harvests, she only needs from
- twelve to fifteen thousand tons of cereals every day, and these she
- can, if necessary, always obtain at night-time through her Channel
- service, _via_ Spain and France. Even this necessity will hardly
- arise, because two medium-sized steamers are sufficient to carry
- the fifteen thousand tons, and things would have to be very bad,
- indeed, if these did not succeed in reaching a British port. And if
- our statistical tricksters juggle with crop failures, please do not
- forget that new harvests are soon to be expected, and that it will
- not do always to count on crop failures.
-
- "You will be doing a good work if you can persuade people at
- headquarters to abandon their belief that Great Britain can be
- starved to submission. Unfortunately their other belief, viz., that
- we can cut off her supplies of ore and pit-props, will also have to
- be abandoned.
-
- "Certainly, the achievements of our submarines have been amazing.
- At their present rate they will enormously diminish the British
- tonnage figures, and raise the hatred of everything German to
- boiling point; but they will not, unfortunately, lead to such an
- end of the war as our Pan-Germans desire. It is a thousand pities!
-
- "When the submarine problem began to assume practical shape, I
- pointed out to the Chief of the Admiralty Staff that, to be
- successful, the submarine war must be brief; that its principal
- object was not to sink a large number of ships, but to produce such
- a feeling of alarm in neutral countries as to prevent them from
- risking their ships (1) because of the great value of tonnage
- immediately after the war, (2) because of the impossibility of
- finding crews, and (3) because of the insurance difficulty. These
- conditions of success were, indeed, realized during the first four
- weeks; but since that time people, as I had predicted, have got
- used to the danger. The crews are coming forth again, the insurance
- companies issue their policies again, and the ships are put to sea
- again.
-
- "If the Admiralty Staff, who is doubtless in possession of the
- figures, would submit to you a list of the number of vessels laid
- up in Dutch and Scandinavian ports on March 1st, owing to the
- submarine danger, and another one showing the position as it is
- to-day, you would discover that, at a low estimate, at least 30 per
- cent, of the cargo vessels are running again, and that, after
- another month or so, the number of those still idle will have
- dwindled down to 20 per cent, or less.
-
- "These are my views on the situation. If we have no other means of
- finishing the war but the submarine menace, it will go on for
- years. I should like to protest in anticipation against any
- suggestion to the effect that I am trying to minimize the
- achievements of the submarines. On the contrary, I have nothing but
- the highest admiration for them, and I really find it quite
- impossible to praise in ordinary prose all that our country has
- done during this war; the whole achievement is one grand epic.
-
- "Within the next few months the problem will have to be solved how
- to put an end to this devastating catastrophe which is ruining the
- progress of the world. There is no need for me to tell you that the
- position of Germany has grown considerably worse through the active
- intervention of the United States. The fact that this enormously
- wealthy country with its one hundred million inhabitants has turned
- against us is fraught with the most dangerous consequences. Now it
- will no longer be possible for us to continue the war for several
- more years, and then to enforce a peace on lines such as are laid
- down by a noisy section of our people, unless we succeed in
- exploiting the extremely fortunate change in the Russian situation
- in such a way that the vast resources of that country will be at
- our disposal.
-
- "This letter has become longer than it ought to be, but the gravity
- of the subject with which it deals must be my excuse for going into
- so many details. Perhaps I may avail myself of some future occasion
- to acquaint you with my hopes and fears on other political matters;
- because, as I have already explained, the present state of affairs
- makes it urgently desirable that the gentlemen whose privilege it
- is to be near His Majesty should see things as they really are, and
- not as they would wish them to be.
-
- "Compare, if you have a chance, the advertisement pages of an
- English paper with those of a German one. I have just come across a
- copy of the _Daily Telegraph_ which I beg to enclose for this
- purpose. I have been in the habit of studying these advertisements
- for many months; they are excellent means of gauging the difference
- in the effects of the war on the two countries."
-
-During the remaining part of 1917, and during the first months of 1918
-as well, Ballin took an active interest in the preparations for the Bill
-dealing with the rebuilding of the German mercantile marine; in other
-respects, especially with regard to political matters, the course of
-events condemned him to remain passive. His notes during this period are
-few. I select the following passages from them:
-
- " ... July 17th, 1917. The Erzberger resolution which was chiefly
- aimed at Helfferich and the naval authorities has made the
- Chancellor's position untenable. Everybody turned against Herr von
- Bethmann, and General von Ludendorff informed me by telephone that
- he would resign if Bethmann remained in office.
-
- "I then had a lengthy talk with His Excellency v. Valentini who
- agreed that it was necessary for the Chancellor to retire; but he
- found it just as difficult as other people to name a suitable
- successor. Vienna had raised strong objections to the appointment
- of Prince Bülow, and, acting upon Valentini's suggestion, I made
- up my mind to approach the Kaiser with a view to discussing with
- him the situation which appeared to me fraught with the greatest
- danger. I therefore asked His Excellency von Reischach to arrange
- such a meeting for me, but on Thursday night I was rung up from
- headquarters and informed that Hindenburg and Ludendorff were
- already on their way to the Kaiser to report to His Majesty on this
- subject. Under these circumstances I did not like to interfere, and
- on Friday I withdrew my application for an interview. The Kaiser
- has told the two generals that he had accepted Bethmann's
- resignation the previous evening. He is thus able to save himself
- from a perplexing situation by contending that he had to give in to
- the wishes of the Supreme Army Command.
-
- " ... July 25th, 1917. Yesterday I called on Prince Bülow at his
- Flottbek residence, and found him looking better than I had seen
- him for years. After I had left him I had the feeling that the
- Prince, who regards the whole situation with a great deal of
- misgiving, would even be willing to accept the post of Foreign
- Secretary under Michaelis himself, in order to be able to guide our
- foreign policy along sensible lines once more. Contrary to the
- reserve which he formerly showed, he now condemns Bethmann's policy
- with great bitterness. Bethmann, he maintains, by yielding to the
- demand for universal suffrage, acted like a banker on the day
- before bankruptcy who would try to save himself from disaster by
- using his clients' deposits.
-
- "The Mexico telegram[5] he treated with a good deal of sarcasm,
- remarking that it was the maddest prank since the exploits of the
- Captain of Köpenick, with which I agreed. If anyone, he said, ever
- wrote a comedy on the subject, he would scarcely venture to lay the
- plot in modern times, but would go back to the period when pigtails
- and wigs were the fashion.
-
- " ... July 30th, 1917. I had several messages over the telephone,
- as well as a visit, from Lieutenant-Colonel von Voss, the Chief of
- Staff with the Altona Army Command, who wanted to consult me as to
- whether Prince Bülow should be offered the post of Foreign
- Secretary. I am afraid, however, that there is not much chance of
- his being appointed. The Prince shares this opinion, and would not
- like the Press to make any propaganda in his favour.
-
- " ... Sept. 14th, 1917. In the meantime, on August 19th, the Kaiser
- has been to Hamburg on a one day's visit. He came from Heligoland,
- and was brimful of optimism.
-
- "He pretended to be very well satisfied with his new Chancellor,
- and was very optimistic as to a German victory, an attitude which,
- I am afraid, is not in the least justified by the situation as it
- is."
-
-In the month of September, 1917, Ballin wrote a memorandum for Dr.
-Schwander, the newly appointed Secretary of State for National Economy.
-Apart from politics this document deals with economic matters, and in
-particular with the legislation concerning these during the period of
-transition which would succeed the close of the war. Ballin gave a great
-deal of thought to these questions, and I shall refer to them later on.
-Meanwhile I will quote the text of the memorandum:
-
-_"September 6th, 1917._
-
- "The fall of Riga shows once more how far superior our military
- achievements are to the work performed by our politicians. With the
- dispatch of the Mexico telegram their folly appeared to me to have
- reached its height; but the descent from that point is but slow.
- The news recently published by the Press to the effect that the
- Federal Council is to deal with the question of the constitutional
- and administrative reforms which are to be granted to
- Alsace-Lorraine, makes me fear that some big political blunder is
- going to be committed again. It is evidently believed that, if
- Alsace-Lorraine were to be established as an independent federal
- state with perhaps some South German prince as its Grand Duke, such
- a measure would remove an obstacle to peace. I, however, consider
- it a great tactical mistake to attempt such a solution of the
- Alsace-Lorraine problem before the war is over. We must never lose
- sight of the fact that each one of the leading actors in the
- political drama has to play to his own gallery, and that therefore
- at the conclusion of peace--which in my opinion can only be one of
- compromise--French diplomacy must be able to show up something
- which the man in the street can be induced to regard as a _succès
- d'estime_. No doubt it would be easier and more to our liking to
- solve the problem in our own way, and at the initiative of our
- Government; but by doing so we would deprive ourselves of another
- possibility for compromising which we ought to keep in order to
- enable the French to retire from the struggle with a fair measure
- of success.
-
- "We have a bad habit of spoiling the chances of peace by premature
- actions intended to help it on and to prepare the way for it. Just
- think of what we did in Poland! In the same way we deliberately
- diminished the great value of the important asset which we possess
- in the shape of Belgium when we set up the Council of Flanders and
- introduced the administrative partition of that country.
-
- "Besides these political matters there are others which were better
- left alone for the present. I am thinking of the steps taken to
- regulate our economic restoration after the war. War corporations
- are springing from the ground like mushrooms after rain, and the
- preparations made in order to solve the difficult economic post-war
- problems have an ugly tendency toward establishing too many
- Government-controlled organizations. To my mind the appointment of
- a 'Government Commissioner for the period of Economic Transition'
- is altogether superfluous. We must refrain from all attempts at
- interfering by artificial means with the natural development of
- events. This, however, is precisely what the Commissioner would
- have to do. He would have to act according to instructions received
- from the Bank of Germany or from some specially created body
- dealing with the question of the foreign exchanges and the
- provision of foreign bills.
-
- "My belief is that our foreign exchanges which have so completely
- got out of order will prove an excellent means of diminishing the
- hatred against us and of making our enemies less disinclined to
- resume business with us. The Americans who are now able to obtain
- goods to the value of M 6.20 for their dollar, instead of M 4.20,
- as they used to do, will soon discover their liking for us again.
-
- "Another point is that the coming peace, even if we derive no other
- gain from it, will enormously raise German prestige all over the
- world. Prussia became a European Power after the Seven Years' War,
- in spite of the fact that the peace treaty brought her neither a
- territorial nor a financial gain, merely confirming the right of
- Frederick the Great to the possessions he had defended in the war.
- Prestige, however, means credit, and this circumstance makes me
- believe that all these anxious discussions of the foreign exchange
- question and of the need for controlling German payments abroad are
- just as superfluous as the Government control of our economic
- activities during the period of transition.
-
- "The nations now at war will be impoverished after the war, and the
- state of our exchange and the high prices of raw material will
- compel us to live from hand to mouth as far as the importation of
- raw material is concerned. Pending the return of normal conditions,
- no sensible manufacturer will want to import more raw material than
- he urgently requires.
-
- "I therefore think we ought to try to induce the Government to
- desist from its proposed control of trade and industries, and to
- restore the old conditions. If the Government's proposal to carry
- on under its own management large sections of our import and export
- trade--in order to make these valuable sources of profit available
- for the reduction of its debts--were allowed to materialize, our
- economic doom would be certain, however attractive the plan might
- be in view of the huge national debt. One must be careful not to
- ignore the fact that the flourishing state of trade and
- manufactures is always largely due to the existence of personal
- relations.
-
- "If I think of the lessons of the past forty years--a period during
- which the freedom of trade, the freedom of industrial enterprise,
- and the freedom of shipping have led to marvellous successes and to
- the accumulation of huge wealth--I ask myself: 'How is it possible
- that a wise statesman could seriously occupy himself with the plan
- of establishing a Government-bound system in place of it?' How, I
- ask you, can a State-managed industrial organization avail itself
- of the advantages to be had when trade is booming, or to guard
- itself against the losses when there is a slump? What will be the
- attitude of such an organization towards dealings in futures and
- speculation, both of which are indispensable forms of modern
- business enterprise? True, it has been suggested that these
- difficulties could be overcome if some business men were requested
- to accept appointments under this system, and if so-called 'mixed'
- concerns worked by the co-operation of public funds and private
- capital were established. May Heaven grant that this will never be
- done! I am sure you have had even more to do than I with business
- men who had been promoted to the higher dignity of Government
- officials. Most of them have turned out complete failures in their
- new spheres; they have become more bureaucratic than our
- bureaucrats themselves; their initiative and their eagerness to
- take upon themselves responsibilities have never lasted very long.
- Let there always be a fair field and no favour! Personal relations
- and personal efficiency are all that we need for the rebuilding of
- our national economic system. The 'mixed' concerns are bad because
- they lack the necessary elasticity, because they disregard the
- personal equation, and because they impede the indispensable
- freedom of action.
-
- "I am quite prepared for these views of mine to meet with much
- criticism. People will say: 'All that is very well, but the
- Government's huge indebtedness compels it to take recourse to
- extraordinary measures.' Quite right, but would it not be much
- wiser to reduce this indebtedness by increasing direct and indirect
- taxation, instead of depriving those who have proved during the
- past few decades what they can do of the means that have made them
- so efficient?
-
- "Even among the efficient business men, unless they be born
- geniuses, a distinction must be drawn between those who can make
- profits and those who can organize. The former kind--who are,
- moreover, but few and far between--will never submit to the
- personal restrictions to which they would be subjected in
- state-managed or 'mixed' concerns. The second kind alone, however,
- would never make any concern prosper.
-
- "Another consideration is that the enemy countries would view with
- much suspicion any such institutions controlled partly or wholly
- by the Government. I remember quite well the scant respect with
- which the French delegates were treated at the International
- Shipping Conferences before the war. Everyone knew that the big
- French shipping companies, owing to the huge Government subsidies,
- had to put up with a great deal of supervision on the part of the
- Government, and that they could often vote neither for nor against
- the most important proposals with which the Conference had to deal,
- because they had first to obtain the consent of the Government
- commissioner. They were, therefore, simply ignored, as it was clear
- that they could raise no counter-proposals at their own initiative.
-
- "And truly there is every reason for us to use the utmost caution
- whenever any questions connected with the reconstruction of our
- country are concerned. The excellent Dr. Naumann, with his
- 'Berlin--Bagdad' slogan, has already smashed a good many window
- panes which will have to be paid for after the war by the producing
- classes. The suggestion that an economic union of the Central
- European countries should be established was put forward at a most
- inopportune moment, and the propaganda in its favour was bound to
- bring about the retaliatory measures agreed upon by our enemies at
- the Paris Economic Conference.
-
- "The resolutions of this Conference were of little practical
- importance to us until the day when America entered the field
- against us. If the United States assents to them, it will become
- possible to enforce them, and for this reason I am watching the
- further development of the economic question with growing concern.
- I maintain that peace negotiations should only be started after a
- previous agreement has been arrived at between the belligerents to
- the effect that, on the conclusion of peace, the commercial
- relations formerly existing between them should be restored as far
- as possible, and that the resolutions passed at the Paris Economic
- Conference and at the Central European Conference should be
- rescinded. Such an attitude, however, can only be taken up by our
- delegates if they agree that the former commercial treaties, no
- matter whether they are still running or whether they have elapsed,
- should automatically become valid again for a fairly extensive
- period of time after the close of the war. The disadvantages which
- some of these treaties involve for us are easily outbalanced by the
- advantages secured by the others.
-
- "Our Government cannot be reminded too often that it is necessary
- to consult experienced men of business in all such questions. Since
- the early days of the war I have vainly tried to convince Herr v.
- Bethmann of this necessity. After all, nobody can possibly be an
- expert in everything. Yesterday, when reading the letters of Gustav
- Freytag to his publisher, Mr. Hirzel, I came across the following
- admirable piece of self-criticism: 'I do not know yet what is to
- become of my work; but I fear I am doing what others, better
- qualified than I, ought to be doing, and that I am leaving undone
- what I ought to do.' Every great leader in our political and
- economic life must have experienced that it is extremely
- unsatisfactory to waste one's time and energy on work which another
- man could do just as well as, or even better than, oneself. This
- the Government should remember whenever it attempts to interfere
- with the big industrial combines, such as trusts, syndicates, etc.
- Wherever a syndicate is necessary in the best interests of any
- industry, a leader will be forthcoming who will create it; and only
- in cases where inferior minds, acting for selfish reasons of their
- own, do not wish to acknowledge the need for combining, the
- Government should be asked to exercise whatever pressure it
- considers advisable in order to further the great aims that are
- involved.
-
- "I am afraid that after the war we shall lack the funds needed for
- the solution of the traffic problems with which we shall then be
- confronted, especially with regard to our inland waterways. At any
- rate, if we do build the necessary canals immediately after the
- war, we shall find ourselves compelled to charge such high rates to
- the vessels using these waterways that their advantages will
- largely tend to become illusory. Even as it is now, our trade and
- our manufactures are seriously handicapped by the high canal dues
- existing, by the tugboat monopoly, etc. A really far-sighted policy
- which would make it its principal object to assist the progress of
- our foreign trade would have to guard against the mistaken idea
- that the levying of high rates was the only means of obtaining
- interest on the capital invested. After all, even the turnpikes had
- to be abolished in the end.
-
- "The agitation in favour of separating from Russia the Ukraine,
- Finland, and other parts inhabited by alien peoples--an agitation
- which is becoming noisier every day--troubles me very much. Since
- the early days of the war I have maintained that it must be our
- main war aim to detach Russia from the Entente, and that we must
- endeavour to establish close relations between our own country and
- Russia so that the two of us shall be strong enough to face a
- possible alliance between Great Britain, the United States, and
- France. This should be our aim even now. But if we are going
- deliberately to dismember the Russian Empire and to parcel it out
- into a number of independent units, our political influence after
- the war will be slight indeed, and the result must necessarily make
- itself felt to the detriment of our whole economic life."
-
-At Ballin's suggestion, the members of the Reichstag were invited to
-attend a meeting which was to be held in Hamburg during the summer of
-1918. Large sections of people in the three Hanseatic cities viewed with
-grave concern the plans which the Government entertained for the
-economic development after the war, and the meeting had been called to
-draw the attention of the visitors to this state of affairs. Three
-principal speeches were delivered, and at the close of the meeting
-Ballin briefly recapitulated the main arguments against too much
-Government interference. Much of what he said on that occasion, and much
-of what he had written in the memorandum quoted above, has been borne
-out by the events of the recent past, even though the actual terms of
-the peace imposed on Germany were much more unfavourable than he had
-expected them to be. In addressing himself to the Vice President of the
-Reichstag, Geheimrat Dove, and the large number of the elected
-representatives of the German people who accepted the invitation, Ballin
-said:
-
- "We should be glad if you would see to it that the Government does
- not put a halter round our necks, and that it refrains from the
- dangerous attempt to employ barrack-room methods where economic
- questions of national and international importance are at stake.
- Let us have air, and light, and freedom to act; and we, by availing
- ourselves of our relations with the overseas countries, shall be
- able to carry out the work that lies before us....
-
- " ... I am convinced that all the measures which are contemplated
- to stabilize economic conditions during the period of transition
- from war to peace will do more harm than good. If carried into
- practice, they will merely prepare the soil for an economic
- struggle to succeed the present war of arms. We need a peace that
- is doubly secure! We cannot ask our enemies to give us freedom
- where we impose compulsion. We cannot fight for the freedom of the
- seas, and at the same time surround Central Europe with a barbed
- wire.
-
- "I do not wish to deny that in order to carry out our economic
- tasks a certain amount of Government control will be necessary.
- That, of course, goes without saying; but anything beyond it is an
- unmixed evil. If it is said to-day that the measures to be adopted
- during the period of economic transition are, in some instances,
- intended to remain in force for three years, and if it is announced
- semi-officially that the thousand and one war corporations are to
- be made use of for the purposes of this policy, and that their
- disappearance is to be very gradual--I can only sound a serious
- note of warning against any such designs. When the war is over all
- those who can do efficient work will return to their normal
- occupations; and those who then prefer to remain attached to the
- war corporations in one capacity or other are surely to some extent
- people who have discovered some hidden charms in these
- institutions, or, if not, they are persons who, fearful of the
- risks connected with the unfettered interplay of forces, feel that
- they are better off under the protecting wing of the Government. If
- you are going to entrust the future of our country to such
- organizations for better or worse, the economic war after the war,
- as I have said before, will be sure to follow, and you will have to
- face a war that will last years and years."
-
-As regards the closing months of the war--which are also the closing
-months of Ballin's life--it must suffice to refer here to one event
-only; one, however, which is of dramatic significance. I am speaking of
-Ballin's last meeting with the Kaiser. His notes on this subject,
-roughly sketched though they are, require no further comment. I
-reproduce them in full:
-
-_"Hamfelde, August 25th (Sunday), 1918._
-
- "Last Tuesday Herr Deters[6] rang me up to ask me on behalf of Hugo
- Stinnes if I would meet him in Berlin on the Thursday.
- Lieut.-Colonel Bauer, one of Ludendorff's aides-de-camp, a
- gentleman largely responsible for the Pan-German leanings of the
- General and for his close association with the interests of the big
- manufacturers, had been to see Stinnes, and on the strength of the
- information he had received from Lieut.-Colonel Bauer he thought it
- advisable to have a talk with me. I declined the invitation because
- I expected that the work they wanted me to do would be anything but
- pleasant.
-
- "Next morning Herr Deters rang me up again and told me that Stinnes
- would call on me in Hamburg on Friday morning.
-
- "I left for Hamfelde on Wednesday afternoon, but returned to town
- again on Thursday, because Stinnes had arranged to call on me as
- early as 10.30 a.m. on Friday.
-
- "The proposed meeting thus took place on Friday, August 23rd, from
- 10.40 a.m. to 1.15 p.m. Stinnes, with admirable frankness and
- directness, started our conversation by stating that the military
- situation had become much worse. Our troops, he said, began to fail
- us in our task, and the number of deserters had been very large
- lately (he mentioned, I believe, that their number was 32,000).
- Ludendorff had told the Crown Prince the plain truth; but it was
- still necessary to explain the true state of affairs to the Kaiser,
- and to make it clear to His Majesty that Hertling, who was
- completely laid up with sickness, could no longer effectively fill
- his post. The real work was done by his son, Captain v. Hertling,
- and no efforts were being made to come to a cessation of
- hostilities. In other directions, too, matters were drifting
- towards a catastrophe. The Minister of War, v. Stein, lacked the
- necessary authority. In many instances the men called up did not
- enlist at all; in Silesia large numbers of them had concealed
- themselves in the woods and forests, and their wives provided them
- with food, while no energetic steps to check these occurrences were
- taken by the Chief Army Command. I replied to Stinnes that if
- Ludendorff agreed I would be ready to undertake the unpleasant task
- of informing the Kaiser, but that it would first be necessary that
- Ludendorff and myself should come to an understanding as to whom to
- propose to His Majesty for the Chancellorship.
-
-_"Continuation. Hamburg, August 26th, 1918._
-
- "Stinnes said he thought that Ludendorff had Prince Bülow in his
- mind. I told Stinnes that Bülow, in my opinion, might perhaps be
- suitable at the head of a peace delegation, but that it was too
- late to think of him as a possible Chancellor, and that the German
- people--more particularly the Socialists--had not now the requisite
- confidence in his ability to fill the post of Chancellor. Neither
- would he be acceptable to our enemies. It would be difficult to
- persuade Great Britain, the United States and France that a prince,
- especially Prince Bülow, would seriously carry out the
- democratization of Germany. If, however, we really were to discuss
- peace at last it would be necessary that the office of Chancellor
- should be vested in a man to whom our enemies could take no
- possible exception. Stinnes perfectly agreed with me in this
- matter.
-
- "We continued to discuss other possible candidates for the post,
- but we could not agree on anyone. Finally Stinnes proposed that we
- should both go to Berlin and there continue the discussion together
- with Lieut.-Colonel Bauer, Ludendorff's representative. He would in
- the meantime report to Berlin about our conversation, and he was
- hopeful that we could see Bauer either to-night (Monday), or
- to-morrow (Tuesday, August 27th).
-
- "This morning Stinnes informed me through Deters that he had sent
- me a wire stating that the proposed meeting could not take place
- until Monday next, September 2nd, at 8 p.m. He proposed that we
- should have a preliminary meeting at the Hotel Continental at 7
- p.m. the same evening. I suggested that it would be better to fix
- this preliminary meeting at 6.30 p.m.
-
- "I must add that Bauer's (that is Ludendorff's) suggestion was that
- I should not see the Kaiser by myself, but together with Stinnes,
- Duisburg, and Krupp v. Bohlen.
-
- "I replied to Stinnes that I considered it very inadvisable for
- such a deputation to visit the Kaiser, who would never tolerate
- that four gentlemen--two of whom were perfect strangers to
- him--should speak to him about such matters. It would be better
- that Herr v. Bohlen, or, if Ludendorff attached special value to
- it, I myself should call on the Kaiser in private, and that either
- Herr v. Bohlen or I should then endeavour to induce the Kaiser to
- see the other three gentlemen as well.
-
- "Stinnes was greatly depressed and took as grave a view of the
- situation as I did myself."
-
-Ballin's notes on the Berlin meeting are confined to a few jottings,
-from which it appears that not Lieutenant-Colonel Bauer but Major v.
-Harbou in his stead took part in it, and that the question of selecting
-a suitable candidate for the Chancellorship proved impossible of a
-satisfactory solution. As a last resort, if everything else should fail,
-Ballin thought of proposing Stinnes himself, because in his opinion the
-situation demanded a man of dictatorial character and with the authority
-of a dictator.
-
-Concerning his interview with the Kaiser, Ballin wrote down the
-following notes:
-
- "I arrived at Wilhelmshöhe on the morning of September 5th, and I
- was asked to 'report' to the Kaiser at 12.45 p.m. This expression
- was chosen because the new head of the Kaiser's Civil Cabinet, Herr
- v. Berg, evidently wished to invest my visit with an official
- character which would enable him to be in attendance. After a
- while, however, the Kaiser became impatient and did not wish to
- wait till the hour appointed for the interview. So I was requested
- by telephone to hold myself in readiness by 11 o'clock.
-
- "I went to the Castle at that hour and waited in the room of the
- aide-de-camp until the Kaiser came and asked me to go for a walk
- with him. However, Herr v. Berg was also there and accompanied us.
- Consequently the conversation lost much of the directness which
- would have been highly desirable in the Kaiser's own interest, as
- well as in that of the country.
-
- "I found the Kaiser very misinformed, as usual, and full of that
- apparent buoyancy of spirit which he likes to display in the
- presence of third persons. The facts have been twisted to such an
- extent that even the serious failure of our offensive--which, at
- first, had depressed him very much--has been described to him as a
- success. It is now intended to retire to the old Hindenburg line,
- so that the only result of the offensive has been the loss of
- several hundreds of thousands of valuable lives. All this, as I
- have said, is dished up to the poor Kaiser in such a fashion that
- he remains perfectly blind to the catastrophic effect of it.
-
- "He now puts his whole trust in Herr v. Hintze, whom he evidently
- looks upon as a great light.
-
- "I told the Kaiser of my grave misgivings and made him clearly
- understand that I did not think there would be much use in entering
- into peace negotiations with Great Britain. I urged that no time
- should be lost in immediately approaching Wilson, who was an
- idealist and who had no territorial aspirations in Europe. If,
- however, the war should continue much longer Wilson would most
- probably become subject to the influences of a war party, and then
- we could no longer hope that he would still insist upon a
- settlement along the lines of his idealist programme.
-
- "The Kaiser agreed that my views were well founded, but he thought
- we ought not to enter into peace negotiations before the approach
- of autumn, by which time we should have returned to the safe
- position afforded by the Hindenburg line. Then, he thought, we
- should avail ourselves of the offer of mediation which had been
- made by the Queen of Holland.
-
- "Whenever I was too frank in my criticisms and suggestions, Herr v.
- Berg skilfully interposed. He declared to me when the Kaiser had
- left that it would not do to make His Majesty too pessimistic.
-
- "I also discussed with the Kaiser the question of doing away with
- the restrictions imposed upon the sale of perishable articles of
- food, such as butter, eggs, etc.; and I pointed out to him that the
- fixing of maximum prices and the issuing of regulations dealing
- with illicit trading merely forced the people to pay exorbitant
- prices, at the same time helping those engaged in underhand trading
- to amass huge fortunes. On this subject, too, the Kaiser fell in
- with my own views, and it was decided to release at least the
- perishable articles, and to allow them to be sold once more through
- the ordinary channels without restriction.
-
- "The Kaiser also declared that this war would soon be followed by
- another, to which he referred as the Second Carthaginian War. He
- spoke a great deal of an Anglo-American alliance which would, of
- course, be directed against Japan, and the views on political
- subjects which he expressed in this connexion showed that he is
- being very badly advised indeed.
-
- "Herr v. Berg is obviously conservative and Pan-German in his
- politics, and it seems that his influence is predominant at Court.
- Only on the Prussian suffrage question did he agree with my own
- standpoint, which is that universal suffrage must be granted now
- that the King has promised it.
-
- "Since the Kaiser and the Kaiserin, on account of the latter's
- illness, were dining alone, I joined the so-called 'Court Marshal's
- table,' together with the Countesses Keller and Rantzau, the
- gentlemen-in-waiting on the Kaiser, and the physician-in-ordinary
- and the chamberlain of the Kaiserin. The duty of acting as court
- marshal fell to General v. Gontard, as Herr v. Reischach had
- unfortunately fallen seriously ill."
-
-In order to illustrate further what has been shown to be Ballin's views
-on the character of the Kaiser, I here quote the first part of a letter
-of his, dated October 25th, 1918:
-
- "In the meantime," he writes, "Wilson's reply has been received,
- and it is certain that compliance with its terms will be equivalent
- to capitulation.
-
- "To my mind Wilson's note clearly shows that he and his allies will
- demand that the Hohenzollerns, or at any rate the Kaiser and the
- Crown Prince, shall relinquish their rights to the throne, and
- that, in consideration of such an act, they will ease their terms
- of peace.
-
- "Each of the men who are at the head of their respective
- Governments has to play to his gallery, and if these men desire to
- give their audience a convincing proof of the completeness of the
- success they have achieved, they can do no better than demand
- condign punishment for the man who has been held responsible for
- the war, and inflict it upon him. I do not believe that the Kaiser
- would grieve very much if he were given a chance now of retiring
- into private life without much loss of dignity. The war, which was
- something absolutely uncongenial to his whole nature, has had such
- bad effect on his health that it would be desirable in his own
- interest if he were enabled to retire comfortably into private
- life. He must see the force of this argument himself, and it is not
- likely that he would refuse to accept such a chance, as a refusal
- would prejudice the best interests of his country. The Kaiserin,
- however, may be expected to oppose any such solution with much
- feeling. If the Kaiser's grandson were now appointed his successor,
- and if a regent were nominated in whom everybody had confidence,
- the whole German situation would lose much of its seriousness. Of
- course, the abdication of the Kaiser would not take place without
- certain disturbances, but it would be necessary to face these
- disadvantages with a good grace. No doubt the outlook would be
- better if they could be avoided, and if the Kaiser, without losing
- his position, could be invested with rights and duties similar to
- those of the British king, who, broadly speaking, enjoys all the
- advantages of his dignity without having to take upon himself
- responsibilities which he is unable to bear. I quite believe that
- the Kaiser never derived much pleasure from his sovereign powers;
- at any rate, if he did, he has ceased to do so since this
- unfortunate war has been forced upon him."
-
-Ballin's last entry in his diary contains the following passage:
-
- "Stinnes has sent word to me that the Socialist and Centre parties
- are of opinion that I ought to be nominated to conduct the peace
- negotiations. I have told him that I should not shirk it, but that
- I should be much better pleased if somebody else would do it."
-
-This note was written on November 2nd, 1918. One short week later, on
-November 9th, his heart had ceased to beat--a heart which had so warmly
-responded to the call of his Kaiser and country, and which had succumbed
-to its excessive load of grief and sorrow.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS
-
-
-To present an exhaustive description of Albert Ballin's life-work within
-the compass of this volume is an impossible task, and the more the
-writer entered into the details of his attempt to do so, the more
-thoroughly did he realize this impossibility.
-
-The story of a life comprising thirty-two years of incessant hard work,
-only interrupted when nature's law or a very imperative behest of his
-medical adviser made it necessary, and spent at the head of an
-undertaking which, as a result of this work, developed into one of the
-greatest that the economic history of the generation just passed has
-known, cannot be told in full by means of a mere description unless it
-be accompanied by volumes of statistics which, however, convey no
-meaning to anyone except the initiated.
-
-The author, therefore, had to content himself with delineating a picture
-of his hero with a background formed by the events which he himself had
-helped to shape, and which, in many instances, had received their
-distinguishing stamp through his own genius. The essence of his
-character, and the importance of his work to his contemporaries, must
-stand out from this background as the portrait of a painter--as seen by
-himself--would stand out from a mirror. What the mirror does not show,
-and cannot show, is the immensity of the mental forces hidden below the
-surface which alone give expression to the portrait; all the factors
-which have brought about the final result--the strength, the courage,
-the daring, and the feeling of responsibility without which it would
-never have been achieved.
-
-Still more difficult it is to interpret the very essence of the
-character of him whose work we see before us, or, indeed, to give a
-comprehensible account of it to the stranger.
-
-The only way of doing justice to a man of such commanding genius as
-Ballin is to try to discover first of all the one essential root
-principle of his personality. Having succeeded in that, we shall find no
-more difficulty in reconciling the great number of apparently mutually
-contradictory traits of his character. This principle is the focus where
-all the rays of light are collected from all directions, and which forms
-the source of light, warmth, and vital energy.
-
-Albert Ballin was a born business man if ever there was one. To him the
-noble words of Schiller's lines apply: "The treasures which his ships
-carry across the oceans spell untold blessings to all who receive them."
-His whole mind was drawn towards the sea; his inborn inclinations and
-the surroundings amidst which he grew up had destined him to be a
-shipping man. To the boy Ballin the Hamburg harbour was the favourite
-playground; and the seven seas were just large enough to serve as a
-field of action for the youth and the man. There was his real home, and
-there he felt at rest. How often, indeed, has he assured us that the
-sleeplessness to which he fell an unfortunate victim whenever he was
-ashore left him as soon as he was on board ship, and that a miserable
-river barge was sufficient to have this effect on him. He was proof
-against sea-sickness, both bodily and mentally. Thus he became a
-shipping man, because it was his natural vocation; and in this chosen
-profession of his he became one of the greatest and most brilliantly
-gifted rulers the world has ever seen.
-
-Whenever there was a problem to be solved he attacked it in a spirit of
-boldness, yet tempered by the utmost conscientiousness and caution. No
-task he encountered was so big that his daring could not tackle it and
-overcome its difficulties; nothing was so insignificant that he would
-not attend to it somehow. Whatever decision his infallible instinct
-intuitively recognized as right, and to whatever idea his impulsive
-nature had given practical shape, had to pass muster during the
-sleepless hours of the night before the tribunal of his restless mind
-when, as he used to say, "everything appears wrapt up in a grey mist."
-At such times his reason began to analyse and to criticize the decisions
-he had reached during the day. Then he would often shudder at his own
-boldness, and the torments of doubt would be aggravated by the thought
-of the enormous responsibility which he bore towards his company. For it
-must be understood that from the day he joined the Hamburg-Amerika Linie
-his interests and those of the company became parts of an inseparable
-whole.
-
-The company's affairs absorbed all his thoughts at all times; the
-company's well-being was the object of his constant care; he devoted
-himself exclusively to the service of the company, and the opinions
-which he formed in his mind regarding persons and things were
-instinctively coloured according to their relationship to the company's
-affairs. The gradual progress during its infancy, the later expansion,
-and the final greatness of the company, were as the events of his own
-life to him; when the proud structure which he had raised collapsed his
-life was ended. His thoughts incessantly converged towards this very
-centre of his being. All his work, all his words and deeds, were devoted
-to the furtherance of the company's interests. He identified himself so
-completely with the company that he actually was the Packetfahrt, and
-the Packetfahrt was he. Even his love and hatred were rooted in the
-company. He remained a grateful and lifelong friend to anyone who had
-been of service to the company or to him as representing it.
-
-This highly subjective and indissoluble relationship between himself and
-the company--which it had been the dream of his life to raise to the
-highest pinnacle of prosperity--is the key to the fundamental principle
-which lies at the root of his whole complex personality. But however
-well-defined his personal individuality stood out, his subjectivity was
-nevertheless animated by a strong sense of duty. His views, for
-instance, on the essential principles governing the most perfect
-organization which modern capitalism has produced--i.e. the joint-stock
-company--were free from any tinge of personal considerations whatever.
-He was himself the responsible head of a big joint-stock company, and
-instinctively this fact exercised such a powerful influence on all his
-thoughts and feelings that it is quite impossible to arrive at a just
-appreciation of his character unless this circumstance is borne in mind.
-His character which appears so complicated to the cursory onlooker, but
-which is in reality of singular simplicity and consistency, is best
-illustrated by his reply to a question of one of his friends who had
-asked him why he did not allow some piece of scathing criticism which he
-had just expressed in private to be made public. "My dear friend," he
-said, "you forget that you are not the chairman of the board of
-directors of a joint-stock company." What he meant to convey was that
-the enmity which he would incur by expressing those views in public
-would adversely affect the firm of which he was the head, and that the
-interests of his company compelled him to impose upon himself
-restrictions which he could ignore in his private capacity.
-
-Although he had nothing but scorn for the very suggestion that this
-company should receive at any time any subsidies from public funds, he
-made it to the fullest extent subservient to the needs of the public and
-of the nation at large. He often remarked that such gigantic concerns
-as, e.g., the Hamburg-Amerika Linie, are no longer private ventures
-purely and simply. The ties that bind them to the whole economic life of
-the nation--and, for the matter of that, to the world in general--are so
-close and so manifold that it would be disastrous to ignore them or to
-sever them. Hundreds of industrial, commercial, and agricultural
-enterprises were lavishly supplied with work through the orders they
-received from the Hamburg-Amerika Linie in connexion with the building
-and the equipment of its steamers and with the needs of its
-organizations on shore. Its hundreds of thousands of passengers and
-emigrants, and the huge volume of German-made products and manufactured
-articles carried on board its vessels, spread the German name and German
-fame throughout the civilized world. Hence, to Albert Ballin the
-national flag and that of the Hapag were two symbols expressive of but
-one idea.
-
-A man who, like Ballin, was at the head of the biggest German shipping
-company and therefore also, by implication, one of the leading spirits
-in the economic life of Germany, could not very well hold himself aloof
-where high politics were concerned. The more the economic problems
-gained in importance, the greater became their bearing on the course of
-the country's politics. Ballin, however, would never have become a
-professional politician from inclination, because he invariably refused
-to be mixed up with the strife of parties. He never officially belonged
-to any political party; and although he made friends with members of all
-the non-Socialist parties, his general outlook on politics was mainly
-coloured by Liberal views, and he was a firm believer in Free Trade.
-Whenever questions dealing with the interests of shipping and trade were
-involved, he had no difficulty in making the responsible people listen
-to his claims and to his suggestions, but he never tried to make his
-influence felt on purely political affairs unless they affected the
-country's vital international interests. His lengthy and extensive
-travels to the countries of Europe, to the North American continent, and
-to the Far East, had broadened his outlook. His profession as a shipping
-man not only brought him into frequent contact with the heads of the big
-shipping companies all the world over, but also with a number of the
-financial magnates and industrial captains of Great Britain, the United
-States, and other countries of economic importance. He took rank with
-the greatest economic leaders as an equal, and this unchallenged
-position of commanding authority was reflected by the esteem in which he
-was held by the principal statesmen and parliamentarians. He was
-familiar with the essential and vital needs of other nations, and he
-therefore not only stood up for the national rights whenever they
-appeared in jeopardy, but he also raised his warning voice against a
-policy provocative of conflicts whenever he thought it possible to avoid
-them. Whoever is conscious of his strength is also aware of the
-limitations set to his power.
-
-In politics as well as in business he held that "a lean compromise was
-preferable to a fat lawsuit," as the German proverb puts it. It has been
-mentioned elsewhere in this volume that Ballin was essentially the man
-of compromise. It is very probable that the experiences of his early
-life had helped to develop this outstanding feature of his personality.
-It may be assumed that he, a young man of unknown Jewish family, found
-his path beset with difficulties in a city-state like Hamburg, where the
-influence of the wealthy patriciate of the merchant classes was
-supreme, and that he was looked upon as an upstart even after he had
-reached a prominent position himself. The casual observer is far too
-much inclined to underestimate the conservative character--both
-politically and socially--of the three Hanseatic cities. Still, evidence
-is not wanting that Ballin's unusual gifts were occasionally recognized
-and appreciated even in the days of his early career. An English
-journalist, for instance, who met him some time about 1895,
-characterized him by the following words: "He struck me as a great man;
-otherwise nothing so incongruous as such a type of man at the head of a
-big steamship line could be imagined." That Field-Marshal Count
-Waldersee honoured him by his friendship at an early period has been
-mentioned in a different chapter of this volume. And even in patrician
-Hamburg he found an immensely powerful friend and patron shortly after
-he had entered the services of the Packetfahrt. This was no less a man
-than the shipowner Carl Laeisz, the most eminent representative of the
-"House of Laeisz."
-
-The firm of F. Laeisz, which was successfully owned by its founder,
-Ferdinand, his son Carl, and his grandson Carl Ferdinand, has stood
-sponsor to all the more important shipping companies established in
-Hamburg, and through its great authority helped them all to get over the
-critical years of their early youth. The sound principles by which the
-firm was guided might sometimes lead to much disappointment on the part
-of the shareholders, but they proved to be of unsurpassable benefit to
-the companies concerned, and nothing illustrates them better than the
-oft-told episode of the shareholder who went to see Carl Laeisz,
-complaining that the Hamburg South American S.S. Company did not pay any
-dividend. "The object of the company is to carry on the shipping trade,
-and not to distribute dividends," was the blunt but characteristic
-reply. Being thoroughly unconventional in his habits, Carl Laeisz--no
-less than his singularly gifted son, who was one of those rare men whom
-it was really impossible to replace--nevertheless did invaluable service
-in connexion with the establishment of new firms in Hamburg, and with
-the encouragement of existing ones.
-
-It was a great compliment to Ballin that in 1888, when he had only been
-associated with the Packetfahrt for a couple of years, and when the
-directors asked for authority to increase the joint-stock capital of the
-company from 20 to 25 million marks, Carl Laeisz informed them in
-advance that, at the general meeting of the shareholders, he would move
-an increase of 10 instead of 5 millions, and that this motion was
-unanimously carried. Those who have known Carl Laeisz personally will
-appreciate what it meant to Ballin when, by way of giving him an
-introduction to the London firm of Messrs. J. Henry Schröder, Laeisz
-scribbled the following note on the back of one of Ballin's visiting
-cards:
-
- "It gives me pleasure to introduce to you the bearer of this card,
- whom I am proud to name my friend, and to recommend him to your
- protection and to your unfailing kindness.
-
-"Sincerely yours,
-"(_Signed_) LAEISZ."
-
-
-
-As this card was found among the papers and documents which Ballin left
-at the time of his death, it would seem that it was not used for its
-intended purpose, but that he preferred to keep it as a souvenir of the
-man whom he always remembered with gratitude and affection, and of whose
-life he could tell a good number of characteristic anecdotes. The
-telegram of which the text is given below is also highly typical of Carl
-Laeisz. I have not been able to discover what was the occasion of
-sending it, but I am inclined to think that it must be in some manner
-connected with the conference held in the Berlin Royal Castle, and
-referred to on an earlier page, at which Ballin first attracted the
-Kaiser's attention. The text is as follows:
-
- "Persons who give in without a protest are miserable creatures, and
- being such, they are deserving of nothing but contempt. Suggest
- that you obstinately stick to Hamburg point of view, not only from
- personal conviction, but for other weighty reasons as well. Meeting
- hardly convened simply to induce you to give in."
-
-Although there is scarcely anyone to whom the name of a Hamburg patriot
-can be applied with greater justice than to Ballin, and although there
-are few people who have done more to promote the well-being and the
-prosperity of their native city, and who have had a better appreciation
-of one of the most lovable features of her inhabitants, viz. their dry,
-unconventional, and kindly humour, it would be wrong to assume that this
-local patriotism of Ballin made him blind to the shortcomings and
-deficiencies of his native city. On the contrary, his eminent sense of
-the realities of life made him see most clearly the points of weakness
-in the position of Hamburg, e.g. those connected with the system of her
-finances. The so-called Köhlbrand agreement, which, after a hard
-struggle, put an end to the long controversy between Hamburg and Prussia
-by stipulating that the course of the lower Elbe should be regulated
-without detriment to the interests of the town of Harburg, imposed such
-a vast amount of expenditure upon Hamburg, and the Prussian local
-authorities concerned insisted on securing the payment of such large
-compensations to the owners whose rights were adversely affected by the
-improvement of the waterway, that it might well be doubted whether
-Hamburg could shoulder these enormous burdens.
-
-It speaks volumes for Ballin's unprejudiced mind that he frequently
-maintained nothing would be of greater benefit to Hamburg than her
-renunciation of her sovereignty as a city-state in favour of
-incorporation with Prussia. Prussia, he argued, was her natural
-hinterland, after all; and if she consented to be thus incorporated, she
-would be such a precious jewel in the crown of Prussia that she could
-secure without an effort all the advantages and privileges which
-Prussia, by pursuing the strictly Prussian line in her politics, now
-actually prevented her from acquiring. In course of time, however, her
-present isolation would undermine the foundations of her existence,
-especially if and when the increasing volume of traffic passing through
-her port should demand a further expansion of the latter, and,
-consequently, a further rise in the financial burdens. In that case the
-unnatural position which resulted from the fact that the "Elbe delta"
-belonged to two different states, and which had its origin in the
-political history of the district, would make itself felt with all its
-drawbacks, and the ultimate sufferer would be the country as a whole of
-which Hamburg, after all, was the connecting link with the nations
-beyond the sea.
-
-These are the same arguments and considerations which are used when the
-modern problem of a "Greater Hamburg" is under discussion, with this
-difference only, that in Ballin's time the only solution which was
-regarded as possible was that Hamburg should cast in her lot with her
-Prussian neighbour.
-
-Ballin repeatedly vented the full force of his sarcasm against the
-advocates of an "out-and-out Hamburg policy" to whom his own views
-sounded like heresy, a policy which found perhaps its most comic
-expression in the speech of a former Hamburg burgomaster who referred to
-the King of Prussia as "our illustrious ally." Ballin did not recognize
-the existence of a line of demarcation which, as many lesser minds
-imagined, separated republican Hamburg from the rest of Germany. In
-reality there is no such separation; Hamburg, indeed, receives year
-after year a constant influx of human material and of ideas from her
-German hinterland, without which she could not exist at all, and in
-spite of which she has never had a superfluity, but--at times, at
-least--rather a deficiency of specially gifted citizens. This latter
-circumstance and the frequent absence of that quality of mental
-alertness which Bismarck, in speaking of the German character in
-general, used to designate as the missing "dash of champagne in the
-blood" once made Ballin say: "I quite see that what this town wants is
-10,000 Jews. I do not, by any means, shut my eyes to the disagreeable
-qualities of the Jewish character, but still, another 10,000 of them
-would be a decided advantage." This utterance confirms how free from
-prejudice he was where the Jewish question was concerned. Although not
-at all orthodox, but rather indifferent in his religious views, he was
-far too proud to disavow his origin or his religion, or to change the
-latter. Of someone who had changed his name, he said, in a tone of
-bitter reproach, that he had insulted his father.
-
-Ballin's relations with the working classes and his attitude towards the
-Labour question were not such as the Socialist papers were fond of
-alleging, especially at the time when the Labour controversy was at its
-height, and when strikes were constantly occurring or threatening. The
-first big strike affecting Ballin's special sphere of activity was that
-of the Hamburg dock labourers in 1896. It was caused by wages disputes
-which the Packetfahrt tried in vain to settle by raising the wages paid
-to the men. The interests of the employers in the ensuing struggle were
-not, however, specially represented by the associations of the shipping
-firms, but were looked after by the big "Association of Employers of
-Labour," and therefore the attitude taken up by the employers as a whole
-was not determined by practical considerations from the point of view of
-the shipping companies. The Packetfahrt, however, seems to have
-emphasized the necessity of being guided by such practical
-considerations, as may be inferred from the fact that the Packetfahrt
-was the only one among the large firms of employers which advocated from
-the outset that certain concessions should be granted in respect of the
-demands put forward by the workmen. Although, as has been remarked, the
-company succeeded in seeing its recommendation adopted, the strike
-started on November 18th, 1896. At first it was restricted to the
-dockers, but the number of the strikers was soon swelled by the adhesion
-of the quay-labourers and of several other categories of port-labourers
-and seamen. When this had occurred, and when the Packetfahrt suggested
-that steps should be taken on the part of the employers with the object
-of reaching a friendly settlement, these suggestions did not secure a
-majority in the counsels of the employers, and it was in regard to this
-that Ballin's notes, under date of December 9th, contain the following
-entry: "We are continuing our efforts to induce the Employers'
-Association and the Shipowners' Association to give the strikers a
-chance of an honourable retreat. What we propose in detail is that the
-men should be asked to resume work of their own accord in consideration
-of which the employers would promise to submit their grievances to a
-_bona fide_ examination. All our efforts have failed because of the
-attitude taken up by the Employers' Association. We can only hope that
-the Senate will consent to mediate in the conflict." This body, however,
-was afraid of being accused of prejudice in favour of the employers, and
-declined to act as mediator. "It is very much against my wish,"
-Ballin's notes continue, "that our own interests are represented by the
-Employers' Association," and on December 23rd, he wrote: "Meanwhile, the
-Senate, in reply to the resolution passed by the men, has asked them to
-resume work unconditionally against the promise to look into their
-grievances, and as far as they appeared to be justified, to redress them
-after a joint conference had been held between the employers and the
-strikers. This offer of a compromise was rejected by the workmen." The
-employers were able to get the most urgent work done by substitute
-labour, and the strike came to an end in the early days of February.
-
-Among the subsequent Labour troubles those of 1907 are of special
-significance. In that year, after a strike of the dockers and the
-seamen, all those employers who had occasion to employ any workmen in
-the port of Hamburg founded an organization somewhat on the lines of a
-Labour Bureau, called the _Hafenbetriebsverein_. The termination of the
-strike just referred to was brought about by Ballin's personal
-influence, and it was he who conducted the prolonged negotiations with
-the heads of the Labour organization. Later on, in 1911, when the
-_Hafenbetriebsverein_ began to conclude agreements with this
-organization by which the wages for the various categories of dock
-labourers were fixed--a policy which did not exactly meet with the full
-approval of large sections of employers, it was again due to Ballin's
-influence that these agreements were generally accepted. It is just
-possible that a certain event, insignificant in itself, may have
-strengthened Ballin's natural tendency towards a settlement along the
-lines of a compromise. As has been said before, the year 1907, which,
-from the business point of view, had been excellent (at least, during
-the first six months), and during which the above-mentioned strike
-occurred, was succeeded by a year which brought exceedingly
-unsatisfactory earnings to the company. Ballin did what he had done on a
-previous occasion, in 1901: he sent a memorandum to all the employees of
-the firm asking them to cut down expenses to the lowest possible extent,
-to contribute their share towards a more economical working of every
-department, and to submit to him any suggestions of their own as to how
-the necessary retrenchment could be effected. I was instructed to
-examine the general expenses account with a view to finding out in what
-way a reduction would be possible, and I drew Ballin's attention to the
-fact that the considerable sums which had to be spent in 1907 in
-consequence of the strike would, of course, not appear again in the
-balance-sheet for 1908, so that this would lead to an automatic
-reduction of the working expenses. Ballin was surprised to see how large
-this particular item was, and the whole occurrence proved once more that
-a lean agreement would have been preferable to a fat lawsuit.
-
-As Ballin was pre-eminently a man whose mind was bent on practical work
-and on the production of practical results, it is but natural that he
-was greatly interested in the practical aspects of social politics, and
-that he applied its principles to the activities in which he was engaged
-as far as he thought he was justified in doing so. Not in peace times
-only, but also during the war did he hold these views, and when he was
-connected with the work of provisioning the civil population, and,
-later, with that of preparing the economic post-war reconstruction, he
-was frequently brought into contact with men who occupied prominent
-positions in the world of Labour.
-
-His capacity for work was enormous and seemed wellnigh inexhaustible. He
-made a most lavish use of it, especially in the early part of his life,
-and the personal assistance he required with his work was of the
-slightest. His greatest aid, indeed, was his marvellous memory, which
-almost enabled him to do his work without ever referring to the files of
-letters and documents. He could always recall to his mind every phase of
-past events, and every detail of all the ships he had built or
-purchased, and he was never wavering in the opinion he had formed of
-anyone who had ever crossed his path, because such opinion was founded
-on facts.
-
-Very gradually only did his fellow-members on the Board of Directors
-succeed in persuading him to refrain from putting in an appearance at
-his office on Sundays, and to do such Sunday work as he wanted to do at
-home. The telegraph and the telephone always kept him busy, both on
-weekdays and on Sundays. Even on his travels and on his holidays he
-wanted to be informed of all that was going on, and he could be very
-annoyed when any important news had been withheld from him, or when he
-believed that this had been the case, so that his secretariat, to be on
-the safe side, had gone rather far in forwarding on his correspondence
-when he was away from town. When I first entered upon my duties with him
-he had just returned from a rest cure at Kissingen. He pointed at the
-huge pile of letters that had been forwarded to him on his so-called
-holiday, adding, in a tone of bitterness: "You see, every expansion of a
-business becomes a curse to its leader." Sometimes his absences from
-Hamburg would amount to as much as eight months per annum, and it was
-certainly no easy task always to know what to send on and what to hold
-over until after his return. To do so one had to be well acquainted with
-all the details of each transaction and to know what was important,
-especially what was important to him; and if one wished to see his mind
-at ease it was necessary never to let him think that anything was kept
-back from him. Any apparent neglect in this respect he was apt to
-regard as a personal slight. And yet the time which he had at his
-disposal for attending to current correspondence, both when at the
-office and when travelling, was but limited.
-
-The waiting-room outside his private office was nearly always crowded
-with intending visitors. The callers were carefully sifted, and all
-those who were strangers and those who had come without having an
-appointment were passed on to someone else as far as this was possible.
-Great credit is due to his ever faithful personal attendant at home and
-on his travels, Carl Fischer, for the perfect tact which he showed in
-the performance of this difficult task.
-
-In spite of all this sifting, however, the time left for getting through
-a day's mail was not sufficient. I therefore, shortly after entering the
-company's services, made it a point to submit to his notice only those
-letters which I considered of real importance. According to the mood in
-which he seemed to be I then acquainted him with the contents of as much
-of the remainder as I thought it wise to do. I believe I gradually
-succeeded in acquiring a fair amount of skill in reading his mind, and
-this facility enabled me to avoid more dangerous rocks than one. I tried
-to proceed along similar lines when he was away from Hamburg, especially
-when he was taking a holiday. On such occasions I forwarded on to him
-only the important letters, taking great care, however, that he was not
-kept out of touch with any matter of real consequence, so that he should
-never feel that he was left in the dark about anything. After some time
-I had the satisfaction of being told by him when he returned from a
-holiday that that had been "his first real holiday since he had joined
-the Packetfahrt."
-
-Once one had learnt to understand his way of reasoning and his
-individual traits, it was not difficult to know how to treat him. If a
-mistake had been made, or if some oversight had taken place, the most
-foolish thing would be not to tell him so at once. To act otherwise
-would mean the immediate and permanent forfeiture of his confidence,
-whilst an open admission of the mistake would strengthen his faith
-enormously. He hated to be shut out from the actual practice of the
-company's business by a Chinese wall of bureaucratic control. Whenever
-such a wall was in process of erection he quickly and inexorably pulled
-it down, and he always remained in personal contact with every
-department and with every prominent member of the staff as far as the
-size of the huge undertaking enabled him to do so. For this reason he
-but rarely, and only when the pressure of other business was encroaching
-too much on him, omitted to receive at his private office the captains
-who came to make their reports to the directors. He knew, of course,
-every one of them personally, as he had appointed many of them himself
-years ago. He was no stranger to their various idiosyncrasies, and he
-knew all their good qualities. He was also personally acquainted with a
-great many of those unconventional and often somewhat blunt but always
-good-natured individuals of humble rank who seem to thrive wherever much
-shipping is going on. He was not too proud to write an appreciative
-article on the death of one of them, which, since it reflects high
-credit on his own generosity and kindness of heart, ought not to be
-allowed to be forgotten altogether. It was published by the _Hamburger
-Fremdenblatt_, to the staff of which the subject of his appreciation
-might, in a sense, be said to have belonged.
-
- KUSKOP.
-
- "It was not until my return from England that I learnt, through
- reading the _Fremdenblatt_, the news of the death of Karl
- Kuskop--news which made me feel very sad indeed. Kuskop ranked high
- among the few remaining real 'characters' of whom he was a type,
- and as I was not able to pay my last respects to him I feel a
- desire to do honour to his memory by a few words of personal
- recollection, although Dr. Obst has already done so by means of an
- excellent article of his own. For I believe I owe a few words of
- farewell to a man of whom I have heard nothing but what was good
- and generous throughout the better part of thirty years.
-
- "Karl Kuskop was a 'character' in the best sense of the term. He
- was as harmless as a big child; and although he could scarcely be
- said to be prominently gifted for his work, he did, indirectly at
- least, a great deal of good within his humble sphere. His
- popularity amongst all sorts and conditions of men connected with
- shipping was tremendous. My personal acquaintance with him dates
- back to the early trial trips of our steamers and similar
- occasions--occasions at which Kuskop was present as the
- 'representative' of the _Fremdenblatt_. I still have a vivid
- recollection of a magnificent summer evening when we, a party of
- about eighty people, left the passenger reception halls by our
- saloon-steamer _Blankensee_ on our way to Brunshausen where we
- intended to go on board one of our new boats which was ready for
- her trial trip. Kuskop, who was wearing his yachting cap and was
- armed with a pair of huge binoculars, had taken up a position on
- deck. He stood out very conspicuously, and a port labourer who was
- working on board an English steamer as soon as he saw him, raised
- the cry of _'Fremdenblatt_.' This cry was immediately taken up by
- the people on the quay-sides, on the river-vessels, on the
- ferry-boats, on the barges, and all other vessels in the
- neighbourhood, and developed into quite an ovation which was as
- spontaneous as it was popular. The worthy Kuskop appeared to be
- visibly gaining in importance; he had taken off his cap, and the
- tears trickled down his kindly face.
-
- "He well deserved this popularity. For years and years he
- unfailingly saw to it that the Hamburg steamers, at whatever port
- of the globe they arrived, found a _Fremdenblatt_ waiting for them,
- thus providing a valuable and much appreciated link between the
- crews and the old home. I myself have also reaped the benefit of
- his attentive care. Years ago when I was making a trip round the
- world I found the _Fremdenblatt_ waiting for me wherever I went;
- and after having been so much out of touch with the civilized world
- for weeks, that even Kuskop's genius could not discover my
- whereabouts, I was agreeably surprised to find on arriving at
- Vancouver all the old copies of the _Fremdenblatt_ that had failed
- to reach me, carefully piled up in one of the sleeping compartments
- of the saloon carriage which had been placed at my disposal for the
- railway journey from the Pacific to the Atlantic seaboard.
-
- "At that time I personally experienced the pleasant sensation--of
- which our captains and the other officers had often spoken to
- me--which one feels on reading the back copies of old newspapers,
- calling up, as it does, vivid recollections of home. In company
- with my wife, and some German officers who were returning from the
- scene of unrest in China in order to complete their convalescence
- at home, I greedily devoured the contents of the old papers from
- beginning to end, thus passing in a delightful way the time taken
- by travelling the long distance from Vancouver to Montreal. The
- idea, which was afterwards made use of by Oskar Blumenthal in a
- witty article, occurred to me to edit a paper which would publish
- the news of the day a week after it had been reported, and even
- then only as much of it as had proved to be true. Such a newspaper
- would save us a great deal of unnecessary worry, as the contents of
- this 'Periodical for the Dissemination of Truthful News' would be
- sifted to a minimum.
-
- "But it is time to cut short this digression. When I met my friend
- Kuskop again after my trip, it was at Stettin on the occasion of a
- launch. He happened to be in especially high spirits, and even more
- communicative than usual. He then told me the tale of his friend
- Senator Petersen, and it is such a good story that it would be a
- pity not to record it here.
-
- "It had become customary for the ships' captains and the other
- ships' officers who could boast his friendship to treat poor Kuskop
- to the wildest canards in return for his supplying them with
- reading matter from their far-away home. One afternoon, when they
- were sitting over a bottle of old port in Hermann Bade's wine
- restaurant at Stubbenhuk and it was getting late, one of them--he
- always referred to them as 'them young fools'--told him that a
- river barge loaded with arsenic had just sprung a leak in the
- harbour, so that it might become necessary to prohibit the use of
- water for drinking purposes for some time. It was about five
- o'clock and Kuskop, according to his own account, did not even stop
- to finish his glass of port, but hurried to the offices of 'his'
- paper which, in its next edition, published it as a fact that a
- quantity of arsenic had vitiated the water of the Elbe. Next
- morning, when Kuskop was still soundly asleep, two detectives
- appeared at the house in which he lived, and escorted him to
- headquarters, where he was locked up. At ten o'clock he was taken
- up before Mr. Livonius--or whoever was the chief of police at that
- time--who, with much abuse, demanded particulars concerning the
- arsenic affair. Kuskop, seeing at once that one of 'them young
- fools' had been pulling his leg, refused to supply any information
- whatever. He was then brought before Senator Petersen, who, with a
- great display of persuasion, tried to make him reveal the name of
- his informant. Kuskop, however, remained obstinate, and the
- Senator, changing his methods from persuasion to coercion, had him
- locked up again. He remained in confinement till five o'clock in
- the afternoon, and was then taken before Senator Petersen for the
- second time, who now peremptorily demanded that he should state his
- informant's name. Kuskop replied: 'Herr Senator, if you were in my
- position, you would not give him away yourself.' The Senator turned
- round to the police officials and said: 'Mr. Kuskop is a gentleman,
- you see. We shall not get anything out of him. The best thing you
- can do is to chuck him out,' which suggestion was thereupon
- promptly and most efficiently carried out by some of those who were
- present.
-
- "Another of his adventures he confided to me when a trial trip had
- taken us right out into the North Sea. One of 'them young fools,'
- he said, whom he regularly met at Mutzenbecher's tavern, had told
- him as the very latest news that Captain Kier had been taken into
- custody at Rio on the unfounded allegation of having committed
- theft. Kuskop, feeling somewhat sceptical on hearing this
- intelligence, but not believing himself justified in depriving the
- readers of the _Fremdenblatt_ of such a highly interesting item of
- news, thought he would be extra careful this time, and so did not
- mention the captain by name, but merely referred to him as 'a Mr.
- K----, captain of a Hamburg steamer.' This happened in the good old
- times when there were still real winters in Hamburg, and when the
- Elbe was sometimes ice-bound for months. The Hamburg steamers were
- then compelled to take up winter quarters at Glückstadt--of all
- places--and Kuskop used to establish a 'branch office' at that town
- on such occasions. As bad luck would have it, he was fated one day
- to meet Captain Kier there, who, with some of his friends, was
- dining at his hotel. A huge tureen of soup with an enormous ladle
- stood on the table in front of the captain, who was just about to
- serve the soup when Kuskop entered the room. Without a moment's
- hesitation the captain seized the ladle, the tureen, and everything
- he could lay his hands on, and hurled them at him. He was, as the
- latter afterwards confessed to me with the most innocent
- expression, offended by the newspaper report, because, as it
- happened, he was the only captain K---- on the route from Hamburg
- to Rio at that particular time. He subsequently brought an action
- against Kuskop, who had to retire from his business for some weeks
- in order to get over the consequences of the mistake he had made.
-
- "These are only two of the minor adventures from Kuskop's ample
- store of reminiscences. It is a pity that our sea-faring men are so
- reticent; otherwise they would be able to furnish a volume of
- material concerning Kuskop that would far exceed that relating to
- Kirchhoff, that other well-known Hamburg 'character.' I wish
- someone would collect all the Kuskop stories; for I do not believe
- that we shall ever again come across such a perfect specimen of his
- kind as he was, and it would be sad to allow such a man to be
- forgotten.
-
- "Kuskop, however, was not only a 'character': he was also a 'real
- good sort,' and he has been of real service to all those who have
- ever travelled on Hamburg vessels. Because of that it is certain
- that he will long be remembered; for it is not to him that the
- following quotation can be applied: 'May each one of us--whether he
- works with his hands or with his brain to earn a living
- wage--always bear in mind that all that is best in him is gradually
- lost in the process of toil, and that, after he has departed this
- life, nobody will remember that he ever existed.'
-
- "Our friend Kuskop never lost his good qualities in the process of
- toil, and he was always a friend and a helpmate to all decent
- people. I am sure in saying this I have the support of all who knew
- him, and so with us his memory will always be kept green."
-
-Ballin very frequently went to New York--which might be called the most
-prominent outpost of the company--because he recognized the value of
-being in constant touch with every aspect of the many activities carried
-on by the Packetfahrt, and especially with those persons whose interests
-it was of importance to the company to cultivate. The numerous pool
-conferences often took him to London, where he always made a point of
-keeping on friendly terms with the leading British shipping firms, and,
-later on, with some of the leading politicians as well. There were few
-people in Germany who could rival him in his knowledge of the psychology
-of the American or the British mind. This knowledge resulted from his
-great capacity for rapidly and correctly summing up the character of
-anyone with whom he had to deal. He had developed to a high degree the
-art of treating the different types of people he met according to their
-different individualities. His kindness of heart, his brilliant powers
-of conversation, his prodigious memory, his quickness of repartee, and
-his keen sense of humour made him a favourite wherever he cared to be
-one. One felt his charm as soon as one came into personal contact with
-him. His wonderfully alert eye, which could express so much kindness,
-the soothing tones of his melodious voice, and the firm and friendly
-grip of his hand, made one forget that he was not a handsome man,
-although his powerfully developed forehead and his head which, in later
-years, was almost bald, were of classic perfection.
-
-Albert Ballin would never have gained the commanding position he held if
-the keenness of his intellect and the force of his character had not
-been supplemented by that pleasing amiability which distinguishes all
-really good men. To him was given a large measure of that noble courtesy
-which springs from the heart. He who could be hard and unyielding where
-the business interests entrusted to his care were at stake, was full of
-generosity and sympathy towards the members of his family circle and his
-friends. Nothing delighted him more than the happiness of others. Those
-whom he cared for he treated with a tender regard which was deeply
-touching. He loved to give presents, and did so with the most delicate
-tact. He never expected any thanks; it was sufficient for him to see the
-happy face of the recipient. And if he ever met with ingratitude or
-spitefulness, he ignored it and dismissed it from his mind.
-
-Personally generous to the limit of extravagance, he never spent a penny
-of the funds of his company without being convinced that it would be to
-its benefit. He left nothing undone when he thought he could realize a
-profit to the company, or cut down expenses. Money, to him, was only a
-means to an end; and the earnings of the company were in the first place
-intended to be spent on increasing its scope and prosperity wherever
-possible. Those who know what remuneration the heads of other concerns
-receive may well be surprised to see how little Ballin made for himself
-out of his position, but they would do him a great injustice if they
-thought he ought to have made more out of it. He even spent the greater
-part of his income for purposes of representation in the interests of
-his company. His amiable charm of manner and his brilliant
-conversational gifts did much towards making the entertainments he
-provided the successes they invariably were; and even if so much
-representation, especially that in connexion with Kiel Week, became
-somewhat of a burden to him, his company reaped rich benefit from his
-munificence.
-
-But to appreciate to the full the charm of his personality one must have
-been his guest at his beautiful home in Hamburg or at his beloved
-country seat near Hamfelde, and have listened to his conversation while
-sitting round the fire of an evening, or been his companion on his long
-walks and rambles through the neighbouring Forest of Hahnheide. His
-conversation was always animated, his witty remarks were always to the
-point, and he was unsurpassed as a raconteur. He was excellent as a
-speaker at committee meetings, and he always hit upon the right words
-suitable for a political toast. The skill with which he wielded the pen
-is proved by numerous newspaper articles, memoranda, and descriptions of
-his travels, but above all by his voluminous correspondence. He was
-probably one of the most versatile letter-writers, and yet so
-conscientious in this as to be almost pedantic. In his early years he
-had also tried his hand at poetry. His beautiful home, which was adorned
-with pictures and sculptures by eminent masters, was a source of great
-pleasure to him. He was very fond of music and congenial company, and he
-knew how to appreciate the pleasures of a full and daintily arranged
-table.
-
-When I intimated to one of Ballin's old friends that I intended to write
-his Life, he told me that this would not be an easy task, and that he
-hoped I would not forget to depict Ballin as the amiable _charmeur_ to
-which side of his character so many of his successes were due, and which
-was the secret of much of his great popularity. The number of people
-who claimed to be his friends, both before and after his death, but
-especially when they were trying to get some advantage out of the
-company, was surprisingly large. They were, in fact, so numerous that
-such a claim, when put forward, was generally--and rightly--looked upon
-with a great deal of suspicion. Very often, when such self-styled
-friends were announced to him, Ballin would reply: "I do not know the
-man," or "I do not remember him, but I may have met him." Ballin may
-justly be described as a man of world-wide fame, and whenever he went
-abroad the papers eagerly followed his movements. In New York especially
-it required all his cunning and resourcefulness to escape from the
-reporters desiring to interview him.
-
-Owing to his prominent position before the public he received an
-abundance of honours during his life. The many distinctions and presents
-which the Kaiser bestowed on him were a source of gratitude and delight
-to him, and he valued them because they were a symbol of the personal
-ties that linked him to the Kaiser; but the foreign decorations, of
-which he also received a great many, were of so little interest to him
-that he did not even trouble to have those of them replaced which once
-were stolen from him. It was a great disappointment to him, however, not
-to be able to recover the Japanese ornamental swords which were taken on
-the same occasion, and which he had always carefully treasured because
-of their high artistic value. They were a present from the Marquis Ito,
-whom Ballin had once helped to obtain an audience of the Kaiser--an
-audience which, he hoped, would lead to the establishment on a permanent
-footing of Germany's relations with the Empire of the Mikado. It would
-appear, indeed, that, if the leaders of Germany's political destiny had
-shown some more circumspection, the same friendly relations might have
-been brought about between Germany and Japan as were entered into later
-on between Great Britain and the latter country. Personal souvenirs,
-like those just mentioned, were prized so highly by Ballin that no
-persuasion would induce him to part with them, and even Professor
-Brinckmann, the Director of the Hamburg Museum for Arts and Crafts, who
-was one of the leading authorities on the subject of Japanese applied
-art, and who tried hard to secure possession of them for his museum, met
-with a flat refusal.
-
-Every year Ballin spent at least six months, and often more, away from
-Hamburg, and during such absences the work he had to accomplish was not
-less, but rather more than that which he did when in Hamburg.
-Conferences followed upon each other in quick succession at all times of
-the day, and the time that was left was filled up by visits. Often the
-amount of work was so great that he had to get through a whole series of
-difficult problems in a single day. The number of visits he had arranged
-was always considerably augmented by numerous others not allowed for in
-his arrangements for the day; because wherever he went the news of his
-arrival spread immediately. He could never even think of travelling
-incognito. It is literally true that he was known to every hotel porter
-all over the world. He was in the habit of extending his hospitality
-twice a day to a larger or smaller number of business friends when he
-was travelling. At first his love of congenial society had prompted him
-to do this, but in after years he continued it because he wanted to
-secure some benefit for his company even in his hours of relaxation.
-Still, he was often quite glad when, late at night, he had come to the
-close of his day's work, and when he could let the happenings of the day
-pass before his mind's eye in the quiet solitude of his room, or, as he
-liked to express it, "to draw the balance of the day's account."
-
-Even before 1900 the never-tiring energy of his mind and the excessive
-strain on his nervous system brought about a practically permanent
-insomnia which never left him either in Hamburg or on his travels. Only
-when he was on the sea, or was staying at his country house, did he
-obtain any relief; and at such times he could dispense with the drugs to
-the use of which he had become a victim more and more regularly and
-extensively as time went on. The fact that this habit did not entirely
-ruin his nervous system proves that he was possessed of an iron
-constitution, which only gave way under the huge strain caused by the
-war. When he saw that his life's work had been broken to fragments, and
-when he felt that he had not enough strength left for a second attempt
-of such magnitude, even his immense nerve force collapsed under the
-blow.
-
-The anxieties caused by the war--a war which he knew would be
-lost--weighed more and more heavily on his mind the longer it lasted.
-Outwardly he bore himself bravely and steadfastly, but his mind was full
-of dark forebodings, especially when he was by himself. If he had not
-had the unvarying sympathy of the faithful partner of his life, with
-whom he shared thirty-five years of mutual happiness, and if he had not
-always derived fresh consolation from his beloved adopted daughter and
-from his grandchildren, he would indeed many a time have felt very
-lonely. In spite of his apprehensions as to the result of the war, he
-yet remained faithful to the task of his life, and he hoped against
-hope. His ardent love of his work was constantly struggling with his
-reason, which foretold him the ruin of the Empire and in consequence
-that of German shipping.
-
-This fact explains some apparent contradictions in his views and
-actions. What was the general public to think of a man who was watching
-the progress of the war with the greatest pessimism, whilst at the same
-time bringing all his influence to bear on the passing of a law which
-was to make possible the reconstruction of Germany's merchant fleet,
-knowing that such reconstruction could only be achieved if the Empire
-which was to set aside the funds were to remain intact. In this matter,
-as in others, it was the intuition of the born business-man which guided
-him, or perhaps a sort of instinct which made him discover new ways when
-the old ones had failed. These forces of his mind had nothing in common
-with logical reasoning, and they prevented him from drawing the
-practical inference from the sentiment so often expressed by us during
-the war: "If the Empire falls to pieces, we shall all be ruined; and if
-the Empire becomes bankrupt, we shall be insolvent too." Events have
-shown that this sentiment was not justified by facts. Empires and
-individuals may perish; but the nations, and their trade and commerce
-which are the outcome of their economic needs and of their geographical
-position, will outlast them.
-
-Neither is it likely that the life-work of those men who have left their
-mark on their epoch will ever be in vain. There are two great
-achievements which, it appears, will always stand out like two pillars
-in the wreck of destruction that has fallen upon Germany, viz.
-Bismarck's work of political unification, and--a necessary preliminary
-of it--the powerful economic foundations laid with incessant toil by the
-great industrial leaders of whom Germany had so many during the era of
-her prosperity.
-
-Albert Ballin was one of the most gifted among their number, and the
-world-wide fame of his achievements has outlived his death. When, after
-five years of isolation from the rest of the world, Germany appeared
-once more amongst the nations, she did so with the knowledge that the
-foundations of the proud structure which Ballin had built up were still
-unshaken, and this knowledge has proved one of her greatest assets when
-she entered upon the task of reconstruction.
-
-If German shipping is to flourish again, and if German steamers are now
-ploughing the oceans once more, credit is due to Albert Ballin. His work
-it is from which new life is emanating, and it is to be hoped that his
-spirit will continue to animate German shipping both now and in the
-future.
-
-[Illustration: Extract Annotated by William II]
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
-Aden, 85
-
-Adler Line, 7
-
-Aehrenthal, Count, 141
-
-Agadir incident, 162
-
-Agents, emigration, work of, 8
-
-Alsace-Lorraine, problem of, 272
-
-_America_, 12
-
-_Amerika_, 25, 106, 129
-
-Andersen, Mr., and the Danish Royal Family, 99
-
-Anglo-American Alliance, Ballin's opinion of, 256
-
-Anglo-German rapprochement, 134
- shipping agreement, 18
- understanding, 164, 165
- advantage of, 136
- Ballin as negotiator, 136
- failure of, 133
-
-Anglo-Russian agreement, 137
-
-Antwerp, 81, 82
-
-_Aquitania_, 113
-
-Asquith, Mr. H. H., 262
- on Lord Haldane's mission, 177
- speech on Navy, 154
-
-Atlantic Conference, 111
-
-Atlantic Transport-Leyland Co., enlargement of, 45
-
-_Auguste Victoria_, 25, 27, 72, 75, 193, 196
-
-_Australia_, 12
-
-Austria, need of compromise with Italy, 242
-
-Austria-Hungary, strained relations between, 251
-
-Austro-German _Zollverein_, 251
-
-
-Baden-Powell, General, and the German menace, 138
-
-Bagdad Railway, 189
-
-Baker, B. N., American shipping magnate, 42
- comes to Europe, 44
-
-Baker, B. N., discusses terms of community of interest agreement, 42
-
-Balkan States, and Germany, 251
-
-Ballin, Albert, adopts Lord Pirrie's advice, 44
- advises peace overtures, 245
- after the war problems, 255
- agreement with Harland and Wolff, 122
- American appreciation of, 308
- an English journalist on, 293
- ancestry of, 2
- and Admiral v. Tirpitz, 237
- and Adolph Woermann, 107
- and Anglo-German rapprochement, 134
- and Carl Laeisz, 294
- and Count Tisza, 252
- and Count Waldersee, 194
- and Government subsidies, 60
- and Hamburg-Amerika Linie, 69
- and Hugo Stinnes, 280
- and Mr. Gerard, 246
- and labour questions, 297
- and politics, 131
- and North German Lloyd, 116
- and Princess Marie of Denmark, 99
- and Reichstag, 279
- and submarine warfare, 252, 254
- and the Russo-Japanese War, 104
- and Union Line, 19
- and working classes, 297
- and world war, 132
- anxiety as to Roumania, 244
- article in _Frankfurter Zeitung_ on blockade, 234
- as Anglo-German negotiator, 136
- as arbitrator, 79
- as general representative of Carr Line, 12
- as head of Packetfahrt passenger department, 18, 21
- at Constitutional Club, 140
- at Neues Palais, 204
- at the German front, 266
- attempts at mediation during war, 233
- boldness of, 289
- business principle of, 132
- capacity for work of, 300
- chairman of Pool Conference, 36
- complains of German official high-handedness, 232
- conducts London emigration discussions, 1898, 38
- death of, 286
- defends himself, 235
- dines with Danish Royal Family, 100
- disagrees with use of submarines, 229
- discusses Morgan Trust with William II, 53
- early biographical details of, 6
- education of, 3, 4
- establishes German-Japanese Bank, 204
- estimates British naval staying-power, 253
- Far East investigations, 84
- favours peace by compromise, 236
- forcing the British Lines, 36
- friendliness of William II toward, 206
- further reports on Morgan Trust negotiations, 49-50
- grave warning in 1918, 279
- Hamfelde, his country home, 310
- handling of labour troubles, 298-9
- his father's death, 5
- his life-work, 115
- his 1901 trip epitomized, 95
- his observation of details, 123
- his view on evading war, July 27, 1914, 216
- ideal in forming Pool, 66
- impressions of Paris after Morocco affair, 181
- in London discussing Austrian ultimatum, 215
- in Vienna, 1916, 249
-
-Ballin, Albert, intense patriotism of, 291
- international services of, vii
- interview with Bethmann-Hollweg, 152
- interview with Grey, Haldane, and Churchill, 215
- last diary entry, 286
- last meeting with William II, 209, 280
- letter from William II, 175
- letter to Kiderlen-Wächter, 163
- letters to General v. Falkenhayn, 244
- made Packetfahrt Director, 27
- meets Sir Ernest Cassel, 138
- mental versatility of, 2
- mission to Vienna, 1915, 242
- negotiations with Booth Line on Brazilian trade, 83
- notes of conversations with William II, 203
- official thanks to, 141
- on Agadir incident, 163
- on _Blücher_, 60
- on death of Edward VII, 160
- on engineering problems, 121
- on foreign exchange, 274
- on _Hohenzollern_, 202
- on London in election time, 158
- on naval armaments, 147
- on neutrals, 245
- on peace problems, 239
- on sale of confiscated fleet, 230
- on Sandjak Railway, 142
- on security of William II, 241
- on Serbian situation, 214
- on war's failures, 258 _et seq._
- opinion of German Chancellor, 259
- opinion of war's duration, 237
- personal characteristics of, 287
- pioneer in steerage business, 11
- policy of, 79
- political views, 291
- premier position at twenty-nine, 19
- present from Marquis Ito, 311
- prodigious memory of, 4
- report on British attitude to Germany, 161
- report on development of German shipping, 47
- reticence of, 3
- reviews war position in 1916, 258
- ridicules submarine warfare, 268-9
- stimulating influences of his life, 2
- strain of war on health, 313
- sturdy honesty of, 309
- suggested as negotiator of peace, 286
- suggests Pool, 24
- talks with Prince Bülow, 271
- talks with William II on submarine war, 248
- threatens British traffic, 22
- trip round the world, 83
- value of wonderful memory, 35
- views on character of William II, 285
- visits London in 1914, 184
- war problems of foreign policy, 241
- William II discusses politics with, 203
- William II writes to, on Navy Bill, 183
- William II's personal interest in, 198
- wire from Leopold de Rothschild, 163
- with Prince Henry of Prussia on the _Hohenzollern_, 57
- with William II at Front, 266
- with William II in Italy, 204
- with William II on _Kaiser Wilhelm II_, 55
- work in _Reichseinkauf_, 224
- writes frank letter on war to William II, 1916, 252 _et seq._
- writes on Morgan Trust, 46
- writes to William II, April, 1917, 264
-
-Bauer, Lieut.-Col., 280
-
-Beck, Edward, 27
-
-Berg, Herr von, 282
-
-_Berliner Tageblatt_ on Anglo-Russian naval agreement, 213
-
-Bernstorff, Count, 264
-
-Bethmann-Hollweg, von, 151, 152, 156, 262, 270, 277
- attacked respecting Agadir, 162
- on British delegation, 166-7
- telegram to Mexico, 271
-
-_Bismarck_, launch of, 202
-
-Bismarck, Prince, 114
-
-Blockade, German, futility of, 267
-
-Blohm and Voss, 113
-
-_Blücher_, Ballin on trial trip, 60
-
-Boer War, European move to stop, 143
- lesson of, 139
-
-Bohlen, Krupp v., 282
-
-Bolten, August, 10
-
-British argument against German naval expansion, 133
- Cabinet and German naval expansion, 182
- confiscation of German merchant fleet, 229
- convoys, how they outwitted the Germans, 267
- emigration, comparison with German, 15
- excitement over Morgan Trust, 60
- feeling in Russo-Japanese war, at German attitude, 104
- Ludendorff's promise to crush, 266
- Navy, Ballin on, 239
- opinion on shipping deals, 67
- rivalry with Germany, 133
- shipbuilding, developments in, and Hamburg-Amerika Linie, 128, 208
- shipbuilding, German move against, 17
- shipping companies, Pierpont Morgan and, 55
- shipping lines, and emigration, 7-14;
- agreement with, 23;
- join the Continental Pool, 23;
- offered to German companies, 67
- supremacy, Ballin on, 241
-
-Bülow, Prince, 141, 247, 270
-
-
-Canadian Pacific Railway, 62, 111
-
-Cargo and steerage shipping, 13
-
-Carr, Edward, 12
-
-Carr Line, the, 12 _et seq._
- and Packetfahrt, 12
-
-Cassel, Sir Ernest, 134
- and Winston Churchill, 165
- meets Ballin, 138
- on Anglo-German understanding, 165
- on naval problem, 179
- on Sandjak Railway, 142
- report of interview with, on Navy, 171
- work for reduction of naval armaments, 134 _et seq._
-
-Cholera, epidemic at Hamburg, 36, 72
-
-Christiansand, port of, 21
-
-Churchill, Mr. Winston, 166
- at Kiel, 1914, 192
- complains of Germany, 180
- Sir Ernest Cassel on, 165
- speech on Navy, 175
- suggests a naval holiday, 186
-
-Colombo, 86
-
-_Columbia_, 77, 201
-
-Community of interest agreement (_see_ "Pool" and "Morgan Trust")
-
-Congo, Franco-German agreement, 162
-
-Coolies, Chinese, 89
-
-Cunard Line, and Austrian Government, 65
- and Hungarian Government, 63
- effect on Pool, 65
- introduces turbines, 111
- new liners, 113
- opposition to cabin Pool, 61
- refuses to join Pool, 37
-
-Cuxhaven, development of, 69
- regatta at, 205
-
-
-_Daily Telegraph_, sent to William II, 270
- the William II interview, 144
-
-Dardanelles, the, operations in, 245
- de Freitas and Co., A. C., 79
- de Freitas Line, purchase of, 80
-
-Denmark, emigration from, 13
- Royal Family of, their interest in shipping, 99
-
-_Deutschland_, 25, 78, 130
-
-Diesel engine, application to steamship, 102
-
-Dreadnoughts, 200
-
-
-Eastern Asiatic Co., 98
-
-Edward VII, 134
- and Morgan Trust, 61
-
-Edward VII, chances of Anglo-German war, during reign of, 139
- death of, 158
- policy of, 135
- the Kiel week, 206
- visit to Wilhelmshöhe, 136
- visits Berlin, 145
- visits Kaiser at Friedrichshof, 142
-
-Elbe, enlargement of harbour facilities on the, 69, 70, 79
-
-Ellerman, Mr., of Leyland Line, 45
-
-Emden, rise of, 83
-
-Emigrants, early accommodation of, 7, 8, 14
-
-Emigration, anti-British action, 17
- Ballin's work for, 9
- beginnings of pooling, 12
- British and German, 15
- British rates, 22
- business, how controlled, 8
- comparisons of Carr Line and Packetfahrt, 15
- cost of, 12
- Danish, 13
- Hungarian, 63
- in the 'seventies, 8
- medical control established, 74
- on pre-paid basis, 9 _et seq._
- rate war begins, 14
- statistics of, 103
- stopped by Hamburg cholera epidemic, 36
-
-Emigration Law, German, 23
-
-Erzberger, Herr, 244
-
-Esher, Lord, and the Admiralty, 138
-
-Europe, concerted inquiry to Germany, 140
- situation in September, 1916, 262
-
-
-Falkenhayn, General v., Ballin and, 244
-
-Finland, 278
-
-Forced draught, first vessels under, 26
-
-Foreign exchange, Ballin on, 273
-
-Francis Joseph, Emperor, 250
- and Count Tisza, 250
-
-Frederick the Great on experience, viii
-
-Frisch, Geheimrat, 223
-
-Furness, Sir Christopher, and Morgan Trust, 61
-
-_Fürst Bismarck_, 193
-
-Fürstenkonzern, 110
-
-
-George V, King, Ballin's letter respecting, 160
-
-George, Mr. Lloyd, speech on Agadir incident, 162
- visits Germany, 143
-
-Gerard, Mr., and Ballin, 246
-
-German-British shipping agreement, 18
-
-German emigration fleet, in 1882, 10
-
-German Government, note to British Government, 170
-
-German Naval Bill, 137
-
-German Navy, the 1908 affair, 138
-
-Germany, and Belgian Relief Committee, 231
- and the Merchant Service Bill, 228
- bad feeling among neutrals to, 245
- Ballin cries "everything is being gambled away," 257
- Ballin discusses after-the-war problems, 255
- big naval programme, 143
- British agitation against, 137
- confiscation of merchant fleet, 229
- control of trade and industries, 274
- failure of political leaders, 264
- favourable shipping situation of, 80
- feeling towards British, 143
- food problem, September, 1918, 284
- habit of premature actions, 273
- ignorance of British character, 260
- internal condition in August, 1914, 223 _et seq._
- lack of effective administration during war, 233
- mental attitude of, 134
- plans to approach President Wilson, 283
-
-Germany, state in 1916 "like living in a madhouse," 257
- useless sacrifices of, 229
- war condition of, 257
- war-hopes in ruins, 269
-
-Germany's industrial growth, 7
-
-_Gigantic_, 113
-
-Goschen, Sir Ernest, 153
-
-Gothenburg, port of, 21
-
-Grey, Sir Edward, 262
- on Lord Haldane's mission, 177
- on naval armaments, 157
- on the Navy, 138
-
-Great War (_see_ World War)
-
-Grumme, Capt. v., joins Hamburg-Amerika Linie, 199
- with William II at Morgan Trust discussion, 53.
-
-
-Hague Conference, 137
-
-Hahn, Dr. Diederich, Chairman Agrarian League, 59
-
-Haldane, Lord, 171
- and British neutrality, 190
- Cabinet's attitude toward, 184
- explains to Ballin, 191
- German opinion respecting, 187
- success of his mission, 177
- visits Berlin, 134, 167
- William II's discussions with, 174 _et seq._
-
-Hamburg, absorption into Prussia, 296
- birthplace of Ballin, 1
- cholera epidemic in, 36, 72
- dock strike, 299
- in the nineteenth century, 1-6
-
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie, and Great Britain, 207
- and Persia, 107
- and Russo-Japanese war, 105
- buys foodstuffs for isolated Germany, 223
- far-reaching alterations, 98
- fate of ships when war broke out, 220
- financial stability of, 116
- fleet of, 116
- instructions to ships on eve of war, 220
- new premises, 202
- sixtieth anniversary, 117
- William II and, 195
-
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie (_see also_ Packetfahrt)
-
-Hamburg-Amerikanische Packetfahrt-Actien-Gesellschaft, 7
-
-Hamburg Regattas, William II at, 201
-
-Hamburg-South American S.S. Co., 79
-
-Hammann, Geheimrat, 138, 141
-
-_Hammonia_, 24
-
-Hansa Line, 69
- taken over by Hamburg-Amerika Linie, 70
-
-Hansemann, v., director Disconto-Gesellschaft, 55
-
-Hansen, President, Chief of Arbitration Court Pool, 35
-
-Harbou, Major v., 282
-
-Harland and Wolff, 112, 121
-
-Henckell-Donnersmarck, Prince, Kaiser's interest in, 47
-
-Hintze, Herr v., 283
-
-_Hohenzollern_, 194
-
-Holland-America Line, 7
-
-Holland, Queen of, offers mediation, 283
-
-Holtzendorff, Admiral v., 246
-
-Hongkong, 88
-
-Huldermann, Bernhard, and Count Witte on averting war, 217
- and Navy Bill, 170
-
-
-Immco Lines, Pool name for Morgan Trust, 65
-
-Immigrants, Scandinavian trade, 36
-
-_Imperator_, 31, 113, 125, 126
-
-International Mercantile Marine Company (_see_ Morgan Trust)
-
-Inverclyde, Lord, and Morgan Trust, 64
-
-Italia Company, the, started, 79
-
-Italy, agreement with, necessary to success of war, 241
- Germany's failure in, 242
-
-
-Jagow, Herr v., 213, 214
-
-Jewish ancestry of Ballin, 2
-
-Jones, Sir A., and the Morgan Trust, 6
-
-Jonquières, Herr v., 231
-
-_Kaiser Wilhelm der Grösse_, 77
-
-_Kaiser Wilhelm II_, 205
-
-_Kaiserin_, 113
-
-_Kaiserin Auguste Victoria_, 25, 106, 129
-
-Kaiserin, the, and the war, 211
- opposition to private life, 285
-
-Kiautschou, 97
-
-Kiel Canal, widening the, 200
- Edward VII at, 206
- Week, origin of, 201
-
-Kirchheim, Chief Inspector Emil F., viii
-
-Köhlhrand, agreement the, 295
-
-Kühlmann, Herr v., 189
-
-Kunhardt, M., 27
-
-Kuskop, Karl, 303
-
-
-Laeisz, Carl, 293
-
-Laeisz, F., 293
-
-Laird's, orders to, 26
-
-Law, German Emigration, of 1887, 23
-
-Leuthold, Prof., 199
-
-Leyland Line, acquired by Pierpont Morgan, 48
-
-Liberal Cabinet, and naval armaments, 149
-
-Liberal Government, and Anglo-German understanding, 136
-
-Lichnowsky, Prince, 188
- view on Haldane's "neutrality" conversation, 191
-
-Liners, developments in, 125 _et seq._
-
-Lohmann, Mr., 10
- Director-General of Lloyd Line, 32
-
-Ludendorff, and the Crown Prince, 280
- and "to her knees" promise, 266
-
-_Lusitania_, 62, 113
-
-
-Marie, Princess, of Denmark, 99
-
-Marine engineering, Ballin's enterprise in, 122
- development of, 119
- Packetfahrt types, 125
- progress in, 127
-
-Marschall, Bieberstein v., 188
-
-_Mauretania_, 62, 113
-
-Mediterranean Conference, 111
-
-_Meteor_, 197
-
-Metternich, Count, at St. James's, 212
- on Anglo-German understanding, 187
- predicts Great War, 188
- sees Sir Edward Grey, 178
-
-Morgan, Pierpont, guest of William II at Kiel, 61
-
-Morgan, Trust, the, 40 _et seq._
- agreement reached, 52
- announced to British Press, 59
- effect of freight slump, 61
- final discussions in New York, 55 _et seq._
- financial aspect, 45
- inception of, 45
- International Mercantile Marine Co., formal name of, 65
- King Edward VII and, 61
- outline of draft agreement, 51
- Pierpont Morgan at London Conference, 49
- Pierpont Morgan's operations attract public attention, 46
- telegram from William II, 56
- terms of agreement, 58
- William II discusses, 53
-
-Morris and Co., 1 _et seq._
-
-Mutius, Herr v., 247
-
-
-Nanking, 92
-
-Naumann, Dr., and "Berlin to Bagdad," 276
-
-_Nautikus_, naval propaganda in, 200
-
-Naval armaments, a cause of unrest, 133
- Ballin's report on, 146 _et seq._
- big navy propaganda, 133
- Reichstag and reduction of, 145
-
-Naval Bill of 1912, 155
- Ballin writes to Sir Ernest Cassel on, 168
- British alarm at, 166
-
-Naval holiday, Mr. Churchill suggests a, 186
-
-Navy, a bigger British, 171
-
-Navy League, German, 137
-
-_New York_, 49
-
-New York, emigration to, in the 'eighties, 7 _et seq._
- steerage passengers to, statistics, 29
-
-_Normannia_, 77
-
-North Atlantic Steamship Lines Association, history of, 32
-
-_North German Gazette_, 157
-
-North German Lloyd, 7, 98, 106, 111
- competes with Packetfahrt, 10
- jubilee of, 117
-
-
-Oertzen, Herr v., 91
-
-_Olympic_, 113
-
-
-Packetfahrt, the, a founder of, 10
- agreement with Philadelphia Shipping Co. and Pennsylvania Railroad Co., 77
- and Ballin, 289
- and Carr Line, 12
- and emigrants, 10
- and Harland and Wolff, 121
- and Russian coal, 104
- and the Russo-Japanese War, 103
- Ballin made director of, 27
- celebration of jubilee, 74
- 1886 Pool, 21
- extension of South American business, 80
- improved appointments and accommodation on vessels, 26
- increase of capital, 26
- letter from chairman of Cunard Company, 75
- more new vessels built, 25, 74
- New York branch established, 27
- passenger department created, 19
- service to Mexico, 83
- statistics (1886), 19
- (_see also_ Hamburg-Amerika Linie)
-
-_Panther_, William II and, 210
-
-Paris Economic Conference, 276
-
-Passenger traffic, improvements in, 41
-
-Peace negotiations, Ballin and, 286
-
-Peters, Heinrich, central offices of, 34
- secretary of Pool, 31
-
-_Philadelphia_, 49
-
-Pirrie, Lord, 121
- advises Ballin, 44
- discusses Morgan Trust, 63
-
-Pleasure cruises, inception of, 70 _et seq._
-
-Pool accommodation discussions (1898), 38
- actuarial basis of, 34
- agreement on (1891), 24
- agreement with Allan Line, 74
- agreement with Italian Lines, 74
- agreement with Lloyd Line, 74
- Ballin's opinions upon, 115
- British Lines refuse (1892), 33
- cardinal principles of, 30
- Cunard Line refuses to join, 37
- details of the, 28
- Heinrich Peters, secretary of, 31
- its most dramatic episode, 67
- more internal troubles, 115
- negotiations for a greater, 35
- North Atlantic Steamship Lines Association, formal name of, 33
- proposed by Ballin, 1886, 24
- special, for Mediterranean business, 34
- terms definitely made, 33
- the General, 111
- the transatlantic, 110
- tonnage and passenger statistics, 29
- U.S.A. Railway pool compared, 28
- world war's effect upon, 111
-
-Port Said, 85
-
-_Pretoria_, 201
-
-Princes' Trust, 110
-
-_Prinzessin Victoria Luise_, 130
-
-Prussia, Prince Henry of, 57
-
-
-Rate war, the, 14, 110
-
-Red Star Line, 7
-
-_Reichseinkauf_, the, formation of, 223
-
-Reuchlin, Mr., of Holland-American Line, 32
-
-Richardson, Spence and Co., 9
-
-Riga, fall of, 272
-
-Roumania, anxiety regarding food from, 251
- neutrality of, 244
- supplies grain during war to Germany, 227
-
-Rupprecht of Bavaria, Prince, 137
-
-Russia, army of, 139
-
-Russian East Asiatic S.S. Co., 101
-
-Russian Press, outburst against Sandjak Railway, 141
-
-Russian Volunteer Fleet, 111
-
-Russo-Japanese War, 102
- coaling problems for Russian fleet, 105
- ships for, 25
-
-
-_St. Louis_, 49
-
-_St. Paul_, 49
-
-Sandjak Railway, 141
-
-Scandia Line, 21
-
-Scandinavian emigration, 21
-
-Schön, Herr v., 141
-
-Schratt, Frau Kathi, 250
- pro-English sympathies of, 252
-
-Schwander, Dr., 272
-
-Shanghai, 90
-
-Shaughnessy, Lord, 62
-
-Shipping agreement on rates, 17
- agreements, enormous range of, 111
- British tonnage in 1901, 49
- crisis of 1907, 111
- Imperial Government's interest in, 55
- some tonnage comparisons, 49
- statistics (1881-1885), 29
- transatlantic business, trend of, 67
-
-Ships, speed of, in 1882, 10
-
-Singapore, 87
-
-Skoda, Baron, 251
-
-Sloman and Co., R. M., 18
-
-South African War, 79
-
-South America, development of, 82
-
-Southampton, Packetfahrt service transferred to, 73
-
-Spanish-American War, ships for, 25
-
-Steinhöft, Hamburg, 1
-
-Stettin, Vulkan Yard, 78, 113
- orders to, 26
-
-Stinnes, Hugo, 280
-
-Storm, Director A., viii
-
-Strasser, Mr., of the Red Star Line, 32
-
-Stürgkh, Count, 243
- Francis Joseph and, 250
-
-Submarine warfare, 248, 252, 258
- amazing achievements, 268
- unrestricted, beginning of, 263
-
-Thingvalla Line, 21
-
-_Times, The_, on German neutrality, 104
-
-Tirpitz, Admiral v., 151, 152, 199
- and Ballin, 237
- threatens resignation, 246
-
-Tisza, Count, 243
- and Count Stürgkh, 250
-
-_Titanic_, 113
-
-Tokio, 93
-
-Trans-Andine Railway, completion of, 82
-
-Tsingtau, 92, 97
-
-Tweedmouth, Lord, and the Kaiser, 137
-
-
-Ukraine, the, 278
-
-U.S.A., application of Monroe doctrine in, 82
- cholera and isolation in, 73
- devastating effects of entry into war, 255
- economic depression of the 'eighties, 9
- enters the war, 269
- German fears of intervention, 252
- immigration from Scandinavia, 21
- Railway Pool, 29
- railways and shipping co-operation, 44
-
-
-_Vaterland_, 113
-
-Versailles treaty, German view of, 208
-
-Vienna, conditions in, 249
-
-Vulkan Yard, Stettin, 26, 78, 113
-
-
-Waldersee, General Count Georg, and Ballin, 194
- on rationing Germany, 221
-
-_Westminster Gazette_ (article in facsimile at end), 163, 235
-
-White Star Line, and Pierpont Morgan, 55
- new liners, 113
-
-Wiegand, Dr. Heinrich, 119
- and Morgan Trust, 54
-
-Wilding, Mr., Ballin's friendship for, 9
-
-William II, and "a place in the sun," 202
- and British Navy, British feeling aroused, 137
- and _Daily Telegraph_ interview, 143
- and Nicholas, suggested talk to avert war, 220
- and President Wilson's note, 285
- and the _Bismarck_, 114
- at Hamburg, 193
- Ballin explains situation in September, 1918, 209
- Ballin reports to, on navy problem, 138
- Ballin tells him the ugly truth in 1917, 267
- blind to situation, September, 1918, 283
- "brimful of optimism," 272
- comments on _Westminster Gazette_ article, 163
- designs excursion steamer, 196
- discusses Morgan Trust with Ballin, 53
- discusses Morocco question, 205
- facsimile comments on _Westminster Gazette_ article (_see_ end of book)
- interest in German shipbuilding, 196
- interest in Morgan Trust, 197
- intervenes in shipping struggle, 106
- isolation of, 255
- last meeting with Ballin, 280
- letter on British Navy, 137
- maritime interests of, 201
- monarchical discussions, Ballin and, 285
- on balance of power, 165
- on Germany's Austro-Hungarian policy, 189
- on the Churchill speech, 183
- outspoken letter in 1916 from Ballin, 252 _et seq._
- personal interest in Ballin, 198
- persuaded to retire into private life, 285
- sees Edward VII at Friedrichshof, 142
- supports Ballin's mission of inquiry
- to U.S.A., 54
- telegram to Morgan Trust, 56
- venerated in Austria, 251
- visits Windsor, 136
- wants apology from Great Britain, 183
- writes to Ballin on Haldane interview, 175
-
-Wilson, President, 263
-
-Witt, Mr. Johannes, 27
-
-Witte, Count, on situation July, 1914, 217
-
-Woermann, Adolph, 107
- character sketch of, 108
-
-World war, the, 213
- Ballin attempts mediation, 233
- Ballin describes 1917 situation to William II, 265
- Ballin favours a compromise, 236
- Ballin on neutrals, 245
- Ballin on the blockade, 234
- Ballin on the crisis, 215
- Bismarck's prophecy regarding, 133
- British censorship in, 225
- coal problems during, 102
- Count Witte on situation, July 24th, 1914, 217
- defection of German conscripts, 281
- effect on Pool, 111
-
-World war, the, entry of U.S.A., effect of, 253 _et seq._
- food problems of Germany, 222
- forced upon William II, 285
- foreign policy and food during, 241
- German mistakes in, 258-9
- Germany stunned by _débâcle_, 236
- grain from Roumania, 227
- indemnities, 261
- Mexico telegram, 271
- outbreak of, 132
- peace overtures, 245
- position in 1916, 258
- provisioning Germany, 221
- shipping profits during, 65
- submarine warfare in, 229
- the British blockade, 224
- Tyrol, failure in the, 259
- Verdun and Italian campaigns, political and military failures, 258
-
-World's shipping collapse, cause of, 229
-
-
-Yang-Tse-Kiang, the, 91, 96
-
-
-Zentral-Einkaufs-Gesellschaft, 226 _et seq._
-
- PRINTED IN ENGLAND BY CASSELL & COMPANY, LIMITED, LONDON, E. C. 4.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] Gross registered tonnage.
-
-[2] Then British Ambassador in Berlin.
-
-[3] This refers to the political events in Berlin immediately prior to
-the outbreak of war.
-
-[4] The head of the Press Department of the Foreign Office.
-
-[5] The telegram which the Foreign Office sent to the German Minister
-in Mexico, and which was partly responsible for the entry of the United
-States into the war.
-
-[6] Director of the Hamburg branch of the firm of Hugo Stinnes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Typographical errors corrected by the etext transcriber:
-
-aded to their fleets=> added to their fleets {pg 48}
-
-in the era on the machine-gun=> in the era of the machine-gun {pg 266}
-
-aready explained=> already explained {pg 270}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Albert Ballin, by Bernhard Huldermann
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ALBERT BALLIN ***
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Albert Ballin, by Bernhard Huldermann
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-Title: Albert Ballin
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-Author: Bernhard Huldermann
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-<p class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="311" height="500" alt="bookcover" title="" />
-</p>
-
-<p class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/albert_ballin_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img class="enlargeimage"
-src="images/enlarge-image.jpg"
-alt=""
-width="18"
-height="14" />
-<br />
-<img src="images/albert_ballin.jpg" width="330" height="500" alt="Albert Ballin photo" title="Albert Ballin photo" /></a>
-</p>
-
-<h1><span class="smcap">Albert Ballin</span></h1>
-
-<p class="cb"><small>By</small><br />
-Bernhard Huldermann<br /><br /><br />
-<i>Translated from the German<br />
-by<br />
-W. J. EGGERS, M.A. (London)</i><br /><br /><br />
-<img src="images/colophon.png" width="20" height="24" alt="decoration" title="decoration" />
-<br /><br /><br />
-Cassell and Company, Limited<br />
-London, New York, Toronto and Melbourne<br />
-1922<br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
-
-To the Memory of<br />
-A L B E R T &nbsp; B A L L I N<br />
-in true veneration and heartfelt gratitude</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“<i>He was a man; take him for all in all,</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i0"><i>I shall not look upon his like again.</i>â€<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i3"><span class="smcap">Shakespeare</span>, <i>Hamlet</i> (<i>Act I, Scene 2</i>).<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE"></a>PREFACE</h2>
-
-<p class="nind">M<small>Y</small> principal reason for publishing the information contained in this
-volume is to keep alive the memory of Albert Ballin. I particularly
-desire to show what was his share in bringing about the economic advance
-of Germany during the golden age of the Empire’s modern history, and to
-relate how he&mdash;unsuccessfully, alas!&mdash;strove to prevent the proud
-structure which he had helped to raise, from falling to ruin in the time
-of his country’s distress. I believe that much that concerns the latter
-aspect of his work will be new to most readers. In spite of all that has
-been said and written concerning the political activities which Ballin
-displayed (and is alleged to have displayed) both before and during the
-war, their object&mdash;and, more important still, their intimate connexion
-with his economic activities&mdash;is scarcely known. Eminently successful
-though Ballin had been in creating an atmosphere of mutual understanding
-between the various nations in the economic sphere, his attempts to
-reconcile the contending ambitions of those same nations where politics
-were concerned ended in failure. And yet it is impossible to understand
-his failure in one respect without first understanding his success in
-the other; indeed, the connexion between the two sides of his work forms
-the key to the character of the man and to the historical significance
-of his achievements.</p>
-
-<p>It is possible that this volume may shed some new light on the causes of
-Germany’s collapse; this idea, at any rate, was before my mind when I
-decided upon publication. Frederick the Great somewhere remarked that,
-to the great loss of mankind, the experiences gained by one generation
-are always useless to the next, and that each generation is fated to
-make its own mistakes. If this is true, it is nevertheless to be hoped
-that Germany, considering the magnitude of the disaster that has
-overtaken her, will not allow the spirit of resignation implied by this
-remark to determine her actions in the present case.</p>
-
-<p>In thus submitting to the public the information contained in this book,
-I am carrying out the behest of the deceased, who asked me to collect
-his papers, and to make whatever use I thought fit of them. Moreover,
-the fact that I had the privilege of being his collaborator for more
-than ten years gives me perhaps a special right to undertake this task.</p>
-
-<p>My best thanks are due to Director A. Storm for supplying me with
-material illustrative of Ballin’s early career; to Chief Inspector Emil
-F. Kirchheim for assistance with the technical details, and to Professor
-Francke, who was on intimate terms of friendship with Ballin during a
-number of years, for information concerning many matters relative to
-Ballin’s personal character.</p>
-
-<p>My constant endeavour has been to describe persons and events <i>sine ira
-et studio</i>, and to refrain from stating as a fact anything for which no
-documentary evidence is available.</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-<span class="smcap">The Author.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><i>October, 1921.</i></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-
-<tr><td align="left" colspan="2"><small>CHAPTER</small></td>
-<td align="right"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="left" valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">1.</a></td><td><span class="smcap">Morris and Co.</span></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_001">1</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="left" valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">2.</a></td><td><span class="smcap">General Representative of the Carr
-Line</span></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_012">12</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="left" valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">3.</a></td><td><span class="smcap">Head of the Packetfahrt’s Passenger
-Department</span></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_021">21</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="left" valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_FOUR">4.</a></td><td><span class="smcap">The Pool</span></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_028">28</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="left" valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">5.</a></td><td><span class="smcap">The Morgan Trust</span></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_040">40</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="left" valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">6.</a></td><td><span class="smcap">The Expansion of the Hamburg-Amerika
-Linie</span></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_069">69</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="left" valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">7.</a></td><td><span class="smcap">The Technical Reorganization of the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie</span></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_121">121</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="left" valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">8.</a></td><td><span class="smcap">Politics</span></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_131">131</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="left" valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">9.</a></td><td><span class="smcap">The Kaiser</span></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_193">193</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="left" valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">10.</a></td><td><span class="smcap">The War</span></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_213">213</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="left" valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">11.</a></td><td><span class="smcap">Personal Characteristics</span></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_287">287</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Extract Annotated by William II</span></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_316">316</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2"><span class="smcap"><a href="#INDEX">Index</a></span>:
-<a href="#A">A</a>,
-<a href="#B">B</a>,
-<a href="#C">C</a>,
-<a href="#D">D</a>,
-<a href="#E">E</a>,
-<a href="#F">F</a>,
-<a href="#G">G</a>,
-<a href="#H">H</a>,
-<a href="#I">I</a>,
-<a href="#J">J</a>,
-<a href="#K">K</a>,
-<a href="#L">L</a>,
-<a href="#M">M</a>,
-<a href="#N">N</a>,
-<a href="#O">O</a>,
-<a href="#P">P</a>,
-<a href="#R">R</a>,
-<a href="#S">S</a>,
-<a href="#T">T</a>,
-<a href="#U">U</a>,
-<a href="#V">V</a>,
-<a href="#W">W</a>,
-<a href="#Y">Y</a>,
-<a href="#Z">Z</a>
-
-</td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_317">317</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><a name="page_001" id="page_001"></a></p>
-
-<h2>ALBERT BALLIN</h2>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I<br /><br />
-<span class="smcap">Morris and Co.</span></h2>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">Albert Ballin</span> was a native of Hamburg. Before the large modern harbour
-basins of the city were built, practically all the vessels which
-frequented the port of Hamburg took up their berths along the northern
-shore of the Elbe close to the western part of the town. A long road,
-flanked on one side by houses of ancient architecture, extended&mdash;and
-still extends&mdash;parallel to this predecessor of the modern harbour.
-During its length the road goes under different names, and the house in
-which Ballin was born and brought up stood in that portion known as
-Steinhöft.</p>
-
-<p>A seaport growing in importance from year to year is always a scene of
-busy life, and the early days which the boy Ballin spent in his father’s
-house and its interesting surroundings near the river’s edge left an
-indelible impression on his plastic mind.</p>
-
-<p>Those were the times when the private residence and the business
-premises of the merchant and of the shipping man were still under the
-same roof; when a short walk of a few minutes enabled the shipowner to
-reach his vessel, and when the relations between him and the captain
-were still dominated by that feeling of personal friendship and personal
-trust the disappearance of which no man has ever more regretted than
-Albert<a name="page_002" id="page_002"></a> Ballin. Throughout his life he never failed to look upon as
-ideal that era when every detail referring to the ship and to her
-management was still a matter of personal concern to her owner. He
-traced all his later successes back to the stimulating influence of
-those times; and if it is remembered how enormous was then the capacity
-for work, and how great the love of it for its own sake, it must be
-admitted that this estimate was no exaggeration. True, it is beyond
-doubt that the everyday surroundings in which his boyhood was spent, and
-the impressions gained from them, powerfully influenced his imagination
-both as boy and growing youth. It may, however, also be regarded as
-certain that the element of heredity was largely instrumental in
-moulding his character.</p>
-
-<p>Ballin belonged to an old Jewish family, members of which&mdash;as is proved
-by ancient tombstones and other evidence&mdash;lived at Frankfort-on-Main
-centuries ago. Later on we find traces of them in Paris, and still later
-in Central and North Germany, and in Denmark. Documents dating from the
-seventeenth century show that the Ballins at that time were already
-among the well-to-do and respected families of Hamburg and Altona. Some
-of the earliest members of the family that can be traced were
-distinguished for their learning and for the high reputation they
-enjoyed among their co-religionists; others, in later times, were
-remarkable for their artistic gifts which secured for them the favour of
-several Kings of France. Those branches of the family which had settled
-in Germany and Denmark were prominent again for their learning and also
-for their business-like qualities. The intelligence and the artistic
-imagination which characterized Albert Ballin may be said to be due to
-hereditary influences. His versatile mind, the infallible discernment he
-exercised in dealing with his fellow-men, his artistic tastes, and his
-high appreciation<a name="page_003" id="page_003"></a> of what was beautiful&mdash;all these are qualities which
-may furnish the key to his successes as a man of business. His sense of
-beauty especially made him extremely fastidious in all that concerned
-his personal surroundings, and was reflected in the children of his
-imagination, the large and beautifully appointed passenger steamers.</p>
-
-<p>Ballin always disliked publicity. When the Literary Bureau of his
-Company requested him to supply some personal information concerning
-himself, he bluntly refused to do so. Hence there are but few
-publications available dealing with his life and work which may claim to
-be called authentic. Nevertheless&mdash;or perhaps for that very
-reason&mdash;quite a number of legends have sprung up regarding his early
-years. It is related, for instance, that he received a sound business
-training first in his father’s business and later during his stay in
-England. The actual facts are anything but romantic. Being the youngest
-of seven brothers and sisters, he was treated with especial tenderness
-and affection by his mother, so much so, in fact, that he grew up rather
-a delicate boy and was subject to all sorts of maladies and
-constitutional weaknesses. He was educated, as was usual at that time,
-at one of the private day-schools of his native city. In those days,
-when Hamburg did not yet possess a university of her own, and when the
-facilities which she provided for the intellectual needs of her citizens
-were deplorably inadequate for the purpose, visitors from the other
-parts of Germany could never understand why that section of the
-population which appreciated the value of a complete course of higher
-education&mdash;especially an education grounded on a classical
-foundation&mdash;was so extremely small. The average Hamburg business man
-certainly did not belong to that small section; and the result was that
-a number of private schools sprang up which qualified their pupils for
-the examination entitling them to one year’s&mdash;<a name="page_004" id="page_004"></a>instead of three
-years'&mdash;military service, and provided them with a general education
-which&mdash;without any reflection on their principals&mdash;it can only be said
-would not bear comparison with that, for instance, which was looked upon
-as essential by the members of the higher grades of the Prussian Civil
-Service. Fortunately, the last few decades have brought about a great
-improvement in this respect, just as they have revolutionized the
-average citizen’s appreciation of intellectual culture and refinement.</p>
-
-<p>Albert Ballin did not stand out prominently for his achievements at
-school, and he did not shine through his industry and application to his
-studies. In later life he successfully made up for the deficiencies of
-his school education by taking private lessons, especially in practical
-mathematics and English, in which language he was able to converse with
-remarkable fluency. His favourite pastime in his early years was music,
-and his performances on the ’cello, for instance, are said to have been
-quite excellent. None of his friends during his later years can furnish
-authoritative evidence on this point, as at that time he no longer had
-the leisure to devote himself to this hobby. Apart from music, he was a
-great lover of literature, especially of books on <i>belles lettres</i>,
-history, and politics. Thanks to his prodigious memory, he thus was able
-to accumulate vast stores of knowledge. During his extended travels on
-the business of his Company he gained a first-hand knowledge of foreign
-countries, and thus learned to understand the essential characteristics
-of foreign peoples as well as their customs and manners, which a mere
-study of books would never have given him. So he became indeed a man of
-true culture and refinement. He excelled as a speaker and as a writer;
-although when he occasionally helped his adopted daughter with her
-German composition, his work did not always meet<a name="page_005" id="page_005"></a> with the approval of
-the teacher, and was once even returned with the remark, “newspaper
-German.â€</p>
-
-<p>In 1874, at the age of seventeen, Ballin lost his father. The business,
-which was carried on under the firm of Morris and Co., was an Emigration
-Agency, and its work consisted in booking emigrants for the
-transatlantic steamship lines on a commission basis. Office premises and
-dwelling accommodation were both&mdash;as already indicated&mdash;located in the
-same building, so that a sharp distinction between business matters and
-household affairs was often quite impossible, and the children acquired
-practical knowledge of everything connected with the business at an
-early age. This was especially so in the case of young Albert, who loved
-to do his home lessons in the office rooms. History does not divulge
-whether he did so because he was interested in the affairs of the
-office, or whether he obtained there some valuable assistance. The whole
-primitiveness of those days is illustrated by the following episode
-which Ballin once related to us in his own humorous way. The family
-possessed&mdash;a rare thing in our modern days&mdash;a treasure of a servant who,
-apart from doing all the hard work, was the good genius of the home, and
-who had grown old as the children grew up. “Augusta†had not yet read
-the modern books and pamphlets on women’s rights, and she was content to
-go out once a year, when she spent the day with her people at Barmbeck,
-a suburb of Hamburg. One day, when the young head of Morris and Co. was
-discussing some important business matters with some friends in his
-private office, the door was suddenly thrust open, and the “treasureâ€
-appeared on the scene and said: “Adjüs ook Albert, ick gah hüt ut!â€
-("Good-bye, Albert, I am going out to-day!") It was the occasion of her
-annual holiday.</p>
-
-<p>The firm of Morris and Co., of which Ballin’s father had been one of the
-original founders in 1852, had never<a name="page_006" id="page_006"></a> been particularly successful up to
-the time of his death. Albert, the youngest son, who was born on August
-15th, 1857, joined the business when his father died. He had then just
-finished his studies at school. The one partner who had remained a
-member of the firm after Ballin’s death left in 1877, and in 1879 Albert
-Ballin became a partner himself. The task of providing for his widowed
-mother and such of his brothers and sisters as were still dependent on
-his help then devolved on him, and he succeeded in doing this in a very
-short time. He applied himself to his work with the greatest diligence,
-and he became a shining example to the few assistants employed by the
-firm. On the days of the departure of the steamers the work of the
-office lasted until far into the night, as was usually the case in
-Hamburg in former years. An incident which took place in those early
-days proves that the work carried on by Morris and Co. met with the
-approval of their employers. One day the head of one of the foreign
-lines for which the firm was doing business paid a personal visit to
-Hamburg to see what his agents were doing. On entering the office young
-Albert received him. He said he wanted to see Mr. Ballin, and when the
-youthful owner replied that he was Mr. Ballin the visitor answered: “It
-is not you I want to see, young man, but the head of the firm.†The
-misunderstanding was soon cleared up, and when Ballin anxiously asked if
-the visitor had come to complain about anything connected with the
-business, the reply was given that such was by no means the case, and
-that the conduct of the business was considered much more satisfactory
-than before.</p>
-
-<p>To arrive at a proper understanding of the conditions ruling in Hamburg
-at the end of the ’seventies, it is necessary to remember that the
-shipping business was still in its infancy, and that it was far from
-occupying the prominent position which it gained in later<a name="page_007" id="page_007"></a> years and
-which it has only lost again since the war. The present time, which also
-is characterized by the prevalence of foreign companies and
-foreign-owned tonnage in the shipping business of Hamburg, bears a
-strong likeness to that period which lies now half a century back. The
-“Hamburg-Amerikanische Packetfahrt-Actien-Gesellschaft,†although only
-running a few services to North and Central America, was even then the
-most important shipping company domiciled in Hamburg; but it counted for
-very little as an international factor, especially as it had just passed
-through a fierce struggle against its competitor, the Adler Line, which
-had greatly weakened it and had caused it to fall behind other lines
-with regard to the status of its ships. Of the other Hamburg lines which
-became important in later times, some did not then exist at all, and
-others were just passing through the most critical period of their
-infancy. The competitors of the Packetfahrt in the emigrant traffic were
-the North German Lloyd, of Bremen; the Holland-America Line, of
-Rotterdam, and the Red Star Line, of Antwerp. Apart from the direct
-traffic from Hamburg to New York, there was also the so-called indirect
-emigrant traffic <i>via</i> England, which for the most part was in the hands
-of the British lines. The passengers booked by the agents of the latter
-were first conveyed from Hamburg to a British port, and thence, by a
-different boat, to the United States. It was the time before the
-industrialization of Germany had commenced, when there was not
-sufficient employment going round for the country’s increasing
-population. The result was that large numbers of the inhabitants had to
-emigrate to foreign countries. That period lasted until the ’nineties,
-by which time the growth of industries required the services of all who
-could work. Simultaneously, however, with the decrease of emigration
-from Germany, that from Southern Europe,<a name="page_008" id="page_008"></a> Austria-Hungary, and the
-Slavonic countries was assuming huge proportions, although the
-beginnings of this latter were already quite noticeable in the
-’seventies and ’eighties. This foreign emigrant traffic was the mainstay
-of the business carried on by the emigration agencies of the type of
-Morris and Co., whereas the German emigrants formed the backbone of the
-business on which the German steamship lines relied for their passenger
-traffic. Either the companies themselves or their agencies were in
-possession of the necessary Government licences entitling them to carry
-on the emigration business. The agencies of the foreign lines, on the
-other hand, either held no such licence at all, or only one which was
-restricted to certain German federal states or Prussian provinces&mdash;such,
-for instance, as Morris and Co. possessed for the two Mecklenburgs and
-for Schleswig-Holstein. This circumstance naturally compelled them to
-tap foreign districts rather than parts of Germany; and since the German
-lines, in order to keep down their competition, refused to carry the
-passengers they had booked, they were obliged to work in conjunction
-with foreign ones. They generally provided the berths which the
-sub-agencies required for their clientèle, and sometimes they would book
-berths on their own account, afterwards placing them at the disposal of
-the agencies. They were the connecting link between the shipping
-companies and the emigrants, and the former had no dealings whatever
-with the latter until these were on board their steamers. The Hamburg
-emigration agents had therefore also to provide accommodation for the
-intending emigrants during their stay in Hamburg and to find the means
-for conveying them to the British port in question. A number of taverns
-and hostelries in the parts near the harbour catered specially for such
-emigrants, and the various agents found plenty of scope for a display of
-their respective business capacities. A<a name="page_009" id="page_009"></a> talent for organization, for
-instance, and skill in dealing with the emigrants, could be the means of
-gaining great successes.</p>
-
-<p>This was the sphere in which the youthful Albert Ballin gave the first
-proofs of his abilities and intelligence. Within a few years of his
-entering the firm the latter acquired a prominent position in the
-“indirect†emigration service <i>via</i> England, a position which brought
-its chief into personal contact with the firm of Richardson, Spence and
-Co., of Liverpool, who were the general representatives for Great
-Britain of the American Line (one of the lines to whose emigration
-traffic Morris and Co. attended in Hamburg), and especially with the
-head of that firm, Mr. Wilding. An intimate personal friendship sprang
-up between these two men which lasted a lifetime. These close relations
-gave him an excellent opportunity for studying the business methods of
-the British shipping firms, and led to the establishment of valuable
-personal intercourse with some other leading shipping people in England.
-Thus it may be said that Ballin’s connexions with England, strengthened
-as they were by several short visits to that country, were of great
-practical use to him and that, in a sense, they furnished him with such
-business training as until then he had lacked.</p>
-
-<p>How successfully the new chief of Morris and Co. operated the business
-may be gauged from the fact that, a few years after his advent, the firm
-had secured one-third of the volume of the “indirect†emigration traffic
-<i>via</i> England. At that time, in the early ’eighties, a period of grave
-economic depression in the United States was succeeded by a trade boom
-of considerable magnitude. Such a transition from bad business to good
-was always preceded by the sale of a large number of “pre-paids,†i.e.
-steerage tickets which were bought and paid for by people in the United
-States and sent<a name="page_010" id="page_010"></a> by them to those among their friends or relatives in
-Europe who, without possessing the necessary money, wished to emigrate
-to the States. A few months after the booking of these “pre-paids†a
-strong current of emigration always set in, and the time just referred
-to proved to be no exception to the rule. The number of steerage
-passengers leaving Hamburg for New York increased from 25,000 in 1879 to
-69,000 in 1880, and 123,000 in 1881.</p>
-
-<p>It was quite impossible for the biggest Hamburg shipping company&mdash;the
-Packetfahrt&mdash;to carry successfully this huge number of emigrants. And
-even if this had been possible, the Packetfahrt would not have
-undertaken it, because it intentionally ignored the stream of non-German
-emigrants. Besides, the Company had neglected for years to adapt its
-vessels to the needs of the times, and had allowed its competitors to
-gain so much that even the North German Lloyd, a much younger
-undertaking, had far outstripped it. The latter, under its eminent
-chairman, Mr. Lohmann, had not only outclassed the Packetfahrt by the
-establishment of its service of fast steamers&mdash;“Bremen-New York in 9
-days"&mdash;which was worked with admirable regularity and punctuality, but
-had also increased the volume of its fleet to such an extent that, in
-1882, 47 of the 107 transatlantic steamers flying the German flag
-belonged to this Company, whereas the Packetfahrt possessed 24 only. For
-all these reasons it would have been useless for Morris and Co. to
-suggest to the Packetfahrt that they should secure for it a large
-increase in its emigrant traffic; and even if they had tried to extend
-their influence by working in co-operation with the Packetfahrt, such an
-attempt would doubtless have provoked the liveliest opposition on the
-part of the firm of August Bolten, the owner of which was one of the
-founders of the Packetfahrt, and which, because<a name="page_011" id="page_011"></a> they were acting as
-general agents for the North American cargo and passenger business,
-exercised a powerful influence over the management of the Packetfahrt.
-The firm of August Bolten, moreover, had, like the line they
-represented, always consistently refused to have any dealings with the
-emigrant agencies.</p>
-
-<p>Ballin, knowing that the next few years would lead to a considerable
-increase in the emigrant traffic, therefore approached a newly
-established Hamburg shipping firm&mdash;which intended to run a cargo service
-from Hamburg to New York&mdash;with the proposal that it should also take up
-the steerage business. His British friends, when they were informed of
-this step, expressed the apprehension lest their own business with his
-firm should suffer from it, but Ballin had no difficulty in allaying
-their fears.<a name="page_012" id="page_012"></a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II<br /><br />
-<span class="smcap">General Representative of the Carr Line</span></h2>
-
-<p class="nind">T<span class="smcap">he</span> new shipping line for which Morris and Co. contracted to act as
-General Passenger Agents was the privately owned firm of Mr. Edward
-Carr. The agreement concluded between the two firms shows distinct
-traces of Ballin’s enterprising spirit and of the largeness of his
-outlook. Morris and Co. undertook to book for the two steamships of the
-Carr Line then building, viz. the <i>Australia</i> and the <i>America</i>, as many
-passengers as they could carry, and guaranteed to pay the owners a
-passage price of 82 marks per head, all the necessary expenses and
-commissions, including those connected with the dispatch of the
-passengers, to be paid by Morris and Co. The steerage rate charged by
-the Packetfahrt at that time was 120 marks. It was agreed that, if this
-rate should be increased, a corresponding increase should be made in the
-rates of the Carr Line. The number of trips to be performed by each
-steamer should be about eight or nine per annum. If a third boat were
-added to the service, the agreement entered into should be extended so
-as to cover this boat as well. For every passenger short of the total
-capacity of each steamer Morris and Co. were to pay a compensation of 20
-marks, if no arrangements had been made for the accommodation of the
-passenger, and 35 marks in case such accommodation had been arranged. It
-was expected that each boat would carry from 650 to 700 passengers. The
-actual number carried, however, turned out to be slightly less, and
-amounted to 581 when the first steamer left<a name="page_013" id="page_013"></a> Hamburg on June 7th, 1881.
-Morris and Co. also undertook to hand over to the Carr Line all the
-through cargo they could secure. From the very start the work done by
-Ballin seems to have met with the unqualified approval of the Carr Line
-people; because the latter waived their claim to the compensation due to
-them for the sixty passengers short of the total number which were to be
-carried on the first trip, as Morris and Co. could prove that these
-passengers had failed to arrive, although the firm had been advised from
-Denmark that they were to come. On how small a scale the firm’s business
-was conducted may be gauged from the circumstance that the whole staff
-consisted of nine employees only, who were paid salaries aggregating
-20,302 marks.</p>
-
-<p>In one essential feature the service of the new line differed from those
-of its old-established competitors. The <i>Australia</i> and the <i>America</i>
-were ordinary cargo boats, but, in addition to a moderate amount of
-cargo, they also carried steerage passengers. They thus had not much in
-common with the usual passenger steamers by which both cabin and
-steerage passengers were carried. The advantage of the new type to the
-emigrants was that it gave them much more space than was at their
-disposal on the older boats. Whereas on the cabin steamers they were
-practically confined to a very small part of the boat, the Carr Line
-steamers made no restriction whatever as to their movements on board;
-all the available space, especially on deck, was thrown open to them.
-This type was not entirely a novelty, the sailing vessels of the older
-period used for the emigrant traffic being run on similar lines. The
-advantages accruing to the owners from their new type of steamers were
-obvious. The arrangements for the accommodation and provisioning of the
-emigrants, compared with what was needed in the case of cabin<a name="page_014" id="page_014"></a>
-passengers, were of the simplest kind, and thus the cost price of the
-steamers was considerably less than that of vessels of the usual type.
-This also meant a saving in the wages bill, as it led to a reduction in
-the number of hands on board; and since the speed of the new boats was
-also less than that of the older ones, the working expenses were reduced
-in proportion. The financial results of the service, therefore, were
-better, in spite of the low rates charged to the steeragers, than those
-obtainable by running cabin steamers with steerage accommodation, and
-than those obtainable by running cargo steamers without any passenger
-accommodation.</p>
-
-<p>The new line soon made itself felt as a serious competitor to the
-Packetfahrt, especially so as by 1885 its fleet had increased from two
-to five steamers. The lower steerage rates charged by the Carr Line led
-to a general decrease of rates in the New York service, which was not
-confined to the lines running their services from Hamburg. The passage
-prices charged from the various ports are naturally closely related to
-each other, because each port tries to attract as much traffic as
-possible to itself, and this can only be brought about by a carefully
-thought-out differentiation. The struggle between the various lines
-involved which had started in Hamburg quickly extended to other seaports
-and affected a great many lines in addition to those of Hamburg. The
-rate-cutting process began in May, 1882. In the following October the
-Packetfahrt and the Lloyd had reduced their rates to 90 and in June,
-1883, to 80 marks, whilst the British lines in February, 1884, charged
-so little as 30s. The Carr Line, of course, had to follow suit. It not
-only did so, but in proportion reduced its own rates even more than the
-other lines. The rates were even lower in practice than they appeared to
-be, owing to the constantly growing commissions<a name="page_015" id="page_015"></a> payable to the agents.
-The agents of the competing lines, by publishing controversial articles
-in the newspapers, soon took the general public into their confidence;
-and in order to prevent such publicity being given as to their internal
-affairs, the managements of the various steamship lines entered into
-some sort of mutual contact. The worst result of the rate-slashing was
-that the agreements which the older lines had concluded amongst
-themselves for the maintenance of remunerative prices soon became
-unworkable. First those relating to the Westbound rates had to go down
-before the new competitor; and in 1883, when this competition had really
-commenced to make itself appreciably felt, the Packetfahrt found itself
-compelled to declare its withdrawal from the New York Continental
-Conference by which the Eastbound rate had been fixed at $30 for the
-passage from New York to the Continent, a rate which was so high that
-the Carr Line found it easy to go below it.</p>
-
-<p>The Packetfahrt made great efforts to hold its own against the newcomer,
-but, as the following figures show, its success was but slight. In 1883
-the Packetfahrt carried 55,390 passengers on 76 voyages, against 16,471
-passengers carried on 29 voyages by the Carr Line, so that the traffic
-secured by the latter amounted to about 30 per cent. of that of the
-former. The figures for 1884 show that 58,388 passengers were carried by
-the Packetfahrt on 86 voyages, against 13,466 steeragers on 30 voyages
-by the Carr Line. If the figures relative to the direct and the indirect
-emigrant traffic from Hamburg are studied, it will be seen that a
-considerable decrease had taken place in the volume of the latter kind
-within a very few years, thus leading to an improvement in the position
-of the German lines as compared with that of their British competitors.
-These figures are as follows:<a name="page_016" id="page_016"></a></p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr class="sml"><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="center" colspan="3"><i>Number of Emigrants carried</i></td></tr>
-<tr class="sml"><td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td align="center"><i>Packetfahrt</i>&nbsp; &nbsp; </td>
-<td align="center"><i>Carr Line</i>&nbsp; &nbsp; </td>
-<td align="center"><i>via British ports</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td>1880</td><td align="right">47,000</td><td align="right">&mdash;</td><td align="right">20,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1881</td><td align="right">68,000</td><td align="right">4,000</td><td align="right">47,600</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1882</td><td align="right">68,000</td><td align="right">11,000</td><td align="right">31,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1883</td><td align="right">55,000</td><td align="right">16,000</td><td align="right">13,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1884</td><td align="right">58,000</td><td align="right">13,000</td><td align="right">16,000</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>At the same time the Packetfahrt, in order to prevent French competition
-from becoming too dangerous on the Havre-New York route, had to reduce
-its rates from Havre, and a little later it had to do likewise with
-regard to the Eastbound freight rates and the steerage rates. The keen
-competition going on between the lines concerned had led to a lowering
-of the Eastbound rate to Hamburg from $30 to $18; and as the commission
-payable to the agents had gone up to $5, the net rate amounted to $13
-only. At last the shareholders of the Packetfahrt became restless, and
-at the annual general meeting held in 1884 one of their representatives
-moved that the Board of the Company should be asked to enter into an
-agreement with the competing firm of Edward Carr. The motion, however,
-was lost; and the further proposal that a pool should be established
-among the Hamburg emigrant agents fared no better.</p>
-
-<p>It was clear that the rate-war, which continued for a long period, would
-considerably affect the prosperity of the Carr Line in common with the
-other shipping companies. This circumstance prompted the proposal of
-Edward Carr, when the discussions were renewed in the spring of 1885, to
-carry them on upon a different basis altogether. He proposed, in fact,
-that the Carr Line itself should be purchased by the Packetfahrt. In the
-course of the ensuing negotiations Albert Ballin, as the representative
-of Edward Carr, who was absent from Hamburg for a time, played a
-prominent part.<a name="page_017" id="page_017"></a> The Packetfahrt, in the meantime, had received advices
-from its New York office to the effect that the latter had reconsidered
-its attitude towards the claims of the Carr Line, that it looked upon a
-successful termination of the struggle against this Line as hopeless,
-and that it therefore recommended the granting of the differential rates
-which formed the obstacle to peace. Nevertheless, it was not until July,
-1885, that, at a conference held in Hamburg, an agreement was concluded
-by the Packetfahrt, the Lloyd, the Carr Line, the Dutch, Belgian, and
-French lines, and the representative of the British lines. All these
-companies bound themselves to raise their rates to 100 marks, except
-that the Carr Line should be entitled to fix theirs at 90 marks. Thus
-the latter had at length received the recognition of its claim to a
-differentiation, and of its right to exist side by side with the older
-Company, although its steamers were not of an equal quality with those
-of the latter. An agreement was also concluded by which the rates of
-commission due to the Hamburg emigrant agents were fixed, and at the
-continued negotiations with the other lines Albert Ballin, from that
-time onward, in his capacity of representative of the Carr Line, was
-looked upon as on an equal footing with the representatives of the other
-lines.</p>
-
-<p>The principal subject of the discussions was the question of
-eliminating, as far as possible, British influence from the emigrant
-traffic <i>via</i> Hamburg. The competition of the British was, naturally,
-very detrimental to the business of all the Continental, but more
-especially the German lines, because the interests of the respective
-sides were utterly at variance with each other. The firm foundations of
-the business transacted by the British lines were laid in England, and
-the Continental business was merely a source of additional profit; but
-to the German lines it was the mainstay of their existence, and to make
-it<a name="page_018" id="page_018"></a> pay was of vital importance to them. The German lines, therefore,
-did not rest until, as the result of the continued negotiations among
-the Continental companies, it was agreed that the uniform rates just
-fixed should not apply to the traffic which was carried on by the two
-Hamburg lines from that city. Towards the end of 1885 the first object
-aimed at by this step was realized: the conclusion of an agreement
-between the two Hamburg lines and the representatives of the British
-lines settling the rates and the commissions; but apart from this, no
-changes of fundamental importance were made in this business until after
-Albert Ballin, under an agreement proposed by the Packetfahrt, had
-entered the service of the Packetfahrt, as head of their passenger
-department. An important exception, however, was the amalgamation
-suddenly announced in March, 1886, of the Carr Line and the Union Line,
-which latter company was operated by Rob. M. Sloman and Co., of Hamburg.
-The fact of this amalgamation considerably weakened the position of the
-Packetfahrt in its dealings with the Carr Line, because it gave
-additional strength to the latter.</p>
-
-<p>The details of the five years’ agreement between Ballin and the
-Packetfahrt were approved by the Board of Trustees of that Company about
-the middle of May, 1886. It was stipulated that, in conformity with the
-pool agreement concluded between the two lines on May 22nd, the
-Packetfahrt should appoint Mr. Albert Ballin sole and responsible head
-of its North American passenger department (Westbound as well as
-Eastbound services); that his work should include the booking of
-steeragers for the Union Company’s steamers (which, in accordance with
-the pool agreement, the Packetfahrt had taken over), that he should
-appoint and dismiss the clerks employed by his department; that he
-should fix their salaries and commissions; that he should sign<a name="page_019" id="page_019"></a> passage
-agreements on behalf of the Company, and that he should issue the
-necessary instructions to the agents and officers of the Company. All
-letters and other documents were to be signed “by proxy of the
-Hamburg-Amerikanische Packetfahrt-Actien-Gesellschaft,†and he was
-required annually to submit to the directors a draft estimate of the
-expenses of his department. On how modest a scale the whole arrangement
-was drawn up may be inferred from the figures given in the first year’s
-draft estimate, viz. Salaries, 35,000 marks; advertisements, 50,000
-marks; posters and printed matter, 25,000 marks; travelling expenses,
-6,000 marks; postage and telegrams, 10,000 marks; extras and sundries,
-10,000 marks. Equally modest was the remuneration of the new head who
-was to receive a fixed salary of 10,000 marks per annum, plus a
-commission under the pool agreement, allowing the inference that the
-total annual income of the newly appointed head of the department would
-work out at something like 60,000 marks, which goes to show that the
-Company had a high opinion of his capacity for attracting traffic to its
-services. The conclusion of this agreement meant that the Packetfahrt
-henceforth took entire control of its passenger business&mdash;which, until
-then, had been looked after by the firm of Aug. Bolten&mdash;and that a
-passenger department had to be specially created. Thus an important step
-forward was made which could only be undertaken by the firm because such
-a well-qualified man as Ballin happened to be at their service just
-then.</p>
-
-<p>If the course of the negotiations between the Packetfahrt and the Carr
-Line had not already shown it, this agreement would prove without a
-shadow of doubt that the then head of Morris and Co. had, at the age of
-twenty-nine, and after twelve years of practical work, gained the
-premier position in the emigrant business of his<a name="page_020" id="page_020"></a> native city and also a
-leading one in the general European emigrant business which in itself is
-one of the most important branches of the shipping trade. The
-correspondence between Edward Carr and Ballin furnishes no indication
-that the latter himself had insisted upon his being taken over by the
-Packetfahrt or that he had worked with this object.<a name="page_021" id="page_021"></a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III<br /><br />
-<span class="smcap">Head of the Packetfahrt’s Passenger Department</span></h2>
-
-<p class="nind">O<span class="smcap">n</span> May 31st, 1886, Albert Ballin first took part in a joint meeting of
-the Board of Trustees and the Board of Directors of the Packetfahrt. On
-this occasion two proposals were put forward by him: one, to provide new
-premises for the work connected with the booking of passengers at an
-annual rent of 5,000 marks; the other, to start a direct service from
-Stettin to New York <i>via</i> Gothenburg. This latter proposal was prompted
-by the desire to reduce the influence of the British lines competing for
-the Hamburg business. Such a reduction could only be brought about if it
-were proved to the British lines that their position was by no means
-unassailable. The Scandinavian emigrant business to the United States
-which for long had been a source of great profit to the British, lent
-itself admirably to such purposes. Ballin’s proposal was agreed to by
-the Company’s management, with the result that in July, 1886, a pool
-agreement was concluded between the Packetfahrt (on behalf of a Stettin
-Line of steamers) and the Danish Thingvalla Line. Steamers now began to
-call at Gothenburg and Christiansand on their voyages from Stettin to
-the United States. The new line was known as the “Scandia Line"; and in
-later years, when a similar object was aimed at, it was called into
-existence once more. The aim was not to establish a new steamer service
-for its own sake, but rather to create an object for compensation which,
-in the negotiations with the British lines, could be given up again in
-exchange<a name="page_022" id="page_022"></a> for concessions on the part of the latter regarding the
-Hamburg business. If this plan failed, Ballin had another one mapped
-out: he threatened to attack the British in their own country by
-carrying steerage passengers either from Liverpool <i>via</i> Havre, or from
-Plymouth <i>via</i> Hamburg. People in England laughed at this idea.
-“Surely,†they said, “no British emigrant will travel on a German
-vessel.†The British lines replied to Ballin’s threat by declaring that
-they would again reduce to 30s. their rates from Hamburg to New York
-<i>via</i> a British port. However, the negotiations which Ballin entered
-into with them in England during the month of September, 1886, soon
-cleared the air, and led to the conclusion of an agreement towards the
-end of the year. The Packetfahrt promised to withdraw its Scandia Line,
-and the British lines, in return, agreed to raise their steerage rates
-from Hamburg to 85 marks gross, and those from Liverpool, Glasgow, and
-London to £2 10s. net. A clearing house which should be under the
-management of a representative of the British lines, and which was also
-to include the business done by the Bremen agents of the latter, was to
-be set up in Hamburg. This clearing house was kept on until other and
-more far-reaching agreements with the British lines made its continued
-existence superfluous.</p>
-
-<p>The arrangements which Ballin made with the agents represented in the
-clearing house show his skill in his dealings with other people. The
-whole agreement, especially the fixing of the terms governing the share
-to be assigned to the agents&mdash;which amounted to 55 per cent, of the
-Hamburg business&mdash;was principally aimed at the realization of as high a
-rate as possible. This policy proved to be a great success. Another step
-forward was that the Packetfahrt now consented to accept passengers
-booked by the agents, thus reversing their previous policy of ignoring
-them altogether.<a name="page_023" id="page_023"></a></p>
-
-<p>The agreement with the British lines also provided that the Union Line
-should raise its rates to 90 marks, the Packetfahrt to 95 marks, and the
-Lloyd those charged for its services to Baltimore and New York to 100
-and 110 marks respectively. Henceforward both competing groups were
-equally interested in obtaining as high a rate as possible.</p>
-
-<p>The practical working of the agreement did not fail to give
-satisfaction, and the Continental lines could, undisturbed by external
-interference, put their own house in order. A few years later, in 1890,
-the British lines complained that they did not succeed in getting the
-percentage of business to which they were entitled. Negotiations were
-carried on at Liverpool, during which Ballin was present. He pointed out
-that, considering the whole Continental position, the British lines
-would be ill-advised to withdraw from the agreement, and he stated that
-he would be prepared to guarantee them their share (33 per cent.) of the
-Hamburg business. The outcome was that the British lines declared
-themselves satisfied with these new stipulations. A few years later,
-when the British lines joined the Continental Pool, the Hamburg
-agreement ceased to be necessary, and in 1893 the clearing house was
-abolished.</p>
-
-<p>The new Emigration Law of 1887&mdash;due to the exertions of the North German
-Lloyd and the Packetfahrt&mdash;strengthened the position of the lines
-running direct services from German ports. Another step forward was the
-increase of the passage rates which was agreed upon after negotiations
-had taken place at Antwerp and in England, and after the German, Dutch,
-and Belgian lines had had a conference at Cologne. Contact was also
-established with the chief French line concerned.</p>
-
-<p>The improvement, however, was merely temporary. The termination of the
-struggle for the Hamburg business did not mean that all the differences
-between all<a name="page_024" id="page_024"></a> the transatlantic lines had been settled. On the contrary,
-all the parties concerned gradually realized that it would be necessary
-to institute quite different arrangements; something to ensure a fairer
-distribution of the traffic and a greater consolidation of their common
-interests. A proposal to gain these advantages by the establishment of a
-pool was submitted by the representative of the Red Star Line at a
-conference held in the autumn of 1886, and a memorandum written by
-Ballin, likewise dating from 1886, took up the same idea; but an
-agreement was not concluded until the close of 1891.</p>
-
-<p>That, in spite of Ballin’s advocacy, five years had to elapse before
-this agreement became perfect is perhaps to some extent due to the fact
-that Ballin&mdash;who at that time, after all, was only the head of the
-Passenger Department of his Company&mdash;could not always speak with its
-full authority where his own personal views were concerned. Moreover,
-the influence of his Company was by no means very considerable in those
-early days. The only passenger boat of any importance which the Company
-possessed in the early ’eighties, before Ballin had entered its
-services, was the <i>Hammonia</i>, and she was anything but a success. She
-was inferior both as regards her efficiency and her equipment. At last,
-however, Ballin’s desire to raise the prestige of the Company triumphed,
-and the building of several fast boats was definitely decided upon. In
-addition to a comparatively large number of passengers&mdash;especially those
-of the first cabin&mdash;they were to carry a moderate amount of cargo. In
-size they were subject to the restrictions imposed upon them by the
-shortcomings of the technical knowledge of that time, and by the absence
-of the necessary improvements in the fairway of the lower Elbe. Speed,
-after all, was the main consideration; and it was the struggle for the
-blue riband<a name="page_025" id="page_025"></a> of the Atlantic which kept the attention of the travelling
-public riveted on these boats.</p>
-
-<p>A statement giving details of the financial results obtained by the
-first four of the new fast steamers which were entered into the service
-of the Company between 1889 and 1891 showed that the earnings up to and
-including the year 1895 did not even cover the working expenses, and
-that those up to 1899 were not sufficient to allow for an interest of 4
-per cent, on the average book values of the steamers. It must be
-remembered, however, that the first of these two periods included the
-disastrous season of 1892-93, when Hamburg was visited by an epidemic of
-cholera. And a different light is shed on the matter also if we further
-remember that depreciation had been allowed for on a generous scale, no
-less than 50 per cent, of the cost price plus the expenditure incurred
-through an enlargement of the <i>Auguste Victoria</i>, the oldest of the
-boats, having been deducted on that account. The Packetfahrt, like all
-the other German shipping companies, has always been very liberal in
-making ample provision for depreciation. When, therefore, these steamers
-were sold again at the time of the Spanish-American and Russo-Japanese
-wars, a considerable profit was realized on the transactions which
-enabled the Company to replace them by a very high-grade type of vessel
-(the <i>Deutschland</i>, <i>Amerika</i>, and <i>Kaiserin Auguste Victoria</i>). It must
-be admitted in this connexion that perhaps no shipowner has ever been
-more favoured by fortune than Ballin where the sale of such difficult
-objects as obsolete express steamers was concerned. The value which
-these boats had in relation to the prestige of the Company was very
-considerable; for, as Ballin expressed it to me one day: “The possession
-of the old express steamers of the Packetfahrt certainly proved to be
-something like a white elephant; but just consider<a name="page_026" id="page_026"></a> how greatly they
-have enhanced the prestige of the Company.†They attracted thousands of
-passengers to the Line, and acted as feeders to its other services.</p>
-
-<p>The orders for the first two of these steamers were given towards the
-close of 1887 to the Vulkan yard, at Stettin, and to the firm of Laird
-respectively, at a price of £210,000 each, and the boats were to be
-completed early in 1889. They were the first twin-screw steamers, and
-were provided with the system of “forced draught†for the engines. This
-system had just been introduced in British yards, and Ballin’s attention
-had been drawn to it by his friend Wilding, who was always ready to give
-him valuable advice on technical matters. In order to find the means for
-the construction of these and of some other boats, the general meeting
-of the shareholders, held on October 6th, 1887, voted a capital increase
-of 5,000,000 marks and the issue of 6,250,000 marks of debentures.
-Knowing that an improvement of the services was the great need of the
-time, Ballin, since the time of joining the Company, had done all he
-could to make the latter a paying concern again, and in this he
-succeeded. For the year 1886 a dividend of 5 per cent. was paid, and
-thus it became possible to sanction an increase of the joint-stock
-capital.</p>
-
-<p>Further foundations for later successes were laid by the reform of the
-organization and of the technical services of the Company. His work in
-connexion with the Carr Line had taught the youthful head of the
-passenger department that careful attention to the material comfort of
-the steerage passengers could be of great benefit to the Company. He
-continued along lines such as these, and at his suggestion the steerage
-accommodation on two of the Packetfahrt’s steamers was equipped with
-electric light, and provided with some single berths as well. This
-latter provision was extended still further during the succeeding year.
-In<a name="page_027" id="page_027"></a> addition to the fast steamers, some ordinary ones were also ordered
-to be built. In 1888 two steamers were ordered for the Company’s West
-Indies service, and shortly afterwards eight units of the Union Line
-were bought at a price of 5,200,000 marks. All these new orders and
-purchases of steamers led to the joint-stock capital being raised from
-20 to 30 million marks. Two more boats were laid down in the Stettin
-Vulkan yard, and a third with the firm of Laird. The express steamer
-then building at the Vulkan yard was named <i>Auguste Victoria</i> in honour
-of the young Empress.</p>
-
-<p>During the summer months of 1887 Ballin, together with Mr. Johannes
-Witt, one of the members of the Board of Trustees, went to New York in
-order to discuss with the agents a reorganization of the New York
-representation, which was looked after by Edward Beck and Kunhardt. In
-consequence of the negotiations which Ballin carried on to that end, the
-agents undertook to submit their business for the Company to the control
-of an officer specially appointed by the Packetfahrt. This small
-beginning led, in later years, to the establishment in New York of the
-Company’s direct representation under its own management.</p>
-
-<p>When Ballin joined the Packetfahrt, he did not strictly confine his
-attention to matters connected with the passenger services. When, for
-instance, the head of the freight department was prevented from
-attending a meeting called by the Board of Trustees, Ballin put forward
-a proposal for raising the rates on certain cargo. It was therefore only
-but fit acknowledgment of his many-sided talents, and recognition that
-his energetic character had been the guiding spirit in the Company’s
-affairs, that the Board of Trustees appointed Ballin in 1888 a member of
-the Board of Directors after two years with the Packetfahrt. This
-appointment really filled a long-felt gap.<a name="page_028" id="page_028"></a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_FOUR" id="CHAPTER_FOUR"></a>CHAPTER FOUR<br /><br />
-<span class="smcap">THE POOL</span></h2>
-
-<p class="nind">T<span class="smcap">he</span> term “pool†may be defined in a variety of ways, but, generally
-speaking, the root idea underlying its meaning is always the same, both
-in its application to business and to betting. A pool, in brief, is a
-combination of a number of business concerns for their own mutual
-interests, all partners having previously agreed upon certain principles
-as to the distribution of the common profits. In other words, it is a
-community of interests concluded upon the basis of dividing the profits
-realized in a certain ratio. I have been unable to discover when and
-where this kind of combination was first used in actual practice. Before
-the transatlantic steamship companies did so, the big trunk lines of the
-United States railway system are said to have used it in connexion with
-the westbound emigrant traffic, and possibly for other purposes also.</p>
-
-<p>When Ballin wrote his memorandum of February 5th, 1886, the steamship
-lines must already have been familiar with the meaning of the term, for
-the memorandum refers to it as something well known. Ballin begins by
-stating that the “Conference of the Northern European Lines†might be
-looked upon as having ceased to exist, seeing that two parties were
-represented on it whose claims were diametrically opposed to each other.
-Whereas the North German Lloyd insisted on the right to lower its rates,
-the Red Star Line claimed that these rates should be raised, so that it
-might obtain a better<a name="page_029" id="page_029"></a> differential rate for itself. A reconciliation of
-these mutually contradictory views, the memorandum went on to say,
-appeared to be impossible, unless all parties agreed upon an
-understanding which would radically alter the relations then existing
-between their respective interests; and a way leading out of the
-<i>impasse</i> would be found by adopting the pooling system proposed by the
-representative of the Red Star Line. If we take the number of steeragers
-carried to New York from 1881 to 1885 by the six lines concerned as a
-basis, the respective percentages of the total traffic are as follows:</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="center"><i>Percentage</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td>North German Lloyd</td><td align="right">33·45</td></tr>
-<tr><td>North German Lloyd (Baltimore Line)</td><td align="right">14·80</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Packetfahrt</td><td align="right">27·00</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Union Line</td><td align="right">5·53</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Red Star Line</td><td align="right">12·26</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Holland American Line</td><td align="right">6·96</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>It was, however, justly pointed out at a meeting of the Conference that
-the amount of tonnage must also be taken into account in laying down the
-principles which were to govern the distribution of the profits. The
-average figures of such tonnage employed by the six lines during the
-same period were:</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="center"><i>Tons</i></td><td align="center"><i>Percentage</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td>North German Lloyd</td><td align="right">275,520</td><td align="right">33·91</td></tr>
-<tr><td>North German Lloyd (Baltimore Line)</td><td align="right">63,000</td><td align="right">7·76</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Packetfahrt</td><td align="right">199,500</td><td align="right">24·55</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Union Line</td><td align="right">42,840</td><td align="right">5·27</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Red Star Line</td><td align="right">149,600</td><td align="right">18·41</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Holland American Line</td><td align="right">82,080</td><td align="right">10·10</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center">Total tonnage</td><td align="right" class="bt">812,540</td><td align="right" class="bt">&nbsp;</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><a name="page_030" id="page_030"></a></p>
-
-<p>The average of both sets of percentage figures worked out as follows:</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="center"><i>Percentage</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td>North German Lloyd</td><td align="right">33·68</td></tr>
-<tr><td>North German Lloyd (Baltimore Line)</td><td align="right">11·28</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Packetfahrt</td><td align="right">25·77</td><td>½</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Union Line</td><td align="right">5·40</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Red Star Line</td><td align="right">15·33</td><td>½</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Holland American Line</td><td align="right">8·53</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>“It would be necessary,†the memorandum continued, “to calculate each
-Company’s share annually on the basis of the average figures obtained
-for the five years immediately preceding, so that, for instance, the
-calculation for 1887 would be based on the figures for the five years
-from 1882 to 1886; that for 1888 on those for the period from 1883 to
-1887, and so on. Uniform passage rates and uniform rates of commission
-would have to be agreed upon. To those lines which, like the North
-German Lloyd, maintained a service which was run by fast steamers
-exclusively, would have to be conceded the right to charge in their
-separate accounts passage money up to 10 marks in excess of the normal
-rates, seeing that their expenses were heavier than those of the other
-lines. Those Companies, however, claiming differential rates below the
-general ones agreed upon would have to make up the difference
-themselves, which was not to exceed the amount of 30 marks&mdash;i.e. they
-would have to contribute to the common pool a sum equal to the general
-rate without deduction.â€</p>
-
-<p>The two cardinal principles lying at the root of this proposal were (1)
-the assigning to each line of a definite percentage of the total traffic
-on the basis of the average figures ascertained for a definite period of
-time, and (2) the possibility of further grading these percentages by
-taking into account the amount of tonnage which<a name="page_031" id="page_031"></a> each line placed at the
-disposal of the joint undertaking. This latter provision&mdash;which was
-known during the early stages of the movement as the tonnage clause&mdash;was
-intended to prevent any single line from stagnation, and to give scope
-to the spirit of enterprise.</p>
-
-<p>The tonnage clause was not maintained for the whole time during which
-the pool agreement was in force. It was afterwards abolished at the
-instance of the North German Lloyd. This event led, in the long run, to
-the last big crisis which the pool had to pass through by the notice of
-withdrawal given by the Hamburg-Amerika Linie. When this Company
-proposed to considerably enlarge its steerage accommodation through the
-addition to its service of the three big boats of the <i>Imperator</i> class,
-it demanded a corresponding increase of its percentage figure, and, when
-this claim fell through owing to the opposition of the North German
-Lloyd, it gave formal notice of its withdrawal from the pool.
-Precautions taken to counteract this led to negotiations which had to be
-discontinued when the war broke out. Nevertheless, the pool, which was
-first proposed in 1886, and which came into existence in 1892, did a
-great deal of good. More than once, however, the agreement ceased to be
-effective for a time, and this was especially the case on the occasion
-of the struggle with the Cunard Line which followed upon the
-establishment of the Morgan Trust in 1903.</p>
-
-<p>The secretary of the pool was Heinrich Peters, the former head of the
-passenger department of the Lloyd. The choice of Mr. Peters is probably
-not unconnected with the fact that it was he who, at a moment when the
-negotiations for establishing a pool had reached a critical stage,
-appeared on the scene with a clearly-defined proposal, so that he, with
-justice, has been described as “the father of the pool.†Shortly before
-his death in the summer of 1921 Mr. Peters wrote to<a name="page_032" id="page_032"></a> me concerning his
-proposal and the circumstances of its adoption:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“The history of the events leading up to the creation of the ‘North
-Atlantic Steamship Lines Association,’†he wrote in his letter, “was not
-without complications. So much so that after the Conference at Cologne,
-at which it had been found impossible to come to an understanding, I
-went to bed feeling very worried about the future. Shortly afterwards&mdash;I
-don’t know whether I was half awake or dreaming&mdash;the outline of the plan
-which was afterwards adopted stood out clearly before my mind’s eye, its
-main features being that each line should be granted a fixed percentage
-of the traffic on the basis of ‘Moore’s Statistics’ (reports issued
-periodically and showing the number of passengers landed in New York at
-regular intervals), and that the principle of compensation should be
-applied to adjust differences. When I was fully awake I found this plan
-so obviously right that, in order not to let it slip my memory, I jotted
-down a note concerning it on my bedside table. Next morning, when
-Ballin, Reuchlin (of the Holland American Line), Strasser (of the Red
-Star Line), and myself met again in the smoking-room of the Hotel du
-Nord, I told them of my inspiration, and my plan was looked upon by them
-with so much favour that Ballin said to me: ‘Well now, Peters, you have
-discovered the philosopher’s stone.’ We then left, previously agreeing
-amongst ourselves that we would think the matter over at our leisure,
-and that we should refrain from taking any steps leading to a conflict,
-at least for the time being. On my return to Bremen I went straight to
-Lohmann (who was director general of the Lloyd at that time), but he
-immediately threw a wet blanket over my enthusiasm. His objection was
-that such an agreement would interfere with the progressive development<a name="page_033" id="page_033"></a>
-of the Lloyd. A few days later a meeting of the Board of Trustees was
-held at which I entered into the details of my proposal; but I am sorry
-to say that my oratorical gifts were not sufficient to defend it against
-the objections that were raised, nor to prevent its rejection. I can
-hardly imagine what the representatives of the other lines must have
-felt on hearing that it was the Lloyd itself which refused to accept the
-proposal which had been put forward by its own delegate, although the
-share allotted to it was very generous. Thus the struggle went on for
-another eighteen months, and it was not until January, 1892, that the
-principal lines concerned definitely concluded a pool agreement closely
-resembling the draft agreement I had originally proposed.</p>
-
-<p>“The North Atlantic Steamship Lines Association was originally intended
-to remain in existence for the period of five years; but as it was
-recognized by all parties that it was necessarily a step in the dark,
-people had become so doubtful as to the wisdom of what they had done
-that a clause was added to the effect that it could be cancelled after
-the first six months provided a fortnight’s notice was given by any
-partner to it. Nevertheless, the agreement successfully weathered a
-severe crisis during the very first year of its existence, when the
-disastrous cholera epidemic paralysed the Hamburg trade and shipping.â€</p>
-
-<p>That this account is correct is confirmed by the minutes of the Cologne
-meeting of February 6th, 1890.</p>
-
-<p>The British lines definitely declined in March, 1892, to join the pool.
-Thus the plan finally agreed upon in 1892 was subscribed to by the
-Continental lines alone, with the exception of the French line. In
-contrast with previous proposals, the eastbound traffic was also to be
-parcelled out by the lines forming the pool.</p>
-
-<p>This so-called North Atlantic Steamship Lines Association,<a name="page_034" id="page_034"></a> the backbone
-of the later and greater pool, was built up on the following
-percentages:</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr class="sml"><td>&nbsp;</td>
-
-<td><i>Westbound</i><br />
-<i>traffic</i> (<i>p.c.</i>)</td>
-
-<td> <i>Eastbound</i><br />
-<i>traffic</i> (<i>p.c.</i>)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>North German Lloyd</td><td align="right">46·16</td><td align="right">44·53</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Packetfahrt (including the Union Line)</td><td align="right">28·84</td><td align="right">18·47</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Red Star Line</td><td align="right">15·70</td><td align="right">20·68</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Holland American Line</td><td align="right">9·30</td><td align="right">16·32</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>These percentages were subject to the effect of the tonnage clause by
-which it was provided that 50 per cent. of the tonnage (expressed in
-gross registered tons) which any line should possess at any time in
-excess of that possessed in 1890 should entitle such line to an increase
-of its percentage.</p>
-
-<p>It has already been stated that Mr. Heinrich Peters was appointed
-secretary of the pool. He, in compliance with the provision that the
-secretariat should be domiciled at a “neutral†place, chose the small
-university town of Jena for his residence. Thus this town, so famous in
-the literary annals of Germany, became, for more than twenty years, the
-centre of an international organization with which few, if any, other
-places could vie in importance, especially since the four lines which
-had just concluded the original pool were joined, in course of time, by
-the British lines, the French line, the Austrian line, and some
-Scandinavian and Russian lines as well. Later on a special pool was set
-up for the Mediterranean business which, in addition to the German,
-British, and Austro-Hungarian lines, also comprised the French
-Mediterranean, the Italian, and the Greek lines, as well as one Spanish
-line. The business of all these lines was centred at Jena.</p>
-
-<p>Of considerable importance to the smooth working of the pool was the
-court of arbitration attached to its organization. On account of the
-prominent position<a name="page_035" id="page_035"></a> occupied by the German companies, German law was
-agreed to as binding for the decisions, and since at the time when the
-pool was founded, Germany did not possess a uniform Code of Civil Law
-for all parts of the Empire, the law ruling at Cologne was recognized to
-be applicable to such purposes. Cologne was the city at which the
-establishment of the pool was decided upon, and there all the important
-meetings that became necessary in course of time were held. The chairman
-of the Cologne Association of Solicitors was nominated president of the
-arbitration court, but later on this office devolved on President
-Hansen, a member of the Supreme Court for the Hanseatic cities, who
-filled his post for a long term of years&mdash;surely a proof of the
-confidence and esteem with which he was honoured by all parties
-concerned. Numerous awards issued by him, and still more numerous
-resolutions adopted at the many conferences, have supplemented the
-original pool agreement, thus forming the nucleus of a real code of
-legislation affecting all matters dealing with the pool in which a large
-number of capable men drawn from the legal profession and from the world
-of business have collaborated.</p>
-
-<p>The knowledge of these regulations gradually developed into a science of
-its own, and each line had to possess one or more specialists who were
-experts in these questions among the members of its staff. I am sure
-they will unanimously agree that Albert Ballin surpassed them all in his
-knowledge of the intricate details. His wonderful memory enabled him,
-after a lapse of more than twenty years, to recall every phase in the
-history of the pool, so that he acquired an unrivalled mastery in the
-conduct of pool conferences. This is abundantly borne out by the fact
-that in 1908, when negotiations were started in London for the
-establishment of a general pool&mdash;i.e. one comprising the<a name="page_036" id="page_036"></a> whole of
-Northern Europe, including Great Britain&mdash;Ballin, at the proposal of the
-British lines, was selected chairman of the conference which, after
-several critical phases had been passed through, led to a complete
-success and an all-round understanding.</p>
-
-<p>In 1892 the normal development of business was greatly handicapped by
-the terrible epidemic of cholera then raging in Hamburg. For a time the
-United States completely closed her doors to all emigrants from the
-Continent, and it was not until the following year that conditions
-became normal again. Nevertheless Ballin, in order to extend the various
-understandings between the Northern European lines, took an important
-step, even before the close of 1892, by falling back upon a measure
-which he had already once employed in 1886. His object was to make the
-British lines more favourably inclined towards an understanding, and to
-this end he attacked them once more in the Scandinavian business. The
-actual occasion which led to the conflict was that the British lines,
-owing to differences of opinion among themselves, had given notice of
-withdrawal from the Hamburg agreement and from the Hamburg clearing
-house. This gave the Packetfahrt a free hand against its British
-competitors, and enabled it to carry as many as 2,500 Scandinavian
-passengers via Hamburg in 1892. The position of the Packetfahrt during
-the ensuing rate war was considerably improved by the agreement which it
-had concluded with the Hamburg agents of the British lines, who,
-although their principals had declared their withdrawal from the pool,
-undertook to maintain the rate which had been jointly agreed upon by
-both parties.</p>
-
-<p>Some time had to elapse before this move had its desired effect on the
-British lines. Early in 1894 they declared themselves ready to come to
-an understanding with the Continental lines on condition that they were<a name="page_037" id="page_037"></a>
-granted 7 per cent. of the Continental traffic (in 1891 they had been
-offered 14 per cent.), and that the Packetfahrt was to discontinue its
-Scandia Line.</p>
-
-<p>This general readiness of the British companies, however, did not
-preclude the hostility of some of their number against any such
-agreement, and so the proposal fell through. The proposed understanding
-came to grief owing to the refusal of the Cunard Line to join a
-Continental pool at the very moment when the negotiations with the
-British lines had, after a great deal of trouble, led to a preliminary
-understanding with them. A letter which Ballin received from an English
-friend in January, 1894, shows how difficult it was to make the British
-come round to the idea of a pool. In this letter it was said that the
-time was not ripe then for successfully persuading the British lines to
-join any pool or any other form of understanding which would necessitate
-agreement on a large number of details. All that could be expected to be
-done at the time, the writer continued, was a rate agreement of the
-simplest possible kind, and he thought that if such an understanding
-were agreed to and loyally carried out, that would be an important step
-forward towards arriving at a general agreement of much wider scope.</p>
-
-<p>To such vague agreements, however, the Continental lines objected on
-principle, and the opposition of the Cunard Line made it impossible to
-agree upon anything more definite. Thus the struggle was chiefly waged
-against this line. The Continental lines were assisted by the American
-Line, which had sailings from British ports, and with the management of
-which Ballin had been on very friendly terms ever since the time when
-he, as the owner of the firm of Morris and Co., had worked for it. After
-the conflict had been going on for several months, it terminated with a
-victory of the Continental lines. Thus the road was at last clear for
-an<a name="page_038" id="page_038"></a> attempt to make the whole North Atlantic business pay.</p>
-
-<p>The first step in that direction was the conclusion, in 1896, of an
-agreement concerning the cabin business. The Packetfahrt’s annual report
-for that year states that the results obtained through the carrying of
-cabin passengers could only be described as exceedingly unfavourable,
-considering that the huge working expenses connected with that kind of
-business had to be taken into account. Nevertheless, this traffic, which
-had reached a total of more than 200,000 passengers during the preceding
-year, could be made a source of great profit to the companies if they
-could be persuaded to act in unison. The agreement then concluded was at
-first restricted to the fixing of the rates on a uniform scale.</p>
-
-<p>Both these agreements&mdash;the one dealing with the steerage and the one
-dealing with the cabin business&mdash;were concluded, in 1895, for three
-years in the first instance. In May, 1898, discussions were opened in
-London, at which Ballin presided, with a view to extending the period of
-their duration, and these proceedings, after a time, led to a successful
-conclusion, but in June, Ballin again presiding, the desired
-understanding was reached. A few weeks later an agreement concerning the
-second cabin rates was also arrived at, and towards the close of the
-year negotiations were started with a view to the extension of the
-steerage agreement. In 1899 the pool was extended to run for a further
-period of five years, under percentages:</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr class="sml"><td>&nbsp;</td>
-
-<td><i>Westbound</i><br />
-<i>traffic</i> (<i>p.c.</i>)</td>
-
-<td> <i>Eastbound</i><br />
-<i>traffic</i> (<i>p.c.</i>)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>North German Lloyd</td><td align="right">44·14</td><td align="right">41·53</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Packetfahrt</td><td align="right">30·71</td><td align="right">26·47</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Red Star Line</td><td align="right">15·37</td><td align="right">18·68</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Holland American Line</td><td align="right">9·78</td><td align="right">13·32</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><a name="page_039" id="page_039"></a></p>
-
-<p>To the Packetfahrt these new percentages meant a step forward, although
-the omission of the tonnage clause was a decided hindrance to its
-further progress.</p>
-
-<p>The next important event in the development of the relations between the
-transatlantic lines was the establishment of the so-called Morgan Trust
-and the conclusion of a “community of interest†agreement between it and
-the German lines.<a name="page_040" id="page_040"></a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V<br /><br />
-<span class="smcap">THE MORGAN TRUST</span></h2>
-
-<p class="nind">S<span class="smcap">peaking</span> generally, the transatlantic shipping business may be said to
-consist of three great branches, viz. the cargo, the steerage, and the
-cabin business. The pool agreements that were concluded between the
-interested companies covered only the cargo business and the steerage
-traffic. The condition which alone makes it possible for the owners to
-work the shipping business on remunerative lines is that all needless
-waste of material must be strictly banned. The great advantage which was
-secured by concluding the pool agreement was that it satisfied this
-condition during the more than twenty years of its existence, to the
-mutual profit of the associated lines. Each company knew that the
-addition of new steamers to its fleet would only pay if part of a
-carefully considered plan, and if, in course of time, such an increase
-of tonnage would give it a claim to an increase of the percentage of
-traffic allotted to its services.</p>
-
-<p>Much less satisfactory was the state of things with regard to the third
-branch of the shipping business, viz. the cabin traffic. A regular
-“cabin pool,†with a <i>pro rata</i> distribution of the traffic, was never
-established, although the idea had frequently been discussed. All that
-was achieved was an agreement as to the fares charged by each company
-which were to be graded according to the quality of the boats it
-employed in its services. Owing to the absence of any more far-reaching
-understandings, and to the competition between<a name="page_041" id="page_041"></a> the various
-companies&mdash;each of which was constantly trying to outdo its competitors
-as regards the speed and comfort of its boats, in order to attract to
-its own services as many passengers as possible&mdash;the number of
-first-class boats increased out of all proportion to the actual
-requirements, and frequent and regular services were maintained by each
-line throughout the year. There was hardly a day on which first-class
-steamers did not enter upon voyages across the Atlantic from either
-side, and the result was that the boats were fully booked during the
-season only, i.e. in the spring and early part of summer on their
-East-bound, and in the latter part of summer and in the autumn on their
-Westbound, voyages. During the remaining months a number of berths were
-empty, and the fares obtainable were correspondingly unprofitable.
-Ballin, in 1902, estimated the unnecessary expenditure to which the
-companies were put in any single year owing to this unbusinesslike state
-of affairs at not less then 50 million marks. The desire to do away with
-conditions such as these by extending the pool agreement so as to
-develop it into a community-of-interest agreement of comprehensive scope
-was one of the two principal reasons leading to the formation of the
-Morgan Trust. The other reason was the wish to bring about a system of
-co-operation between the European and the American interests.</p>
-
-<p>This desire was prompted by the recognition of the cardinal importance
-to the transatlantic shipping companies of the economic conditions
-ruling in the United States. The cargo business depended very largely on
-the importation of European goods into the United States, and on the
-exportation of American agricultural produce to Europe which varied from
-season to season according to the size of the crop and to the consuming
-capacity of Europe. The steerage business, of course, relied in the main
-on the capacity of the United States<a name="page_042" id="page_042"></a> for absorbing European immigrants,
-which capacity, though fluctuating, was practically unlimited. The
-degree of prosperity of the cabin business, however, was determined by
-the number of people who travelled from the States to Europe, either on
-business, or on pleasure, or to recuperate their health at some European
-watering-place, at the Riviera, etc. Social customs and the attractions
-which the Paris houses of fashion exercised on the American ladies also
-formed a considerable factor which had to be relied on for a prosperous
-season. In the transatlantic shipping business, in fact, America is
-pre-eminently the giving, and Europe the receiving, partner. Thus it was
-natural to realize the advisability of entering into direct relations
-with American business men.</p>
-
-<p>To the Packetfahrt, and especially to Ballin, credit is due for having
-attempted before anybody else to give practical shape to this idea. His
-efforts in this direction date far back to the early years of his
-business career. We possess evidence of this in the form of a letter
-which he wrote in 1891 to Mr. B. N. Baker, who was at the head of one of
-the few big American shipping companies, the Atlantic Transport Company,
-the headquarters of which were at Baltimore, and which ran its services
-chiefly to Great Britain. Mr. Baker was a personal friend of Ballin’s.
-The letter was written after some direct discussions had taken place
-between the two men, and its contents were as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“I replied a few days ago officially to your valued favour of the
-4th ult. to the effect that in consonance with your expressed
-suggestion one of the Directors will proceed to New York in
-September with a view to conferring with you about the matter at
-issue.</p>
-
-<p>“Having in the meantime made it a point to go more fully into your
-communication, I find that the opinions which I have been able to
-form on your propositions meet<a name="page_043" id="page_043"></a> your expressed views to a much
-larger extent than you will probably have supposed. I have not yet
-had an opportunity of talking the matter over with my colleagues,
-and I therefore do not know how far they will be prepared to fall
-in with my views. But in order to enable me to frame and bring
-forward my ideas more forcibly here, I think it useful to write to
-you this strictly confidential letter, requesting you to inform
-me&mdash;if feasible by cable&mdash;what you think of the following project:</p>
-
-<p>“(1) You take charge of our New York Agency for the freight, and
-also for the passage business, etc.</p>
-
-<p>“(2) You engage those of our officials now attached to our New York
-branch whom we may desire to retain in the business.</p>
-
-<p>“(3) You take over half of our Baltimore Line in the manner that
-each party provides two suitable steamers fitted for the transport
-of emigrants. To this end I propose you should purchase at their
-cost price the two steamers which are in course of construction in
-Hamburg at present for our Baltimore Line (320 feet length, 40 feet
-beam, 27 feet moulded, steerage 8 feet, carrying 3,500 tons on 22
-feet and about 450 steeragers, guaranteed to steam 11 knots, ready
-in October this year), and we to provide two similar steamers for
-this service. The earnings to be divided under a pool system.</p>
-
-<p>“(4) Your concern takes up one million dollars of our shares with
-the obligation not to sell them so long as you control our American
-business. I may remark that just at present our shares are
-obtainable cheaply in consequence of the general depression
-prevailing in the European money market, and further, owing to the
-fact that only a small dividend is expected on account of the very
-poor return freight ruling from North America. I think you would be
-able to take the shares out of the market at an average of about 7
-per cent. above par. We have paid in the last years since we
-concluded the pool with the Union Line, viz. in 1886 4 per cent.,
-1887 6 per cent., 1888 8½ per cent., 1889 11 per cent., 1890 8
-per cent. in the way of dividends, and during this time we wrote
-off for depreciation and added to the reserve funds about 60 per
-cent.<a name="page_044" id="page_044"></a></p>
-
-<p>“The position of our Company is an excellent one, our fleet
-consisting of modern ships (average age only about five years), and
-the book values of them being very low.</p>
-
-<p>“I should be obliged to you for thinking the matter over and
-informing me&mdash;if possible by cable&mdash;if you would be prepared to
-enter into negotiations on this basis. I myself start from the
-assumption that it might be good policy for our Company to obtain
-in the States a centre of interest and a position similar to that
-held by the Red Star Line and the Inman Lines in view of their
-connexion with the Pennsylvania Railroad, etc. It further strikes
-me that if this project is brought into effect one of your concern
-should become a member of our Board. I should thank you to return
-me this letter which, as I think it right expressly to point out to
-you, contains only what are purely my individual ideas.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>It may be assumed that the writing of this letter was prompted not only
-by the Packetfahrt’s desire to strengthen its position in the United
-States, but also by its wish to obtain a foothold in Great Britain. This
-would enable it to exercise greater pressure on the competing British
-lines, which&mdash;indirectly, at least&mdash;still did a considerable portion of
-the Continental business. Ballin’s suggestion did not lead to any
-practical result at the time, but was taken up again eight years later,
-in 1899, on the advice of Mr. (now Lord) Pirrie, of Messrs. Harland and
-Wolff, of Belfast. Important interests, partly of a financial character,
-linked his firm to British transatlantic shipping; and his special
-reason for taking up Ballin’s proposal was to prevent an alliance
-between Mr. Baker’s Atlantic Transport Company and the British Leyland
-Line, a scheme which was pushed forward from another quarter. He induced
-Mr. Baker to come to Europe so that the matter might be discussed
-directly. The attractiveness of the idea to Ballin was still further
-enhanced by the circumstance that the Atlantic Transport Line also
-controlled the<a name="page_045" id="page_045"></a> National Line which maintained a service between New
-York and London, and was, indeed, the decisive factor on the New
-York-London route. Ballin, accordingly, after obtaining permission from
-the Board of Trustees, went to London, where he met Mr. Baker and Mr.
-Pirrie.</p>
-
-<p>It soon became clear, however, that the Board of Trustees did not wish
-to sanction such far-reaching changes. When Ballin cabled the details of
-the scheme to Hamburg, it was seen that 25 million marks&mdash;half the
-amount in shares of the Packetfahrt&mdash;would be needed to carry it
-through. Thus the discussions had to be broken off; but the attitude
-which the Board had taken up was very much resented by Ballin.
-Subsequent negotiations which were entered into in the early part of
-1900 in Hamburg at the suggestion of Mr. Baker also failed to secure
-agreement, and shortly afterwards the American company was bought up by
-the Leyland Line.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time a movement was being set on foot in the United States
-which aimed at a strengthening of the American mercantile marine by
-means of Government subsidies. This circumstance suggested to Mr. Baker
-the possibility of setting up an American shipping concern consisting of
-the combined Leyland and Atlantic Transport Company lines together with
-the British White Star Line, which was to profit by the expected
-legislation concerning shipping subsidies. Neither the latter idea,
-however, nor Mr. Baker’s project assumed practical shape; but the
-Atlantic Transport-Leyland concern was enlarged by the addition of a
-number of other British lines, viz. the National Line, the
-Wilson-Furness-Leyland Line, and the West Indian and Pacific Line, all
-of which were managed by the owner of the Leyland Line, Mr. Ellerman,
-the well-known British shipping man of German descent. The<a name="page_046" id="page_046"></a> tonnage
-represented by these combined interests amounted to half a million tons,
-and the new combine was looked upon as an undesirable competitor, by
-both the Packetfahrt and the British lines. The dissatisfaction felt by
-the latter showed itself, among other things, in their refusal to come
-to any mutual understanding regarding the passenger business. In the
-end, Mr. Baker himself was so little pleased with the way things turned
-out in practice that he severed his connexion with the other lines
-shortly afterwards, and once more the question became urgent whether it
-would be advisable for the Packetfahrt&mdash;either alone, or in conjunction
-with the White Star Line and the firm of Messrs. Harland and Wolff&mdash;to
-purchase the Atlantic Transport Line.</p>
-
-<p>That was the time when Mr. Pierpont Morgan’s endeavours to create the
-combine, which has since then become known as the Morgan Trust, first
-attracted public attention. Ballin’s notes give an exhaustive
-description of the course of the negotiations which lasted nearly
-eighteen months and were entered into in order to take precautions
-against the danger threatening from America, whilst at the same time
-they aimed at some understanding with Mr. Morgan, because the
-opportunity thus presented of setting up an all-embracing organization
-promoting the interests of all the transatlantic steamship concerns
-seemed too good to be lost. Ballin’s notes for August, 1901, contain the
-following entry:</p>
-
-<p>“The grave economic depression from which Germany is suffering is
-assuming a more dangerous character every day. It is now spreading to
-other countries as well, and only the United States seem to have escaped
-so far. In addition to our other misfortunes, there is the
-unsatisfactory maize-crop in the States which, together with the other
-factors, has demoralized the<a name="page_047" id="page_047"></a> whole freight business within an
-incredibly short space of time. For a concern of the huge size of our
-own such a situation is fraught with the greatest danger, and our
-position is made still worse by another circumstance. In the States, a
-country whose natural resources are wellnigh inexhaustible, and whose
-enterprising population has immensely increased its wealth, the creation
-of trusts is an event of everyday occurrence. The banker, Pierpont
-Morgan&mdash;a man of whom it is said that he combines the possession of an
-enormous fortune with an intelligence which is simply astounding&mdash;has
-already created the Steel Trust, the biggest combination the world has
-ever seen, and he has now set about to lay the foundations for an
-American mercantile marine.â€</p>
-
-<p>A short report on the position then existing which Ballin made for
-Prince Henckell-Donnersmarck, who had himself called into being some big
-industrial combinations, is of interest even now, although the situation
-has entirely changed. But if we want to understand the position as it
-then was we must try to appreciate the views held at that time, and this
-the report helps us to do. Ballin had been referred to Prince
-Henckell-Donnersmarck by the Kaiser, who had a high opinion of the
-latter’s business abilities, and who had watched with lively interest
-the American shipping projects from the start, because he anticipated
-that they would produce an adverse effect on the future development of
-the German shipping companies. The report is given below:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“In 1830 about 90 per cent. of the United States sea-borne trade
-was still carried by vessels flying the American flag. By 1862 this
-percentage had gone down to 50 per cent., and it has shown a
-constant decrease ever since. In 1880 it had dwindled down to 16
-per cent., and in 1890 to as low a figure as 9 per cent. During
-recent years this falling<a name="page_048" id="page_048"></a> off, which is a corollary of the customs
-policy pursued by the United States, has given rise to a number of
-legislative measures intended to promote the interests of American
-shipping by the granting of Government subsidies. No practical
-steps of importance, however, have been taken so far; all that has
-been done is that subsidies have been granted to run a North
-Atlantic mail service maintained by means of four steamers, but no
-success worth mentioning has been achieved until now.</p>
-
-<p>“Quite recently the well-known American banker, Mr. J. Pierpont
-Morgan, conjointly with some other big American capitalists, has
-taken an interest in the plan. The following facts have become
-known so far in connexion with his efforts:</p>
-
-<p>“Morgan has acquired the Leyland Line, of Liverpool, which,
-according to the latest register, owns a fleet of 54 vessels,
-totalling 155,489 gross register tons. This purchase includes the
-West India and Pacific Line, which was absorbed into the Leyland
-Line as recently as a twelvemonth ago. The Mediterranean service
-formerly carried on by the Leyland Line has not been acquired by
-Morgan. He has, however, added the Atlantic Transport Company.
-Morgan’s evident intention is to form a big American shipping
-trust, and I have received absolutely reliable information to the
-effect that the American Line and the Red Star Line are also going
-to join the combine. The shares of the two last-named lines are
-already for the most part in American hands, and both companies are
-being managed from New York. Both lines together own 23 steamers
-representing 86,811 tons.</p>
-
-<p>“A correct estimate of the size of the undertaking can only be
-formed if the steamers now building for the various companies, and
-those that have been added to their fleets since the publication of
-the register from which the above figures are taken, are also taken
-into account. These vessels represent a total tonnage of about
-200,000 tons, so that the new American concern would possess a
-fleet representing 430,000 gross register tons. The corresponding
-figures for the Hamburg-Amerika Linie and for the Lloyd, including
-steamers building, are 650,000 and 600,000 tons respectively.</p>
-
-<p>“The proper method of rightly appreciating the importance<a name="page_049" id="page_049"></a> of the
-American coalition is to restrict the comparison, as far as the two
-German companies are concerned, to the amount of tonnage which they
-employ in their services to and from United States ports. If this
-is borne in mind, we arrive at the following figures: German
-lines&mdash;390,000 G.R.T.; American concern&mdash;about 430,000 G.R.T. These
-figures show that, as regards the amount of tonnage employed, the
-Morgan Trust is superior to the two German companies on the North
-Atlantic route. It can also challenge comparison with the regular
-British lines&mdash;grand total, 438,566 G.R.T.</p>
-
-<p>“In all the steps he has taken, Morgan, no doubt, has been guided
-by his confidence in his ability to enforce the passing of a
-Subsidy Act by Congress in favour of his undertaking. So long as he
-does not succeed in these efforts of his he will, of course, be
-obliged to operate the lines of which he has secured control under
-foreign flags. Up to the present only four steamers of the American
-Line, viz. the <i>New York</i>, <i>Philadelphia</i>, <i>St. Louis</i>, and <i>St.
-Paul</i>, are flying the United States flag, whereas the remaining
-vessels of the American Line, and those of the Leyland, the West
-India and Pacific, the American Transport, the National, and the
-Furness-Boston lines, are sailing under the British, and those of
-the Red Star Line under the Belgian flag.</p>
-
-<p>“The organization which Mr. Morgan either has created, or is
-creating, is not in itself a danger to the two German shipping
-companies; neither can it be said that the Government
-subsidies&mdash;provided they do not exceed an amount that is justified
-by the conditions actually existing&mdash;are in themselves detrimental
-to the German interests. The real danger, however, threatens from
-the amalgamation of the American railway interests with those of
-American shipping.</p>
-
-<p>“It is no secret that Morgan is pursuing his far-reaching plans as
-the head of a syndicate which comprises a number of the most
-important and most enterprising business men in the United States,
-and that the railway interests are particularly well represented in
-it. Morgan himself, during his stay in London a few months ago,
-stated to some British shipping men that, according to his
-estimates, nearly 70 per cent. of the goods which are shipped to
-Europe from the North Atlantic ports are carried to the latter by
-the railroads<a name="page_050" id="page_050"></a> on Through Bills of Lading, and that their further
-transport is entrusted to foreign shipping companies. He and his
-friends, Morgan added, did not see any reason why the railroad
-companies should leave it to foreign-owned companies to carry those
-American goods across the Atlantic. It would be much more logical
-to bring about an amalgamation of the American railroad and
-shipping interests for the purpose of securing the whole profits
-for American capital.</p>
-
-<p>“This projected combination of the railroad and sea-borne traffic
-is, as I have pointed out, a great source of danger to the foreign
-shipping companies, as it will expose them to the possibility of
-finding their supplies from the United States <i>hinterland</i> cut off.
-This latter traffic is indispensable to the remunerative working of
-our North American services, and it is quite likely that Morgan’s
-statement that they amount to about 70 per cent. of the total
-sea-borne traffic is essentially correct.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>The negotiations which Ballin carried on in this connexion are described
-as follows in his notes:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“When I was in London in July (1901), I had an opportunity of
-discussing this American business with Mr. Pirrie. Pirrie had
-already informed me some time ago that he would like to talk to me
-on this subject, but he had never indicated until then that Morgan
-had actually instructed him to discuss matters with me. A second
-meeting took place at which Ismay (the chairman of the White Star
-Line) was present in addition to Pirrie and myself, and it was
-agreed that Pirrie should go to New York and find out from Morgan
-himself what were his plans regarding the White Star Line and the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie.</p>
-
-<p>“Shortly after Pirrie’s return from the States I went to London to
-talk things over with him. He had already sent me a wire to say
-that he had also asked Mr. Wilding to take part in our meeting; and
-this circumstance induced me to call on Mr. Wilding when I passed
-through Southampton <i>en route</i> for London. What he told me filled
-me with as much concern as surprise. He informed me that the
-syndicate intended to acquire the White Star Line, but<a name="page_051" id="page_051"></a> that, owing
-to my relations with the Kaiser, the acquisition of the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie was not contemplated. Morgan, he further told
-me, was willing to work on the most friendly terms with us, as far
-as this could be done without endangering the interests of the
-syndicate; but the fact was that the biggest American railroad
-companies had already approached the syndicate, and that they had
-offered terms of co-operation which were practically identical with
-a combination between themselves and the syndicate.</p>
-
-<p>“In the course of the discussions then proceeding between Pirrie,
-Wilding, and myself the situation changed to our advantage, and I
-was successful in seeing my own proposals accepted, the essence of
-which was that, on the one hand, our independence should be
-respected, that the nationality of our company should not be
-interfered with, and that no American members should be added to
-our Board of Trustees; whilst, on the other hand, a fairly close
-contact was to be established between the two concerns, and
-competition between them was to be eliminated.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>The draft agreement, which was discussed at these meetings in London
-(and which was considerably altered later on), provided that it should
-run for ten years, and that a mutual interchange of shares between the
-two concerns should be effected, the amount of shares thus exchanged to
-represent a value of 20 million marks (equivalent to 25 per cent. of the
-joint-stock capital of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie). Mutual participation
-was provided for in case of any future increase in the capital of either
-company; but the American concern was prohibited from purchasing any
-additional shares of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie. The voting rights for
-the Hamburg shares should be assigned to Ballin for life, and those for
-the American shares to Morgan on the same terms. Instead of actually
-parting with its shares, the Hamburg company was to have the option of
-paying their equivalent in steamers. The agreement emphasized that,
-whilst recognizing the desirability of<a name="page_052" id="page_052"></a> as far-reaching a financial
-participation as possible, Ballin did not believe that, with due regard
-to German public opinion and to the wishes of the Imperial Government,
-he was justified in recommending an interchange of shares exceeding the
-amount agreed upon. The American concern was prohibited from calling at
-any German ports, and the Hamburg company agreed not to run any services
-to such European ports as were served by the other party. A pool
-agreement covering the cabin business was entered into; and with respect
-to the steerage and cargo business it was agreed that the existing
-understandings should be maintained until they expired, and that
-afterwards a special understanding should be concluded between both
-contracting parties.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately after Ballin’s return to Hamburg the Board of Trustees
-unanimously expressed its agreement in principle with the proposals.</p>
-
-<p>“For my own part,†Ballin says in his notes on these matters, “I
-declared that I could only regard the practical execution of these
-proposals as possible if they receive the unequivocal assent of the
-Kaiser and of the Imperial Chancellor. Next evening I was surprised to
-receive two telegrams, one from the Lord Chamberlain’s office, and one
-from the Kaiser, commanding my presence on the following day for dinner
-at the Hubertusstock hunting lodge of the Kaiser, where I was invited to
-stay until the afternoon of the second day following. I left for Berlin
-on the same evening, October 16th (1901); and, together with the
-Chancellor, I continued my journey the following day to Eberswalde. At
-that town a special carriage conveyed us to Hubertusstock, where we
-arrived after a two-hours’ drive, and where I was privileged to spend
-two unforgettable days in most intimate intercourse with the Kaiser. The
-Chancellor had previously informed me<a name="page_053" id="page_053"></a> that the Kaiser did not like the
-terms of the agreement, because Metternich had told him that the
-Americans would have the right to acquire 20 million marks’ worth of our
-shares. During an after-dinner walk with the Kaiser, on which we were
-accompanied by the Chancellor and the Kaiser’s A.D.C., Captain v.
-Grumme, I explained the whole proposals in detail. I pointed out to the
-Kaiser that whereas the British lines engaged in the North Atlantic
-business were simply absorbed by the trust, the proposed agreement would
-leave the independence of the German lines intact. This made the Kaiser
-inquire what was to become of the North German Lloyd, and I had to
-promise that I would see to it that the Lloyd would not be exposed to
-any immediate danger arising out of our agreement, and that it would be
-given an opportunity of becoming a partner to it as well. The Kaiser
-then wanted to see the actual text of the agreement as drafted in
-London. When I produced it from my pocket we entered the room adjacent
-to the entrance of the lodge, which happened to be the small bedroom of
-Captain v. Grumme; and there a meeting, which lasted several hours, was
-held, the Kaiser reading out aloud every article of the agreement, and
-discussing every single item. The Kaiser himself was sitting on Captain
-v. Grumme’s bed; the Chancellor and myself occupied the only two chairs
-available in the room, the Captain comfortably seating himself on a
-table. The outcome of the proceedings was that the Kaiser declared
-himself completely satisfied with the proposals, only commissioning me,
-as I have explained, to look after the interests of the North German
-Lloyd.</p>
-
-<p>“On the afternoon of the following day, after lunch, the Chancellor and
-I returned to Berlin, this giving me a chance of discussing with the
-former&mdash;as I had previously done with the Kaiser&mdash;every question of<a name="page_054" id="page_054"></a>
-importance. On October 18th I arrived back in Hamburg.â€</p>
-
-<p>The negotiations with the North German Lloyd which Ballin had undertaken
-to enter upon proved to be very difficult, the Director General of that
-company, Dr. Wiegand, not sharing Ballin’s views with respect to the
-American danger and the significance of the American combination. After
-Ballin, however, had explained the proposals in detail, the Lloyd people
-altered their previously held opinion, and in the subsequent London
-discussions, which were resumed in November, the President of the Lloyd,
-Mr. Plate, also took part. Nevertheless, it was found impossible to
-agree definitely there and then, and a further discussion between the
-two directors general took place at Potsdam on November 13th, both of
-them having been invited to dinner by the Kaiser, who was sitting
-between the two gentlemen at the table. Ballin’s suggestion that he and
-Dr. Wiegand should proceed to New York in order to ascertain whether the
-shipping companies and the American railroads had actually entered into
-a combination, was heartily seconded by the Kaiser, and was agreed to by
-Dr. Wiegand. The Lloyd people, however, were still afraid that the
-proposed understanding would jeopardize the independence of the German
-lines; but Ballin, by giving detailed explanations of the points
-connected with the financial provisions, succeeded in removing these
-fears, and the Board of Trustees of the Lloyd expressed themselves
-satisfied with these explanations. They insisted upon the omission of
-the clauses dealing with the financial participation, but agreed to the
-proposals in every other respect.</p>
-
-<p>The arrangements for such mutual exchange of shares were thereupon
-dropped in the final drafting of the agreement, and were replaced by a
-mutual participation in the distribution of dividends, the American<a name="page_055" id="page_055"></a>
-concern guaranteeing the German lines a dividend of 6 per cent., and
-only claiming a share in a dividend exceeding that figure. This change
-owed its origin to a proposal put forward by Mr. v. Hansemann, the
-Director of the Disconto-Gesellschaft, who had taken an active interest
-in the development of the whole matter.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of the negotiations the Lloyd made a further proposal by
-which it was intended to safeguard the German national character of the
-two great shipping companies. It was suggested that a
-corporation&mdash;somewhat similar to the Preussische Seehandlung&mdash;should be
-set up by the Imperial Government with the assistance of some privately
-owned capital. This corporation should purchase such a part of the
-shares of each company as would defeat any attempts at destroying their
-national character. Ballin, however, to whom any kind of Government
-interference in shipping matters was anathema, would have nothing to do
-with this plan, and thus it fell through.</p>
-
-<p>Ballin thereupon having informed the Kaiser in Kiel on board the
-battleship <i>Kaiser Wilhelm II</i> regarding the progress of the
-negotiations, a further meeting with the Lloyd people took place early
-in December, which led to a complete agreement among the two German
-companies as to the final proposals to be submitted to the American
-group; and shortly afterwards, at a meeting held at Cologne, agreement
-was also secured with Mr. Pirrie. The final discussions took place in
-New York early in February, Ballin and Mr. Tietgens, the chairman of the
-Board of Directors, acting on behalf of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie, and
-President Plate and Dr. Wiegand on that of the Lloyd. Meanwhile,
-Morgan’s negotiations with the White Star Line and other British
-companies had also led to a successful<a name="page_056" id="page_056"></a> termination. Concerning the New
-York meetings we find an interesting entry in Ballin’s diary:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“In the afternoon of February 13th, 1902, Messrs. Griscom, Widener,
-Wilding, and Battle, and two sons of Mr. Griscom met us in
-conference. Various suggestions were put forward in the course of
-the proceedings which necessitated further deliberations in private
-between ourselves and the Bremen gentlemen, and it was agreed to
-convene a second general meeting at the private office of Mr.
-Griscom on the 15th floor of the Empire Building. This meeting was
-held in the forenoon of the following day, and a complete agreement
-was arrived at concerning the more important of the questions that
-were still open. I took up the position that the combine would only
-be able to make the utmost possible use of its power if we
-succeeded in securing control of the Cunard and Holland American
-Lines. I was glad to find that Mr. Morgan shared my view. He
-authorized me to negotiate on his behalf with Director Van den
-Toorn, the representative of the Holland American Line, and after a
-series of meetings a preliminary agreement was reached giving
-Morgan the option of purchasing 51 per cent. of the shares of the
-Holland American Line. Morgan undertook to negotiate with the
-Cunard Line through the intermediary of some British friends. It
-has been settled that, if the control of the two companies in
-question is secured to the combine, one half of it should be
-exercised by the American group, and the other half should be
-divided between the Lloyd and ourselves. This arrangement will
-assure the German lines of a far-reaching influence on the future
-development of affairs.</p>
-
-<p>“On the following Thursday the agreements, which were meanwhile
-ready in print, were signed. We addressed a joint telegram to the
-Kaiser, informing him of the definite conclusion of the agreement,
-to which he sent me an exceedingly gracious reply. The Kaiser’s
-telegram was dispatched from Hubertusstock, and its text was as
-follows:</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ballin, Director General of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie, New York.
-Have received your joint message with sincere satisfaction. Am
-especially pleased that it reached<a name="page_057" id="page_057"></a> me in the same place where the
-outlines gained form and substance in October last. You must be
-grateful to St. Hubertus. He seems to know something about shipping
-as well. In recognition of your untiring efforts and of the success
-of your labours I confer upon you the Second Class of my Order of
-the Red Eagle with the Crown. Remember me to Henry.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Wilhelm I.R.</span>’</p>
-
-<p>“Morgan gave a dinner in our honour at his private residence which
-abounds in treasures of art of all descriptions, and the other
-gentlemen also entertained us with lavish hospitality. Tietgens and
-I returned the compliment by giving a dinner at the Holland House
-which was of special interest because it was attended not only by
-the partners of Morgan, but also by Mr. Jacob Schiff, of Messrs.
-Kuhn, Loeb &amp; Co., who had been Morgan’s opponents in the conflict
-concerning the Northern Pacific. During the following week the
-Lloyd provided a big dinner on board the <i>Kronprinz Wilhelm</i> for
-about 200 invited guests.</p>
-
-<p>“Prince Henry of Prussia was one of the passengers of the
-<i>Kronprinz Wilhelm</i> which, owing to the inclemency of the weather,
-arrived in New York one day behind her scheduled time. On the day
-of her arrival&mdash;Sunday, February 23rd&mdash;I had dinner on board the
-<i>Hohenzollern</i>. We also took part in a number of other celebrations
-in honour of the Prince. Especially memorable and of extraordinary
-sumptuousness was the lunch at which Mr. Morgan presided, and at
-which one hundred captains of industry&mdash;leading American business
-men from all parts of the States&mdash;were present. On the evening of
-the same day the press dinner took place which 1,200 newspaper men
-had arranged in honour of the Prince. Mr. Schiff introduced me to
-Mr. Harriman, the chairman of the Union Pacific, with whom I
-entered into discussions concerning our participation in the San
-Francisco-Far East business.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>At the request of the American group the publication of the agreement
-was delayed for some time, because it was thought desirable to wait for
-the final issue of the Congress debates on the Subsidies Bill. A report<a name="page_058" id="page_058"></a>
-which Ballin, after some further discussion with Morgan and his London
-friends had taken place, made for the German Embassy in London,
-describes the situation as it appeared in April, 1902. It runs as
-follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“(1) Acquisition of the joint control of the Cunard Line by the two
-German companies and the American syndicate. On this subject
-discussions have taken place with Lord Inverclyde, the chairman of
-the Cunard Line. Neither Lord Inverclyde nor any of the other
-representatives of British shipping interests objected in any way
-to the proposed transaction for reasons connected with the national
-interest. He said, indeed, that he thought the syndicate should not
-content itself with purchasing 51 per cent. of the shares, but that
-it should rather absorb the whole company instead. The purchase
-price he named appeared to me somewhat excessive; but he has
-already hinted that he would be prepared to recommend to his
-company to accept a lower offer, and it is most likely that the
-negotiations will lead to a successful issue, unless the British
-Government should pull itself together at the eleventh hour.</p>
-
-<p>“(2) Public announcement of the formation of the Combine. Whereas
-until quite recently the American gentlemen maintained that it
-would be advisable to wait for the conclusion of the negotiations
-going on at Washington with respect to the proposed subsidy
-legislation, Mr. Morgan now shares my view that it is not desirable
-to do so any longer, but that it would be wiser to proceed without
-any regard to the intentions of Washington. The combine,
-therefore&mdash;unless unexpected obstacles should intervene&mdash;will make
-its public appearance within a few weeks.</p>
-
-<p>“(3) The British Admiralty. An agreement exists between the British
-Admiralty and the White Star Line conceding to the former the right
-of pre-emption of the three express steamers <i>Oceanic, Teutonic,</i>
-and <i>Majestic.</i> This agreement also provides that the White Star
-Line, against an annual subsidy from the Government, must place
-these boats at the disposal of the Admiralty in case of war. The
-First Lord has now asked Mr. Ismay whether there is any<a name="page_059" id="page_059"></a> truth in
-the report that he wants to sell the White Star Line; and when he
-was told that such was the case, he declared that, this being so,
-he would be compelled to exercise his right of pre-emption.</p>
-
-<p>“It would be extremely awkward in the interests of the combine if
-the three vessels had to be placed at the service of the Admiralty,
-especially as it is probable that they would be employed in
-competition with the combine. Therefore a compromise has been
-effected in such a form that Mr. Morgan is to take over the
-agreement on behalf of the combine for the three years it has still
-to run. This means that the steamers will continue to fly the
-British flag for the present, and that they must be placed at the
-disposition of the Admiralty in case of war. The Admiralty
-suggested an extension of the terms of the agreement for a further
-period of three years; but it was content to withdraw its
-suggestion when Mr. Morgan declined to accept it. The agreement
-does not cover any of the other boats of the line which are the
-biggest cargo steamers flying the Union Jack, and consequently no
-obligations have been incurred with respect to these.</p>
-
-<p>“(4) Text of the public announcement. A memorandum is in course of
-preparation fixing the text of the announcement by which the public
-is to be made acquainted with the formation of the combine. In
-compliance with the wishes emanating from prominent British
-quarters, the whole transaction will be represented in the light of
-a big Anglo-American ‘community of interest’ agreement; and the
-fact that it virtually cedes to the United States the control of
-the North Atlantic shipping business will be kept in the
-background, as far as it is possible to do so.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>The first semi-official announcement dealing with the combine was
-published on April 19th by the British Press, and at an Extraordinary
-General Meeting of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie on May 28th, the public was
-given some carefully prepared information about the German-American
-agreement. At that meeting Dr. Diederich Hahn, the well-known chairman
-of the <i>Bund<a name="page_060" id="page_060"></a> der Landwirte</i> (Agrarian League), rose, to everybody’s
-surprise, to inquire if it was the case that the national interests, and
-especially the agricultural interests of Germany, would be adversely
-affected by the agreement. The ensuing discussion showed Ballin at his
-best. He allayed Dr. Hahn’s fears lest the American influence in the
-combination would be so strong as to eliminate the German influence
-altogether by convincing him that the whole agreement was built up on a
-basis of parity, and that the German interests would not be jeopardized
-in any way. The argument that the close connexion established between
-the trust and the American railroad companies would lead to Germany
-being flooded with American agricultural produce he parried by pointing
-out that the interests of the American railroads did not so much require
-an increased volume of exports, but rather of imports, because a great
-disproportion existed between their eastbound and their westbound
-traffic, the former by far exceeding the latter, so that a further
-increase in the amount of goods carried from the western part of the
-country to the Atlantic seaports would only make matters worse from the
-point of remunerative working of their lines.</p>
-
-<p>What Ballin thought of the system of Government subsidies in aid of
-shipping matters is concisely expressed by his remarks in a speech which
-he made on the occasion of the trial trip of the s.s. <i>Blücher</i>, when he
-said: “If it were announced to me to-day that the Government subsidies
-had been stolen overnight, I should heave a sigh of relief, only
-thinking what a pity it was that it had not been done long ago.â€</p>
-
-<p>In Great Britain the news that some big British shipping companies had
-been purchased by the American concern caused a great deal of public
-excitement. In Ballin’s diary we find the following entry under date of
-June 5th:<a name="page_061" id="page_061"></a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“In England, in consequence of the national excitement, a very
-awkward situation has arisen. Sir Alfred Jones and Sir Christopher
-Furness know how to make use of this excitement as an opportunity
-for shouldering the British nation with the burden which the
-excessive tonnage owned by their companies represents to them in
-these days of depression. King Edward has also evinced an
-exceedingly keen interest in these matters of late, which goes to
-show that what makes people in England feel most uncomfortable is
-not the passing of the various shipping companies into American
-hands, but the fact that the German companies have done so well
-over the deal. Mr. Morgan has had an interview with some of the
-British Cabinet ministers at which he declared his readiness to
-give the Government additional facilities as regards the supply of
-auxiliary cruisers. We are hopeful that such concessions will take
-the wind out of the sails of those who wish to create a
-counter-combination subsidized by grants-in-aid from the
-Government.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>An outcome of the German-American arrangements was that Morgan and his
-friends were invited by the Kaiser to take part in the festivities
-connected with the Kiel Week. The American gentlemen were treated with
-marked attention by the Kaiser, and extended their visit so as to
-include Hamburg and Berlin as well.</p>
-
-<p>At a conference of the transatlantic lines held in December, 1902, at
-Cologne, Ballin put forward once more his suggestion that a cabin pool
-should be established. The proposal, however, fell through owing to the
-opposition from the Cunard Line.</p>
-
-<p>The depression in the freight business which had set in in 1901, and
-which was still very pronounced towards the close of 1902, seriously
-affected the prospects of the transatlantic shipping companies,
-especially those combined in the Morgan Trust, who were the owners of a
-huge amount of tonnage used in the cargo business, and whose sphere of
-action was restricted to the North<a name="page_062" id="page_062"></a> Atlantic route. “Experience now
-shows,†Ballin wrote in his notes, “that we were doing the right thing
-when we entered into the alliance with the Trust. If we had not done
-this, the latter would doubtless have tried to invade the German market
-in order to keep its many idle ships going.â€</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the Cunard Line had concluded an agreement with the British
-Government by which the Government bound itself to advance to the
-company the funds for the building of its two mammoth express liners,
-the <i>Mauretania</i> and the <i>Lusitania</i>, while at the same time granting it
-a subsidy sufficient to provide for the payment of the interest on and
-for the redemption of the loan advanced by the Government for the
-building of the vessels.</p>
-
-<p>Further difficulties seemed to be ahead owing to the aggressive measures
-proposed by the Canadian Pacific Company, which was already advertising
-a service from Antwerp to Canada. To ward off the danger threatening
-from this quarter, Ballin proceeded to New York to take up negotiations
-with Sir Thomas Shaughnessy, the president of the Canadian Pacific. He
-went there on behalf of all the Continental shipping companies
-concerned, and the results he arrived at were so satisfactory to both
-parties that Ballin corresponded henceforth on terms of close personal
-friendship with Sir Thomas, who was one of the leading experts on
-railway matters anywhere. These friendly relations were very helpful to
-Ballin afterwards when he was engaged in difficult negotiations with
-other representatives of Sir Thomas’s company, and never failed to
-ensure a successful understanding being arrived at.</p>
-
-<p>On the occasion of this trip to America Ballin had some interesting&mdash;or,
-as he puts it, “rather exciting"&mdash;discussions with Morgan and his
-friends. He severely criticized the management of the affairs of the
-Trust,<a name="page_063" id="page_063"></a> and tried to make Morgan understand that nothing short of a
-radical improvement&mdash;i.e. a change of the leading personages&mdash;would put
-matters right. “Morgan,†he writes, “finds it impossible to get the
-right men to take their places, and he held out to me the most alluring
-prospects if I myself should feel inclined to go to New York as
-president of the Trust, even if only for a year or two; but I refused
-his offer, chiefly on account of my relations with the Kaiser.â€</p>
-
-<p>Ballin’s suggestions, nevertheless, led to a change in the management of
-the Trust. This was decided upon at meetings held in London, where
-Ballin stayed for a time on his way back to Hamburg. Mr. Pirrie also
-took part in these meetings.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime the relations between the Cunard Line and the other
-transatlantic shipping companies had become very critical. The Hungarian
-Government, for some time past, had shown a desire to derive a greater
-benefit from the considerable emigrant traffic of the country&mdash;a desire
-which was shared by important private quarters as well. The idea was to
-divert the stream of emigrants to Fiume&mdash;instead of allowing them to
-cross the national frontiers uncontrolled&mdash;and to carry them from that
-port to the United States by direct steamers. Ballin had repeatedly
-urged that the lines which were working together under the pool
-agreement should fall in with these wishes of the Hungarian Government;
-but his proposals were not acted upon, mainly owing to the opposition of
-the North German Lloyd, which company carried the biggest share of the
-Hungarian emigrants.</p>
-
-<p>To the great surprise of the pool lines it was announced in the early
-part of 1904 that the Hungarian Government was about to conclude an
-agreement with the Cunard Line&mdash;the only big transatlantic shipping
-company which had remained outside the Trust&mdash;by<a name="page_064" id="page_064"></a> which it was provided
-that the Cunard Line was to run fortnightly services from Fiume, and by
-which the Hungarian Government was to bind itself to prevent&mdash;by means
-of closing the frontiers or any other suitable methods&mdash;emigrants from
-choosing any other routes leading out of the country. Such an agreement
-would deprive the pool lines of the whole of their Hungarian emigrant
-business. Discussions between Ballin and the representatives of the
-Cunard Line only elicited the statement on the part of the latter that
-it had no power any longer to retrace its steps. An episode which took
-place in the course of these discussions is of special interest now, as
-it enables us to understand why the amalgamation of the Cunard Line with
-the Morgan Trust never took place.</p>
-
-<p>Ballin asked Lord Inverclyde why the attitude of the Cunard Line had
-been so aggressive throughout. The reply was that the Morgan Trust, and
-not the Cunard Line, was the aggressor, because Morgan’s aim was to
-crush it. When Ballin interposed that this had never been intended by
-the Trust&mdash;that the Trust, indeed, had attempted to include the Cunard
-Line within the combination, that Lord Inverclyde himself had also made
-a proposal towards that end, and that the project had only come to grief
-on account of the strong feeling of British public opinion against
-it&mdash;Lord Inverclyde answered that, far from this being the case, the
-Trust had never replied to his proposal, and that he had not even
-received an acknowledgment of his last letter.</p>
-
-<p>In a letter to Mr. Boas, the general representative of his company in
-New York, in which he described the general situation, Ballin stated
-that the statement of Lord Inverclyde was indeed quite correct.</p>
-
-<p>The Hungarian situation became still more complicated after the receipt
-of some information that reached Ballin from Vienna to the effect that
-the<a name="page_065" id="page_065"></a> Austrian Government intended to imitate the example set by the
-Hungarian Government by running a service from Trieste. After prolonged
-discussions the Austrian Government also undertook not to grant an
-emigration licence to the Cunard Line so long as the struggle between
-the two competing concerns was not settled.</p>
-
-<p>Thereupon this struggle of the pool lines&mdash;both the Continental and the
-British ones&mdash;against the Cunard Line was started in real earnest, not
-only for the British but also for the Scandinavian and the Fiume
-business. After some time negotiations for an agreement were opened in
-London in July on the initiative and with the assistance of Mr. Balfour,
-who was then President of the Board of Trade. These, however, led to no
-result, and a basis for a compromise was not found until August, 1904,
-when renewed negotiations took place at Frankfort-On-Main. A definite
-understanding was reached towards the close of the same year, and then
-at last this struggle, which was really one of the indirect consequences
-of the establishment of the Morgan Trust, came to an end.</p>
-
-<p>Looked upon from a purely business point of view, the Morgan Trust&mdash;or,
-to call it by its real name, the “International Mercantile Marine
-Company,†which in pool slang, was simply spoken of as the “Immco
-Lines"&mdash;was doubtless a failure. Only the World War, yielding, as it
-did, formerly unheard-of profits to the shipping business of the neutral
-and the Allied countries, brought about a financial improvement, but it
-is still too early to predict whether this improvement will be
-permanent. The reasons why the undertaking was bound to be
-unremunerative before the outbreak of the war are not far to seek, and
-include the initial failure of its promoters to secure the adhesion of
-the Cunard Line&mdash;a failure which, as is shown by Ballin’s notes, was to
-a large extent due to the hesitating policy<a name="page_066" id="page_066"></a> of the Hamburg company. To
-make business as remunerative as possible was the very object for which
-the Trust was formed, but the more economical working which was the
-means to reach this end could not be realized while such an essential
-factor as the Cunard Line not only remained an outsider, but even became
-a formidable competitor.</p>
-
-<p>It can hardly be doubted that the adhesion of the Cunard Line to the
-Morgan Trust&mdash;or, in other words, the formation of a combine including
-all the important transatlantic lines without exception&mdash;would have
-brought about such a development of the pool idea as would have led to a
-much closer linking-up of the financial interests of the individual
-partners than could be achieved under a pool agreement. Under such a
-“community of interest†agreement, every inducement to needless
-competition could be eliminated, and replaced by a system of mutual
-participation in the net profits of each line. This was the ideal at
-which Ballin, taught by many years of experience, was aiming.</p>
-
-<p>Over and over again the pool lines had an opportunity of finding out
-that it paid them better to come to a friendly understanding, even if it
-entailed a small sacrifice, than to put up a fight against a new
-competitor. Sometimes, indeed, an understanding was made desirable owing
-to political considerations. However, the number of participants
-ultimately grew so large that Ballin sarcastically remarked: “Sooner or
-later the pool will have to learn how to get along without us,†and he
-never again abandoned his plan of having it replaced by closely-knit
-community of interest agreements which would be worked under a
-centralized management, and therefore produce much better results. In
-other branches of his activities&mdash;e.g. in his agreements with the other
-Hamburg companies and in the one with the Booth Line, which was engaged
-in the service<a name="page_067" id="page_067"></a> to Northern Brazil, he succeeded in developing the
-existing understandings into actual community of interest agreements,
-and it seems that these have given all-round satisfaction. The
-negotiations between himself and the North German Lloyd shortly before
-the outbreak of the war were carried on with the same object.</p>
-
-<p>Throughout the endless vicissitudes in the history of the pool the
-formation of the Morgan Trust decidedly stands out as the most
-interesting and most dramatic episode. At the present time the position
-of the German steamship companies in those days seems even more imposing
-than it appeared to the contemporary observer. To-day we can hardly
-imagine that some big British lines should, one after the other, be
-offered for purchase first to some German, and then to the American
-concerns. Such a thing was only possible because at that time British
-shipping enterprise was more interested in the employment of tramp
-steamers than in the working of regular services, the shipowners
-believing that greater profits could be obtained by the former method.
-The result was a noticeable lack of leading men fully qualified to speak
-with authority on questions relating to the regular business, whereas in
-Germany such men were not wanting. The transatlantic business
-threatened, in fact, to become more and more the prerogative of the
-German-American combination. To-day, of course, it is no longer possible
-to say with certainty whether the Cunard Line could have been induced to
-join that combination, if the right moment had not been missed. The
-great danger with which British shipping was threatened at that time,
-and the great success which the German lines achieved, not only stirred
-British public opinion to its depths, but also acted as a powerful
-stimulus on the shipping firms themselves. This caused a pronounced
-revival of regular line shipping, which went so far that tramp shipping<a name="page_068" id="page_068"></a>
-became less and less important, and which ultimately led to a
-concentration of the former within the framework of a few large
-organizations which exercise a correspondingly strong influence on
-present-day British shipping in general. These organizations differ from
-the big German companies by the circumstance that they represent close
-financial amalgamations and that they have not, like the German
-companies, grown up slowly and step for step with the expanding volume
-of transatlantic traffic.<a name="page_069" id="page_069"></a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI<br /><br />
-<span class="smcap">The Expansion of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie</span></h2>
-
-<p class="nind">T<span class="smcap">he</span> principal work which fell to Ballin’s share during the period
-immediately following his nomination in 1888 on the Board of his company
-was that connected with the introduction of the fast steamers and the
-resulting expansion of the passenger business. Offices were established
-in Berlin, Dresden, and Frankfort-On-Main in 1890, and arrangements were
-made with the Hamburg-South American S.S. Co., the German East Africa
-Line, and the Hansa Line&mdash;the latter running a service to Canada&mdash;by
-which these companies entrusted the management of their own passenger
-business to the Packetfahrt. Thus, step by step, the passenger
-department developed into an organization the importance of which grew
-from year to year.</p>
-
-<p>The expansion of the passenger business also necessitated an enlargement
-of the facilities for the dispatch of the Company’s steamers. This work
-had been effected until then at the northern bank of the main Elbe, but
-in 1888 it was transferred to the Amerika-Kai which was newly built at
-the southern bank; and when the normal depth of the fairway of the Elbe
-was no longer sufficient to enable the fast steamers of considerable
-draught to come up to the city, it was decided to dispatch them from
-Brunshausen, a small place situated much lower down the Elbe. In the
-long run, however, it proved very inconvenient to manage the passenger
-dispatch from there, and the construction of special port facilities at
-Cuxhaven owned by the Company was taken in hand. The accommodation at
-the Amerika-Kai,<a name="page_070" id="page_070"></a> although it was enlarged as early as 1889, was soon
-found to be inadequate, so that it was resolved to provide new
-accommodation at the Petersen-Kai, situated on the northern bank of the
-Elbe, and this project was carried out in 1893.</p>
-
-<p>The number of services run by the Company was augmented in those early
-years by the establishment of a line to Baltimore and another to
-Philadelphia. In 1889 a new line starting from New York was opened to
-Venezuelan and Colombian ports. The North Atlantic services were
-considerably enlarged in 1892, when the Company took over the Hansa
-Line.</p>
-
-<p>The desire to find remunerative employment for the fast steamers during
-the dead season of the North Atlantic passenger business prompted the
-decision to enter these boats into a service from New York to the
-Mediterranean during the winter months. The same desire, however, also
-gave rise to one of the most original ideas carried into practice
-through Ballin’s enterprise, i.e. the institution of pleasure trips and
-tourist cruises. It may perhaps be of interest to point out in this
-connexion that, about half a century earlier, another Hamburg shipping
-man had thought of specially fitting out a vessel for an extended cruise
-of that kind. I do not know whether this plan was carried out at the
-time, and whether Ballin was indebted to his predecessor for the whole
-idea; in any case, the following advertisement which appeared in the
-<i>Leipziger Illustrierte Zeitung,</i> and which I reprint for curiosity’s
-sake, was found among his papers.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="c">
-<span class="smcap">"An Opportunity for Taking Part in a Voyage<br />
-Round the World</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“The undersigned Hamburg shipowner proposes to equip one of his
-large sailing vessels for a cruise round the world, to start this
-summer, during which the passengers will be<a name="page_071" id="page_071"></a> able to visit the
-following cities and countries, viz. Lisbon, Madeira, Teneriffe,
-Cap Verde Islands, Rio de Janeiro, Rio de la Plata, Falklands
-Islands, Valparaiso, and all the intermediate ports of call on the
-Pacific coast of South America as far as Guayaquil (for Quito), the
-Marquesas Islands, Friendly Islands (Otaheite), and other island
-groups in the Pacific, China (Choosan, Hongkong, Canton, Macao,
-Whampoa), Manilla, Singapore, Ceylon, ÃŽle de France or Madagascar,
-the Cape of Good Hope, St. Helena, Ascension Island, the Azores,
-and back to Hamburg.</p>
-
-<p>“The cruise is not intended for business purposes of any kind; but
-the whole equipment and accommodation of the vessel, the time spent
-at the various ports of call, and the details of the whole cruise,
-are to be arranged with the sole object of promoting the safety,
-the comfort, the entertainment, and the instruction of the
-passengers.</p>
-
-<p>“Admission will be strictly confined to persons of unblemished
-repute and of good education, those possessing a scientific
-education receiving preference.</p>
-
-<p>“The members of the expedition may confidently look forward to a
-pleasant and successful voyage. A first-class ship, an experienced
-and well-educated captain, a specially selected crew, and a
-qualified physician are sufficient guarantees to ensure a complete
-success.</p>
-
-<p>“The fare for the whole voyage is so low that it only represents a
-very slight addition to the ordinary cost of living incurred on
-shore. In return, the passenger will have many opportunities of
-acquiring a first-hand knowledge of the wonders of the world, of
-the beautiful scenery of the remotest countries, and of the manners
-and customs of many different nations. During the whole voyage he
-will be surrounded by the utmost comfort, and will enjoy the
-company of numerous persons of culture and refinement. The sea air
-will be of immeasurable benefit to his health, and the experience
-which he is sure to gain will remain a source of pleasure to him
-for the rest of his life.</p>
-
-<p>“Full particulars may be had on application to the undersigned, and
-a stamped envelope for reply should be enclosed.</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-<span class="smcap">“Rob. M. Sloman,</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="c">“<i>Hamburg, January</i>, 1845.&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;
-<i>Shipowner in Hamburg.</i>â€</p></div>
-
-<p><a name="page_072" id="page_072"></a></p>
-
-<p>Ballin’s idea of running a series of pleasure cruises did not meet with
-much support on the part of his associates; the public, however, took it
-up with enthusiasm from the very start. Early in 1891 Ballin himself
-took part in the first trip to the Far East on board the express steamer
-<i>Auguste Victoria</i>. Organized pleasure trips on a small scale were by no
-means an entire novelty in Germany at that time; the Carl Stangen
-Tourist Office in Berlin, for instance, regularly arranged such
-excursions, including some to the Far East, for a limited number of
-participants. To do so, however, for as many as 241 persons, as Ballin
-did, was something unheard-of until then, and necessitated a great deal
-of painstaking preparation. Among other things, the itinerary of the
-intended cruise, owing to the size and the draught of the steamer used,
-had to be carefully worked out in detail, and arrangements had to be
-made beforehand for the hotel accommodation and for the conveyance of
-passengers during the more extended excursions on shore. All these
-matters gave plenty of scope to the organizing talents of the youthful
-director, and he passed the test with great credit.</p>
-
-<p>The first Far Eastern cruise proved so great a success that it was
-repeated in 1892. In the following year it started from New York, surely
-a proof that the Company’s reputation for such cruises was securely
-established not in Germany alone, but in the States as well. Meanwhile,
-however, Hamburg had been visited by a terrible catastrophe which
-enormously interfered with the smooth working of the Company’s express
-steamer services. This was the cholera epidemic during the summer of
-1892. It lasted several weeks, and thousands of inhabitants fell victims
-to it. Those who were staying in Hamburg in that summer will never
-forget the horrors of the time. In the countries of Northern Europe
-violent epidemics were practically unknown,<a name="page_073" id="page_073"></a> and the scourge of cholera
-especially had always been successfully combated at the eastern frontier
-of Germany, so that the alarm which spread over the whole country, and
-which led to the vigorous enforcement of the most drastic measures for
-isolating the rest of Germany from Hamburg, may easily be comprehended,
-however ludicrous those measures in some instances might appear. There
-are no two opinions as to the damage they inflicted on the commerce and
-traffic of the city. The severest quarantine, of course, was instituted
-in the United States, and the passenger services to and from Hamburg
-ceased to be run altogether, so that the transatlantic lines decided to
-temporarily suspend the steerage pool agreement they had just concluded.
-The Packetfahrt, in order not to stop its fast steamer services
-completely, first transferred them to Southampton, and afterwards to
-Wilhelmshaven, thus abstaining from dispatching these boats to and from
-Hamburg. The steerage traffic had to be discarded entirely, after an
-attempt to maintain it, with Stettin as its home port, had failed.
-Financially this epidemic and its direct consequences brought the
-Company almost to the verge of collapse, and the Packetfahrt had to stop
-altogether the payment of dividends for 1892, 1893, and 1894.</p>
-
-<p>Business was resumed in 1893, but at first it was very slow. Every means
-were tried to induce the United States to rescind her isolation
-measures. An American doctor was appointed in Hamburg; disinfection was
-carried out on a large scale; with great energy the city set herself to
-prevent the recurrence of a similar disaster. The Packetfahrt, in
-conjunction with the authorities, designed the plans for building the
-emigrants’ halls situated at the outskirts of the city, which are unique
-of their kind and are still looked upon as exemplary. These plans owe
-their origin to the extremely talented<a name="page_074" id="page_074"></a> Hamburg architect, Mr. Thielen,
-whose early death is greatly to be regretted.</p>
-
-<p>An important innovation was the establishment of regular medical control
-and medical treatment for the emigrants from the East of Europe on their
-reaching the German frontier, a measure which was decided upon and taken
-in hand by the Prussian Government. The expansion of the Packetfahrt’s
-business, of course, was most adversely affected by the epidemic and its
-after-effects; and several years of consolidation were needed before the
-latter could be overcome. Consequently, hardly any new services were
-opened during the years immediately following upon the epidemic.</p>
-
-<p>An important step forward, which greatly strengthened the earning
-capacities of the Company’s resources, was taken in 1895, when the
-building orders for the steamers of the “P†class were given. These
-vessels were of large size but of moderate speed. They were extremely
-seaworthy, and were capable of accommodating a great many passengers,
-especially steeragers, as well as of carrying large quantities of cargo.
-The number of services run by the Company was added to in 1893 by a line
-from New York to Italy, and in the following year by one from Italy to
-the River Plate. Pool agreements were concluded with the Lloyd and the
-Allan Line with respect to the first-named route, and with the Italian
-steamship companies with respect to the other. The agreement with the
-Italians, however, did not become operative until a few years
-afterwards.</p>
-
-<p>In 1897 the Packetfahrt celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of its
-existence&mdash;an event in which large sections of the public took a keen
-interest. Perhaps the most noteworthy among the immense number of
-letters of congratulation which the Company received on that occasion is
-the one sent by the chairman of the Cunard Line, of which the verbatim
-text is given below. It<a name="page_075" id="page_075"></a> was addressed to one of the directors in reply
-to an invitation to attend the celebrations in person.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“It is with great regret I have to announce my inability to join
-with you in celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of the foundation
-of your Company, to be held on board your s.s. <i>Auguste Victoria</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“I the more regret this as I have the greatest possible admiration
-of the skill and enterprise which has directed the fortunes of your
-Company, especially in recent years.</p>
-
-<p>“You were the first to give the travelling public the convenience
-of a speedy and reliable transit between the two great continents
-of the world by initiating a regular service of twin-screw steamers
-of high speed and unexceptionable accommodation.</p>
-
-<p>“You also set the shipping world the example of the great economy
-possible in the transit of the world’s commodities in vessels of
-greatly increased capacity and proportionate economy, which other
-nations have been quick to follow and adopt to their great
-advantage.</p>
-
-<p>“Your Company had furthermore met a felt want in giving most
-luxurious and well-appointed accommodation for visiting scenes,
-both new and old, of world-wide interest, and making such
-journeyings, hitherto beset with anxiety and difficulty, as easy of
-accomplishment as the ordinary railway journey at home.</p>
-
-<p>“You have succeeded in this, not through any adventitious aids,
-such as Government subsidies, but by anticipating and then meeting
-the wants of the travelling and commercial public; and no one, be
-his nationality what it was, can, in the face of such facts,
-abstain from offering his meed of praise to the foresight, acumen,
-and ability that have accomplished such great results in such a
-comparatively small time as the management and direction of the
-Hamburg-American Packet Company.</p>
-
-<p>“I would venture, therefore, to thus congratulate you and your
-colleagues, and whilst reiterating my regret at being prevented
-from doing so at your forthcoming meeting, allow me the expression
-of the wish that such meeting may be<a name="page_076" id="page_076"></a> a happy and satisfactory one,
-and that a new era of, if possible, increased success to the
-Hamburg-American Packet Company may take date from it.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>Towards the latter end of the ’nineties, at last, a big expansion of the
-Company’s activities set in. In 1897 the Hamburg-Calcutta Line was
-purchased, but the service was discontinued, the steamers thus acquired
-being used for other purposes. Shortly before the close of the same year
-a suggestion was put forward by some Hamburg firms that were engaged in
-doing business with the Far East that the Packetfahrt should run a
-service to that part of the world.</p>
-
-<p>Just then the steamship companies engaged in the Far Eastern trade were
-on the point of coming to a rate agreement among themselves; and the
-management of the Packetfahrt which, owing to the offer held out to it
-by Hamburg, Antwerp, and London firms, could hope to rely on finding a
-sure basis for its Far Eastern business, did not consider it wise to let
-the favourable opportunity slip. Quick decision and rapid action, before
-the proposed agreement of the interested lines had become an
-accomplished fact, were necessary; because, once the gates were closed,
-an outsider would find it difficult to gain admission to the ring.</p>
-
-<p>Hence the negotiations with a view to the Packetfahrt joining in the Far
-Eastern business, which had only been started during the second half of
-December, 1897, came to a close very soon; and in the early days of
-January, 1898, the Packetfahrt advertised its intention of running
-monthly sailings to Penang, Singapore, Hongkong, Shanghai, Yokohama, and
-Hiogo. Six cargo steamers of 8,000 tons burden were entered into the new
-service; and simultaneously an announcement was made to the effect that
-large fast passenger boats would be added to it as soon as the need for
-these should make itself felt.<a name="page_077" id="page_077"></a></p>
-
-<p>The participation in the Far Eastern business, and the consequent taking
-over of competing lines or the establishment of joint services with
-them, was not the only important event of the year 1898 as far as the
-development of the Packetfahrt is concerned. In the spring of that same
-year an agreement was made with the Philadelphia Shipping
-Company&mdash;which, in its turn, had an agreement with the Pennsylvania
-Railroad Company&mdash;by which the Packetfahrt undertook to run a regular
-service of cargo steamers between Hamburg and Philadelphia.</p>
-
-<p>An event of still greater importance, however, was the outbreak of war
-between the United States and Spain which also took place in that year.
-The Spanish Government desired to strengthen the fighting power of its
-navy by the addition of several auxiliary cruisers; and even some time
-before the war broke out an offer reached the Packetfahrt through the
-intermediary of a third party to purchase its two express steamers,
-<i>Columbia</i> and <i>Normannia</i>, which were among the fastest ocean-liners
-afloat. Before accepting this offer, the Packetfahrt, in order to avoid
-the reproach of having committed a breach of neutrality, first offered
-these two steamers to the United States Government; but on its refusal
-to buy them, they were sold to the British firm acting on behalf of the
-Spanish Government, and re-sold to the latter. As the Packetfahrt had
-allowed a high rate of depreciation on the two boats, their book-value
-stood at a very low figure; and the considerable profit thus realized
-enabled it to acquire new vessels for the extension of its passenger
-services.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile a new express steamer, the <i>Kaiser Wilhelm der Grösse</i>, had
-been added to the fleet of the North German Lloyd. Ballin, having made a
-voyage on board this vessel to New York, reported to the Trustees of his
-Company that he considered her a splendid achievement.<a name="page_078" id="page_078"></a> Owing to the
-heavy working expenses, however, she would not, he thought, prove a
-great success from a financial point of view. He held that the
-remunerativeness of express steamers was negatived by the heavy working
-expenses and, as early as 1897, had projected the construction of two
-steamers of very large proportions, but of less speed. This, however,
-was not carried out. Instead, the Packetfahrt decided to build a vessel
-which was to be bigger and faster still than the <i>Kaiser Wilhelm der
-Grösse</i>. The new liner was built by the Stettin Vulkan yard, and
-completed in 1900. She was the <i>Deutschland</i>, the famous ocean
-greyhound, a great improvement in size and equipment, and she held the
-blue riband of the Atlantic for a number of years.</p>
-
-<p>About the same time, the express service to New York had been
-supplemented by the inauguration of an additional passenger service on
-the same route, which proved a great success in every way. The steamers
-employed were the combined passenger and cargo boats of moderate speed
-of the “P†class referred to above; and, their working expenses being
-very low, they could carry the cargo at very low rates, so that they
-proved of great service to the rapidly expanding interchange of goods
-between Germany and the United States. Their great size made it
-necessary to accelerate their loading and discharging facilities as much
-as possible. This necessity, among other things, led to the introduction
-of grain elevators which resulted in a great saving of time, as the
-grain was henceforth no longer discharged in sacks, but loose. The
-Company also decided to take the loading and discharging of all its
-vessels into its own hands. To accelerate the dispatch of steamers to
-the utmost possible extent, it was decided in 1898 to enlarge once again
-the Company’s harbour facilities, and an agreement was concluded with
-the Hamburg Government providing for the construction of large harbour<a name="page_079" id="page_079"></a>
-basins with the necessary quays, sheds, etc., in the district of
-Kuhwärder on the southern banks of the Elbe.</p>
-
-<p>It was typical of Ballin’s policy of the geographical distribution of
-risks and of the far-sighted views he held concerning the international
-character of the shipping business that he attempted at the end of the
-’nineties to gain an extended footing abroad for the Company’s
-activities. The Packetfahrt therefore ordered the building of two
-passenger boats in Italian yards, and it was arranged that these vessels
-should fly either the German or the Italian flag. In the end, however, a
-separate Italian shipping company, the Italia, was set up, which was to
-devote itself more particularly to the River Plate trade. When the
-financial results of the new enterprise failed to come up to
-expectations, the shares were sold to Italian financiers in 1905.</p>
-
-<p>The closing years of the nineteenth and the opening years of the
-twentieth century represented a period of extraordinary prosperity to
-shipping business all over the world&mdash;a prosperity which was caused by
-the outbreak of the South African war in 1899. An enormous amount of
-tonnage was required to carry the British troops, their equipment,
-horses, etc., to South Africa, and the circumstance that this tonnage
-temporarily ceased to be available for the needs of ordinary traffic
-considerably stiffened the freight rates. The favourable results thus
-obtained greatly stimulated the spirit of enterprise animating the
-shipping companies everywhere.</p>
-
-<p>About the same time the business of the Company experienced a notable
-expansion in another direction. A fierce rate war was in progress
-between the Hamburg-South American S.S. Co. and the firm of A. C. de
-Freitas &amp; Co., and neither party seemed to be able to get the better of
-the other. As early as 1893 Ballin, on behalf of the Hamburg-South
-American S.S. Co.,<a name="page_080" id="page_080"></a> had carried on some negotiations with the firm of de
-Freitas with the object of bringing about an amalgamation of the two
-companies with respect to their services to Southern Brazil. In 1896 he
-had done so again in compliance with the special request of Mr. Carl
-Laeisz, the chairman of the former company, and in 1898 he did so for
-the third time, but in this case on his own initiative. No practical
-results, however, were reached, and as Ballin was desirous of seeing an
-end being put to the hopeless struggle between the two rival firms, he
-took up those negotiations for the fourth time in 1900, hoping to
-acquire the de Freitas Line for his own Company. He was successful, and
-an expert was nominated to fix the market value of the fourteen steamers
-that were to change hands. As the valuation took place at a time when
-the shipping business was in an exceedingly flourishing state, the price
-which he fixed worked out at so high an average per ton as was never
-again paid before the outbreak of the war. The valuer told me that he
-himself considered the price very high, so that he felt in duty bound to
-draw Ballin’s attention to it beforehand. Ballin tersely replied: “I
-know, but I want the business,†thus making it perfectly clear that he
-attached more than ordinary importance to the deal.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the purchase of the de Freitas Lines had become an
-accomplished fact, arrangements were made with the Hamburg-South
-American S.S. Company, which provided for a joint service to South
-America, a service which was still further extended when the Packetfahrt
-bought up a British line trading from Antwerp to the Plate, thus also
-securing a footing at Antwerp in connexion with its South American
-business. The necessity for taking such a step grew in proportion as
-Antwerp acquired an increasing importance owing to the increasing German
-export business.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps there is no country which can be served by<a name="page_081" id="page_081"></a> the seaports of so
-many foreign countries as Germany. Several Mediterranean ports attract
-to themselves a portion of the South German trade; Antwerp and some of
-the French ports possess splendid railway connexion with Southern and
-Western Germany, and both Antwerp and Rotterdam are in a position to
-avail themselves of the highway of the Rhine as an excellent means of
-communication with the whole German hinterland. Finally, it must be
-remembered that the Scandinavian seaports are also to a certain extent
-competing for the German business, especially for the trade with the
-hinterland of the Baltic ports of Germany. All this goes to show that
-the countries surrounding Germany which have for centuries striven to
-exercise a kind of political hegemony over Germany&mdash;or, rather,
-generally speaking, over Central Europe&mdash;are not without plenty of
-facilities enabling them to try to capture large portions of the
-carrying trade of these parts of Europe. This danger of a never-ending
-economic struggle which would not benefit any of the competing rivals
-was the real reason underlying Ballin’s policy of compromise. He clearly
-recognized that any other course of action would tend to make permanent
-the existing chaos ruling in the realm of ocean shipping.</p>
-
-<p>In this struggle for the carrying trade to and from Central Europe the
-port of Antwerp occupied a position all by itself. The more the
-countries beyond the sea were opened up by the construction of new
-railways and the establishment of industrial undertakings, and the more
-orders the manufacturers in the Central European countries received in
-consequence of the growing demand, the greater became the value of
-Antwerp to the shipping companies in every country. In this respect the
-early years of the twentieth century witnessed an extraordinary
-development, which, in its turn, benefited the world’s carrying trade to
-an ever-increasing<a name="page_082" id="page_082"></a> extent. Never before had so much European capital
-been invested in overseas countries. Again, as a result of the Spanish
-war the political and economic influence of the United States had
-enormously expanded in the West Indian islands, whilst, at the same
-time, the Monroe doctrine was being applied more and more thoroughly and
-systematically. Consequently the attention of the American investors was
-also increasingly drawn towards those same countries. In Central America
-new railway lines were constructed by British and American capital,
-including some right across the country from the Atlantic to the
-Pacific, thus considerably facilitating trade with the Pacific coast of
-America. Other lines were built in Brazil and in the Argentine, and
-harbour and dock facilities were constructed in nearly all the more
-important South American ports. French and Belgian capital shared in
-these undertakings, and some German capital was also employed for the
-same purpose. The Trans-Andine railway was completed, and numerous
-industrial works were added to the existing ones. The great economic
-advance was not exclusively restricted to South America; it extended to
-the Far East, to the great British dominions beyond the sea, especially
-to Canada and Australia, and&mdash;after the close of the South African
-War&mdash;to Africa also. Russia built the great Trans-Siberian railway, and
-Germany commenced to exploit the resources of her colonies. As a result
-of all these activities the iron and steel manufacturers were
-overwhelmed with export orders. This applies particularly to the German
-iron and steel manufacturers, whose leading organization, the
-Stahlwerks-Verband, largely favoured the route <i>via</i> Antwerp, because it
-was the cheapest, to the great detriment of the German ports. Thus the
-German shipowners were compelled to follow the traffic, and the
-importance of Antwerp increased from year to year. The Hamburg-Amerika
-Linie met<a name="page_083" id="page_083"></a> this development by opening a special branch office for
-dealing with the Antwerp business.</p>
-
-<p>In 1899, a year before the Hamburg-Amerika Linie established itself in
-the services to Brazil and the River Plate, a line had been started by
-the Company to Northern Brazil and the Amazon River. The conflict with
-the Booth Line which resulted from this step was amicably settled in
-1902 through negotiations conducted by Ballin. Later on, indeed, the
-relations between the two companies became very cordial, and even led to
-the conclusion of a far-reaching community of interest agreement, the
-Booth Line being represented in Hamburg by the Hamburg-Amerika Linie,
-and the latter in Brazil by the British company. An agreement of such
-kind was only feasible when a particularly strong feeling of mutual
-trust existed between the two contracting partners, and Ballin
-repeatedly declared that he looked upon this agreement with the Booth
-Line as the most satisfactory of all he had concluded.</p>
-
-<p>In 1900 the West Indian business was extended by opening a passenger
-service to Mexico, and another noteworthy event which took place during
-the same year was the conclusion of an agreement with the big German
-iron works in the Rhenish-Westphalian district by which the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie undertook to ship to Emden the Swedish iron ore
-needed by them from the ports of Narvik and Lulea. Two special steamers
-were ordered to be exclusively used for this service. Henceforth Emden
-began to play an important part in connexion with the German ore supply,
-and the real prosperity of that port dated from that time.</p>
-
-<p>Early in 1901 Ballin decided to embark on a trip round the world. He
-thought it desirable to do so in order to acquire a first-hand knowledge
-of the Far Eastern situation, which had become of special interest to
-the country owing to the acquisition by Germany of<a name="page_084" id="page_084"></a> Tsingtau, and to the
-unrest in China. His special object was to study the questions that had
-become urgent in connexion with the organization of the passenger
-service of which the Packetfahrt, in consequence of the agreement with
-the Lloyd, had just become a partner. There was, in addition, the
-project of starting a Pacific service, which engaged his attention. All
-these important details could only be properly attended to on the spot.
-It became necessary to acquire a business footing in the various ports
-concerned, to organize the coast transport services which were to act as
-feeders to the main line, etc. Besides, the Packetfahrt, and the Lloyd
-as well, had special reasons for being interested in Far Eastern
-affairs, as both companies had been entrusted with troop transports and
-the transport of equipment needed for the German contingent during the
-troubles in China. During his Far Eastern trip Ballin wrote detailed
-accounts dealing with the business matters he attended to, and also
-describing his personal impressions of persons and things in general,
-the former kind addressed to the Board of his Company, the latter to his
-mother. These letters are full of interest; they present a more faithful
-description of his character as a man, and as a man of business, than
-could be given in any other way. I shall therefore quote a few extracts
-from the comprehensive reports, commencing with those he wrote to his
-mother:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="r">
-“<i>On board the I.M.S.</i> ‘<i>Kiautschou</i>’<br />
-“<i>January 16th, 1901.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“The weather was cold and windy when we arrived late at night
-outside Port Said, and midnight was well past when we had taken up
-the pilot and were making our way into the port. The intense cold
-had caused me to leave the navigating bridge; and as I did not
-think it likely that our agent would arrive on board with his
-telegrams until the next morning, I had followed the example of my
-wife and of nearly all the<a name="page_085" id="page_085"></a> other passengers and had gone to bed.
-However, if we had thought that we should be able to sleep, we soon
-found out our mistake. The steamer had scarcely taken up her
-moorings when several hundreds of dusky natives, wildly screaming
-and gesticulating, and making a noise that almost rent the skies,
-invaded her in order to fill her bunkers with the 800 tons of coal
-that had been ordered. Perhaps there is no place anywhere where the
-bunkers are filled more rapidly than at Port Said, and certainly
-none where this is done to the accompaniment of a more deafening
-noise. Just imagine a horde of natives wildly screaming at the top
-of their voices, and add to this the noise produced by the coal
-incessantly shot into the bunkers, and the shouting of the men in
-command going on along with it. You will easily understand that it
-was impossible for anyone to go to sleep under conditions such as
-these.... After trying for several hours, I gave up the attempt,
-and, on entering the drawing-room, I found that willy-nilly (but,
-as Wippchen would have said, more nilly than willy) practically all
-the other passengers had done the same thing. There I was also
-informed that those who were in the know had not even made an
-attempt to go to sleep, but had gone ashore at 2 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> Port Said is
-a typical brigands’ den, and relies for its prosperity on the mail
-packets calling there. The shops, the taverns, the music-halls, and
-the gambling places are all organized on lines in accordance with
-the needs of modern traffic. So it was not surprising to see that
-the proprietors of these more or less inviting places of
-entertainment had brightly lit up their premises, and hospitably
-opened their doors despite the unearthly hour, being quite willing
-to try and entice the unwary passengers into their clutches.â€</p></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="r">
-“<i>Between</i> <span class="smcap">Aden</span> <i>and</i> <span class="smcap">Colombo</span>.<br />
-“<i>January 24th</i>, 1901.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“ ... We did not stop long at Aden; and as the quarantine
-regulations for all vessels arriving from Port Said were very
-strict, it became impossible for the passengers on board the
-<i>Kiautschou</i> to land on the island. Aden, which the British would
-like to turn into a second Gibraltar, is situated in a barren,
-treeless district, and is wedged in between hills<a name="page_086" id="page_086"></a> without any
-vegetation. Small fortifications are scattered all over the island.
-It must be a desolate spot for Europeans to live at. The British
-officers call it ‘The Devil’s Punch Bowl,’ and to be transferred to
-Aden is equivalent to them to being deported.â€</p></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="r">
-“<i>January 28th</i>, 1901.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“ ... In the meantime we have spent a most enjoyable and
-unforgettable day at Colombo. The pilot brought the news of Queen
-Victoria’s death, which filled us with lively sympathy, and which
-caused a great deal of grief among the British passengers. Shortly
-before 9 o’clock we went ashore: and as the business offices do not
-open until an hour later&mdash;thus preventing me from calling on my
-business friends at that hour&mdash;I took a carriage-drive through the
-magnificent park-like surroundings of the city. The people one
-meets there are a fit match to the beautiful scenery; but whilst in
-former times they were the rulers of this fertile island, they are
-now, thanks to the blessings of civilization, the servants of their
-European masters....</p>
-
-<p>“When we reached the old-established Oriental Hotel where we had
-our lunch, we met there a number of our fellow-passengers busily
-engaged in bargaining with the Singhalese and Indian dealers who
-generally flock to the terraces of the hotel as soon as a mail
-packet has arrived. The picture presented by such Oriental
-bargaining is the same everywhere, except that the Colombo dealers
-undeniably manifest an inborn gracefulness and gentlemanly bearing.
-When I tried to get rid of an old man who was pestering me with his
-offers to sell some precious stones, he said to me, in the
-inimitable singing tone of voice used by these people when they
-speak English: ‘Just touch this stone, please, but do not buy it: I
-only wish to receive it back from your lucky hands.’ In spite of
-their manners, however, these fellows are the biggest cheats on
-earth. Another dealer wanted to sell me a sheet of old Ceylon
-stamps for which he demanded fifteen marks&mdash;a price which, as he
-stated, meant a clean loss of five marks to him. When I offered him
-two marks instead, merely because I had got tired of him, he handed
-me the whole sheet, and said: ‘Please take them;<a name="page_087" id="page_087"></a> I know that one
-day I shall be rewarded for the sacrifice which I bring.’ Later on
-I discovered that the same man had sold exactly the same stamps to
-a fellow-passenger for 50 pfennigs, and that he had told the same
-story to him as to me. Such are the blessings of our marvellous
-civilization....</p>
-
-<p>“ ... In the afternoon we went for a magnificent drive to the Mount
-Lavinia Hotel, which is beautifully situated on a hill affording an
-extensive view of the sea. Boys and girls as beautiful as Greek
-statues, and as swift-footed as fallow deer, pursued us in our
-carriage, begging for alms. It was curious to see with what
-unfailing certainty they managed to distinguish the German from the
-English passengers, and they were not slow in availing themselves
-of this opportunity to palm off what little German they knew on us.
-‘Oh, my father! My beautiful mother! You are a great lady! Please
-give me ten cents, my good uncle!’ We were quite astonished to meet
-such a large progeny....â€</p></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="r">
-“<i>February 2nd</i>, 1901.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“.... The entrance to Singapore is superbly beautiful. The steamer
-slowly wended her way through the channels between numerous small
-islands clad with the most luxurious vegetation, so that it almost
-took us two hours to reach the actual harbour.... The food question
-is extremely complicated in this part of the tropics, which is
-favoured by kind Nature more than is good. The excessive fertility
-of the soil makes the cultivation of vegetables and cereals quite
-impossible, as everything runs to seed within a few days, so that,
-for instance, potatoes have to be obtained from Java, and green
-vegetables from Mulsow’s, in Hamburg. I am sure my geography master
-at school, who never ceased to extol the richness of the soil of
-this British colony, was not aware of this aspect of the matter.</p>
-
-<p>“Singapore is a rapidly developing emporium for the trade with the
-Far East. It has succeeded in attracting to itself much of the
-commerce with the Dutch Indies, British North Borneo, the
-Philippines, and the Federated Malay States. To achieve this, of
-course, was a difficult matter, even with the aid of the shipping
-companies, but its clever<a name="page_088" id="page_088"></a> and energetic business community managed
-to do it. We Germans may well be proud of the fact that our
-countrymen now occupy the premier position in the business life of
-the city....</p>
-
-<p>“ ... We spent about thirty-six hours at Saigon. This city has been
-laid out by the French with admirable skill, and there is no doubt
-but that Indo-China is a most valuable possession of theirs. As
-regards the difference in the national character of the French and
-the British, it is interesting to note that the former have just
-erected a magnificent building for a theatre at Saigon, at a cost
-of 2½ million francs. The British would never have dreamt of
-doing such a thing; I am sure they would have invested that money
-in the building of club-houses and race-courses....â€</p></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="r">
-“<i>February 16th</i>, 1901.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“ ... As far as social life and social pleasures are concerned, it
-must be said that the German colony at Hongkong is in no way
-inferior to that at Singapore. Premier rank in this respect must be
-assigned to the Siebs family. Mr. Siebs, the senior member of the
-Hamburg firm of Siemssen and Co., has been a resident in the East
-for a long term of years&mdash;forty-two, if I remember rightly; and he
-now occupies an exceedingly prominent position both in German and
-British society. That this is so is largely due&mdash;apart from his
-intimate knowledge of all that concerns the trade and commerce of
-China, and apart from his own amiability and never-failing
-generosity&mdash;to his charming wife, who, by means of the hospitality,
-the refinement, and the exemplary management characterizing her
-home, has been chiefly instrumental in acquiring for the house of
-Siebs the high reputation it enjoys. Whoever is received by Mrs.
-Siebs, I have been told, is admitted everywhere in Hongkong
-society.</p>
-
-<p>“Even though I only give here an outline of my impressions, I
-cannot refrain from adding a few details dealing with some aspects
-of everyday life at Hongkong, this jewel among the crown colonies
-of Britain. The offices of the big firms and of the shipping
-companies’ agencies, most of them housed in beautiful buildings,
-flank the water’s edge; farther<a name="page_089" id="page_089"></a> back there is the extensive
-shopping quarter, and still more in the rear there is the Chinese
-quarter, teeming with an industrious population. Being myself so
-much mixed up with the means of communication, I am surely entitled
-to make a few remarks concerning this subject in particular. Horses
-are but rarely seen, and are only used for riding, and sporting
-purposes generally. Their place is taken by the coolies, who no
-doubt represent the most pitiable type of humanity&mdash;at least, from
-the point of view of a sensitive person. In the low-lying part of
-the town the jinrikishas, which are drawn by coolies, predominate;
-but the greater part of Hongkong is situated on the slopes of a
-hill, and nearly all the private residences are built along the
-beautifully kept, terrace-like roads leading up to the summit of
-the peak. In this part the chair coolies take the place of the
-jinrikisha coolies; and in the low-lying parts also it is
-considered more stylish to be carried by chair coolies. The
-ordinary hired chairs are generally carried by two coolies only,
-but four are needed for the private ones. The work done by these
-poor wretches is fatiguing in the extreme. They have to drag their
-masters up and down the hill, which is very steep in places, and it
-is a horrid sensation to be carried by these specimens of panting
-humanity for the first time. In the better-class European
-households each member of the family has his own chair, and the
-necessary coolies along with it, who are paid the princely wage of
-from 16 marks to 17 marks 50 pfennigs a month. They also receive a
-white jacket and a pair of white drawers reaching to the knee, but
-they have to provide their own food. The poor fellows are generally
-natives from the interior parts of the island. They spend about one
-mark a week on their food; the rest they send home to their
-families. They are mostly married, and the money they earn in their
-capacity as private coolies represents to them a fortune. They
-rarely live longer than forty years; in fact, their average length
-of life is said not to exceed thirty-five. As many as eight coolies
-were engaged to attend to the needs of my wife and myself for the
-time of our stay. The poor creatures, who, by the way, had quite a
-good time in our service, spent the whole day from early in the
-morning<a name="page_090" id="page_090"></a> to late at night lying in front of a side entrance to our
-hotel, except when they had to do their work for us....</p>
-
-<p>“ ... The Chinese have only one annual holiday&mdash;New Year. They are
-hard at work during the whole year; they know of no Sundays and of
-no holidays, but the commencement of the New Year is associated
-with a peculiar belief of theirs. To celebrate the event, they take
-their best clothes out of pawn (which, for the rest of the year,
-they keep at the pawnbroker’s to prevent them from being stolen).
-To keep the evil spirits away during the coming twelvemonth, they
-burn hundreds of thousands of firecrackers when the New Year
-begins, and also during the first and second days of it,
-accompanied by the noise of the firing of guns. One must have been
-through it all in order to understand it. For the better part of
-two days and two nights one could imagine a fierce battle raging in
-the neighbourhood; crackers were exploding on all sides, together
-with rockets and fireballs, and the whole was augmented by the
-shouting and screaming of the revellers. It was a mad noise, and we
-could scarcely get any sleep at night.</p>
-
-<p>“The houses in the Chinese quarter were decorated up to the roofs
-with bunting, beautiful big lanterns, paper garlands with religious
-inscriptions, and a mass of lovely flowers.</p>
-
-<p>“On such days&mdash;the only holidays they possess&mdash;the Chinese
-population are in undisputed possession of their town, and the
-British administration is wise enough not to interfere with the
-enjoyment of these sober and hard-working people. I really wonder
-how the German police would act in such cases....â€</p></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="r">
-“<span class="smcap">Shanghai</span>, <i>March 6th, 1901</i>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“ ... It is surely no exaggeration to describe Shanghai as the New
-York of the Far East. The whole of the rapidly increasing trade
-with the Yangtse ports, and the bulk of that with the northern
-parts of the country, passes through Shanghai. The local German
-colony is much larger than the one at Hongkong; and here, too, it
-is pleasant to find that our countrymen are playing an extremely
-important part in the extensive business life of the town....â€</p></div>
-
-<p><a name="page_091" id="page_091"></a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="r">
-“<i>Between</i> <span class="smcap">Tsingtau</span> <i>and</i> <span class="smcap">Nagasaki</span>,<br />
-<i>on board the s.s</i> <i>'Sibiria</i>.’<br />
-“<i>March 18th, 1901.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“Our s.s. <i>Sibiria</i> had arrived in the harbour about ten days ago,
-and was now ready for our use. I had decided first of all to make a
-trip up the Yang-tse-Kiang on board the <i>Sibiria</i>, because I wanted
-to get to know this important river, which flows through such a
-fertile tract of country, and on the banks of which so many of the
-busiest cities of China are situated. The Yangtse&mdash;as it is usually
-called for shortness’ sake&mdash;is navigable for very large-sized
-ocean-going steamers for a several days’ journey. During the summer
-months it often happens that the level of the water in its upper
-reaches rises by as much as 50 feet, which&mdash;on account of the
-danger of the tremendous floods resulting from it&mdash;has made it
-necessary to pay special attention to the laying-out of the cities
-situated on its banks. The object of our journey was Nanking. This
-city, which was once the all-powerful capital of the Celestial
-Empire, has never again reached its former importance since its
-destruction during the great revolution of 1862, and since the
-choice of Peking as the residence of the Imperial family. Two years
-ago it was thrown open to foreign commerce; and the Powers
-immediately established their consulates in the city, not only
-because a new era of development is looked forward to, but also
-because Nanking is the seat of a viceroy.</p>
-
-<p>“Our amiable consul, Herr v. Oertzen, received us with the greatest
-hospitality. The German colony which he has to look after consists
-of only one member so far. This young gentleman, who holds an
-appointment in connexion with the Chinese customs administration,
-feels, as is but natural, quite happy in consequence of enjoying a
-practical monopoly of the protection extended to him by the home
-government. He has helped himself to the consul’s cigars and to his
-moselle to such good effect that the <i>Sibiria</i> arrived just in time
-to prevent the German colony at Nanking from lodging a complaint
-regarding the insufficiency of the supplies put at its disposal by
-the Government. The consul told us that we should never have a
-chance of coming across another Chinese town that could compare
-with the interior<a name="page_092" id="page_092"></a> of Nanking, and so we had to make up our minds
-to pay a visit to these parts.</p>
-
-<p>“I had seen plenty of dirt and misery at Jaffa and Jerusalem, but I
-have never found so much filth and wretchedness anywhere as I
-noticed at Nanking. My wife and a charming young lady who
-accompanied us on our Yangtse expedition were borne in genuine
-sedan chairs as used for the mandarins, preceded by the interpreter
-of the consulate, and followed by the rest of us, who were riding
-on mules provided with those typically Chinese saddles, which,
-owing to their hardness, may justly claim to rank among the
-instruments of torture.</p>
-
-<p>“Our procession wended its way through a maze of indescribably
-narrow streets crowded with a moving mass of human beings and
-animals. Everywhere cripples and blind men lay moaning in front of
-their miserable hovels, and it almost seemed that there were more
-people suffering from some disease or other than there were healthy
-ones. When we stopped outside the big temple of Confucius, where
-the ladies of our party dismounted from their chairs, the people,
-in spite of their natural timidity, flocked to see us, because they
-had probably never seen any European ladies until then. We were
-thankful when at last we reached the consulate building again, and
-when, after having had a good bath, we are able to enjoy a cup of
-tea.</p>
-
-<p>“ ... In the early hours of March 13th our steamer arrived at
-Tsingtau. I was surprised and delighted with what I saw. There, in
-spite of innumerable difficulties, a city had sprung up in an
-incredibly short space of time.</p>
-
-<p>“Rooms had been reserved for us at the handsome, but very cold,
-Hotel Prinz Heinrich; and in the afternoon of the day of our
-arrival we strolled up the roads, which were still somewhat dusty,
-and in parts only half finished, to the summit of the hill where
-the acting Governor and the officers of higher rank had their
-homes. Even though it is true that up to now military necessities
-have taken precedence in the laying-out of the town, so that the
-needs of trade and traffic have not received due attention, it must
-be admitted that a wonderful piece of constructive work has been
-achieved. All the members of our party&mdash;especially<a name="page_093" id="page_093"></a> those who, like
-Dr. Knappe, our consul-general at Shanghai, had known the place two
-years ago&mdash;were most agreeably surprised at the progress that had
-been made.</p>
-
-<p>“Our first few days at Tsingtau were spent much as they were
-everywhere else&mdash;plenty of work during the day-time, and plenty of
-social duties in the evenings. But things began to look different
-on Saturday morning, when my old friend and well-wisher,
-Field-Marshal Count Waldersee, arrived on board H.M.S. <i>Kaiserin
-Auguste</i>. He had announced that his arrival would take place at 9
-A.M., and his flagship cast anchor with military punctuality. The
-Governor and I went on board to welcome the old gentleman, who was
-evidently greatly touched at meeting me out here, and it was plain
-to see that my presence in this part of the world made him almost
-feel homesick. The Field-Marshal very much dislikes the
-restrictions imposed on his activities; and judging from all he
-told me, I must confess that a great military leader has hardly
-ever before been faced with a more thankless task than he. On the
-one hand he is handicapped through the diplomatists, and on the
-other through the want of unanimity among the Powers. Thus, instead
-of fulfilling the soldier’s task with which he is entrusted, he is
-compelled to waste his time in idleness, and to preside at endless
-conferences at which matters are discussed dealing with the most
-trivial questions of etiquette. He really deserves something better
-than that....â€</p></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="r">
-“<span class="smcap">Tokio</span>. <i>March 31st, 1901.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“ ... What a difference between Japan and the cold and barren north
-of China! There everything was dull and gloomy, whilst this country
-is flooded with sunshine. Here we are surrounded by beautifully
-wooded hills, and a magnificent harbour extends right into the
-heart of the city. From the windows of our rooms we overlook big
-liners and powerful men-of-war, and our own <i>Sibiria</i> has chosen
-such a berth that the Hapag flag merrily floating in the breeze
-gives us a friendly welcome.</p>
-
-<p>“The difference in the national character of the Chinaman and the
-Japanese clearly proves the great influence which the climate and
-the natural features of a country<a name="page_094" id="page_094"></a> can exercise on its inhabitants.
-The one always grave and sulky, and not inclined to be friendly;
-the other always cheerful, fond of gossip, and overflowing with
-politeness in all his intercourse with strangers. But it must not
-be forgotten that the integrity of the Chinese, especially of the
-Chinese merchants, is simply beyond praise, whereas the Japanese
-have a reputation for using much cunning and very little sincerity,
-so that European business men cannot put much faith in them.</p>
-
-<p>“The women of Japan are known to us through ‘The Mikado’ and ‘The
-Geisha.’ They make a direct appeal to our sympathies and to our
-sense of humour. In one week the stranger will become more closely
-acquainted with the womenfolk and the family life of Japan than he
-would with those of China after half a dozen years of residence in
-their midst. In China the women are kept in seclusion as much as
-possible, but the whole family life of the Japs is carried on with
-an utter indifference to publicity. This is due to a large extent
-to the way their homes are built. Their houses are just as dainty
-as they are themselves; and it is really quite remarkable to see
-that the Japs, who closely imitate everything they see in Europe,
-still build them exactly as they have done from time immemorial.
-They are practically without windows, and in place of these the
-openings in the walls are filled with paper stretched on to frames.
-Instead of doors there are movable screens made of lattice-work;
-and since everything is kept wide open during the day-time one can
-look right into the rooms from the street. In the summer the
-Japanese make their home in the streets, and we are told that then
-the most intimate family scenes are enacted in the open air. I am
-of opinion that this, far from pointing to a want of morality, is
-really the outcome of a highly developed code of morals. Things
-which are perfectly natural in themselves are treated as such, and
-are therefore not hidden from the light of day....</p>
-
-<p>“ ... At 9 A.M. on March 23rd we arrived at Kobe, where we had to
-spend several days.</p>
-
-<p>“Our trip is now approaching its end; at least, we now experience
-the pleasant feeling that we are daily nearing home. What will it
-look like when we get back? At almost<a name="page_095" id="page_095"></a> every port of call some sad
-news has reached us, and our stay at Kobe was entirely overshadowed
-by my grief at the loss of my old friend Laeisz. Even now I cannot
-realize that I shall find his place empty when I return....â€</p></div>
-
-<p>The brief statement in which Ballin summarized the results of his trip
-from a business point of view is appended:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“Among the business transacted during my trip the following items
-are of chief importance:</p>
-
-<p>“(1) The establishment of a branch of our Company at Hongkong.</p>
-
-<p>“(2) The acquisition of the Imperial Mail Packet Service to
-Shanghai, Tsingtau, and Tientsin, formerly carried on by Messrs.
-Diedrichsen, Jebsen and Co.</p>
-
-<p>“(3) The acquisition of the Yangtse Line, hitherto carried on by
-the firm of Rickmers.</p>
-
-<p>“(4) The joint purchase with the firm of Carlowitz and Messrs.
-Arnhold, Karberg and Co. of a large site outside Shanghai harbour
-intended for the building of docks and quays, and the lease of the
-so-called Eastern Wharf, both these undertakings to be managed by a
-specially created joint-stock company.</p>
-
-<p>“(5) The establishment of temporary offices at Shanghai.</p>
-
-<p>“(6) In Japan discussions are still proceeding concerning the
-running of a line from the Far East to the American Pacific coast.</p>
-
-<p>“(7) In New York negotiations with the representative of the firm
-of Forwood are under way regarding the purchase of the Atlas Line.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>This list summarizes the contents of a long series of letters from all
-parts of the world where Ballin’s keen insight, long foresight, and
-business acumen suggested to his alert mind possibilities of extending
-Packetfahrt shipping interests. Time translated many of his suggestions
-into flourishing actualities, some of which<a name="page_096" id="page_096"></a> survived the 1914-18 years;
-others disappeared in the cataclysm; others, again, by the lapse of time
-have not the keen general interest that appertained to the ideas when
-they fell fresh-minted from his pen. The following, however, in regard
-to China and Japan, are worthy of record:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="r">
-“<i>Shanghai.</i><br />
-<i>March 4th, 1901.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“I am not quite satisfied with the course which the negotiations
-concerning the possible inauguration of a Yangtse line have taken
-so far.</p>
-
-<p>“The vessels employed are of the flat-bottomed kind, some being
-paddle boats, others twin-screw steamers. In their outward
-appearance the Yangtse steamers, owing to their high erections on
-deck, greatly resemble the saloon steamers plying on the Hudson.
-Their draught rarely exceeds 12 feet, and those which occasionally
-go higher up the river than Hankau draw even less. Most of the
-money earned by these boats is derived from the immense Chinese
-passenger traffic they carry.... The chief difficulty we have
-experienced in our preparations for the opening of a Yangtse line
-of our own consists in the absence of suitable pier
-accommodation....â€</p></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="r">
-“<i>On board the s.s. Sibiria on the Yangtse.</i><br />
-<i>March 10th, 1901.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“ ... After what I have seen of Nanking, I am afraid that the
-development of that place which is being looked forward to will not
-be realized for a fairly long time to come. Matters are quite
-different with respect to Chin-kiang where we are stopping now, a
-port which is even now carrying on a thriving trade with the
-interior parts of the country. It can scarcely be doubted that, if
-the Celestial Empire is thrown open to the Western nations still
-more than has been done up to now, the commerce of the Yangtse
-ports is bound to assume large proportions. During the summer
-months, i.e. for practically two-thirds of the year, the Yangtse is
-navigable for ocean-going steamers of deep draught, even more so
-than the Mississippi. At that time of the year the<a name="page_097" id="page_097"></a> volume of water
-carried by the river increases enormously in certain reaches. This
-increase has been found to amount to as much as 38 feet, and some
-of the steamers of the Russian Volunteer Fleet going up to Hankau
-possess a draught which exceeds 25 feet....â€</p></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="r">
-“<i>On board the Sibiria between</i><br />
-<span class="smcap">Tsingtau and Japan.</span><br />
-<i>March 19th, 1901.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“ ... We arrived at Tsingtau on the morning of March 14th. The
-impression produced by this German colony on the new-comer is an
-exceedingly favourable one. Everywhere a great deal of diligent
-work has been performed, and one feels almost inclined to think
-that the building activity has proceeded too fast, so that the
-inevitable reaction will not fail to take place. Looked at from our
-shipping point of view, it must be stated that the work
-accomplished looks too much like Wilhelmshaven, and too little like
-Hongkong. It was, of course, a foregone conclusion that in the
-development of a colony which is completely ruled by the Admiralty
-the naval interests would predominate. However, there is still time
-to remedy the existing defects, and I left Kiautschou with the
-conviction that a promising future is in store for it. Only the
-landing facilities are hopelessly inadequate at present; and as to
-the accommodation for merchant vessels which is in course of being
-provided, it would seem that too extensive a use has been made of
-the supposed fact that mistakes are only there in order to be
-committed, and that it would be a pity not to commit as many as
-possible....â€</p></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="r">
-“<i>On board the s.s. Empress of China between</i><br />
-<span class="smcap">Yokohama and Vancouver</span>.<br />
-<i>April 17th, 1901.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“ ... In the meantime I have had opportunities of slightly
-familiarizing myself in more respects than one with the conditions
-ruling in Japan.</p>
-
-<p>“The country is faced with an economic crisis. Encouraged by a
-reckless system of credit, she has imported far more<a name="page_098" id="page_098"></a> than
-necessary; she is suffering from a shortage of money, which is sure
-to paralyse her importing capacities for some time to come.</p>
-
-<p>“It seems pretty certain too, that future development will be
-influenced by another and far more serious factor, viz.: the
-ousting of the German by the American commerce from the Japanese
-market. The exports from the United States to Japan have increased
-just as much as those to China.... I cannot help thinking that in
-the coming struggle America will enjoy immense advantages over us;
-but you must permit me to postpone the presentation of a detailed
-statement showing my reasons for thinking so until my return to
-Hamburg.... I believe we shall be well advised to establish as soon
-as possible a service between the Far East and the Pacific coast of
-America....â€</p></div>
-
-<p>In 1903 far-reaching alterations were made in the relations existing
-between the Hamburg-Amerika Linie and the North German Lloyd, which had
-become somewhat less friendly than usual in more respects than one; and
-in particular the agreement concerning the Far Eastern services of both
-companies was subjected to some considerable modifications.</p>
-
-<p>The year 1903 is also remarkable for an event which, although not of
-great importance from the business point of view, is of interest in
-other respects. This event was the establishment of business relations
-with a Danish company concerning, in the first place, the West Indian
-trade, and later that with Russia also. The Danish concern in question
-was the East Asiatic Company, of Copenhagen. The founder of this company
-was a Mr. Andersen, one of the most successful business men known to
-modern commercial enterprise, and certainly not only the most successful
-one of his own country, but also one of high standing internationally.
-When still quite young he founded a business in Further India which,
-although conducted at<a name="page_099" id="page_099"></a> first on a small scale only, he was able to
-extend by the acquisition of valuable concessions, especially of
-teak-wood plantations in Siam. In course of time this business developed
-into a shipping firm which, owing to the concessions just mentioned, was
-always in a position to ship cargo of its own&mdash;an advantage which proved
-inestimable when business was bad and no other freight was forthcoming.
-When Mr. Andersen returned to Europe he continued to enlarge his
-business, making Copenhagen its centre. He enjoyed the special patronage
-of the Danish Royal Family, and afterwards also that of the Imperial
-Russian family. His special well-wisher and a partner of his firm was
-the Princess Marie of Denmark, who became known in the political world
-because she incurred the enmity of Bismarck, chiefly on account of her
-attempt to stir up ill feeling between the Iron Chancellor and Tsar
-Alexander III. Bismarck, in the second volume of his memoirs, describes
-how he succeeded in circumventing her plans through a personal meeting
-with the Tsar. It was the exceptional business abilities of the Princess
-Marie which brought Mr. Andersen into contact with the Russian Imperial
-family. It is typical of the common sense of the Princess and of her
-unaffected manners that she arrived at the offices of the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie one day without having been previously announced;
-and as she did not give her name to the attendant outside Ballin’s
-private office, he could only tell him that “a lady†wanted to see him.
-The two letters addressed to Ballin which are given below are also
-illustrative of her style.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“<span class="smcap">My Dear Sir</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-“<i>January 17th</i>, 1904.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“I hope you will excuse my writing in French to you, but you may
-reply to me in English. I have had a chat with Director Andersen,
-who told me that your discussions with him have led to nothing. I
-greatly regret this, both for personal reasons and in the interests
-of the business. I am convinced<a name="page_100" id="page_100"></a> that your negotiations would have
-had the desired result if it had not been for some special
-obstacles with which this new company had to contend. It is such a
-pity that Mr. Andersen had to attend to so many other things. If
-you and he alone had had to deal with it, and if it had been purely
-a business matter, the agreement would certainly have been
-concluded at once. Perhaps you and Andersen will shortly discover a
-basis on which you can co-operate. I personally should highly
-appreciate an understanding between my company and yours if it
-could be brought about, so that you could work together hand in
-hand like two good friends. You <i>must</i> help me with it. Mr.
-Andersen was so charmed with your amiability when he came back. One
-other thing I must tell you, because I possess sufficient business
-experience to understand it, and that is that both he and I admire
-you as a man of business. I should be delighted if you could come
-here; but I request you to give a few days’ notice of your arrival.
-Wishing you every success in your undertakings and the best of luck
-during the new year,</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-“I remain, Yours faithfully,<br />
-(<i>signed</i>) “<span class="smcap">Marie.</span>â€<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“<span class="smcap">My Dear Director</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-“<i>February 10th, 1905.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“I am so delighted to hear from Mr. Andersen that his company and
-yours intend to co-operate in the Danish West Indies and in Russia
-to your mutual interest. I have always held that such an
-understanding between you and Mr. Andersen would lead to good
-results, and you may feel convinced that I shall extend to you not
-only my personal assistance and sympathy, but also that of my
-family, and that of my Russian family, all of whom take a great
-interest in this matter. I am looking forward to seeing you in
-Hamburg early in March on my way to France. With my best regards,</p></div>
-
-<p class="r">
-“Yours faithfully,<br />
-(<i>signed</i>) “<span class="smcap">Marie.</span>â€<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>In June, 1904, after the close of Kiel Week, Ballin paid a visit to
-Copenhagen. There he met the Princess Marie and the King and Queen of
-Denmark, and was<a name="page_101" id="page_101"></a> invited to dine with them at Bernstorff Castle. The
-business outcome of the negotiations was that in 1905 a joint service to
-the West Indies was established between the Hamburg-Amerika Linie and
-the Danish West Indian Company. Four of the big new steamers of the
-latter were leased to the Packetfahrt, and operated by that company,
-which thus not only increased the tonnage at its disposal, but also
-succeeded in eliminating an unnecessary competition.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time the Packetfahrt bought the larger part of the shares of
-the Russian East Asiatic S.S. Company owned by the Danish firm. The
-object of the purchase was to establish a community of interests with
-the Russian Company. The Kaiser took great interest in this scheme, and
-during his visits to Copenhagen in 1903 and 1905 Mr. Andersen reported
-to him on the subject. It was intended to bring about close business
-relations between Germany, Russia, and Denmark for the special purpose
-of developing Russian trade, and to organize the Russian East Asiatic
-S.S. Company on such lines as would make it a suitable instrument to
-this end. It is to be regretted that the community of interest agreement
-then concluded was not of long duration. The Russian bureaucracy made
-all sorts of difficulties, and it is possible that the representatives
-of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie in Russia did not display as much
-discretion in their dealings with these functionaries as they ought to
-have done. At any rate, the Packetfahrt was so little satisfied with its
-participation in this Russian concern that it re-sold its rights to the
-interested Copenhagen parties in 1906, not without incurring a
-considerable loss on the transaction. The West Indies agreement
-automatically lapsed when the Packetfahrt acquired sole possession of
-the four Danish steamers.</p>
-
-<p>Later on some sort of co-operation with the Russian<a name="page_102" id="page_102"></a> company was brought
-about once more by the admission of that company to the transatlantic
-steerage pool. The Packetfahrt also had an opportunity of profiting from
-the technical experience gained by the Danish East Asiatic Company,
-which was the first shipping concern to specialize in the use of
-motor-ships. It was enabled to do so by the support it received from the
-shipbuilding firm of Messrs. Burmeister and Wain, of Copenhagen, who had
-applied the Diesel engine, a German invention, to the propulsion of
-ships, and who subsequently built a fleet of excellent motor-ships for
-the East Asiatic Company. One of these vessels was afterwards acquired
-by the Hamburg-Amerika Linie for studying purposes. The new type of
-vessel proved exceedingly remunerative during the war, as it made the
-owners independent of the supply of British bunker coal, and relieved
-them of the numerous difficulties connected with obtaining it. This
-great practical success of the Danish shipbuilders became possible only
-because they applied themselves consistently to the development of one
-particular type of engine, whereas in Germany endless experiments were
-made with a great variety of different types which led to no tangible
-results. It was only when the war came, and when the building of
-numerous submarines became necessary that German engineering skill
-obtained a chance of showing what it could do, and then, indeed, it
-proved itself worthy of the occasion.</p>
-
-<p>In 1904 war broke out between Russia and Japan, an event which exercised
-such an influence on the Packetfahrt that it is hardly an exaggeration
-to say that the rapid progress the company made during the next few
-years amounted to a re-birth. The war provided the company with a chance
-to sell a large number of its units at a considerable rate of profit,
-and the contract concluded with the Russian Government for<a name="page_103" id="page_103"></a> the coal
-supply added enormously to its revenues. The Russian Government partly
-converted the purchased steamers into auxiliary cruisers for the purpose
-of checking and disorganizing Japanese sea-borne trade, and it partly
-used them to accompany its Baltic fleet on its way to the Far East. As
-an illustration of the magnitude and the complexity of this transaction,
-it may be permitted to quote a few extracts from Ballin’s notes
-referring to it:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="r">
-“<i>May, 1904.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“Much though my time has been occupied by the Hungarian affair (the
-competition of the Cunard Line in Hungary), and great though the
-strain on my nerves has been on that account, I must say that much
-bigger claims are made on my time and on my nerves by the
-negotiations we are now carrying on with the Russian Government
-concerning the sale of some of our steamers. On Christmas Day I
-sent some representatives to Petrograd who were to approach the
-government in case it intended to acquire any merchant vessels for
-purposes of war. These gentlemen are still staying at Petrograd,
-where they have been all the time with the exception of a few
-weeks, and we have carried on some extremely difficult negotiations
-by cable which so far have led to the definite sale of the <i>Fürst
-Bismarck</i> and the <i>Belgia</i>. The <i>Auguste Victoria</i>, which is still
-in dock until the necessary repairs have been executed, has also
-been sold to Russia, and the prospects that the <i>Columbia</i> will
-follow suit are extremely good.</p>
-
-<p>“The sales, of course, necessitate large alterations of the
-existing schedules, and they lead to a great deal of inconvenience.
-A particularly awkward situation has been brought about by the
-circumstance that the <i>Fürst Bismarck</i> has been chartered to the
-firm of Thos. Cook and Sons for an excursion from Marseilles, in
-which 500 members of a Sunday school are to take part, so that, in
-order to release her, it has become necessary for the <i>Augusts
-Victoria</i> to interrupt her usual trip to the Near East, and for the
-<i>Columbia</i> to take her place....<a name="page_104" id="page_104"></a></p>
-
-<p>“Our big coal contract with the Russian Government has, in the
-meantime, been considerably added to. The execution of the
-contract, however, is causing me a great deal of anxiety, as the
-English press, notably <i>The Times</i>, is only too glad to make use of
-this circumstance as a pretext for rousing suspicions as to
-Germany’s neutrality. As our government is not taking up a very
-firm attitude, the effect of these articles, of course, is highly
-disagreeable. On Friday, September 23rd, I had an opportunity of
-discussing this matter with the Imperial Chancellor at Homburg. The
-Chancellor did not disguise the anxiety he felt concerning these
-contracts, especially as he had just then received a long telegram
-from the German Ambassador in Tokio advising him to proceed with
-much caution. I told the Chancellor that he need not study in any
-way the damage which our company might suffer; that we did not ask
-that any regard should be paid to our business interests in case
-these should clash with those of the country, and that, if the
-Government were of opinion that the interests of the country
-necessitated the cancelling of the whole agreement, I should be
-glad to receive instructions from him to that effect. Failing such
-instructions, of course, I was not entitled to cancel a contract
-which was in every respect a properly drawn-up legal instrument. At
-the same time I pointed out to the Chancellor that Germany, if he
-thought that he had reason to adopt such an attitude, would run the
-risk of offending both antagonists; for it was but reasonable to
-expect that, owing to the agitation carried on by the British, no
-action on Germany’s part would cause a change of feeling in Japan,
-but that it would be a fatal blow to Russia, whose Baltic fleet in
-that case would simply be unable to reach the Far East.</p>
-
-<p>“From Frankfort I went to Berlin in order to discuss the question
-of the coal contract with the Foreign Office, which the Chancellor
-had requested me to do. I had a long conference with Richthofen....</p>
-
-<p>“ ... <i>October 1st, 1904.</i> Meanwhile our negotiations with the
-Russian Government have made good progress, and practically the
-whole of my time is taken up with these transactions, which have
-given us a very exciting time. They compel me to go to Berlin
-pretty frequently, as I consider<a name="page_105" id="page_105"></a> it both fair to the Foreign
-Office and advisable in our own interests that the former should
-always be fully informed of all the steps I am taking. Several of
-our gentlemen are constantly travelling from Hamburg to Petrograd,
-and conferences of our directors are held nearly every morning,
-necessitated by the telegrams which arrive from Petrograd
-practically every day. In order to be in a position to carry out
-the coal contracts, we have been obliged to charter a large number
-of steamers, so that at times as many as 80 of these are employed
-in this Russian transaction. Besides the old express steamers and
-the <i>Belgia</i> we have now sold to the Russians the <i>Palatia</i> and the
-<i>Phœnicia</i>, as well as nine other boats of our company,
-including the <i>Belgravia</i>, <i>Assyria</i>, and <i>Granada</i> (the remaining
-ones are cargo vessels, mostly taken out of the West Indies
-service), but as regards these latter, we have reserved to
-ourselves the right of redemption.... We have successfully
-accomplished the great task we had undertaken, although, owing to
-the absence of coaling stations, it was thought next to impossible
-to convey such a huge squadron as was the Baltic fleet all the way
-from European to Far Eastern waters. It safely reached its
-destination, because the previously arranged coaling of the vessels
-was carried out systematically and without a hitch anywhere,
-although in some cases it had to be done in open roadsteads. Its
-inglorious end in the Korea Straits cannot, and does not, diminish
-the magnitude of the achievement; and the experiences we have
-gained by successfully carrying out our novel task will surely
-prove of great value to the Government. This whole coaling business
-has been a source of considerable profits to our company, although
-if due regard is paid to the exceptional character of the work and
-to the unusual risks we had to run, they cannot be called
-exorbitant.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>A few statistics will show what the whole undertaking meant to the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie from a business point of view. During the years
-1904 and 1905 the company increased its fleet by no less than 21
-steamers&mdash;partly new buildings and partly new purchases<a name="page_106" id="page_106"></a>&mdash;representing a
-value of 22½ million marks. To these new acquisitions must be added
-the 19 steamers then building, of a value of 52 million marks, amongst
-them the two big passenger steamers <i>Amerika</i> and <i>Kaiserin Auguste
-Victoria</i> for the New York route, and other big boats for the Mexico,
-the River Plate, and the Far East services. A large fraction of the sums
-spent on this new tonnage&mdash;viz. no less than 24 million
-marks&mdash;represented the profits made on the sales of ships; another large
-portion was taken out of current earnings, and the remainder was secured
-by a debenture issue. Never again, except in 1913, has the company added
-such an amount of tonnage to its fleet in a single year as it did at
-that time. But the “re-birth†of the company did not only consist in
-this augmentation of tonnage, but also, and chiefly, in the entire
-reorganization of its New York service by the addition to its fleet of
-the <i>Amerika</i> and the <i>Kaiserin Auguste Victoria</i>. This event meant that
-the era of the express steamers was being succeeded by one characterized
-by another type of vessel which, though possessing less speed, was
-mainly designed with a view to securing the utmost possible comfort to
-the passengers. The two steamers proved exceedingly remunerative
-investments, and added enormously to the clientèle of the company. The
-profits earned on the Russian transaction also made up to a large extent
-for the losses incurred in the keen rate war with the Cunard Line then
-in progress. In spite of this rate war the company was able to increase
-its dividend to 9 per cent. in 1904, and to 11 per cent. in 1905.</p>
-
-<p>Another event which took place in 1904 was the conclusion of a contract
-with the German Government concerning the troop transports to German
-South-West Africa, and the year 1905 witnessed the settlement of a
-short-lived conflict with the North German Lloyd.<a name="page_107" id="page_107"></a> This conflict
-attracted a great deal of attention at the time, and the Kaiser himself
-thought fit to intervene with a view to terminating it.</p>
-
-<p>When it was seen that German commercial interests in the Middle East had
-considerably increased, the Hamburg-Amerika Linie opened a special line
-to the Persian Gulf in 1906. The year 1907 is chiefly remarkable for a
-rate war affecting the services from Hamburg to the West Coast of
-Africa, of which until then the Woermann Line had considered itself
-entitled to claim a monopoly.</p>
-
-<p>The African shipping business had been jealously nursed by its founder,
-Adolph Woermann, who had always tried hard to guard this special domain
-of his against the encroachments of all outsiders. However much Ballin
-and Adolph Woermann differed in character, they were akin to each other
-in one essential feature&mdash;viz. the jealous love they bore to the
-undertaking with which they had identified themselves. Both men, grown
-up in absolutely different environments, yet resembled each other in the
-daring and the fearlessness with which they defended the interests of
-their businesses. The one had trained himself to employ moderation and
-commonsense to overcome resistance where the use of forcible means
-promised no success; the other was a pioneer in the colonial sphere, a
-king in his African empire, the discoverer of new outlets, but broken in
-spirit and bereft of his strength when compelled by circumstances to
-share with others. When Adolph Woermann had died, Ballin honoured his
-memory by contributing to the public Press an appreciation of his
-character, which is perhaps the best that has been written, and which
-ought to be saved from being forgotten. This fact, it is hoped, will be
-sufficient justification for reproducing in this connexion a translation
-of Ballin’s article:<a name="page_108" id="page_108"></a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“The late Adolph Woermann was a man whom we may truly describe as
-the ideal of what a Hanseatic citizen should be. Secretary of State
-Dernburg himself once told me that he knew quite well that the work
-he was doing for the benefit of our colonies would never come up to
-what Adolph Woermann had achieved in the face of the greatest
-imaginable difficulties.</p>
-
-<p>“Never before, perhaps, has any private shipowner displayed so much
-daring as we see embodied in the business he has built up through
-his labours. Woermann has developed the means of communication
-between Germany and her African colonies to such perfection that
-even the similar work performed by British shipping men has been
-overshadowed. He has done this without receiving any aid from the
-Government; in fact, he had to overcome all sorts of obstacles
-which were put in his way by the bureaucracy. His confidence in his
-work was not shaken when losses had to be faced. Then, more than
-ever, he had his eyes firmly fixed on his goal; and practically
-every vessel which he had built to facilitate communication between
-the German mother country and her colonies represented a fresh step
-forward towards a higher type, thus increasing the immense personal
-responsibility with which he burdened himself. His patriotism was
-of the practical kind; he did his work without asking for the help
-of others, especially without that of the Government.</p>
-
-<p>“And now he has died in bitter disappointment. His striking outward
-appearance has always reminded us of the Iron Chancellor, but the
-similarity in the character of the two men has only become apparent
-during the last few years. It is well known that when the troubles
-in the colonies had been settled he was accused of having enriched
-himself at the expense of the country. He never lost his resentment
-of this accusation; and even though his accusers can point to the
-fact that the court which had to investigate the claims put forward
-by the Government gave judgment to the effect that some of these
-claims were justified, it must be said in reply that this statement
-of the case is inadequate and one-sided. All that was proved was
-that Woermann, who hated red tape, and who never had recourse to
-legal assistance when drawing up his agreements, did not use as
-much caution in<a name="page_109" id="page_109"></a> this matter as would have been advisable in his
-own interest. The facts that have become known most clearly
-disprove the accusation that he had made large profits at the
-expense of the country, and that he had used the country’s distress
-to enrich himself. To the task of carrying out the troop transports
-he devoted himself with his customary largeness of purpose, and he
-accomplished it magnificently. In order to be able to do so, he had
-enlarged his fleet by a number of steamers, and the consequence was
-that, when the work was achieved, he had to admit himself that he
-had over-estimated his strength. When my late colleague Dr.
-Wiegand, the Director-General of the North German Lloyd, and I were
-asked to express an expert opinion on the rates which Woermann had
-charged the Government, we found them thoroughly moderate; in fact,
-we added a rider to the effect that if either of our companies had
-been entrusted with those transports, we could only have carried
-out a very few expeditions at the rates charged by Woermann.
-Woermann, however, carried through the whole task; and when it was
-done he found himself compelled to pass on to the shoulders of the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie part of the excessive burden which he had
-taken upon himself.</p>
-
-<p>“His iron determination would have enabled him to dispense with the
-assistance thus obtained. But by that time his accusers had
-commenced their attacks on his character, and when the Government
-had officially taken up an attitude against him, he became a prey
-to that resentment to which I have referred before. All those who
-had the privilege of being associated with him during the past few
-years must have noted with grief how this great patriot gradually
-became an embittered critic. The heavy blow also led to the
-breakdown of his health, and during the last years of his life we
-only knew him as a sick man.</p>
-
-<p>“If it is borne in mind how strong, how masterful, and how
-self-reliant a man has passed away with Adolph Woermann, it is sad
-to think that in the end he was not strong enough after all to bear
-on his own shoulders entirely the immense burden of responsibility
-which he had taken upon himself, and that he received nothing but
-ingratitude as the reward of his life’s work, although he was
-actuated by<a name="page_110" id="page_110"></a> truly patriotic motives throughout. Still, this shall
-not prevent us from acknowledging that he was the greatest, the
-most daring, and the most self-sacrificing private shipowner whom
-the Hanseatic cities have ever produced&mdash;a princely merchant if
-ever there was one. He was a true friend and an earnest well-wisher
-to the city in which he was born, and to the country which he
-served as a statesman. We are sincerely grateful to him for the
-work he has done, and in honouring his memory we know that we are
-paying tribute to the greatest Hanseatic citizen who had been
-living in our midst.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>To complete the enumeration of the many rate wars which occurred during
-the first decade of the twentieth century, we must make brief reference
-to the competition emanating in 1909 from the so-called “Princes’ Trustâ€
-(Fürstenkonzern) and its ally, viz. a Hamburg firm which had already
-fought the Woermann Line. The object of the fight was to secure the
-business from Antwerp to the Plate. The struggle ended with the
-acquisition of the shipping interests of the Princes’ Trust, the
-business career of which came to a sudden end shortly afterwards by a
-financial disaster causing enormous losses to the two princely families
-concerned&mdash;the house of Hohenlohe and that of Fürstenberg. The details
-connected with this affair are still in everybody’s memory, and it would
-be beyond the scope of this volume to enter into them. It should be
-mentioned, however, that in connexion with the settlement arrived at the
-two big companies undertook to start some transatlantic services from
-the port of Emden, and in particular to establish a direct line for the
-steerage traffic to North America. The necessary arrangements to this
-end had just been made when the war broke out, and further progress
-became impossible.</p>
-
-<p>The transatlantic pool was considerably extended in scope during those
-years. More than once, however, after the rate war with the Cunard Line
-had come to an<a name="page_111" id="page_111"></a> end, the amicable relations existing between the lines
-were disturbed, e.g. when the Russian Volunteer Fleet opened a competing
-service&mdash;a competition which was got rid of by the aid of the Russian
-East Asiatic S.S. Company; when some British lines temporarily withdrew
-from the steerage pool, and when some differences of policy arose
-between the Hamburg-Amerika Linie and the North German Lloyd. The
-Hamburg company demanded a revision of the percentages, contending that
-the arrangements made fifteen years ago no longer did justice to the
-entirely altered relative positions of the two companies. The
-discussions held in London in February, 1908, under Ballin’s
-chairmanship, which lasted several days, and in which delegates of all
-the big Continental and British lines, as well as of the Canadian
-Pacific Railway Company took part, led to the formation of the Atlantic
-Conference (also known as the General Pool). It was supplemented in the
-following year by that of the Mediterranean Conference. Both these
-agreements were renewed in 1911, and further agreements were concluded
-with the Russian and Scandinavian lines to complete the system.
-Agreements on so large a scale had never before been concluded between
-any shipping companies.</p>
-
-<p>This network of agreements existed until it was destroyed through the
-outbreak of the war.</p>
-
-<p>During the fluctuating conditions which characterized the shipping
-business of those years the year 1908 witnessed a depression which, in
-its after-effects, is comparable only to that caused by the cholera
-epidemic sixteen years earlier. Business had been excellent for a fairly
-long time, but it became thoroughly demoralized in the second half of
-1907, and an economic crisis of a magnitude such as has seldom been
-experienced began to affect every country. No part of the shipping
-business remained unaffected by it; hundreds and<a name="page_112" id="page_112"></a> hundreds of
-ocean-going liners lay idle in the seaports of the world.</p>
-
-<p>Very gradually prospects began to brighten up in the course of 1908, so
-that the worst of the depression had passed sooner than had been
-expected. Indeed, in one respect the crisis had proved a blessing in
-disguise, inasmuch as it had strengthened the inclination of the
-shipping concerns everywhere to compromise and to eliminate unnecessary
-competition&mdash;the formation of the general pool, in fact, being the
-outcome of that feeling. The subsequent recovery made up for the losses;
-and the succeeding years, with their very gratifying financial results,
-and their vast internal consolidation, represent the high-water mark in
-the development of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after the end of the depression a renewed spell of building
-activity set in. First of all a new cargo steamer, possessing a burden
-of 12,000 tons&mdash;which was something quite unusual at the time&mdash;was
-ordered to be built by Messrs. Harland and Wolff, at a price which was
-also unusually low. It almost created a record for cheapness; and the
-courage of the builders who accepted such an order at such terms was
-greatly admired. A German yard&mdash;the Vulkan, of Bremen&mdash;then came forward
-with a similar offer, because the German shipbuilders, too, were glad to
-provide their men with work. The result of the combined labour of both
-these firms was a type of cargo boat which proved extremely useful,
-especially in the Far Eastern trade, and which represented a good
-investment to the company.</p>
-
-<p>Gradually the other branches of the business began to increase their
-activity, and the service to North America especially received the close
-attention of the company’s management. Meanwhile, other shipping
-companies had added some vessels of the very highest class to their
-fleets. The two big turbine steamers of<a name="page_113" id="page_113"></a> the Cunard Line, the
-<i>Lusitania</i> and the <i>Mauretania</i>, had attracted many passengers, and the
-White Star Line had the mammoth liner <i>Olympic</i> building, which was to
-be followed by two others of the same type, the <i>Titanic</i> and the
-<i>Gigantic</i>. The new Cunarder, the <i>Aquitania</i>, was to be of the same
-type, so that once more the public was offered the choice of steamers of
-a kind unknown until then. This competition compelled the Packetfahrt to
-follow suit, and Ballin commenced to evolve plans for the building of a
-new vessel which, of course, had to surpass the highest achievement of
-the competing lines, i.e. the <i>Olympic</i>. Thus, in co-operation with the
-Vulkan yard, of Stettin, and with Messrs. Blohm and Voss, of Hamburg,
-the plans for the three steamers of the “Imperator†class were designed.
-The competition among the various yards had been extremely keen, and the
-Vulkan yard secured the order for the building of the first unit of this
-class, the <i>Imperator</i>. From the point of view of speed, these new
-vessels resembled the fast steamers of the older kind; with regard to
-their equipment, they represented a combination of this type and that of
-the <i>Kaiserin</i>, but from the business point of view they were quite a
-novelty, as the basis of their remunerativeness was no longer the cargo
-and steerage business, but the cabin business. If the booking of a
-certain number of cabins could be relied on for each voyage an adequate
-return would be assured. Everything, therefore, was done to attract as
-many cabin passengers as possible. These vessels were a triumph of
-German shipbuilding and engineering skill; and the senior partner of
-Messrs. Blohm and Voss, when the <i>Vaterland</i> was launched, stated with
-just pride that she was the biggest vessel in existence; that she was
-built on the biggest slip; that she had received her equipment under the
-biggest crane, and that she would be docked in the biggest floating dock
-in the world. The launching<a name="page_114" id="page_114"></a> of the third and biggest of the three
-steamers, the <i>Bismarck</i>, represented a red-letter day in the life of
-Ballin and in the history of the company. Nominally she was christened
-by the granddaughter of the Iron Chancellor, but actually by the Kaiser.
-The bottle of champagne used for the purpose did not break when it left
-the young lady’s hands; but the Kaiser seized it, and with a sweeping
-movement of the arm hurled it against the stem of the huge vessel. To
-remove as far as possible the last vestige of the unhappy estrangement
-between the Kaiser and the Chancellor had always been Ballin’s earnest
-desire. So it filled him with great joy when he was enabled to dedicate
-the greatest product of his life-work to the memory of the Prince whom
-he admired intensely; and still more was he pleased when the Kaiser
-consented to take part in the ceremony. He had often expressed his
-regret at the unfortunate stage management in connexion with the
-Kaiser’s visit to Hamburg after the unveiling of the Bismarck monument,
-when he was driven past it without an opportunity having been arranged
-for him to inspect it. Such a course, Ballin remarked, was bound to
-create the impression that the Kaiser had intentionally been led past
-it. “I wish I had been permitted to speak to the Kaiser about it
-beforehand,†he told me afterwards. “I am sure he would have insisted
-upon seeing it.†Proper stage management plays so prominent a part in
-the life of royalty, and it can be of such great use in avoiding certain
-blunders and in hiding certain shortcomings that it is much to be
-regretted that the Kaiser had so often to dispense with it.</p>
-
-<p>The entering into the Packetfahrt’s service of the “Imperator†type of
-steamers represented an extraordinary increase in the amount of tonnage
-which the company employed on the New York route; and when the North
-German Lloyd refused to allow the Packetfahrt<a name="page_115" id="page_115"></a> a corresponding addition
-to its percentage share under the pool agreement, which the Packetfahrt
-believed itself justified in asking for, a conflict threatened once more
-to disturb the relations existing between the two companies. As a result
-the position of both was weakened in Austria, where the Government
-cleverly used the situation to its own advantage. Apart from this,
-however, not much damage was done, as negotiations were soon started
-with the object of securing the conclusion of a far-reaching community
-of interest agreement which was not merely to be restricted to the
-transatlantic services of the two companies. If these negotiations could
-be brought to a successful issue, Ballin thought that this would be the
-dawn of a new era in the contractual relations existing between shipping
-firms everywhere, because he believed that such development would not be
-confined to the German lines, but would assume international
-proportions. The agreements actually in force seemed to him obsolete&mdash;at
-least in part. That this should be so is but natural, as the factor
-which it is intended to eliminate by the terms of such agreements&mdash;man’s
-innate selfishness&mdash;is, after all, ineradicable. “Nature,†in the words
-of the Roman poet, “will always return, even if you expel it with a
-pitchfork.†Wherever a human trait like selfishness is to be kept within
-certain bounds by means of written agreements, it becomes necessary not
-only to make small improvements from time to time, but to subject the
-whole system to a thorough overhauling every now and then.</p>
-
-<p>Many events affecting the progress of the company’s business have no
-reference in these pages, but the reader can visualize the importance of
-Albert Ballin’s life-work if he keeps before his mind the fact that
-while in the early part of 1886 the Hamburg-Amerika Linie maintained but
-a mail service from Hamburg to New York and four<a name="page_116" id="page_116"></a> lines to Mexico and
-the West Indies, from that date to 1913 fifty new services were added to
-the existing ones.</p>
-
-<p>The fleet possessed by the Hamburg-Amerika Linie in 1886 consisted of 22
-ocean-going steamers, totalling 60,531 G.R.T.<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> By the end of 1913
-these figures had increased to 172 steamers and 1,028,762 G.R.T.
-respectively. During the twenty-eight years 269 vessels of 1,388,206
-tons had been added, either by new building or by purchase, and 101
-steamers of 346,927 tons had been sold. At the end of 1913 19 steamers
-of 268,766 tons were building, so that, including these, the total
-tonnage amounted to 1,360,360 G.R.T. at that date.</p>
-
-<p>During the same period the joint-stock capital of the company had
-increased from 15 to 157½ million marks, the debenture issues from
-5·6 to 69·5 million marks, and the visible reserves from 3,595,285 to
-58,856,552 marks.</p>
-
-<p>The working profits of the company during those twenty-eight years
-amounted to 521,727,426 marks, 2,735,700 of which were Government
-subsidies received during the temporary participation in the Imperial
-Mail Service to the Far East.</p>
-
-<p>The average dividend paid to the shareholders was 7·02 per cent. per
-annum. This figure, to my thinking, proves that the biggest steamship
-company the world has ever known was to a small extent only a
-“capitalist enterprise.†Out of a total net profit of over 500 millions,
-no more than 140 million marks went to the shareholders as interest on
-their invested capital; by far the greater part of the remainder was
-used to extend the company’s business, so that the country in general
-benefited by it.</p>
-
-<p>Concerning one matter which played an important part in Ballin’s career,
-viz., the relations between his company and the North German Lloyd, the
-reader may perhaps desire a more exhaustive account. There certainly<a name="page_117" id="page_117"></a>
-was no want of rivalry between the two companies. One notable reason for
-this was the fact that at the time when Ballin joined the Packetfahrt
-the latter had fallen far behind its younger competitor in its
-development, both from the business and the technical point of view. The
-Packetfahrt, in particular, had not kept pace with the technical
-progress in steamship construction, and the consequence was that, when
-the pool was set up, it had to content itself with a percentage which
-was considerably less than that allotted to the Lloyd. The enormous
-advance made under the Ballin régime naturally caused it to demand a
-larger share. At the same time the Lloyd also increased its efforts more
-than ever before, and thus a race for predominance was started between
-the two big companies, which greatly assisted them in obtaining the
-commanding position they acquired as the world’s leading shipping firms.
-I do not think this is the place to go into all the details of this
-struggle, and I shall confine myself to reproducing an article which
-Ballin himself contributed in 1907 on the occasion of the fiftieth
-anniversary of the foundation of the North German Lloyd. As this article
-throws several interesting sidelights on the development of
-transatlantic shipping enterprise, it may furnish a suitable conclusion
-to the account given in the present chapter:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“The year 1907 is one which will stand out prominently in the
-history of our transatlantic shipping on account of the two
-anniversaries which we are going to celebrate during its course. On
-May 27th it will be sixty years since the Hamburg-Amerika Linie was
-called into existence, and on February 20th the North German Lloyd
-will celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of its foundation. I
-suppose that a more competent pen than mine will present us on that
-day with a detailed account of the development of the great Bremen
-shipping firm, and my only object in writing this article is<a name="page_118" id="page_118"></a> to
-review in brief the period of more than twenty years during which I
-have had the pleasure of working hand in hand with our Bremen
-friends.</p>
-
-<p>“Until the year 1885 the two big companies, the Lloyd and the
-Packetfahrt, scarcely had any mutually profitable dealings with
-each other; on the contrary, their relations were characterized by
-open enmity. It is true that the attempts at a <i>rapprochement</i>,
-which were made from time to time, did in some cases lead to the
-conclusion of an agreement concerning certain rates to which both
-companies bound themselves to adhere, but they never lasted more
-than a short time, and ultimately, far from causing an improvement
-of the existing state of things, they left matters worse than they
-had been before. I think I may congratulate myself on being the
-first to have brought about a better understanding between the two
-companies which, in the end, paved the way to the establishment of
-a lasting friendship which has grown closer and closer during the
-past twenty years.</p>
-
-<p>“In 1886, shortly after I had joined the Hamburg-Amerika Linie,
-when I went to Bremen in order to find out what could be done to
-lessen or, if possible, to remove altogether the competition
-between both companies, the conduct of the firm’s business had
-passed from the hands of Consul Meier, who was getting on in years,
-into those of Director Lohmann. Mr. Lohmann was a man of unusual
-energy and possessed of a rare gift for organization. In the annals
-of international shipping his name will be for ever associated with
-the introduction into the North Atlantic route of fast steamers
-under the German flag. He had been fortunate enough to meet with a
-congenial mind on the technical side in the head of the firm of
-Messrs. John Elder and Co., the Glasgow shipbuilders. At their
-yard, starting in 1881, a series of fast steamers were built&mdash;the
-<i>Elbe</i>, the <i>Werra</i>, the <i>Fulda</i>, the <i>Saale</i>, the <i>Trave</i>, the
-<i>Aller</i>, and the <i>Lahn</i>&mdash;which opened up a new and memorable era in
-the progress of the means of communication between the Old World
-and the New. These boats proved of great benefit to the company
-financially, and they were also a considerable boon to the
-passengers owing to their speed and punctuality. I recollect
-talking to<a name="page_119" id="page_119"></a> the chairman of a big British steamship company on
-board one of his steamers in New York harbour in 1888, when the
-s.s. <i>Lahn</i>, of the North German Lloyd, steamed in. My British
-colleague, filled with admiration, glanced at his watch, touched
-his hat by way of salutation, and said with honest enthusiasm:
-‘Wonderful boats; they are really doing clockwork.’ He only
-expressed the sentiment felt by the travelling public generally;
-everybody appreciated their reliability and punctuality, and the
-excellence of their service.</p>
-
-<p>“Director Lohmann died very suddenly on February 9th, 1892; he had
-just concluded an address at a general meeting of the company held
-at the ‘Haus Seefahrt’ when he dropped down dead. During the last
-few years of his life he had not been well advised technically, and
-failed to adopt the twin-screw principle, as had been done by the
-Hamburg company. Thus, when the two fast single-screw steamers, the
-<i>Havel</i> and the <i>Spree</i>, were built at Stettin in 1890, they were
-practically obsolete, because the travelling public by that time
-had come to prefer those of the twin-screw type, owing to the
-increased safety they afforded.</p>
-
-<p>“In 1888 Consul Meier retired from the chairmanship of the Lloyd,
-to be succeeded&mdash;after the short reign of Mr. Reck&mdash;by Mr. George
-Plate. To Mr. Plate, if I am rightly informed, great credit is due
-for having secured the services of Director-General Dr. Heinrich
-Wiegand on the board of the company.</p>
-
-<p>“What the Lloyd has achieved under the Wiegand régime far surpasses
-anything accomplished in the past.</p>
-
-<p>“The Hamburg-Amerika Linie, meanwhile, had been alive to the needs
-of the times; and the consequence was a healthy competition between
-these two steamship companies&mdash;by far the biggest the world has
-ever seen&mdash;practically on all the seven seas. This competition, by
-intelligent compromise, was restricted within reasonable limits,
-the guiding spirits of the two concerns consciously adopting the
-policy implied by the strategic principle: ‘In approaching the
-enemy’s position we must divide our forces; in attacking him we
-must concentrate them.<a name="page_120" id="page_120"></a>’</p>
-
-<p>“It would not be correct to say that this atmosphere of friendship
-had never been clouded&mdash;it would, indeed, have been tedious had it
-been otherwise than it was. Up to now, however, Wiegand and I have
-always been able to maintain pleasant relations between our two
-concerns, and in the interests of both of them it is sincerely to
-be hoped that this spirit of mutual understanding will continue to
-animate them in the future.â€</p></div>
-
-<p><a name="page_121" id="page_121"></a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII<br /><br />
-<span class="smcap">The Technical Reorganization of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie</span></h2>
-
-<p class="nind">I<span class="smcap">n</span> another chapter of this book the big passenger boats of the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie have been described as the outcome of Ballin’s
-imaginative brain. This they were indeed, and in many instances it is
-scarcely possible to say how far the credit for having built them is due
-to the naval architect, and how far it is due to Ballin. He was
-profoundly against employing <i>one</i> system throughout, and on accepting
-the views of <i>one</i> expert exclusively; and this aversion was so
-pronounced that he objected on principle to the nomination of any
-technical expert to the Board of his company. The company, he said, is
-surely going to last longer than a lifetime or two. Besides, it must try
-to solve the problem of perpetual youth, and therefore it cannot afford
-to run the risk of staking its fortune on the views held by one single
-man who is apt to ignore the progress of his science without noticing
-it. The same dislike of onesidedness induced him to encourage to the
-best of his capacity a healthy competition among the various shipyards,
-and to avail himself of the experiences gained not only by the German
-yards but by their British rivals also. At an early stage of his career
-close business relations were established between himself and Messrs.
-Harland and Wolff, of Belfast; and a personal friendship connected him
-with the owner of that firm, Mr. (now Lord) Pirrie. Acting upon the
-example set by the White Star Line, Ballin made an agreement with<a name="page_122" id="page_122"></a>
-Messrs. Harland and Wolff as early as 1898, by which the latter bound
-themselves always to keep a slip at the disposal of the Packetfahrt. The
-reason which prompted Ballin to make this arrangement was, as he
-explained to the Board of Trustees, that the company’s orders for new
-construction and repairs had nowhere been carried out more
-satisfactorily and more cheaply than by the Belfast yard, where all the
-new vessels ordered were built under a special agreement, i.e. at cost
-price with a definitely fixed additional percentage representing the
-profits and certain expenditure incurred by the builders. This
-arrangement enabled the Packetfahrt to become acquainted with whatever
-was latest and best in British shipyard production, and, as it were, to
-acquire models which it could improve upon in German yards after they
-had been tested on actual service. Some of the best and most important
-types of vessels which the Packetfahrt has produced owe their origin to
-this system; and it is only fair to say that it exercised an entirely
-beneficial influence on the progress of the German shipbuilding
-industry, the prosperity of which is largely due to the fact that it has
-profited from the century-old experience gained by the British yards and
-by British ocean-shipping.</p>
-
-<p>Ballin held the view that, just as the shipbuilding expert had to watch
-the progress of naval architecture and to make practical application of
-its results, and just as the merchant had to exploit this progress for
-the benefit of his business, the shipowner&mdash;especially the one who
-maintains a service of passenger boats&mdash;has the special task of making
-every step in the direction of further advance serviceable to the needs
-of the passengers. Being himself, as has been pointed out elsewhere,
-gifted with a strong faculty for appreciating things beautiful, and
-raising no less high demands as regards the beauty and the comfort of
-all his surroundings,<a name="page_123" id="page_123"></a> Ballin constantly endeavoured to make use of all
-the results of his own observations and of his own experience for the
-greater comfort of the passengers. Those who saw the finished products
-of his imagination, the beautifully appointed “floating hotels,†hardly
-realized how many apparently insignificant details&mdash;which, after all, in
-their entirety make what we call comfort&mdash;owe their origin to his own
-personal suggestions. Each time he made a sea voyage on board a steamer
-of his own, or of some other company, he brought home with him a number
-of new ideas, chiefly such as affected technicalities, and matters
-dealing with the personal comfort of the passengers. Numerous entries in
-the notebooks which he carried on such occasions are there to serve as
-illustrations; the following items, for instance, are selected from
-those which he jotted down, roughly, on a voyage to New York some time
-in the ’nineties. They speak for themselves, in spite of their
-sketchiness:</p>
-
-<p>“List of Moselle purveyors wants revision&mdash;notices on board to be
-restricted as much as possible, those which are necessary to be
-tastefully framed&mdash;sailing lists and general regulations to be included
-in passengers’ lists&mdash;state cabin on board <i>Kaiser Friedrich</i>: key,
-latch, drawer; no room for portmanteaux and trunks; towels too
-small&mdash;<i>Deutschland</i>: soiled linen cupboard too small&mdash;stewards
-<i>Oceanic</i> white jackets&mdash;celery glasses&mdash;butter dishes too small&mdash;large
-bed pillows&mdash;consommé cups&mdash;playing cards: Packetfahrt complete name of
-firm&mdash;Packetfahrt complete name on Wehber’s wine bottles&mdash;toast to be
-served in a serviette (hot).â€</p>
-
-<p>Rough notes such as these were used to serve Ballin as the material
-underlying the detailed reports and instructions to the company’s
-servants which he composed during the voyage, so that not even a long
-sea voyage gave him the unbroken spell of leisure he so<a name="page_124" id="page_124"></a> badly needed.
-Indeed, the longer it lasted the more chances did it provide for
-thoroughly inspecting the practical working of the steamer. Many other
-reports are in my possession, but the one given will serve to emphasize
-the meticulous quality of observation he possessed, and how practical
-was his mind in regard to details of comfort and convenience, and the
-special climatic needs of different routes.</p>
-
-<p>Even where the peculiar conditions obtaining in tropical climates were
-concerned&mdash;conditions with which he was personally quite
-unacquainted&mdash;he unfailingly discovered any defects that might exist,
-and also the means by which they could be remedied.</p>
-
-<p>Ballin’s connexion with the Packetfahrt practically coincides with the
-whole of that period during which the immense progress of modern
-steamship building from humble beginnings to its present stage of
-development took place; with the only exception that the North German
-Lloyd had already, before Ballin joined the Packetfahrt, established its
-services of fast steamers which were far ahead of those maintained by
-other shipping companies owing to their punctuality and reliability, and
-which Ballin then set himself to improve upon and to excel. Apart from
-this one type of vessel, the science of steamship construction, as seen
-from our modern point of view, was still in its infancy.</p>
-
-<p>In 1886 the steamships owned by the Hamburg-Amerika Linie were mainly of
-two different types, viz., those used in the North Atlantic service
-(principally on the New York route), and those used in the Mexico-West
-Indies service.</p>
-
-<p>The expansion of the Packetfahrt’s business after Ballin had joined the
-company, and especially the addition of new services together with the
-increase in the number of ports of departure and of destination, made it
-necessary constantly to increase the size and<a name="page_125" id="page_125"></a> the carrying capacity of
-the cargo boats, and the size and the speed of the passenger steamers,
-as well as to improve and to modernize the passenger accommodation on
-board the latter. All this, of course, considerably added to the cost
-price of the vessels, so that, as a further consequence, the facilities
-for loading and discharging them had to be improved and extended. Four
-principal types of steamers may be distinguished in the development of
-the company’s fleet, especially of that part of it which was engaged on
-the North Atlantic route, where the main development took place.</p>
-
-<p><i>Type One</i>: Fast steamers&mdash;twin screws, 18 knots, 8,500
-G.R.T.&mdash;possessing accommodation for passengers of all classes and
-provided with comparatively little cargo space, but comfortably and
-luxuriously appointed throughout. The three leading ideas governing
-their construction were safety, speed, and comfort; and progress was
-made to keep abreast of competing lines, until it culminated in the
-vessels of the “Imperator†class. The <i>Imperator</i> was built in 1913.
-They were quadruple screw turbine steamers, possessing no fewer than 42
-multitubular boilers each, and, as they were of a capacity of 52,000
-gross register tons, they were nearly three times the size of the
-<i>Deutschland</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Type Two</i>: Ships of medium speed and of considerable size, and
-therefore providing a high standard of comfort for passengers combined
-with ample facilities for cargo accommodation.</p>
-
-<p><i>Type Three</i>: Chiefly built as cargo boats, but in such a way that a
-part of their space could be utilized for the accommodation of a large
-number of steerage passengers.</p>
-
-<p><i>Type Four</i>: Cargo steamers without any passenger accommodation.</p>
-
-<p>The difference between the floating palaces of type No. 1 in 1913 and
-those vessels which the Hamburg-Amerika<a name="page_126" id="page_126"></a> Linie possessed when Ballin
-first entered upon his career as a shipping man was like that between
-day and night. A brief comparison of a few details will be the best
-means of illustrating the enormous progress achieved within less than
-the lifetime of a generation. The size of the vessels had increased from
-3,000 to more than 50,000 tons; the speed from 14 to nearly 25 knots;
-the height of the decks from 6½ to 8 feet in the lower decks, whilst
-that of the upper ones, as far as the social rooms were concerned,
-amounted to as much as 20 feet. Large portions of the upper decks were
-reserved for the social rooms, the finest of which&mdash;the ball-room&mdash;could
-challenge comparison with almost any similar room in any hotel ashore
-with respect to its size and to the magnificence of its furnishings and
-of its decoration. From a technical point of view, too, the construction
-of such a huge room on board a vessel, which possessed a floor space of
-4,800 square feet, and a ceiling unsupported by any columns or pillars
-of any kind, was an unprecedented achievement. Besides, there were
-immense dining-rooms for each class, smoking-rooms, ladies’ saloons, a
-restaurant, a winter garden, a swimming pool, and numerous smaller rooms
-suitable for the relaxation and amusement of the passengers.</p>
-
-<p>On the older boats the arrangement was that the small cabins were all
-grouped round the one and only social room on board, so that the
-occupants of the cabins could hear all that was going on in the social
-room, and <i>vice versa</i>. The superficial area at the disposal of each
-passenger was gradually increased from 43 square feet in the double
-cabins to 172 square feet in the cabins of the <i>Imperator</i>, so that the
-latter were really no longer mere cabins, but actual rooms. The
-suites-de-luxe comprised up to twelve rooms, the largest of which
-covered an area of 247 square feet.</p>
-
-<p>It must not be thought, however, that the first-class<a name="page_127" id="page_127"></a> passengers were
-the only ones for whose comfort the company catered. The other classes
-progressed proportionately in added comfort, space, and social
-facilities, not excepting the steerage.</p>
-
-<p>But by far the greatest improvements made were those in connexion with
-the enormous progress of the purely technical side of shipbuilding
-during the whole period under review. The more the vessels increased in
-size, the less were they liable to the pitching and rolling motion
-caused when the weather was rough. Moreover, special appliances, such as
-bilge keels and bilge tanks, were employed to lessen these movements
-still more, even when the sea was high. The reciprocating engines
-gradually gave place to higher types, and later on turbines and
-oil-engines were also introduced. In addition to the propelling
-machinery a number of auxiliary engines were used which were of various
-kinds and for various purposes, such as the ventilation of the cabins
-and the other rooms, the generation of light, the services in connexion
-with the personal welfare of the passengers and with their safety whilst
-on board ship. Instead of single bottoms, double bottoms were used, and
-the additional safety resulting therefrom was still further enhanced by
-dividing the space between the two by means of a whole network of
-partitions. The vessels of the “Imperator†class, indeed, possessed
-practically a double shell, which formed an effective protection against
-the danger of collision. The lifeboats increased in size and in number,
-and their shape and equipment were improved. Emergency lighting stations
-were arranged which could generate a sufficient amount of electric
-current if the ordinary supply should break down at any time. The whole
-vessels were divided into self-contained compartments by water-tight
-bulkheads, the doors of which could be automatically closed. This
-division into many compartments proved<a name="page_128" id="page_128"></a> an effective protection against
-the risk of fire; but a number of special devices were also adopted to
-serve the same purpose, e.g. an extensive system of steampipes by which
-each single room could be rapidly filled with steam, so that the fire
-could be automatically extinguished. Fire-proof material was used for
-the walls separating adjacent rooms and cabins, and, not content with
-all this, the company provided its mammoth liners with an actual fire
-brigade, the members of which were fully trained for their work. The
-most important improvements affecting the navigation of the steamers
-were the introduction of wireless telegraphy apparatus, the gyroscopic
-compasses, the system of submarine direction indicator signalling, and
-the substitution of two steering gears instead of one, not to mention a
-series of minor improvements of all kinds.</p>
-
-<p>The provisioning on board the German steamers was of proverbial
-excellence, the kitchen arrangements were modelled after those found in
-the big hotels, and were supplied with all manner of supplementary
-devices. The huge store rooms were divided into sections for those
-provisions that were of a perishable nature and for those that were not;
-and for the former refrigerating rooms were also provided in which the
-temperature could be regulated according to the nature of the articles.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the most interesting development of the various types of
-steamers is that which type No. 2 has undergone. It originated in Great
-Britain, whence it was taken over in 1894. The first unit of this type
-added to the fleet of the Packetfahrt was the <i>Persia</i>, of 5,800 G.R.T.,
-and a speed of 12 knots, built to accommodate a number of cabin and
-steerage passengers, and to carry a considerable amount of cargo as
-well. These boats possessed many advantages over similar ones,
-advantages which were due to their size, their shape, and the loading
-facilities with which they were equipped. Ballin<a name="page_129" id="page_129"></a> immediately recognized
-the good points of this type, and he improved it until the vessels
-reached a size of 13,000 G.R.T., which still enabled them to travel at a
-speed of 13 knots. They were twin-screw steamers, and were provided with
-every safety device known at the time. A still further improvement of
-this type was represented by the <i>Amerika</i> and the <i>Kaiserin Auguste
-Victoria</i>, built in 1905 and 1906 respectively, luxuriously equipped
-throughout; by their large size&mdash;they possessed a capacity of very
-nearly 25,000 G.R.T.&mdash;extremely seaworthy, and as they could travel at
-the rate of 17½ knots, their speed was scarcely inferior to that
-possessed by the older type of fast steamers. From the point of view of
-actual remunerativeness they were far superior to the fast steamers,
-combining, as they did, all the earning possibilities of the passenger
-and of the cargo vessels.</p>
-
-<p>The development of the types comprising the cargo steamers went hand in
-hand with the expansion of international trade relations, and with the
-constant increase in the amount of goods exchanged between the nations.
-To a certain extent development was limited by the dimensions of the
-Suez Canal. Still, improvements became possible in this respect too when
-the depth of the Canal was increased to 27 feet in 1908, 29 feet in
-1912, and 30 feet in 1914.</p>
-
-<p>Ballin carefully watched this development, incessantly improving the
-existing types of his company’s cargo boats, so that they should always
-meet the growing needs of sea-borne trade, and in some instances even
-anticipating them, until, when the war broke out, twin screw cargo boats
-of a capacity of 16,000 tons and possessing a speed of 13 knots were
-being built for the company.</p>
-
-<p>In a brief outline such as this, it is not possible to enter into
-details concerning the expansion of the other lines which became
-affiliated to or otherwise associated with the Packetfahrt in course of
-time. One special<a name="page_130" id="page_130"></a> type, however, ought to receive a somewhat more
-detailed treatment in this connexion, viz., that of the excursion
-steamers. The running of pleasure cruises, originally nothing but a mere
-expedient to prevent the express steamers from lying idle during the
-dead season, gradually became an end in itself. The Northern and
-Mediterranean cruises were soon followed by others, e.g. those to the
-West Indies and the pleasure trips round the globe. Two special
-steamers, the <i>Prinzessin Victoria Luise</i>, and the somewhat smaller and
-less sumptuous <i>Meteor</i>, both of them equipped after the style of
-pleasure yachts, were built when it was found advisable to make this
-service independent of the fast steamers and the big passenger boats
-which had also been employed for this purpose. After the loss of the
-<i>Prinzessin Victoria Luise</i> she was replaced first by a British
-passenger boat that had been purchased, and then by the <i>Deutschland</i>,
-specially reconditioned for her new purpose, and renamed <i>Victoria
-Luise</i>. Both vessels were extremely popular with the international
-travelling public, and year after year they carried thousands of
-tourists to countries and places distinguished for the beauty of their
-natural scenery or for their historical and artistic associations. They
-were largely instrumental in constantly augmenting the number of those
-who formed the regular clientèle of the company.</p>
-
-<p>“Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery.†In the realm of shipping
-it has always been customary for each company to profit by the
-experience gained and the progress made by its competitors. This applies
-to the Packetfahrt and its management also; but in their case they have
-given infinitely more than they have received, and in the whole history
-of shipping there has never been one single person who has exercised a
-more stimulating influence on its technical progress than Albert
-Ballin.<a name="page_131" id="page_131"></a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII<br /><br />
-<span class="smcap">Politics</span></h2>
-
-<p class="nind">N<span class="smcap">otwithstanding</span> the many business controversies in which Ballin took an
-important part, it has occasionally been said that he was not really a
-“fighter.†This statement may be allowed to pass quite unchallenged,
-provided that by the term “fighter†we mean a man whose habit it is to
-fight to the bitter end. Ballin never indulged in fighting for its own
-sake, nor was it ever his object to see his vanquished opponent lie
-prostrate before him. Such a mental attitude he, in his own drastic way,
-would have described as a “perverted pleasure.†Always and everywhere it
-was his aim to secure to himself and to those he represented the maximum
-benefit obtainable consistent with the realities of the situation, so
-that he has been justly described as “a man of compromise.â€</p>
-
-<p>This feature of his personality, indeed, forms the key-note both to his
-policy and to the principles on which it was based. Perhaps in other
-spheres of economic activity it is possible for a struggle between two
-competing rivals to end in the complete victory of one of them; in the
-shipping business such an outcome is the exception but not the rule.
-There a really <i>weak</i> opponent is never met with, unless one’s rival
-happens to be exceptionally inexperienced or constitutionally unsound.
-The minor competitor, where shipping is concerned, is by no means always
-the less powerful of the two. On the contrary, the contest which
-inflicts small losses on him inflicts heavy losses on his big opponent,
-and may easily exhaust the latter first. The last few decades<a name="page_132" id="page_132"></a> have
-witnessed the establishment of many new shipping firms under the
-auspices of national sentiment. Governments and whole peoples have
-backed them, and in such cases private undertakings have found it
-difficult to compete.</p>
-
-<p>During his early training Ballin had so thoroughly convinced himself of
-the necessity for co-operation and compromise in matters economic that
-this conviction became the corner-stone of his policy. He also made it
-his principle never to tie an unwilling partner to an agreement which
-the latter considered to be detrimental to his vital interests, and he
-would only approve of an agreement if both parties to it felt satisfied
-that they had done a good stroke of business by concluding it. The
-numerous “community of interest†agreements to which he signed his name
-established, the longer they lasted and the further they were extended,
-an increasingly intimate contact between the shipping firms all over the
-world, thus proving that the consistent application of his principles
-was justified by its success.</p>
-
-<p>In politics, too, he regarded this line of action as the only correct
-one. Over and over again he described the World War as a “stupid war†or
-as the “most stupid of all wars,†because its origin, the conflict
-between Austria-Hungary and Serbia, was so utterly meaningless to the
-progress of the world. Its actual outbreak was caused by the strained
-economic relations between Hungary and Serbia, or&mdash;to put it quite
-plainly&mdash;by the boycott of the Serbian pig, a matter which was surely of
-no importance to the world’s trade and traffic at large. “No Bismarck
-was needed to prevent <i>this</i> war,†he often said when speaking of its
-immediate origin.</p>
-
-<p>This attitude of his does not mean that he shut his eyes to the
-deep-seated antagonisms which were at the back of these local squabbles,
-viz., the Franco-Russian<a name="page_133" id="page_133"></a> coalition against Germany, and the
-Anglo-German rivalry. The latter he regarded as sufficient to turn the
-scale; if it could be adjusted a World War, he felt sure, would be
-avoided. The possibility of a universal conflagration had been pointed
-out to him by no less an authority than Prince Bismarck on the occasion
-of the latter’s visit to Hamburg, when he was shown over the express
-steamer of the Packetfahrt that was to bear his name. “I shall not live
-to see the World War,†Bismarck told him; “but you will, and it will
-start in the Near East.â€</p>
-
-<p>With ever-increasing anxiety, Ballin noticed how, as a result of the
-German naval armaments, the Anglo-German antagonism came into existence,
-and how in time the position became worse and worse. When the
-Government, about the year 1900, embarked upon its propaganda for the
-creation of a big navy, he lent it his active assistance, but in later
-years he strongly opposed the naval race with Great Britain, trying to
-the best of his ability to circumvent its disastrous consequences.</p>
-
-<p>The British argument against Germany’s naval programme was that a nation
-which owned one-third of the inhabited globe and intended to maintain
-its supremacy could not renounce its naval predominance. His knowledge
-of British mentality&mdash;gained, as it was, through many years of
-intercourse with the English&mdash;told him that this reasoning was certainly
-unassailable from the British point of view, and that England would
-fight for its recognition to the bitter end. Therefore, he considered
-the situation could only be met by an Anglo-German understanding. The
-failure of arriving at such a solution was probably caused&mdash;apart from
-personal motives&mdash;by the fact that in Germany the spirit of compromise
-was not the predominant one, but that its place was taken by an
-exaggerated opinion of<a name="page_134" id="page_134"></a> the country’s own strength combined with a
-certain ignorance regarding foreign countries.</p>
-
-<p>This mental attitude is typical of the two factions which were
-all-powerful in Germany at the time, viz., what might be called the Old
-Prussian aristocracy, and the representatives of the heavy industries.
-The common platform on which these two groups met was the policy to be
-pursued regarding customs tariffs, which, although it formed the basis
-of the economic greatness of Germany, also prepared the way for serious
-international conflicts. During the war these two groups were in charge
-of what was meant to be the political policy of the country, but which
-was, in fact, nothing but an inferior substitute for it.</p>
-
-<p>Ballin’s international position is illustrated by the fact that he was
-the first to be approached in the matter of a projected Anglo-German
-rapprochement, an affair which reached its climax with Lord Haldane’s
-visit to Berlin. Owing to its historical interest this episode is worth
-a detailed account.</p>
-
-<p>The first steps in this direction date back as far as the year 1908, and
-the ultimate breakdown of the project did not take place until the
-outbreak of the war. The British negotiator was Sir Ernest Cassel, who,
-a native of Germany, had settled in England when quite young, and who
-had become one of the world’s most successful financiers. He was the
-intimate friend of King Edward from the time when the latter was Prince
-of Wales, and he also acted as his banker and as his political adviser.
-The King visited his home almost daily during the last few years of his
-life to take part in a game of bridge. The motives which may have
-prompted Sir Ernest to lend his assistance and his great influence to an
-endeavour which aimed at an understanding between his adopted country
-and the land of his birth need not, in the case of a man so clever and
-so experienced, be very far to seek. Sir Ernest repeatedly<a name="page_135" id="page_135"></a> referred to
-himself as a German, and as such he was deprived of his
-privy-councillorship during the war. Thus it is quite likely that he
-might have been prompted no less by an inherited predilection for the
-one, than by an acquired preference for the other country. This very
-fact may also have enabled him to see matters with particular clearness
-of vision and without any prejudice. He and his friends reasoned
-somewhat along the following lines:</p>
-
-<p>The policy of King Edward having led to a considerable strengthening of
-the position of France on the Continent, there arose the danger of an
-armed conflict between the continental Powers, especially as many points
-of dispute threatened at the same time to disturb the relations between
-Germany and Great Britain. These differences were caused on the one hand
-by the political activities of Germany as a world power, and on the
-other by her commercial and industrial expansion which bid fair to
-relegate Great Britain to a subordinate position. People in England
-regarded the want of a system of protection similar to the German
-protective tariffs as the real cause of this development, a want which
-retarded the progress of British industrialism, and which prevented
-British financiers from taking an active interest in these matters. The
-German financiers, however, exerted all their influence on behalf of the
-industrial expansion of their country, thus emancipating it more and
-more from foreign capital. The time during which the financing of the
-German industries by French money (the so-called French “pensions"),
-i.e. the discounting by French capitalists of bills drawn by German
-industrialists, played an important part, and even represented a serious
-menace in days of political tension, had only just passed, but, thanks
-to the increasing capital strength of Germany, its effects had now quite
-ceased to make themselves felt.<a name="page_136" id="page_136"></a></p>
-
-<p>The advantage to Great Britain of an understanding with Germany was that
-it would guarantee her maritime supremacy which she was resolved to
-maintain at any price, whilst at the same time reducing the burden of
-her naval armaments which, in her case, too, had become wellnigh
-insupportable. The Liberal Government then in power was particularly
-interested in such financial retrenchment, being quite aware that the
-time had arrived for the State to enter upon an era of social
-legislation.</p>
-
-<p>Contact between Ballin and the above-mentioned British groups was
-established through the agency of some friends of his connected with
-German high finance. The fact that the British selected Ballin to start
-these negotiations is probably due to his well-known friendship with the
-Kaiser, which suggested the possibility of approaching the German
-Government&mdash;even if only by informal channels in the first instance.
-This first attempt, should it prove successful, might at any moment be
-followed up by direct negotiations between the two governments. In view
-of the traditional close connexion existing in England between business
-circles on the one hand, and the politicians, the parties, and the
-Government on the other, such proceedings did not by any means imply a
-policy of backstairs, but might be relied upon to open up a way for
-sounding German official quarters in the most natural manner.</p>
-
-<p>The general tenor of Anglo-German relations at that time was somewhat as
-follows.</p>
-
-<p>The visit of King Edward to Wilhelmshöhe and that of the German Emperor
-and Empress to Windsor Castle in the summer of 1907 had been of a very
-friendly character, and, together with other manifestations of
-friendship exchanged between various German and British societies, they
-had exercised a favourable impression on public opinion in both
-countries. But very soon this<a name="page_137" id="page_137"></a> friendly feeling was replaced by one of
-irritation. Great Britain and Russia had concluded an agreement
-concerning their frontiers in the Middle East, and this led to questions
-in the Reichstag as to whether German interests had been properly
-safeguarded. At the same time (in the summer of 1907) the Hague
-Conference came to an end without having led to an understanding
-regarding the limitation of armaments, which many people in England
-would have liked to be brought about. Towards the end of the year the
-German Government submitted to the Reichstag a Navy Bill by which the
-life of the capital ships was to be reduced from 25 to 20 years. This
-was tantamount to asking for the cost of three new ships of the line.
-Simultaneously a powerful propaganda for the navy was started, and when
-Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria resigned the protectorate of the Bavarian
-section of the Navy League, because the League which at that time was
-presided over by the well-known General Keim had engaged in party
-politics, his withdrawal had the undesirable effect of focusing public
-attention on the League’s share in this agitation. This step, as was but
-natural, brought about a change in the chairmanship of the League.</p>
-
-<p>In England the agitation against Germany in general, and against her
-naval policy in particular, became very violent in the early part of
-1908. In February <i>The Times</i> announced that the Kaiser, for the express
-purpose of interfering with the British naval budget, had sent a letter
-to that effect to Lord Tweedmouth, the First Lord of the Admiralty. His
-lordship categorically denied in Parliament that the document had any
-political character whatever, but in spite of this denial, and in spite
-of the support which he received from Lord Lansdowne and from Lord
-Rosebery, the matter produced a violent outburst of feeling on the part
-of the British Press and public. During March, 1908, both houses<a name="page_138" id="page_138"></a> of
-Parliament discussed German and British naval policy in great detail. In
-an article published by the <i>National Review</i>, Lord Esher, the chairman
-of the Imperial Maritime League, demanded that for every keel laid down
-by Germany, Britain should lay down two, and General Baden-Powell
-described the danger of a German invasion as imminent. On the other
-hand, Sir Edward Grey, the Foreign Secretary, emphasized in one of his
-speeches the point of view referred to above, viz. that a reduction of
-the naval burdens would also be desirable in the interest of Britain,
-but that he could recommend such a policy only if the other governments
-consented to do the same.</p>
-
-<p>All these considerations might easily suggest to the clear-headed men of
-business on either side of the North Sea how greatly it would be to the
-mutual advantage of both if a way could be found towards a limitation of
-naval armaments.</p>
-
-<p>The first interview between Ballin and Sir Ernest Cassel took place in
-the summer of 1908, and Ballin afterwards gave the Kaiser a detailed
-account of it when the latter visited Hamburg and Kiel at the end of
-June. Another report, based on material supplied by Ballin, was composed
-by the chief of the Press Department of the Foreign Office, Geheimrat
-Hammann, for the use of the Imperial Chancellor and the Foreign
-Secretary, and in the absence of any original account by Ballin himself,
-it may be permitted to give an outline of its contents below.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Ernest opened the conversation by saying that for a long time back
-he had desired to discuss the political situation simply in his capacity
-as a private person, and that he felt qualified to do so because of his
-intimate acquaintance with some of the leading personages and with
-politics in general. He would like to contribute his share towards the
-prevention of a<a name="page_139" id="page_139"></a> dangerous development of the existing rivalry. The King
-felt very keenly that the rapid increase of the German naval forces
-constituted a menace to Britain’s maritime position. He was convinced,
-however, that his nephew would never provoke a wanton conflict, and
-that, in his heart of hearts, he loathed the horrors of war. Although,
-therefore, during his&mdash;the King’s&mdash;lifetime the danger of an
-Anglo-German war was remote, it was nevertheless necessary that, when
-his son succeeded him, the latter should find Britain’s maritime
-position so strong that the Kaiser’s successor should be unable to
-assail it.</p>
-
-<p>When Ballin interposed at this stage that the British navy, because of
-its unchallenged superiority in numbers, need not be afraid of the newly
-created naval power of Germany, Sir Ernest replied that it was well
-known to British naval experts that the increase of the German navy was
-considerably greater than the official statements made in the Reichstag
-would let it appear. Undoubtedly the British navy would always preserve
-its superiority, not only numerically, but also technically with regard
-to material, construction, and armaments. Nevertheless, the advantages
-possessed by the German system of manning the ships and the great
-efficiency of German naval officers justified an apprehension lest the
-German superiority in the human factor might outweigh the British
-superiority in tonnage. The Boer war had taught England how difficult it
-was to conquer a high-spirited, though numerically weak enemy. He said
-that fear of the German danger formed the driving power of the whole
-policy of the Entente, and that this policy was only meant to guard
-against that menace. Therefore Russia had been advised at the Reval
-meeting to forgo the enlargement of her navy, and to concentrate all her
-energies on her army.</p>
-
-<p><a name="page_140" id="page_140"></a>Upon Sir Ernest’s intimation that at some date Britain, together with
-France and Russia, might inquire of Germany when she intended to put a
-stop to her naval armaments, Ballin replied that his friend, if he was
-anxious to render a really valuable service to Britain and to the cause
-of peace, could do no better than make it perfectly plain that such an
-inquiry would mean war. Germany would resist with her whole strength any
-such attempt which unmistakably suggested the methods employed at
-Fashoda.</p>
-
-<p>During the progress of the interview Sir Ernest&mdash;who showed that he
-possessed excellent information concerning Germany’s finances&mdash;observed
-that the state of the same would render it very difficult for her to
-make war. In that connexion he pointed out the intimate bearing of
-international finance on political relations, and he emphasized how much
-the borrowing countries were dependent on the lending ones. Still, even
-the creditor nations would sometimes be forced into an uncomfortable
-position, as was, for instance, the case with Great Britain after the
-United States had passed on to her the greater part of the Japanese
-debt. In Japan the disproportion between military burdens and economic
-strength was becoming more and more pronounced, and if the country were
-faced with the alternative of choosing between the total financial
-exhaustion of the people and a stoppage of the payment of interest, it
-would prefer to take the latter course.</p>
-
-<p>In London Ballin was present at the Constitutional Club when a Member of
-Parliament made a speech in which he stated, with the general approval
-of his audience, that the position of Britain was not really so good as
-the policy pursued by the Entente might lead one to believe. The
-national balance-sheet had been much more satisfactory during the reign
-of Queen Victoria; the items now appearing on the credit side being
-partly<a name="page_141" id="page_141"></a> bad debts incurred by Spaniards, Portuguese, and Japanese, for
-whose political good behaviour Britain paid far too high a price, and
-one should not allow oneself to be misled as to the value of these
-ententes by balance-sheets which were purposely kept vague.</p>
-
-<p>Geheimrat Hammann told Ballin by letter that Prince Bülow, the Imperial
-Chancellor, and Herr v. Schön, the Foreign Secretary, were very grateful
-to him for his information, and that in the opinion of both gentlemen
-his reply to the suggestion concerning the stoppage of naval armaments
-was “as commendable as it was correct.†Meanwhile the Kaiser had also
-supplied the Chancellor with a general résumé of Ballin’s report to him.</p>
-
-<p>Ballin’s visit gave rise to an exchange of letters which it may not be
-inappropriate to reproduce in this place. By way of explanation, it
-should first be said that the Sandjak Railway project, to which
-reference is made in Ballin’s letter, had greatly agitated public
-opinion all over Europe during the spring of 1908. In February, Count
-Aehrenthal, the Austrian Foreign Minister, at a committee meeting of the
-delegations, had announced the Government’s intention of constructing a
-railway line connecting the Bosnian system with the town of Mitrovitza
-in the Sandjak (or province) of Novi Bazar. This announcement led to a
-violent outburst of the Russian Press, which described this project as a
-political <i>démarche</i> on the part of Austria in the Balkans and as an
-interference with the Macedonian reforms aimed at by the Powers. In
-Austria it was thought that Germany would support her ally as a matter
-of course, and Prince Bülow, in an interview given to a journalist,
-tried to pacify the <i>Novoie Vremia</i>. He declared that the Russian papers
-were absolutely mistaken when they alleged that the project was inspired
-from Berlin, and he stated that Austria,<a name="page_142" id="page_142"></a> like her German ally, pursued
-none but commercial aims in the Balkans.</p>
-
-<p>These remarks will be a sufficient explanation of the allusions
-contained in Ballin’s letter of July 13th, 1908, which, after an
-expression of thanks for the hospitality extended to him, reads as
-follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“By the way, the views I expressed to you on the matter of the
-Sandjak Railway are now completely borne out by the facts. Both the
-Kaiser and, later, Prince Bülow have given me positive assurances
-that the German Government was just as much taken by surprise on
-hearing of this Austrian project as were the London and Petrograd
-Cabinets.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope that our respective monarchs may soon meet now. There is
-nothing that we on our side would welcome more heartily than the
-establishment and the maintenance of the most friendly and most
-cordial relations between the two sovereigns and their peoples. The
-Kaiser will not return home from his Northern cruise and from his
-visit to the Swedish Royal Court until the middle of August, but I
-think it is probable that the two monarchs may meet when King
-Edward returns from Marienbad, and that their Majesties will then
-fix the date for the official return visit to Berlin. I sincerely
-trust that this Berlin visit will be of the utmost benefit to both
-countries.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>Sir Ernest Cassel replied:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“I also feel that the meeting of their Majesties must produce a
-great deal of good, and, as I now hear, it will after all be
-possible to arrange for this meeting to take place on the outward
-journey of the King. I am still as convinced as ever that our side
-is animated by the same friendly sentiments as yours.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>The meeting between the Kaiser and King Edward which was suggested in
-these letters actually took place on August 11th at Friedrichshof
-Castle, when the King<a name="page_143" id="page_143"></a> was on his way to Ischl, and it was accorded a
-friendly reception in the German Press. It was followed up by an
-exchange of equally friendly manifestations on the part of the peoples
-of both countries. Mr. Lloyd George, then Chancellor of the Exchequer,
-went to Germany in August, 1908, to study the German system of workmen’s
-insurance against disability and old age, and British workmen came to
-visit German trade unions, and to gather information about German
-industrial conditions. Official Britain also pronounced herself in
-favour of an understanding between the two countries which Mr. Lloyd
-George described as the only means of relieving the European tension,
-and Mr. Churchill professed similar sentiments.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly afterwards, however, at the end of October, an event took place
-which severely compromised the Kaiser’s policy, viz. the incident of the
-<i>Daily Telegraph</i> interview. In this the Kaiser, amongst other matters,
-bitterly complained that his friendship for England received such scant
-acknowledgment. As a proof of the friendly sentiments by which his
-actions were guided he stated that he, during the Boer war, had refused
-the humiliating suggestion put forward by France and Russia that the
-three Powers conjointly should compel Britain to put a stop to the war;
-that he had communicated this refusal to King Edward, and that he
-previously had presented Queen Victoria with a plan of campaign mapped
-out by himself, to which the one actually pursued by Britain bore a
-striking resemblance. With regard to Germany’s naval programme, he
-emphasized that his country needed a big fleet in order to command
-attention when the question of the future of the Pacific was discussed.
-Finally, with regard to Anglo-German relations, the Kaiser said that the
-middle and lower classes in Germany did not entertain very friendly
-feelings towards England.<a name="page_144" id="page_144"></a></p>
-
-<p>The effect which this interview produced all over Germany was one of
-profound consternation. Its publication led to the well-known
-discussions in the Reichstag in November, 1908, during which the Kaiser,
-to the great dismay of the nation, was staying at Donaueschingen with
-Prince Fürstenberg, where he was hunting. In England, and abroad
-generally, people regarded this interview as proving a great want of
-consistency in the conduct of Germany’s foreign policy, and this
-impression was by no means changed when it became known that its
-publication was only due to an unfortunate oversight. The Kaiser had
-sent the account of it, as he was bound to do by the Constitution, to
-Prince Bülow, who was then staying at Norderney. Bülow, however, did not
-read it himself, but passed it on to the Berlin Foreign Office to be
-examined. There, indeed, an examination took place, but only with a view
-to finding out whether it contained any errors of fact, and when this
-was proved not to be the case, it was marked to that effect, passed the
-various ministries without any further examination, and was published.
-This unfortunate chain of accidents did not, however, alter the fact
-that the Kaiser ought to have been aware of the great political
-importance of his utterances. It has always been a chief fault of his to
-speak out too impulsively when it would have been politically more
-expedient to be less communicative. Nor can the entourage of the
-sovereign be excused for not drawing his and the Chancellor’s attention
-to the great political significance of his utterances. The Chancellor
-himself and the Foreign Office, profiting from their previous
-experiences with the Kaiser and his appearances in public, ought to have
-used a great deal more circumspection, and it would have been well if
-the permanent officials in the Foreign Office had shown rather more
-political insight.<a name="page_145" id="page_145"></a></p>
-
-<p>The endeavours of the official circles to remove the tension existing
-between the two countries were not affected by the incident. On February
-9th, 1909, King Edward and his Queen paid their visit to Berlin, thus
-bringing about the event which Ballin in his letter of July 13th, 1908,
-had described as so very desirable. To appreciate the importance of this
-strictly official visit, we must bear in mind the fact that it did not
-take place until the ninth year of the reign of King Edward. This long
-postponement was no doubt due to a large extent to the estrangement
-between uncle and nephew, and this, in its turn, had its origin in the
-natural dislike which the Kaiser felt for his uncle’s mode of conducting
-his private life while still Prince of Wales. It would have been
-preferable, however, to relegate such personal likes and dislikes to the
-background where politics or business were concerned. British official
-comments emphatically underlined the significance of the visit, and the
-German Press followed suit, although voices were not wanting to warn
-against any over-estimation of such acts of courtesy. The reply given in
-the Reichstag by Herr v. Schön, the Foreign Secretary, to a question as
-to whether any suggestions had been put forward by Great Britain with
-respect to a reduction of naval armaments was very cool in its tone. His
-statement amounted to this: that no formal proposal for an understanding
-which might have served as a basis for negotiations had been received,
-probably for the reason that it was not customary among friendly Powers
-to put forward any proposals of which it was doubtful to say whether
-they would be entertained.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of this cold douche and in spite of other obstacles, the
-promoters of an understanding, Ballin and Sir Ernest Cassel, did not
-cease their efforts in that direction. In July, 1909, Ballin paid a
-second visit to Sir Ernest, during which the political discussions were<a name="page_146" id="page_146"></a>
-continued. On these latter he reported to the Kaiser as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“My friend to whom I had intimated in a private letter written
-about a week earlier that it was my intention to visit him&mdash;at the
-same time hinting that, for my personal information, I should like
-very much to take up the threads of the conversation we had had a
-twelvemonth ago on the subject of the question of the navy&mdash;had
-evidently used the interval to supply himself at the proper
-quarters with authoritative information about this matter. During
-the whole of our long talk he spoke with extraordinary assurance,
-and every word seemed to be thought out beforehand.</p>
-
-<p>“At the commencement of our conversation I said to my friend that
-in view of the great excitement which reigned in England on account
-of the German naval armaments, and which was assuming a decidedly
-anti-German character, he would quite understand that I should
-desire to take up once more the interesting discussions which we
-had had on the same subject a year ago. I pointed out that this
-excitement&mdash;spread as it was by an unscrupulous press and fostered
-by foolish politicians&mdash;was apt to produce results altogether
-different from those which the Government might perhaps consider it
-desirable to bring about within the scope of its programme. I
-emphasized the fact that, of course, I was merely speaking as a
-private citizen, reading with interest the English papers and the
-letters of his English friends, so that all my knowledge of the
-subject was derived from private sources.</p>
-
-<p>“A year ago, I said, my friend, in the clear and concise manner
-that distinguished him, had explained to me the need for an
-understanding between Germany and Britain governing the future
-development of their naval forces, at the same time requesting me
-to exert myself in that sense. This suggestion of his had not been
-made in vain. The fact that I had been successful in establishing
-complete concord amongst Germans, British, French, Italians,
-Austrians, and a whole series of small nations on questions
-affecting their highly important shipping interests, and in
-replacing an<a name="page_147" id="page_147"></a> unbridled and economically disastrous competition by
-friendly agreements to the benefit of each partner, was bound to
-make me sympathize with any measures that it was possible to take
-in order to bring about a similar result between the Governments if
-only they were met in the right spirit. I, therefore, had made up
-my mind to submit such a plan to our Government, but before doing
-so, it would be necessary for me to know whether Britain still
-adhered to the principles which my friend had enunciated to me at
-our previous meeting.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir Ernest’s reply was that as far as Britain was concerned a
-great change had taken place during the interval, and that he was
-no longer able to endorse the views he had held at that time. The
-necessity for his country to maintain her supremacy on the sea at
-all hazards, and subject to no engagements of any kind, was now
-more clearly recognized than it had been a year ago. A one-sided
-understanding between Germany and Britain could no longer be
-thought of, since both Austria and France had now voted large sums
-for the enlargement of their respective navies. Austria would
-certainly be found on the German side, but France could by no means
-be said to be an asset on which it would be safe for Britain to
-rely, to say nothing about the two ‘dark horses,’ Russia and Italy.
-If Britain, in view of these uncertainties, were to permit Germany
-to nail her down to a fixed programme, she would dwindle down to a
-fifth-rate Power. Germany possessed her overwhelmingly large army
-with which she could keep in check Austria, Italy, Russia, and
-France, but Britain had nothing but her navy to guarantee her
-existence as a world power and to safeguard the roads that linked
-her to her colonies. For many decades Britain had enjoyed
-opportunities for accumulating big fortunes. These times, however,
-had now passed. During the reign of the Emperor William II, who,
-with a consistency which it would be difficult to praise too
-highly, had made his country a commercial power of world-wide
-importance, and who had raised German industrial enterprise and
-German merchant shipping to a condition of undreamt-of prosperity,
-Britain sustained immense losses in her overseas commerce. British
-trade was declining, and there was no doubt<a name="page_148" id="page_148"></a> but that in the long
-run Britain would be compelled to abandon her principles of Free
-Trade.</p>
-
-<p>“The question of the Austrian naval armaments appeared to trouble
-my friend more than anything, and this circumstance, combined with
-the doubtful attitude of Russia and the uncertainty of the
-situation in France, was evidently a source of great anxiety to the
-King. My friend remarked in this connexion that in his opinion the
-moment chosen for the conclusion of an understanding was very
-favourable to German but very unfavourable to British interests. It
-was useless to talk of an agreement so long as an element of mutual
-fear had to be reckoned with. At present this fear manifested
-itself in Britain in a manner which was most inopportune, so that
-it was bound to make the German public believe that Britain would
-be ready to come to an understanding even if the terms of it were
-detrimental to her own interests. Britain had got behindhand both
-with her commerce and with her naval programme. To fight her
-competitors in the world’s trade with a fair chance of success was
-impossible for more reasons than one, but the elimination of the
-disadvantage from which she suffered with respect to her naval
-armaments was merely a question of money. The funds that were
-required to bring the British Navy up to the necessities of the
-international situation would certainly be found, because they had
-to be found.</p>
-
-<p>“I told my friend that I was astonished to hear how completely his
-views had changed on these matters. Not what he did say, but what
-he had left unsaid, made me suspect that official circles in
-England&mdash;partly, perhaps, through the fault of the German
-Government&mdash;had arrived at the conclusion that the latter would
-refrain from a further strengthening of the navy after the existing
-naval programme had been carried out, and that it would merely
-content itself with the gradual replacement of the units as they
-became obsolete. Such a proceeding could be justified only if the
-same plan were adopted by Britain also. If, however, his remarks
-implied that in the opinion of his Government the moment had now
-arrived for altering the ratio of naval strength existing between
-both countries by a comprehensive programme of new building, it
-would soon become evident<a name="page_149" id="page_149"></a> that there were some flaws in that
-calculation. In view of any such intentions it was my
-opinion&mdash;which, however, was quite personal and unofficial&mdash;that
-Germany would have to decide upon such an increase of her navy as
-would enable her to carry on a war of defence with the certainty of
-success. If, therefore, Britain meant to go on building warships on
-a large scale, this would merely lead to an aimless naval race
-between the two countries.</p>
-
-<p>“These remarks of mine concluded our first conversation, and I
-accepted my friend’s invitation to dine with him that evening in
-company with some prominent men of his acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p>“In the evening I was greatly surprised to see that I was the only
-guest present. My friend told me that, in order to be alone with
-me, he had cancelled his invitations to the other gentlemen,
-stating that he did not yet feel well enough to see them. It was
-obvious to me that he had, meanwhile, reported on the outcome of
-our conversation, and that the atmosphere had changed. This change
-had without doubt been brought about by my remarks concerning the
-necessity for a further enlargement of the German Navy, if the
-action of Britain compelled our Government to take such a course.
-The long discussions that followed proved that this view of mine
-was correct in every detail.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir Ernest explained that the Liberal Cabinet had acted penny wise
-and pound foolish in dealing with the question of the navy. This
-was the conviction of the great majority of the British people, and
-this action had caused the feelings of apprehension and of
-hostility animating them. The Liberal Government had thus made a
-serious blunder, and had, in his opinion, prepared its own doom by
-doing so. He thought the days of the Liberal party were numbered,
-and another party would soon be in office. Anti-German feeling
-would be non-existent to-day if the Liberal cabinet had not,
-because of its preoccupation with questions of social policy,
-neglected the navy. The whole matter was further aggravated by
-other questions of a political kind. France, on account of the
-French national character, had always been a doubtful asset to
-Britain, and, considering the state of her internal politics, she
-was so now more than<a name="page_150" id="page_150"></a> ever. Germany, on the other hand, possessed a
-great advantage in that her military preponderance enabled her to
-rely with absolute certainty on her Austrian ally. He would say
-nothing about Russia, because he had never regarded the
-Anglo-Russian <i>rapprochement</i> as politically expedient.</p>
-
-<p>“If it was admitted&mdash;and he thought this admission was implied by
-my remarks&mdash;that her colonial and her commercial interests made it
-imperative for Britain to maintain an unchallenged supremacy on the
-seas, he felt certain that some reasonable men would, after all, be
-able to discover a formula which would make an understanding
-between both countries possible. A great difficulty, however, was
-presented by my often reiterated demand that Britain must not
-abandon her principles of Free Trade. In questions such as these,
-she could, indeed, speak for herself, but not for her great
-colonies. History had proved that she lost her American colonies as
-soon as she tried to foist her own commercial policy on the
-colonists. He had no doubt that Germany, despite the disagreeable
-surprises which she had experienced when adjusting the system of
-her Imperial finances, possessed sufficient wealth to go on
-increasing her navy in the same proportion as Britain. The great
-mistake committed by the Liberal cabinet and by the other advisers
-of the King had been their assumption that financial considerations
-would prevent Germany from carrying out her naval programme in its
-entirety. German prosperity had grown far more rapidly, he thought,
-than even the German Government and German financial experts had
-believed to be possible. Signs of it could be noticed wherever one
-went, and one would turn round in astonishment if, during the
-season, one heard the tourists in Italy or in Egypt talk in any
-language but German. He, at any rate, felt certain of Germany’s
-ability to keep pace with Britain in the naval race, even if that
-pace was very greatly accelerated.</p>
-
-<p>“Reasons of internal policy had convinced him that Britain would
-not in any case abandon her Free Trade principles within a
-measurable period of time, and as it was not intended to conclude a
-perpetual agreement, but only one for a limited number of years, he
-thought it was not<a name="page_151" id="page_151"></a> at all necessary that Germany should insist
-upon her demand in connexion with this question. As the colonies
-enjoyed complete independence in these as in other matters, the
-difficulties would be insurmountable. In return for such a
-concession on Germany’s part, Britain would doubtless be willing to
-meet the views of the German Government in other respects. For
-these reasons he would be quite ready to change the opinion he had
-expressed in the morning, and to agree that it could produce
-nothing but good if either side were to appoint some moderate men
-for the purpose of discussing the whole question. Such a meeting
-would have to be kept absolutely secret, and both parties should
-agree that there should be no victor and no vanquished if and when
-an agreement was concluded. This condition would have to be a <i>sine
-qua non</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“I promised Sir Ernest that I would use my best endeavours to this
-end when an opportunity should present itself, and we arranged to
-have another meeting in the near future.</p>
-
-<p>“There is no doubt but that my friend is an extremely
-well-qualified negotiator. I do not recollect that during my long
-experience, extending over many years, I have ever come across a
-man who could discuss matters for hours at a time with so much
-self-reliance, deliberation, and fixity of purpose.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>This report was passed on by the Kaiser to Herr v. Tirpitz, the
-Secretary for the Navy, who not only expressed his approval of the
-project, but also recommended that the Imperial Chancellor, Herr v.
-Bethmann-Hollweg, who had succeeded Prince Bülow on July 14th should be
-kept informed of all that was done to bring about an understanding. The
-Chancellor, accordingly, was presented by the Kaiser himself with a copy
-of Ballin’s report. This was the correct thing to do, as it avoided a
-<i>faux pas</i> such as, during the chancellorship of Prince Bülow, had
-sometimes been made. Future developments, however, proved that this step
-deprived the whole action of its spontaneity, and its immediate<a name="page_152" id="page_152"></a> effect
-was that the Secretary for the Navy was relieved of all responsibility
-in the matter. Ballin, in later days, summed up his views on this way of
-dealing with the subject by saying that if Herr v. Tirpitz had been left
-a free hand in the whole matter&mdash;if, for instance, <i>he</i> had conducted it
-as Imperial Chancellor&mdash;it would hardly have turned out a failure. The
-main object of the negotiations that Ballin had carried on was to ensure
-that a number of “experts and men of moderate views,†i.e. naval experts
-in the first instance, should join in conference in order to discuss
-how, without injury to their relative fighting efficiency, both
-countries could bring about a reduction of their naval armaments. This
-plan was so simple and so obviously right that, had it been carried out
-as a preliminary to something else, and had the attention of the experts
-been drawn to the enormous political importance of their decision,
-success would have been assured. The procedure, however, which the
-Chancellor adopted compelled him to combat the active opposition of the
-various departments involved even before a meeting of the naval experts
-could be arranged for, and this was a task which far exceeded the
-strength of Herr v. Bethmann-Hollweg, the most irresolute of all German
-chancellors, the man to whom Fate afterwards entrusted the most
-momentous decision which any German statesman has ever had to make.</p>
-
-<p>An interview between Ballin and the Chancellor was followed up, with the
-consent of the latter, by an exchange of telegrams between Ballin and
-Sir Ernest Cassel. From these it became clear that official circles in
-London were favourably disposed towards the opening of discussions in
-accordance with the terms laid down in Ballin’s report, and Ballin
-approached the Chancellor with the request to let him know whether he
-should continue to work on the same lines as before,<a name="page_153" id="page_153"></a> or whether the
-Chancellor would prefer a different method, by which he understood
-direct official negotiations. In a telegram to the Chancellor he
-explained that in his opinion Sir Ernest’s reference to the friendly
-disposition of official London implied that he was authorized to arrange
-the details about the intended meeting of experts. If, therefore, he
-went to England again, he would have to know what were the views and
-intentions of the Chancellor. The reply of the latter, dated August
-11th, was as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“Many thanks for your welcome telegram, which has found my closest
-attention. I shall send you further details as soon as I have
-interviewed the gentlemen concerned, which I intend to do to-morrow
-and during the next few days.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>This reply clearly showed that the Chancellor had made up his mind to
-deal with the matter along official lines and in conformity with his own
-ideas.</p>
-
-<p>The subsequent course of events is indicated by a letter of the
-Chancellor to Ballin, dated August 21st, in which he says:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“I have to-day taken the official steps of which I told you. As Sir
-Ernest Goschen<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> and I have agreed to observe absolute secrecy in
-this matter, and as a statement of your friend to the British
-Government to the effect that I had undertaken an official
-<i>démarche</i>, might possibly be regarded as an indiscretion, I
-suggest that if you inform your friend at all, you should word your
-reply in such a way that this danger need not be feared.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>This letter shows, and later events have also proved, that the guiding
-spirits of Germany’s political destiny were unable to meet on such terms
-as expediency would<a name="page_154" id="page_154"></a> dictate the overtures of a man like Sir Ernest
-Cassel, whose status and whose good intentions were beyond criticism.
-If, on receipt of this news, Sir Ernest, who had been working so hard
-for an understanding, was not entirely discouraged, it was no doubt due
-to the diplomatic skill with which Ballin&mdash;who was a master of this art,
-as of so many others&mdash;interpreted the Chancellor’s rebuff when
-communicating it to his friend.</p>
-
-<p>That the latter’s account of British feeling towards Germany was
-perfectly unbiased, may also be inferred from another piece of news
-which reached Ballin about the same time from a British source, and
-which reads as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“My only object in writing just now is to say that if there is any
-feeling in high quarters in your country favourable to coming to an
-understanding with this country concerning naval matters, I am
-quite satisfied from the inquiries I have made that the present
-would be an opportune time for approaching this question, and that
-the present Government of this country would be found entirely
-favourable to coming to such an arrangement.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>However, by that time, the matter was in the hands of the various
-departments, and they proved unable to make a success of it. Why they
-failed, and why the step which Herr v. Bethmann had taken with the
-British Ambassador produced no results, are questions which can only be
-answered by reference to the files of the Foreign Office.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Asquith, in a speech dealing with the British naval programme
-delivered on July 14th, 1910, explained why no understanding with
-Germany had been arrived at.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“The German Government told us&mdash;I cannot complain, and I have no
-answer to make&mdash;that their procedure in this<a name="page_155" id="page_155"></a> matter is governed by
-an Act of the Reichstag under which the programme automatically
-proceeds year by year. That is to say, after the year 1911-12, the
-last year in which under that law four Dreadnoughts are
-constructed, the rate of construction drops in the two succeeding
-years to two each year, so that we are now, we may hope, at the
-very crest of the wave. If it were possible, even now, by
-arrangement to reduce the rate of construction no one would be more
-delighted than his Majesty’s Government. We have approached the
-German Government on the subject. They have found themselves unable
-to do anything; they cannot do it without an Act of the Reichstag,
-repealing their Navy Law. They tell us&mdash;and no doubt with great
-truth&mdash;they would not have the support of public opinion in Germany
-to a modified programme.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>As these statements have never been contradicted, it must be assumed
-that the departments concerned sheltered themselves behind the formal
-objection that, owing to public feeling, a repeal or a modification of
-the Navy Law was out of the question. If this assumption is correct, it
-is evident that no touch of political genius was revealed in the
-treatment of this important question. Even the hope that the “crest of
-the wave†had been reached turned out a disappointment, as was proved by
-the introduction of the new Navy Bill in 1912.</p>
-
-<p>The objections which Herr v. Bethmann, on March 30th, 1911, raised to an
-international limitation of armaments can likewise only be described as
-formal ones. He said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“If it is the intention of the Powers to come to an understanding
-with regard to general international armaments, they must first of
-all agree upon a formula defining the relative position of each....
-Practically, it might be said, such an order of precedence has
-already been established by Great Britain’s claim that,
-notwithstanding her anxiety<a name="page_156" id="page_156"></a> to effect a reduction of her
-expenditure on armaments, and notwithstanding her readiness to
-submit any disputes to arbitration, her navy must under all
-circumstances be equal&mdash;or even superior&mdash;to any possible
-combination. Great Britain is perfectly justified in making this
-claim, and in conformity with the views I hold on the disarmament
-problem, I am the last person in the world to question her right to
-do so. But it is quite a different matter to use such a claim as
-the basis of an agreement which is to receive the peaceful consent
-of the other Powers. What would happen if the latter raised any
-counter-claims of their own, or if they were dissatisfied with the
-percentage allotted to them? The mere suggestion of questions such
-as these is sufficient to make us realize what would happen if an
-international congress&mdash;because one restricted to the European
-Powers alone could not be comprehensive enough&mdash;had to adjudicate
-on such claims.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>If this explanation is intended to be a reply to such statements from
-the British side as the one just quoted from Mr. Asquith, the fact had
-been disregarded that the most serious problem under discussion&mdash;viz.
-the Anglo-German rivalry&mdash;could quite well be solved without convening
-an “international congress.â€</p>
-
-<p>As early as December 10th, 1910, Herr v. Bethmann, in a speech delivered
-before the Reichstag, had enlarged on this same subject from the
-political point of view:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“As to the relations between ourselves and Great Britain, and as to
-the alleged negotiations with the latter country concerning a
-mutual curtailment of naval armaments, I am bound to say that the
-British Government, as everybody knows, has more than once
-expressed its conviction that the conclusion of an agreement fixing
-the naval strengths of the various Powers would conduce to an
-important improvement of international relations.... We, too, share
-Great Britain’s desire to eliminate the question of naval
-competition, but during the informal <i>pourparlers</i> which have taken
-place from time to time, and which have been<a name="page_157" id="page_157"></a> conducted in a spirit
-of mutual friendship, we have always given prominence to our
-conviction that a frank discussion of the economic and political
-spheres of interest to be followed up by a mutual understanding on
-these points would constitute the safest way of destroying the
-feeling of distrust which is engendered by the question of the
-respective strengths of the military and naval forces maintained by
-each country.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>The speech which Sir Edward Grey delivered in the House of Commons on
-March 14th, 1911, with special reference to this speech of Herr v.
-Bethmann shows unmistakably that the remarks of the latter did not
-reassure Great Britain with respect to the only point at issue in which
-she was interested, viz. the limitation of the German naval programme.
-Britain, according to Sir Edward, did not desire that her relations with
-any Power should be of such a nature as to impede the simultaneous
-existence of cordial relations with Germany. An Anglo-German agreement
-had been specially suggested. This suggestion required some careful
-thinking over. If he were to hold out any hope that Germany, in
-compliance with the terms of some such agreement would be willing to
-cancel or to modify her naval programme, he would be contradicted at
-once. Only within the limits of this programme would it be possible to
-come to some understanding between the two Governments. It might, for
-instance, be agreed to spread the expenditure voted for the navy over a
-longer term of years, or to arrange that the present German programme
-should not be increased in future. Matters such as these could form the
-subjects for discussion between the two Governments, and it would be
-desirable from every point of view that an understanding should be
-arrived at. To this speech the <i>North German Gazette</i> replied that
-Germany would be quite prepared to fall in with Sir Edward’s suggestions
-if agreements such as those<a name="page_158" id="page_158"></a> outlined by him could in any way allay the
-feeling of distrust governing public opinion in Great Britain. If from
-this semi-official pronouncement it may be inferred that Herr v.
-Bethmann on his part was favourably disposed towards an agreement, the
-question arises: “Why was it not concluded?â€</p>
-
-<p>In order to understand why the British Cabinet attached so much value to
-the settlement of the Anglo-German naval questions and to the
-pacification of public opinion, it must be remembered that the Liberal
-Cabinet, owing to its hostile attitude towards the House of Lords, had
-drifted into a violent conflict with the Conservative party, and that
-the latter, in its turn, during the election campaign had accused the
-Cabinet of having neglected the navy, driving home its arguments by
-constantly pointing out the “German danger.†Moreover, King Edward had
-died in the meantime (May 6th, 1910), and of his son and successor it
-was said that he, at the time of his accession to the throne, was no
-longer a man of unbiased sentiment, that he was very anti-German, and
-that he was under the influence of a small group of Conservative
-extremists.</p>
-
-<p>It may not be out of place to reproduce in this connexion the text of
-two accounts dealing with the situation in England which Ballin wrote in
-the spring and in the summer of 1910 respectively, when he was staying
-in London, and which he submitted to the Kaiser for his information.</p>
-
-<p>In the early part of 1910 he wrote:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“If I were to say that London was completely dominated by the
-election campaign, this would be a very mild way of characterizing
-the situation as it is. The whole population has been seized with a
-fit of madness. The City men who, until quite recently, had
-preserved an admirable calm, have now lost their heads altogether,
-and are the most ardent advocates of Tariff Reform. Every victory
-of<a name="page_159" id="page_159"></a> a Conservative candidate is cheered by them to the echo. Under
-these circumstances, even in the City, the fear of war has grown.
-If we ask ourselves what it is that has brought about such an
-extraordinary change in the attitude of commonsense business
-people, we find that there are several reasons for it, viz. the
-general slump in business; the unfortunate policy cf Lloyd George
-with regard to the Irish Nationalists; the advances he made to the
-Labour Party, and the effects of his social legislation which are
-now felt with increasing seriousness.</p>
-
-<p>“Business is bad in England, and up to now very little has been
-seen of the improvement which is so marked in Germany. It is but
-natural that, in view of the extended trade depression which has so
-far lasted more than two years, a people endowed with such business
-instincts as the British should feel favourably disposed towards a
-change of the country’s commercial policy. This disposition is
-further strengthened by the constant reiteration of the promise
-that it will be possible to provide the money needed for new
-warship construction and for the newly inaugurated social policy by
-means of the duties which the foreigner will be made to pay.</p>
-
-<p>“It seems pretty certain that the present Government, in spite of
-the great election successes gained by the Conservative party, will
-still retain a slight majority if it can rely on the Nationalist
-vote. That is what I had always predicted. But the majority on
-which the Liberal Cabinet depends will doubtless be a very
-uncomfortable one to work with, and the opinion is general that it
-will hardly take more than a twelvemonth before another dissolution
-of Parliament will be necessary. It is said that the elections that
-will then be held will smash up the Liberal party altogether, but I
-consider this is an exaggeration. In this country everything
-depends on the state of business. If, in the course of the year,
-trade prospects brighten up again, and if everything becomes normal
-once more, the Tariff Reformers in the City will turn Free Traders
-again and will take great care not to kill the goose that lays the
-golden eggs. I am quite convinced that everything hangs on the
-future development of trade and traffic. To-day, as I have<a name="page_160" id="page_160"></a> said
-before, Tariff Reform and a Zollverein with the Colonies are the
-catchwords that are on everybody’s lips, and the anti-German
-feeling is so strong that it is scarcely possible to discuss
-matters with one’s oldest friends, because the people over here
-have turned mad and talk of nothing but the next war and the
-protective policy of the near future. Large crowds are spending
-hours every night in the principal squares such as Trafalgar
-Square, where they have come to watch the announcements of the
-election results in the provinces. Their behaviour is exemplary. It
-is a curious thing that in this country the election game is spread
-over several weeks, in consequence of which the political
-excitement of the masses is raised to boiling-point. Within a few
-months’ time, I am sure, things will look entirely different
-again.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>From the second report, in the summer of 1910, the following is the
-salient extract:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“I am now returned from England, and it may not be out of place to
-report the impressions I received of the political and economic
-conditions over there.</p>
-
-<p>“My previous visit to London coincided with the big election
-campaign, and I have already described the fit of mad excitement
-which had taken possession of the people, and which was directed
-against Germany.</p>
-
-<p>“The situation has now undergone a complete change, which is
-noticeable everywhere and which is caused by the close of the
-election campaign, by the death of the King, and, finally, by the
-visit of the Kaiser on the occasion of the Royal funeral. Everyone
-whom I met in London&mdash;Liberals and Conservatives alike&mdash;spoke in
-terms of the highest praise of the Kaiser’s sympathetic attitude
-displayed during his stay in England, and which was all the more
-commendable as it was not denied that he had suffered many slights
-during the lifetime of his late uncle.</p>
-
-<p>“The attitude of the people towards the new monarch is one of
-reserve, but also&mdash;in conformity with the national character of the
-English&mdash;one of loyalty and good faith. The situation with regard
-to home politics is as difficult<a name="page_161" id="page_161"></a> now as it has been all along.
-Unless a compromise between the parties is arrived at new elections
-will be unavoidable in the spring or even before. I have met a
-great many persons of political experience who are of opinion that,
-even if a compromise is made, it will be necessary to submit such
-an arrangement to the decision of the electorate by an appeal to
-the country. It is difficult to predict the result of such new
-elections. The views held by large sections of the Press and of the
-public bear out the truth of the remarks in my previous letter when
-I emphasized the fact that the British are a nation of business men
-who act on the principle of ‘leave well alone,’ and who will refuse
-to have anything to do with Tariff Reform as soon as there is an
-improvement in trade.</p>
-
-<p>“Business has, indeed, improved in the meantime, but only very
-slightly, and much less than in Germany. This slight improvement,
-however, has not failed to give a fillip to the cause of Free Trade
-among the City men. If elections in the spring are regarded as
-likely, much will depend on the further development of trade. I
-must confess that I take a very pessimistic view as to the future
-of Great Britain in this respect. The British can really no longer
-compete with us, and if it were not for the large funds they have
-invested, and for the sums of money which reach the small
-mother-country from her great dominions, their saturated and
-conservative habits of life would soon make them a <i>quantité
-négligeable</i> as far as their competition with us in the world’s
-markets is concerned.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, their financial strength and their excellent system of
-foreign politics, in which they have now been trained for
-centuries, will always attract business to their country, the
-possession of which we shall always begrudge them (for is not envy
-one of the national characteristics of the German race?).â€</p></div>
-
-<p>Up to the summer of 1911 the feeling remained friendly. Early in July
-Ballin wrote:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“To-day the feeling, as far as the City is concerned, is thoroughly
-friendly towards Germany. The visit in the<a name="page_162" id="page_162"></a> spring of the Kaiser
-and the Kaiserin, on the occasion of the unveiling of the monument
-to Queen Victoria, has created a most sympathetic impression&mdash;an
-impression which has been strengthened by the participation of the
-Crown Prince and Princess in the Coronation festivities. At present
-the Kaiser is actually one of the most popular persons in England,
-and the suggestion of bringing about an Anglo-German understanding
-is meeting with a great deal of approval from all sections of the
-population.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>However, this readiness to come to an understanding received a setback
-during the course of the year, when it was adversely affected by the new
-developments in the Morocco affair and by the dispatch of the <i>Panther</i>
-to Agadir, which led to fresh complications with France, and later also
-with Great Britain. The grievances of the latter found expression in a
-sharply worded speech by Lloyd George in July, 1911, the main argument
-of which was that Great Britain, in questions affecting her vital
-interests, could not allow herself to be treated as though she were
-non-existent. In Germany this pronouncement led to violent attacks on
-the part of the Conservative opposition against Herr v. Bethmann and
-against England, and it was the latter against whom Herr v. Heydebrand
-directed his quotation from Schiller, to the effect that a nation which
-did not stake her everything on her honour was deserving only of
-contempt. It is also well known that the outcome of the whole affair, as
-well as its sequel, the Franco-German Congo agreement, produced much
-indignation in Germany, where it was felt that the material results
-obtained were hardly worth the great display of force, and that it was
-still less worth while to be drifted into a big war in consequence of
-this incident.</p>
-
-<p>The measure of the anxiety which was felt at that time in business and
-financial circles all over the world may be gauged by reading the
-following letter from Ballin<a name="page_163" id="page_163"></a> to the Secretary of State, Herr v.
-Kiderlen-Wächter, in which it is necessary to read between the lines
-here and there.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“Baron Leopold de Rothschild has just sent me a wire from London in
-which he says that, on the strength of information he has received
-from the Paris Rothschilds, people there are greatly disappointed
-to see that the German answer&mdash;the details of which are still
-unknown there&mdash;leaves some important questions still unsolved.
-Public sentiment in the French capital, he says, is beginning to
-get excited, and it would be to the interest of everybody to settle
-matters as speedily as possible.</p>
-
-<p>“I felt it my duty to draw your attention to this statement, and
-you may take it for what it is worth.</p>
-
-<p>“I need not tell your Excellency that people here and, I suppose,
-all over Germany, are watching the progress of events with growing
-anxiety. In this respect, therefore, the desires of the German
-people seem identical with those of the French.</p>
-
-<p>“It would also be presumptuous on my part to speak to your
-Excellency about the feeling in England and the British armaments,
-as the information you derive from your official sources is bound
-to be better still than that which I can obtain through my
-connexions.</p>
-
-<p>“With best wishes for a successful solution of this difficult and
-important problem, I have the honour to remain,</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-“Your Excellency’s most obedient servant,<br />
-(<i>Signed</i>) <span class="smcap">Ballin</span>.â€<br />
-</p></div>
-
-<p>A most interesting document, and one which casts a clear sidelight on
-the divergence of opinion held in Germany and Great Britain, and on the
-chances of arriving at an agreement, is an article which dates from the
-latter part of 1911.</p>
-
-<p>This article deals with the Anglo-German controversy and was published
-by the <i>Westminster Gazette</i>. It was sent to Ballin by an English friend
-with the remark that it presented a faithful picture of the views on<a name="page_164" id="page_164"></a>
-foreign affairs held by the great majority of British Liberals. Ballin
-forwarded it to Berlin for the Kaiser’s information, with a note saying
-that he had received it from one of the most level-headed Englishmen he
-had ever met. It was subsequently returned to him, with the addition of
-a number of marginal notes and a lengthy paragraph at its close, all
-written in the Kaiser’s own handwriting. The numerous underlinings, too,
-are the Kaiser’s own work. On account of its historical interest a
-facsimile reproduction of this article is inserted at the end of the
-book. The following is a translation of the Kaiser’s criticism at the
-conclusion of the article:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“Quite good, except for the ridiculous insinuation that we are
-aspiring after the hegemony in Central Europe. We simply <i>are</i>
-Central Europe, and it is quite natural that other and smaller
-nations should tend towards us and should be drawn into our sphere
-of action owing to the law of gravity, particularly so if they are
-of our own kin. To this the British object, because it absolutely
-knocks to pieces their theory of the Balance of Power, i.e. their
-desire to be able to play off one European Power against another at
-their own pleasure, and because it would lead to the establishment
-of a united Continent&mdash;a contingency which they want to prevent at
-all costs. Hence their lying assertion that we aim at a predominant
-position in Europe, while it is a fact that they claim such a
-position for themselves in world politics. We Hohenzollerns have
-never pursued such ambitious and such fantastic aims, and, God
-granting it, we shall never do so.</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-“(<i>Signed</i>) <span class="smcap">Wilhelm I.R.</span>â€<br />
-</p></div>
-
-<p>The year 1912 opened with several pronouncements of the British Press in
-favour of an Anglo-German understanding. It was even hinted that Britain
-would raise no objections to a possible extension of Germany’s colonial
-activities, or, as one paper put it, “to the foundation of a German
-African empire stretching from the<a name="page_165" id="page_165"></a> Atlantic to the Indian Ocean.â€
-Similar sentiments were expressed in a letter from Sir Ernest Cassel to
-Ballin, dated January 9th, 1912.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“Since writing to you last,†says Sir Ernest, “I have had the
-opportunity of a confidential chat with Mr. Winston Churchill. He
-is aware that the position which he has now occupied for some time
-ties him down to some special limitations which will not allow him
-to pay a visit of the kind you suggest so long as the situation
-remains what it is. Should the King go to Germany, and should he
-take Winston with him, he&mdash;Winston&mdash;would feel highly honoured if
-he were permitted to discuss the important questions that were
-demanding a solution. Such an opportunity would have to come about
-quite spontaneously, and Winston would have to secure the previous
-consent of the Prime Minister and of Sir Edward Grey.</p>
-
-<p>“Thus far Winston. His friendly sentiments towards Germany are
-known to you. I have been acquainted with him since he was quite a
-young man, and he has never made a secret of his admiration of the
-Kaiser and of the German people. He looks upon the estrangement
-existing between the two countries as senseless, and I am quite
-sure he would do anything in his power to establish friendly
-relations.</p>
-
-<p>“The real crux of the situation is that Great Britain regards the
-enormous increase of the German Navy as a grave menace to her vital
-interests. This conviction is a deep-rooted one, and there are no
-two opinions in London as to its significance.</p>
-
-<p>“If it were possible to do something which, without endangering the
-safety of Germany, would relieve Great Britain of this nightmare,
-it is my opinion that people over here would go very far to
-conciliate German aspirations.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>The striking fact that after a long interval, and in spite of the
-failure of the previous endeavours, a renewed attempt was made to arrive
-at a naval understanding, and that special pains were taken to ensure
-its success, may be due to various causes. For instance, the Morocco<a name="page_166" id="page_166"></a>
-incident of 1911 had shown how easily a series of comparatively
-unimportant events might lead within reach of a dangerous catastrophe,
-unless the atmosphere of general distrust could be removed, and it was
-felt in Great Britain that this distrust was largely the result of the
-constant and regular increase of Germany’s armaments. Moreover, it was
-known that a new Navy Bill was then forthcoming in Germany which, in its
-turn, would be bound to cause fresh alarm, and growing expenditure in
-Great Britain, and that the Liberal Cabinet would prefer to gain its
-laurels by bringing about a more peaceful frame of mind. Finally, Mr.
-Winston Churchill had been appointed First Lord of the Admiralty in
-October, 1911, and as he was known to be by no means anti-German, his
-entering upon office may have given rise to the hope that, while he was
-administering the affairs of the Navy, it would be possible to settle
-certain purely technical matters affecting his department, which could
-then furnish the conditions preliminary to an understanding with
-Germany. Ballin, at any rate, had cherished the hope&mdash;as is borne out by
-the letter quoted above&mdash;that Mr. Churchill could be induced to pay a
-visit to Germany, and that an opportunity might then be found to bring
-the naval experts of both countries face to face with each other. Ballin
-had always eagerly desired that such a meeting should take place,
-because his long experience in settling difficult business questions had
-taught him that there was no greater barrier between people, and
-certainly none that hampered their intellectual <i>rapprochement</i> to a
-larger extent, than the fact of their never having come into personal
-contact with one another, and of never having had a chance to actually
-familiarize themselves with the mentality and the whole personality of
-the man representing the other side. It might also be assumed that, once
-the two really responsible persons&mdash;Churchill<a name="page_167" id="page_167"></a> and Tirpitz&mdash;had met in
-conclave, the feeling of their mutual responsibility would be too strong
-to allow the negotiations to end in failure.</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately, such a meeting never took place; all that was achieved
-was a preliminary step, viz. the visit of Lord Haldane to Berlin.</p>
-
-<p>Owing to the lack of documentary evidence it is not possible to say who
-first suggested this visit, but it is clear that the suggestion&mdash;whoever
-may have been its author&mdash;was eagerly taken up by Sir Ernest Cassel and
-Ballin, and that it also met with a warm welcome on the part of Herr v.
-Bethmann. In reply to a telegram which Ballin, with the approval&mdash;if not
-at the actual desire&mdash;of the Chancellor, sent to his friend in London, a
-message reached him on February 2nd, 1912, when he was in Berlin engaged
-on these very matters. This reply, which originated with the Foreign
-Office, expressed the sender’s thanks for the invitation to attend a
-meeting of delegates in Berlin and his appreciation of the whole spirit
-which had prompted the German suggestion, and then went on to say that
-the new German Navy Bill would necessitate an immediate increase in the
-British naval estimates, because the latter had been framed on the
-supposition that the German programme would remain unaltered. If the
-British Government were compelled to find the means for such an
-increase, the suggested negotiations would be difficult, if not
-impossible. On the other hand, the German programme might perhaps be
-modified by spreading it out over a longer period of time or by some
-similar measure, so that a considerable increase of British naval
-construction in order to balance the German efforts could be avoided. In
-that case the British Government would be ready to proceed with the
-negotiations without loss of time, as it would be taken for granted that
-there was a fair prospect of the proposed discussions leading to a
-favourable<a name="page_168" id="page_168"></a> result. If this suggestion was acceptable to Germany, the
-British Government thought the next step should be a private&mdash;and not an
-official&mdash;visit of a British Cabinet Minister to Berlin.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps it is now permissible to give the text of some documents without
-any further comment, as these latter speak for themselves. The first is
-a letter of the Chancellor addressed to Ballin, and reads as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="r">
-“<span class="smcap">Berlin.</span> <i>Febr. 4th, 1912.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="nind">
-“<span class="smcap">Dear Mr. Ballin</span>,&mdash;<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“We are still busy wording the text of our reply, and I shall not
-be able to see you at 11 o’clock. As soon as the text is settled, I
-shall submit it to His Majesty for his approval. Under these
-circumstances I think it is doubtful whether we ought to adhere to
-the time fixed for our appointment. I rather fancy that I cannot
-tell you anything definite before 12 or 1 o’clock, and I shall ring
-you up about that time. You have already made such great sacrifices
-in the interest of our cause that I hope you will kindly accept
-this alteration as well.</p>
-
-<p>“In great haste.</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-“(<i>Signed</i>) <span class="smcap">Bethmann-Hollweg</span>.â€<br />
-</p></div>
-
-<p>The next document is a letter of Ballin to Sir Ernest Cassel, intended
-to explain the situation.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“The demand raised by your official telegram rather complicates
-matters. The fact is that the Bill as it stands now only asks for
-half as much as was contained in the original draft. This reduced
-demand is much less than the nation and the Reichstag had expected.
-If after this a still further curtailment is decided upon, such a
-step will create the highly undesirable impression that, in order
-to pave the way for an understanding with London, it had become
-necessary to make very considerable sacrifices. This, of course,
-must be avoided at all costs, because if and when an understanding
-is arrived at, there must be neither victors nor vanquished.<a name="page_169" id="page_169"></a></p>
-
-<p>“I need not emphasize the fact that our Government is taking up the
-matter with the greatest interest and that it is keenly anxious to
-bring about a successful issue. The reception with which you have
-met on our side must have given you convincing and impressive
-proofs of this attitude.</p>
-
-<p>“I have now succeeded in making our gentlemen promise me&mdash;although
-not without much reluctance on their part&mdash;that they would not
-object to the formula proposed by your Government, viz. ‘It is
-agreed to submit the question of the proposed increase of naval
-tonnage to a <i>bona fide</i> discussion.’ Thus there is now a fair
-prospect of reaching a favourable result, and the preliminary
-condition laid down by your Government has been complied with.</p>
-
-<p>“I think that the delegate sent should be accompanied by a naval
-expert. The gentleman in question should also understand that he
-would have to use the utmost frankness in the discussions, and that
-he must be able to give an assurance that it is intended to subject
-the British programme, too, to such alterations as will make it not
-less, but rather more, acceptable than it is now. Surely, your
-Government has never desired that we should give you a definite
-undertaking on our part, whereas you should be at liberty to extend
-your programme whenever you think fit to do so. A clearly defined
-neutrality agreement is another factor which will enter into the
-question of granting the concessions demanded by your Government.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Reciprocal assurances’ is a term which it is difficult to define;
-if, for instance, the attitude of Great Britain and her action last
-summer had been submitted to a court of law, it would hardly be
-found to have violated the obligations implied by such ‘reciprocal
-assurances,’ and yet we were at the edge of war owing to the steps
-taken by your people.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought it my duty, my dear friend, to submit these particulars
-to you, so that you, for the benefit of the great cause we are
-engaged in, may take whatever steps you consider advisable before
-the departure of the delegate.</p>
-
-<p>“Our people would appreciate it very much if you would make the
-great sacrifice of coming over to this country when the meeting
-takes place. I personally consider this<a name="page_170" id="page_170"></a> also necessary, and it
-goes without saying that I shall be present as well.</p>
-
-<p>“P.S.&mdash;The Chancellor to whom I have shown this letter thinks it
-would be better not to send it, because the official note contains
-all that is necessary.</p>
-
-<p>“However, I shall forward it all the same, because I believe it
-will present a clearer picture of the situation to you than the
-note. Please convince the delegate that it is a matter of give and
-take, and please come. It entails a great sacrifice on your part,
-but the cause which we have at heart is worth it.</p>
-
-<p>“The bearer of this note is our general secretary, Mr. Huldermann.
-He is a past master of discretion, and fully acquainted with the
-situation.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>I was instructed to hand the following note by the German Government to
-Sir Ernest Cassel with the request to pass it on to the British
-Government, and at the same time I was to explain verbally and in
-greater detail the contents of Ballin’s letter on the situation.</p>
-
-<p>The text of the official note is as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“We are willing to continue the discussion in a friendly spirit.
-The Navy Bill is bound to lead to a discussion of the naval plans
-of both countries, and in this matter we shall be able to fall in
-with the wishes of the British Government if we, in return, receive
-sufficient guarantees as to a friendly disposition of British
-policy towards our own interests. Any agreement would have to state
-that either Power undertakes not to join in any plans,
-combinations, or warlike complications directed against the other.
-If concluded, it might pave the way for an understanding as to the
-sums of money to be spent on armaments by either country.</p>
-
-<p>“We assume that the British Government shares the views expressed
-in this note, and we should be glad if a British Cabinet minister
-could proceed to Berlin, in the first instance for the purpose of a
-private and confidential discussion only.â€</p></div>
-
-<p><a name="page_171" id="page_171"></a></p>
-
-<p>On the evening of the same day (February 4th) I left for London. I
-arrived there the following evening and went straight to Sir Ernest
-Cassel. I prepared the following statement for Ballin at the time, in
-which I described the substance of our conversation and the outcome of
-my visit:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“The note which I had brought with me did not at first satisfy our
-friend. He made a brief statement to the effect that we saw a fair
-prospect of reaching a successful solution of the problem was all
-that was needed, and that our answer was lengthy, but evasive. This
-opinion, however, he did not maintain after the close of our
-conversation, which lasted more than two hours. I pointed out to
-him that, as I understood it, the phrase ‘We are willing to
-continue the discussion in a friendly spirit’ amounted to a
-declaration on the part of the German Government that, in its
-opinion, there was a ‘fair prospect,’ and that an accommodating
-spirit was all one could ask at present. He thought that Lord
-Haldane had been asked to go to Berlin so that a member of the
-Cabinet should have an opportunity of ascertaining on the spot that
-Berlin was really disposed to discuss matters in a friendly spirit.
-On this point positive assurances were needed before Sir Edward
-Grey and Mr. Winston Churchill went across, who, if they did go,
-would not return without having effected the object of their visit.
-Sir Ernest always emphasized that he only stated his own private
-views, but it was evident that he spoke with the highest authority.
-The demand for three Dreadnoughts, he said, which the new German
-Navy Bill asked for, amounted to a big increase of armaments, and
-Great Britain would be compelled to counterbalance it by a
-corresponding increase, which she would not fail to do. If,
-however, Germany were prepared not to enlarge her existing
-programme, Great Britain would be pleased to effect a reduction on
-her part. When I referred to the apprehension of the German
-Government lest Great Britain should take advantage of the fact
-that Germany had her hands tied, in order to effect big armaments
-which it would be impossible for us to equal, our<a name="page_172" id="page_172"></a> friend remarked
-that, for the reason stated above, such fears were groundless. In
-spite of this assurance, I repeatedly and emphatically drew his
-attention to the necessity for limiting the British programme just
-as much as the German one. He evidently no longer fancied the
-suggestion previously put forward that the question of agreeing
-upon a definite ratio of strength for the two navies should be
-discussed; because, if this was done, one would get lost in the
-details. Nevertheless, he did not, as the discussion proceeded,
-adhere to this standpoint absolutely. He agreed that the essential
-thing was to establish friendly political relations, and if, as I
-thought, Germany had reason to complain of British opposition to
-her legitimate expansion, one could not do better than discuss the
-various points at issue one by one, similar to the method which had
-proved so successful in the case of the Anglo-French negotiations.
-Great Britain would not raise any objections to our desire for
-rounding-off our colonial empire, and she was quite willing to
-grant us our share in the distribution of those parts of the globe
-that were still unclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>“By keeping strictly to the literal text of the German note, he
-found the latter quite acceptable as far as it referred to the
-question of a declaration of neutrality. He said there was a great
-difference between such declarations, and often it was quite
-possible to interpret them in various ways. I imagined that what
-was in his mind were the obligations which Britain had taken upon
-herself in her agreement with France, and I therefore asked him for
-a definition of the term ‘neutrality.’ His answer was very guarded
-and contained many reservations. What he meant was something like
-this: Great Britain has concluded agreements with France, Russia,
-and other countries which oblige her to remain neutral where the
-other partner is concerned, except when the latter is engaged in a
-war of aggression.</p>
-
-<p>“Applied to two practical cases, this would mean: If an agreement
-such as the one now under consideration had been in existence at
-the time of the Morocco dispute last summer, Great Britain would
-have been free to take the side of France if war had broken out
-between that country and ourselves, because in this case we&mdash;as he
-argued with<a name="page_173" id="page_173"></a> much conviction&mdash;had been the aggressors. On the other
-hand, if we had severed our relations with Italy during the
-Turco-Italian war and had come to the support of Turkey, Great
-Britain would not have been allowed to join Italy in conspiring
-against us if we had an agreement such as the one in question.</p>
-
-<p>“In the interval between my first and my second visit Sir Ernest
-evidently had, by consulting his friend Haldane, arrived at a very
-definite opinion, and when I visited him for the second time he
-assured me most emphatically that Great Britain would concede to us
-as much as she had conceded to the other Powers, but not more. We
-could rely on her absolute loyalty, ‘and,’ he added, ‘our attitude
-towards France proves that we can be loyal to our friends.’</p>
-
-<p>“For the rest, the manner in which he pleaded the British point of
-view was highly interesting. Great Britain, he argued, had done
-great things in the past, but owing to her great wealth a decline
-had set in in the course of the last few decades. ('Traces of this
-development,’ he added, ‘have also been noticeable in your
-country.') Germany, however, had made immense progress, and within
-the next fifteen or twenty years she would overtake Great Britain.
-If, then, such a dangerous competitor commenced to increase his
-armaments in a manner which could be directed only against Britain,
-he must not be surprised if the latter made every effort to check
-him wherever his influence was felt. Great Britain, therefore,
-could not remain passive if Germany attempted to dominate the whole
-Continent; because this, if successful, would upset the Balance of
-Power. Neither could she hold back in case Germany attacked and
-annihilated France. Thus, the situation being what it was, Britain
-was compelled&mdash;provided the proposed agreement with Germany was not
-concluded&mdash;to decide whether she would wait until her competitor
-had become still stronger and quite invincible, or whether she
-would prefer to strike at once. The latter alternative, he thought,
-would be the safer for her interests.</p>
-
-<p>“Our friend had a copy of the German note made by his secretary,
-and then forwarded it to Haldane. In the course of the evening the
-latter sent an acknowledgment of its<a name="page_174" id="page_174"></a> receipt, from which Sir
-Ernest read out to me the words: ‘So far very good.’ It was evident
-that his friend’s opinion had favourably influenced his own views
-on the German note.</p>
-
-<p>“On Tuesday Sir Ernest and Lord Haldane drove to the former’s house
-after having attended Thanksgiving Service. Lord Haldane stayed for
-lunch, and was just leaving when I arrived at 3 o’clock. He did not
-want to be accompanied by a naval expert, for, although he did not
-pretend to understand all the technical details, he said that he
-knew all that was necessary for the discussion. He stated that he
-would put all his cards on the table and speak quite frankly.</p>
-
-<p>“Our friend spoke of our German politics in most disparaging terms,
-saying that they had been worth nothing since Bismarck’s time. What
-Ballin had attained in his dealings with the shipping companies was
-far superior to all the achievements of Germany’s diplomatists.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>The positive information which this report contained was passed on to
-the Chancellor.</p>
-
-<p>By way of explanation it may be added that the German Navy Bill, which
-later on, at the end of March, 1912, was laid before the Reichstag,
-provided for the formation of a third active squadron in order to adapt
-the increase in the number of the crews to the increase in the material.
-This third squadron necessitated the addition of three new battleships
-and of two small cruisers, and it was also intended to increase the
-number of submarines and to make provision for the construction of
-airships.</p>
-
-<p>The discussions with Lord Haldane took place at the Royal Castle,
-Berlin, on February 9th, the Kaiser being in the chair. The Chancellor
-did not attend, he had a separate interview with Haldane. The outcome of
-the conference is described in a statement from an authoritative source,
-viz. in a note which the Kaiser dispatched to Ballin by special
-messenger immediately after the close of the conference. It reads as
-follows:<a name="page_175" id="page_175"></a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="r">
-“<span class="smcap">The Castle, Berlin.</span><br />
-“9.2.1912. 6 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="nind">
-“<span class="smcap">Dear Ballin</span>,<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“The conversation has taken place, and all the pros and many cons
-have been discussed. Our standpoint has been explained in great
-detail, and the Bill has been examined. At my suggestion, it was
-resolved to agree on the following basis (informal line of action):</p>
-
-<p>“(1) Because of its scope and its importance, the Agreement must be
-concluded, and it must not be jeopardized by too many details.</p>
-
-<p>“(2) Therefore, the Agreement is not to contain any reference to
-the size of the two fleets, to standards of ships, to
-constructions, etc.</p>
-
-<p>“(3) The Agreement is to be purely political.</p>
-
-<p>“(4) As soon as the Agreement has been published here, and as soon
-as the Bill has been laid before the Reichstag, I, in my character
-of commander-in-chief, instruct Tirpitz to make the following
-statement to the Committee: The third squadron will be asked for
-and voted, but the building of the three additional units required
-to complete it will not be started until 1913, and one ship each
-will be demanded in 1916 and 1919 respectively.</p>
-
-<p>“Haldane agreed to this and expressed his satisfaction. I have made
-no end of concessions. But this must be the limit. He was very nice
-and very reasonable, and he perfectly understood my position as
-commander-in-chief, and that of Tirpitz, with regard to the Bill. I
-really think I have done all I could do.</p>
-
-<p>“Please remember me to Cassel and inform him.</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-“Your sincere friend,<br />
-“(<i>Signed</i>) <span class="smcap">Wilhelm I.R.</span>â€<br />
-</p></div>
-
-<p>After Lord Haldane’s departure from Berlin there was a gap of
-considerable length in the negotiations which had made such a promising
-start, and unfortunately during that time Mr. Churchill made a speech
-which not only the German papers but also the Liberal Press in Great
-Britain described as wanting in discretion. The passage which German
-opinion resented<a name="page_176" id="page_176"></a> most of all was the statement that, in contrast with
-Great Britain, for whom a big navy was an absolute necessity, to Germany
-such navy was merely a luxury.</p>
-
-<p>For the rest, the following two letters from the Chancellor to Ballin
-may throw some light on the causes of the break in the negotiations:</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-“<span class="smcap">Berlin.</span><br />
-“2.3.1912.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="nind">
-“<span class="smcap">Dear Mr. Ballin</span>,<br />
-</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“Our supposition that it is the contents of the Bill which have
-brought about the change of feeling is confirmed by news from a
-private source. It is feared that the Bill as it stands will have
-such an adverse influence on public opinion that the latter will
-not accept a political agreement along with it. Nevertheless, the
-idea of an understanding has not been lost sight of, even though it
-may take six months or a year before it can be accomplished.</p>
-
-<p>“In consequence of this information the draft reply to London
-requires to be reconsidered, and it has not been dispatched so far.
-I shall let you know as soon as it has left.</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-“Sincerely yours.<br />
-“(<i>Signed</i>) <span class="smcap">Bethmann-Hollweg.</span>â€<br />
-</p></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="r">
-“<span class="smcap">Berlin.</span><br />
-“8.3.1912.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="nind">
-“<span class="smcap">Dear Mr. Ballin</span>,<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“This is intended for your confidential information. Regarding the
-naval question Great Britain now, as always, lays great stress on
-the difficulty of reconciling public opinion to the inconsistency
-implied by a big increase in the Naval Estimates hand in hand with
-the conclusion of a political and colonial agreement. However, even
-if an agreement should not be reached, she hopes that the
-confidential relations and the frank exchange of opinions between
-both Governments which have resulted from Lord Haldane’s mission
-may continue in future. The question of a colonial understanding is
-to be discussed in the near future.</p>
-
-<p>“It is imperative that the negotiations should not break down.
-Success is possible in spite of the Navy Bill if the discussions
-are carried on dispassionately. As matters<a name="page_177" id="page_177"></a> stand, the provisions
-of the Bill must remain as they are. Great Britain has no right to
-interfere with our views on the number of the crews which we desire
-to place on board our existing units. As far as the building dates
-of the three battleships are concerned, I should have preferred&mdash;as
-you are aware&mdash;to leave our hands untied, but His Majesty’s
-decision has definitely fixed 1913 and 1916 as the years for laying
-them down. This is a far-reaching concession to Great Britain.</p>
-
-<p>“Discreet support from private quarters will be appreciated.</p>
-
-<p>“Many thanks for your news. You know that and why I was prevented
-from writing these last few days.</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-“Sincerely yours,<br />
-“(<i>Signed</i>) <span class="smcap">Bethmann-Hollweg</span>.â€<br />
-</p></div>
-
-<p>In order to find out whether any foreign influence might have been at
-work in London, I was commissioned to meet Sir Ernest Cassel in the
-South of Europe early in March. Ballin supplied me with a letter
-containing a detailed account of the general situation. Owing to a delay
-in the proposed meeting, I took the precaution of burning the letter, as
-I had been instructed to do, and I informed Sir Ernest of its contents
-by word of mouth.</p>
-
-<p>In this document Ballin gave a brief résumé of the situation as it
-appeared to him after his consultations with the various competent
-departments in Berlin, somewhat on the following lines:</p>
-
-<p>(1) After Lord Haldane’s return Sir Edward Grey officially told Count
-Metternich that he was highly pleased with the successful issue of Lord
-Haldane’s mission, and gave him to understand that he thought it
-unlikely that any difficulties would arise.</p>
-
-<p>(2) A few days later Mr. Asquith made a statement in the House of
-Commons which amply confirmed the views held by Sir Edward Grey, and
-which produced a most favourable impression in Berlin.<a name="page_178" id="page_178"></a></p>
-
-<p>(3) This induced the Chancellor to make an equally amicable and hopeful
-statement to the Reichstag.</p>
-
-<p>(4) In spite of this, however, there arose an interval of several weeks,
-during which neither Count Metternich nor anybody in Berlin received any
-news from the proper department in London. This silence naturally caused
-some uneasiness.</p>
-
-<p>(5) Count Metternich was asked to call at the Foreign Office, where Sir
-Edward Grey commenced to raise objections mainly in reference to the
-Navy Bill. “I must add in this connexion&mdash;as, no doubt, Lord Haldane has
-also told you verbally&mdash;that on the last day of his stay in Berlin an
-understanding was arrived at between the competent quarters on our side
-and Lord Haldane with regard to the building dates of the three
-battleships. As you will remember, it had been agreed not to discuss the
-proposed establishment of the third squadron on an active footing and
-the increase in the number of the crews connected with it, but to look
-upon these subjects as lying outside the negotiations.†Quite suddenly
-and quite unexpectedly we are now faced with a great change in the
-situation. Grey, as I have said before, objects&mdash;in terms of the
-greatest politeness, of course&mdash;to the increase in the number of the
-crews, asks questions as to our intentions with regard to torpedo boats
-and submarines, and&mdash;this is most significant&mdash;emphasizes that the
-Haldane mission has at any rate been of great use, even if the
-negotiations should not lead to any definite result.</p>
-
-<p>(6) The next event was a further interview with Count Metternich during
-which it was stated that, according to the calculations of the First
-Lord of the Admiralty, the increase in the number of the crews amounted
-to 15,000 men, whilst it had been thought in England that it would be a
-question of from 4,000 to 5,000 men at the outset. It appeared that this
-large increase was<a name="page_179" id="page_179"></a> looked upon with misgivings, and that it was desired
-to enter into fresh negotiations which would greatly interfere with the
-arrangements made by the German competent quarters with regard to the
-navy. Hence Metternich replied that, in his opinion, these explanations
-could only mean that the Cabinet did not agree to the arrangements made
-by Lord Haldane. Grey’s answer was full of polite assurances couched in
-the language of diplomacy, but, translated into plain German, what he
-meant was: “You are quite right.â€</p>
-
-<p>Ballin’s letter went on to say that the German Navy Bill had gradually
-been reduced to a minimum, and that it was not possible to cut it down
-any further. We could not, and we would not, give rise to the suspicion
-that great alterations had been made merely to meet British objections.
-Finally, Ballin requested his friend to go to London in order to make
-inquiries on the spot, and also declared his readiness to go there
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>My report on my conversations with Sir Ernest Cassel, which took place
-at Marseilles on March 9th and 10th, is as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“Our friend arrived about four hours late, but he received me all
-the same at 10 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span> on that evening. I told him all about my
-journey and related to him verbally the contents of Ballin’s
-letter. When I described the incident of how Grey had raised new
-objections at his interview with Metternich, and when I explained
-how, after that, the matter had come to a dead stop, so that
-nothing further was heard of it in Germany, our friend interrupted
-me by saying that since then the British Government had presented a
-memorandum containing the objections raised against the German Navy
-Bill. The latter, he suggested, was the only stumbling-block, as
-could be inferred from a letter which he had received <i>en route</i>
-from Haldane.</p>
-
-<p>“When I remarked that Ballin, in a postscript to his letter, had
-expressed an apprehension lest some foreign influence had
-interfered with the course of events, our friend<a name="page_180" id="page_180"></a> positively denied
-this. France, he said, was on good terms with Great Britain, and
-had no reason for intriguing against an Anglo-German agreement
-destined, as it was, to promote the cause of peace.</p>
-
-<p>“When I then proceeded with my account, drawing his special
-attention to the reduction of the estimates contained in the Navy
-Bill, Sir Ernest interposed that he was not sufficiently <i>au
-courant</i> as to the details. He himself, in his statement prepared
-for the British Government, had only referred to the battleships,
-and he thought he had perhaps given too cursory an account of the
-other factors of the case. He also threw out some fairly plain
-hints that Haldane had gone too far in Berlin, and that he had made
-statements on a subject with which he was not sufficiently
-conversant. Later on, he continued, the Navy Bill had been
-subjected to a careful examination by the British Admiralty, and
-before his departure from Cannes he, Sir Ernest, had received a
-letter from Mr. Churchill, the tone of which was very angry.
-Churchill complained that Germany had presented such a long list of
-the wishes with which she wanted Great Britain to comply, that the
-least one could hope for was an accommodating spirit in the
-question of the Navy. Everything now depended on Churchill; if he
-could be satisfied, all the rest would be plain sailing. He and
-Lloyd George were the greatest friends of the agreement. Sir Ernest
-also made it fairly clear that Great Britain would be content with
-a postponement of the building dates, or in other words with a
-‘retardation of the building programme.’ The negotiations would be
-bound to fail, unless Ballin could secure such a postponement. It
-was necessary to strike whilst the iron was hot, and this
-particular iron had already become rather cool. He quite accepted
-Grey’s statement that the Haldane mission had not been in vain, as
-the feeling had doubtless become more friendly since then. Some few
-individual indiscretions, such as Churchill’s reference to the
-German Navy as an article of luxury, should not be taken too
-seriously. If the German Bill were passed into law in its present
-shape, the British Government would be obliged to introduce one
-asking for three times as much, but it could not possibly do this
-and declare at the same time that it had<a name="page_181" id="page_181"></a> reached an understanding
-with Germany. Such a proceeding would be absurd. The argument that
-it is inconsistent with common sense to conclude an agreement and
-yet to continue one’s armaments, is evidently still maintained in
-Great Britain, and is one which, of course, it is impossible to
-refute.</p>
-
-<p>“In the course of our conversation Sir Ernest produced the letter
-which he had received from Haldane <i>en route</i>. This letter stated
-that the discussions with Metternich were then chiefly on the
-subject of the Navy Bill, and that the Admiralty had prepared a
-memorandum for the German Government dealing with these questions.
-The letter was dated February 25th, and its tone was not
-pessimistic; Churchill, however, as stated above, had previously
-written him a ‘very angry’ letter. In this connexion it must not be
-forgotten that the man on whom everything depends is not the
-amiable negotiator Haldane, but Churchill.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>In order to make further inquiries about the state of things and to
-assist in promoting the good cause, Ballin, immediately after my return,
-proceeded to Paris and then to London. He reported to the Chancellor
-upon the impressions he had received in Paris. The following is an
-extract from his report:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“Owing to the brief time at my disposal when I was in Paris, I
-could only learn the views of the members of the ‘<i>haute finance</i>.’
-It is well known that in France the attitude taken up by financial
-circles is always regarded as authoritative. They look upon the
-present situation as decidedly pacific; they are pleased that the
-Morocco affair is settled, and they feel quite sure that the
-political sky is unclouded by complications. They would gladly
-welcome an agreement between Germany and Great Britain. My friends
-assure me that the Government also does not view the idea of such
-an understanding with displeasure; on the contrary, it looks upon
-it as an advantage. It is, however, thought unlikely that an
-agreement will be reached, because it is believed that popular
-feeling in Germany is too much opposed to it. If, notwithstanding<a name="page_182" id="page_182"></a>
-these pacific views held by influential and competent sections, the
-casual visitor to the French capital is impressed by a certain
-bellicose attitude of the nation as a whole, it is largely due to
-the propaganda carried on by the <i>Matin</i> with the purpose of
-obtaining voluntary subscriptions for the furtherance of aviation.
-The French are enthusiastic over this idea, and as it has a strong
-military bearing, the man in the street likes to connect the French
-aviation successes with a victorious war.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>From London Ballin sent me some telegrams which I was instructed to pass
-on to the Chancellor. In these messages he stated that his conversations
-with the German Ambassador and with Haldane had convinced him that
-people in London believed that the increase in the number of the crews,
-if the proposed German Navy Bill became law, would be greater than the
-figures given by Berlin would make it appear. It would therefore be most
-desirable to arrange for a meeting of experts to clear up this
-discrepancy. Ballin’s impression was that the British Cabinet, and also
-the King, were still favourably disposed to the whole plan, and that the
-Cabinet was unanimous in this view. A conversation with Churchill, which
-lasted several hours, confirmed these impressions. In London the
-increase in the number of the crews had previously been estimated at
-half of what it would really be, and alarm was felt about the large
-number of torpedo boats and submarines demanded; but since the German
-Government had explained that the figures arrived at in London&mdash;i.e.
-those stated in the memorandum which had been addressed to the German
-Government some time before&mdash;were not correct, Churchill had agreed that
-both sides should nominate experts who would check the figures and put
-them right. Churchill was anxious to see that the matter was brought to
-a successful issue, and he was still hoping that a neutrality agreement
-would induce the German<a name="page_183" id="page_183"></a> Government to make concessions in regard to the
-Navy Bill.</p>
-
-<p>When Ballin had satisfied himself as to this state of things, he
-immediately returned to Berlin, as he did not consider it appropriate
-that any private person should do anything further for the time being,
-and as he thought that the conduct of the discussions concerning the
-neutrality agreement were best left to the Ambassador.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, however, the German Government had definitely made up its
-mind that the Navy Bill would have to remain as it stood. This was the
-information Ballin received from the Kaiser and the Chancellor when he
-returned from London on March 16th.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Ernest Cassel then suggested to the British Government that the
-negotiations concerning the neutrality agreement should be re-opened as
-soon as the first excitement caused by the Navy Bill had subsided, which
-would probably be the case within a few months, and that the interval
-should be utilized for clearing up the details. In Berlin, however, the
-discussions were looked upon as having been broken off, as may be seen
-from the following telegram which the Kaiser sent to Ballin on March
-19th in reply to Ballin’s information about his last exchange of
-telegrams with London:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“Many thanks for letter. The latest proposals arriving here
-immediately after you had left raised impossible demands and were
-so offensive in form that they were promptly rejected. Further harm
-was done by Churchill’s arrogant speech which a large section of
-the British press justly described as a provocation of Germany. The
-‘agreement’ has thus been broken by Great Britain, and we have done
-with it. The negotiations must be started afresh on quite a
-different basis. What apology has there been offered to us for the
-passage in the speech describing our fleet as an article of luxury?</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-“(<i>Signed</i>) <span class="smcap">Wilhelm I.R.</span>â€<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><a name="page_184" id="page_184"></a></p></div>
-
-<p>That the negotiations had actually been broken off was confirmed to
-Ballin by a letter of the Chancellor of the same date:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="nind">
-“<span class="smcap">Dear Mr. Ballin</span>,<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“My cordial thanks for your letter of the 18th. What your friend
-told Metternich is identical with what he wired you. Churchill’s
-speech did not come up to my expectations. He really seems to be a
-firebrand past praying for. The Army and Navy Bills will probably
-not go up to the Federal Council until the 21st, as the Army Bill
-requires some amendments at the eleventh hour. Their contents will
-be published simultaneously.</p>
-
-<p>“My opinion is that our labours will now have to be stopped
-altogether for some time. The problem before us suffers from the
-defect that, because of its inherent difficulties, it admits of no
-solution. I shall always remain sincerely grateful to you for your
-loyal assistance. When you come to Berlin next time, please don’t
-forget to call at the Wilhelmstrasse.</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-“With kindest regards,<br />
-“Sincerely yours,<br />
-“(<i>Signed</i>)<span class="smcap"> Bethmann-Hollweg</span>.â€<br />
-</p></div>
-
-<p>The conviction of the inherent impossibility of solving the problem was
-shared by many people in Germany&mdash;chiefly, of course, by those connected
-with the Navy; and some critics went so far as to say that Great Britain
-had never honestly meant to arrive at an understanding, or at any rate
-that Haldane&mdash;whose honesty and sincerity were beyond doubt&mdash;was
-disowned by his fellow-members in the Cabinet.</p>
-
-<p>When Ballin, in compliance with the wishes of the Foreign Office, went
-to London during the critical period before the outbreak of the war in
-1914, he wrote a letter from there to a naval officer of high rank with
-whom he had been on terms of friendship for years. This document is of
-interest now because it shows what<a name="page_185" id="page_185"></a> Ballin’s own standpoint was with
-regard to the views described in the previous paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“People over here,†he wrote, “do not believe that negotiations
-with Great Britain on the subject of a naval agreement could
-possibly be crowned with success, and you yourself contend that it
-would have been better if such negotiations had never been started.
-Your standpoint is that the failure of any efforts in that
-direction would merely tend to aggravate the existing situation, a
-point of view with which I entirely concur.</p>
-
-<p>“On the other hand, however, you cannot deny the soundness of the
-argument that, if the responsible leaders of British naval policy
-keep expressing their desire to enter into a discussion, the
-refusal of Germany to do so must cause the British to believe that
-we are pursuing aims far exceeding those we have openly avowed. My
-somewhat fatigued brain is unable to see whether the German
-contention is right or wrong. But naturally, I always look upon
-things from the business man’s point of view, and so I always think
-it better to come to some kind of an agreement with a competitor
-rather than allow him an unlimited measure of expansion. Once,
-however, I have come to the conclusion that for financial or other
-reasons this competitor can no longer keep pace with me, his
-further existence ceases altogether to interest me.</p>
-
-<p>“Thus the views of the expert on these matters and those of the
-business man run counter to each other, and I am entitled to
-dismiss this subject without entering upon a discussion of the
-interesting and remarkable arguments which Winston Churchill put
-before me last night. I cannot, however, refrain from contradicting
-by a few brief words the contention that the motives which had
-prompted the Haldane mission were not sincere. A conversation with
-Sir Edward Grey the night before last has strengthened this
-conviction of mine still further. I regard Sir Edward as a serious,
-honest, and clever statesman, and I am sure you will agree with my
-view that the Haldane mission has cleared the atmosphere
-surrounding Anglo-German relations which had become very strained.â€</p></div>
-
-<p><a name="page_186" id="page_186"></a></p>
-
-<p>It may be supposed that history, in the meantime, has proved whose
-standpoint was the correct one: that of the business man or that of the
-naval expert.</p>
-
-<p>Not much need be said about the subsequent development of events up to
-the outbreak of the war.</p>
-
-<p>The above-mentioned opinion which the Chancellor held regarding
-Churchill’s speech of March 18th, 1912, was probably arrived at on the
-strength of the cabled reports only. Whoever reads the full original
-text of the speech must fail to find anything aggressive in it, and
-there was no harm in admitting that it was a perfectly frank and honest
-statement concerning the naval rivalry of the two Powers. Among other
-things it contained the suggestion that a “naval holiday†should be
-agreed upon, i.e. both countries should abstain from building new ships
-for a definite period. We, at any rate, looked upon Churchill’s speech
-as a suitable means of making people see what would be the ultimate
-consequences of the interminable naval armaments. I made a German
-translation of it which, with the aid of one of the committees for an
-Anglo-German understanding, I spread broadcast all over the country.
-However, it proved a complete failure, as there were powerful groups in
-both countries who contended that the efforts to reconcile the two
-standpoints could not lead to any positive result, and that the old
-injunction, <i>si vis pacem, para bellum</i>, indicated the only right
-solution. Only a master mind could have overcome these difficulties. But
-Herr v. Bethmann, as we know, considered that the problem, for inherent
-reasons, did not admit of any solution at all, and the Kaiser’s initial
-enthusiasm had probably been damped by subsequent influences of a
-different kind. Ballin himself, in later years, ascribed the failure of
-the mission to the circumstance that the Kaiser and his Chancellor,
-between themselves only, had attempted to bring the whole matter to a
-successful<a name="page_187" id="page_187"></a> issue instead of entrusting this task to the Secretary of
-Foreign Affairs and to Admiral Tirpitz, the Secretary for the Navy.</p>
-
-<p>An interesting sidelight on the causes which led to the failure of this
-last important attempt to reach an understanding is thrown by the
-rumours which were spread in the German Press in March, 1912, to the
-effect that the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, Herr v.
-Kiderlen, wished to resign, because he felt that he had been left too
-much in the dark with regard to the Anglo-German negotiations. It was
-also reported that the Chancellor’s position had been shaken, and that
-Admiral Tirpitz felt dissatisfied, because the Navy Bill did not go far
-enough. Probably there was some vestige of truth in all these rumours,
-and this may have been connected with the attitude which the three
-gentlemen concerned had taken up towards the question of the
-negotiations with Great Britain.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after the visit of Lord Haldane Ballin received a letter from a
-personage belonging to the Kaiser’s entourage in which it was said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“The impression which has taken root with me during the many hours
-which I spent as an attentive listener is that your broad-minded
-scheme is being wrecked by our official circles, partly through
-their clumsiness, and partly through their bureaucratic conceit,
-and&mdash;which is worse&mdash;that we have failed to show ourselves worthy
-of the great opportunity.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>When it had become certain that the last attempt to reach an
-understanding had definitely and finally failed, the ambassador in
-London, Count Metternich, did not shrink from drawing the only possible
-conclusion from it. He had always expressed his conviction that a war
-between Germany and a Franco-Russian coalition would find Great Britain
-on the side of Germany’s opponents, and his resignation&mdash;which, as
-usual,<a name="page_188" id="page_188"></a> was explained by the state of his health&mdash;was really due to a
-report of his in which he stated it as his opinion that a continuation
-of German armaments would lead to war with Great Britain no later than
-1915. It is alleged that the Kaiser added a very “ungracious†marginal
-note to this report. Consequently, the ambassador, who was a man of very
-independent character, did the only thing he could consistently do, and
-resigned his office. In taking this step he may have been influenced by
-the reception which the failure of the Haldane mission met with in
-Conservative circles in Great Britain, where no stone was left unturned
-to urge the necessity for continuing the policy of big armaments and to
-paint German untrustworthiness in the most glaring colours.</p>
-
-<p>Count Metternich’s successor was Herr v. Marschall, a gentleman whose
-appointment the Press and the official circles welcomed with great
-cordiality, and from whose considerable diplomatic abilities, which were
-acknowledged on all sides, an improvement of Anglo-German relations was
-confidently expected. It was said that the Kaiser had sent “his best
-man,†thus demonstrating how greatly he also desired better relations.
-But Herr v. Marschall’s activities came to a sudden end through his
-early death in September, 1912, and in October his place was taken by
-Prince Lichnowsky, whose efforts in the direction of an improvement in
-the relations are familiar to everyone who has read his pamphlet. Apart
-from the work performed by the ambassadors, great credit is also due to
-the activities displayed by Herr v. Kühlmann, the then Secretary to the
-Legation and subsequent Secretary of State. The public did not see a
-deal of his work, which was conducted with skill and was consistent. His
-close personal acquaintance with some of the leading British
-politicians, especially with Sir Edward Grey, enabled him to do much
-work for the maintenance of good relations and in the<a name="page_189" id="page_189"></a> interest of
-European peace, particularly during the time when the post of ambassador
-was vacant, and also during the Balkan War. He had, moreover, a great
-deal to do with the drafting of the two colonial agreements dealing with
-the Bagdad Railway and the African problems respectively, both of which
-were ready for signature in the summer of 1914. The former especially
-may be looked upon as a proof not only that a considerable improvement
-had taken place in Anglo-German relations, but also that Great Britain
-was not inclined to adjust the guiding lines of her policy in Asia Minor
-exclusively in conformity with the wishes of Russia. Anybody who takes
-an interest in the then existing possibilities of German expansion with
-the consent of Great Britain and on the basis of these colonial draft
-agreements cannot do better than read the anonymous pamphlet entitled
-“<i>Deutsche Weltpolitik und kein Krieg</i>†("German World Power and No
-War"), published in 1913 by Messrs. Puttkamer &amp; Mühlbrecht, of Berlin.
-The author is Dr. Plehn, the then representative of the <i>Cologne
-Gazette</i> in London, and it partly reflects the views of Herr v.
-Kühlmann.</p>
-
-<p>In this connexion I should like to refer briefly to an episode which
-took place towards the close of 1912. The German periodicals have
-already discussed it, especially the <i>Süddeutsche Monatshafte</i> in June,
-1921, in a review of the reports which Count Lerchenfeld, the Bavarian
-minister to the Court of Berlin, had made for the information of his
-Government. In these reports he mentions an event to which the Kaiser
-had already referred in a letter to Ballin dated December 15th, 1912.
-The Kaiser, in commenting on the state of tension then existing between
-Austria and Serbia, made some significant remarks concerning the policy
-of Germany towards Austria-Hungary. When the relations between Vienna
-and Petrograd, he wrote, had<a name="page_190" id="page_190"></a> assumed a dangerous character, because it
-was recognized that the attitude of Serbia was based on her hope of
-Russian support, Germany might be faced with the possibility of having
-to come to the assistance of Austria.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“The Slav subjects of Austria,†the letter continued, “had become
-very restless, and could only be brought to reason by the resolute
-action of the whole Dual Monarchy against Serbia. Austria had
-arrived at the cross roads, and her whole future development hung
-in the balance. Either the German element would retain its
-ascendancy, in which case she would remain a suitable ally, or the
-Slav element would gain the upper hand, and she would cease to be
-an ally altogether. If we were compelled to take up arms, we should
-do so to assist Austria not only against Russian aggression, but
-also against the Slavs in general, and in her efforts to remain
-German. That would mean that we should have to face a racial
-struggle of the Germanic element against Slav insolence. It is
-beyond our power to prevent this struggle, because the future of
-the Habsburg monarchy and that of our own country are both at
-stake. (This was the real meaning of Bethmann’s very plain
-speaking.) It is therefore a question on which depends the very
-existence of the Germanic race on the continent of Europe.</p>
-
-<p>“It was of great importance to us that Great Britain had so far
-supported the Austro-German standpoint in these matters. Now, since
-a war against Russia would automatically imply a war with France as
-well, it was of interest to us to know whether, in this purely
-continental case, Great Britain could and would declare her
-neutrality in conformity with her proposals of last February.</p>
-
-<p>“On December 6th, Haldane, obviously sent by Grey, called on
-Lichnowsky and explained to the dumbfounded ambassador in plain
-words that, assuming Germany getting involved in war against Russia
-and France, Great Britain would <i>not</i> remain neutral, but would at
-once come to the assistance of France. The reason given for this
-attitude was that Britain could not and would not tolerate at any
-time that we should acquire a position of continental predominance<a name="page_191" id="page_191"></a>
-which might easily lead to the formation of a united continent.
-Great Britain could therefore never allow France to be crushed by
-us. You can imagine the effect of this piece of news on the whole
-of the Wilhelmstrasse. I cannot say that I was taken by surprise,
-because I, as you know, have always looked upon Great Britain as an
-enemy in a military sense. Still, this news has decidedly cleared
-matters up, even if the result is merely of a negative character.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>Ballin did not omit to ask his friend for some details concerning the
-visit of Lord Haldane mentioned in the Kaiser’s letter, and was
-furnished with the following explanation by Lord Haldane himself.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing had been further from his intentions, he said, than to call on
-Prince Lichnowsky for the express purpose of making any such
-declaration; and Balkan questions, to the best of his recollection, had
-not been touched at all. He had spent a very pleasant half-hour with the
-Prince, and in the course of their conversation he had seen fit to
-repeat the formula which had been discussed during his stay in Berlin,
-and which referred to Britain’s interest in the preservation of the
-integrity of France. This, possibly, might have given rise to the
-misunderstanding.</p>
-
-<p>Prince Lichnowsky himself, in his pamphlet entitled “My London Mission,â€
-relates the incident as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“In my dispatches sent to Berlin I pointed out again and again that
-Great Britain, being a commercial country, would suffer enormously
-through any war between the European Powers, and would prevent it
-by every means within her power. At the same time, however, she
-could never tolerate the weakening or the crushing of France,
-because it would disturb the Balance of Power and replace it by the
-ascendancy of Germany. This view had been expressed to me by Lord
-Haldane shortly after my arrival, and everybody whose opinion
-counts for anything told me the same thing.â€</p></div>
-
-<p><a name="page_192" id="page_192"></a></p>
-
-<p>The failure of the negotiations aiming at an understanding led to a
-continuance of the increase in the British armaments, a concentration of
-the British battle fleet in the North Sea, and to that of the French
-fleet in the Mediterranean. The latter arrangement was looked upon in
-Germany as a menace directed against Italy, and produced a sharp
-semi-official criticism in the <i>Frankfurter Zeitung</i>. In spite of all
-this, however, friendly messages from London concerning the
-possibilities of an understanding, the “naval holiday,†etc., reached
-Germany from time to time.</p>
-
-<p>How closely Ballin clung to his favourite idea that the naval experts of
-both countries should come to an understanding is demonstrated by the
-circumstance that in 1914, when the British squadron was present during
-the Kiel yachting week, he tried to bring about a meeting and a personal
-exchange of views between Churchill and Tirpitz.</p>
-
-<p>Churchill was by no means disinclined to come to Germany for this
-purpose, but unfortunately the desire was expressed by the German side,
-and especially by the Kaiser, that the British Government should make an
-official inquiry whether his visit would be welcomed. The Government,
-however, was not disposed to do so, and the whole thing fell through,
-although Churchill sent word that, if Tirpitz really wanted to see him,
-he would find means to bring about such a meeting.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the last attempt at an understanding had resulted in failure, and
-before any further efforts in the same direction could be made, Europe
-had been overtaken by its fate.<a name="page_193" id="page_193"></a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX<br /><br />
-<span class="smcap">The Kaiser</span></h2>
-
-<p class="nind">T<span class="smcap">he</span> origin of the friendship between Ballin and the Kaiser, which has
-given rise to so much comment and to so many rumours, was traced back by
-the Kaiser himself to the year 1891, when he inspected the express
-steamer <i>Auguste Victoria</i>, and when he, accompanied by the Kaiserin,
-made a trip on board the newly-built express steamer <i>Fürst Bismarck</i>.
-Ballin, although he received the honour of a decoration and a few
-gracious words from His Majesty, did not think that this meeting had
-established any special contact between himself and his sovereign. He
-told me, indeed, that he dated their acquaintance from a memorable
-meeting which took place in Berlin in 1895, and which was concerned with
-the preparations for the festivities in celebration of the opening of
-the Kiel Canal.</p>
-
-<p>The Kaiser wanted the event to be as magnificent as possible, and his
-wishes to this effect were fully met by the Hamburg civic authorities
-and by the shipping companies. Although Ballin had only been a short
-time in the position he then held, his versatile mind did not overlook
-the opportunity thus offered for advertising his company. The Kaiser was
-keenly interested in every detail. After some preliminary discussions
-with the Hamburg Senate, all the interested parties were invited to send
-their delegates to Berlin, where a general meeting was to be held in the
-Royal Castle with the Kaiser in the chair. It was arranged that the
-North German Lloyd and the Hamburg-Amerika Linie should provide<a name="page_194" id="page_194"></a> one
-steamer each, which was to convey the representatives of the Government
-departments and of the Reichstag, as well as the remaining guests,
-except those who were to be accommodated on board the <i>Hohenzollern</i>,
-and that both steamers should follow in the wake of the latter all the
-way down the Elbe from Hamburg to the Canal. When this item was
-discussed the Kaiser said he had arranged that the <i>Hohenzollern</i> should
-be followed first by the Lloyd steamer and then by the Hamburg-Amerika
-liner. Thereupon Ballin asked leave to speak. He explained that, since
-the journey was to start in Hamburg territorial waters, it would perhaps
-be proper to extend to the Hamburg company the honour of the position
-immediately after the Imperial yacht. The Kaiser, in a tone which
-sounded by no means gracious, declared that he did not think this was
-necessary, and that he had already given a definite promise to the Lloyd
-people. Ballin replied that, if the Kaiser had pledged his word, the
-matter, of course, was settled, and that he would withdraw his
-suggestion, although he considered himself justified in making it.</p>
-
-<p>At the close of the meeting Count Waldersee, who had been one of those
-present, took Ballin’s arm and said to him: “As you are now sure to be
-hanged from the Brandenburger Tor, let us go to Hiller’s before it comes
-off, to have some lunch together.†Ballin never ceased to be grateful to
-the Count for this sign of kindness, and his friendship with him and his
-family lasted until his death. The arrangements made by the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie for the reception of its guests were carefully
-prepared and carried out. It is not easy to give an idea to a non-expert
-of the great many minute details which have to be attended to in order
-to accommodate a large number of exacting visitors on a steamer in such
-a manner that nobody finds anything to complain of, especially if, as is
-but natural on an occasion such<a name="page_195" id="page_195"></a> as this, an endless variety of
-questions as to precedence and etiquette have to be taken into account.
-Great pains and much circumspection are necessary to arrange to
-everybody’s satisfaction all matters affecting the reception of the
-guests, the provision of food and drinks, the conveyance of luggage,
-etc. Thanks to the infinite care, however, with which Ballin and his
-fellow-workers attended to this matter, everything turned out eminently
-satisfactory. In the evening, when the guests of the Hamburg-Amerika
-Linie were returning to their steamer at the close of the festivities,
-the company agreeably surprised them by providing an artistically
-arranged collation of cold meats, etc., and the news of this spread so
-quickly that from the other vessels people who felt that the official
-catering had not taken sufficient account of their appetites, lost no
-time in availing themselves of this opportunity of a meal.</p>
-
-<p>This event, at any rate, helped to establish the reputation of the
-company’s hospitality.</p>
-
-<p>It may be presumed that this incident had shown the Kaiser&mdash;who,
-although he did not object to being contradicted in private, could not
-bear it in public&mdash;that the Hamburg Company was animated by a spirit of
-independence which did not subordinate itself to other influences
-without a protest, and which jealously guarded its position. It must be
-stated that the Kaiser never bore Ballin any ill will on account of his
-opposition, which may be partly due to the great pains the Packetfahrt
-took in order to make the festivities a success. The event may also have
-induced the Kaiser to watch the progress of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie
-after that with particular attention. His special interest was centred
-round the provision for new construction, and in this matter he exerted
-his influence from an early time in favour of the German yards.</p>
-
-<p>The first occasion of the Kaiser’s pleading in favour<a name="page_196" id="page_196"></a> of German yards
-dates from the time previous to his accession to the throne. Ballin, in
-a speech which he delivered when the trial trip of the s.s. <i>Meteor</i>
-took place, stated the facts connected with this intervention as
-follows: The directors had just started negotiations with British
-shipbuilding firms for the building of their first express steamer when
-the Prussian Minister to the Free City of Hamburg called to inform them,
-at the request of Prince Bismarck, that the latter, acting upon the
-urgent representations of Prince Wilhelm, suggested that they should
-entrust the building of the big vessel to a German yard. The Prince was
-profoundly convinced that Germany, for the sake of her own future, must
-cease to play the part of Cinderella among the nations, and that there
-was no want of engineers among his countrymen who, if given a chance,
-would prove just as efficient as their fellow-craftsmen in England. The
-Packetfahrt thereupon entrusted the building of the vessel to the
-Stettin Vulkan yard. She was the fast steamer <i>Auguste Victoria</i>, and
-was christened after the young Empress. Launched in 1888, she
-immediately won “the blue riband of the Atlantic†on her first trip.</p>
-
-<p>Another and still more practical suggestion of the Kaiser was put
-forward at the time when the company were about to build an excursion
-steamer. The satisfactory results which their fast steamers had yielded
-during the dead season in the transatlantic passage business when used
-for pleasure cruises had induced them to take this step, and when the
-Kaiser’s attention was drawn to this project, he, on the strength of the
-experience he had made with his <i>Hohenzollern</i>, designed a sketch and
-composed a memorandum dealing with the equipment of such a steamer. It
-was Ballin’s opinion that this Imperial memorandum contained some
-suggestions worth studying, although it was but<a name="page_197" id="page_197"></a> natural that the
-monarch could not be expected to be sufficiently acquainted with all the
-practical considerations which the company had to bear in mind in order
-to make the innovation pay, and that, therefore, some of his
-recommendations could not be carried out.</p>
-
-<p>If we remember what vivid pleasure the Kaiser derived from his own
-holiday cruises, it cannot surprise us to see that he took such a keen
-interest in the company’s excursion trips. How keen it was may be
-inferred from an incident which happened early in his reign, and to
-which Ballin, when describing his first experiences on this subject,
-referred in his above-mentioned speech on the occasion of the trial trip
-of the <i>Meteor</i>. Ballin said: “Even among my most intimate associates
-people were not wanting who thought that I was not quite right in my
-mind when, at the head of 241 intrepid travellers, I set out on the
-first pleasure cruise to the Far East in January, 1891. The Kaiser had
-just inspected the vessel, and then bade farewell to the company and
-myself by saying: ‘That’s right. Make our countrymen feel at home on the
-open sea, and both your company and the whole nation will reap the
-benefit.’â€</p>
-
-<p>In after years the Kaiser’s interest in the company chiefly centred
-round those landmarks in its progress which marked the country’s
-expansion in the direction of <i>Weltpolitik</i>, e.g. its participation in
-the Imperial Mail Service to the Far East, its taking up a share in the
-African trade, etc. In fact, after 1901, when the Kaiser had keenly
-interested himself in the establishment of the Morgan Trust and its
-connexion with German shipping companies, there was scarcely an
-important event in the history of the company (such as the extension of
-its services, the addition of a big new steamer, etc.) which he allowed
-to pass without a few cordial words of congratulation. He also took the
-liveliest interest<a name="page_198" id="page_198"></a> in the personal well-being of Ballin. He always sent
-him the compliments of the season at Christmas or for the New Year,
-generally in the shape of picture post-cards or photographs from his
-travels, together with a few gracious words, and he never failed to
-remember the anniversaries of important events in Ballin’s life or to
-inquire after him on recovering from an illness. Ballin, in his turn,
-acquainted the Kaiser with anything which he believed might be of
-interest to His Majesty, or might improve his knowledge of the economic
-conditions existing in his own as well as in foreign countries. He kept
-him informed about all the more important pool negotiations, e.g. those
-in connexion with the establishment, in 1908, of the general pool, and
-those referring to the agreements concluded with other German shipping
-companies, etc. Whenever he noticed on his travels any signs of
-important developments, chiefly those of a political kind, he furnished
-his Imperial friend with reports on the foreign situation.</p>
-
-<p>In 1904 the Kaiser’s interest in Ballin took a particularly practical
-form. Ballin had suffered a great deal from neuralgic pains which, in
-spite of the treatment of various physicians, did not really and
-permanently diminish until the patient was taken in hand by Professor
-Schweninger, the famous medical adviser of no less a man than Bismarck.
-Ballin himself testified to the unvaried attention and kindness of Dr.
-Schweninger, and to the great success of his treatment. It is to be
-assumed that Schweninger, because of his energetic manner of dealing
-with his patients, was eminently suited to Ballin’s disposition, which
-was not an easy one for his doctor and for those round him to cope with.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“As early as January, 1904,†Ballin remarks in his notes, “the
-Kaiser had sent a telegram inviting me to attend the <i>Ordensfest</i>
-celebrations in Berlin, and during the subsequent levee he favoured
-me with a lengthy conversation, chiefly<a name="page_199" id="page_199"></a> because he wanted to tell
-me how greatly he was alarmed at the state of my health. His
-physician, Professor Leuthold, had evidently given him an
-unfavourable account of it. The Kaiser explained that he could no
-longer allow me to go on without proper assistance or without a
-substitute who would do my work when I was away for any length of
-time. This state of things caused him a great deal of anxiety, and,
-as it was a matter of national interest, he was bound to occupy
-himself with this problem. He did not wish to expose himself to a
-repetition of the danger&mdash;which he had experienced in the Krupp
-case&mdash;that a large concern like ours should at any moment be
-without a qualified steersman at the helm. He said he knew that of
-all the gentlemen in his entourage Herr v. Grumme was the one I
-liked best, and that I had an excellent opinion of him. He also
-considered Grumme the best man he had ever had round him, and it
-would be difficult to replace him. Nevertheless he would be glad to
-induce Grumme to join the services of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie, if
-I thought that this would solve the difficulty he had just referred
-to, and that such a solution would fall in with my own wishes. He
-was convinced that I should soon be restored to my normal health if
-I were relieved of some part of my work, and that this would enable
-me to do much useful service to the nation and himself; so he would
-be pleased to make the sacrifice. I sincerely thanked His Majesty,
-and assured him that I could not think of any solution that I
-should like better than the one he had proposed, and that, if he
-were really prepared to do so much for me, I would beg him to
-discuss the matter with Grumme. That very evening he sent for
-Grumme, who immediately expressed his readiness to enter the
-services of our company if such was His Majesty’s pleasure.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>The lively interest which the Kaiser took in the development of our
-mercantile marine was naturally closely connected with the growth of the
-Imperial Navy and with our naval policy in general. The country’s
-maritime interests and the merchant fleet were the real motives that
-prompted his own naval policy, whereas Tirpitz chiefly looked upon them
-as a valuable asset<a name="page_200" id="page_200"></a> for propaganda purposes. During the first stage of
-the naval policy and of the naval propaganda&mdash;which at that time were
-conducted on quite moderate lines&mdash;Ballin, as he repeatedly told me,
-played a very active part. It was the time when the well-known
-periodical <i>Nautikus</i>, afterwards issued at regular annual intervals,
-was first published by the Ministry for the Navy, and when a very active
-propaganda in favour of the navy and of the country’s maritime interests
-was started. Experience has proved how difficult it is to start such a
-propaganda, especially through the medium of a Press so loosely
-organized as was the German Press in those days. But it is still more
-difficult to stop, or even to lessen, such propaganda once it has been
-started, because the preliminary condition for any active propaganda
-work is that a large number of individual persons and organizations
-should be interested in it. It is next to impossible to induce these
-people to discontinue their activities when it is no longer thought
-desirable to keep up the propaganda after its original aim has been
-achieved. Germany’s maritime interests remained a favourite subject of
-Press discussions, and the animation with which these were carried on
-reached a climax whenever a supplementary Navy Bill was introduced. Even
-when it was intended to widen the Kiel Canal, as it proved too narrow
-for the vessels of the “Dreadnought†type, the necessity for doing so
-was explained by reference to the constantly increasing size of the new
-steamers built for the mercantile marine; although, seeing that the
-shallow waters of the Baltic and of the channels leading into it made it
-quite impossible to use them for this purpose, nobody ever proposed to
-send those big ships through the canal. In later years Ballin often
-spoke with great bitterness of those journalists who would never leave
-off writing about “the daring of our merchant fleet†in terms of<a name="page_201" id="page_201"></a>
-unmeasured eulogy, and whom he described as the greatest enemies of the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie.</p>
-
-<p>But it was not only the propaganda work for the Imperial Navy to which
-the Kaiser contributed by his own personal efforts: the range of his
-maritime interests was much wider. He gave his assistance when the
-problems connected with the troop transports to the Far East and to
-South West Africa were under discussion; he studied with keen attention
-the progress of the German mercantile marine, the vessels of which he
-frequently met on his travels; he often went on board the German tourist
-steamers, those in Norwegian waters for instance, when he would
-unfailingly make some complimentary remarks on the management, and he
-became the lavish patron of the sporting events known as Kiel Week, the
-scope of which was extending from year to year. The Kiel Week,
-originally started by the yachting clubs of Hamburg for the
-encouragement of their sport, gradually developed into a social event of
-the first order, and since 1902 it became customary for the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie to dispatch one of their big steamers to Kiel,
-where it served as a hotel ship for a large number of the visitors. From
-1897 Kiel Week was preceded by a visit of the Kaiser&mdash;and frequently of
-the Kaiserin as well&mdash;to Hamburg, where their Majesties attended the
-summer races and the yachting regatta on the lower Elbe. In 1897 the
-Kaiser had the intention of being present at a banquet which the
-Norddeutsche Regatta-Verein was giving on board the Packetfahrt liner
-<i>Columbia</i>, and he was only prevented from doing so at the last moment.
-In the following year the Hamburg-Amerika Linie sent their s.s.
-<i>Pretoria</i> to Kiel. On this vessel the well-known “Regatta dinner†took
-place which the Kaiser attended, and which, on future occasions, he
-continued to honour with his presence. Ballin received a special
-invitation to<a name="page_202" id="page_202"></a> visit the Kaiser on board his yacht <i>Hohenzollern</i>. He
-could not, however, avail himself of it, because the message only
-reached him on his way home to Hamburg. The year after, the Kaiser
-commanded Ballin to sit next to him at the table, and engaged him in a
-long conversation on the subject of the load-line which he wanted to see
-adopted by German shipping firms for their vessels. The Packetfahrt
-carried this suggestion into practice shortly afterwards, and in course
-of time the other companies followed suit.</p>
-
-<p>On the occasion of these festivities the Kaiser in 1904 paid a visit to
-the new premises of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie. In 1905 and in subsequent
-years he also visited Ballin’s private home and took lunch with him. The
-speeches which he made at the regatta dinners given in connexion with
-the regatta on the lower Elbe frequently contained some political
-references. In 1908, for instance, he said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“Although we do not possess such a navy as we ought to have, we
-have gained a place in the sun. It will now be my duty to see to it
-that we shall keep this place in the sun against all comers.... I,
-as the supreme head of the Empire, can only rejoice whenever I see
-a Hanseatic citizen&mdash;let him be a native of Hamburg, or Bremen, or
-Lübeck&mdash;striking out into the world with his eyes wide open, and
-trying to find a spot where he can hammer a nail into the wall from
-which to hang the tools needed to carry on his trade.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>In 1912 he quoted the motto from the Lübeck Ratskeller:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“It is easy to hoist the flag, but it costs a great deal to haul it
-down with honour.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>And in 1914, after the launch of the big steamer <i>Bismarck</i>, he quoted
-Bismarck’s saying, slightly altered:</p>
-
-<p>“We Germans fear God, but nothing and nobody besides.<a name="page_203" id="page_203"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>Kiel Week never passed without a great deal of political discussion. The
-close personal contact on such occasions between Ballin and the Kaiser
-furnished the former with many an opportunity for expressing his views
-on politics. Much has been said about William II’s “irresponsible
-advisers,†who are alleged to have endeavoured to influence him in the
-interests of certain cliques, and it cannot, of course, be denied that
-the men who formed the personal entourage of the monarch were very far
-from representing every shade of public opinion, even if that had been
-possible. The traditions of the Prussian Court and of princely education
-may have contributed their share to this state of things. The result, at
-any rate, was that in times of crises&mdash;as, for instance, during the
-war&mdash;it was impossible to break through the phalanx of men who guarded
-the Kaiser and to withdraw him from their influence. Events have shown
-how strong this influence must have been, and how little it was suited
-to induce the Kaiser to apply any self-criticism to his preconceived
-ideas. Added to this, there was the difficulty of obtaining a private
-conversation with the Kaiser for any length of time&mdash;a difficulty which
-was but rarely overcome even by persons possessing very high
-credentials. It has already been mentioned that the Kaiser did not like
-to be contradicted in the presence of others, because he considered it
-derogatory to his sovereign position. Ballin repeatedly succeeded in
-engaging the Kaiser in private conversations of some length, especially
-after his journeys abroad, when the Kaiser invited him to lunch with
-him, and afterwards to accompany him on a walk unattended.</p>
-
-<p>Ballin’s notes more than once refer to such conversations with the
-Kaiser, e.g. on June 3rd, 1901, when he had been a member of the
-Imperial luncheon party:<a name="page_204" id="page_204"></a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“After lunch the Kaiser asked me to report on my trip to the Far
-East, and he, in his turn, told me some exceedingly interesting
-pieces of news relating to his stay in England, and to political
-affairs connected with it.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>The following passage, referring to the Kiel Week, is taken from the
-notes of the same year:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“I received many marks of the Kaiser’s attention, who, on July
-27th, summoned me to Kiel once more, as he wished to discuss with
-the Chancellor and me the question of the Japanese bank.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>During his trip to the Far East Ballin had taken a great deal of trouble
-to bring about the establishment of a German-Japanese bank.</p>
-
-<p>The following extracts are taken from the notes of subsequent years:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“On December 10th (1903) I received a wire asking me to see the
-Kaiser at the <i>Neues Palais</i>. To my infinite joy the Kaiser had
-quite recovered the use of his voice. He looked well and fit, and
-during a stroll through the park I had a long chat with him
-concerning my trip to America and other matters. In February the
-Kaiser intends to undertake a Mediterranean cruise on board the
-<i>Hohenzollern</i> for the benefit of his health. He will probably
-proceed to Genoa on board one of the Imperial mail packets, which
-is to be chartered for him.â€</p>
-
-<p>(April 1904). “The Kaiser had expressed a wish to see me in Italy.
-On my arrival at Naples I found a telegram waiting for me in which
-I was asked to proceed to Messina if necessary. Owing, however, to
-the state of our negotiations with the Russian Government, I did
-not think it desirable to meet the Kaiser just then, and thus I had
-no opportunity of seeing him until May 3rd when I was in Berlin to
-attend a meeting of the <i>Disconto-Gesellschaft</i>, and to confer with
-Stübel on the question of some further troop transports to South
-West Africa. I received an invitation to join the Imperial luncheon
-party at which the birthday of the Crown Prince was to be
-celebrated in advance, since his Majesty would<a name="page_205" id="page_205"></a> not be in town on
-May 6th. The Kaiser’s health had much improved through his cruise;
-he had lost some of his stoutness, and the Kaiserin, too, was
-greatly pleased to see him looking so well. We naturally discussed
-the topics of the day, and the Kaiser, as always, was full of
-kindness and goodwill towards me.â€</p>
-
-<p>“On June 21st, 1904, the usual Imperial Regatta took place at
-Cuxhaven, and the usual dinner on board the <i>Blücher</i>. These events
-were followed by Kiel Week, which lasted from June 22nd to 28th. We
-stayed on board the <i>Victoria Luise</i>, and I was thus brought into
-especially close contact with the Kaiser. I accompanied him to
-Eckernförde on board the <i>Meteor</i>, and we discussed the political
-situation, particularly in its bearing on the Morocco question and
-on the attitude of Great Britain.â€</p>
-
-<p>“On June 19th, 1904, the Kaiser, the Kaiserin, and some of their
-sons were staying in Hamburg. I dined with them at Tschirschky’s
-(the Prussian Minister in Hamburg), and we drove to the races. On
-June 20th we proceeded to Cuxhaven, where, on board the
-<i>Deutschland</i>, I heard the news&mdash;which the Kaiser had just
-communicated to Kaempff (the captain of the <i>Deutschland</i>)&mdash;that
-the North German Lloyd steamer <i>Kaiser Wilhelm II</i>, in consequence
-of her being equipped with larger propellers, had won the speed
-record. Late at night the Kaiser asked me to see him on board the
-<i>Hohenzollern</i>, where he engaged me in a long discussion on the
-most varied subjects. On June 21st the regatta took place at
-Cuxhaven. The Kaiser and Prince Heinrich were amongst the guests
-who were entertained at dinner on board the <i>Deutschland</i>. The
-Kaiser was in the best of health and spirits. Owing to the
-circumstance that Burgomaster Burchard&mdash;who generally engages the
-Kaiser in after-dinner conversation&mdash;was prevented by his illness
-from being present, I was enabled to introduce a number of Hamburg
-gentlemen to His Majesty. As the Kaiser had summoned me to dine
-with him on board the <i>Hohenzollern</i> on the 22nd, I could not
-return to Hamburg, but had to travel through the Kiel Canal that
-same night on board a tug steamer. On the 22nd I stayed at the club
-house of the Imperial Yachting Club, whilst at my<a name="page_206" id="page_206"></a> own house a
-dinner party was given for 36 persons. On the 23rd I changed my
-quarters to the <i>Prinzessin Victoria Luise</i>, and the other visitors
-arrived there about noon. A special feature of Kiel Week of 1904
-was the visit of King Edward to the Kaiser whom he met at Kiel. For
-the accommodation of the ministers of state and of the other
-visitors whom the Kaiser had invited in connexion with the presence
-of the King, we had placed our s.s. <i>Prinz Joachim</i> at his
-disposal, in addition to the <i>Prinzessin Victoria Luise</i>. We also
-supplied, for the first time, a hotel ship, the <i>Graf Waldersee</i>,
-all the cabins of which were engaged. On June 27th my wife and I,
-and a number of other visitors from the <i>Prinzessin Victoria
-Luise</i>, were invited to take afternoon tea with the Kaiser and
-Kaiserin on board the <i>Hohenzollern</i>, and I had a lengthy
-conversation with King Edward.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>Whenever the Kaiser granted Ballin an interview without the presence of
-witnesses he cast aside all dignity, and discussed matters with him as
-friend to friend. Neither did he object to his friend’s counsel and
-admonitions, and he was not offended if Ballin, on such occasions,
-subjected his actions or his opinions to severe criticism.</p>
-
-<p>On such occasions the Kaiser, as Ballin repeatedly pointed out, “took it
-all in without interrupting, looking at me from the depth of his kind
-and honest eyes.†That he did not bear Ballin any malice for his
-frankness is shown by the fact that he took a lively and cordial
-interest in all the events touching the private life of Ballin and his
-family, his daughter’s engagement, for instance&mdash;an interest which still
-continued after Ballin’s death.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of this close friendship between Ballin and the Kaiser, it
-would be quite wrong to assume that Ballin exercised anything resembling
-a permanent influence on His Majesty. Their meetings took place only
-very occasionally, and were often separated by intervals<a name="page_207" id="page_207"></a> extending over
-several months, and it happened only in rare cases that Ballin availed
-himself of the privilege of writing to the Kaiser in person. It is true
-that the latter was always pleased to listen to Ballin’s explanations of
-his views, and it is possible that every now and than he did allow
-himself to be guided by them; but it is quite certain that he never
-allowed these views to exercise any actual influence on the country’s
-politics. The events narrated in the chapter of this book dealing with
-politics show that in a concrete case, at any rate, Ballin’s
-recommendations and the weight of his arguments were not sufficient to
-cope successfully with the influence of others who were the permanent
-advisers of the sovereign, and who had at all times access to His
-Majesty.</p>
-
-<p>If thus the effect of Ballin’s friendship with the Kaiser has frequently
-been greatly overrated in regard to politics, the same holds good&mdash;and,
-indeed, to a still greater extent&mdash;in regard to the advantages which the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie is supposed to have derived from it. One of
-Ballin’s associates on the Board of the company was quite right when he
-said: “Ballin’s friendship with the Kaiser has done more harm than good
-to the Hamburg-Amerika Linie.†Indirectly, of course, it raised the
-prestige of the company both at home and abroad. But there is no doubt
-that it had also an adverse effect upon it: at any rate, outside of
-Germany. It gave rise to all sorts of rumours, e.g. that the company
-obtained great advantages from the Government; that the latter
-subsidized it to a considerable extent; that the Kaiser was one of the
-principal shareholders, etc. It is also quite certain that these beliefs
-were largely instrumental in making the Hamburg-Amerika Linie, as Ballin
-put it, one of the war aims of Great Britain, and it is even alleged
-that, at the close of the war, the British Government approached some of
-the country<a name="page_208" id="page_208"></a>’s leading shipping firms with the suggestion that they
-should buy up the Hamburg-Amerika Linie or the North German Lloyd. This
-was at the time when it became desirable to secure the necessary
-organization for the intended commercial conquest of the Continent. It
-is quite possible&mdash;and, I am inclined to think, quite probable&mdash;that
-this suggestion was put forward because such a step would be in harmony
-with that frame of mind from which originated such stipulations of the
-Versailles treaty as deal with shipping masters, and with the assumption
-that German shipping&mdash;which was supposed to depend for its continuance
-mainly on the existence of the German monarchial system&mdash;would
-practically come to an end with the disappearance of the latter. It
-would, indeed, be difficult to name any historical document which pays
-less regard to the vital necessities of a nation and which actually
-ignores them more completely than does the treaty signed at Versailles.</p>
-
-<p>The allegation that Ballin should ever have attempted to make use of his
-friendship with the Kaiser for his own or for his company’s benefit is,
-moreover, diametrically opposed to the established fact that he knew the
-precise limits of his influence, and that he never endeavoured to
-overreach himself. His “policy of compromise†was the practical outcome
-of this trait of his character.</p>
-
-<p>The opinion which my close observation of Ballin’s work during the last
-ten years of his life enabled me to form was, as far as its political
-side is concerned, confirmed to me in every detail by no less a person
-than Prince Bülow, who, without doubt, is the most competent judge of
-German affairs in the first decade of the twentieth century. When I
-asked the Prince whether Ballin could be accused of ever having abused
-the friendship between himself and the Kaiser for any ulterior<a name="page_209" id="page_209"></a> ends
-whatever, he replied with a decided negative. Ballin, he said, had never
-dreamt of doing such a thing. He had always exercised the greatest tact
-in his relations with the Kaiser, and had never made use of them to gain
-any private advantage. Besides, his views had nearly always coincided
-with those held by the responsible leaders of the country’s political
-destinies. Once only a conflict of opinion had arisen between Ballin and
-himself on a political question, and this was at the time when the
-customs tariffs were under discussion. Ballin held that these were
-detrimental to the country’s best interests, and it is a well-known fact
-that, at that time, there was a widespread feeling as to the
-impossibility of concluding any commercial treaties so long as those
-tariffs were in operation.</p>
-
-<p>During the most critical period of the existence of the monarchy&mdash;i.e.
-during the war&mdash;Ballin’s influence on the Kaiser was but slight. Only on
-a very few occasions was he able to meet the Kaiser, and he never had an
-opportunity of talking to him privately, as in former times. It was the
-constant aim of the Kaiser’s entourage to maintain their controlling
-influence over the Kaiser unimpaired. Even when they last met&mdash;in
-September, 1918&mdash;and when Ballin, at the instance of the Supreme Army
-Command, was asked to explain to the Kaiser the situation as it actually
-was, he was not permitted to see the Kaiser without the presence of a
-witness, so that his influence could not assert itself. The fact that
-the Kaiser was debarred from knowing the truth was the cause of his and
-of his country’s ruin. “The Kaiser is only allowed to know the bright
-side of things,†Ballin used to say, “and therefore he does not see
-matters as they really stand.â€</p>
-
-<p>This is all the more regrettable because, as Ballin thought, the Kaiser
-was not wanting in either the capacity or the independence of mind which
-would have enabled<a name="page_210" id="page_210"></a> him to pursue a policy better than the one in which
-he actually acquiesced. More than once, Ballin said, the Kaiser’s
-judgment on a political issue was absolutely sound, but he did not wish
-to act contrary to the recommendations of his responsible advisers.
-When, for instance, it was decided that the gunboat <i>Panther</i> should be
-dispatched to Agadir, a decision which was arrived at during Kiel Week
-of 1911, the Kaiser exclaimed, with much show of feeling, that a step of
-such far-reaching importance could not be taken on the spur of the
-moment and without consulting the nation, and he only gave his consent
-with great reluctance. Moreover, Ballin stated, he was by no means in
-sympathy with Tirpitz, and the latter was not a man after his own heart,
-but he was content to let him have his way, because he believed that the
-naval policy of Tirpitz was right, so that he was not entitled to
-jeopardize the interests of his country by dismissing him. The Kaiser
-was not moved by an ambitious desire to build up a powerful navy
-destined to risk all in a decisive struggle against Great Britain, and
-the numerous passages in his public speeches which foreign observers
-interpreted as implying such a desire, must be regarded as the explosive
-outbursts of a strong character which was sometimes directed into wrong
-channels by a certain sense of its own superiority, and which, in
-seeking to express itself, would occasionally outrun discretion. His
-inconsistency which made him an easy prey to the influence of his
-entourage, caused him to be looked upon by foreign critics as
-vacillating and unstable, and this impression&mdash;as was discovered when
-too late&mdash;discredited his country immensely in the eyes of Great
-Britain, who, after all, had to be reckoned with as the decisive factor
-in all questions relative to world policy. Such a character could be
-guided in the right direction only if the right influence could be
-brought permanently to bear on it.<a name="page_211" id="page_211"></a> But who was to exercise such
-influence on the Kaiser? Certainly his entourage did not include anyone
-qualified to do so, because it was not representative of all sections of
-the nation; neither was any of the successive Chancellors able to
-undertake such a task, since none of them succeeded in solving the
-questions of internal policy in a manner approved by a reliable and
-solid majority in the Reichstag. The Kaiserin also was not free from
-prejudice as to the war and the causes of its outbreak. Ballin relates
-how, on one of the few occasions when he was privileged to see the
-Kaiser during the war, Her Majesty, with clenched fists, exclaimed:
-“Peace with England? Never!†The Imperial family considered themselves
-betrayed by England and the English court. Why this should be so is
-perhaps still more difficult to say now than Ballin could understand in
-those days. Arguments, however, were useless in such a case, and could
-produce nothing but harm. The Kaiser did not bear Ballin any malice
-because of the frankness with which he explained his views that day; on
-the contrary, members of the Kaiser’s entourage have confirmed that,
-after Ballin had left that evening, he even tried to make the Kaiserin
-see his (Ballin’s) point of view. Putting himself into Ballin’s
-position, he said, he could perfectly understand how he felt about it
-all; but he himself could not help thinking that his English relatives
-had played him false, so that he was forced to continue the struggle
-with England tooth and nail.</p>
-
-<p>When Ballin, during the summer of 1918, gave me a character sketch of
-the Kaiser, of which the account I have endeavoured to present in the
-preceding paragraphs is an outline, he added: “But what is the good of
-it? He is, after all, the managing director, and if things turn out
-wrong he is held responsible exactly as if he were the director of a
-joint-stock company.â€</p>
-
-<p>This comparison of the German Empire and its<a name="page_212" id="page_212"></a> ruler with a joint-stock
-company and its board of directors used to form a frequent subject of
-argument in our inner circle, and even before the war these discussions
-regularly led to the conclusion that, what with the policy carried on by
-the Government and that carried on by the parties in the Reichstag, the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie would have gone bankrupt long ago if its affairs
-had been conducted on such lines as those of the German Empire. It was a
-never-ending cause of surprise to us to learn how completely the
-European situation was misjudged in the highest quarters, when, for
-instance, the following incident, which was reported to Ballin during
-the war, became known to us. One day, when the conversation at lunch in
-the Imperial headquarters turned to the subject of England, the Kaiser
-remarked: “I only wish someone had told me beforehand that England would
-take up arms against us,†to which one of those present replied in a
-quiet whisper: “Metternich.†It would have been just as proper, Ballin
-added, to have mentioned my own name, because I also warned the Kaiser
-over and over again. On another page in this book reference is made to
-the well-known fact that the reason why Count Metternich, the German
-ambassador at the Court of St. James, had to relinquish his post was
-that he, in one of his reports, predicted that Germany would be involved
-in war with Great Britain no later than 1915 unless she reduced the pace
-of her naval armaments. This was one of those numerous predictions to
-which, like so many others, especially during the war, no one wanted to
-listen. Even in the late summer of 1918, when Ballin saw the Kaiser for
-the last time, such warnings met with a deaf ear. This meeting, to which
-Ballin consented with reluctance, was the outcome of a friendship which,
-politically speaking, was devoid of practical results. A detailed
-account follows.<a name="page_213" id="page_213"></a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X<br /><br />
-<span class="smcap">The War</span></h2>
-
-<p class="nind">A<span class="smcap">bout</span> the middle of the month of July, 1914, Ballin, when staying at
-Kissingen for the benefit of his health, received a letter from the
-Foreign Secretary, Herr v. Jagow, which made him put an immediate end to
-his holiday and proceed to Berlin. The letter was dated July 15th, and
-its principal contents were as follows:</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Berliner Tageblatt</i>, it said, had published some information
-concerning certain Anglo-Russian agreements on naval questions. The
-Foreign Office did not attach much value to it, because it was at
-variance with the general assumption that Germany’s relations with Great
-Britain had undergone a change for the better, and also with the
-apparent reluctance of British statesmen to tie their country to any
-such agreements. The matter, however, had been followed up all the same,
-and through very confidential channels it had been ascertained that the
-rumours in question were by no means devoid of an actual background of
-fact. Grey, too, had not denied them point blank at his interview with
-Lichnowsky. It was quite true that Anglo-Russian negotiations were
-proceeding on the subject of a naval agreement, and that the Russian
-Government was anxious to secure as much mutual co-operation between the
-two countries as possible. A definite understanding had not, so far,
-been reached, notwithstanding the pressure exercised by Russia. Grey’s
-attitude had become somewhat uncertain; but it was thought that he<a name="page_214" id="page_214"></a>
-would ultimately give his consent, and that he would quieten his own
-conscience by arguing that the negotiations had not really been
-conducted between the Cabinets, but between the respective naval
-authorities. It was also quite likely that the British, who were adepts
-at the art of making nice distinctions, would be negotiating with the
-mental reservation that they would refrain from taking an active part
-when the critical moment arrived, if it suited them not to do so; and a
-<i>casus fœderis</i> would presumably not be provided for in the
-agreement. At any rate, the effect of the latter would be enormously to
-strengthen the aggressive tendencies of Russia. If the agreement became
-perfect, it would be useless for Germany to think any longer of coming
-to a <i>rapprochement</i> with Great Britain, and therefore it would be a
-matter of great importance to make a last effort towards counteracting
-the Russian designs. His (v. Jagow’s) idea was that Ballin, who had
-intimate relations with numerous Englishmen in leading positions, should
-send a note of warning across the North Sea. This suggestion was
-followed up by several hints as to the most suitable form of wording
-such a note, and the letter concluded with the statement that the matter
-was one of great urgency. A postscript dated July 16th added that a
-further article had been published by the <i>Berliner Tageblatt</i>,
-according to which the informants of the author also took a serious view
-of the situation.</p>
-
-<p>Ballin, in response to the request contained in the letter, did not
-content himself with sending a written note to his London friends, but
-he immediately went to Berlin for the purpose of gaining additional
-information on the spot, with special reference to the general political
-outlook. He learned that Austria intended to present a strongly worded
-note to Serbia, and that it was expected that in reply a counter-note
-dictated by Russia would be received. He was also told that the<a name="page_215" id="page_215"></a>
-Government not only wanted some information regarding the matter which
-formed the special subject of Herr v. Jagow’s letter, but also regarding
-the general political situation in London, as it was doubted whether the
-reports received from the ambassador were sufficiently trustworthy and
-complete. This was all that Ballin was told. Since then many facts have
-become known which throw a light on the way in which political questions
-were dealt with by the Berlin authorities during the critical period
-preceding the war, and if we, knowing what we know now, read the letter
-of Herr v. Jagow, we ask ourselves in amazement what was the object of
-the proposed action in London? Could it be that it was intended to
-intimidate the British Government? This could hardly be thought
-possible, so that some other result must have been aimed at. We can only
-say that the whole affair is still surrounded by much mystery, and we
-can sympathize with Ballin’s bitter complaints in later days that he
-thought people had not treated him with as much openness as they should
-have done, and that they had abused his intimate relations with leading
-British personages.</p>
-
-<p>Ballin then left Berlin for Hamburg. He gave me his impressions of the
-state of political affairs&mdash;which he did not regard as critical&mdash;and
-went to London, ostensibly on business. In London he met Grey, Haldane,
-and Churchill, and there also he did not look upon the situation as
-critical&mdash;at least, not at first. When, however, the text of the
-Austrian note became known on Thursday, July 23rd, and when its full
-significance had gradually been realized, the political atmosphere
-became clouded: people asked what was Austria’s real object, and began
-to fear lest the peace might be disturbed. Nevertheless, Ballin returned
-from London on July 27th with the impression that a fairly capable
-German diplomat might even then succeed in bringing<a name="page_216" id="page_216"></a> about an
-understanding with Great Britain and France which, by preventing Russia
-from striking, would result in preserving the peace. Great Britain and
-the leading British politicians, he said, were absolutely in favour of
-peace, and the French Government was so much against war that its
-representatives in London seemed to him to be rather nervous on the
-subject. They would, he thought, do anything in their power to prevent
-war. If, however, France was attacked without any provocation on her
-part, Great Britain would be compelled to come to her assistance.
-Britain would never allow that we, as was provided for in the old plan
-of campaign, should march through Belgium. It was quite true that the
-Austrian note had caused grave anxiety in London, but how earnestly the
-Cabinet was trying to preserve peace might be gauged by the fact that
-Churchill, when he took leave of Ballin, implored him, almost with tears
-in his eyes, not to go to war. These impressions of Ballin are confirmed
-by the reports of Prince Lichnowsky and other members of the German
-Embassy in their observations during the critical days.</p>
-
-<p>Apart from these politicians and diplomatists on active service there
-were other persons of political training, though no longer in office,
-who did not think at that time that there was an immediate danger of
-war. In this connexion I should like to add a report of a very
-remarkable conversation with Count Witte, which took place at Bad
-Salzschlirf on July 24th. The Count&mdash;whose untimely death was greatly
-regretted&mdash;was without any doubt one of the most capable statesmen of
-his time&mdash;perhaps the only one with a touch of genius Europe
-possessed&mdash;and he certainly knew more about the complicated state of
-things in Russia than any living person. For these reasons his views on
-the events which form the first stage of the fateful conflict are of
-special interest. I shall reproduce the report of this<a name="page_217" id="page_217"></a> conversation
-exactly as we received it at the time, and as we passed it on to Berlin.
-The authenticity of the statements of Count Witte as given here is
-beyond question.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“Yesterday (on July 24th) I paid a visit to Count Witte who was
-staying at Bad Salzschlirf, and in the course of the day I had
-several conversations with him, the first of which took place as
-early as ten o’clock in the morning. After a few words of welcome,
-and after discussing some matters of general and personal interest,
-I said to the Count: ‘I should like to thank you for your welcome
-letter and for your telegram. The question which you raise in them
-of a meeting between our two emperors appears of such fundamental
-importance to me that I may perhaps hope to be favoured with some
-details by you personally.’</p>
-
-<p>“Witte replied: ‘In the first instance I wish to reaffirm what I
-have repeatedly told you, both verbally and by letter, viz. that I
-am not in the least anxious to be nominated Russian delegate for
-the proposed negotiations concerning a commercial treaty between
-Germany and Russia. Whoever may be appointed from the Russian side
-will gain no laurels. I think a meeting between the Kaiser and the
-Tsar some time within the next few weeks would be of very great
-importance. Have you read the French papers? The tone now assumed
-by Jules Hedeman is a direct challenge. I know Hedeman, and I also
-know that he only writes what will please Sasonov, Poincaré and
-Paléologue (the French ambassador in Petrograd). Now that the
-Peterhof meeting has taken place the language employed by all the
-French and Russian papers will become more arrogant than ever. It
-is quite certain that the Russian diplomatists and their French
-colleagues will now assume a different tone in their intercourse
-with the German diplomatists. The <i>rapprochement</i> with Great
-Britain is making considerable progress, and whether a naval
-convention exists or not, Great Britain will now side with Russia
-and France. If even now a meeting could be arranged between the two
-Emperors, this would be of immense significance. The
-mischief-makers both in Russia and in France would<a name="page_218" id="page_218"></a> be made to look
-small, and public opinion would calm down again.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I asked Witte: ‘Do you think, Sergei Yulyevitch, that the Tsar
-would avail himself of a possible opportunity of meeting the
-Kaiser?’</p>
-
-<p>“Witte replied: ‘I am firmly convinced of it; I may, indeed, state
-without hesitation that the Tsar would be delighted to do so. The
-personal relations between the Tsar and the Kaiser are not of an
-ordinary kind. They converse with each other in terms of intimate
-friendship, and each time the Tsar has had a chat with the Kaiser
-he has been in better spirits. Believe me, if this meeting comes
-off, the impression which the French visit has left on the Tsar
-will be entirely wiped out. The effect of the showy reception of
-the French visitors which the press agitators have not failed to
-use for their own ends will be obliterated. Such a meeting will
-express in unambiguous terms that, whatever value the Tsar attaches
-to the Franco-Russian alliance, he insists on the maintenance of
-amicable relations with Germany. The meeting will have to be
-arranged without loss of time, in about four or six weeks, because
-in two months from now the Tsar will be leaving for Livadia. The
-army manœuvres will be held within the next few weeks, and the
-Tsar will then go to the Finnish skerries where, in my opinion, the
-meeting might take place without difficulty.’</p>
-
-<p>“I asked Witte: ‘Do you not think that, if the meeting were
-officially proposed by Germany, it might be looked upon as a sign
-of weakness on her side, especially in view of the now existing
-tension between the two countries?’</p>
-
-<p>“Witte replied: ‘By no means. One has always to take into account
-the fact that the relations between the Tsar and the Kaiser, as I
-explained before, are in the highest degree friendly and intimate.
-I do not know how the Kaiser would feel on the subject, but I am
-convinced that he is possessed of the necessary political sagacity
-to find the way that will lead to a meeting. He might, e.g., write
-to the Tsar quite openly that, as the relations between their two
-countries had lately been somewhat under a cloud in consequence of
-the inefficient diplomacy of their respective representatives, he
-would be particularly happy to meet him at this juncture.<a name="page_219" id="page_219"></a> Or the
-suggestion might reach the Tsar <i>via</i> the Grand Duke of Hesse and
-his sister, the Tsarina. But this is immaterial, because the Kaiser
-is sure to find the right way. I can only repeat that the effect of
-the meeting would be enormous. The Russian press and Russian
-society would change their whole attitude, and the agitation in the
-French press would receive a severe setback.’</p>
-
-<p>“I said to Witte: ‘I shall communicate the gist of our conversation
-to Mr. Ballin. As it is quite possible that he will be ready to
-endorse this suggestion, I should like to know your answer to one
-more question, viz., whether, if Mr. Ballin were to submit the
-proposal to the proper quarters, you would allow him to refer to
-you as the originator of the suggestion.’</p>
-
-<p>“Witte replied: ‘Certainly. He may say that I look upon this
-meeting as an event of the utmost importance to both countries at
-the present moment.’</p>
-
-<p>“I said: ‘Seeing that you will be leaving Germany within five days
-from now, would you be prepared to go to Berlin if the Kaiser would
-receive you unofficially?’</p>
-
-<p>“Witte replied: ‘Certainly. At any moment.’</p>
-
-<p>“When we went for a walk in the afternoon, Witte made reference,
-amongst other things, to various political questions. I shall
-confine myself to quoting only a few of his remarks.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Practically speaking,’ he said, ‘I think that there will be no
-war, although theoretically the air is thick with difficulties
-which only a war can clear away. But nowadays there is nobody who,
-like William the First, would put his foot down and say: “Now I
-will not yield another inch!†The spot at Ems where this happened
-is now adorned with a monument. Within a few years when the
-armaments which for the present are on paper only, shall be
-completed, Russia will really be strong. But even then, one has
-still to reckon with the possibility of internal complications.
-France, however, need not fear any such difficulties, because
-countries possessing a constitution acknowledged by all their
-inhabitants are not liable to revolutionary movements, no matter
-how often their governments change.’</p>
-
-<p>“In speaking of Hartwig, Witte remarked: ‘His death is the severest
-blow to Russian diplomacy. He was unquestionably the most gifted
-Russian diplomatist. When Count<a name="page_220" id="page_220"></a> Lammsdorff, who was a great friend
-of mine, was Minister for Foreign Affairs, he used to do nothing
-without first asking my advice. Hartwig, at that time, was the
-chief of his departmental staff, and he often came to see me. Even
-in those early days I had an opportunity of admiring his eminent
-diplomatic gifts.’â€</p></div>
-
-<p>The suggestion which formed the principal subject of the above
-conversations&mdash;viz. that a personal meeting of the two Emperors should
-be arranged in order to remove the existing tension&mdash;was not followed
-up, and the proposal would in any case have been doomed to failure,
-because the politicians who were responsible for the conduct of affairs
-at that time had done nothing to prevent the Kaiser from embarking on
-his customary cruise in Northern waters.</p>
-
-<p>The latter end of July was full of excitement for the directors and the
-staff of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie. We endeavoured to acquaint the
-vessels that were under way with the critical situation, and we
-instructed each captain to make for a neutral port in case war should
-break out. The naval authorities warned us not to allow any ships to put
-to sea, and we were particularly asked not to permit the sailing of the
-s.s. <i>Imperator</i>, which was fixed for July 31st, because the attitude of
-Great Britain was uncertain. At a midnight meeting held at Ballin’s
-private residence it was decided to postpone the departure of the vessel
-“on account of the uncertain political situation.†Every berth on the
-steamer was booked, and hundreds of passengers were put to the greatest
-inconvenience. Most of them proceeded to a neutral or to a British port
-from which they subsequently embarked for the United States.</p>
-
-<p>After this, events followed upon each other’s heels in swift succession.
-When war broke out, most of the ships succeeded in reaching neutral
-ports, so that comparatively few of them were lost in the early part of<a name="page_221" id="page_221"></a>
-the war. By August 5th the cables had been cut. This circumstance made
-it very difficult to keep up communications with New York, and compelled
-the majority of our agencies and branches abroad to use their own
-discretion as to what to do. The place of regular business was taken by
-the work involved in carrying out the various agreements which the
-company had entered into during peace time, viz. those for the
-victualling and bunkering of various units of the Imperial Navy, for the
-supply of auxiliary vessels, and for the establishment of an
-organization which was to purchase the provisions needed by the navy.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, the Ministry of the Interior had started to devise
-measures for provisioning the country as a whole, as far as that was
-still possible. It is well known that the responsible authorities had
-done far too little&mdash;indeed, hardly anything at all&mdash;to cope with this
-problem, because they had never taken a very serious view of the danger
-of war. Even the arrangements of the military authorities in connexion
-with the plans of mobilization were utterly deficient in this respect.</p>
-
-<p>The first who seriously studied the question as to what would have to be
-done for the provisioning of the military and civil population if
-Germany had to fight against a coalition of enemies, and if the overseas
-supplies were stopped, was General Count Georg Waldersee, who became
-Quartermaster General in 1912. In a letter which he wrote to Ballin
-about that time, he gave a very clear description of the probable state
-of things in such an emergency. He pointed out that the amount of
-foodstuffs required during a war would probably be larger than the
-quantities needed in peace time&mdash;a contingency which had escaped
-attention in Germany altogether&mdash;and that above all there would be an
-enormous shortage of raw materials. Therefore, he said, if it was
-desired to guard the country against disagreeable<a name="page_222" id="page_222"></a> surprises, it was
-imperative to make certain preparations for an economic and a financial
-mobilization. The military authorities at least had studied this problem
-theoretically, but the civil authorities would not make any move at all.
-The general said he thought it desirable that this question should
-receive more attention in the future, and he asked Ballin to let him
-know his views on the matter, and to give him some practical advice. The
-anxiety felt in military quarters was largely augmented by the receipt
-of disquieting rumours about the increase of Russian armaments.</p>
-
-<p>In reply we furnished Count Waldersee with a brief memorandum written by
-myself in which, amongst other items, I referred him to some suggestions
-put forward by Senator Possehl, of Lübeck, in the course of a lecture
-delivered about the same time before a selected audience. In view of the
-fact that Germany depended for her food supply and for her raw materials
-to an increasing extent on foreign sources, there could be no doubt as
-to the necessity for making economic preparations against the
-possibility of a war, if a war was considered at all probable.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, and in spite of the newly awakened interest on the part of
-the military authorities, these economic preparations had, before the
-war, made absolutely no progress worth mentioning. The only practical
-step which, as far as my knowledge goes, had been taken by the civil
-authorities, was the conclusion of an agreement entered into with a
-Dutch firm dealing with the importation of cereals in case of war. When,
-in the fateful summer of 1914, this contingency arose, the firm in
-question had chartered some British steamers, which instead of carrying
-their cargoes to Rotterdam took them to British ports.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, no serious efforts of any kind had been made to grapple with the
-problem. On Sunday, August 2nd,<a name="page_223" id="page_223"></a> Geheimrat Frisch, who afterwards became
-the director of the <i>Zentral-Einkaufs-Gesellschaft</i> (Central Purchasing
-Corporation), came to Hamburg, in order to inform Ballin, at the request
-of the Ministry for the Interior, that the latter felt very anxious in
-regard to the quantity of food actually to be found in Germany, which,
-it was feared, would be very small, and that it was expected that a
-great shortage would arise after a very brief period. He therefore asked
-him to use his best endeavours in order to secure supplies from abroad.
-A Hamburg firm was immediately requested to find out how much food was
-actually available in the country, and, although the figures obtained
-were not quite so bad as it was expected, steps were taken at once to
-remedy the deficiencies by importing food from neutral countries. A
-great obstacle to the rapid success of these efforts was the absolute
-want of any preparatory work. The very attempt to raise the necessary
-funds abounded with difficulties of every kind, because no money had
-been set aside for such expenditure in connexion with the scheme of
-mobilization, and the time taken by the attempts made in this direction,
-as well as the circumstance that communication with the United States
-could only be maintained <i>via</i> neutral countries, were the causes of a
-great deal of serious delay.</p>
-
-<p>At Ballin’s suggestion the <i>Reichseinkauf</i> (Government Purchasing
-Organization) was then formed. For this organization the Hamburg-Amerika
-Linie was to do all the purchasing, and it was arranged that it should
-put at the disposal of the new body all those members of its staff who
-were not called up, and who were considered suitable for the work.
-Buyers were sent to every neutral country; but the mobilization then in
-progress led to a complete stoppage of railway travelling for the civil
-population, thus causing no end of difficulties to these buyers, and
-making personal contact with the<a name="page_224" id="page_224"></a> Berlin authorities almost impossible.
-Added to all this, there was the inevitable confusion which the
-replacement of the civil administration by the army commands brought in
-its train. It had, in fact, been assumed that this war would resemble
-its predecessors in every respect, and no one was prepared for a world
-war. Hence, such important matters as the importation of foodstuffs from
-abroad and the work of supplying political information to neutral
-countries concerning the German standpoint were sadly neglected;
-everything had to be provided at a moment’s notice, and had to be
-carried through in the face of a great deal of opposition. Funds and
-energy were largely wasted; the military, naval, and civil organizations
-were working against one another instead of co-operating; and it took a
-long time before a little order could be introduced into the chaos. It
-was also found that the German credits abroad were quite inadequate for
-such enormous requirements. An attempt to dispose of some treasury bills
-in New York was only moderately successful, and in consequence of this
-lack of available funds the supplies obtained from the United States
-were but small. Even the fact that the Hamburg-Amerika Linie immediately
-succeeded in establishing the necessary connexions with American
-shippers, and in securing a sufficient amount of neutral tonnage, did
-not improve matters in the least. To obtain the required funds in
-Berlin, as has been explained before, involved considerable loss of
-time; and as the months passed the British blockade became more and more
-effective. Thus, as the war continued, large quantities of food could
-only be procured from European countries.</p>
-
-<p>Ballin took a large personal share in the actual business transacted by
-the <i>Reichseinkauf</i>. He did so, if for no other reason, because he
-needed some substitute for the work connected with the real shipping
-business<a name="page_225" id="page_225"></a> which was rapidly decreasing in extent. The only benefit his
-company derived from its new work was that it gave employment to part of
-the members of its staff, thus reducing in some measure the expenses.
-With the stoppage of the company’s real business its principal source of
-income ran dry in no time, and the small profits made out of the supply
-of provisions to the navy was only a poor compensation.</p>
-
-<p>The world’s economic activities in those days presented a picture of
-utter confusion. All the stock exchanges were closed; all dealings in
-stocks and shares had ceased, so that no prices could be quoted; several
-countries had introduced a moratorium, and numerous banks had stopped
-payment. Germany had no longer any direct intercourse with the overseas
-countries; the British censorship was daily increasing its hold on the
-traffic proceeding <i>via</i> neutral ports. At first those foreign steamship
-companies which maintained passenger services to America did splendid
-business, because Europe was full of American tourists and business men
-who were anxious to secure a berth to get home, and numerous cabin
-passengers had to be content with steerage accommodation. When this rush
-was past, however, shipping business, like international commerce,
-entered upon its period of decline. The freight rates came down, the
-number of steamers laid up assumed large proportions, and the world’s
-traffic, in fact, was paralysed.</p>
-
-<p>After a comparatively brief period it was found too difficult to conduct
-the <i>Reichseinkauf</i> organization with its headquarters at Hamburg,
-because the intercourse with the Imperial Treasury at Berlin, which
-provided the funds, took up too much time, and also because it seemed
-highly advisable to purchase the foreign foodstuffs needed by the
-military as well as the civil population through one and the same
-organization. The state<a name="page_226" id="page_226"></a> of things in respect to these matters was
-simply indescribable; indeed, if it had been purposely intended to
-encourage the growth of war profiteering, it would have been impossible
-to find a better method of setting about it. Numerous buyers,
-responsible to different centres, not merely purchased without regard to
-each other, but even outbid each other, thus causing a rise in prices
-which the public had to pay. Conditions such as these were brought about
-by the utter unpreparedness of the competent civil authorities and by
-the fact that the military authorities could dispose of the vast amounts
-of money placed at their command at the outbreak of the war. These
-conditions were doubtless the soil from which sprang all the evils which
-later on developed into the pernicious system we connect with the name
-of <i>Kriegswirtschaft</i>, and for which it will be impossible to demand
-reparation owing to the lost war and to the outbreak of the revolution.</p>
-
-<p>In order to facilitate the intercourse with the proper Government
-boards, and to centralize the purchasing business as much as possible,
-Ballin’s suggestion that the seat of the organization should be removed
-to Berlin was adopted, and at the same time the whole matter was put on
-a sounder footing by its conversion into a limited company under the
-name of <i>Zentral-Einkaufs-Gesellschaft</i> (Central Purchasing
-Corporation). The history of the Z.E.G. is well known in the country,
-and its work has been subject to a great deal of criticism, largely due
-to the fact that all the annoyance caused by the many restrictions which
-the Government found it necessary to impose, and which had to be put up
-with during the war, was directed against this body. Generally speaking,
-this attitude of the population was very unfair, because the principal
-grievances concerned the distribution of the foodstuffs, and for this
-part the Z.E.G. was not responsible. Its only task was to obtain the
-necessary<a name="page_227" id="page_227"></a> supplies from abroad. If it is remembered that the
-transactions of the corporation reached enormous proportions, and that,
-after all, it was improvised at a time of war, we cannot be surprised to
-see that some mistakes and even some serious blunders did occur
-occasionally, and that the right people were not always found in the
-right places. Moreover, some of the really amazing feats accomplished by
-the Z.E.G&mdash;e.g. the supply of grain from Roumania, which necessitated
-enormous labour in connexion with the transhipment from rail to steamer
-and with the conveyance up the Danube&mdash;were only known to a few people.
-It is obvious that nothing could be published during the war about these
-achievements nor about the agreements concluded, after endless
-negotiations, with neutral countries and thus the management of the
-Z.E.G. was obliged to suffer in silence the criticisms and reproaches
-hurled at it without being able to defend itself.</p>
-
-<p>The volume of the work done by the Z.E.G. may be inferred from the fact
-that the goods handled by the organization during the four years from
-1915 to 1918 represented a value of 6,500 million marks, in which
-connexion it must not be forgotten that at that time the purchasing
-power of the mark was still nearly the same as before the war. When the
-Roumanian harvest was brought in the daily imports sometimes reached a
-total of 800 truck-loads. However, the greatest credit, in my opinion,
-is due to the Z.E.G. for putting a stop to the above-mentioned confusion
-in the methods of buying abroad and for establishing normal conditions.
-To-day it is scarcely possible to realize how difficult it was and how
-much time it required to overcome the opposition often met with at home.</p>
-
-<p>Not much need be said here about the activities of the Hamburg-Amerika
-Linie during the war. The longer the struggle lasted, and the larger the
-number of countries<a name="page_228" id="page_228"></a> involved in the war against Germany became, the
-heavier became the company’s losses of tonnage and of other property.
-All the shore establishments, branch offices, pier accommodation, etc.,
-situated in enemy countries, were confiscated, and the anxiety about the
-post-war reconstruction grew from month to month. Ballin never lost
-sight of this problem, and it is chiefly due to his efforts that the
-Government and the Reichstag passed a Bill (1917) providing the means
-for the rebuilding of the country’s mercantile marine. Along with this
-he tried to keep the company financially independent by cutting down
-expenses, by finding work for the inland offices of the company, by
-selling tonnage, and by other means. The families and dependents of
-those employees who had been called to the colours were assisted as far
-as the funds at the company’s disposal permitted. Of all these measures
-the company has already given the necessary information to the public,
-and I can confine myself to these brief statements. There is only one
-circumstance which requires special mention.</p>
-
-<p>It is universally acknowledged that no German industry has suffered so
-greatly through the action of the German Government as the shipping
-business. When the discussions as to the rebuilding of the merchant
-fleet were being carried on, the Government frankly admitted this fact.
-I am not thinking, in this connexion, of those measures which were
-imposed upon the Government by the Versailles Treaty, such as the
-surrender of the German mercantile marine, but what I have in mind is
-the steps taken whilst the war was in actual progress. These have one
-thing in common with those imposed by the enemy: their originators have,
-more or less, arrived at the belated conviction that they have
-sacrificed much valuable property to no purpose. In Great Britain it is
-admitted quite openly that the confiscation of the<a name="page_229" id="page_229"></a> German merchant
-fleet has very largely contributed to the ensuing collapse of the
-world’s shipping markets, and to the confusion which now prevails on
-every trade route. The war measures of the German Government&mdash;or,
-rather, of the German naval authorities&mdash;have sacrificed enormous values
-merely for the sake of a phantom, thus necessitating the compensation
-due to the shipowners&mdash;a compensation far from sufficient to make good
-even a moderate fraction of the loss. The vessels that can be built for
-the sums thrown out for this purpose will not be worth the twentieth
-part of the old ones, if quality is taken into account as well as
-quantity. This will become apparent when the compensation money has been
-spent, and when it will be possible to compare the fleet of German
-passenger boats then existing with what the country possessed previous
-to the war.</p>
-
-<p>The phantom just referred to was the foolish belief that it would be
-possible to eliminate all ocean tonnage from the high seas&mdash;a belief
-which was in itself used to justify the submarine war, and which was
-responsible for the assumption that the withdrawal of German tonnage
-from the high seas would affect the food and raw material supply of the
-enemy countries. This mistaken idea was also the reason for prohibiting
-the sale of the German vessels in neutral ports, and for ordering the
-destruction of their engines when it became impossible to prevent their
-confiscation. The latter measure, and in particular the manner in which
-it was carried out, prove the utter inability of the competent
-authorities to grasp the very elements of the great problem they were
-tackling, and in view of such lack of knowledge it is easy to understand
-the bitterness of tone which characterizes Ballin’s criticism of these
-measures as contained in his memorandum to the Minister of the Interior
-(1917). He wrote:<a name="page_230" id="page_230"></a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“When Your Excellency decided to permit the sale of our vessels in
-the United States it was too late to do so, because the U.S.
-Government had already seized them. Previous to that, when we saw
-that war would be inevitable, and when we had received an
-exceedingly favourable purchasing offer from an American group, we
-had asked permission to sell part of our tonnage laid up in that
-country.</p>
-
-<p>“Your Excellency, acting on behalf of the Chancellor, declined to
-grant this permission. I am quite aware that neither the Chancellor
-nor Your Excellency as his representative were responsible for this
-refusal, but that it was due to a decision of the Admiralty Staff.
-However, the competent authority to which the protection and the
-furtherance of the country’s shipping interests are entrusted is
-the Ministry of the Interior. With the Admiralty Staff itself, as I
-need not remind Your Excellency, we have no dealings whatever, and
-we are not even entitled to approach that body directly in such
-matters.</p>
-
-<p>“Our company which was the biggest undertaking of its kind in the
-world, and which previous to the war possessed a fleet aggregating
-about 1,500,000 tons, has lost practically all its ships except a
-very few. The losses are not so much due to capture on the part of
-the enemy as to the measures taken by our own Government. If our
-Government had acted with the same foresight as did the
-Austro-Hungarian Government with respect to its ships in United
-States and Chinese waters, the German vessels then in Italy,
-Portugal, Greece, the United States, Brazil, and elsewhere, might
-have been either retained by us or disposed of at their full value.</p>
-
-<p>“The Austrian ships, with their dismantled engines were, at the
-instance of the Austrian Government, sold in such good time that
-the shipping companies concerned are not only in a position to-day
-to refrain from asking their Government to pass a Shipowners’
-Compensation Bill, as we are bound to do, but they have even
-enriched the Austrian national wealth by such handsome additions
-that their capital strength has reached a sum never dreamt of
-before, and that they are now able to rebuild their fleet by
-drawing upon their own funds, and to make such further additions to
-their tonnage that in future we shall not only be compelled to
-compete with the<a name="page_231" id="page_231"></a> shipping companies of neutral and enemy
-countries&mdash;which have accumulated phenomenal profits&mdash;but with the
-Austrian mercantile marine as well.</p>
-
-<p>“From the point of view of our country’s economic interests it is
-greatly to be regretted that the policy of the Government has not
-changed in this respect even now. We have received reliable news
-from private sources to the effect that the engines of the German
-vessels now in Argentine waters have been destroyed without Your
-Excellency having so far informed us of this action, and without
-Your Excellency having asked us to take steps to utilize the
-vessels, if possible, for the benefit of the country’s economic
-interests and for that of the completely decimated German merchant
-fleet.</p>
-
-<p>“Moreover, a wire sent by His Excellency Herr v. Jonquières to the
-competent Hamburg and Bremen authorities states that the ships in
-Uruguayan waters are also in great jeopardy. The Government of that
-country, according to this report, would prefer to purchase them
-rather than confiscate them. After what has been done before, we
-fear that the Admiralty Staff will either not permit the sale at
-all, or only grant its permission when it is too late.</p>
-
-<p>“Your Excellency, I am sure, is fully aware of the fact that the
-methods of the Admiralty Staff&mdash;ignoring, as it does, all other
-considerations except its own&mdash;have caused one country after the
-other to join the ranks of Germany’s enemies. In view of the
-shortage of tonnage which Great Britain and other of our enemies
-systematically try to bring about&mdash;evidently with the intention of
-inconveniencing neutral countries as much as possible&mdash;these latter
-feel compelled, for the very reason of this lack of tonnage, to
-declare war upon us, because the politics of our country are guided
-by a body of men who, unfortunately, shut their eyes to the
-economic and political consequences of their decisions.</p>
-
-<p>“Several months ago, at a time when nobody thought of unrestricted
-submarine warfare, an opportunity presented itself to us of
-concluding an agreement with the Belgian Relief Committee by which
-it would have been possible for us to withdraw our steamers, one
-after the other, from American ports and, under the flag of that
-committee, to bring them to Rotterdam. At that time, it was again
-the<a name="page_232" id="page_232"></a> Admiralty Staff which prevented the conclusion of this
-agreement, because, for reasons best known to itself, it would
-grant permission for only three of these vessels, although Great
-Britain had agreed that the whole of our fleet interned in U.S.
-ports, representing 250,000 tons in all, could sail under the terms
-of the proposed agreement, and although the Allies as a whole had
-signed a written declaration to the effect that they would not
-interfere with our ships so long as they were used for the
-provisioning of Belgium. I took the liberty of pointing out to
-Captain Grashoff, the representative of the Admiralty Staff, that
-nothing could have prevented us from letting the ships remain at
-Rotterdam after they had completed their mission, and that
-afterwards, as has been borne out by later facts, they could have
-been safely taken to Hamburg.</p>
-
-<p>“I respectfully ask Your Excellency whether it is not possible to
-enter a protest against such unnecessary dismemberment of part of
-the German national assets....</p>
-
-<p>“ ... I must also protest most emphatically against the
-insinuation&mdash;which is sure to be made&mdash;that I have no right to
-criticize any steps which the Admiralty Staff has regarded as
-necessary for reasons of our naval strategy. Without reservation
-the German shipowners agree to any measures which are strategically
-necessary, however greatly they may injure their interests. The
-criticism which I beg to make on behalf of German
-shipping&mdash;although possessing no formal mandate&mdash;concerns itself
-with those steps which might have been taken without jeopardizing
-the success of our naval strategy if the vital necessities of
-German mercantile shipping had been studied with as much
-consideration as this branch of the economic activities of our
-country has a right to claim.</p>
-
-<p>“What we principally take exception to in this connexion is that no
-information was sent to us before the decision to destroy the
-engines of our ships was arrived at, and that we were not assisted
-in making use of these dismantled vessels in the financial
-interests of our country. Nothing of this kind was done, although
-it was the most natural thing to do so, and although such action
-would have deprived many a country of a reason to declare war upon
-Germany.â€</p></div>
-
-<p><a name="page_233" id="page_233"></a></p>
-
-<p>To a man of the type of Ballin&mdash;who had, throughout his life, been
-accustomed to perform a huge amount of successful work&mdash;a period of
-enforced inactivity was unbearable. The longer it lasted the more he
-suffered from its effects, especially because the preparatory work for
-the post-war reconstruction, the work connected with the war
-organization of the German shipowners, etc., was only a poor substitute
-for the productive labour he had been engaged in during more than thirty
-years of peace. There is no doubt but that the Government could have
-made better use of Ballin’s gift of organization, but it must be
-remembered that there was really no effective central Government in
-Germany throughout the war. The civil administration was not exactly
-deposed, but it was subordinated to the military one from the very
-beginning, and the latter carried on its work along the guiding lines
-laid down in the scheme of mobilization. The authorities to whose care
-the economic aspects of the war were entrusted did not often&mdash;if at
-all&mdash;avail themselves of Ballin’s advice; and to offer it unbidden never
-entered his mind, because he was cherishing the hope that the war would
-not last long, and because it was his belief that the world would be
-sensible enough to put an end to the wholesale destruction before long.
-It was a bitter disappointment to him to find how greatly he was
-mistaken, and to see that the forces of unreason remained in the
-ascendancy, especially as he was always convinced that Time would be on
-the side of Germany’s enemies. The sole aim of his political activities
-during the war was to bring about peace as early as possible.</p>
-
-<p>Of all the attempts at mediation known to me, the one which seemed to be
-most likely to succeed passed through the hands of Ballin. To give a
-detailed account of it must be left to a time which need no longer pay
-regard to governments and individuals. Ballin’s share<a name="page_234" id="page_234"></a> in it was brought
-about through his former international connexions. Through him it
-reached the Kaiser and the Chancellor, and owing to his untiring
-efforts, which lasted for two years, the position in the early part of
-1917 was such that the establishment of direct contact between the two
-sides was imminent. Then the unrestricted submarine war began, the
-intended direct contact could not be established, and the carefully
-woven thread was definitely snapped asunder; because from that time on
-the Allies were certain that the United States would join them, and they
-felt assured of victory. No other mediation scheme with which I am
-acquainted has been pursued with so much unselfishness, devotion, and
-energy as this one. This attempt, however, no more than any other, could
-have procured for us that kind of peace which public opinion in Germany
-had been led for years to expect, thanks to the over-estimation of the
-country’s strength, fostered by the military censorship and by the
-military reports.</p>
-
-<p>From such exaggerated opinions Ballin always held himself aloof. He
-recognized without reservation the immense achievements of Germany in
-the war, but he was fearful lest the strength of the country could not
-cope in the long run with the ever-increasing array of enemies, and he
-therefore maintained that, if it was desired to bring about peace, the
-Government would have to be moderate in its terms. A much discussed
-article which he contributed to the <i>Frankfürter Zeitung</i> on January
-1st, 1915, under the heading of “The Wet Triangle,†is not inconsistent
-with these views of his. In it he pointed out that Germany’s naval
-power, in order to make a future blockade impossible, should no longer
-be content to be shut up in the “wet triangle,†i.e. the North Sea, but
-ought to establish itself on the high seas. This statement has been
-alleged to refer to Belgium, and Ballin has been wrongly claimed a
-partisan<a name="page_235" id="page_235"></a> by those who supported the annexation of that country. What he
-really meant was that Germany should demand a naval base on the
-Atlantic, somewhere in the northern parts of Africa, and this idea
-seemed to be quite realizable if taken in conjunction with the terms of
-peace he had in view, viz. no annexations, no indemnities, economic
-advantages, a permanent political and naval understanding with Great
-Britain, based on her recognition that a military defeat of Germany was
-impossible. All this would be somewhat on the lines of the article
-published by the <i>Westminster Gazette</i>, referred to in the eighth
-chapter and a facsimile of which is given at the end of the book. Ballin
-was firmly convinced that, even if a mere peace of compromise was the
-outcome, i.e. one which left Germany without any territorial gains and
-without any indemnities, the impression which the German achievements
-during the war would produce on the rest of the world would be so
-overwhelming that the country would secure indirectly far greater
-advantages than could be gained by means of the largest possible
-indemnity and the most far-reaching annexations. Besides, the
-experiences of former times had proved that Germany would be quite
-unable to absorb such large accessions of territory as certain people
-had in mind. These views of Ballin, of course, were looked upon as those
-of a “pacificist,†and Ballin was classified among their number.</p>
-
-<p>In a letter which Ballin wrote to a friend of his, a naval officer, in
-April, 1915, he puts up a highly characteristic defence of himself
-against the accusations implied by describing him as “pacificist†and
-“pro-English.â€</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“If,†he wrote, “the fact that I have been privileged to spend a
-considerable part of my life in close contact with you, entitles me
-to add a few personal remarks, I should like to say that I have
-made up my mind to retire from my post after<a name="page_236" id="page_236"></a> the end of the war
-altogether. I told you shortly after the outbreak of the war that
-my life’s work was wrecked. To-day I am convinced that it will soon
-come to life again, but my youth would have to be restored to me
-before I could ever dream of taking up again that position in
-international shipping which I held before the war. I cannot
-imagine that I would ever go to London again and take the chair at
-the conferences at which the great problems of international
-shipping would come up for discussion, and nobody, I think, can
-expect that I should be content to play second fiddle at my age.
-Indeed, I cannot see how I could ever re-enter upon intimate
-relations with the British, the French, the Italians, and
-especially with the Americans. Strangely enough, influential
-circles on our side, and even His Majesty himself, look upon me as
-‘pro-English,’ and yet I am the only German who can say with truth
-that he has been fighting the English for supremacy in the shipping
-world during the last thirty years. During this long period I have,
-if I am allowed to make use of so bold a comparison, conquered one
-British trench after the other, and I have renewed my attacks
-whenever I could find the means for doing so.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>It is no secret that during the war many prominent politicians and
-economists&mdash;men of sound political training&mdash;viewed the question of the
-war aims which it was desirable to realize very much in the same light
-as did Ballin, but that the censorship made it impossible for anyone to
-give public expression to such opinions. Ballin’s appreciation of the
-probable gain which Germany would derive from a peace by compromise has
-now been amply confirmed by the undeniable fact that the rest of the
-world has been tremendously impressed by Germany’s achievements, an
-impression which has made foreigners regard her chances of recovery with
-much more confidence than she has felt herself, stunned as she was by
-the immensity of her <i>débâcle</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The following notes, which are largely based on Ballin’s own diary, are
-intended to supplement the<a name="page_237" id="page_237"></a> information given so far as to his political
-activities during the war.</p>
-
-<p>The outbreak of war, as may be inferred from what has already been
-related, took him completely by surprise, and he did not think that the
-struggle would last very long. “The necessities of the world’s commerce
-will not stand a long war,†was his opinion during the early days. For
-the rest, he tried to find work for himself which would benefit his
-country. “What we need to-day,†he wrote to a friend, “is work. This
-will lift us up and keep us going, and will make those of us who are no
-longer fit to fight feel that we are still of some use after all.†But
-in connexion with this thought another one began to occupy his mind. He
-anxiously asked: “Which of the men now at headquarters will have the
-strength and the wisdom required to negotiate a successful peace when
-the time comes?†All his thoughts centred round the one idea of how to
-secure peace; what advantages his country would derive from it; and how
-it would be possible to bring about an international grouping of the
-Powers which would be of the greatest benefit to Germany. On October
-1st, 1914, he wrote to Grand Admiral v. Tirpitz:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“ ... I quite agree with what you say in your welcome letter.
-Indeed, you could not view these matters<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> with graver anxiety
-than I do myself. I hope I shall soon have the opportunity I desire
-of discussing these things with you personally.</p>
-
-<p>“To win the peace will be hardly less difficult than to win the
-war. My opinion is that the result of this world war, if it lasts
-12 months, will be exactly the same as if it lasts six months. I
-mean to say that, if we do not succeed in acquiring the guarantees
-for our compensation demands within a few months, the further
-progress of events will not appreciably improve our chances in this
-direction.<a name="page_238" id="page_238"></a></p>
-
-<p>“What we must aim at is a new grouping of the Powers round an
-alliance between Germany, Great Britain and France. This alliance
-will become possible as soon as we shall have vanquished France and
-Belgium, and as soon as you shall have made up your mind to bring
-about an understanding with Great Britain concerning the naval
-programme.</p>
-
-<p>“I am aware that this idea will find but slight favour with you,
-but you will never secure a reasonable peace with Great Britain
-without a naval agreement.</p>
-
-<p>“By a reasonable peace I mean one which will enable both Germany
-and Britain to sheathe their swords in honour, and which will not
-burden either nation with a hatred which would contain within it
-the germs of future war.</p>
-
-<p>“We have had no difficulty in putting up with the French clamour
-for <i>revanche</i> for a period of 44 years, because in this case we
-had only to deal with a small group of nationalist firebrands, but
-a British clamour for revenge would produce an exceedingly adverse
-effect on the future of our national well-being and of our share in
-the world’s trade and commerce.</p>
-
-<p>“For a long time past it has been my conviction that the era of the
-super-Dreadnoughts has passed, and some time ago I asked Admiral
-von Müller if it was not possible to consider the question of a
-naval understanding simply on the basis of an agreement as to the
-sum of money which either Government should be entitled to spend
-annually on naval construction, leaving it to the discretion of
-each side how to make use of the money agreed upon for the building
-of the various types of ships.</p>
-
-<p>“Great Britain is putting up a fight for her existence just as much
-as we do, if not to an even greater extent. Her continuance as a
-world power depends on the superiority&mdash;the numerical superiority
-at least&mdash;of her navy.</p>
-
-<p>“I am convinced&mdash;always supposing that we shall succeed in
-conquering France and Belgium&mdash;that the British terms concerning
-her naval supremacy will be very moderate, and I cannot help
-thinking that a fair understanding regarding naval construction is
-just as important to Germany as it is to Great Britain.</p>
-
-<p>“The present state of things is the outcome of a <i>circulus<a name="page_239" id="page_239"></a>
-vitiosus</i>, and is bound to produce a soreness which will never
-permit of a sound understanding....</p>
-
-<p>“ ... And what about the further course of the war? I sincerely
-hope that your Excellency will not risk the navy. The expression
-‘The Fleet in being’ which has never left my memory, and which has
-lately been heard of again, implies exactly all I mean.</p>
-
-<p>“The navy, in my opinion, has never been, and never ought to be,
-anything but the indispensable reserve of a healthy international
-policy. Just as a conscientious director-general would never dream
-of reducing the reserve funds of his company, unless compelled to
-do so by sheer necessity, we ought not to drag the navy into the
-war, if it could possibly be avoided.</p>
-
-<p>“What would it profit you to risk a naval battle on the high seas?
-Not only our own, but British experts as well, believe that our
-ships, our officers, and our crews are superior to the British, and
-King Edward emphasized at every opportunity that the crews on
-British warships are not a match to those on German vessels. But
-what are you going to do? Are you going to make them fight against
-a numerically superior enemy? Such a course would be open to great
-objections, and even, if the battle turned out successfully, the
-victors would not escape serious damage.</p>
-
-<p>“I do not know how your Excellency, and their Excellencies v.
-Müller and Pohl look upon these matters, but since you yourself
-have asked me to state my views, I hope you will not take it amiss
-if my zeal causes me to enlarge upon a subject which is not quite
-within my province. Besides, I have another reason for doing so.</p>
-
-<p>“It is our duty to prepare ourselves in good time for the peace
-that is to come. Does your Excellency believe it would augur well
-for the future peace if Germany succeeded in inflicting a naval
-victory on the British? I do not think so myself, but I rather
-fancy that the opposite effect would take place.... If the British
-should suffer a big naval defeat, they would be forced to fight to
-the bitter end. That is inherent in the nature of things; even
-those who can only argue in terms of a Continental policy must
-understand it.</p>
-
-<p>“Even a partial loss of her naval prestige would spell<a name="page_240" id="page_240"></a> ruin to
-Great Britain. It would imply the defection of the great dominions
-which now form part of her world empire. The <i>raison d’être</i> for
-Great Britain’s present position ceases to exist as soon as she has
-lost her naval supremacy....</p>
-
-<p>“ ... And, please, do not lose sight of one further consideration.
-We must find our compensation by annexing valuable territories
-beyond the seas; but for the peaceful enjoyment of such overseas
-gains we shall be dependent on the good will of Great Britain....
-At present, men of German blood occupy leading positions in the
-economic life of almost every British colony, and the open door has
-been the means by which we have acquired a great deal of that
-national wealth of ours which caused the smooth working of our
-financial mobilization when the war broke out.</p>
-
-<p>“ ... For all these reasons I consider it a great mistake that the
-press should be allowed to excite German public opinion against
-Great Britain to the extent it is done. I was in Berlin during the
-week, and I was alarmed when I became acquainted with the wild
-schemes which are entertained not only by the people of Berlin, but
-also by distinguished men from the Rhineland and Westphalia.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>Apart from the peace problem there was another matter which gave Ballin
-grave cause for anxiety. This was the circumstance that the Kaiser,
-because of his long absences from Berlin, lost the necessary touch with
-the people, and could not, therefore, be kept properly informed of
-popular feeling. He expressed his fears on this account in a letter to a
-friend of his amongst the Kaiser’s entourage in which he wrote:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“I hope you will soon be able to induce His Majesty to remove his
-winter quarters to Germany. My common sense tells me that, if a war
-is waged on French and Russian soil, the headquarters ought to be
-situated in Germany. From the point of view of security also I
-consider this very desirable, and I feel a great deal of anxiety
-concerning His Majesty.... Whether it is wise to exercise the
-censorship of the press to the extent it is done, is a question<a name="page_241" id="page_241"></a> on
-which more opinions than one are possible.... I have just had a
-call from a Mr. X., a former officer, and an exceedingly reliable
-and capable man. He complained bitterly of the rigid censorship,
-and he thought it would be a mistake from which we should have to
-suffer in days to come. It would certainly be a blessing if such a
-man who is highly esteemed by the Foreign Office could be given a
-chance of explaining his views at headquarters.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>Among the problems of foreign policy with which Germany saw herself
-faced in the early part of the war, those referring to Italy and
-Roumania were of special interest to Ballin. The question was how to
-prevent these two countries from joining the ranks of Germany’s enemies.
-Ballin did all he could to bring about the Italian mission of Prince
-Bülow. He not only urged the Chancellor to select Bülow for this task,
-but he also tried hard to induce the Prince to undertake the thankless
-errand involved. In addition to the political importance of the mission,
-he laid great stress on its bearing on the food problem.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“The question of provisioning the German people,†he wrote in a
-letter to the Army Headquarters, “is closely connected with the
-solution of the Italian and Roumanian difficulties. No pressure is,
-in my opinion, too strong in order to make it perfectly clear to
-Austria that some sort of an agreement with Italy is a <i>sine qua
-non</i> for the successful termination of this war. If it were argued
-that Italy would come forward with fresh demands as soon as her
-original claims had been satisfied, I think the German Government
-could combat this objection by insisting upon a written promise on
-the part of Italy to the effect that she would not extend her
-demands.</p>
-
-<p>“ ... Political and military considerations make it plain beyond
-any question of doubt that Italy, who will be armed to the teeth in
-March, will not be able to lay down her arms again unless Austria
-arrives at an understanding<a name="page_242" id="page_242"></a> with her. Thus our greatest danger is
-the uncertainty as to what these neutrals will do, and I hope that
-the ministerial changes in Austria will smooth the way for a
-reasonable attitude towards this regrettable but unavoidable
-necessity. Our aim should be to prevent the scattering of our
-forces, for the burden imposed upon ourselves because of the
-inadequacy of our allies is almost superhuman, and contains the
-danger of exhaustion.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>The German mission to Italy suffered through the vacillations of
-Austrian politics, and was therefore doomed to failure. Austrian feeling
-concerning a compromise with Italy was always dependent on the news from
-the Italian front; if this was favourable, people did not want to hear
-of it, and in the opposite case they would only discuss such an
-understanding most unwillingly. The proposed compromise was looked upon
-as a heavy sacrifice, and people were by no means favourably disposed
-towards German mediation. Prince Bülow was accused of having “presented
-Italy with the Trentino.†Disquieting news which Ballin received from
-Vienna induced him to report to the Chancellor on the state of Austrian
-feeling, and to offer his services if he thought that his
-old-established relations with Vienna could be of any use. His offer was
-also prompted by his conviction that the German diplomatic
-representation in Vienna was not adapted to Austrian mentality.</p>
-
-<p>Thereupon Ballin, early in March, 1915, entered upon a semi-official
-mission to Vienna. He first acquainted himself with the actual state of
-the Austrian mind by calling on his old friend, his Excellency v.
-Schulz, the Vice-President of the Austrian Chief Court of Audits, who
-was regarded as one of the best informed personages in the capital, and
-who was one of the regular partners of the old Emperor Francis Joseph
-for his daily game of tarock. This gentleman<a name="page_243" id="page_243"></a> told Ballin that the
-people of Austria felt a good deal of resentment towards Germany, who
-had stepped in far too early as the “advocate of Italy,†at a time when
-Austria was still hoping to settle Serbia all by herself. This hope,
-indeed, had proved an illusion; but Germany’s strategy had also turned
-out a failure, because she had misjudged the attitude of Great Britain,
-and had not finished with France as rapidly as she had expected to do.
-Now Austria, confronted by stern necessity, would have to make
-concessions to Italy which every true Austrian would view with bitter
-grief; and, to bring about the active assistance of Roumania, Count
-Tisza would consider a sacrifice in the Bukovina debatable, but never
-one in Transylvania. Ballin told his friend that, as far as Roumania was
-concerned, he would have to leave it to Austria to settle that question
-by herself; and that his mission with regard to Italy was so difficult
-that he preferred not to make it more so by trying to solve the
-Roumanian problem as well.</p>
-
-<p>Ballin’s subsequent interviews with the Prime Minister, Count Stürgkh,
-and with the Minister v. Koerber, as well as those with other
-influential personages, confirmed these impressions, and he left Vienna
-buoyed up by the hope that the conference between German, Austrian, and
-Italian delegates which it was proposed to hold at Vienna would lead to
-a successful result. Such, however, was not the case, and it is quite
-probable that the possibility of arriving at an understanding with Italy
-had passed by that time, or, assuming the most favourable circumstances,
-that only immediate and far-reaching Austrian concessions could have
-saved the situation; but these were not forthcoming.</p>
-
-<p>The next subject which caused much anxiety to Ballin was the question as
-to what Roumania would do, a country to whose attitude, considering her
-importance<a name="page_244" id="page_244"></a> to Germany as a food-producing area, he attached even more
-value than to that of Italy. In his notes dating from that time he said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“ ... June 21st, 1915. The news which I received from X. regarding
-the political situation in Roumania and Bulgaria was so serious
-that I felt bound to send copies of these letters to the Chief of
-the General Staff, General v. Falkenhayn, and to inform him that,
-in my opinion, our Foreign Office had now done all it could
-possibly do, and that nothing but some forcible military pressure
-such as he and Baron Conrad could exercise on Count Tisza would
-induce this obstinate gentleman to settle his differences with the
-Balkan States....â€</p>
-
-<p>“ ... On this occasion X. expressed a great deal of contempt at the
-suggestion that we should draw upon the members of the old
-diplomacy for additional help. On the whole, he seemed to be very
-proud of the achievements of the Foreign Office, whereas I am of
-opinion that this body has entirely failed, and is of no practical
-use any longer. Things must be in a pretty bad state if Herr
-Erzberger, of all people, is looked upon as the last hope of the
-country. I suggested to the gentlemen that it would do some good if
-the Chancellor were to request the more virulent of the Pan-Germans
-to see him, and to ask Hindenburg to explain to them the military
-situation without any camouflage. This suggestion was favourably
-received, and it is to be passed on to the Chancellor....</p>
-
-<p>“ ... The Chancellor informed me that he was considering whether,
-if Roumania remained neutral, and if the operations against the
-Dardanelles terminated successfully for us, he ought to submit any
-official proposals for peace to our enemies. I expressed my
-admiration of the plan, but told the Chancellor of my objections to
-its practical execution. The Entente, I feared, would refuse to
-entertain the proposals, and the German people would regard it as a
-sign of weakness. The Chancellor asked me to refrain from
-pronouncing a definite opinion for the present, but to think it
-over until our next meeting.â€</p></div>
-
-<p><a name="page_245" id="page_245"></a></p>
-
-<p>In a letter of July 31st, 1915, Ballin wrote as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“I should like to express my heartfelt gratitude to you for sending
-on to me the report which contains some of the finest observations
-that have come to my knowledge since the outbreak of the war.</p>
-
-<p>“ ... The writer lays great stress on the belief prevalent in enemy
-and neutral countries alike that Germany is making a bid for
-universal supremacy and for supremacy on the high seas&mdash;a belief
-which has spurred on the resistance of the enemy to the utmost, and
-has caused a good deal of bad feeling amongst the neutrals. I
-repeatedly brought this fact to the knowledge of the Chancellor and
-I urgently suggested to him that in some way&mdash;e.g., by an Imperial
-proclamation on the anniversary of the outbreak of war, or by some
-other suitable means&mdash;we should announce to all and sundry that
-such hare-brained schemes are not entertained by any responsible
-person or body of persons in Germany. I sincerely trust that some
-such steps will be taken at an early opportunity, because otherwise
-I do not see when the war will be over. Though not a pessimist I do
-not believe in taking too rosy a view of things. I envy the British
-because they have the courage openly to discuss in their press and
-parliament the reverses as well as the successes they have had.</p>
-
-<p>“ ... You see I am not taking too cheerful a view of matters. I
-have nothing but the most enthusiastic admiration for the
-achievements of the German people, both at the front and at home.
-Although not gifted politically this people could do wonders if led
-by great statesmen and by great politicians.â€</p>
-
-<p>“ ... August 10th, 1915. This morning I spent an hour with the
-Chancellor, who had requested me to call on him.... We had a long
-discussion as to the advisability of publishing a statement to the
-effect that Germany would be ready at any moment to discuss an
-honourable peace. She had achieved great successes in the field,
-she was in possession of important mortgages, her armies were
-occupying large tracts of the enemy’s country, and she was not
-carrying on a war of aggression but one of defence: therefore such
-a step could not be regarded as a sign of weakness. The<a name="page_246" id="page_246"></a>
-Chancellor, nevertheless, was afraid that such a step might after
-all be interpreted in that sense. I suggested to him that it might
-be of some use if the Pope could be induced to address a peace
-message to the rulers of the various countries.</p>
-
-<p>“I also called the Chancellor’s urgent attention to the need for
-dealing with the food problem during the ensuing winter, especially
-with relation to the price of meat.â€</p>
-
-<p>“ ... August 12th, 1915. The United States Ambassador, Mr. Gerard,
-had expressed the desire to discuss with me the question as to the
-advisability of suggesting that President Wilson should mediate
-between the belligerents. I therefore called on him on Tuesday,
-August 10th, and advised him to refrain from any official action in
-that direction, but said that I thought he might ask the President
-to sound opinion in Great Britain as to the chances of such peace
-proposals.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>In the early part of September, 1915, Admiral v. Holtzendorff was
-appointed Chief of the Admiralty Staff. This appointment gave rise to a
-conflict with Grand Admiral v. Tirpitz, who threatened to resign
-because, <i>inter alia</i>, the Kaiser had issued instructions to the effect
-that the Chief of the Admiralty Staff should no longer be subject to the
-authority of the Secretary for the Navy, but that he could communicate
-with the Kaiser and with the Chancellor direct. Ballin thought a
-possible resignation of Admiral v. Tirpitz would be fraught with serious
-consequences at that moment, as it would produce a bad impression on
-public opinion and be inimical to the position of the Kaiser. These
-considerations caused Ballin to intervene in person with Admiral v.
-Tirpitz and with the Chief of the Naval Cabinet, with the result that
-the Grand Admiral withdrew his intended resignation.</p>
-
-<p>The following extracts are taken from Ballin’s notes during the next few
-months:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“ ... October 20th, 1915. I am annoyed at the importunity with
-which some interested parties, such as<a name="page_247" id="page_247"></a> the Central Association of
-German Manufacturers and the representatives of agriculture, are
-pushing forward their views on the peace terms. Moreover, my
-alleged readiness to conclude a ‘bad peace’ with Great Britain is
-being talked about so widely that even His Excellency Herr v.
-Zimmermann has drawn my attention to the ill effects of such
-calumnies. All this has prompted me to avail myself of the
-opportunity presented by the annual meeting of the Association of
-Hamburg Shipowners of making a speech in which I have explained my
-views as to the freedom of the seas.</p>
-
-<p>“Prince Bülow will be leaving for Lucerne to-day where he intends
-to stay for some time, and the Prussian <i>chargé d’affaires</i>, Herr
-v. Mutius&mdash;of whom it has been alleged that the Chancellor
-appointed him to his post on the death of his predecessor (the
-excellent Herr v. Bülow, Prussian Minister to Hamburg) for the
-reason that he might have a watchful eye on Prince Bülow and
-myself&mdash;has been promptly transferred to Warsaw. Evidently the
-Berlin authorities now think the danger has passed, since Prince
-Bülow has left.â€</p>
-
-<p>“ ... November 23rd, 1915. Hammann<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> asked me why I did not call
-on the Chancellor, and I told him that I thought the Chancellor
-might feel annoyed with me for my interference in favour of
-Tirpitz, which, however, would not affect me in any way, because I
-was convinced that I had acted in the best interests of the Kaiser,
-and that it would have been unwise to remove Tirpitz from his post
-so long as the war lasted.â€</p>
-
-<p>“ ... The Chancellor asked me to see him on Wednesday at 6.30 p.m.,
-and I spent nearly two hours with him. I urgently advised him to
-make a frank statement in the Reichstag as to our readiness for
-peace, and to do so in such a form that it could not possibly be
-looked upon as a sign of weakness.â€</p>
-
-<p>“ ... On January 10th, 1916, I was commanded to dine with Their
-Majesties at the <i>Neues Palais</i>. The only other guests apart from
-myself were the Minister of the Royal Household, Count Eulenburg,
-and the Minister of Agriculture, Herr v. Schorlemer. None of the
-suite were present so that the company consisted of five persons
-only. The Kaiser was in<a name="page_248" id="page_248"></a> high spirits and full of confidence. The
-after-dinner conversation extended to such a late hour that we did
-not catch the train by which we intended to return, and we were
-obliged to leave by the last train that night.</p>
-
-<p>“A remark of mine concerning the possibility of an extension of
-submarine warfare had, as the Chancellor had been informed, caused
-the Kaiser to assume that I completely shared the point of view of
-Admirals v. Holtzendorff and v. Tirpitz, who now recommend a
-submarine campaign against Great Britain on a large scale. I
-therefore, at the Chancellor’s request, addressed the following
-letter to the Kaiser:</p>
-
-<p>“‘A few days ago I had occasion to discuss with Grand Admiral v.
-Tirpitz and Admiral v. Holtzendorff the question of a resumption of
-the submarine campaign.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I was then given confidential information as to the number of
-submarines at our disposal, and I am bound to say that even if due
-allowance is made for the activity of the mine-seeking auxiliaries
-I regard the number of large submarines as insufficient for the
-purposes of such a finally decisive measure.</p>
-
-<p>“‘The first attempt at submarine warfare proved unsuccessful on
-account of the insufficiency of the means employed to carry it
-through; and it is my humble opinion that a second attempt should
-only be undertaken if its success were beyond the possibility of a
-doubt. If this cannot be guaranteed the consequences of such a
-measure appear to me to be out of all proportion to the risks
-attached to it.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I therefore beg to respectfully suggest to Your Majesty that the
-work of the mine-laying auxiliaries should be carried on as
-hitherto, and should even be extended. I also consider that the
-submarines should be made use of to the fullest extent of their
-capacity, with the proviso, however, that their employment against
-passenger steamers should be subject to the restrictions recently
-laid down by Your Majesty.</p>
-
-<p>“‘When the number of the big submarines shall be sufficient
-effectively to cut off the British food supply, I think the time
-will have arrived for us to employ this weapon against Great
-Britain without paying regard to the so-called neutrals.</p>
-
-<p>“‘At present about two hundred ocean steamers or more<a name="page_249" id="page_249"></a> enter
-British ports every day, and an equal number leave for foreign
-ports. If we sink a daily average of 30 or 40 we can, indeed,
-greatly inconvenience England, but we shall assuredly not be able
-to compel her to sue for peace.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I humbly apologize to Your Majesty for thus stating my views on
-this matter; but I am of opinion that the extreme importance of the
-proposed steps will be a sufficient excuse for me.’â€</p></div>
-
-<p>In the early part of 1916 Ballin went on a second mission to Vienna, and
-afterwards he prepared a detailed report for the Chancellor dealing with
-the state of public feeling as he found it. This document presents a
-faithful picture of the precarious conditions in that capital which the
-German Government had constantly to reckon with, and may therefore be of
-interest even now. The following passages are extracts from it:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“If we desire to keep the Austrian fighting spirit unimpaired we
-must avoid at all hazards suggesting the possibility of an
-understanding with Italy. The Italian war is popular down to the
-lowest classes of the people, and the successful stand against
-Italy is a subject of pride and hope to all Austrians.</p>
-
-<p>“Hence the circumstance that Prince Bülow has temporarily taken up
-his abode at Lucerne has roused a considerable amount of suspicion.
-Even the officials in the various ministerial departments fear that
-the Prince might intend to make unofficial advances to Italy when
-in Lucerne, and that these steps might be followed in Berlin by a
-movement in favour of a separate peace with Italy by which Austria
-would have to cede the Trentino. People were obviously pleased and
-relieved when I could explain to them that the Prince was greatly
-embarrassed on account of having lost his Villa Malta, and that the
-choice of a suitable residence during the winter had been very
-difficult. They were particularly gratified when I told them&mdash;what
-I had heard from the Prince’s own lips&mdash;that he had had no official
-mission, and that he had not been engaged upon any negotiations.<a name="page_250" id="page_250"></a></p>
-
-<p>“People are especially proud of the Isonzo battles, but they do not
-shut their eyes to the uncertain prospects of a successful Austrian
-offensive. They really consider that Austria has gained her war
-aims, and the old Emperor described the military situation to Frau
-Kathi Schratt by saying that the war was in many respects like a
-game of tarock, in which the winner was not allowed to cease
-playing because the losers insisted upon him going on with the game
-so that they might have their revenge. Matters at first had been to
-the advantage of our enemies: the Russians had overrun Galicia, the
-Serbians had defeated the Austrians at Belgrade, and the French had
-looked upon the retreat from the Marne as a great success. Now,
-however, the war was all in favour of Germany and Austria, and
-therefore our opponents did not want to call a truce just yet.</p>
-
-<p>“If this comparison which the venerable old gentleman has borrowed
-from his favourite game of cards is correct, the war will not be
-over until one side has nothing further to stake, and the decision
-will be brought about by that side whose human and financial
-resources shall last longest.</p>
-
-<p>“Banking circles, of course, view the financial situation with the
-utmost gravity, but the general public&mdash;in spite of the high prices
-ruling here, and in spite of the great want of food which is much
-more noticeable than with us&mdash;regard matters a great deal more
-serenely. This is simply due to the greater optimism so
-characteristic of the Austrians, whose motto is: ‘Life is so short,
-and death so very, very long.’ They prefer to assign to future
-generations the worries which would spoil their sublunary
-existence.</p>
-
-<p>“The present Cabinet is looked upon as weak and mediocre. The old
-Emperor clings to Count Stürgkh because of the extensive use to
-which the latter puts the celebrated paragraph 14 of the
-Constitution, by which Parliament is eliminated altogether, and
-which provides the Government with every conceivable liberty of
-action. The all-powerful Tisza gives his support to Count Stürgkh
-just because of his weakness. Hence the attempt to replace the
-latter by Prince Hohenlohe, the present Minister of the Interior,
-is beset with much difficulty. The Emperor wants to avoid a break
-with Tisza at all costs. This state of things makes people feel
-very worried.<a name="page_251" id="page_251"></a> The strain in the relations between Austria and
-Hungary has greatly increased since my last visit, whereas the
-friendly feelings for Germany are now more pronounced than ever.</p>
-
-<p>“Our Kaiser everywhere enjoys an unexampled veneration. Within the
-next few days he will be made the subject of great celebrations in
-his honour. Although the tickets of admission are sold at enormous
-prices, even General v. Georgi, the Chief of the National Defence
-Organization&mdash;whom I met last night&mdash;did not succeed in obtaining a
-box, notwithstanding his high connexions. This morning the
-well-known member of the Hofburg Theatre, Herr Georg Reimers, read
-to me two poems dedicated to the Kaiser which he is going to recite
-that night, and I feel bound to say that it can hardly be an
-unmixed pleasure to the members of the court to witness this act of
-enthusiastic homage paid to our ruler.</p>
-
-<p>“The Roumanian question, particularly in its bearing on the food
-supply, is regarded by people who are able to judge with great
-anxiety. It is believed that the only thing to do is to send to
-Bucharest experienced men connected with the supply and the
-distribution of food who must be properly authorized to purchase as
-much grain as possible for ourselves and for our allies.</p>
-
-<p>“The big Austro-German <i>Zollverein</i>&mdash;or by whatever other name it
-is intended to describe the proposed customs union&mdash;is looked upon
-with very mixed feelings. Last night Baron Skoda (the Austrian
-Krupp) explained to me after a dinner given at his house, with the
-lively consent of members of the court and of the big
-manufacturers, that the Austrian interests might indeed profit from
-such a union with the Balkan States, but that it would be better
-that Germany should remain an outsider for a period of fifteen
-years. This is evidently a case of <i>timeo Danaos, et dona
-ferentes</i>, and people feel that Austria, owing to her economic
-exhaustion, would be easily absorbed by Germany after the
-conclusion of the war. The Hungarians, naturally, view matters from
-a different angle, not only because the Hungarian farmers would
-like to sell their grain to Germany free of any duty, and because
-industry counts for very little in their country, but also because
-they dislike the Austrians.<a name="page_252" id="page_252"></a></p>
-
-<p>“ ... I also dined with Count Tisza. He is a purely Magyar
-politician who regards the international situation from his
-Hungarian point of view, and in conformity with his Magyar
-inclinations. He is evidently a strong if obstinate character, and
-he does not impress me as a man who will give up his post without a
-protest. He, too, thinks the real war aims of Austria-Hungary have
-been accomplished. Serbia is crushed, Galicia liberated, and
-Russian supremacy in the Balkans&mdash;formerly viewed with so much
-apprehension&mdash;is a thing of the past. All that is wanting now is to
-bring the Italian campaign to a successful conclusion and the war
-may be regarded as over as far as Austro-Hungarian interests are
-involved.</p>
-
-<p>“Both Tisza and the Austrian society showed strong symptoms of an
-Anglophile leaning. Frau Schratt, who in such matters simply
-re-echoes the views of the old Emperor, seemed very pro-English,
-and had something to say about ‘German atrocities.’</p>
-
-<p>“I mention these facts because I cannot help thinking that,
-notwithstanding the war, some friendly threads must have been spun
-across from England to Austria.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>The subject of an unrestricted submarine war, already touched upon by
-Ballin in his above-mentioned letter to the Kaiser written in January,
-1916, was discussed with much animation in the course of the year, and a
-powerful propaganda in its favour was started by certain quarters.
-Ballin’s attitude towards this question, and particularly towards its
-bearing on the possible entry of the United States into the war, is
-described with great clearness in a letter addressed to a friend of his
-attached to the Army Headquarters. In this message he wrote:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“ ... You ask me to tell you something about the political and
-military situation as I see it, and I shall gladly comply with your
-wish.</p>
-
-<p>“The American danger seems to be averted for the moment at least. A
-severance of diplomatic relations with<a name="page_253" id="page_253"></a> the United States would
-have been nothing short of fatal to Germany at the present stage.
-Just because the war may be looked upon as won in a military sense,
-we were obliged to avoid such a catastrophe at all costs. As far as
-military exertions are concerned, it is quite correct to say that
-Germany has won the war, because in order to turn the present
-position into a military defeat our enemies, in the first instance,
-would have to gain military victories in Russia, France, and
-Belgium. These would have to be followed up by our retreat from the
-occupied countries and by their invasion of ours, and they would
-have to defeat us at home. Every sensible critic must see that
-neither their human material nor their organizing powers are
-sufficient for such achievements. The fact is that we have reached
-the final stage of a progressive war of exhaustion, which nothing
-but the intervention of the United States could have prolonged.</p>
-
-<p>“The accession of Italy to the ranks of our opponents has shown
-what it means if an additional Power enters the war against us.
-From a military point of view the entry of Italy did not materially
-aggravate our position; but the whole aspect of the war, as viewed
-by our enemies, underwent a complete change, and Grey, who shortly
-before had announced that ‘there is nothing between us and Germany
-except Belgium,’ stated a few weeks subsequent to the Italian
-<i>volte-face</i> that he could not find a suitable basis for peace
-negotiations anywhere.</p>
-
-<p>“The entry of the United States would have been of immeasurably
-greater effect on the imagination and the obstinacy of our enemies.</p>
-
-<p>“The very intelligent gentlemen who even now preach the
-unrestricted submarine war, especially the leading members of the
-Conservative and National Liberal parties, are misinformed about
-what the submarines can do. They not only regard it as possible,
-but even as practically certain, that the starvation of Great
-Britain could be achieved if the unrestricted submarine war were
-introduced. I need not tell Your Excellency that such an assumption
-fails to estimate things at their true value. Great Britain will
-always be able to maintain her connexion with the French Channel
-ports. Quite apart from that, she will always succeed in importing<a name="page_254" id="page_254"></a>
-the 14,000 tons of cereals which she needs every day to feed her
-population even if the number of our submarines is trebled, because
-it must not be forgotten that the submarines cannot operate during
-the night.</p>
-
-<p>“Hence the whole problem is now, as ever, governed by the axiom to
-which I have over and over again drawn the attention of the heads
-of the Berlin economic associations, viz. that we can no more force
-the British into subjection through our submarines than they can
-hope to wear us out by their starvation blockade. Both the
-submarine war and the blockade are extremely disastrous measures,
-inflicting heavy losses on either side; but neither of them can
-determine the fate of the war nor bring about a fundamental
-improvement in the position of either of the belligerent groups of
-Powers. That, apart from all other considerations, the unrestricted
-submarine war would have exposed us to the open hostility of the
-neutral countries, and might even have caused them to join the
-ranks of our enemies, is an additional contingency which the
-submarine enthusiasts have found it most convenient to dismiss by a
-wave of the hand.</p>
-
-<p>“If after the war Germany remains isolated from the rest of the
-world, she cannot feed her population, and the doctrine of Central
-European brotherhood promulgated by some of our amiable poets has
-given rise to a movement which is apt to be of the greatest
-detriment to the interests of our country when the war is over.</p>
-
-<p>“If we had wished to invest large parts of our German national
-wealth in countries like Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, and Turkey,
-nothing could have prevented us from realizing such a plan at any
-time previous to the war, provided we had thought it economically
-sound.</p>
-
-<p>“Such a return to a continental policy, I maintain, would be a
-disaster to Germany. Our needs and our aspirations have increased
-to such an extent that we can no longer hope to satisfy them by
-economic isolation or within the framework of a Central European
-economic league of states.</p>
-
-<p>“It is not because I am at the head of the biggest German shipping
-concern that I tell you these things, but I do so with the
-disinterestedness of a man who hopes to be allowed to retire into
-private life when this terrible war is over. No one<a name="page_255" id="page_255"></a> can perform
-his life’s work more than once, and no one can make a fresh start
-at the age of sixty.</p>
-
-<p>“The war has considerably strengthened the moral fibre of the
-Chancellor; he has learnt to take upon his shoulders
-responsibilities which, I think, he would formerly have shirked. It
-is much to be regretted that the Conservative party cannot see eye
-to eye with him in so many questions. He is blamed for the fact
-that the Kaiser is so difficult of access, and that he does not
-every now and then receive the leaders of our political and
-economic life, as he should do considering the fateful time through
-which the Empire is passing.</p>
-
-<p>“If the Chancellor is to succeed in carrying through the huge tasks
-still before him, it is, in my opinion, imperative that he should
-not lose touch with Conservative circles, and I think there is no
-reason why the Kaiser should not ask men like Herr v. Wangenheim,
-Count Schwerin-Löwitz, etc., to visit him from time to time at
-headquarters, and to acquaint him with their wishes and anxieties.</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot help telling you that the whole nation views with
-profound regret the Kaiser’s isolation. Since the outbreak of the
-war I have only once had an interview with His Excellency v.
-Falkenhayn, and the main purpose of my asking for it was to request
-him to bring about a change in this state of things by using his
-influence with the Kaiser. His Excellency frankly told me that he
-had some objections to doing this, but he promised me nevertheless
-that he would exercise his influence in this direction. I am only
-afraid that, because of the excessive burden of work he has to get
-through, the matter has slipped his memory....â€</p></div>
-
-<p>Ballin was not the only one who, as early as 1916, regarded with such
-alarm the devastating effects of a possible entry of the United States
-into the war; other men of political training thought so too, although
-their number was not large. The following passages, taken from two
-letters which Ballin received from a member of the German diplomatic
-service, show that the feeling was there:<a name="page_256" id="page_256"></a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“February 16th, 1916. My chief apprehensions are purely political.
-Although it seems that for the moment our differences with the
-United States will be smoothed over, there can be no doubt but that
-at times the tension has been so great that a wrong move at the
-critical moment would have caused America to take up arms against
-us. Contrary to what most people seem to think, I regard this
-danger as having by no means passed; in fact I look upon it as
-always lurking in the background. Those who, like myself, have seen
-that the secret ideal of British policy is an alliance and
-permanent co-operation with America, will agree with me that such
-an Anglo-American understanding for the period of this war would be
-of lasting detriment to our whole future. You know England, and you
-know that the course of events has turned the Entente automatically
-into an alliance, although the British, especially those who look
-beyond the actual present, have always felt a great deal of
-aversion towards such a development. The individual Frenchman,
-indeed, is mostly looked upon as a somewhat grotesque and slightly
-ludicrous character, but all the same there exists some sympathy
-with the French as a nation, however artificially this may have
-been brought about; but towards Russia the average Englishman never
-felt anything but an icy aloofness and a great deal of antipathy.
-Hence, the so-called allies of the British have never been the
-cause of unalloyed joy to them.</p>
-
-<p>“On the other hand, to establish permanent relations with that part
-of the Anglo-Saxon race inhabiting the huge continent across the
-Atlantic has at all times been the aim pursued by every really
-far-sighted British statesman. By means of such an alliance, it is
-hoped to consolidate and to strengthen for many generations the
-foundations on which the venerable but also slightly dilapidated
-structure of the United Kingdom rests. From a purely maritime point
-of view, such an alliance would be of overwhelming strength. In my
-opinion it would be perfectly hopeless for our country, constantly
-menaced as it is by serious Continental complications, to gain the
-trident of Neptune in opposition to these two Powers. I believe an
-Anglo-American league, whose object it would be to prevent us from
-becoming a commercial, naval, and Continental Power, would
-restrict<a name="page_257" id="page_257"></a> us once more to a purely Continental policy, a policy
-which we have so successfully discarded since the accession of our
-present Kaiser.</p>
-
-<p>“To frustrate such an alliance must be our principal task. To call
-it into being or even to facilitate its conclusion would be the
-greatest crime against Germany’s future which anyone could commit.</p>
-
-<p>“Let us by all means sink as much enemy tonnage as possible, let us
-lay mines, and let us proceed with our submarine warfare as
-hitherto, or even with more energy, but let the people who are at
-the head of the whole movement be aware of the immense
-responsibility that rests on their shoulders. If our leading men
-speak of a war with America just as cheerfully as though San Marino
-or Montenegro were involved, I cannot help viewing such an attitude
-with the utmost apprehension. The British will use all their
-astuteness and all their energy to exploit any mistakes committed
-by Germany. If they succeed in this, and if, in consequence, our
-relations with the United States become very strained again or
-drift towards a rupture, I fear that we shall not be able to bring
-this war to a successful close, or derive from it any security for
-our future development.</p>
-
-<p>“Berlin, February 26th, 1916. During the two days I have now been
-here it has greatly depressed me to see a number of fanatics who
-cannot gauge the consequences of their doings attempting to drive
-this splendid German people towards a new abyss. Alas! delusions
-and folly are rampant everywhere. If I were you, I should now
-disregard every other consideration, and explain to the Kaiser as a
-friend that everything is being gambled away: the existence of his
-Empire, his crown, and possibly the fate of the dynasty. It is like
-living in a madhouse; everyone talks about war with Holland,
-America, Denmark and Roumania as though a mere picnic were
-concerned.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>During the war Ballin tried over and over again to make the responsible
-authorities see the position in the same light as his own observations,
-and his repeated discussions with unprejudiced and clear-headed men had<a name="page_258" id="page_258"></a>
-led him to see it himself. The letter reproduced below contains a
-description of the general situation at the time of writing (July,
-1916). It was addressed to a friend of his in the diplomatic service who
-was looking after German interests in one of the countries allied with
-Germany, and who had asked him for some information concerning the
-situation at home:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“I am sorry that I can send you no good news at all. The conduct of
-the war and its probable outcome are more of a mystery now than
-ever, and with all that I cannot help feeling that our responsible
-quarters do not even now realize the profound gravity of the
-situation. The political and the military leaders are frequently at
-variance. There is a lack of proper co-operation between Berlin and
-Vienna. We imagine ourselves to be the rider, but we are only the
-horse. The road between Berlin and Vienna is studded with
-compromises of doubtful value, and incapable archdukes are given
-the most important positions.</p>
-
-<p>“The military situation was favourable until the Austrians thought
-their day of reckoning with Italy had come, and when our own
-Supreme Command set out to cover themselves with laurels in France.</p>
-
-<p>“Both these undertakings turned out to be political and military
-failures. For hundreds of reasons an early peace is imperative to
-us. As matters stand at present only Great Britain and Russia can
-conclude peace, because France and Italy must be regarded as mere
-British vassals.</p>
-
-<p>“Since the Cabinets of London and Petrograd remain absolutely deaf
-to our publicly expressed overtures for peace, we have no choice
-but to try to utterly defeat the one or the other of these, our
-principal enemies, either Russia or Great Britain.</p>
-
-<p>“We could have finished with Great Britain if we had had at least
-300 first-class submarines, and in that case we might have regarded
-a war against America with complacency.</p>
-
-<p>“However, even if we possessed, as some optimists believe, as many
-as 150 first-class submarines, we could not strike a mortal blow at
-Great Britain and defy the United<a name="page_259" id="page_259"></a> States as well. Therefore, we
-have only one choice left: we must force Russia, our second chief
-enemy, to her knees.</p>
-
-<p>“Russia has been badly hit through the loss of the industrial
-regions of Poland. If we had exerted all our strength in that
-direction, and if we had taken Kiev, the economic key to Russia,
-the Tsar would have had no alternative but to conclude a separate
-peace, and this would have settled the Roumanian question at the
-same time.</p>
-
-<p>“With less certainty, but also, perhaps, with less exertion, it
-might have proved possible to make peace <i>via</i> Petrograd. But what
-have we done instead? We have squandered our forces. The Eastern
-theatre of war was denuded of troops, because at first Falkenhayn
-felt sure he could take Verdun in a fortnight, then by Easter, and
-finally by Whitsuntide. All our forces have been hurled at Verdun;
-rivers of blood have been spilt, and now, in July, we are still
-outside it. And what does it profit us if we do get it? We shall
-only find other and more formidable lines behind it.</p>
-
-<p>“In the meantime our good Austrians have transferred all their
-reliable officers and men to the Tyrol, and have left nothing but
-the rubbish and their inefficient generals to guard the points of
-danger. And what are the results? A graceful retirement for
-Salandra and the formation of an anti-German coalition government
-in Italy on the one hand, and a manifestation of Austrian
-superiority on the other, but a failure, nevertheless, because the
-Austrians were not strong enough numerically to get down into the
-plain. And even if they had compelled the evacuation of Venetia
-nothing would have been gained. The fate of Italy, as it happens,
-does not depend on Austria, but on Great Britain, who will rather
-watch her starve and perish for want of coal than permit her to sue
-for peace.</p>
-
-<p>“Although all this is perfectly plain to everyone, our Supreme
-Command seems to be undecided as to whether an offensive with all
-the means at our disposal should be started on the Western Front
-simultaneously with one against Russia, or whether it should be
-directed against Russia only. As far back as last year I exerted
-all my influence&mdash;small though it has become&mdash;in favour of an
-energetic and whole-hearted offensive against Russia.<a name="page_260" id="page_260"></a></p>
-
-<p>“Well-informed and far-seeing men have justly pointed out that, if
-fortune so wills it, the Kaiser, arm in arm with Hindenburg and
-Ludendorff, could risk a ‘bad peace’ without danger to himself and
-his dynasty, but it appears beyond doubt that the influence of
-Falkenhayn is all-powerful.</p>
-
-<p>“ ... If we were to arrive at an understanding with Russia to-day,
-we should be able to go on with the war against Great Britain for a
-long time to come, and, by means of unimpeded submarine activity,
-to carry it to a successful issue. In that case we could also
-estimate the danger threatening us from America at as low a figure
-as many who are unacquainted with the position are putting it now.</p>
-
-<p>“Thus it is my view that it is necessary to abandon definitely the
-belief that the war can be brought to a successful issue on the
-Western Front, and without first defeating Russia. It is greatly to
-be deplored that many observers assert that the Western Powers will
-make peace when they have found out that the big offensive now in
-progress remains without any visible success. Only people who do
-not know Great Britain can put forward such a proposition, but how
-many people are there at the Wilhelmstrasse who do know Great
-Britain? Very few indeed, if any....</p>
-
-<p>“ ... You said you would rejoice to hear from me, and I can only
-regret with all my heart that I have not been able to report
-anything to you in which it would really be possible to rejoice.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>A still more serious note is struck in the following letter written in
-September, 1916:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“Very many thanks for your welcome letter of yesterday’s date, with
-the contents of which I agree in every detail.</p>
-
-<p>“I quite share your belief that Hindenburg and Ludendorff must each
-feel like a great physician who is only called in when it is too
-late. Two declarations of war within 24 hours were necessary to
-bring about this change which the German people had been looking
-forward to for months and months. The Chancellor is justly
-reproached for not having had the courage to insist upon the
-appointment of these two men<a name="page_261" id="page_261"></a> and on the resignation of Falkenhayn
-long ago. It is contended that he should have tendered his own
-resignation if his recommendations were refused, and his neglect to
-do so makes him principally responsible for the fate that is in
-store for us. For a long time back I have kept emphasizing the need
-for transferring our main activities to the Eastern theatre of war,
-and for definitely settling these personal questions.</p>
-
-<p>“The Chancellor clings to his post because he believes that there
-is no one better qualified than himself to be at the head of
-affairs. Such an attitude reminds me of the old gentleman who
-neither wanted to die nor to retire from his post as president of
-the Berlin Chamber of Commerce, and who bitterly complained to
-those who came to congratulate him on his ninetieth birthday that
-he was compelled to stick to his office, in spite of his advanced
-years, because he could not see a better man to succeed him.</p>
-
-<p>“It is very sad that we have arrived at such an <i>impasse</i>, and I am
-convinced that the present internal political situation is
-untenable. No German Chancellor can possibly carry the business of
-the country to a successful issue if, in the midst of a terrible
-war, he is obliged to fight against an opposition consisting of the
-Conservatives, the representatives of the Heavy Industries, and the
-majority of the National Liberals.</p>
-
-<p>“As far as I can make out, the Chinese wall surrounding the Kaiser
-has not disappeared with the exit of Falkenhayn from the scene. No
-one is granted access to him who knows something about the events
-that led up to this war, and who, in the interests of his dynasty
-as well as his own, would tell him the unvarnished truth. We are,
-after all, a constitutional country. It would doubtless be best to
-transfer General Headquarters to Berlin, but, of course, people are
-not wanting who object to such a proceeding, asserting that it
-would enable outside influences to acquire a hold on the conduct of
-affairs.</p>
-
-<p>“How badly people are informed with regard to the actual situation
-was brought home to me when I was in Berlin a short while ago, and
-when X. contended with great emphasis that we should have to attach
-more value to huge indemnities than to annexations. If it is
-possible that the men<a name="page_262" id="page_262"></a> round the Kaiser count on heavy indemnities
-even now, it shows how sadly they misjudge the real state of
-affairs.</p>
-
-<p>“My feeling tells me that the present Cabinets, containing as they
-do men who are compromised by their actions since the outbreak of
-war, cannot give us peace. How can anyone imagine that men like
-Bethmann, Asquith and Grey, who have hurled such incredible insults
-at each other, can ever sit together at the same table?</p>
-
-<p>“The question as to who is to succeed them, of course, abounds with
-difficulties.</p>
-
-<p>“I recently met some Austrian gentlemen in Berlin. They are
-completely apathetic; they have lost all interest in the future,
-and they themselves suggest that Germany should no longer permit
-Austria to have a voice in the conduct of affairs. Her food supply
-will only last until March 1st. After that date she will depend on
-Hungary and ourselves for her food. She fears that she is not
-likely to get much, if anything, from Hungary; on the other hand,
-she feels sure that we are compelled for our own sake to save her
-from famine.</p>
-
-<p>“Constantinople, too, has only supplies for a few more weeks.</p>
-
-<p>“With us at home the paraffin question is becoming very serious. In
-country districts it may be possible to tell people to go to bed at
-curfew time, but the working population of our large cities will
-never consent to dispense with artificial light. Serious riots have
-already taken place in connexion with the fat shortage.</p>
-
-<p>“I am afraid that Great Britain is trying to bring about such a
-change in the situation as will enable her shortly to tell the
-small neutral countries that no one in Europe will be permitted any
-longer to remain neutral, and that they must make up their minds to
-enter one or the other of the two big syndicates. You see nothing I
-can write to you has even a semblance of comfort in it. I regard
-the future with the utmost apprehension.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>In contrast to such views as were expressed in the foregoing letters,
-the men who were at the head of<a name="page_263" id="page_263"></a> affairs at that time maintained that
-nothing but the application of rigorous force, or, in other words, the
-unrestricted use of the submarine weapon against Great Britain, would
-lead to a successful termination of the world war. The propaganda in
-favour of that measure is still in everybody’s memory. Whatever may be
-said in defence of the authors of this propaganda, there is one reproach
-from which they cannot escape, viz. that they left no stone unturned to
-prevent their opponents from stating their views, and this, on account
-of the strict censorship to which the expression of every independent
-opinion was subject, was not a difficult matter. Their one-sided policy
-went so far that, when a pamphlet on the question of submarine warfare
-was written by order of the Admiralty Staff and circulated among a
-number of persons, including leading shipping men, Ballin was purposely
-excluded, because it was taken for granted that he would not express
-himself in favour of the contents. It is not likely, however, that the
-methods of reasoning put forward in this document&mdash;which was much more
-like an academic dissertation than an unprejudiced criticism of a
-political and military measure affecting the whole national existence of
-Germany&mdash;would have induced Ballin to change his views on the submarine
-war. Once only, and then merely for a brief period, was he in doubt as
-to whether his views on that question were right, but he soon returned
-to his first opinion when he found that he had been misinformed
-regarding the number and the effectiveness of submarines available.</p>
-
-<p>The inauguration of unrestricted submarine warfare in January, 1917, not
-only put a sudden end to the peace movement in which Ballin, as has been
-explained on a preceding page, played an important part, but also to the
-attempt of President Wilson to bring the two sides together. The details
-of the President<a name="page_264" id="page_264"></a>’s endeavours have meanwhile become public property
-through the revelations of Count Bernstorff, the German ambassador in
-Washington. In both instances a few weeks would have sufficed to
-ascertain whether the proposed action was likely to bring about the
-desired end, and the former attempt had even led to the impending
-establishment of mutual contact between the belligerents. The inability
-of the German political leaders to avail themselves of this opportunity,
-or at least their failure to do so, has doubtless been the greatest
-misfortune from which Germany had to suffer during the whole war.</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding the successful exploits of the submarines, Ballin’s
-apprehensions never left him, and they were not allayed by the
-development of the position at home. The letter published below, which
-he wrote to the Chief of the Kaiser’s Civil Cabinet, believing that this
-gentleman would be most likely to assist him in laying his views before
-the Kaiser, admirably sums up his feelings, and testifies both to his
-real patriotism and to his presentiment of the fate that was to overtake
-his country:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“<span class="smcap">Your Excellency</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-“<i>April 4th, 1917</i>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>The internal conditions of our country fill me with grave alarm,
-and I therefore venture to approach Your Excellency privately with
-this expression of my apprehensions.</p>
-
-<p>“I do not doubt for a moment that our competent authorities intend
-to extract the utmost advantage to ourselves from the situation
-which is developing in Russia. This Russian revolution may enable
-us to bring the war to a close, and to obtain peace terms which,
-relatively speaking, are not unfavourable.</p>
-
-<p>“What Germany has achieved in this war is beyond all praise. A
-glance at the map shows how small she is compared with her
-opponents in the field; and yet she is bravely struggling against a
-world in arms in which even the few countries<a name="page_265" id="page_265"></a> that have remained
-neutral are not our friends. It is, indeed, one grand epic. But
-unfortunately the position at home becomes more untenable every
-day.</p>
-
-<p>“If we find ourselves compelled to reduce the bread ration still
-more, you will, I am sure, agree with me that the bulk of the
-people will suffer enormously through being underfed. In Austria,
-conditions are said to be worse still, and I am afraid that we
-shall even have to part with some of our stores to feed her
-population.</p>
-
-<p>“At first sight the Chancellor’s speech in the Prussian House of
-Deputies appeared to be somewhat too comprehensive in its range of
-vision; but a few days later, when the news of the Russian
-revolution arrived, it almost seemed that his words had been
-prompted by Divine inspiration. After this Russian news had become
-known, it would have been impossible for him to make this speech
-without giving rise to the suspicion that these events had cast
-their shadow in advance on the Prussian Parliament. Unfortunately,
-however, this favourable development was not followed up by the
-right steps. On the contrary, the Chancellor, after his breezy
-advance in the House of Deputies, has now retired from the position
-he then took up, thus creating the impression that our policy is
-constantly shaped by all sorts of mutually contradictory views and
-currents. Up to now, although the people have to suffer greatly
-through the shortage of food and fuel, their patriotism has put up
-with it because of their faith in the promised electoral reforms.
-It would have been so simple to reiterate this promise, and at the
-same time to point out that so many other things claimed precedence
-during the war, and that so much was at stake, that it would hardly
-be advisable to introduce this great reform at present, seeing that
-there was no time to give proper attention to the careful working
-out of all the details.</p>
-
-<p>“If now, however, such bills as those dealing with the entailed
-property legislation and with the repeal of the Polish laws are to
-be discussed, such a postponement is no longer justifiable.</p>
-
-<p>“It almost seems as if the Government is unable to read the signs
-of the times. The fate of the Prussian suffrage reform bids fair to
-resemble that of the sibylline books, of<a name="page_266" id="page_266"></a> which it was said that
-the longer one hesitated to buy them the more expensive they
-became. To-day the people would still be content to agree to plural
-voting, but when the war is over, and when the Socialist leaders
-are demobilizing their men, inducing tens of thousands of them,
-decorated with the Iron Cross, to air their grievances, it will be
-too late to stop the ball from rolling. It is true that people say
-revolutions are impossible in the era of the machine-gun. I have no
-faith in this theory, especially since the events that have
-happened in Petrograd have become known to us. That, in a country
-like Russia, the reigning family could disappear from the scene
-without any opposition, and without a single Grand Duke or a single
-soldier attempting to prevent it, is certainly food for much
-reflection.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope Your Excellency will pardon me for thus frankly expressing
-my anxieties, but I considered it my duty to let Your Excellency
-know my feelings.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>In May, 1917, Ballin accepted an invitation received from the Supreme
-Army Command and paid a visit to General Headquarters, where he found a
-great deal of discontent prevailing with the policy of the Chancellor.
-He also met the Kaiser, and reports on his visit as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“After sharing the Kaiser’s repast&mdash;which was plain and on a war
-diet&mdash;I had several hours’ private conversation with His Majesty. I
-found him full of optimism, far more so than I thought was
-justified. Both he and Ludendorff seem to put too much faith in the
-success of the submarines; but they fail to see that this weapon is
-procuring for us the enmity of the whole world, and that the
-promise held out by its advocates, viz., that Great Britain will be
-brought to her knees within two months, is, to put it mildly,
-extremely doubtful of realization, unless we can sink the ships
-which carry ammunition and pit-props to England.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>In a letter addressed to a gentleman in the Kaiser’s entourage he gave a
-further detailed account of his views on the optimism prevailing in high
-places:<a name="page_267" id="page_267"></a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“I cannot help thinking of the enthusiastic and at the same time
-highly optimistic letter which you had the great kindness to show
-me last night. My opinion is that the gentlemen who form the
-entourage of His Majesty ought not to view matters as that
-interesting epistle suggests that they do.</p>
-
-<p>“You are a believer in the statistics of Mr. X. I took the liberty
-of telling you last night that statistics are a mathematical form
-of telling a lie, and that, to use the expression of a clever
-Frenchman, a statistical table is like a loose woman who is at the
-service of anyone who wants her. ‘There are different ways of
-arranging figures,’ as they say in England. I do not know Mr. X,
-neither do I know his statistics, but what I have been told about
-them seemed foolish to me. If we carry on the war, and particularly
-the unrestricted submarine war, on the basis of statistics such as
-he and other jugglers with figures have compiled, we are sure to
-fail in the ends we are aiming at.</p>
-
-<p>“As concerns the unrestricted submarine war itself, I still
-maintain the view I have always held, viz., that we shall never
-succeed in starving out Great Britain to such an extent as to force
-her Government to sue for a peace of our dictation.</p>
-
-<p>“I have just had a visit from a Danish friend whom His Majesty also
-knows quite well, and who, together with a committee of delegates
-sent by the Danish Government, will be leaving for England
-to-night. The two members of this committee who represent the
-Ministry of Agriculture have been instructed, <i>inter alia</i>, to
-complain that Great Britain now imports much less bacon, butter,
-and other articles from Denmark than she had undertaken to do, and
-that the prices she pays for these imports are much below those
-originally stipulated.</p>
-
-<p>“Apart from the cargo carried by two small steamers that have been
-torpedoed, Denmark has been able, notwithstanding our submarines,
-to supply Great Britain with all the food required of her. The
-vessels remain in territorial waters until a wireless message
-informs them of the spot where they will meet the British convoy
-which is to take them safely to England. They have to pass through
-only a small danger zone which, as I have said, has hitherto proved
-fatal to no more than two vessels.<a name="page_268" id="page_268"></a></p>
-
-<p>“This fact, to my mind, points to the limits of the success
-obtainable by our submarines. I have constantly explained,
-especially to the Chief of the Admiralty Staff, that I can only
-regard the submarine as a successful weapon if it enables us to cut
-off the British supplies of ore from Spain and Sweden, and also
-those of pit-props, because without the possession of these two
-necessities, Great Britain is no longer able to continue the war. I
-have been assured that our submarines would achieve this task, even
-if torpedo boats were employed as convoys; but the experiences
-gained so far do not bear out these predictions. We succeed,
-indeed, in sinking a few vessels out of many; but suppose there are
-ten ships in a convoy, it still means that nine of them, with their
-supplies of ore and pit-props, safely reach their destination.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me repeat, the starvation of Great Britain is impossible;
-because, in addition to her own harvests, she only needs from
-twelve to fifteen thousand tons of cereals every day, and these she
-can, if necessary, always obtain at night-time through her Channel
-service, <i>via</i> Spain and France. Even this necessity will hardly
-arise, because two medium-sized steamers are sufficient to carry
-the fifteen thousand tons, and things would have to be very bad,
-indeed, if these did not succeed in reaching a British port. And if
-our statistical tricksters juggle with crop failures, please do not
-forget that new harvests are soon to be expected, and that it will
-not do always to count on crop failures.</p>
-
-<p>“You will be doing a good work if you can persuade people at
-headquarters to abandon their belief that Great Britain can be
-starved to submission. Unfortunately their other belief, viz., that
-we can cut off her supplies of ore and pit-props, will also have to
-be abandoned.</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly, the achievements of our submarines have been amazing.
-At their present rate they will enormously diminish the British
-tonnage figures, and raise the hatred of everything German to
-boiling point; but they will not, unfortunately, lead to such an
-end of the war as our Pan-Germans desire. It is a thousand pities!</p>
-
-<p>“When the submarine problem began to assume practical shape, I
-pointed out to the Chief of the Admiralty Staff that, to be
-successful, the submarine war must be brief; that its<a name="page_269" id="page_269"></a> principal
-object was not to sink a large number of ships, but to produce such
-a feeling of alarm in neutral countries as to prevent them from
-risking their ships (1) because of the great value of tonnage
-immediately after the war, (2) because of the impossibility of
-finding crews, and (3) because of the insurance difficulty. These
-conditions of success were, indeed, realized during the first four
-weeks; but since that time people, as I had predicted, have got
-used to the danger. The crews are coming forth again, the insurance
-companies issue their policies again, and the ships are put to sea
-again.</p>
-
-<p>“If the Admiralty Staff, who is doubtless in possession of the
-figures, would submit to you a list of the number of vessels laid
-up in Dutch and Scandinavian ports on March 1st, owing to the
-submarine danger, and another one showing the position as it is
-to-day, you would discover that, at a low estimate, at least 30 per
-cent, of the cargo vessels are running again, and that, after
-another month or so, the number of those still idle will have
-dwindled down to 20 per cent, or less.</p>
-
-<p>“These are my views on the situation. If we have no other means of
-finishing the war but the submarine menace, it will go on for
-years. I should like to protest in anticipation against any
-suggestion to the effect that I am trying to minimize the
-achievements of the submarines. On the contrary, I have nothing but
-the highest admiration for them, and I really find it quite
-impossible to praise in ordinary prose all that our country has
-done during this war; the whole achievement is one grand epic.</p>
-
-<p>“Within the next few months the problem will have to be solved how
-to put an end to this devastating catastrophe which is ruining the
-progress of the world. There is no need for me to tell you that the
-position of Germany has grown considerably worse through the active
-intervention of the United States. The fact that this enormously
-wealthy country with its one hundred million inhabitants has turned
-against us is fraught with the most dangerous consequences. Now it
-will no longer be possible for us to continue the war for several
-more years, and then to enforce a peace on lines such as are laid
-down by a noisy section of our people, unless we succeed in
-exploiting the extremely fortunate change in the Russian<a name="page_270" id="page_270"></a> situation
-in such a way that the vast resources of that country will be at
-our disposal.</p>
-
-<p>“This letter has become longer than it ought to be, but the gravity
-of the subject with which it deals must be my excuse for going into
-so many details. Perhaps I may avail myself of some future occasion
-to acquaint you with my hopes and fears on other political matters;
-because, as I have already explained, the present state of affairs
-makes it urgently desirable that the gentlemen whose privilege it
-is to be near His Majesty should see things as they really are, and
-not as they would wish them to be.</p>
-
-<p>“Compare, if you have a chance, the advertisement pages of an
-English paper with those of a German one. I have just come across a
-copy of the <i>Daily Telegraph</i> which I beg to enclose for this
-purpose. I have been in the habit of studying these advertisements
-for many months; they are excellent means of gauging the difference
-in the effects of the war on the two countries.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>During the remaining part of 1917, and during the first months of 1918
-as well, Ballin took an active interest in the preparations for the Bill
-dealing with the rebuilding of the German mercantile marine; in other
-respects, especially with regard to political matters, the course of
-events condemned him to remain passive. His notes during this period are
-few. I select the following passages from them:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“ ... July 17th, 1917. The Erzberger resolution which was chiefly
-aimed at Helfferich and the naval authorities has made the
-Chancellor’s position untenable. Everybody turned against Herr von
-Bethmann, and General von Ludendorff informed me by telephone that
-he would resign if Bethmann remained in office.</p>
-
-<p>“I then had a lengthy talk with His Excellency v. Valentini who
-agreed that it was necessary for the Chancellor to retire; but he
-found it just as difficult as other people to name a suitable
-successor. Vienna had raised strong objections to the appointment
-of Prince Bülow, and, acting upon Valentini<a name="page_271" id="page_271"></a>’s suggestion, I made
-up my mind to approach the Kaiser with a view to discussing with
-him the situation which appeared to me fraught with the greatest
-danger. I therefore asked His Excellency von Reischach to arrange
-such a meeting for me, but on Thursday night I was rung up from
-headquarters and informed that Hindenburg and Ludendorff were
-already on their way to the Kaiser to report to His Majesty on this
-subject. Under these circumstances I did not like to interfere, and
-on Friday I withdrew my application for an interview. The Kaiser
-has told the two generals that he had accepted Bethmann’s
-resignation the previous evening. He is thus able to save himself
-from a perplexing situation by contending that he had to give in to
-the wishes of the Supreme Army Command.</p>
-
-<p>“ ... July 25th, 1917. Yesterday I called on Prince Bülow at his
-Flottbek residence, and found him looking better than I had seen
-him for years. After I had left him I had the feeling that the
-Prince, who regards the whole situation with a great deal of
-misgiving, would even be willing to accept the post of Foreign
-Secretary under Michaelis himself, in order to be able to guide our
-foreign policy along sensible lines once more. Contrary to the
-reserve which he formerly showed, he now condemns Bethmann’s policy
-with great bitterness. Bethmann, he maintains, by yielding to the
-demand for universal suffrage, acted like a banker on the day
-before bankruptcy who would try to save himself from disaster by
-using his clients’ deposits.</p>
-
-<p>“The Mexico telegram<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> he treated with a good deal of sarcasm,
-remarking that it was the maddest prank since the exploits of the
-Captain of Köpenick, with which I agreed. If anyone, he said, ever
-wrote a comedy on the subject, he would scarcely venture to lay the
-plot in modern times, but would go back to the period when pigtails
-and wigs were the fashion.</p>
-
-<p>“ ... July 30th, 1917. I had several messages over the telephone,
-as well as a visit, from Lieutenant-Colonel von Voss, the Chief of
-Staff with the Altona Army Command, who<a name="page_272" id="page_272"></a> wanted to consult me as to
-whether Prince Bülow should be offered the post of Foreign
-Secretary. I am afraid, however, that there is not much chance of
-his being appointed. The Prince shares this opinion, and would not
-like the Press to make any propaganda in his favour.</p>
-
-<p>“ ... Sept. 14th, 1917. In the meantime, on August 19th, the Kaiser
-has been to Hamburg on a one day’s visit. He came from Heligoland,
-and was brimful of optimism.</p>
-
-<p>“He pretended to be very well satisfied with his new Chancellor,
-and was very optimistic as to a German victory, an attitude which,
-I am afraid, is not in the least justified by the situation as it
-is.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>In the month of September, 1917, Ballin wrote a memorandum for Dr.
-Schwander, the newly appointed Secretary of State for National Economy.
-Apart from politics this document deals with economic matters, and in
-particular with the legislation concerning these during the period of
-transition which would succeed the close of the war. Ballin gave a great
-deal of thought to these questions, and I shall refer to them later on.
-Meanwhile I will quote the text of the memorandum:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="r">
-<i>"September 6th, 1917.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“The fall of Riga shows once more how far superior our military
-achievements are to the work performed by our politicians. With the
-dispatch of the Mexico telegram their folly appeared to me to have
-reached its height; but the descent from that point is but slow.
-The news recently published by the Press to the effect that the
-Federal Council is to deal with the question of the constitutional
-and administrative reforms which are to be granted to
-Alsace-Lorraine, makes me fear that some big political blunder is
-going to be committed again. It is evidently believed that, if
-Alsace-Lorraine were to be established as an independent federal
-state with perhaps some South German prince as its Grand Duke, such
-a measure would remove an obstacle to peace. I, however, consider
-it a great tactical mistake to attempt such a solution of the
-Alsace-Lorraine problem before the war is<a name="page_273" id="page_273"></a> over. We must never lose
-sight of the fact that each one of the leading actors in the
-political drama has to play to his own gallery, and that therefore
-at the conclusion of peace&mdash;which in my opinion can only be one of
-compromise&mdash;French diplomacy must be able to show up something
-which the man in the street can be induced to regard as a <i>succès
-d’estime</i>. No doubt it would be easier and more to our liking to
-solve the problem in our own way, and at the initiative of our
-Government; but by doing so we would deprive ourselves of another
-possibility for compromising which we ought to keep in order to
-enable the French to retire from the struggle with a fair measure
-of success.</p>
-
-<p>“We have a bad habit of spoiling the chances of peace by premature
-actions intended to help it on and to prepare the way for it. Just
-think of what we did in Poland! In the same way we deliberately
-diminished the great value of the important asset which we possess
-in the shape of Belgium when we set up the Council of Flanders and
-introduced the administrative partition of that country.</p>
-
-<p>“Besides these political matters there are others which were better
-left alone for the present. I am thinking of the steps taken to
-regulate our economic restoration after the war. War corporations
-are springing from the ground like mushrooms after rain, and the
-preparations made in order to solve the difficult economic post-war
-problems have an ugly tendency toward establishing too many
-Government-controlled organizations. To my mind the appointment of
-a ‘Government Commissioner for the period of Economic Transition’
-is altogether superfluous. We must refrain from all attempts at
-interfering by artificial means with the natural development of
-events. This, however, is precisely what the Commissioner would
-have to do. He would have to act according to instructions received
-from the Bank of Germany or from some specially created body
-dealing with the question of the foreign exchanges and the
-provision of foreign bills.</p>
-
-<p>“My belief is that our foreign exchanges which have so completely
-got out of order will prove an excellent means of diminishing the
-hatred against us and of making our enemies less disinclined to
-resume business with us. The Americans who are now able to obtain
-goods to the value of M 6.20 for<a name="page_274" id="page_274"></a> their dollar, instead of M 4.20,
-as they used to do, will soon discover their liking for us again.</p>
-
-<p>“Another point is that the coming peace, even if we derive no other
-gain from it, will enormously raise German prestige all over the
-world. Prussia became a European Power after the Seven Years’ War,
-in spite of the fact that the peace treaty brought her neither a
-territorial nor a financial gain, merely confirming the right of
-Frederick the Great to the possessions he had defended in the war.
-Prestige, however, means credit, and this circumstance makes me
-believe that all these anxious discussions of the foreign exchange
-question and of the need for controlling German payments abroad are
-just as superfluous as the Government control of our economic
-activities during the period of transition.</p>
-
-<p>“The nations now at war will be impoverished after the war, and the
-state of our exchange and the high prices of raw material will
-compel us to live from hand to mouth as far as the importation of
-raw material is concerned. Pending the return of normal conditions,
-no sensible manufacturer will want to import more raw material than
-he urgently requires.</p>
-
-<p>“I therefore think we ought to try to induce the Government to
-desist from its proposed control of trade and industries, and to
-restore the old conditions. If the Government’s proposal to carry
-on under its own management large sections of our import and export
-trade&mdash;in order to make these valuable sources of profit available
-for the reduction of its debts&mdash;were allowed to materialize, our
-economic doom would be certain, however attractive the plan might
-be in view of the huge national debt. One must be careful not to
-ignore the fact that the flourishing state of trade and
-manufactures is always largely due to the existence of personal
-relations.</p>
-
-<p>“If I think of the lessons of the past forty years&mdash;a period during
-which the freedom of trade, the freedom of industrial enterprise,
-and the freedom of shipping have led to marvellous successes and to
-the accumulation of huge wealth&mdash;I ask myself: ‘How is it possible
-that a wise statesman could seriously occupy himself with the plan
-of establishing a Government-bound system in place of it?’ How, I
-ask you, can a State-managed industrial organization avail itself
-of<a name="page_275" id="page_275"></a> the advantages to be had when trade is booming, or to guard
-itself against the losses when there is a slump? What will be the
-attitude of such an organization towards dealings in futures and
-speculation, both of which are indispensable forms of modern
-business enterprise? True, it has been suggested that these
-difficulties could be overcome if some business men were requested
-to accept appointments under this system, and if so-called ‘mixed’
-concerns worked by the co-operation of public funds and private
-capital were established. May Heaven grant that this will never be
-done! I am sure you have had even more to do than I with business
-men who had been promoted to the higher dignity of Government
-officials. Most of them have turned out complete failures in their
-new spheres; they have become more bureaucratic than our
-bureaucrats themselves; their initiative and their eagerness to
-take upon themselves responsibilities have never lasted very long.
-Let there always be a fair field and no favour! Personal relations
-and personal efficiency are all that we need for the rebuilding of
-our national economic system. The ‘mixed’ concerns are bad because
-they lack the necessary elasticity, because they disregard the
-personal equation, and because they impede the indispensable
-freedom of action.</p>
-
-<p>“I am quite prepared for these views of mine to meet with much
-criticism. People will say: ‘All that is very well, but the
-Government’s huge indebtedness compels it to take recourse to
-extraordinary measures.’ Quite right, but would it not be much
-wiser to reduce this indebtedness by increasing direct and indirect
-taxation, instead of depriving those who have proved during the
-past few decades what they can do of the means that have made them
-so efficient?</p>
-
-<p>“Even among the efficient business men, unless they be born
-geniuses, a distinction must be drawn between those who can make
-profits and those who can organize. The former kind&mdash;who are,
-moreover, but few and far between&mdash;will never submit to the
-personal restrictions to which they would be subjected in
-state-managed or ‘mixed’ concerns. The second kind alone, however,
-would never make any concern prosper.</p>
-
-<p>“Another consideration is that the enemy countries would view with
-much suspicion any such institutions controlled<a name="page_276" id="page_276"></a> partly or wholly
-by the Government. I remember quite well the scant respect with
-which the French delegates were treated at the International
-Shipping Conferences before the war. Everyone knew that the big
-French shipping companies, owing to the huge Government subsidies,
-had to put up with a great deal of supervision on the part of the
-Government, and that they could often vote neither for nor against
-the most important proposals with which the Conference had to deal,
-because they had first to obtain the consent of the Government
-commissioner. They were, therefore, simply ignored, as it was clear
-that they could raise no counter-proposals at their own initiative.</p>
-
-<p>“And truly there is every reason for us to use the utmost caution
-whenever any questions connected with the reconstruction of our
-country are concerned. The excellent Dr. Naumann, with his
-‘Berlin&mdash;Bagdad’ slogan, has already smashed a good many window
-panes which will have to be paid for after the war by the producing
-classes. The suggestion that an economic union of the Central
-European countries should be established was put forward at a most
-inopportune moment, and the propaganda in its favour was bound to
-bring about the retaliatory measures agreed upon by our enemies at
-the Paris Economic Conference.</p>
-
-<p>“The resolutions of this Conference were of little practical
-importance to us until the day when America entered the field
-against us. If the United States assents to them, it will become
-possible to enforce them, and for this reason I am watching the
-further development of the economic question with growing concern.
-I maintain that peace negotiations should only be started after a
-previous agreement has been arrived at between the belligerents to
-the effect that, on the conclusion of peace, the commercial
-relations formerly existing between them should be restored as far
-as possible, and that the resolutions passed at the Paris Economic
-Conference and at the Central European Conference should be
-rescinded. Such an attitude, however, can only be taken up by our
-delegates if they agree that the former commercial treaties, no
-matter whether they are still running or whether they have elapsed,
-should automatically become valid again for a fairly extensive
-period of time after the close of the war. The<a name="page_277" id="page_277"></a> disadvantages which
-some of these treaties involve for us are easily outbalanced by the
-advantages secured by the others.</p>
-
-<p>“Our Government cannot be reminded too often that it is necessary
-to consult experienced men of business in all such questions. Since
-the early days of the war I have vainly tried to convince Herr v.
-Bethmann of this necessity. After all, nobody can possibly be an
-expert in everything. Yesterday, when reading the letters of Gustav
-Freytag to his publisher, Mr. Hirzel, I came across the following
-admirable piece of self-criticism: ‘I do not know yet what is to
-become of my work; but I fear I am doing what others, better
-qualified than I, ought to be doing, and that I am leaving undone
-what I ought to do.’ Every great leader in our political and
-economic life must have experienced that it is extremely
-unsatisfactory to waste one’s time and energy on work which another
-man could do just as well as, or even better than, oneself. This
-the Government should remember whenever it attempts to interfere
-with the big industrial combines, such as trusts, syndicates, etc.
-Wherever a syndicate is necessary in the best interests of any
-industry, a leader will be forthcoming who will create it; and only
-in cases where inferior minds, acting for selfish reasons of their
-own, do not wish to acknowledge the need for combining, the
-Government should be asked to exercise whatever pressure it
-considers advisable in order to further the great aims that are
-involved.</p>
-
-<p>“I am afraid that after the war we shall lack the funds needed for
-the solution of the traffic problems with which we shall then be
-confronted, especially with regard to our inland waterways. At any
-rate, if we do build the necessary canals immediately after the
-war, we shall find ourselves compelled to charge such high rates to
-the vessels using these waterways that their advantages will
-largely tend to become illusory. Even as it is now, our trade and
-our manufactures are seriously handicapped by the high canal dues
-existing, by the tugboat monopoly, etc. A really far-sighted policy
-which would make it its principal object to assist the progress of
-our foreign trade would have to guard against the mistaken idea
-that the levying of high rates was the only means of<a name="page_278" id="page_278"></a> obtaining
-interest on the capital invested. After all, even the turnpikes had
-to be abolished in the end.</p>
-
-<p>“The agitation in favour of separating from Russia the Ukraine,
-Finland, and other parts inhabited by alien peoples&mdash;an agitation
-which is becoming noisier every day&mdash;troubles me very much. Since
-the early days of the war I have maintained that it must be our
-main war aim to detach Russia from the Entente, and that we must
-endeavour to establish close relations between our own country and
-Russia so that the two of us shall be strong enough to face a
-possible alliance between Great Britain, the United States, and
-France. This should be our aim even now. But if we are going
-deliberately to dismember the Russian Empire and to parcel it out
-into a number of independent units, our political influence after
-the war will be slight indeed, and the result must necessarily make
-itself felt to the detriment of our whole economic life.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>At Ballin’s suggestion, the members of the Reichstag were invited to
-attend a meeting which was to be held in Hamburg during the summer of
-1918. Large sections of people in the three Hanseatic cities viewed with
-grave concern the plans which the Government entertained for the
-economic development after the war, and the meeting had been called to
-draw the attention of the visitors to this state of affairs. Three
-principal speeches were delivered, and at the close of the meeting
-Ballin briefly recapitulated the main arguments against too much
-Government interference. Much of what he said on that occasion, and much
-of what he had written in the memorandum quoted above, has been borne
-out by the events of the recent past, even though the actual terms of
-the peace imposed on Germany were much more unfavourable than he had
-expected them to be. In addressing himself to the Vice President of the
-Reichstag, Geheimrat Dove, and the large number of the elected
-representatives of the German people who accepted the invitation, Ballin
-said:<a name="page_279" id="page_279"></a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“We should be glad if you would see to it that the Government does
-not put a halter round our necks, and that it refrains from the
-dangerous attempt to employ barrack-room methods where economic
-questions of national and international importance are at stake.
-Let us have air, and light, and freedom to act; and we, by availing
-ourselves of our relations with the overseas countries, shall be
-able to carry out the work that lies before us....</p>
-
-<p>“ ... I am convinced that all the measures which are contemplated
-to stabilize economic conditions during the period of transition
-from war to peace will do more harm than good. If carried into
-practice, they will merely prepare the soil for an economic
-struggle to succeed the present war of arms. We need a peace that
-is doubly secure! We cannot ask our enemies to give us freedom
-where we impose compulsion. We cannot fight for the freedom of the
-seas, and at the same time surround Central Europe with a barbed
-wire.</p>
-
-<p>“I do not wish to deny that in order to carry out our economic
-tasks a certain amount of Government control will be necessary.
-That, of course, goes without saying; but anything beyond it is an
-unmixed evil. If it is said to-day that the measures to be adopted
-during the period of economic transition are, in some instances,
-intended to remain in force for three years, and if it is announced
-semi-officially that the thousand and one war corporations are to
-be made use of for the purposes of this policy, and that their
-disappearance is to be very gradual&mdash;I can only sound a serious
-note of warning against any such designs. When the war is over all
-those who can do efficient work will return to their normal
-occupations; and those who then prefer to remain attached to the
-war corporations in one capacity or other are surely to some extent
-people who have discovered some hidden charms in these
-institutions, or, if not, they are persons who, fearful of the
-risks connected with the unfettered interplay of forces, feel that
-they are better off under the protecting wing of the Government. If
-you are going to entrust the future of our country to such
-organizations for better or worse, the economic war after the war,
-as I have said before, will be sure to follow, and you will have to
-face a war that will last years and years.â€</p></div>
-
-<p><a name="page_280" id="page_280"></a></p>
-
-<p>As regards the closing months of the war&mdash;which are also the closing
-months of Ballin’s life&mdash;it must suffice to refer here to one event
-only; one, however, which is of dramatic significance. I am speaking of
-Ballin’s last meeting with the Kaiser. His notes on this subject,
-roughly sketched though they are, require no further comment. I
-reproduce them in full:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="r">
-<i>"Hamfelde, August 25th (Sunday), 1918.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“Last Tuesday Herr Deters<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> rang me up to ask me on behalf of Hugo
-Stinnes if I would meet him in Berlin on the Thursday.
-Lieut.-Colonel Bauer, one of Ludendorff’s aides-de-camp, a
-gentleman largely responsible for the Pan-German leanings of the
-General and for his close association with the interests of the big
-manufacturers, had been to see Stinnes, and on the strength of the
-information he had received from Lieut.-Colonel Bauer he thought it
-advisable to have a talk with me. I declined the invitation because
-I expected that the work they wanted me to do would be anything but
-pleasant.</p>
-
-<p>“Next morning Herr Deters rang me up again and told me that Stinnes
-would call on me in Hamburg on Friday morning.</p>
-
-<p>“I left for Hamfelde on Wednesday afternoon, but returned to town
-again on Thursday, because Stinnes had arranged to call on me as
-early as 10.30 a.m. on Friday.</p>
-
-<p>“The proposed meeting thus took place on Friday, August 23rd, from
-10.40 a.m. to 1.15 p.m. Stinnes, with admirable frankness and
-directness, started our conversation by stating that the military
-situation had become much worse. Our troops, he said, began to fail
-us in our task, and the number of deserters had been very large
-lately (he mentioned, I believe, that their number was 32,000).
-Ludendorff had told the Crown Prince the plain truth; but it was
-still necessary to explain the true state of affairs to the Kaiser,
-and to make it clear to His Majesty that Hertling, who was
-completely laid up with sickness, could no longer effectively fill
-his post. The real work was done by his son, Captain v. Hertling,
-and<a name="page_281" id="page_281"></a> no efforts were being made to come to a cessation of
-hostilities. In other directions, too, matters were drifting
-towards a catastrophe. The Minister of War, v. Stein, lacked the
-necessary authority. In many instances the men called up did not
-enlist at all; in Silesia large numbers of them had concealed
-themselves in the woods and forests, and their wives provided them
-with food, while no energetic steps to check these occurrences were
-taken by the Chief Army Command. I replied to Stinnes that if
-Ludendorff agreed I would be ready to undertake the unpleasant task
-of informing the Kaiser, but that it would first be necessary that
-Ludendorff and myself should come to an understanding as to whom to
-propose to His Majesty for the Chancellorship.</p></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="r">
-<i>"Continuation. Hamburg, August 26th, 1918.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“Stinnes said he thought that Ludendorff had Prince Bülow in his
-mind. I told Stinnes that Bülow, in my opinion, might perhaps be
-suitable at the head of a peace delegation, but that it was too
-late to think of him as a possible Chancellor, and that the German
-people&mdash;more particularly the Socialists&mdash;had not now the requisite
-confidence in his ability to fill the post of Chancellor. Neither
-would he be acceptable to our enemies. It would be difficult to
-persuade Great Britain, the United States and France that a prince,
-especially Prince Bülow, would seriously carry out the
-democratization of Germany. If, however, we really were to discuss
-peace at last it would be necessary that the office of Chancellor
-should be vested in a man to whom our enemies could take no
-possible exception. Stinnes perfectly agreed with me in this
-matter.</p>
-
-<p>“We continued to discuss other possible candidates for the post,
-but we could not agree on anyone. Finally Stinnes proposed that we
-should both go to Berlin and there continue the discussion together
-with Lieut.-Colonel Bauer, Ludendorff’s representative. He would in
-the meantime report to Berlin about our conversation, and he was
-hopeful that we could see Bauer either to-night (Monday), or
-to-morrow (Tuesday, August 27th).</p>
-
-<p>“This morning Stinnes informed me through Deters that he had sent
-me a wire stating that the proposed meeting<a name="page_282" id="page_282"></a> could not take place
-until Monday next, September 2nd, at 8 p.m. He proposed that we
-should have a preliminary meeting at the Hotel Continental at 7
-p.m. the same evening. I suggested that it would be better to fix
-this preliminary meeting at 6.30 p.m.</p>
-
-<p>“I must add that Bauer’s (that is Ludendorff’s) suggestion was that
-I should not see the Kaiser by myself, but together with Stinnes,
-Duisburg, and Krupp v. Bohlen.</p>
-
-<p>“I replied to Stinnes that I considered it very inadvisable for
-such a deputation to visit the Kaiser, who would never tolerate
-that four gentlemen&mdash;two of whom were perfect strangers to
-him&mdash;should speak to him about such matters. It would be better
-that Herr v. Bohlen, or, if Ludendorff attached special value to
-it, I myself should call on the Kaiser in private, and that either
-Herr v. Bohlen or I should then endeavour to induce the Kaiser to
-see the other three gentlemen as well.</p>
-
-<p>“Stinnes was greatly depressed and took as grave a view of the
-situation as I did myself.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>Ballin’s notes on the Berlin meeting are confined to a few jottings,
-from which it appears that not Lieutenant-Colonel Bauer but Major v.
-Harbou in his stead took part in it, and that the question of selecting
-a suitable candidate for the Chancellorship proved impossible of a
-satisfactory solution. As a last resort, if everything else should fail,
-Ballin thought of proposing Stinnes himself, because in his opinion the
-situation demanded a man of dictatorial character and with the authority
-of a dictator.</p>
-
-<p>Concerning his interview with the Kaiser, Ballin wrote down the
-following notes:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“I arrived at Wilhelmshöhe on the morning of September 5th, and I
-was asked to ‘report’ to the Kaiser at 12.45 p.m. This expression
-was chosen because the new head of the Kaiser’s Civil Cabinet, Herr
-v. Berg, evidently wished to invest my visit with an official
-character which would enable him to be in attendance. After a
-while, however, the Kaiser<a name="page_283" id="page_283"></a> became impatient and did not wish to
-wait till the hour appointed for the interview. So I was requested
-by telephone to hold myself in readiness by 11 o’clock.</p>
-
-<p>“I went to the Castle at that hour and waited in the room of the
-aide-de-camp until the Kaiser came and asked me to go for a walk
-with him. However, Herr v. Berg was also there and accompanied us.
-Consequently the conversation lost much of the directness which
-would have been highly desirable in the Kaiser’s own interest, as
-well as in that of the country.</p>
-
-<p>“I found the Kaiser very misinformed, as usual, and full of that
-apparent buoyancy of spirit which he likes to display in the
-presence of third persons. The facts have been twisted to such an
-extent that even the serious failure of our offensive&mdash;which, at
-first, had depressed him very much&mdash;has been described to him as a
-success. It is now intended to retire to the old Hindenburg line,
-so that the only result of the offensive has been the loss of
-several hundreds of thousands of valuable lives. All this, as I
-have said, is dished up to the poor Kaiser in such a fashion that
-he remains perfectly blind to the catastrophic effect of it.</p>
-
-<p>“He now puts his whole trust in Herr v. Hintze, whom he evidently
-looks upon as a great light.</p>
-
-<p>“I told the Kaiser of my grave misgivings and made him clearly
-understand that I did not think there would be much use in entering
-into peace negotiations with Great Britain. I urged that no time
-should be lost in immediately approaching Wilson, who was an
-idealist and who had no territorial aspirations in Europe. If,
-however, the war should continue much longer Wilson would most
-probably become subject to the influences of a war party, and then
-we could no longer hope that he would still insist upon a
-settlement along the lines of his idealist programme.</p>
-
-<p>“The Kaiser agreed that my views were well founded, but he thought
-we ought not to enter into peace negotiations before the approach
-of autumn, by which time we should have returned to the safe
-position afforded by the Hindenburg line. Then, he thought, we
-should avail ourselves of the offer of mediation which had been
-made by the Queen of Holland.<a name="page_284" id="page_284"></a></p>
-
-<p>“Whenever I was too frank in my criticisms and suggestions, Herr v.
-Berg skilfully interposed. He declared to me when the Kaiser had
-left that it would not do to make His Majesty too pessimistic.</p>
-
-<p>“I also discussed with the Kaiser the question of doing away with
-the restrictions imposed upon the sale of perishable articles of
-food, such as butter, eggs, etc.; and I pointed out to him that the
-fixing of maximum prices and the issuing of regulations dealing
-with illicit trading merely forced the people to pay exorbitant
-prices, at the same time helping those engaged in underhand trading
-to amass huge fortunes. On this subject, too, the Kaiser fell in
-with my own views, and it was decided to release at least the
-perishable articles, and to allow them to be sold once more through
-the ordinary channels without restriction.</p>
-
-<p>“The Kaiser also declared that this war would soon be followed by
-another, to which he referred as the Second Carthaginian War. He
-spoke a great deal of an Anglo-American alliance which would, of
-course, be directed against Japan, and the views on political
-subjects which he expressed in this connexion showed that he is
-being very badly advised indeed.</p>
-
-<p>“Herr v. Berg is obviously conservative and Pan-German in his
-politics, and it seems that his influence is predominant at Court.
-Only on the Prussian suffrage question did he agree with my own
-standpoint, which is that universal suffrage must be granted now
-that the King has promised it.</p>
-
-<p>“Since the Kaiser and the Kaiserin, on account of the latter’s
-illness, were dining alone, I joined the so-called ‘Court Marshal’s
-table,’ together with the Countesses Keller and Rantzau, the
-gentlemen-in-waiting on the Kaiser, and the physician-in-ordinary
-and the chamberlain of the Kaiserin. The duty of acting as court
-marshal fell to General v. Gontard, as Herr v. Reischach had
-unfortunately fallen seriously ill.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>In order to illustrate further what has been shown to be Ballin’s views
-on the character of the Kaiser, I here quote the first part of a letter
-of his, dated October 25th, 1918:<a name="page_285" id="page_285"></a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“In the meantime,†he writes, “Wilson’s reply has been received,
-and it is certain that compliance with its terms will be equivalent
-to capitulation.</p>
-
-<p>“To my mind Wilson’s note clearly shows that he and his allies will
-demand that the Hohenzollerns, or at any rate the Kaiser and the
-Crown Prince, shall relinquish their rights to the throne, and
-that, in consideration of such an act, they will ease their terms
-of peace.</p>
-
-<p>“Each of the men who are at the head of their respective
-Governments has to play to his gallery, and if these men desire to
-give their audience a convincing proof of the completeness of the
-success they have achieved, they can do no better than demand
-condign punishment for the man who has been held responsible for
-the war, and inflict it upon him. I do not believe that the Kaiser
-would grieve very much if he were given a chance now of retiring
-into private life without much loss of dignity. The war, which was
-something absolutely uncongenial to his whole nature, has had such
-bad effect on his health that it would be desirable in his own
-interest if he were enabled to retire comfortably into private
-life. He must see the force of this argument himself, and it is not
-likely that he would refuse to accept such a chance, as a refusal
-would prejudice the best interests of his country. The Kaiserin,
-however, may be expected to oppose any such solution with much
-feeling. If the Kaiser’s grandson were now appointed his successor,
-and if a regent were nominated in whom everybody had confidence,
-the whole German situation would lose much of its seriousness. Of
-course, the abdication of the Kaiser would not take place without
-certain disturbances, but it would be necessary to face these
-disadvantages with a good grace. No doubt the outlook would be
-better if they could be avoided, and if the Kaiser, without losing
-his position, could be invested with rights and duties similar to
-those of the British king, who, broadly speaking, enjoys all the
-advantages of his dignity without having to take upon himself
-responsibilities which he is unable to bear. I quite believe that
-the Kaiser never derived much pleasure from his sovereign powers;
-at any rate, if he did, he has ceased to do so since this
-unfortunate war has been forced upon him.â€</p></div>
-
-<p><a name="page_286" id="page_286"></a></p>
-
-<p>Ballin’s last entry in his diary contains the following passage:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“Stinnes has sent word to me that the Socialist and Centre parties
-are of opinion that I ought to be nominated to conduct the peace
-negotiations. I have told him that I should not shirk it, but that
-I should be much better pleased if somebody else would do it.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>This note was written on November 2nd, 1918. One short week later, on
-November 9th, his heart had ceased to beat&mdash;a heart which had so warmly
-responded to the call of his Kaiser and country, and which had succumbed
-to its excessive load of grief and sorrow.<a name="page_287" id="page_287"></a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI<br /><br />
-<span class="smcap">Personal Characteristics</span></h2>
-
-<p class="nind">T<span class="smcap">o</span> present an exhaustive description of Albert Ballin’s life-work within
-the compass of this volume is an impossible task, and the more the
-writer entered into the details of his attempt to do so, the more
-thoroughly did he realize this impossibility.</p>
-
-<p>The story of a life comprising thirty-two years of incessant hard work,
-only interrupted when nature’s law or a very imperative behest of his
-medical adviser made it necessary, and spent at the head of an
-undertaking which, as a result of this work, developed into one of the
-greatest that the economic history of the generation just passed has
-known, cannot be told in full by means of a mere description unless it
-be accompanied by volumes of statistics which, however, convey no
-meaning to anyone except the initiated.</p>
-
-<p>The author, therefore, had to content himself with delineating a picture
-of his hero with a background formed by the events which he himself had
-helped to shape, and which, in many instances, had received their
-distinguishing stamp through his own genius. The essence of his
-character, and the importance of his work to his contemporaries, must
-stand out from this background as the portrait of a painter&mdash;as seen by
-himself&mdash;would stand out from a mirror. What the mirror does not show,
-and cannot show, is the immensity of the mental forces hidden below the
-surface which alone give expression to the portrait; all the factors
-which have brought about the final result&mdash;the strength, the<a name="page_288" id="page_288"></a> courage,
-the daring, and the feeling of responsibility without which it would
-never have been achieved.</p>
-
-<p>Still more difficult it is to interpret the very essence of the
-character of him whose work we see before us, or, indeed, to give a
-comprehensible account of it to the stranger.</p>
-
-<p>The only way of doing justice to a man of such commanding genius as
-Ballin is to try to discover first of all the one essential root
-principle of his personality. Having succeeded in that, we shall find no
-more difficulty in reconciling the great number of apparently mutually
-contradictory traits of his character. This principle is the focus where
-all the rays of light are collected from all directions, and which forms
-the source of light, warmth, and vital energy.</p>
-
-<p>Albert Ballin was a born business man if ever there was one. To him the
-noble words of Schiller’s lines apply: “The treasures which his ships
-carry across the oceans spell untold blessings to all who receive them.â€
-His whole mind was drawn towards the sea; his inborn inclinations and
-the surroundings amidst which he grew up had destined him to be a
-shipping man. To the boy Ballin the Hamburg harbour was the favourite
-playground; and the seven seas were just large enough to serve as a
-field of action for the youth and the man. There was his real home, and
-there he felt at rest. How often, indeed, has he assured us that the
-sleeplessness to which he fell an unfortunate victim whenever he was
-ashore left him as soon as he was on board ship, and that a miserable
-river barge was sufficient to have this effect on him. He was proof
-against sea-sickness, both bodily and mentally. Thus he became a
-shipping man, because it was his natural vocation; and in this chosen
-profession of his he became one of the greatest and most brilliantly
-gifted rulers the world has ever seen.<a name="page_289" id="page_289"></a></p>
-
-<p>Whenever there was a problem to be solved he attacked it in a spirit of
-boldness, yet tempered by the utmost conscientiousness and caution. No
-task he encountered was so big that his daring could not tackle it and
-overcome its difficulties; nothing was so insignificant that he would
-not attend to it somehow. Whatever decision his infallible instinct
-intuitively recognized as right, and to whatever idea his impulsive
-nature had given practical shape, had to pass muster during the
-sleepless hours of the night before the tribunal of his restless mind
-when, as he used to say, “everything appears wrapt up in a grey mist.â€
-At such times his reason began to analyse and to criticize the decisions
-he had reached during the day. Then he would often shudder at his own
-boldness, and the torments of doubt would be aggravated by the thought
-of the enormous responsibility which he bore towards his company. For it
-must be understood that from the day he joined the Hamburg-Amerika Linie
-his interests and those of the company became parts of an inseparable
-whole.</p>
-
-<p>The company’s affairs absorbed all his thoughts at all times; the
-company’s well-being was the object of his constant care; he devoted
-himself exclusively to the service of the company, and the opinions
-which he formed in his mind regarding persons and things were
-instinctively coloured according to their relationship to the company’s
-affairs. The gradual progress during its infancy, the later expansion,
-and the final greatness of the company, were as the events of his own
-life to him; when the proud structure which he had raised collapsed his
-life was ended. His thoughts incessantly converged towards this very
-centre of his being. All his work, all his words and deeds, were devoted
-to the furtherance of the company’s interests. He identified himself so
-completely with the company that he actually was the Packetfahrt, and
-the Packetfahrt was he. Even<a name="page_290" id="page_290"></a> his love and hatred were rooted in the
-company. He remained a grateful and lifelong friend to anyone who had
-been of service to the company or to him as representing it.</p>
-
-<p>This highly subjective and indissoluble relationship between himself and
-the company&mdash;which it had been the dream of his life to raise to the
-highest pinnacle of prosperity&mdash;is the key to the fundamental principle
-which lies at the root of his whole complex personality. But however
-well-defined his personal individuality stood out, his subjectivity was
-nevertheless animated by a strong sense of duty. His views, for
-instance, on the essential principles governing the most perfect
-organization which modern capitalism has produced&mdash;i.e. the joint-stock
-company&mdash;were free from any tinge of personal considerations whatever.
-He was himself the responsible head of a big joint-stock company, and
-instinctively this fact exercised such a powerful influence on all his
-thoughts and feelings that it is quite impossible to arrive at a just
-appreciation of his character unless this circumstance is borne in mind.
-His character which appears so complicated to the cursory onlooker, but
-which is in reality of singular simplicity and consistency, is best
-illustrated by his reply to a question of one of his friends who had
-asked him why he did not allow some piece of scathing criticism which he
-had just expressed in private to be made public. “My dear friend,†he
-said, “you forget that you are not the chairman of the board of
-directors of a joint-stock company.†What he meant to convey was that
-the enmity which he would incur by expressing those views in public
-would adversely affect the firm of which he was the head, and that the
-interests of his company compelled him to impose upon himself
-restrictions which he could ignore in his private capacity.</p>
-
-<p>Although he had nothing but scorn for the very suggestion<a name="page_291" id="page_291"></a> that this
-company should receive at any time any subsidies from public funds, he
-made it to the fullest extent subservient to the needs of the public and
-of the nation at large. He often remarked that such gigantic concerns
-as, e.g., the Hamburg-Amerika Linie, are no longer private ventures
-purely and simply. The ties that bind them to the whole economic life of
-the nation&mdash;and, for the matter of that, to the world in general&mdash;are so
-close and so manifold that it would be disastrous to ignore them or to
-sever them. Hundreds of industrial, commercial, and agricultural
-enterprises were lavishly supplied with work through the orders they
-received from the Hamburg-Amerika Linie in connexion with the building
-and the equipment of its steamers and with the needs of its
-organizations on shore. Its hundreds of thousands of passengers and
-emigrants, and the huge volume of German-made products and manufactured
-articles carried on board its vessels, spread the German name and German
-fame throughout the civilized world. Hence, to Albert Ballin the
-national flag and that of the Hapag were two symbols expressive of but
-one idea.</p>
-
-<p>A man who, like Ballin, was at the head of the biggest German shipping
-company and therefore also, by implication, one of the leading spirits
-in the economic life of Germany, could not very well hold himself aloof
-where high politics were concerned. The more the economic problems
-gained in importance, the greater became their bearing on the course of
-the country’s politics. Ballin, however, would never have become a
-professional politician from inclination, because he invariably refused
-to be mixed up with the strife of parties. He never officially belonged
-to any political party; and although he made friends with members of all
-the non-Socialist parties, his general outlook on politics was mainly
-coloured by Liberal views, and he<a name="page_292" id="page_292"></a> was a firm believer in Free Trade.
-Whenever questions dealing with the interests of shipping and trade were
-involved, he had no difficulty in making the responsible people listen
-to his claims and to his suggestions, but he never tried to make his
-influence felt on purely political affairs unless they affected the
-country’s vital international interests. His lengthy and extensive
-travels to the countries of Europe, to the North American continent, and
-to the Far East, had broadened his outlook. His profession as a shipping
-man not only brought him into frequent contact with the heads of the big
-shipping companies all the world over, but also with a number of the
-financial magnates and industrial captains of Great Britain, the United
-States, and other countries of economic importance. He took rank with
-the greatest economic leaders as an equal, and this unchallenged
-position of commanding authority was reflected by the esteem in which he
-was held by the principal statesmen and parliamentarians. He was
-familiar with the essential and vital needs of other nations, and he
-therefore not only stood up for the national rights whenever they
-appeared in jeopardy, but he also raised his warning voice against a
-policy provocative of conflicts whenever he thought it possible to avoid
-them. Whoever is conscious of his strength is also aware of the
-limitations set to his power.</p>
-
-<p>In politics as well as in business he held that “a lean compromise was
-preferable to a fat lawsuit,†as the German proverb puts it. It has been
-mentioned elsewhere in this volume that Ballin was essentially the man
-of compromise. It is very probable that the experiences of his early
-life had helped to develop this outstanding feature of his personality.
-It may be assumed that he, a young man of unknown Jewish family, found
-his path beset with difficulties in a city-state like Hamburg, where the
-influence of the wealthy patriciate<a name="page_293" id="page_293"></a> of the merchant classes was
-supreme, and that he was looked upon as an upstart even after he had
-reached a prominent position himself. The casual observer is far too
-much inclined to underestimate the conservative character&mdash;both
-politically and socially&mdash;of the three Hanseatic cities. Still, evidence
-is not wanting that Ballin’s unusual gifts were occasionally recognized
-and appreciated even in the days of his early career. An English
-journalist, for instance, who met him some time about 1895,
-characterized him by the following words: “He struck me as a great man;
-otherwise nothing so incongruous as such a type of man at the head of a
-big steamship line could be imagined.†That Field-Marshal Count
-Waldersee honoured him by his friendship at an early period has been
-mentioned in a different chapter of this volume. And even in patrician
-Hamburg he found an immensely powerful friend and patron shortly after
-he had entered the services of the Packetfahrt. This was no less a man
-than the shipowner Carl Laeisz, the most eminent representative of the
-“House of Laeisz.â€</p>
-
-<p>The firm of F. Laeisz, which was successfully owned by its founder,
-Ferdinand, his son Carl, and his grandson Carl Ferdinand, has stood
-sponsor to all the more important shipping companies established in
-Hamburg, and through its great authority helped them all to get over the
-critical years of their early youth. The sound principles by which the
-firm was guided might sometimes lead to much disappointment on the part
-of the shareholders, but they proved to be of unsurpassable benefit to
-the companies concerned, and nothing illustrates them better than the
-oft-told episode of the shareholder who went to see Carl Laeisz,
-complaining that the Hamburg South American S.S. Company did not pay any
-dividend. “The object of the company is to carry on the shipping trade,
-and not to distribute dividends,†was the blunt but characteristic
-reply.<a name="page_294" id="page_294"></a> Being thoroughly unconventional in his habits, Carl Laeisz&mdash;no
-less than his singularly gifted son, who was one of those rare men whom
-it was really impossible to replace&mdash;nevertheless did invaluable service
-in connexion with the establishment of new firms in Hamburg, and with
-the encouragement of existing ones.</p>
-
-<p>It was a great compliment to Ballin that in 1888, when he had only been
-associated with the Packetfahrt for a couple of years, and when the
-directors asked for authority to increase the joint-stock capital of the
-company from 20 to 25 million marks, Carl Laeisz informed them in
-advance that, at the general meeting of the shareholders, he would move
-an increase of 10 instead of 5 millions, and that this motion was
-unanimously carried. Those who have known Carl Laeisz personally will
-appreciate what it meant to Ballin when, by way of giving him an
-introduction to the London firm of Messrs. J. Henry Schröder, Laeisz
-scribbled the following note on the back of one of Ballin’s visiting
-cards:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“It gives me pleasure to introduce to you the bearer of this card,
-whom I am proud to name my friend, and to recommend him to your
-protection and to your unfailing kindness.</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-“Sincerely yours,<br />
-“(<i>Signed</i>) <span class="smcap">Laeisz</span>.â€<br />
-</p></div>
-
-<p>As this card was found among the papers and documents which Ballin left
-at the time of his death, it would seem that it was not used for its
-intended purpose, but that he preferred to keep it as a souvenir of the
-man whom he always remembered with gratitude and affection, and of whose
-life he could tell a good number of characteristic anecdotes. The
-telegram of which the text is given below is also highly typical of Carl
-Laeisz. I have not been able to discover what was the occasion of
-sending it, but I am inclined to think that it must<a name="page_295" id="page_295"></a> be in some manner
-connected with the conference held in the Berlin Royal Castle, and
-referred to on an earlier page, at which Ballin first attracted the
-Kaiser’s attention. The text is as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“Persons who give in without a protest are miserable creatures, and
-being such, they are deserving of nothing but contempt. Suggest
-that you obstinately stick to Hamburg point of view, not only from
-personal conviction, but for other weighty reasons as well. Meeting
-hardly convened simply to induce you to give in.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>Although there is scarcely anyone to whom the name of a Hamburg patriot
-can be applied with greater justice than to Ballin, and although there
-are few people who have done more to promote the well-being and the
-prosperity of their native city, and who have had a better appreciation
-of one of the most lovable features of her inhabitants, viz. their dry,
-unconventional, and kindly humour, it would be wrong to assume that this
-local patriotism of Ballin made him blind to the shortcomings and
-deficiencies of his native city. On the contrary, his eminent sense of
-the realities of life made him see most clearly the points of weakness
-in the position of Hamburg, e.g. those connected with the system of her
-finances. The so-called Köhlbrand agreement, which, after a hard
-struggle, put an end to the long controversy between Hamburg and Prussia
-by stipulating that the course of the lower Elbe should be regulated
-without detriment to the interests of the town of Harburg, imposed such
-a vast amount of expenditure upon Hamburg, and the Prussian local
-authorities concerned insisted on securing the payment of such large
-compensations to the owners whose rights were adversely affected by the
-improvement of the waterway, that it might well be doubted whether
-Hamburg could shoulder these enormous burdens.<a name="page_296" id="page_296"></a></p>
-
-<p>It speaks volumes for Ballin’s unprejudiced mind that he frequently
-maintained nothing would be of greater benefit to Hamburg than her
-renunciation of her sovereignty as a city-state in favour of
-incorporation with Prussia. Prussia, he argued, was her natural
-hinterland, after all; and if she consented to be thus incorporated, she
-would be such a precious jewel in the crown of Prussia that she could
-secure without an effort all the advantages and privileges which
-Prussia, by pursuing the strictly Prussian line in her politics, now
-actually prevented her from acquiring. In course of time, however, her
-present isolation would undermine the foundations of her existence,
-especially if and when the increasing volume of traffic passing through
-her port should demand a further expansion of the latter, and,
-consequently, a further rise in the financial burdens. In that case the
-unnatural position which resulted from the fact that the “Elbe deltaâ€
-belonged to two different states, and which had its origin in the
-political history of the district, would make itself felt with all its
-drawbacks, and the ultimate sufferer would be the country as a whole of
-which Hamburg, after all, was the connecting link with the nations
-beyond the sea.</p>
-
-<p>These are the same arguments and considerations which are used when the
-modern problem of a “Greater Hamburg†is under discussion, with this
-difference only, that in Ballin’s time the only solution which was
-regarded as possible was that Hamburg should cast in her lot with her
-Prussian neighbour.</p>
-
-<p>Ballin repeatedly vented the full force of his sarcasm against the
-advocates of an “out-and-out Hamburg policy†to whom his own views
-sounded like heresy, a policy which found perhaps its most comic
-expression in the speech of a former Hamburg burgomaster who referred to
-the King of Prussia as “our illustrious ally.†Ballin did not recognize
-the existence of a line of demarcation<a name="page_297" id="page_297"></a> which, as many lesser minds
-imagined, separated republican Hamburg from the rest of Germany. In
-reality there is no such separation; Hamburg, indeed, receives year
-after year a constant influx of human material and of ideas from her
-German hinterland, without which she could not exist at all, and in
-spite of which she has never had a superfluity, but&mdash;at times, at
-least&mdash;rather a deficiency of specially gifted citizens. This latter
-circumstance and the frequent absence of that quality of mental
-alertness which Bismarck, in speaking of the German character in
-general, used to designate as the missing “dash of champagne in the
-blood†once made Ballin say: “I quite see that what this town wants is
-10,000 Jews. I do not, by any means, shut my eyes to the disagreeable
-qualities of the Jewish character, but still, another 10,000 of them
-would be a decided advantage.†This utterance confirms how free from
-prejudice he was where the Jewish question was concerned. Although not
-at all orthodox, but rather indifferent in his religious views, he was
-far too proud to disavow his origin or his religion, or to change the
-latter. Of someone who had changed his name, he said, in a tone of
-bitter reproach, that he had insulted his father.</p>
-
-<p>Ballin’s relations with the working classes and his attitude towards the
-Labour question were not such as the Socialist papers were fond of
-alleging, especially at the time when the Labour controversy was at its
-height, and when strikes were constantly occurring or threatening. The
-first big strike affecting Ballin’s special sphere of activity was that
-of the Hamburg dock labourers in 1896. It was caused by wages disputes
-which the Packetfahrt tried in vain to settle by raising the wages paid
-to the men. The interests of the employers in the ensuing struggle were
-not, however, specially represented by the associations of the shipping
-firms,<a name="page_298" id="page_298"></a> but were looked after by the big “Association of Employers of
-Labour,†and therefore the attitude taken up by the employers as a whole
-was not determined by practical considerations from the point of view of
-the shipping companies. The Packetfahrt, however, seems to have
-emphasized the necessity of being guided by such practical
-considerations, as may be inferred from the fact that the Packetfahrt
-was the only one among the large firms of employers which advocated from
-the outset that certain concessions should be granted in respect of the
-demands put forward by the workmen. Although, as has been remarked, the
-company succeeded in seeing its recommendation adopted, the strike
-started on November 18th, 1896. At first it was restricted to the
-dockers, but the number of the strikers was soon swelled by the adhesion
-of the quay-labourers and of several other categories of port-labourers
-and seamen. When this had occurred, and when the Packetfahrt suggested
-that steps should be taken on the part of the employers with the object
-of reaching a friendly settlement, these suggestions did not secure a
-majority in the counsels of the employers, and it was in regard to this
-that Ballin’s notes, under date of December 9th, contain the following
-entry: “We are continuing our efforts to induce the Employers’
-Association and the Shipowners’ Association to give the strikers a
-chance of an honourable retreat. What we propose in detail is that the
-men should be asked to resume work of their own accord in consideration
-of which the employers would promise to submit their grievances to a
-<i>bona fide</i> examination. All our efforts have failed because of the
-attitude taken up by the Employers’ Association. We can only hope that
-the Senate will consent to mediate in the conflict.†This body, however,
-was afraid of being accused of prejudice in favour of the employers, and
-declined to act as mediator. “It is very much<a name="page_299" id="page_299"></a> against my wish,â€
-Ballin’s notes continue, “that our own interests are represented by the
-Employers’ Association,†and on December 23rd, he wrote: “Meanwhile, the
-Senate, in reply to the resolution passed by the men, has asked them to
-resume work unconditionally against the promise to look into their
-grievances, and as far as they appeared to be justified, to redress them
-after a joint conference had been held between the employers and the
-strikers. This offer of a compromise was rejected by the workmen.†The
-employers were able to get the most urgent work done by substitute
-labour, and the strike came to an end in the early days of February.</p>
-
-<p>Among the subsequent Labour troubles those of 1907 are of special
-significance. In that year, after a strike of the dockers and the
-seamen, all those employers who had occasion to employ any workmen in
-the port of Hamburg founded an organization somewhat on the lines of a
-Labour Bureau, called the <i>Hafenbetriebsverein</i>. The termination of the
-strike just referred to was brought about by Ballin’s personal
-influence, and it was he who conducted the prolonged negotiations with
-the heads of the Labour organization. Later on, in 1911, when the
-<i>Hafenbetriebsverein</i> began to conclude agreements with this
-organization by which the wages for the various categories of dock
-labourers were fixed&mdash;a policy which did not exactly meet with the full
-approval of large sections of employers, it was again due to Ballin’s
-influence that these agreements were generally accepted. It is just
-possible that a certain event, insignificant in itself, may have
-strengthened Ballin’s natural tendency towards a settlement along the
-lines of a compromise. As has been said before, the year 1907, which,
-from the business point of view, had been excellent (at least, during
-the first six months), and during which the above-mentioned strike
-occurred, was succeeded by a year which brought<a name="page_300" id="page_300"></a> exceedingly
-unsatisfactory earnings to the company. Ballin did what he had done on a
-previous occasion, in 1901: he sent a memorandum to all the employees of
-the firm asking them to cut down expenses to the lowest possible extent,
-to contribute their share towards a more economical working of every
-department, and to submit to him any suggestions of their own as to how
-the necessary retrenchment could be effected. I was instructed to
-examine the general expenses account with a view to finding out in what
-way a reduction would be possible, and I drew Ballin’s attention to the
-fact that the considerable sums which had to be spent in 1907 in
-consequence of the strike would, of course, not appear again in the
-balance-sheet for 1908, so that this would lead to an automatic
-reduction of the working expenses. Ballin was surprised to see how large
-this particular item was, and the whole occurrence proved once more that
-a lean agreement would have been preferable to a fat lawsuit.</p>
-
-<p>As Ballin was pre-eminently a man whose mind was bent on practical work
-and on the production of practical results, it is but natural that he
-was greatly interested in the practical aspects of social politics, and
-that he applied its principles to the activities in which he was engaged
-as far as he thought he was justified in doing so. Not in peace times
-only, but also during the war did he hold these views, and when he was
-connected with the work of provisioning the civil population, and,
-later, with that of preparing the economic post-war reconstruction, he
-was frequently brought into contact with men who occupied prominent
-positions in the world of Labour.</p>
-
-<p>His capacity for work was enormous and seemed wellnigh inexhaustible. He
-made a most lavish use of it, especially in the early part of his life,
-and the personal assistance he required with his work was of the
-slightest.<a name="page_301" id="page_301"></a> His greatest aid, indeed, was his marvellous memory, which
-almost enabled him to do his work without ever referring to the files of
-letters and documents. He could always recall to his mind every phase of
-past events, and every detail of all the ships he had built or
-purchased, and he was never wavering in the opinion he had formed of
-anyone who had ever crossed his path, because such opinion was founded
-on facts.</p>
-
-<p>Very gradually only did his fellow-members on the Board of Directors
-succeed in persuading him to refrain from putting in an appearance at
-his office on Sundays, and to do such Sunday work as he wanted to do at
-home. The telegraph and the telephone always kept him busy, both on
-weekdays and on Sundays. Even on his travels and on his holidays he
-wanted to be informed of all that was going on, and he could be very
-annoyed when any important news had been withheld from him, or when he
-believed that this had been the case, so that his secretariat, to be on
-the safe side, had gone rather far in forwarding on his correspondence
-when he was away from town. When I first entered upon my duties with him
-he had just returned from a rest cure at Kissingen. He pointed at the
-huge pile of letters that had been forwarded to him on his so-called
-holiday, adding, in a tone of bitterness: “You see, every expansion of a
-business becomes a curse to its leader.†Sometimes his absences from
-Hamburg would amount to as much as eight months per annum, and it was
-certainly no easy task always to know what to send on and what to hold
-over until after his return. To do so one had to be well acquainted with
-all the details of each transaction and to know what was important,
-especially what was important to him; and if one wished to see his mind
-at ease it was necessary never to let him think that anything was kept
-back from him. Any apparent neglect in this respect he was apt to
-regard<a name="page_302" id="page_302"></a> as a personal slight. And yet the time which he had at his
-disposal for attending to current correspondence, both when at the
-office and when travelling, was but limited.</p>
-
-<p>The waiting-room outside his private office was nearly always crowded
-with intending visitors. The callers were carefully sifted, and all
-those who were strangers and those who had come without having an
-appointment were passed on to someone else as far as this was possible.
-Great credit is due to his ever faithful personal attendant at home and
-on his travels, Carl Fischer, for the perfect tact which he showed in
-the performance of this difficult task.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of all this sifting, however, the time left for getting through
-a day’s mail was not sufficient. I therefore, shortly after entering the
-company’s services, made it a point to submit to his notice only those
-letters which I considered of real importance. According to the mood in
-which he seemed to be I then acquainted him with the contents of as much
-of the remainder as I thought it wise to do. I believe I gradually
-succeeded in acquiring a fair amount of skill in reading his mind, and
-this facility enabled me to avoid more dangerous rocks than one. I tried
-to proceed along similar lines when he was away from Hamburg, especially
-when he was taking a holiday. On such occasions I forwarded on to him
-only the important letters, taking great care, however, that he was not
-kept out of touch with any matter of real consequence, so that he should
-never feel that he was left in the dark about anything. After some time
-I had the satisfaction of being told by him when he returned from a
-holiday that that had been “his first real holiday since he had joined
-the Packetfahrt.â€</p>
-
-<p>Once one had learnt to understand his way of reasoning and his
-individual traits, it was not difficult to<a name="page_303" id="page_303"></a> know how to treat him. If a
-mistake had been made, or if some oversight had taken place, the most
-foolish thing would be not to tell him so at once. To act otherwise
-would mean the immediate and permanent forfeiture of his confidence,
-whilst an open admission of the mistake would strengthen his faith
-enormously. He hated to be shut out from the actual practice of the
-company’s business by a Chinese wall of bureaucratic control. Whenever
-such a wall was in process of erection he quickly and inexorably pulled
-it down, and he always remained in personal contact with every
-department and with every prominent member of the staff as far as the
-size of the huge undertaking enabled him to do so. For this reason he
-but rarely, and only when the pressure of other business was encroaching
-too much on him, omitted to receive at his private office the captains
-who came to make their reports to the directors. He knew, of course,
-every one of them personally, as he had appointed many of them himself
-years ago. He was no stranger to their various idiosyncrasies, and he
-knew all their good qualities. He was also personally acquainted with a
-great many of those unconventional and often somewhat blunt but always
-good-natured individuals of humble rank who seem to thrive wherever much
-shipping is going on. He was not too proud to write an appreciative
-article on the death of one of them, which, since it reflects high
-credit on his own generosity and kindness of heart, ought not to be
-allowed to be forgotten altogether. It was published by the <i>Hamburger
-Fremdenblatt</i>, to the staff of which the subject of his appreciation
-might, in a sense, be said to have belonged.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p class="c">
-KUSKOP.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“It was not until my return from England that I learnt, through
-reading the <i>Fremdenblatt</i>, the news of the<a name="page_304" id="page_304"></a> death of Karl
-Kuskop&mdash;news which made me feel very sad indeed. Kuskop ranked high
-among the few remaining real ‘characters’ of whom he was a type,
-and as I was not able to pay my last respects to him I feel a
-desire to do honour to his memory by a few words of personal
-recollection, although Dr. Obst has already done so by means of an
-excellent article of his own. For I believe I owe a few words of
-farewell to a man of whom I have heard nothing but what was good
-and generous throughout the better part of thirty years.</p>
-
-<p>“Karl Kuskop was a ‘character’ in the best sense of the term. He
-was as harmless as a big child; and although he could scarcely be
-said to be prominently gifted for his work, he did, indirectly at
-least, a great deal of good within his humble sphere. His
-popularity amongst all sorts and conditions of men connected with
-shipping was tremendous. My personal acquaintance with him dates
-back to the early trial trips of our steamers and similar
-occasions&mdash;occasions at which Kuskop was present as the
-‘representative’ of the <i>Fremdenblatt</i>. I still have a vivid
-recollection of a magnificent summer evening when we, a party of
-about eighty people, left the passenger reception halls by our
-saloon-steamer <i>Blankensee</i> on our way to Brunshausen where we
-intended to go on board one of our new boats which was ready for
-her trial trip. Kuskop, who was wearing his yachting cap and was
-armed with a pair of huge binoculars, had taken up a position on
-deck. He stood out very conspicuously, and a port labourer who was
-working on board an English steamer as soon as he saw him, raised
-the cry of <i>'Fremdenblatt</i>.’ This cry was immediately taken up by
-the people on the quay-sides, on the river-vessels, on the
-ferry-boats, on the barges, and all other vessels in the
-neighbourhood, and developed into quite an ovation which was as
-spontaneous as it was popular. The worthy Kuskop appeared to be
-visibly gaining in importance; he had taken off his cap, and the
-tears trickled down his kindly face.</p>
-
-<p>“He well deserved this popularity. For years and years he
-unfailingly saw to it that the Hamburg steamers, at whatever port
-of the globe they arrived, found a <i>Fremdenblatt</i> waiting for them,
-thus providing a valuable and much appreciated<a name="page_305" id="page_305"></a> link between the
-crews and the old home. I myself have also reaped the benefit of
-his attentive care. Years ago when I was making a trip round the
-world I found the <i>Fremdenblatt</i> waiting for me wherever I went;
-and after having been so much out of touch with the civilized world
-for weeks, that even Kuskop’s genius could not discover my
-whereabouts, I was agreeably surprised to find on arriving at
-Vancouver all the old copies of the <i>Fremdenblatt</i> that had failed
-to reach me, carefully piled up in one of the sleeping compartments
-of the saloon carriage which had been placed at my disposal for the
-railway journey from the Pacific to the Atlantic seaboard.</p>
-
-<p>“At that time I personally experienced the pleasant sensation&mdash;of
-which our captains and the other officers had often spoken to
-me&mdash;which one feels on reading the back copies of old newspapers,
-calling up, as it does, vivid recollections of home. In company
-with my wife, and some German officers who were returning from the
-scene of unrest in China in order to complete their convalescence
-at home, I greedily devoured the contents of the old papers from
-beginning to end, thus passing in a delightful way the time taken
-by travelling the long distance from Vancouver to Montreal. The
-idea, which was afterwards made use of by Oskar Blumenthal in a
-witty article, occurred to me to edit a paper which would publish
-the news of the day a week after it had been reported, and even
-then only as much of it as had proved to be true. Such a newspaper
-would save us a great deal of unnecessary worry, as the contents of
-this ‘Periodical for the Dissemination of Truthful News’ would be
-sifted to a minimum.</p>
-
-<p>“But it is time to cut short this digression. When I met my friend
-Kuskop again after my trip, it was at Stettin on the occasion of a
-launch. He happened to be in especially high spirits, and even more
-communicative than usual. He then told me the tale of his friend
-Senator Petersen, and it is such a good story that it would be a
-pity not to record it here.</p>
-
-<p>“It had become customary for the ships’ captains and the other
-ships’ officers who could boast his friendship to treat poor Kuskop
-to the wildest canards in return for his<a name="page_306" id="page_306"></a> supplying them with
-reading matter from their far-away home. One afternoon, when they
-were sitting over a bottle of old port in Hermann Bade’s wine
-restaurant at Stubbenhuk and it was getting late, one of them&mdash;he
-always referred to them as ‘them young fools'&mdash;told him that a
-river barge loaded with arsenic had just sprung a leak in the
-harbour, so that it might become necessary to prohibit the use of
-water for drinking purposes for some time. It was about five
-o’clock and Kuskop, according to his own account, did not even stop
-to finish his glass of port, but hurried to the offices of ‘his’
-paper which, in its next edition, published it as a fact that a
-quantity of arsenic had vitiated the water of the Elbe. Next
-morning, when Kuskop was still soundly asleep, two detectives
-appeared at the house in which he lived, and escorted him to
-headquarters, where he was locked up. At ten o’clock he was taken
-up before Mr. Livonius&mdash;or whoever was the chief of police at that
-time&mdash;who, with much abuse, demanded particulars concerning the
-arsenic affair. Kuskop, seeing at once that one of ‘them young
-fools’ had been pulling his leg, refused to supply any information
-whatever. He was then brought before Senator Petersen, who, with a
-great display of persuasion, tried to make him reveal the name of
-his informant. Kuskop, however, remained obstinate, and the
-Senator, changing his methods from persuasion to coercion, had him
-locked up again. He remained in confinement till five o’clock in
-the afternoon, and was then taken before Senator Petersen for the
-second time, who now peremptorily demanded that he should state his
-informant’s name. Kuskop replied: ‘Herr Senator, if you were in my
-position, you would not give him away yourself.’ The Senator turned
-round to the police officials and said: ‘Mr. Kuskop is a gentleman,
-you see. We shall not get anything out of him. The best thing you
-can do is to chuck him out,’ which suggestion was thereupon
-promptly and most efficiently carried out by some of those who were
-present.</p>
-
-<p>“Another of his adventures he confided to me when a trial trip had
-taken us right out into the North Sea. One of ‘them young fools,’
-he said, whom he regularly met at Mutzenbecher’s tavern, had told
-him as the very latest news that Captain Kier had been taken into
-custody at Rio on the<a name="page_307" id="page_307"></a> unfounded allegation of having committed
-theft. Kuskop, feeling somewhat sceptical on hearing this
-intelligence, but not believing himself justified in depriving the
-readers of the <i>Fremdenblatt</i> of such a highly interesting item of
-news, thought he would be extra careful this time, and so did not
-mention the captain by name, but merely referred to him as ‘a Mr.
-K&mdash;&mdash;, captain of a Hamburg steamer.’ This happened in the good old
-times when there were still real winters in Hamburg, and when the
-Elbe was sometimes ice-bound for months. The Hamburg steamers were
-then compelled to take up winter quarters at Glückstadt&mdash;of all
-places&mdash;and Kuskop used to establish a ‘branch office’ at that town
-on such occasions. As bad luck would have it, he was fated one day
-to meet Captain Kier there, who, with some of his friends, was
-dining at his hotel. A huge tureen of soup with an enormous ladle
-stood on the table in front of the captain, who was just about to
-serve the soup when Kuskop entered the room. Without a moment’s
-hesitation the captain seized the ladle, the tureen, and everything
-he could lay his hands on, and hurled them at him. He was, as the
-latter afterwards confessed to me with the most innocent
-expression, offended by the newspaper report, because, as it
-happened, he was the only captain K&mdash;&mdash; on the route from Hamburg
-to Rio at that particular time. He subsequently brought an action
-against Kuskop, who had to retire from his business for some weeks
-in order to get over the consequences of the mistake he had made.</p>
-
-<p>“These are only two of the minor adventures from Kuskop’s ample
-store of reminiscences. It is a pity that our sea-faring men are so
-reticent; otherwise they would be able to furnish a volume of
-material concerning Kuskop that would far exceed that relating to
-Kirchhoff, that other well-known Hamburg ‘character.’ I wish
-someone would collect all the Kuskop stories; for I do not believe
-that we shall ever again come across such a perfect specimen of his
-kind as he was, and it would be sad to allow such a man to be
-forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>“Kuskop, however, was not only a ‘character': he was also a ‘real
-good sort,’ and he has been of real service to all those who have
-ever travelled on Hamburg vessels. Because<a name="page_308" id="page_308"></a> of that it is certain
-that he will long be remembered; for it is not to him that the
-following quotation can be applied: ‘May each one of us&mdash;whether he
-works with his hands or with his brain to earn a living
-wage&mdash;always bear in mind that all that is best in him is gradually
-lost in the process of toil, and that, after he has departed this
-life, nobody will remember that he ever existed.’</p>
-
-<p>“Our friend Kuskop never lost his good qualities in the process of
-toil, and he was always a friend and a helpmate to all decent
-people. I am sure in saying this I have the support of all who knew
-him, and so with us his memory will always be kept green.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>Ballin very frequently went to New York&mdash;which might be called the most
-prominent outpost of the company&mdash;because he recognized the value of
-being in constant touch with every aspect of the many activities carried
-on by the Packetfahrt, and especially with those persons whose interests
-it was of importance to the company to cultivate. The numerous pool
-conferences often took him to London, where he always made a point of
-keeping on friendly terms with the leading British shipping firms, and,
-later on, with some of the leading politicians as well. There were few
-people in Germany who could rival him in his knowledge of the psychology
-of the American or the British mind. This knowledge resulted from his
-great capacity for rapidly and correctly summing up the character of
-anyone with whom he had to deal. He had developed to a high degree the
-art of treating the different types of people he met according to their
-different individualities. His kindness of heart, his brilliant powers
-of conversation, his prodigious memory, his quickness of repartee, and
-his keen sense of humour made him a favourite wherever he cared to be
-one. One felt his charm as soon as one came into personal contact with
-him. His wonderfully alert eye, which could express so much kindness,
-the<a name="page_309" id="page_309"></a> soothing tones of his melodious voice, and the firm and friendly
-grip of his hand, made one forget that he was not a handsome man,
-although his powerfully developed forehead and his head which, in later
-years, was almost bald, were of classic perfection.</p>
-
-<p>Albert Ballin would never have gained the commanding position he held if
-the keenness of his intellect and the force of his character had not
-been supplemented by that pleasing amiability which distinguishes all
-really good men. To him was given a large measure of that noble courtesy
-which springs from the heart. He who could be hard and unyielding where
-the business interests entrusted to his care were at stake, was full of
-generosity and sympathy towards the members of his family circle and his
-friends. Nothing delighted him more than the happiness of others. Those
-whom he cared for he treated with a tender regard which was deeply
-touching. He loved to give presents, and did so with the most delicate
-tact. He never expected any thanks; it was sufficient for him to see the
-happy face of the recipient. And if he ever met with ingratitude or
-spitefulness, he ignored it and dismissed it from his mind.</p>
-
-<p>Personally generous to the limit of extravagance, he never spent a penny
-of the funds of his company without being convinced that it would be to
-its benefit. He left nothing undone when he thought he could realize a
-profit to the company, or cut down expenses. Money, to him, was only a
-means to an end; and the earnings of the company were in the first place
-intended to be spent on increasing its scope and prosperity wherever
-possible. Those who know what remuneration the heads of other concerns
-receive may well be surprised to see how little Ballin made for himself
-out of his position, but they would do him a great injustice if they
-thought he ought to have made more out of it. He even spent the greater
-part of his income for purposes of representation<a name="page_310" id="page_310"></a> in the interests of
-his company. His amiable charm of manner and his brilliant
-conversational gifts did much towards making the entertainments he
-provided the successes they invariably were; and even if so much
-representation, especially that in connexion with Kiel Week, became
-somewhat of a burden to him, his company reaped rich benefit from his
-munificence.</p>
-
-<p>But to appreciate to the full the charm of his personality one must have
-been his guest at his beautiful home in Hamburg or at his beloved
-country seat near Hamfelde, and have listened to his conversation while
-sitting round the fire of an evening, or been his companion on his long
-walks and rambles through the neighbouring Forest of Hahnheide. His
-conversation was always animated, his witty remarks were always to the
-point, and he was unsurpassed as a raconteur. He was excellent as a
-speaker at committee meetings, and he always hit upon the right words
-suitable for a political toast. The skill with which he wielded the pen
-is proved by numerous newspaper articles, memoranda, and descriptions of
-his travels, but above all by his voluminous correspondence. He was
-probably one of the most versatile letter-writers, and yet so
-conscientious in this as to be almost pedantic. In his early years he
-had also tried his hand at poetry. His beautiful home, which was adorned
-with pictures and sculptures by eminent masters, was a source of great
-pleasure to him. He was very fond of music and congenial company, and he
-knew how to appreciate the pleasures of a full and daintily arranged
-table.</p>
-
-<p>When I intimated to one of Ballin’s old friends that I intended to write
-his Life, he told me that this would not be an easy task, and that he
-hoped I would not forget to depict Ballin as the amiable <i>charmeur</i> to
-which side of his character so many of his successes were due, and which
-was the secret of much of his great popularity.<a name="page_311" id="page_311"></a> The number of people
-who claimed to be his friends, both before and after his death, but
-especially when they were trying to get some advantage out of the
-company, was surprisingly large. They were, in fact, so numerous that
-such a claim, when put forward, was generally&mdash;and rightly&mdash;looked upon
-with a great deal of suspicion. Very often, when such self-styled
-friends were announced to him, Ballin would reply: “I do not know the
-man,†or “I do not remember him, but I may have met him.†Ballin may
-justly be described as a man of world-wide fame, and whenever he went
-abroad the papers eagerly followed his movements. In New York especially
-it required all his cunning and resourcefulness to escape from the
-reporters desiring to interview him.</p>
-
-<p>Owing to his prominent position before the public he received an
-abundance of honours during his life. The many distinctions and presents
-which the Kaiser bestowed on him were a source of gratitude and delight
-to him, and he valued them because they were a symbol of the personal
-ties that linked him to the Kaiser; but the foreign decorations, of
-which he also received a great many, were of so little interest to him
-that he did not even trouble to have those of them replaced which once
-were stolen from him. It was a great disappointment to him, however, not
-to be able to recover the Japanese ornamental swords which were taken on
-the same occasion, and which he had always carefully treasured because
-of their high artistic value. They were a present from the Marquis Ito,
-whom Ballin had once helped to obtain an audience of the Kaiser&mdash;an
-audience which, he hoped, would lead to the establishment on a permanent
-footing of Germany’s relations with the Empire of the Mikado. It would
-appear, indeed, that, if the leaders of Germany’s political destiny had
-shown some more circumspection, the same friendly relations might have
-been brought<a name="page_312" id="page_312"></a> about between Germany and Japan as were entered into later
-on between Great Britain and the latter country. Personal souvenirs,
-like those just mentioned, were prized so highly by Ballin that no
-persuasion would induce him to part with them, and even Professor
-Brinckmann, the Director of the Hamburg Museum for Arts and Crafts, who
-was one of the leading authorities on the subject of Japanese applied
-art, and who tried hard to secure possession of them for his museum, met
-with a flat refusal.</p>
-
-<p>Every year Ballin spent at least six months, and often more, away from
-Hamburg, and during such absences the work he had to accomplish was not
-less, but rather more than that which he did when in Hamburg.
-Conferences followed upon each other in quick succession at all times of
-the day, and the time that was left was filled up by visits. Often the
-amount of work was so great that he had to get through a whole series of
-difficult problems in a single day. The number of visits he had arranged
-was always considerably augmented by numerous others not allowed for in
-his arrangements for the day; because wherever he went the news of his
-arrival spread immediately. He could never even think of travelling
-incognito. It is literally true that he was known to every hotel porter
-all over the world. He was in the habit of extending his hospitality
-twice a day to a larger or smaller number of business friends when he
-was travelling. At first his love of congenial society had prompted him
-to do this, but in after years he continued it because he wanted to
-secure some benefit for his company even in his hours of relaxation.
-Still, he was often quite glad when, late at night, he had come to the
-close of his day’s work, and when he could let the happenings of the day
-pass before his mind’s eye in the quiet solitude of his room, or, as he
-liked to express it, “to draw the balance of the day’s account.<a name="page_313" id="page_313"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>Even before 1900 the never-tiring energy of his mind and the excessive
-strain on his nervous system brought about a practically permanent
-insomnia which never left him either in Hamburg or on his travels. Only
-when he was on the sea, or was staying at his country house, did he
-obtain any relief; and at such times he could dispense with the drugs to
-the use of which he had become a victim more and more regularly and
-extensively as time went on. The fact that this habit did not entirely
-ruin his nervous system proves that he was possessed of an iron
-constitution, which only gave way under the huge strain caused by the
-war. When he saw that his life’s work had been broken to fragments, and
-when he felt that he had not enough strength left for a second attempt
-of such magnitude, even his immense nerve force collapsed under the
-blow.</p>
-
-<p>The anxieties caused by the war&mdash;a war which he knew would be
-lost&mdash;weighed more and more heavily on his mind the longer it lasted.
-Outwardly he bore himself bravely and steadfastly, but his mind was full
-of dark forebodings, especially when he was by himself. If he had not
-had the unvarying sympathy of the faithful partner of his life, with
-whom he shared thirty-five years of mutual happiness, and if he had not
-always derived fresh consolation from his beloved adopted daughter and
-from his grandchildren, he would indeed many a time have felt very
-lonely. In spite of his apprehensions as to the result of the war, he
-yet remained faithful to the task of his life, and he hoped against
-hope. His ardent love of his work was constantly struggling with his
-reason, which foretold him the ruin of the Empire and in consequence
-that of German shipping.</p>
-
-<p>This fact explains some apparent contradictions in his views and
-actions. What was the general public to think of a man who was watching
-the progress of<a name="page_314" id="page_314"></a> the war with the greatest pessimism, whilst at the same
-time bringing all his influence to bear on the passing of a law which
-was to make possible the reconstruction of Germany’s merchant fleet,
-knowing that such reconstruction could only be achieved if the Empire
-which was to set aside the funds were to remain intact. In this matter,
-as in others, it was the intuition of the born business-man which guided
-him, or perhaps a sort of instinct which made him discover new ways when
-the old ones had failed. These forces of his mind had nothing in common
-with logical reasoning, and they prevented him from drawing the
-practical inference from the sentiment so often expressed by us during
-the war: “If the Empire falls to pieces, we shall all be ruined; and if
-the Empire becomes bankrupt, we shall be insolvent too.†Events have
-shown that this sentiment was not justified by facts. Empires and
-individuals may perish; but the nations, and their trade and commerce
-which are the outcome of their economic needs and of their geographical
-position, will outlast them.</p>
-
-<p>Neither is it likely that the life-work of those men who have left their
-mark on their epoch will ever be in vain. There are two great
-achievements which, it appears, will always stand out like two pillars
-in the wreck of destruction that has fallen upon Germany, viz.
-Bismarck’s work of political unification, and&mdash;a necessary preliminary
-of it&mdash;the powerful economic foundations laid with incessant toil by the
-great industrial leaders of whom Germany had so many during the era of
-her prosperity.</p>
-
-<p>Albert Ballin was one of the most gifted among their number, and the
-world-wide fame of his achievements has outlived his death. When, after
-five years of isolation from the rest of the world, Germany appeared
-once more amongst the nations, she did so with the<a name="page_315" id="page_315"></a> knowledge that the
-foundations of the proud structure which Ballin had built up were still
-unshaken, and this knowledge has proved one of her greatest assets when
-she entered upon the task of reconstruction.</p>
-
-<p>If German shipping is to flourish again, and if German steamers are now
-ploughing the oceans once more, credit is due to Albert Ballin. His work
-it is from which new life is emanating, and it is to be hoped that his
-spirit will continue to animate German shipping both now and in the
-future.<a name="page_316" id="page_316"></a>
-<a name="page_317" id="page_317"></a></p>
-
-<p class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/ill_pg_316-a_lg.png">
-<img class="enlargeimage"
-src="images/enlarge-image.jpg"
-alt=""
-width="18"
-height="14" /></a>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_316-a_huge.png">
-<img class="enlargeimage"
-src="images/enlarge-image.jpg"
-alt=""
-width="28"
-height="24" /></a>
-<br />
-<a href="images/ill_pg_316-a_lg.png">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_316-a_sml.png" width="283" height="500" alt="Extract Annotated by William II-1"
-title="Extract Annotated by William II-1" /></a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/ill_pg_316-b_lg.png">
-<img class="enlargeimage"
-src="images/enlarge-image.jpg"
-alt=""
-width="18"
-height="14" /></a>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_316-b_huge.png">
-<img class="enlargeimage"
-src="images/enlarge-image.jpg"
-alt=""
-width="28"
-height="24" /></a>
-<br />
-<a href="images/ill_pg_316-b_lg.png">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_316-b_sml.png" width="358" height="500" alt="Extract Annotated by William II-2"
-title="Extract Annotated by William II-2" /></a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/ill_pg_316-c_lg.png">
-<img class="enlargeimage"
-src="images/enlarge-image.jpg"
-alt=""
-width="18"
-height="14" /></a>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_316-c_huge.png">
-<img class="enlargeimage"
-src="images/enlarge-image.jpg"
-alt=""
-width="28"
-height="24" /></a>
-<br />
-<a href="images/ill_pg_316-c_lg.png">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_316-c_sml.png" width="440" height="500" alt="Extract Annotated by William II-3"
-title="Extract Annotated by William II-3" /></a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/ill_pg_316-d_lg.png">
-<img class="enlargeimage"
-src="images/enlarge-image.jpg"
-alt=""
-width="18"
-height="14" /></a>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_316-d_huge.png">
-<img class="enlargeimage"
-src="images/enlarge-image.jpg"
-alt=""
-width="28"
-height="24" /></a>
-<br />
-<a href="images/ill_pg_316-d_lg.png">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_316-d_sml.png" width="500" height="340" alt="Extract Annotated by William II-4"
-title="Extract Annotated by William II-4" /></a>
-</p>
-
-<h2><a name="INDEX" id="INDEX"></a>INDEX</h2>
-
-<p class="cb"><a href="#A">A</a>,
-<a href="#B">B</a>,
-<a href="#C">C</a>,
-<a href="#D">D</a>,
-<a href="#E">E</a>,
-<a href="#F">F</a>,
-<a href="#G">G</a>,
-<a href="#H">H</a>,
-<a href="#I">I</a>,
-<a href="#J">J</a>,
-<a href="#K">K</a>,
-<a href="#L">L</a>,
-<a href="#M">M</a>,
-<a href="#N">N</a>,
-<a href="#O">O</a>,
-<a href="#P">P</a>,
-<a href="#R">R</a>,
-<a href="#S">S</a>,
-<a href="#T">T</a>,
-<a href="#U">U</a>,
-<a href="#V">V</a>,
-<a href="#W">W</a>,
-<a href="#Y">Y</a>,
-<a href="#Z">Z</a></p>
-
-<p class="nind">
-<a name="A" id="A"></a>Aden, <a href="#page_085">85</a><br />
-
-Adler Line, <a href="#page_007">7</a><br />
-
-Aehrenthal, Count, <a href="#page_141">141</a><br />
-
-Agadir incident, <a href="#page_162">162</a><br />
-
-Agents, emigration, work of, <a href="#page_008">8</a><br />
-
-Alsace-Lorraine, problem of, <a href="#page_272">272</a><br />
-
-<i>America</i>, <a href="#page_012">12</a><br />
-
-<i>Amerika</i>, <a href="#page_025">25</a>, <a href="#page_106">106</a>, <a href="#page_129">129</a><br />
-
-Andersen, Mr., and the Danish Royal Family, <a href="#page_099">99</a><br />
-
-Anglo-American Alliance, Ballin’s opinion of, <a href="#page_256">256</a><br />
-
-Anglo-German rapprochement, <a href="#page_134">134</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">shipping agreement, <a href="#page_018">18</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">understanding, <a href="#page_164">164</a>, <a href="#page_165">165</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">advantage of, <a href="#page_136">136</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Ballin as negotiator, <a href="#page_136">136</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">failure of, <a href="#page_133">133</a></span><br />
-
-Anglo-Russian agreement, <a href="#page_137">137</a><br />
-
-Antwerp, <a href="#page_081">81</a>, <a href="#page_082">82</a><br />
-
-<i>Aquitania</i>, <a href="#page_113">113</a><br />
-
-Asquith, Mr. H. H., <a href="#page_262">262</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on Lord Haldane’s mission, <a href="#page_177">177</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">speech on Navy, <a href="#page_154">154</a></span><br />
-
-Atlantic Conference, <a href="#page_111">111</a><br />
-
-Atlantic Transport-Leyland Co., enlargement of, <a href="#page_045">45</a><br />
-
-<i>Auguste Victoria</i>, <a href="#page_025">25</a>, <a href="#page_027">27</a>, <a href="#page_072">72</a>, <a href="#page_075">75</a>, <a href="#page_193">193</a>, <a href="#page_196">196</a><br />
-
-<i>Australia</i>, <a href="#page_012">12</a><br />
-
-Austria, need of compromise with Italy, <a href="#page_242">242</a><br />
-
-Austria-Hungary, strained relations between, <a href="#page_251">251</a><br />
-
-Austro-German <i>Zollverein</i>, <a href="#page_251">251</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="B" id="B"></a>Baden-Powell, General, and the German menace, <a href="#page_138">138</a><br />
-
-Bagdad Railway, <a href="#page_189">189</a><br />
-
-Baker, B. N., American shipping magnate, <a href="#page_042">42</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">comes to Europe, <a href="#page_044">44</a></span><br />
-
-Baker, B. N., discusses terms of community of interest agreement, <a href="#page_042">42</a><br />
-
-Balkan States, and Germany, <a href="#page_251">251</a><br />
-
-Ballin, Albert, adopts Lord Pirrie’s advice, <a href="#page_044">44</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">advises peace overtures, <a href="#page_245">245</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">after the war problems, <a href="#page_255">255</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">agreement with Harland and Wolff, <a href="#page_122">122</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">American appreciation of, <a href="#page_308">308</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">an English journalist on, <a href="#page_293">293</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">ancestry of, <a href="#page_002">2</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Admiral v. Tirpitz, <a href="#page_237">237</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Adolph Woermann, <a href="#page_107">107</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Anglo-German rapprochement, <a href="#page_134">134</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Carl Laeisz, <a href="#page_294">294</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Count Tisza, <a href="#page_252">252</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Count Waldersee, <a href="#page_194">194</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Government subsidies, <a href="#page_060">60</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Hamburg-Amerika Linie, <a href="#page_069">69</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Hugo Stinnes, <a href="#page_280">280</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Mr. Gerard, <a href="#page_246">246</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and labour questions, <a href="#page_297">297</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and politics, <a href="#page_131">131</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and North German Lloyd, <a href="#page_116">116</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Princess Marie of Denmark, <a href="#page_099">99</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Reichstag, <a href="#page_279">279</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and submarine warfare, <a href="#page_252">252</a>, <a href="#page_254">254</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and the Russo-Japanese War, <a href="#page_104">104</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Union Line, <a href="#page_019">19</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and working classes, <a href="#page_297">297</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and world war, <a href="#page_132">132</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">anxiety as to Roumania, <a href="#page_244">244</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">article in <i>Frankfurter Zeitung</i> on blockade, <a href="#page_234">234</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">as Anglo-German negotiator, <a href="#page_136">136</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">as arbitrator, <a href="#page_079">79</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">as general representative of Carr Line, 12<a name="page_318" id="page_318"></a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">as head of Packetfahrt passenger department, <a href="#page_018">18</a>, <a href="#page_021">21</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">at Constitutional Club, <a href="#page_140">140</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">at Neues Palais, <a href="#page_204">204</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">at the German front, <a href="#page_266">266</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">attempts at mediation during war, <a href="#page_233">233</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">boldness of, <a href="#page_289">289</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">business principle of, <a href="#page_132">132</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">capacity for work of, <a href="#page_300">300</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">chairman of Pool Conference, <a href="#page_036">36</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">complains of German official high-handedness, <a href="#page_232">232</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">conducts London emigration discussions, 189<a href="#page_008">8</a>, <a href="#page_038">38</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">death of, <a href="#page_286">286</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">defends himself, <a href="#page_235">235</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">dines with Danish Royal Family, <a href="#page_100">100</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">disagrees with use of submarines, <a href="#page_229">229</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">discusses Morgan Trust with William II, <a href="#page_053">53</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">early biographical details of, <a href="#page_006">6</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">education of, <a href="#page_003">3</a>, <a href="#page_004">4</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">establishes German-Japanese Bank, <a href="#page_204">204</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">estimates British naval staying-power, <a href="#page_253">253</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Far East investigations, <a href="#page_084">84</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">favours peace by compromise, <a href="#page_236">236</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">forcing the British Lines, <a href="#page_036">36</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">friendliness of William II toward, <a href="#page_206">206</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">further reports on Morgan Trust negotiations, <a href="#page_049">49-50</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">grave warning in 191<a href="#page_008">8</a>, <a href="#page_279">279</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hamfelde, his country home, <a href="#page_310">310</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">handling of labour troubles, <a href="#page_298">298-9</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his father’s death, <a href="#page_005">5</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his life-work, <a href="#page_115">115</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his 1901 trip epitomized, <a href="#page_095">95</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his observation of details, <a href="#page_123">123</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his view on evading war, July <a href="#page_027">27</a>, 191<a href="#page_004">4</a>, <a href="#page_216">216</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">ideal in forming Pool, <a href="#page_066">66</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">impressions of Paris after Morocco affair, <a href="#page_181">181</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in London discussing Austrian ultimatum, <a href="#page_215">215</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in Vienna, 191<a href="#page_006">6</a>, <a href="#page_249">249</a></span><br />
-
-Ballin, Albert, intense patriotism of, <a href="#page_291">291</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">international services of, vii</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">interview with Bethmann-Hollweg, <a href="#page_152">152</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">interview with Grey, Haldane, and Churchill, <a href="#page_215">215</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">last diary entry, <a href="#page_286">286</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">last meeting with William II, <a href="#page_209">209</a>, <a href="#page_280">280</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">letter from William II, <a href="#page_175">175</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">letter to Kiderlen-Wächter, <a href="#page_163">163</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">letters to General v. Falkenhayn, <a href="#page_244">244</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">made Packetfahrt Director, <a href="#page_027">27</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">meets Sir Ernest Cassel, <a href="#page_138">138</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">mental versatility of, <a href="#page_002">2</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">mission to Vienna, 191<a href="#page_005">5</a>, <a href="#page_242">242</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">negotiations with Booth Line on Brazilian trade, <a href="#page_083">83</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">notes of conversations with William II, <a href="#page_203">203</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">official thanks to, <a href="#page_141">141</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on Agadir incident, <a href="#page_163">163</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on <i>Blücher</i>, <a href="#page_060">60</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on death of Edward VII, <a href="#page_160">160</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on engineering problems, <a href="#page_121">121</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on foreign exchange, <a href="#page_274">274</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on <i>Hohenzollern</i>, <a href="#page_202">202</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on London in election time, <a href="#page_158">158</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on naval armaments, <a href="#page_147">147</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on neutrals, <a href="#page_245">245</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on peace problems, <a href="#page_239">239</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on sale of confiscated fleet, <a href="#page_230">230</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on Sandjak Railway, <a href="#page_142">142</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on security of William II, <a href="#page_241">241</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on Serbian situation, <a href="#page_214">214</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on war’s failures, <a href="#page_258">258</a> <i>et seq.</i></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opinion of German Chancellor, <a href="#page_259">259</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opinion of war’s duration, <a href="#page_237">237</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">personal characteristics of, <a href="#page_287">287</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">pioneer in steerage business, <a href="#page_011">11</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">policy of, <a href="#page_079">79</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">political views, <a href="#page_291">291</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">premier position at twenty-nine, <a href="#page_019">19</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">present from Marquis Ito, <a href="#page_311">311</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">prodigious memory of, <a href="#page_004">4</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">report on British attitude to Germany, <a href="#page_161">161</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">report on development of German shipping, <a href="#page_047">47</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">reticence of, 3<a name="page_319" id="page_319"></a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">reviews war position in 191<a href="#page_006">6</a>, <a href="#page_258">258</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">ridicules submarine warfare, <a href="#page_268">268-9</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">stimulating influences of his life, <a href="#page_002">2</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">strain of war on health, <a href="#page_313">313</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">sturdy honesty of, <a href="#page_309">309</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">suggested as negotiator of peace, <a href="#page_286">286</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">suggests Pool, <a href="#page_024">24</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">talks with Prince Bülow, <a href="#page_271">271</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">talks with William II on submarine war, <a href="#page_248">248</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">threatens British traffic, <a href="#page_022">22</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">trip round the world, <a href="#page_083">83</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">value of wonderful memory, <a href="#page_035">35</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">views on character of William II, <a href="#page_285">285</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">visits London in 191<a href="#page_004">4</a>, <a href="#page_184">184</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">war problems of foreign policy, <a href="#page_241">241</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">William II discusses politics with, <a href="#page_203">203</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">William II writes to, on Navy Bill, <a href="#page_183">183</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">William II’s personal interest in, <a href="#page_198">198</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">wire from Leopold de Rothschild, <a href="#page_163">163</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">with Prince Henry of Prussia on the <i>Hohenzollern</i>, <a href="#page_057">57</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">with William II at Front, <a href="#page_266">266</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">with William II in Italy, <a href="#page_204">204</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">with William II on <i>Kaiser Wilhelm II</i>, <a href="#page_055">55</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">work in <i>Reichseinkauf</i>, <a href="#page_224">224</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">writes frank letter on war to William II, 191<a href="#page_006">6</a>, <a href="#page_252">252</a> <i>et seq.</i></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">writes on Morgan Trust, <a href="#page_046">46</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">writes to William II, April, 191<a href="#page_007">7</a>, <a href="#page_264">264</a></span><br />
-
-Bauer, Lieut.-Col., <a href="#page_280">280</a><br />
-
-Beck, Edward, <a href="#page_027">27</a><br />
-
-Berg, Herr von, <a href="#page_282">282</a><br />
-
-<i>Berliner Tageblatt</i> on Anglo-Russian naval agreement, <a href="#page_213">213</a><br />
-
-Bernstorff, Count, <a href="#page_264">264</a><br />
-
-Bethmann-Hollweg, von, <a href="#page_151">151</a>, <a href="#page_152">152</a>, <a href="#page_156">156</a>, <a href="#page_262">262</a>, <a href="#page_270">270</a>, <a href="#page_277">277</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">attacked respecting Agadir, <a href="#page_162">162</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on British delegation, <a href="#page_166">166-7</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">telegram to Mexico, <a href="#page_271">271</a></span><br />
-
-<i>Bismarck</i>, launch of, <a href="#page_202">202</a><br />
-
-Bismarck, Prince, <a href="#page_114">114</a><br />
-
-Blockade, German, futility of, <a href="#page_267">267</a><br />
-
-Blohm and Voss, <a href="#page_113">113</a><br />
-
-<i>Blücher</i>, Ballin on trial trip, <a href="#page_060">60</a><br />
-
-Boer War, European move to stop, <a href="#page_143">143</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">lesson of, <a href="#page_139">139</a></span><br />
-
-Bohlen, Krupp v., <a href="#page_282">282</a><br />
-
-Bolten, August, <a href="#page_010">10</a><br />
-
-British argument against German naval expansion, <a href="#page_133">133</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cabinet and German naval expansion, <a href="#page_182">182</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">confiscation of German merchant fleet, <a href="#page_229">229</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">convoys, how they outwitted the Germans, <a href="#page_267">267</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">emigration, comparison with German, <a href="#page_015">15</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">excitement over Morgan Trust, <a href="#page_060">60</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">feeling in Russo-Japanese war, at German attitude, <a href="#page_104">104</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ludendorff’s promise to crush, <a href="#page_266">266</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Navy, Ballin on, <a href="#page_239">239</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opinion on shipping deals, <a href="#page_067">67</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">rivalry with Germany, <a href="#page_133">133</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">shipbuilding, developments in, and Hamburg-Amerika Linie, <a href="#page_128">128</a>, <a href="#page_208">208</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">shipbuilding, German move against, <a href="#page_017">17</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">shipping companies, Pierpont Morgan and, <a href="#page_055">55</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">shipping lines, and emigration, <a href="#page_007">7-14</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">agreement with, <a href="#page_023">23</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">join the Continental Pool, <a href="#page_023">23</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">offered to German companies, <a href="#page_067">67</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">supremacy, Ballin on, <a href="#page_241">241</a></span><br />
-
-Bülow, Prince, <a href="#page_141">141</a>, <a href="#page_247">247</a>, <a href="#page_270">270</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="C" id="C"></a>Canadian Pacific Railway, <a href="#page_062">62</a>, <a href="#page_111">111</a><br />
-
-Cargo and steerage shipping, <a href="#page_013">13</a><br />
-
-Carr, Edward, <a href="#page_012">12</a><br />
-
-Carr Line, the, <a href="#page_012">12</a> <i>et seq.</i><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Packetfahrt, <a href="#page_012">12</a></span><br />
-
-Cassel, Sir Ernest, <a href="#page_134">134</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Winston Churchill, <a href="#page_165">165</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">meets Ballin, <a href="#page_138">138</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on Anglo-German understanding, 165<a name="page_320" id="page_320"></a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on naval problem, <a href="#page_179">179</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on Sandjak Railway, <a href="#page_142">142</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">report of interview with, on Navy, <a href="#page_171">171</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">work for reduction of naval armaments, <a href="#page_134">134</a> <i>et seq.</i></span><br />
-
-Cholera, epidemic at Hamburg, <a href="#page_036">36</a>, <a href="#page_072">72</a><br />
-
-Christiansand, port of, <a href="#page_021">21</a><br />
-
-Churchill, Mr. Winston, <a href="#page_166">166</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">at Kiel, 191<a href="#page_004">4</a>, <a href="#page_192">192</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">complains of Germany, <a href="#page_180">180</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Sir Ernest Cassel on, <a href="#page_165">165</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">speech on Navy, <a href="#page_175">175</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">suggests a naval holiday, <a href="#page_186">186</a></span><br />
-
-Colombo, <a href="#page_086">86</a><br />
-
-<i>Columbia</i>, <a href="#page_077">77</a>, <a href="#page_201">201</a><br />
-
-Community of interest agreement (<i>see</i> “Pool†and “Morgan Trust")<br />
-
-Congo, Franco-German agreement, <a href="#page_162">162</a><br />
-
-Coolies, Chinese, <a href="#page_089">89</a><br />
-
-Cunard Line, and Austrian Government, <a href="#page_065">65</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Hungarian Government, <a href="#page_063">63</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">effect on Pool, <a href="#page_065">65</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">introduces turbines, <a href="#page_111">111</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">new liners, <a href="#page_113">113</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposition to cabin Pool, <a href="#page_061">61</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">refuses to join Pool, <a href="#page_037">37</a></span><br />
-
-Cuxhaven, development of, <a href="#page_069">69</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">regatta at, <a href="#page_205">205</a></span><br />
-
-<br />
-<i><a name="D" id="D"></a>Daily Telegraph</i>, sent to William II, <a href="#page_270">270</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the William II interview, <a href="#page_144">144</a></span><br />
-
-Dardanelles, the, operations in, <a href="#page_245">245</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">de Freitas and Co., A. C., <a href="#page_079">79</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">de Freitas Line, purchase of, <a href="#page_080">80</a></span><br />
-
-Denmark, emigration from, <a href="#page_013">13</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Royal Family of, their interest in shipping, <a href="#page_099">99</a></span><br />
-
-<i>Deutschland</i>, <a href="#page_025">25</a>, <a href="#page_078">78</a>, <a href="#page_130">130</a><br />
-
-Diesel engine, application to steamship, <a href="#page_102">102</a><br />
-
-Dreadnoughts, <a href="#page_200">200</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="E" id="E"></a>Eastern Asiatic Co., <a href="#page_098">98</a><br />
-
-Edward VII, <a href="#page_134">134</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Morgan Trust, <a href="#page_061">61</a></span><br />
-
-Edward VII, chances of Anglo-German war, during reign of, <a href="#page_139">139</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">death of, <a href="#page_158">158</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">policy of, <a href="#page_135">135</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the Kiel week, <a href="#page_206">206</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">visit to Wilhelmshöhe, <a href="#page_136">136</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">visits Berlin, <a href="#page_145">145</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">visits Kaiser at Friedrichshof, <a href="#page_142">142</a></span><br />
-
-Elbe, enlargement of harbour facilities on the, <a href="#page_069">69</a>, <a href="#page_070">70</a>, <a href="#page_079">79</a><br />
-
-Ellerman, Mr., of Leyland Line, <a href="#page_045">45</a><br />
-
-Emden, rise of, <a href="#page_083">83</a><br />
-
-Emigrants, early accommodation of, <a href="#page_007">7</a>, <a href="#page_008">8</a>, <a href="#page_014">14</a><br />
-
-Emigration, anti-British action, <a href="#page_017">17</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ballin’s work for, <a href="#page_009">9</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">beginnings of pooling, <a href="#page_012">12</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">British and German, <a href="#page_015">15</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">British rates, <a href="#page_022">22</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">business, how controlled, <a href="#page_008">8</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">comparisons of Carr Line and Packetfahrt, <a href="#page_015">15</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">cost of, <a href="#page_012">12</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Danish, <a href="#page_013">13</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hungarian, <a href="#page_063">63</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in the ’seventies, <a href="#page_008">8</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">medical control established, <a href="#page_074">74</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on pre-paid basis, <a href="#page_009">9</a> <i>et seq.</i></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">rate war begins, <a href="#page_014">14</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">statistics of, <a href="#page_103">103</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">stopped by Hamburg cholera epidemic, <a href="#page_036">36</a></span><br />
-
-Emigration Law, German, <a href="#page_023">23</a><br />
-
-Erzberger, Herr, <a href="#page_244">244</a><br />
-
-Esher, Lord, and the Admiralty, <a href="#page_138">138</a><br />
-
-Europe, concerted inquiry to Germany, <a href="#page_140">140</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">situation in September, 191<a href="#page_006">6</a>, <a href="#page_262">262</a></span><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="F" id="F"></a>Falkenhayn, General v., Ballin and, <a href="#page_244">244</a><br />
-
-Finland, <a href="#page_278">278</a><br />
-
-Forced draught, first vessels under, <a href="#page_026">26</a><br />
-
-Foreign exchange, Ballin on, <a href="#page_273">273</a><br />
-
-Francis Joseph, Emperor, <a href="#page_250">250</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Count Tisza, <a href="#page_250">250</a></span><br />
-
-Frederick the Great on experience, viii<a name="page_321" id="page_321"></a><br />
-
-Frisch, Geheimrat, <a href="#page_223">223</a><br />
-
-Furness, Sir Christopher, and Morgan Trust, <a href="#page_061">61</a><br />
-
-<i>Fürst Bismarck</i>, <a href="#page_193">193</a><br />
-
-Fürstenkonzern, <a href="#page_110">110</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="G" id="G"></a>George V, King, Ballin’s letter respecting, <a href="#page_160">160</a><br />
-
-George, Mr. Lloyd, speech on Agadir incident, <a href="#page_162">162</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">visits Germany, <a href="#page_143">143</a></span><br />
-
-Gerard, Mr., and Ballin, <a href="#page_246">246</a><br />
-
-German-British shipping agreement, <a href="#page_018">18</a><br />
-
-German emigration fleet, in 188<a href="#page_002">2</a>, <a href="#page_010">10</a><br />
-
-German Government, note to British Government, <a href="#page_170">170</a><br />
-
-German Naval Bill, <a href="#page_137">137</a><br />
-
-German Navy, the 1908 affair, <a href="#page_138">138</a><br />
-
-Germany, and Belgian Relief Committee, <a href="#page_231">231</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and the Merchant Service Bill, <a href="#page_228">228</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">bad feeling among neutrals to, <a href="#page_245">245</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ballin cries “everything is being gambled away,†<a href="#page_257">257</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ballin discusses after-the-war problems, <a href="#page_255">255</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">big naval programme, <a href="#page_143">143</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">British agitation against, <a href="#page_137">137</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">confiscation of merchant fleet, <a href="#page_229">229</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">control of trade and industries, <a href="#page_274">274</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">failure of political leaders, <a href="#page_264">264</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">favourable shipping situation of, <a href="#page_080">80</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">feeling towards British, <a href="#page_143">143</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">food problem, September, 191<a href="#page_008">8</a>, <a href="#page_284">284</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">habit of premature actions, <a href="#page_273">273</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">ignorance of British character, <a href="#page_260">260</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">internal condition in August, 191<a href="#page_004">4</a>, <a href="#page_223">223</a> <i>et seq.</i></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">lack of effective administration during war, <a href="#page_233">233</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">mental attitude of, <a href="#page_134">134</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">plans to approach President Wilson, <a href="#page_283">283</a></span><br />
-
-Germany, state in 1916 “like living in a madhouse,†<a href="#page_257">257</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">useless sacrifices of, <a href="#page_229">229</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">war condition of, <a href="#page_257">257</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">war-hopes in ruins, <a href="#page_269">269</a></span><br />
-
-Germany’s industrial growth, <a href="#page_007">7</a><br />
-
-<i>Gigantic</i>, <a href="#page_113">113</a><br />
-
-Goschen, Sir Ernest, <a href="#page_153">153</a><br />
-
-Gothenburg, port of, <a href="#page_021">21</a><br />
-
-Grey, Sir Edward, <a href="#page_262">262</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on Lord Haldane’s mission, <a href="#page_177">177</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on naval armaments, <a href="#page_157">157</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the Navy, <a href="#page_138">138</a></span><br />
-
-Great War (<i>see</i> World War)<br />
-
-Grumme, Capt. v., joins Hamburg-Amerika Linie, <a href="#page_199">199</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">with William II at Morgan Trust discussion, <a href="#page_053">53</a>.</span><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="H" id="H"></a>Hague Conference, <a href="#page_137">137</a><br />
-
-Hahn, Dr. Diederich, Chairman Agrarian League, <a href="#page_059">59</a><br />
-
-Haldane, Lord, <a href="#page_171">171</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and British neutrality, <a href="#page_190">190</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cabinet’s attitude toward, <a href="#page_184">184</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">explains to Ballin, <a href="#page_191">191</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">German opinion respecting, <a href="#page_187">187</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">success of his mission, <a href="#page_177">177</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">visits Berlin, <a href="#page_134">134</a>, <a href="#page_167">167</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">William II’s discussions with, <a href="#page_174">174</a> <i>et seq.</i></span><br />
-
-Hamburg, absorption into Prussia, <a href="#page_296">296</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">birthplace of Ballin, <a href="#page_001">1</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">cholera epidemic in, <a href="#page_036">36</a>, <a href="#page_072">72</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">dock strike, <a href="#page_299">299</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in the nineteenth century, <a href="#page_001">1-6</a></span><br />
-
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie, and Great Britain, <a href="#page_207">207</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Persia, <a href="#page_107">107</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Russo-Japanese war, <a href="#page_105">105</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">buys foodstuffs for isolated Germany, <a href="#page_223">223</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">far-reaching alterations, <a href="#page_098">98</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">fate of ships when war broke out, <a href="#page_220">220</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">financial stability of, <a href="#page_116">116</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">fleet of, <a href="#page_116">116</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">instructions to ships on eve of war, <a href="#page_220">220</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">new premises, <a href="#page_202">202</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">sixtieth anniversary,&nbsp; <a href="#page_117">117</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">William II and, 195<a name="page_322" id="page_322"></a></span><br />
-
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie (<i>see also</i> Packetfahrt)<br />
-
-Hamburg-Amerikanische Packetfahrt-Actien-Gesellschaft, <a href="#page_007">7</a><br />
-
-Hamburg Regattas, William II at, <a href="#page_201">201</a><br />
-
-Hamburg-South American S.S. Co., <a href="#page_079">79</a><br />
-
-Hammann, Geheimrat, <a href="#page_138">138</a>, <a href="#page_141">141</a><br />
-
-<i>Hammonia</i>, <a href="#page_024">24</a><br />
-
-Hansa Line, <a href="#page_069">69</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">taken over by Hamburg-Amerika Linie, <a href="#page_070">70</a></span><br />
-
-Hansemann, v., director Disconto-Gesellschaft, <a href="#page_055">55</a><br />
-
-Hansen, President, Chief of Arbitration Court Pool, <a href="#page_035">35</a><br />
-
-Harbou, Major v., <a href="#page_282">282</a><br />
-
-Harland and Wolff, <a href="#page_112">112</a>, <a href="#page_121">121</a><br />
-
-Henckell-Donnersmarck, Prince, Kaiser’s interest in, <a href="#page_047">47</a><br />
-
-Hintze, Herr v., <a href="#page_283">283</a><br />
-
-<i>Hohenzollern</i>, <a href="#page_194">194</a><br />
-
-Holland-America Line, <a href="#page_007">7</a><br />
-
-Holland, Queen of, offers mediation, <a href="#page_283">283</a><br />
-
-Holtzendorff, Admiral v., <a href="#page_246">246</a><br />
-
-Hongkong, <a href="#page_088">88</a><br />
-
-Huldermann, Bernhard, and Count Witte on averting war, <a href="#page_217">217</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Navy Bill, <a href="#page_170">170</a></span><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="I" id="I"></a>Immco Lines, Pool name for Morgan Trust, <a href="#page_065">65</a><br />
-
-Immigrants, Scandinavian trade, <a href="#page_036">36</a><br />
-
-<i>Imperator</i>, <a href="#page_031">31</a>, <a href="#page_113">113</a>, <a href="#page_125">125</a>, <a href="#page_126">126</a><br />
-
-International Mercantile Marine Company (<i>see</i> Morgan Trust)<br />
-
-Inverclyde, Lord, and Morgan Trust, <a href="#page_064">64</a><br />
-
-Italia Company, the, started, <a href="#page_079">79</a><br />
-
-Italy, agreement with, necessary to success of war, <a href="#page_241">241</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Germany’s failure in, <a href="#page_242">242</a></span><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="J" id="J"></a>Jagow, Herr v., <a href="#page_213">213</a>, <a href="#page_214">214</a><br />
-
-Jewish ancestry of Ballin, <a href="#page_002">2</a><br />
-
-Jones, Sir A., and the Morgan Trust, <a href="#page_006">6</a><br />
-
-Jonquières, Herr v., <a href="#page_231">231</a><br />
-
-<i><a name="K" id="K"></a>Kaiser Wilhelm der Grösse</i>, <a href="#page_077">77</a><br />
-
-<i>Kaiser Wilhelm II</i>, <a href="#page_205">205</a><br />
-
-<i>Kaiserin</i>, <a href="#page_113">113</a><br />
-
-<i>Kaiserin Auguste Victoria</i>, <a href="#page_025">25</a>, <a href="#page_106">106</a>, <a href="#page_129">129</a><br />
-
-Kaiserin, the, and the war, <a href="#page_211">211</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposition to private life, <a href="#page_285">285</a></span><br />
-
-Kiautschou, <a href="#page_097">97</a><br />
-
-Kiel Canal, widening the, <a href="#page_200">200</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Edward VII at, <a href="#page_206">206</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Week, origin of, <a href="#page_201">201</a></span><br />
-
-Kirchheim, Chief Inspector Emil F., viii<br />
-
-Köhlhrand, agreement the, <a href="#page_295">295</a><br />
-
-Kühlmann, Herr v., <a href="#page_189">189</a><br />
-
-Kunhardt, M., <a href="#page_027">27</a><br />
-
-Kuskop, Karl, <a href="#page_303">303</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="L" id="L"></a>Laeisz, Carl, <a href="#page_293">293</a><br />
-
-Laeisz, F., <a href="#page_293">293</a><br />
-
-Laird’s, orders to, <a href="#page_026">26</a><br />
-
-Law, German Emigration, of 188<a href="#page_007">7</a>, <a href="#page_023">23</a><br />
-
-Leuthold, Prof., <a href="#page_199">199</a><br />
-
-Leyland Line, acquired by Pierpont Morgan, <a href="#page_048">48</a><br />
-
-Liberal Cabinet, and naval armaments, <a href="#page_149">149</a><br />
-
-Liberal Government, and Anglo-German understanding, <a href="#page_136">136</a><br />
-
-Lichnowsky, Prince, <a href="#page_188">188</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">view on Haldane’s “neutrality†conversation, <a href="#page_191">191</a></span><br />
-
-Liners, developments in, <a href="#page_125">125</a> <i>et seq.</i><br />
-
-Lohmann, Mr., <a href="#page_010">10</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Director-General of Lloyd Line, <a href="#page_032">32</a></span><br />
-
-Ludendorff, and the Crown Prince, <a href="#page_280">280</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and “to her knees†promise, <a href="#page_266">266</a></span><br />
-
-<i>Lusitania</i>, <a href="#page_062">62</a>, <a href="#page_113">113</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="M" id="M"></a>Marie, Princess, of Denmark, <a href="#page_099">99</a><br />
-
-Marine engineering, Ballin’s enterprise in, <a href="#page_122">122</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">development of, <a href="#page_119">119</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Packetfahrt types, <a href="#page_125">125</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">progress in, <a href="#page_127">127</a></span><br />
-
-Marschall, Bieberstein v., <a href="#page_188">188</a><br />
-
-<i>Mauretania</i>, <a href="#page_062">62</a>, <a href="#page_113">113</a><br />
-
-Mediterranean Conference, <a href="#page_111">111</a><br />
-
-<i>Meteor</i>, 197<a name="page_323" id="page_323"></a><br />
-
-Metternich, Count, at St. James’s, <a href="#page_212">212</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on Anglo-German understanding, <a href="#page_187">187</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">predicts Great War, <a href="#page_188">188</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">sees Sir Edward Grey, <a href="#page_178">178</a></span><br />
-
-Morgan, Pierpont, guest of William II at Kiel, <a href="#page_061">61</a><br />
-
-Morgan, Trust, the, <a href="#page_040">40</a> <i>et seq.</i><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">agreement reached, <a href="#page_052">52</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">announced to British Press, <a href="#page_059">59</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">effect of freight slump, <a href="#page_061">61</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">final discussions in New York, <a href="#page_055">55</a> <i>et seq.</i></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">financial aspect, <a href="#page_045">45</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">inception of, <a href="#page_045">45</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">International Mercantile Marine Co., formal name of, <a href="#page_065">65</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">King Edward VII and, <a href="#page_061">61</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">outline of draft agreement, <a href="#page_051">51</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Pierpont Morgan at London Conference, <a href="#page_049">49</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Pierpont Morgan’s operations attract public attention, <a href="#page_046">46</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">telegram from William II, <a href="#page_056">56</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">terms of agreement, <a href="#page_058">58</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">William II discusses, <a href="#page_053">53</a></span><br />
-
-Morris and Co., <a href="#page_001">1</a> <i>et seq.</i><br />
-
-Mutius, Herr v., <a href="#page_247">247</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="N" id="N"></a>Nanking, <a href="#page_092">92</a><br />
-
-Naumann, Dr., and “Berlin to Bagdad,†<a href="#page_276">276</a><br />
-
-<i>Nautikus</i>, naval propaganda in, <a href="#page_200">200</a><br />
-
-Naval armaments, a cause of unrest, <a href="#page_133">133</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ballin’s report on, <a href="#page_146">146</a> <i>et seq.</i></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">big navy propaganda, <a href="#page_133">133</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Reichstag and reduction of, <a href="#page_145">145</a></span><br />
-
-Naval Bill of 191<a href="#page_002">2</a>, <a href="#page_155">155</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ballin writes to Sir Ernest Cassel on, <a href="#page_168">168</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">British alarm at, <a href="#page_166">166</a></span><br />
-
-Naval holiday, Mr. Churchill suggests a, <a href="#page_186">186</a><br />
-
-Navy, a bigger British, <a href="#page_171">171</a><br />
-
-Navy League, German, <a href="#page_137">137</a><br />
-
-<i>New York</i>, <a href="#page_049">49</a><br />
-
-New York, emigration to, in the ’eighties, <a href="#page_007">7</a> <i>et seq.</i><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">steerage passengers to, statistics, <a href="#page_029">29</a></span><br />
-
-<i>Normannia</i>, <a href="#page_077">77</a><br />
-
-North Atlantic Steamship Lines Association, history of, <a href="#page_032">32</a><br />
-
-<i>North German Gazette</i>, <a href="#page_157">157</a><br />
-
-North German Lloyd, <a href="#page_007">7</a>, <a href="#page_098">98</a>, <a href="#page_106">106</a>, <a href="#page_111">111</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">competes with Packetfahrt, <a href="#page_010">10</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">jubilee of, <a href="#page_117">117</a></span><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="O" id="O"></a>Oertzen, Herr v., <a href="#page_091">91</a><br />
-
-<i>Olympic</i>, <a href="#page_113">113</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="P" id="P"></a>Packetfahrt, the, a founder of, <a href="#page_010">10</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">agreement with Philadelphia Shipping Co. and Pennsylvania Railroad Co., <a href="#page_077">77</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Ballin, <a href="#page_289">289</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Carr Line, <a href="#page_012">12</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and emigrants, <a href="#page_010">10</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Harland and Wolff, <a href="#page_121">121</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Russian coal, <a href="#page_104">104</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and the Russo-Japanese War, <a href="#page_103">103</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ballin made director of, <a href="#page_027">27</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">celebration of jubilee, <a href="#page_074">74</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">1886 Pool, <a href="#page_021">21</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">extension of South American business, <a href="#page_080">80</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">improved appointments and accommodation on vessels, <a href="#page_026">26</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">increase of capital, <a href="#page_026">26</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">letter from chairman of Cunard Company, <a href="#page_075">75</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">more new vessels built, <a href="#page_025">25</a>, <a href="#page_074">74</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">New York branch established, <a href="#page_027">27</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">passenger department created, <a href="#page_019">19</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">service to Mexico, <a href="#page_083">83</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">statistics (1886), <a href="#page_019">19</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">(<i>see also</i> Hamburg-Amerika Linie)</span><br />
-
-<i>Panther</i>, William II and, <a href="#page_210">210</a><br />
-
-Paris Economic Conference, <a href="#page_276">276</a><br />
-
-Passenger traffic, improvements in, <a href="#page_041">41</a><br />
-
-Peace negotiations, Ballin and, <a href="#page_286">286</a><br />
-
-Peters, Heinrich, central offices of, <a href="#page_034">34</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">secretary of Pool, <a href="#page_031">31</a></span><br />
-
-<i>Philadelphia</i>, <a href="#page_049">49</a><br />
-
-Pirrie, Lord, <a href="#page_121">121</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">advises Ballin, <a href="#page_044">44</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">discusses Morgan Trust, 63<a name="page_324" id="page_324"></a></span><br />
-
-Pleasure cruises, inception of, <a href="#page_070">70</a> <i>et seq.</i><br />
-
-Pool accommodation discussions (1898), <a href="#page_038">38</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">actuarial basis of, <a href="#page_034">34</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">agreement on (1891), <a href="#page_024">24</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">agreement with Allan Line, <a href="#page_074">74</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">agreement with Italian Lines, <a href="#page_074">74</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">agreement with Lloyd Line, <a href="#page_074">74</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ballin’s opinions upon, <a href="#page_115">115</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">British Lines refuse (1892), <a href="#page_033">33</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">cardinal principles of, <a href="#page_030">30</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cunard Line refuses to join, <a href="#page_037">37</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">details of the, <a href="#page_028">28</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Heinrich Peters, secretary of, <a href="#page_031">31</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">its most dramatic episode, <a href="#page_067">67</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">more internal troubles, <a href="#page_115">115</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">negotiations for a greater, <a href="#page_035">35</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">North Atlantic Steamship Lines Association, formal name of, <a href="#page_033">33</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">proposed by Ballin, 188<a href="#page_006">6</a>, <a href="#page_024">24</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">special, for Mediterranean business, <a href="#page_034">34</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">terms definitely made, <a href="#page_033">33</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the General, <a href="#page_111">111</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the transatlantic, <a href="#page_110">110</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">tonnage and passenger statistics, <a href="#page_029">29</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">U.S.A. Railway pool compared, <a href="#page_028">28</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">world war’s effect upon, <a href="#page_111">111</a></span><br />
-
-Port Said, <a href="#page_085">85</a><br />
-
-<i>Pretoria</i>, <a href="#page_201">201</a><br />
-
-Princes’ Trust, <a href="#page_110">110</a><br />
-
-<i>Prinzessin Victoria Luise</i>, <a href="#page_130">130</a><br />
-
-Prussia, Prince Henry of, <a href="#page_057">57</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="R" id="R"></a>Rate war, the, <a href="#page_014">14</a>, <a href="#page_110">110</a><br />
-
-Red Star Line, <a href="#page_007">7</a><br />
-
-<i>Reichseinkauf</i>, the, formation of, <a href="#page_223">223</a><br />
-
-Reuchlin, Mr., of Holland-American Line, <a href="#page_032">32</a><br />
-
-Richardson, Spence and Co., <a href="#page_009">9</a><br />
-
-Riga, fall of, <a href="#page_272">272</a><br />
-
-Roumania, anxiety regarding food from, <a href="#page_251">251</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">neutrality of, <a href="#page_244">244</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">supplies grain during war to Germany, <a href="#page_227">227</a></span><br />
-
-Rupprecht of Bavaria, Prince, <a href="#page_137">137</a><br />
-
-Russia, army of, <a href="#page_139">139</a><br />
-
-Russian East Asiatic S.S. Co., <a href="#page_101">101</a><br />
-
-Russian Press, outburst against Sandjak Railway, <a href="#page_141">141</a><br />
-
-Russian Volunteer Fleet, <a href="#page_111">111</a><br />
-
-Russo-Japanese War, <a href="#page_102">102</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">coaling problems for Russian fleet, <a href="#page_105">105</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">ships for, <a href="#page_025">25</a></span><br />
-
-<br />
-<i><a name="S" id="S"></a>St. Louis</i>, <a href="#page_049">49</a><br />
-
-<i>St. Paul</i>, <a href="#page_049">49</a><br />
-
-Sandjak Railway, <a href="#page_141">141</a><br />
-
-Scandia Line, <a href="#page_021">21</a><br />
-
-Scandinavian emigration, <a href="#page_021">21</a><br />
-
-Schön, Herr v., <a href="#page_141">141</a><br />
-
-Schratt, Frau Kathi, <a href="#page_250">250</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">pro-English sympathies of, <a href="#page_252">252</a></span><br />
-
-Schwander, Dr., <a href="#page_272">272</a><br />
-
-Shanghai, <a href="#page_090">90</a><br />
-
-Shaughnessy, Lord, <a href="#page_062">62</a><br />
-
-Shipping agreement on rates, <a href="#page_017">17</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">agreements, enormous range of, <a href="#page_111">111</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">British tonnage in 190<a href="#page_001">1</a>, <a href="#page_049">49</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">crisis of 190<a href="#page_007">7</a>, <a href="#page_111">111</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Imperial Government’s interest in, <a href="#page_055">55</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">some tonnage comparisons, <a href="#page_049">49</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">statistics (1881-1885), <a href="#page_029">29</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">transatlantic business, trend of, <a href="#page_067">67</a></span><br />
-
-Ships, speed of, in 188<a href="#page_002">2</a>, <a href="#page_010">10</a><br />
-
-Singapore, <a href="#page_087">87</a><br />
-
-Skoda, Baron, <a href="#page_251">251</a><br />
-
-Sloman and Co., R. M., <a href="#page_018">18</a><br />
-
-South African War, <a href="#page_079">79</a><br />
-
-South America, development of, <a href="#page_082">82</a><br />
-
-Southampton, Packetfahrt service transferred to, <a href="#page_073">73</a><br />
-
-Spanish-American War, ships for, <a href="#page_025">25</a><br />
-
-Steinhöft, Hamburg, <a href="#page_001">1</a><br />
-
-Stettin, Vulkan Yard, <a href="#page_078">78</a>, <a href="#page_113">113</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">orders to, <a href="#page_026">26</a></span><br />
-
-Stinnes, Hugo, <a href="#page_280">280</a><br />
-
-Storm, Director A., viii<br />
-
-Strasser, Mr., of the Red Star Line, <a href="#page_032">32</a><br />
-
-Stürgkh, Count, <a href="#page_243">243</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Francis Joseph and, <a href="#page_250">250</a></span><br />
-
-Submarine warfare, <a href="#page_248">248</a>, <a href="#page_252">252</a>, <a href="#page_258">258</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">amazing achievements, <a href="#page_268">268</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">unrestricted, beginning of, 263<a name="page_325" id="page_325"></a></span><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="T" id="T"></a>Thingvalla Line, <a href="#page_021">21</a><br />
-
-<i>Times, The</i>, on German neutrality, <a href="#page_104">104</a><br />
-
-Tirpitz, Admiral v., <a href="#page_151">151</a>, <a href="#page_152">152</a>, <a href="#page_199">199</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Ballin, <a href="#page_237">237</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">threatens resignation, <a href="#page_246">246</a></span><br />
-
-Tisza, Count, <a href="#page_243">243</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Count Stürgkh, <a href="#page_250">250</a></span><br />
-
-<i>Titanic</i>, <a href="#page_113">113</a><br />
-
-Tokio, <a href="#page_093">93</a><br />
-
-Trans-Andine Railway, completion of, <a href="#page_082">82</a><br />
-
-Tsingtau, <a href="#page_092">92</a>, <a href="#page_097">97</a><br />
-
-Tweedmouth, Lord, and the Kaiser, <a href="#page_137">137</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="U" id="U"></a>Ukraine, the, <a href="#page_278">278</a><br />
-
-U.S.A., application of Monroe doctrine in, <a href="#page_082">82</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">cholera and isolation in, <a href="#page_073">73</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">devastating effects of entry into war, <a href="#page_255">255</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">economic depression of the ’eighties, <a href="#page_009">9</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">enters the war, <a href="#page_269">269</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">German fears of intervention, <a href="#page_252">252</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">immigration from Scandinavia, <a href="#page_021">21</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Railway Pool, <a href="#page_029">29</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">railways and shipping co-operation, <a href="#page_044">44</a></span><br />
-
-<br />
-<i><a name="V" id="V"></a>Vaterland</i>, <a href="#page_113">113</a><br />
-
-Versailles treaty, German view of, <a href="#page_208">208</a><br />
-
-Vienna, conditions in, <a href="#page_249">249</a><br />
-
-Vulkan Yard, Stettin, <a href="#page_026">26</a>, <a href="#page_078">78</a>, <a href="#page_113">113</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="W" id="W"></a>Waldersee, General Count Georg, and Ballin, <a href="#page_194">194</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on rationing Germany, <a href="#page_221">221</a></span><br />
-
-<i>Westminster Gazette</i> (article in facsimile at end), <a href="#page_163">163</a>, <a href="#page_235">235</a><br />
-
-White Star Line, and Pierpont Morgan, <a href="#page_055">55</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">new liners, <a href="#page_113">113</a></span><br />
-
-Wiegand, Dr. Heinrich, <a href="#page_119">119</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Morgan Trust, <a href="#page_054">54</a></span><br />
-
-Wilding, Mr., Ballin’s friendship for, <a href="#page_009">9</a><br />
-
-William II, and “a place in the sun,†<a href="#page_202">202</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and British Navy, British feeling aroused, <a href="#page_137">137</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and <i>Daily Telegraph</i> interview, <a href="#page_143">143</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Nicholas, suggested talk to avert war, <a href="#page_220">220</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and President Wilson’s note, <a href="#page_285">285</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and the <i>Bismarck</i>, <a href="#page_114">114</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">at Hamburg, <a href="#page_193">193</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ballin explains situation in September, 191<a href="#page_008">8</a>, <a href="#page_209">209</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ballin reports to, on navy problem, <a href="#page_138">138</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ballin tells him the ugly truth in 191<a href="#page_007">7</a>, <a href="#page_267">267</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">blind to situation, September, 191<a href="#page_008">8</a>, <a href="#page_283">283</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">“brimful of optimism,†<a href="#page_272">272</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">comments on <i>Westminster Gazette</i> article, <a href="#page_163">163</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">designs excursion steamer, <a href="#page_196">196</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">discusses Morgan Trust with Ballin, <a href="#page_053">53</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">discusses Morocco question, <a href="#page_205">205</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">facsimile comments on <i>Westminster Gazette</i> article (<i>see</i> end of book)</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">interest in German shipbuilding, <a href="#page_196">196</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">interest in Morgan Trust, <a href="#page_197">197</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">intervenes in shipping struggle, <a href="#page_106">106</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">isolation of, <a href="#page_255">255</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">last meeting with Ballin, <a href="#page_280">280</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">letter on British Navy, <a href="#page_137">137</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">maritime interests of, <a href="#page_201">201</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">monarchical discussions, Ballin and, <a href="#page_285">285</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on balance of power, <a href="#page_165">165</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on Germany’s Austro-Hungarian policy, <a href="#page_189">189</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the Churchill speech, <a href="#page_183">183</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">outspoken letter in 1916 from Ballin, <a href="#page_252">252</a> <i>et seq.</i></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">personal interest in Ballin, <a href="#page_198">198</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">persuaded to retire into private life, <a href="#page_285">285</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">sees Edward VII at Friedrichshof, <a href="#page_142">142</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">supports Ballin’s mission of inquiry</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">to U.S.A., <a href="#page_054">54</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">telegram to Morgan Trust, 56<a name="page_326" id="page_326"></a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">venerated in Austria, <a href="#page_251">251</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">visits Windsor, <a href="#page_136">136</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">wants apology from Great Britain, <a href="#page_183">183</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">writes to Ballin on Haldane interview, <a href="#page_175">175</a></span><br />
-
-Wilson, President, <a href="#page_263">263</a><br />
-
-Witt, Mr. Johannes, <a href="#page_027">27</a><br />
-
-Witte, Count, on situation July, 191<a href="#page_004">4</a>, <a href="#page_217">217</a><br />
-
-Woermann, Adolph, <a href="#page_107">107</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">character sketch of, <a href="#page_108">108</a></span><br />
-
-World war, the, <a href="#page_213">213</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ballin attempts mediation, <a href="#page_233">233</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ballin describes 1917 situation to William II, <a href="#page_265">265</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ballin favours a compromise, <a href="#page_236">236</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ballin on neutrals, <a href="#page_245">245</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ballin on the blockade, <a href="#page_234">234</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ballin on the crisis, <a href="#page_215">215</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Bismarck’s prophecy regarding, <a href="#page_133">133</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">British censorship in, <a href="#page_225">225</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">coal problems during, <a href="#page_102">102</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Count Witte on situation, July 24th, 191<a href="#page_004">4</a>, <a href="#page_217">217</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">defection of German conscripts, <a href="#page_281">281</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">effect on Pool, <a href="#page_111">111</a></span><br />
-
-World war, the, entry of U.S.A., effect of, <a href="#page_253">253</a> <i>et seq.</i><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">food problems of Germany, <a href="#page_222">222</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">forced upon William II, <a href="#page_285">285</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">foreign policy and food during, <a href="#page_241">241</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">German mistakes in, <a href="#page_258">258-9</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Germany stunned by <i>débâcle</i>, <a href="#page_236">236</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">grain from Roumania, <a href="#page_227">227</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">indemnities, <a href="#page_261">261</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mexico telegram, <a href="#page_271">271</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">outbreak of, <a href="#page_132">132</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">peace overtures, <a href="#page_245">245</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">position in 191<a href="#page_006">6</a>, <a href="#page_258">258</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">provisioning Germany, <a href="#page_221">221</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">shipping profits during, <a href="#page_065">65</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">submarine warfare in, <a href="#page_229">229</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the British blockade, <a href="#page_224">224</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tyrol, failure in the, <a href="#page_259">259</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Verdun and Italian campaigns, political and military failures, <a href="#page_258">258</a></span><br />
-
-World’s shipping collapse, cause of, <a href="#page_229">229</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="Y" id="Y"></a>Yang-Tse-Kiang, the, <a href="#page_091">91</a>, <a href="#page_096">96</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="Z" id="Z"></a>Zentral-Einkaufs-Gesellschaft, <a href="#page_226">226</a> <i>et seq.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p class="c">
-<span class="smcap">Printed in England by Cassell &amp; Company, Limited, London, E. C. 4.</span><a name="page_327" id="page_327"></a><br />
-</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Gross registered tonnage.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Then British Ambassador in Berlin.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> This refers to the political events in Berlin immediately
-prior to the outbreak of war.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> The head of the Press Department of the Foreign Office.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> The telegram which the Foreign Office sent to the German
-Minister in Mexico, and which was partly responsible for the entry of
-the United States into the war.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> Director of the Hamburg branch of the firm of Hugo
-Stinnes.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><a name="transcrib" id="transcrib"></a></p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary=""
-style="padding:2%;border:3px dotted gray;">
-<tr><th align="center">Typographical errors corrected by the etext transcriber:</th></tr>
-<tr><td align="center">aded to their fleets=> added to their fleets {pg 48}</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center">in the era on the machine-gun=> in the era of the machine-gun {pg 266}</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center">aready explained=> already explained {pg 270}</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Albert Ballin, by Bernhard Huldermann
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Albert Ballin
-
-Author: Bernhard Huldermann
-
-Translator: Wilhelm Johann Eggers
-
-Release Date: November 8, 2013 [EBook #44135]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ALBERT BALLIN ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Albert Ballin]
-
-
-
-
- ALBERT BALLIN
-
- By
- Bernhard Huldermann
-
- _Translated from the German
- by
- W. J. EGGERS, M.A. (London)_
-
- [Illustration: decoration]
-
- Cassell and Company, Limited
- London, New York, Toronto and Melbourne
- 1922
-
- To the Memory of
- ALBERT BALLIN
- in true veneration and heartfelt gratitude
-
- "_He was a man; take him for all in all,
- I shall not look upon his like again._"
-
- SHAKESPEARE, _Hamlet_ (_Act I, Scene 2_).
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-My principal reason for publishing the information contained in this
-volume is to keep alive the memory of Albert Ballin. I particularly
-desire to show what was his share in bringing about the economic advance
-of Germany during the golden age of the Empire's modern history, and to
-relate how he--unsuccessfully, alas!--strove to prevent the proud
-structure which he had helped to raise, from falling to ruin in the time
-of his country's distress. I believe that much that concerns the latter
-aspect of his work will be new to most readers. In spite of all that has
-been said and written concerning the political activities which Ballin
-displayed (and is alleged to have displayed) both before and during the
-war, their object--and, more important still, their intimate connexion
-with his economic activities--is scarcely known. Eminently successful
-though Ballin had been in creating an atmosphere of mutual understanding
-between the various nations in the economic sphere, his attempts to
-reconcile the contending ambitions of those same nations where politics
-were concerned ended in failure. And yet it is impossible to understand
-his failure in one respect without first understanding his success in
-the other; indeed, the connexion between the two sides of his work forms
-the key to the character of the man and to the historical significance
-of his achievements.
-
-It is possible that this volume may shed some new light on the causes of
-Germany's collapse; this idea, at any rate, was before my mind when I
-decided upon publication. Frederick the Great somewhere remarked that,
-to the great loss of mankind, the experiences gained by one generation
-are always useless to the next, and that each generation is fated to
-make its own mistakes. If this is true, it is nevertheless to be hoped
-that Germany, considering the magnitude of the disaster that has
-overtaken her, will not allow the spirit of resignation implied by this
-remark to determine her actions in the present case.
-
-In thus submitting to the public the information contained in this book,
-I am carrying out the behest of the deceased, who asked me to collect
-his papers, and to make whatever use I thought fit of them. Moreover,
-the fact that I had the privilege of being his collaborator for more
-than ten years gives me perhaps a special right to undertake this task.
-
-My best thanks are due to Director A. Storm for supplying me with
-material illustrative of Ballin's early career; to Chief Inspector Emil
-F. Kirchheim for assistance with the technical details, and to Professor
-Francke, who was on intimate terms of friendship with Ballin during a
-number of years, for information concerning many matters relative to
-Ballin's personal character.
-
-My constant endeavour has been to describe persons and events _sine ira
-et studio_, and to refrain from stating as a fact anything for which no
-documentary evidence is available.
-
-THE AUTHOR.
-
-_October, 1921._
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
-CHAPTER PAGE
-
-1. MORRIS AND CO. 1
-
-2. GENERAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE CARR LINE 12
-
-3. HEAD OF THE PACKETFAHRT'S PASSENGER DEPARTMENT 21
-
-4. THE POOL 28
-
-5. THE MORGAN TRUST 40
-
-6. THE EXPANSION OF THE HAMBURG-AMERIKA LINIE 69
-
-7. THE TECHNICAL REORGANIZATION OF THE HAMBURG-AMERIKA LINIE 121
-
-8. POLITICS 131
-
-9. THE KAISER 193
-
-10. THE WAR 213
-
-11. PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS 287
-
-EXTRACT ANNOTATED BY WILLIAM II 316
-
-INDEX 317
-
-
-
-
-ALBERT BALLIN
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-MORRIS AND CO.
-
-
-Albert Ballin was a native of Hamburg. Before the large modern harbour
-basins of the city were built, practically all the vessels which
-frequented the port of Hamburg took up their berths along the northern
-shore of the Elbe close to the western part of the town. A long road,
-flanked on one side by houses of ancient architecture, extended--and
-still extends--parallel to this predecessor of the modern harbour.
-During its length the road goes under different names, and the house in
-which Ballin was born and brought up stood in that portion known as
-Steinhoeft.
-
-A seaport growing in importance from year to year is always a scene of
-busy life, and the early days which the boy Ballin spent in his father's
-house and its interesting surroundings near the river's edge left an
-indelible impression on his plastic mind.
-
-Those were the times when the private residence and the business
-premises of the merchant and of the shipping man were still under the
-same roof; when a short walk of a few minutes enabled the shipowner to
-reach his vessel, and when the relations between him and the captain
-were still dominated by that feeling of personal friendship and personal
-trust the disappearance of which no man has ever more regretted than
-Albert Ballin. Throughout his life he never failed to look upon as
-ideal that era when every detail referring to the ship and to her
-management was still a matter of personal concern to her owner. He
-traced all his later successes back to the stimulating influence of
-those times; and if it is remembered how enormous was then the capacity
-for work, and how great the love of it for its own sake, it must be
-admitted that this estimate was no exaggeration. True, it is beyond
-doubt that the everyday surroundings in which his boyhood was spent, and
-the impressions gained from them, powerfully influenced his imagination
-both as boy and growing youth. It may, however, also be regarded as
-certain that the element of heredity was largely instrumental in
-moulding his character.
-
-Ballin belonged to an old Jewish family, members of which--as is proved
-by ancient tombstones and other evidence--lived at Frankfort-on-Main
-centuries ago. Later on we find traces of them in Paris, and still later
-in Central and North Germany, and in Denmark. Documents dating from the
-seventeenth century show that the Ballins at that time were already
-among the well-to-do and respected families of Hamburg and Altona. Some
-of the earliest members of the family that can be traced were
-distinguished for their learning and for the high reputation they
-enjoyed among their co-religionists; others, in later times, were
-remarkable for their artistic gifts which secured for them the favour of
-several Kings of France. Those branches of the family which had settled
-in Germany and Denmark were prominent again for their learning and also
-for their business-like qualities. The intelligence and the artistic
-imagination which characterized Albert Ballin may be said to be due to
-hereditary influences. His versatile mind, the infallible discernment he
-exercised in dealing with his fellow-men, his artistic tastes, and his
-high appreciation of what was beautiful--all these are qualities which
-may furnish the key to his successes as a man of business. His sense of
-beauty especially made him extremely fastidious in all that concerned
-his personal surroundings, and was reflected in the children of his
-imagination, the large and beautifully appointed passenger steamers.
-
-Ballin always disliked publicity. When the Literary Bureau of his
-Company requested him to supply some personal information concerning
-himself, he bluntly refused to do so. Hence there are but few
-publications available dealing with his life and work which may claim to
-be called authentic. Nevertheless--or perhaps for that very
-reason--quite a number of legends have sprung up regarding his early
-years. It is related, for instance, that he received a sound business
-training first in his father's business and later during his stay in
-England. The actual facts are anything but romantic. Being the youngest
-of seven brothers and sisters, he was treated with especial tenderness
-and affection by his mother, so much so, in fact, that he grew up rather
-a delicate boy and was subject to all sorts of maladies and
-constitutional weaknesses. He was educated, as was usual at that time,
-at one of the private day-schools of his native city. In those days,
-when Hamburg did not yet possess a university of her own, and when the
-facilities which she provided for the intellectual needs of her citizens
-were deplorably inadequate for the purpose, visitors from the other
-parts of Germany could never understand why that section of the
-population which appreciated the value of a complete course of higher
-education--especially an education grounded on a classical
-foundation--was so extremely small. The average Hamburg business man
-certainly did not belong to that small section; and the result was that
-a number of private schools sprang up which qualified their pupils for
-the examination entitling them to one year's--instead of three
-years'--military service, and provided them with a general education
-which--without any reflection on their principals--it can only be said
-would not bear comparison with that, for instance, which was looked upon
-as essential by the members of the higher grades of the Prussian Civil
-Service. Fortunately, the last few decades have brought about a great
-improvement in this respect, just as they have revolutionized the
-average citizen's appreciation of intellectual culture and refinement.
-
-Albert Ballin did not stand out prominently for his achievements at
-school, and he did not shine through his industry and application to his
-studies. In later life he successfully made up for the deficiencies of
-his school education by taking private lessons, especially in practical
-mathematics and English, in which language he was able to converse with
-remarkable fluency. His favourite pastime in his early years was music,
-and his performances on the 'cello, for instance, are said to have been
-quite excellent. None of his friends during his later years can furnish
-authoritative evidence on this point, as at that time he no longer had
-the leisure to devote himself to this hobby. Apart from music, he was a
-great lover of literature, especially of books on _belles lettres_,
-history, and politics. Thanks to his prodigious memory, he thus was able
-to accumulate vast stores of knowledge. During his extended travels on
-the business of his Company he gained a first-hand knowledge of foreign
-countries, and thus learned to understand the essential characteristics
-of foreign peoples as well as their customs and manners, which a mere
-study of books would never have given him. So he became indeed a man of
-true culture and refinement. He excelled as a speaker and as a writer;
-although when he occasionally helped his adopted daughter with her
-German composition, his work did not always meet with the approval of
-the teacher, and was once even returned with the remark, "newspaper
-German."
-
-In 1874, at the age of seventeen, Ballin lost his father. The business,
-which was carried on under the firm of Morris and Co., was an Emigration
-Agency, and its work consisted in booking emigrants for the
-transatlantic steamship lines on a commission basis. Office premises and
-dwelling accommodation were both--as already indicated--located in the
-same building, so that a sharp distinction between business matters and
-household affairs was often quite impossible, and the children acquired
-practical knowledge of everything connected with the business at an
-early age. This was especially so in the case of young Albert, who loved
-to do his home lessons in the office rooms. History does not divulge
-whether he did so because he was interested in the affairs of the
-office, or whether he obtained there some valuable assistance. The whole
-primitiveness of those days is illustrated by the following episode
-which Ballin once related to us in his own humorous way. The family
-possessed--a rare thing in our modern days--a treasure of a servant who,
-apart from doing all the hard work, was the good genius of the home, and
-who had grown old as the children grew up. "Augusta" had not yet read
-the modern books and pamphlets on women's rights, and she was content to
-go out once a year, when she spent the day with her people at Barmbeck,
-a suburb of Hamburg. One day, when the young head of Morris and Co. was
-discussing some important business matters with some friends in his
-private office, the door was suddenly thrust open, and the "treasure"
-appeared on the scene and said: "Adjues ook Albert, ick gah huet ut!"
-("Good-bye, Albert, I am going out to-day!") It was the occasion of her
-annual holiday.
-
-The firm of Morris and Co., of which Ballin's father had been one of the
-original founders in 1852, had never been particularly successful up to
-the time of his death. Albert, the youngest son, who was born on August
-15th, 1857, joined the business when his father died. He had then just
-finished his studies at school. The one partner who had remained a
-member of the firm after Ballin's death left in 1877, and in 1879 Albert
-Ballin became a partner himself. The task of providing for his widowed
-mother and such of his brothers and sisters as were still dependent on
-his help then devolved on him, and he succeeded in doing this in a very
-short time. He applied himself to his work with the greatest diligence,
-and he became a shining example to the few assistants employed by the
-firm. On the days of the departure of the steamers the work of the
-office lasted until far into the night, as was usually the case in
-Hamburg in former years. An incident which took place in those early
-days proves that the work carried on by Morris and Co. met with the
-approval of their employers. One day the head of one of the foreign
-lines for which the firm was doing business paid a personal visit to
-Hamburg to see what his agents were doing. On entering the office young
-Albert received him. He said he wanted to see Mr. Ballin, and when the
-youthful owner replied that he was Mr. Ballin the visitor answered: "It
-is not you I want to see, young man, but the head of the firm." The
-misunderstanding was soon cleared up, and when Ballin anxiously asked if
-the visitor had come to complain about anything connected with the
-business, the reply was given that such was by no means the case, and
-that the conduct of the business was considered much more satisfactory
-than before.
-
-To arrive at a proper understanding of the conditions ruling in Hamburg
-at the end of the 'seventies, it is necessary to remember that the
-shipping business was still in its infancy, and that it was far from
-occupying the prominent position which it gained in later years and
-which it has only lost again since the war. The present time, which also
-is characterized by the prevalence of foreign companies and
-foreign-owned tonnage in the shipping business of Hamburg, bears a
-strong likeness to that period which lies now half a century back. The
-"Hamburg-Amerikanische Packetfahrt-Actien-Gesellschaft," although only
-running a few services to North and Central America, was even then the
-most important shipping company domiciled in Hamburg; but it counted for
-very little as an international factor, especially as it had just passed
-through a fierce struggle against its competitor, the Adler Line, which
-had greatly weakened it and had caused it to fall behind other lines
-with regard to the status of its ships. Of the other Hamburg lines which
-became important in later times, some did not then exist at all, and
-others were just passing through the most critical period of their
-infancy. The competitors of the Packetfahrt in the emigrant traffic were
-the North German Lloyd, of Bremen; the Holland-America Line, of
-Rotterdam, and the Red Star Line, of Antwerp. Apart from the direct
-traffic from Hamburg to New York, there was also the so-called indirect
-emigrant traffic _via_ England, which for the most part was in the hands
-of the British lines. The passengers booked by the agents of the latter
-were first conveyed from Hamburg to a British port, and thence, by a
-different boat, to the United States. It was the time before the
-industrialization of Germany had commenced, when there was not
-sufficient employment going round for the country's increasing
-population. The result was that large numbers of the inhabitants had to
-emigrate to foreign countries. That period lasted until the 'nineties,
-by which time the growth of industries required the services of all who
-could work. Simultaneously, however, with the decrease of emigration
-from Germany, that from Southern Europe, Austria-Hungary, and the
-Slavonic countries was assuming huge proportions, although the
-beginnings of this latter were already quite noticeable in the
-'seventies and 'eighties. This foreign emigrant traffic was the mainstay
-of the business carried on by the emigration agencies of the type of
-Morris and Co., whereas the German emigrants formed the backbone of the
-business on which the German steamship lines relied for their passenger
-traffic. Either the companies themselves or their agencies were in
-possession of the necessary Government licences entitling them to carry
-on the emigration business. The agencies of the foreign lines, on the
-other hand, either held no such licence at all, or only one which was
-restricted to certain German federal states or Prussian provinces--such,
-for instance, as Morris and Co. possessed for the two Mecklenburgs and
-for Schleswig-Holstein. This circumstance naturally compelled them to
-tap foreign districts rather than parts of Germany; and since the German
-lines, in order to keep down their competition, refused to carry the
-passengers they had booked, they were obliged to work in conjunction
-with foreign ones. They generally provided the berths which the
-sub-agencies required for their clientele, and sometimes they would book
-berths on their own account, afterwards placing them at the disposal of
-the agencies. They were the connecting link between the shipping
-companies and the emigrants, and the former had no dealings whatever
-with the latter until these were on board their steamers. The Hamburg
-emigration agents had therefore also to provide accommodation for the
-intending emigrants during their stay in Hamburg and to find the means
-for conveying them to the British port in question. A number of taverns
-and hostelries in the parts near the harbour catered specially for such
-emigrants, and the various agents found plenty of scope for a display of
-their respective business capacities. A talent for organization, for
-instance, and skill in dealing with the emigrants, could be the means of
-gaining great successes.
-
-This was the sphere in which the youthful Albert Ballin gave the first
-proofs of his abilities and intelligence. Within a few years of his
-entering the firm the latter acquired a prominent position in the
-"indirect" emigration service _via_ England, a position which brought
-its chief into personal contact with the firm of Richardson, Spence and
-Co., of Liverpool, who were the general representatives for Great
-Britain of the American Line (one of the lines to whose emigration
-traffic Morris and Co. attended in Hamburg), and especially with the
-head of that firm, Mr. Wilding. An intimate personal friendship sprang
-up between these two men which lasted a lifetime. These close relations
-gave him an excellent opportunity for studying the business methods of
-the British shipping firms, and led to the establishment of valuable
-personal intercourse with some other leading shipping people in England.
-Thus it may be said that Ballin's connexions with England, strengthened
-as they were by several short visits to that country, were of great
-practical use to him and that, in a sense, they furnished him with such
-business training as until then he had lacked.
-
-How successfully the new chief of Morris and Co. operated the business
-may be gauged from the fact that, a few years after his advent, the firm
-had secured one-third of the volume of the "indirect" emigration traffic
-_via_ England. At that time, in the early 'eighties, a period of grave
-economic depression in the United States was succeeded by a trade boom
-of considerable magnitude. Such a transition from bad business to good
-was always preceded by the sale of a large number of "pre-paids," i.e.
-steerage tickets which were bought and paid for by people in the United
-States and sent by them to those among their friends or relatives in
-Europe who, without possessing the necessary money, wished to emigrate
-to the States. A few months after the booking of these "pre-paids" a
-strong current of emigration always set in, and the time just referred
-to proved to be no exception to the rule. The number of steerage
-passengers leaving Hamburg for New York increased from 25,000 in 1879 to
-69,000 in 1880, and 123,000 in 1881.
-
-It was quite impossible for the biggest Hamburg shipping company--the
-Packetfahrt--to carry successfully this huge number of emigrants. And
-even if this had been possible, the Packetfahrt would not have
-undertaken it, because it intentionally ignored the stream of non-German
-emigrants. Besides, the Company had neglected for years to adapt its
-vessels to the needs of the times, and had allowed its competitors to
-gain so much that even the North German Lloyd, a much younger
-undertaking, had far outstripped it. The latter, under its eminent
-chairman, Mr. Lohmann, had not only outclassed the Packetfahrt by the
-establishment of its service of fast steamers--"Bremen-New York in 9
-days"--which was worked with admirable regularity and punctuality, but
-had also increased the volume of its fleet to such an extent that, in
-1882, 47 of the 107 transatlantic steamers flying the German flag
-belonged to this Company, whereas the Packetfahrt possessed 24 only. For
-all these reasons it would have been useless for Morris and Co. to
-suggest to the Packetfahrt that they should secure for it a large
-increase in its emigrant traffic; and even if they had tried to extend
-their influence by working in co-operation with the Packetfahrt, such an
-attempt would doubtless have provoked the liveliest opposition on the
-part of the firm of August Bolten, the owner of which was one of the
-founders of the Packetfahrt, and which, because they were acting as
-general agents for the North American cargo and passenger business,
-exercised a powerful influence over the management of the Packetfahrt.
-The firm of August Bolten, moreover, had, like the line they
-represented, always consistently refused to have any dealings with the
-emigrant agencies.
-
-Ballin, knowing that the next few years would lead to a considerable
-increase in the emigrant traffic, therefore approached a newly
-established Hamburg shipping firm--which intended to run a cargo service
-from Hamburg to New York--with the proposal that it should also take up
-the steerage business. His British friends, when they were informed of
-this step, expressed the apprehension lest their own business with his
-firm should suffer from it, but Ballin had no difficulty in allaying
-their fears.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-GENERAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE CARR LINE
-
-
-The new shipping line for which Morris and Co. contracted to act as
-General Passenger Agents was the privately owned firm of Mr. Edward
-Carr. The agreement concluded between the two firms shows distinct
-traces of Ballin's enterprising spirit and of the largeness of his
-outlook. Morris and Co. undertook to book for the two steamships of the
-Carr Line then building, viz. the _Australia_ and the _America_, as many
-passengers as they could carry, and guaranteed to pay the owners a
-passage price of 82 marks per head, all the necessary expenses and
-commissions, including those connected with the dispatch of the
-passengers, to be paid by Morris and Co. The steerage rate charged by
-the Packetfahrt at that time was 120 marks. It was agreed that, if this
-rate should be increased, a corresponding increase should be made in the
-rates of the Carr Line. The number of trips to be performed by each
-steamer should be about eight or nine per annum. If a third boat were
-added to the service, the agreement entered into should be extended so
-as to cover this boat as well. For every passenger short of the total
-capacity of each steamer Morris and Co. were to pay a compensation of 20
-marks, if no arrangements had been made for the accommodation of the
-passenger, and 35 marks in case such accommodation had been arranged. It
-was expected that each boat would carry from 650 to 700 passengers. The
-actual number carried, however, turned out to be slightly less, and
-amounted to 581 when the first steamer left Hamburg on June 7th, 1881.
-Morris and Co. also undertook to hand over to the Carr Line all the
-through cargo they could secure. From the very start the work done by
-Ballin seems to have met with the unqualified approval of the Carr Line
-people; because the latter waived their claim to the compensation due to
-them for the sixty passengers short of the total number which were to be
-carried on the first trip, as Morris and Co. could prove that these
-passengers had failed to arrive, although the firm had been advised from
-Denmark that they were to come. On how small a scale the firm's business
-was conducted may be gauged from the circumstance that the whole staff
-consisted of nine employees only, who were paid salaries aggregating
-20,302 marks.
-
-In one essential feature the service of the new line differed from those
-of its old-established competitors. The _Australia_ and the _America_
-were ordinary cargo boats, but, in addition to a moderate amount of
-cargo, they also carried steerage passengers. They thus had not much in
-common with the usual passenger steamers by which both cabin and
-steerage passengers were carried. The advantage of the new type to the
-emigrants was that it gave them much more space than was at their
-disposal on the older boats. Whereas on the cabin steamers they were
-practically confined to a very small part of the boat, the Carr Line
-steamers made no restriction whatever as to their movements on board;
-all the available space, especially on deck, was thrown open to them.
-This type was not entirely a novelty, the sailing vessels of the older
-period used for the emigrant traffic being run on similar lines. The
-advantages accruing to the owners from their new type of steamers were
-obvious. The arrangements for the accommodation and provisioning of the
-emigrants, compared with what was needed in the case of cabin
-passengers, were of the simplest kind, and thus the cost price of the
-steamers was considerably less than that of vessels of the usual type.
-This also meant a saving in the wages bill, as it led to a reduction in
-the number of hands on board; and since the speed of the new boats was
-also less than that of the older ones, the working expenses were reduced
-in proportion. The financial results of the service, therefore, were
-better, in spite of the low rates charged to the steeragers, than those
-obtainable by running cabin steamers with steerage accommodation, and
-than those obtainable by running cargo steamers without any passenger
-accommodation.
-
-The new line soon made itself felt as a serious competitor to the
-Packetfahrt, especially so as by 1885 its fleet had increased from two
-to five steamers. The lower steerage rates charged by the Carr Line led
-to a general decrease of rates in the New York service, which was not
-confined to the lines running their services from Hamburg. The passage
-prices charged from the various ports are naturally closely related to
-each other, because each port tries to attract as much traffic as
-possible to itself, and this can only be brought about by a carefully
-thought-out differentiation. The struggle between the various lines
-involved which had started in Hamburg quickly extended to other seaports
-and affected a great many lines in addition to those of Hamburg. The
-rate-cutting process began in May, 1882. In the following October the
-Packetfahrt and the Lloyd had reduced their rates to 90 and in June,
-1883, to 80 marks, whilst the British lines in February, 1884, charged
-so little as 30s. The Carr Line, of course, had to follow suit. It not
-only did so, but in proportion reduced its own rates even more than the
-other lines. The rates were even lower in practice than they appeared to
-be, owing to the constantly growing commissions payable to the agents.
-The agents of the competing lines, by publishing controversial articles
-in the newspapers, soon took the general public into their confidence;
-and in order to prevent such publicity being given as to their internal
-affairs, the managements of the various steamship lines entered into
-some sort of mutual contact. The worst result of the rate-slashing was
-that the agreements which the older lines had concluded amongst
-themselves for the maintenance of remunerative prices soon became
-unworkable. First those relating to the Westbound rates had to go down
-before the new competitor; and in 1883, when this competition had really
-commenced to make itself appreciably felt, the Packetfahrt found itself
-compelled to declare its withdrawal from the New York Continental
-Conference by which the Eastbound rate had been fixed at $30 for the
-passage from New York to the Continent, a rate which was so high that
-the Carr Line found it easy to go below it.
-
-The Packetfahrt made great efforts to hold its own against the newcomer,
-but, as the following figures show, its success was but slight. In 1883
-the Packetfahrt carried 55,390 passengers on 76 voyages, against 16,471
-passengers carried on 29 voyages by the Carr Line, so that the traffic
-secured by the latter amounted to about 30 per cent. of that of the
-former. The figures for 1884 show that 58,388 passengers were carried by
-the Packetfahrt on 86 voyages, against 13,466 steeragers on 30 voyages
-by the Carr Line. If the figures relative to the direct and the indirect
-emigrant traffic from Hamburg are studied, it will be seen that a
-considerable decrease had taken place in the volume of the latter kind
-within a very few years, thus leading to an improvement in the position
-of the German lines as compared with that of their British competitors.
-These figures are as follows:
-
- _Number of Emigrants carried_
- _Packetfahrt_ _Carr Line_ _via British ports_
-
- 1880 47,000 -- 20,000
- 1881 68,000 4,000 47,600
- 1882 68,000 11,000 31,000
- 1883 55,000 16,000 13,000
- 1884 58,000 13,000 16,000
-
-At the same time the Packetfahrt, in order to prevent French competition
-from becoming too dangerous on the Havre-New York route, had to reduce
-its rates from Havre, and a little later it had to do likewise with
-regard to the Eastbound freight rates and the steerage rates. The keen
-competition going on between the lines concerned had led to a lowering
-of the Eastbound rate to Hamburg from $30 to $18; and as the commission
-payable to the agents had gone up to $5, the net rate amounted to $13
-only. At last the shareholders of the Packetfahrt became restless, and
-at the annual general meeting held in 1884 one of their representatives
-moved that the Board of the Company should be asked to enter into an
-agreement with the competing firm of Edward Carr. The motion, however,
-was lost; and the further proposal that a pool should be established
-among the Hamburg emigrant agents fared no better.
-
-It was clear that the rate-war, which continued for a long period, would
-considerably affect the prosperity of the Carr Line in common with the
-other shipping companies. This circumstance prompted the proposal of
-Edward Carr, when the discussions were renewed in the spring of 1885, to
-carry them on upon a different basis altogether. He proposed, in fact,
-that the Carr Line itself should be purchased by the Packetfahrt. In the
-course of the ensuing negotiations Albert Ballin, as the representative
-of Edward Carr, who was absent from Hamburg for a time, played a
-prominent part. The Packetfahrt, in the meantime, had received advices
-from its New York office to the effect that the latter had reconsidered
-its attitude towards the claims of the Carr Line, that it looked upon a
-successful termination of the struggle against this Line as hopeless,
-and that it therefore recommended the granting of the differential rates
-which formed the obstacle to peace. Nevertheless, it was not until July,
-1885, that, at a conference held in Hamburg, an agreement was concluded
-by the Packetfahrt, the Lloyd, the Carr Line, the Dutch, Belgian, and
-French lines, and the representative of the British lines. All these
-companies bound themselves to raise their rates to 100 marks, except
-that the Carr Line should be entitled to fix theirs at 90 marks. Thus
-the latter had at length received the recognition of its claim to a
-differentiation, and of its right to exist side by side with the older
-Company, although its steamers were not of an equal quality with those
-of the latter. An agreement was also concluded by which the rates of
-commission due to the Hamburg emigrant agents were fixed, and at the
-continued negotiations with the other lines Albert Ballin, from that
-time onward, in his capacity of representative of the Carr Line, was
-looked upon as on an equal footing with the representatives of the other
-lines.
-
-The principal subject of the discussions was the question of
-eliminating, as far as possible, British influence from the emigrant
-traffic _via_ Hamburg. The competition of the British was, naturally,
-very detrimental to the business of all the Continental, but more
-especially the German lines, because the interests of the respective
-sides were utterly at variance with each other. The firm foundations of
-the business transacted by the British lines were laid in England, and
-the Continental business was merely a source of additional profit; but
-to the German lines it was the mainstay of their existence, and to make
-it pay was of vital importance to them. The German lines, therefore,
-did not rest until, as the result of the continued negotiations among
-the Continental companies, it was agreed that the uniform rates just
-fixed should not apply to the traffic which was carried on by the two
-Hamburg lines from that city. Towards the end of 1885 the first object
-aimed at by this step was realized: the conclusion of an agreement
-between the two Hamburg lines and the representatives of the British
-lines settling the rates and the commissions; but apart from this, no
-changes of fundamental importance were made in this business until after
-Albert Ballin, under an agreement proposed by the Packetfahrt, had
-entered the service of the Packetfahrt, as head of their passenger
-department. An important exception, however, was the amalgamation
-suddenly announced in March, 1886, of the Carr Line and the Union Line,
-which latter company was operated by Rob. M. Sloman and Co., of Hamburg.
-The fact of this amalgamation considerably weakened the position of the
-Packetfahrt in its dealings with the Carr Line, because it gave
-additional strength to the latter.
-
-The details of the five years' agreement between Ballin and the
-Packetfahrt were approved by the Board of Trustees of that Company about
-the middle of May, 1886. It was stipulated that, in conformity with the
-pool agreement concluded between the two lines on May 22nd, the
-Packetfahrt should appoint Mr. Albert Ballin sole and responsible head
-of its North American passenger department (Westbound as well as
-Eastbound services); that his work should include the booking of
-steeragers for the Union Company's steamers (which, in accordance with
-the pool agreement, the Packetfahrt had taken over), that he should
-appoint and dismiss the clerks employed by his department; that he
-should fix their salaries and commissions; that he should sign passage
-agreements on behalf of the Company, and that he should issue the
-necessary instructions to the agents and officers of the Company. All
-letters and other documents were to be signed "by proxy of the
-Hamburg-Amerikanische Packetfahrt-Actien-Gesellschaft," and he was
-required annually to submit to the directors a draft estimate of the
-expenses of his department. On how modest a scale the whole arrangement
-was drawn up may be inferred from the figures given in the first year's
-draft estimate, viz. Salaries, 35,000 marks; advertisements, 50,000
-marks; posters and printed matter, 25,000 marks; travelling expenses,
-6,000 marks; postage and telegrams, 10,000 marks; extras and sundries,
-10,000 marks. Equally modest was the remuneration of the new head who
-was to receive a fixed salary of 10,000 marks per annum, plus a
-commission under the pool agreement, allowing the inference that the
-total annual income of the newly appointed head of the department would
-work out at something like 60,000 marks, which goes to show that the
-Company had a high opinion of his capacity for attracting traffic to its
-services. The conclusion of this agreement meant that the Packetfahrt
-henceforth took entire control of its passenger business--which, until
-then, had been looked after by the firm of Aug. Bolten--and that a
-passenger department had to be specially created. Thus an important step
-forward was made which could only be undertaken by the firm because such
-a well-qualified man as Ballin happened to be at their service just
-then.
-
-If the course of the negotiations between the Packetfahrt and the Carr
-Line had not already shown it, this agreement would prove without a
-shadow of doubt that the then head of Morris and Co. had, at the age of
-twenty-nine, and after twelve years of practical work, gained the
-premier position in the emigrant business of his native city and also a
-leading one in the general European emigrant business which in itself is
-one of the most important branches of the shipping trade. The
-correspondence between Edward Carr and Ballin furnishes no indication
-that the latter himself had insisted upon his being taken over by the
-Packetfahrt or that he had worked with this object.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-HEAD OF THE PACKETFAHRT'S PASSENGER DEPARTMENT
-
-
-On May 31st, 1886, Albert Ballin first took part in a joint meeting of
-the Board of Trustees and the Board of Directors of the Packetfahrt. On
-this occasion two proposals were put forward by him: one, to provide new
-premises for the work connected with the booking of passengers at an
-annual rent of 5,000 marks; the other, to start a direct service from
-Stettin to New York _via_ Gothenburg. This latter proposal was prompted
-by the desire to reduce the influence of the British lines competing for
-the Hamburg business. Such a reduction could only be brought about if it
-were proved to the British lines that their position was by no means
-unassailable. The Scandinavian emigrant business to the United States
-which for long had been a source of great profit to the British, lent
-itself admirably to such purposes. Ballin's proposal was agreed to by
-the Company's management, with the result that in July, 1886, a pool
-agreement was concluded between the Packetfahrt (on behalf of a Stettin
-Line of steamers) and the Danish Thingvalla Line. Steamers now began to
-call at Gothenburg and Christiansand on their voyages from Stettin to
-the United States. The new line was known as the "Scandia Line"; and in
-later years, when a similar object was aimed at, it was called into
-existence once more. The aim was not to establish a new steamer service
-for its own sake, but rather to create an object for compensation which,
-in the negotiations with the British lines, could be given up again in
-exchange for concessions on the part of the latter regarding the
-Hamburg business. If this plan failed, Ballin had another one mapped
-out: he threatened to attack the British in their own country by
-carrying steerage passengers either from Liverpool _via_ Havre, or from
-Plymouth _via_ Hamburg. People in England laughed at this idea.
-"Surely," they said, "no British emigrant will travel on a German
-vessel." The British lines replied to Ballin's threat by declaring that
-they would again reduce to 30s. their rates from Hamburg to New York
-_via_ a British port. However, the negotiations which Ballin entered
-into with them in England during the month of September, 1886, soon
-cleared the air, and led to the conclusion of an agreement towards the
-end of the year. The Packetfahrt promised to withdraw its Scandia Line,
-and the British lines, in return, agreed to raise their steerage rates
-from Hamburg to 85 marks gross, and those from Liverpool, Glasgow, and
-London to L2 10s. net. A clearing house which should be under the
-management of a representative of the British lines, and which was also
-to include the business done by the Bremen agents of the latter, was to
-be set up in Hamburg. This clearing house was kept on until other and
-more far-reaching agreements with the British lines made its continued
-existence superfluous.
-
-The arrangements which Ballin made with the agents represented in the
-clearing house show his skill in his dealings with other people. The
-whole agreement, especially the fixing of the terms governing the share
-to be assigned to the agents--which amounted to 55 per cent, of the
-Hamburg business--was principally aimed at the realization of as high a
-rate as possible. This policy proved to be a great success. Another step
-forward was that the Packetfahrt now consented to accept passengers
-booked by the agents, thus reversing their previous policy of ignoring
-them altogether.
-
-The agreement with the British lines also provided that the Union Line
-should raise its rates to 90 marks, the Packetfahrt to 95 marks, and the
-Lloyd those charged for its services to Baltimore and New York to 100
-and 110 marks respectively. Henceforward both competing groups were
-equally interested in obtaining as high a rate as possible.
-
-The practical working of the agreement did not fail to give
-satisfaction, and the Continental lines could, undisturbed by external
-interference, put their own house in order. A few years later, in 1890,
-the British lines complained that they did not succeed in getting the
-percentage of business to which they were entitled. Negotiations were
-carried on at Liverpool, during which Ballin was present. He pointed out
-that, considering the whole Continental position, the British lines
-would be ill-advised to withdraw from the agreement, and he stated that
-he would be prepared to guarantee them their share (33 per cent.) of the
-Hamburg business. The outcome was that the British lines declared
-themselves satisfied with these new stipulations. A few years later,
-when the British lines joined the Continental Pool, the Hamburg
-agreement ceased to be necessary, and in 1893 the clearing house was
-abolished.
-
-The new Emigration Law of 1887--due to the exertions of the North German
-Lloyd and the Packetfahrt--strengthened the position of the lines
-running direct services from German ports. Another step forward was the
-increase of the passage rates which was agreed upon after negotiations
-had taken place at Antwerp and in England, and after the German, Dutch,
-and Belgian lines had had a conference at Cologne. Contact was also
-established with the chief French line concerned.
-
-The improvement, however, was merely temporary. The termination of the
-struggle for the Hamburg business did not mean that all the differences
-between all the transatlantic lines had been settled. On the contrary,
-all the parties concerned gradually realized that it would be necessary
-to institute quite different arrangements; something to ensure a fairer
-distribution of the traffic and a greater consolidation of their common
-interests. A proposal to gain these advantages by the establishment of a
-pool was submitted by the representative of the Red Star Line at a
-conference held in the autumn of 1886, and a memorandum written by
-Ballin, likewise dating from 1886, took up the same idea; but an
-agreement was not concluded until the close of 1891.
-
-That, in spite of Ballin's advocacy, five years had to elapse before
-this agreement became perfect is perhaps to some extent due to the fact
-that Ballin--who at that time, after all, was only the head of the
-Passenger Department of his Company--could not always speak with its
-full authority where his own personal views were concerned. Moreover,
-the influence of his Company was by no means very considerable in those
-early days. The only passenger boat of any importance which the Company
-possessed in the early 'eighties, before Ballin had entered its
-services, was the _Hammonia_, and she was anything but a success. She
-was inferior both as regards her efficiency and her equipment. At last,
-however, Ballin's desire to raise the prestige of the Company triumphed,
-and the building of several fast boats was definitely decided upon. In
-addition to a comparatively large number of passengers--especially those
-of the first cabin--they were to carry a moderate amount of cargo. In
-size they were subject to the restrictions imposed upon them by the
-shortcomings of the technical knowledge of that time, and by the absence
-of the necessary improvements in the fairway of the lower Elbe. Speed,
-after all, was the main consideration; and it was the struggle for the
-blue riband of the Atlantic which kept the attention of the travelling
-public riveted on these boats.
-
-A statement giving details of the financial results obtained by the
-first four of the new fast steamers which were entered into the service
-of the Company between 1889 and 1891 showed that the earnings up to and
-including the year 1895 did not even cover the working expenses, and
-that those up to 1899 were not sufficient to allow for an interest of 4
-per cent, on the average book values of the steamers. It must be
-remembered, however, that the first of these two periods included the
-disastrous season of 1892-93, when Hamburg was visited by an epidemic of
-cholera. And a different light is shed on the matter also if we further
-remember that depreciation had been allowed for on a generous scale, no
-less than 50 per cent, of the cost price plus the expenditure incurred
-through an enlargement of the _Auguste Victoria_, the oldest of the
-boats, having been deducted on that account. The Packetfahrt, like all
-the other German shipping companies, has always been very liberal in
-making ample provision for depreciation. When, therefore, these steamers
-were sold again at the time of the Spanish-American and Russo-Japanese
-wars, a considerable profit was realized on the transactions which
-enabled the Company to replace them by a very high-grade type of vessel
-(the _Deutschland_, _Amerika_, and _Kaiserin Auguste Victoria_). It must
-be admitted in this connexion that perhaps no shipowner has ever been
-more favoured by fortune than Ballin where the sale of such difficult
-objects as obsolete express steamers was concerned. The value which
-these boats had in relation to the prestige of the Company was very
-considerable; for, as Ballin expressed it to me one day: "The possession
-of the old express steamers of the Packetfahrt certainly proved to be
-something like a white elephant; but just consider how greatly they
-have enhanced the prestige of the Company." They attracted thousands of
-passengers to the Line, and acted as feeders to its other services.
-
-The orders for the first two of these steamers were given towards the
-close of 1887 to the Vulkan yard, at Stettin, and to the firm of Laird
-respectively, at a price of L210,000 each, and the boats were to be
-completed early in 1889. They were the first twin-screw steamers, and
-were provided with the system of "forced draught" for the engines. This
-system had just been introduced in British yards, and Ballin's attention
-had been drawn to it by his friend Wilding, who was always ready to give
-him valuable advice on technical matters. In order to find the means for
-the construction of these and of some other boats, the general meeting
-of the shareholders, held on October 6th, 1887, voted a capital increase
-of 5,000,000 marks and the issue of 6,250,000 marks of debentures.
-Knowing that an improvement of the services was the great need of the
-time, Ballin, since the time of joining the Company, had done all he
-could to make the latter a paying concern again, and in this he
-succeeded. For the year 1886 a dividend of 5 per cent. was paid, and
-thus it became possible to sanction an increase of the joint-stock
-capital.
-
-Further foundations for later successes were laid by the reform of the
-organization and of the technical services of the Company. His work in
-connexion with the Carr Line had taught the youthful head of the
-passenger department that careful attention to the material comfort of
-the steerage passengers could be of great benefit to the Company. He
-continued along lines such as these, and at his suggestion the steerage
-accommodation on two of the Packetfahrt's steamers was equipped with
-electric light, and provided with some single berths as well. This
-latter provision was extended still further during the succeeding year.
-In addition to the fast steamers, some ordinary ones were also ordered
-to be built. In 1888 two steamers were ordered for the Company's West
-Indies service, and shortly afterwards eight units of the Union Line
-were bought at a price of 5,200,000 marks. All these new orders and
-purchases of steamers led to the joint-stock capital being raised from
-20 to 30 million marks. Two more boats were laid down in the Stettin
-Vulkan yard, and a third with the firm of Laird. The express steamer
-then building at the Vulkan yard was named _Auguste Victoria_ in honour
-of the young Empress.
-
-During the summer months of 1887 Ballin, together with Mr. Johannes
-Witt, one of the members of the Board of Trustees, went to New York in
-order to discuss with the agents a reorganization of the New York
-representation, which was looked after by Edward Beck and Kunhardt. In
-consequence of the negotiations which Ballin carried on to that end, the
-agents undertook to submit their business for the Company to the control
-of an officer specially appointed by the Packetfahrt. This small
-beginning led, in later years, to the establishment in New York of the
-Company's direct representation under its own management.
-
-When Ballin joined the Packetfahrt, he did not strictly confine his
-attention to matters connected with the passenger services. When, for
-instance, the head of the freight department was prevented from
-attending a meeting called by the Board of Trustees, Ballin put forward
-a proposal for raising the rates on certain cargo. It was therefore only
-but fit acknowledgment of his many-sided talents, and recognition that
-his energetic character had been the guiding spirit in the Company's
-affairs, that the Board of Trustees appointed Ballin in 1888 a member of
-the Board of Directors after two years with the Packetfahrt. This
-appointment really filled a long-felt gap.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER FOUR
-
-THE POOL
-
-
-The term "pool" may be defined in a variety of ways, but, generally
-speaking, the root idea underlying its meaning is always the same, both
-in its application to business and to betting. A pool, in brief, is a
-combination of a number of business concerns for their own mutual
-interests, all partners having previously agreed upon certain principles
-as to the distribution of the common profits. In other words, it is a
-community of interests concluded upon the basis of dividing the profits
-realized in a certain ratio. I have been unable to discover when and
-where this kind of combination was first used in actual practice. Before
-the transatlantic steamship companies did so, the big trunk lines of the
-United States railway system are said to have used it in connexion with
-the westbound emigrant traffic, and possibly for other purposes also.
-
-When Ballin wrote his memorandum of February 5th, 1886, the steamship
-lines must already have been familiar with the meaning of the term, for
-the memorandum refers to it as something well known. Ballin begins by
-stating that the "Conference of the Northern European Lines" might be
-looked upon as having ceased to exist, seeing that two parties were
-represented on it whose claims were diametrically opposed to each other.
-Whereas the North German Lloyd insisted on the right to lower its rates,
-the Red Star Line claimed that these rates should be raised, so that it
-might obtain a better differential rate for itself. A reconciliation of
-these mutually contradictory views, the memorandum went on to say,
-appeared to be impossible, unless all parties agreed upon an
-understanding which would radically alter the relations then existing
-between their respective interests; and a way leading out of the
-_impasse_ would be found by adopting the pooling system proposed by the
-representative of the Red Star Line. If we take the number of steeragers
-carried to New York from 1881 to 1885 by the six lines concerned as a
-basis, the respective percentages of the total traffic are as follows:
-
- _Percentage_
-
- North German Lloyd 33.45
- North German Lloyd (Baltimore Line) 14.80
- Packetfahrt 27.00
- Union Line 5.53
- Red Star Line 12.26
- Holland American Line 6.96
-
-It was, however, justly pointed out at a meeting of the Conference that
-the amount of tonnage must also be taken into account in laying down the
-principles which were to govern the distribution of the profits. The
-average figures of such tonnage employed by the six lines during the
-same period were:
-
- _Tons_ _Percentage_
-
- North German Lloyd 275,520 33.91
- North German Lloyd (Baltimore
- Line) 63,000 7.76
- Packetfahrt 199,500 24.55
- Union Line 42,840 5.27
- Red Star Line 149,600 18.41
- Holland American Line 82,080 10.10
- ------- -----
- Total tonnage 812,540
-
-The average of both sets of percentage figures worked out as follows:
-
- _Percentage_
-
- North German Lloyd 33.68
- North German Lloyd (Baltimore Line) 11.28
- Packetfahrt 25.77-1/2
- Union Line 5.40
- Red Star Line 15.33-1/2
- Holland American Line 8.53
-
-"It would be necessary," the memorandum continued, "to calculate each
-Company's share annually on the basis of the average figures obtained
-for the five years immediately preceding, so that, for instance, the
-calculation for 1887 would be based on the figures for the five years
-from 1882 to 1886; that for 1888 on those for the period from 1883 to
-1887, and so on. Uniform passage rates and uniform rates of commission
-would have to be agreed upon. To those lines which, like the North
-German Lloyd, maintained a service which was run by fast steamers
-exclusively, would have to be conceded the right to charge in their
-separate accounts passage money up to 10 marks in excess of the normal
-rates, seeing that their expenses were heavier than those of the other
-lines. Those Companies, however, claiming differential rates below the
-general ones agreed upon would have to make up the difference
-themselves, which was not to exceed the amount of 30 marks--i.e. they
-would have to contribute to the common pool a sum equal to the general
-rate without deduction."
-
-The two cardinal principles lying at the root of this proposal were (1)
-the assigning to each line of a definite percentage of the total traffic
-on the basis of the average figures ascertained for a definite period of
-time, and (2) the possibility of further grading these percentages by
-taking into account the amount of tonnage which each line placed at the
-disposal of the joint undertaking. This latter provision--which was
-known during the early stages of the movement as the tonnage clause--was
-intended to prevent any single line from stagnation, and to give scope
-to the spirit of enterprise.
-
-The tonnage clause was not maintained for the whole time during which
-the pool agreement was in force. It was afterwards abolished at the
-instance of the North German Lloyd. This event led, in the long run, to
-the last big crisis which the pool had to pass through by the notice of
-withdrawal given by the Hamburg-Amerika Linie. When this Company
-proposed to considerably enlarge its steerage accommodation through the
-addition to its service of the three big boats of the _Imperator_ class,
-it demanded a corresponding increase of its percentage figure, and, when
-this claim fell through owing to the opposition of the North German
-Lloyd, it gave formal notice of its withdrawal from the pool.
-Precautions taken to counteract this led to negotiations which had to be
-discontinued when the war broke out. Nevertheless, the pool, which was
-first proposed in 1886, and which came into existence in 1892, did a
-great deal of good. More than once, however, the agreement ceased to be
-effective for a time, and this was especially the case on the occasion
-of the struggle with the Cunard Line which followed upon the
-establishment of the Morgan Trust in 1903.
-
-The secretary of the pool was Heinrich Peters, the former head of the
-passenger department of the Lloyd. The choice of Mr. Peters is probably
-not unconnected with the fact that it was he who, at a moment when the
-negotiations for establishing a pool had reached a critical stage,
-appeared on the scene with a clearly-defined proposal, so that he, with
-justice, has been described as "the father of the pool." Shortly before
-his death in the summer of 1921 Mr. Peters wrote to me concerning his
-proposal and the circumstances of its adoption:--
-
-"The history of the events leading up to the creation of the 'North
-Atlantic Steamship Lines Association,'" he wrote in his letter, "was not
-without complications. So much so that after the Conference at Cologne,
-at which it had been found impossible to come to an understanding, I
-went to bed feeling very worried about the future. Shortly afterwards--I
-don't know whether I was half awake or dreaming--the outline of the plan
-which was afterwards adopted stood out clearly before my mind's eye, its
-main features being that each line should be granted a fixed percentage
-of the traffic on the basis of 'Moore's Statistics' (reports issued
-periodically and showing the number of passengers landed in New York at
-regular intervals), and that the principle of compensation should be
-applied to adjust differences. When I was fully awake I found this plan
-so obviously right that, in order not to let it slip my memory, I jotted
-down a note concerning it on my bedside table. Next morning, when
-Ballin, Reuchlin (of the Holland American Line), Strasser (of the Red
-Star Line), and myself met again in the smoking-room of the Hotel du
-Nord, I told them of my inspiration, and my plan was looked upon by them
-with so much favour that Ballin said to me: 'Well now, Peters, you have
-discovered the philosopher's stone.' We then left, previously agreeing
-amongst ourselves that we would think the matter over at our leisure,
-and that we should refrain from taking any steps leading to a conflict,
-at least for the time being. On my return to Bremen I went straight to
-Lohmann (who was director general of the Lloyd at that time), but he
-immediately threw a wet blanket over my enthusiasm. His objection was
-that such an agreement would interfere with the progressive development
-of the Lloyd. A few days later a meeting of the Board of Trustees was
-held at which I entered into the details of my proposal; but I am sorry
-to say that my oratorical gifts were not sufficient to defend it against
-the objections that were raised, nor to prevent its rejection. I can
-hardly imagine what the representatives of the other lines must have
-felt on hearing that it was the Lloyd itself which refused to accept the
-proposal which had been put forward by its own delegate, although the
-share allotted to it was very generous. Thus the struggle went on for
-another eighteen months, and it was not until January, 1892, that the
-principal lines concerned definitely concluded a pool agreement closely
-resembling the draft agreement I had originally proposed.
-
-"The North Atlantic Steamship Lines Association was originally intended
-to remain in existence for the period of five years; but as it was
-recognized by all parties that it was necessarily a step in the dark,
-people had become so doubtful as to the wisdom of what they had done
-that a clause was added to the effect that it could be cancelled after
-the first six months provided a fortnight's notice was given by any
-partner to it. Nevertheless, the agreement successfully weathered a
-severe crisis during the very first year of its existence, when the
-disastrous cholera epidemic paralysed the Hamburg trade and shipping."
-
-That this account is correct is confirmed by the minutes of the Cologne
-meeting of February 6th, 1890.
-
-The British lines definitely declined in March, 1892, to join the pool.
-Thus the plan finally agreed upon in 1892 was subscribed to by the
-Continental lines alone, with the exception of the French line. In
-contrast with previous proposals, the eastbound traffic was also to be
-parcelled out by the lines forming the pool.
-
-This so-called North Atlantic Steamship Lines Association, the backbone
-of the later and greater pool, was built up on the following
-percentages:
-
- _Westbound_ _Eastbound_
- _traffic_ (_p.c._) _traffic_ (_p.c._)
-
- North German Lloyd 46.16 44.53
- Packetfahrt (including the Union
- Line) 28.84 18.47
- Red Star Line 15.70 20.68
- Holland American Line 9.30 16.32
-
-These percentages were subject to the effect of the tonnage clause by
-which it was provided that 50 per cent. of the tonnage (expressed in
-gross registered tons) which any line should possess at any time in
-excess of that possessed in 1890 should entitle such line to an increase
-of its percentage.
-
-It has already been stated that Mr. Heinrich Peters was appointed
-secretary of the pool. He, in compliance with the provision that the
-secretariat should be domiciled at a "neutral" place, chose the small
-university town of Jena for his residence. Thus this town, so famous in
-the literary annals of Germany, became, for more than twenty years, the
-centre of an international organization with which few, if any, other
-places could vie in importance, especially since the four lines which
-had just concluded the original pool were joined, in course of time, by
-the British lines, the French line, the Austrian line, and some
-Scandinavian and Russian lines as well. Later on a special pool was set
-up for the Mediterranean business which, in addition to the German,
-British, and Austro-Hungarian lines, also comprised the French
-Mediterranean, the Italian, and the Greek lines, as well as one Spanish
-line. The business of all these lines was centred at Jena.
-
-Of considerable importance to the smooth working of the pool was the
-court of arbitration attached to its organization. On account of the
-prominent position occupied by the German companies, German law was
-agreed to as binding for the decisions, and since at the time when the
-pool was founded, Germany did not possess a uniform Code of Civil Law
-for all parts of the Empire, the law ruling at Cologne was recognized to
-be applicable to such purposes. Cologne was the city at which the
-establishment of the pool was decided upon, and there all the important
-meetings that became necessary in course of time were held. The chairman
-of the Cologne Association of Solicitors was nominated president of the
-arbitration court, but later on this office devolved on President
-Hansen, a member of the Supreme Court for the Hanseatic cities, who
-filled his post for a long term of years--surely a proof of the
-confidence and esteem with which he was honoured by all parties
-concerned. Numerous awards issued by him, and still more numerous
-resolutions adopted at the many conferences, have supplemented the
-original pool agreement, thus forming the nucleus of a real code of
-legislation affecting all matters dealing with the pool in which a large
-number of capable men drawn from the legal profession and from the world
-of business have collaborated.
-
-The knowledge of these regulations gradually developed into a science of
-its own, and each line had to possess one or more specialists who were
-experts in these questions among the members of its staff. I am sure
-they will unanimously agree that Albert Ballin surpassed them all in his
-knowledge of the intricate details. His wonderful memory enabled him,
-after a lapse of more than twenty years, to recall every phase in the
-history of the pool, so that he acquired an unrivalled mastery in the
-conduct of pool conferences. This is abundantly borne out by the fact
-that in 1908, when negotiations were started in London for the
-establishment of a general pool--i.e. one comprising the whole of
-Northern Europe, including Great Britain--Ballin, at the proposal of the
-British lines, was selected chairman of the conference which, after
-several critical phases had been passed through, led to a complete
-success and an all-round understanding.
-
-In 1892 the normal development of business was greatly handicapped by
-the terrible epidemic of cholera then raging in Hamburg. For a time the
-United States completely closed her doors to all emigrants from the
-Continent, and it was not until the following year that conditions
-became normal again. Nevertheless Ballin, in order to extend the various
-understandings between the Northern European lines, took an important
-step, even before the close of 1892, by falling back upon a measure
-which he had already once employed in 1886. His object was to make the
-British lines more favourably inclined towards an understanding, and to
-this end he attacked them once more in the Scandinavian business. The
-actual occasion which led to the conflict was that the British lines,
-owing to differences of opinion among themselves, had given notice of
-withdrawal from the Hamburg agreement and from the Hamburg clearing
-house. This gave the Packetfahrt a free hand against its British
-competitors, and enabled it to carry as many as 2,500 Scandinavian
-passengers via Hamburg in 1892. The position of the Packetfahrt during
-the ensuing rate war was considerably improved by the agreement which it
-had concluded with the Hamburg agents of the British lines, who,
-although their principals had declared their withdrawal from the pool,
-undertook to maintain the rate which had been jointly agreed upon by
-both parties.
-
-Some time had to elapse before this move had its desired effect on the
-British lines. Early in 1894 they declared themselves ready to come to
-an understanding with the Continental lines on condition that they were
-granted 7 per cent. of the Continental traffic (in 1891 they had been
-offered 14 per cent.), and that the Packetfahrt was to discontinue its
-Scandia Line.
-
-This general readiness of the British companies, however, did not
-preclude the hostility of some of their number against any such
-agreement, and so the proposal fell through. The proposed understanding
-came to grief owing to the refusal of the Cunard Line to join a
-Continental pool at the very moment when the negotiations with the
-British lines had, after a great deal of trouble, led to a preliminary
-understanding with them. A letter which Ballin received from an English
-friend in January, 1894, shows how difficult it was to make the British
-come round to the idea of a pool. In this letter it was said that the
-time was not ripe then for successfully persuading the British lines to
-join any pool or any other form of understanding which would necessitate
-agreement on a large number of details. All that could be expected to be
-done at the time, the writer continued, was a rate agreement of the
-simplest possible kind, and he thought that if such an understanding
-were agreed to and loyally carried out, that would be an important step
-forward towards arriving at a general agreement of much wider scope.
-
-To such vague agreements, however, the Continental lines objected on
-principle, and the opposition of the Cunard Line made it impossible to
-agree upon anything more definite. Thus the struggle was chiefly waged
-against this line. The Continental lines were assisted by the American
-Line, which had sailings from British ports, and with the management of
-which Ballin had been on very friendly terms ever since the time when
-he, as the owner of the firm of Morris and Co., had worked for it. After
-the conflict had been going on for several months, it terminated with a
-victory of the Continental lines. Thus the road was at last clear for
-an attempt to make the whole North Atlantic business pay.
-
-The first step in that direction was the conclusion, in 1896, of an
-agreement concerning the cabin business. The Packetfahrt's annual report
-for that year states that the results obtained through the carrying of
-cabin passengers could only be described as exceedingly unfavourable,
-considering that the huge working expenses connected with that kind of
-business had to be taken into account. Nevertheless, this traffic, which
-had reached a total of more than 200,000 passengers during the preceding
-year, could be made a source of great profit to the companies if they
-could be persuaded to act in unison. The agreement then concluded was at
-first restricted to the fixing of the rates on a uniform scale.
-
-Both these agreements--the one dealing with the steerage and the one
-dealing with the cabin business--were concluded, in 1895, for three
-years in the first instance. In May, 1898, discussions were opened in
-London, at which Ballin presided, with a view to extending the period of
-their duration, and these proceedings, after a time, led to a successful
-conclusion, but in June, Ballin again presiding, the desired
-understanding was reached. A few weeks later an agreement concerning the
-second cabin rates was also arrived at, and towards the close of the
-year negotiations were started with a view to the extension of the
-steerage agreement. In 1899 the pool was extended to run for a further
-period of five years, under percentages:
-
- _Westbound_ _Eastbound_
- _traffic_ (_p.c._) _traffic_ (_p.c._)
-
- North German Lloyd 44.14 41.53
- Packetfahrt 30.71 26.47
- Red Star Line 15.37 18.68
- Holland American Line 9.78 13.32
-
-To the Packetfahrt these new percentages meant a step forward, although
-the omission of the tonnage clause was a decided hindrance to its
-further progress.
-
-The next important event in the development of the relations between the
-transatlantic lines was the establishment of the so-called Morgan Trust
-and the conclusion of a "community of interest" agreement between it and
-the German lines.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE MORGAN TRUST
-
-
-Speaking generally, the transatlantic shipping business may be said to
-consist of three great branches, viz. the cargo, the steerage, and the
-cabin business. The pool agreements that were concluded between the
-interested companies covered only the cargo business and the steerage
-traffic. The condition which alone makes it possible for the owners to
-work the shipping business on remunerative lines is that all needless
-waste of material must be strictly banned. The great advantage which was
-secured by concluding the pool agreement was that it satisfied this
-condition during the more than twenty years of its existence, to the
-mutual profit of the associated lines. Each company knew that the
-addition of new steamers to its fleet would only pay if part of a
-carefully considered plan, and if, in course of time, such an increase
-of tonnage would give it a claim to an increase of the percentage of
-traffic allotted to its services.
-
-Much less satisfactory was the state of things with regard to the third
-branch of the shipping business, viz. the cabin traffic. A regular
-"cabin pool," with a _pro rata_ distribution of the traffic, was never
-established, although the idea had frequently been discussed. All that
-was achieved was an agreement as to the fares charged by each company
-which were to be graded according to the quality of the boats it
-employed in its services. Owing to the absence of any more far-reaching
-understandings, and to the competition between the various
-companies--each of which was constantly trying to outdo its competitors
-as regards the speed and comfort of its boats, in order to attract to
-its own services as many passengers as possible--the number of
-first-class boats increased out of all proportion to the actual
-requirements, and frequent and regular services were maintained by each
-line throughout the year. There was hardly a day on which first-class
-steamers did not enter upon voyages across the Atlantic from either
-side, and the result was that the boats were fully booked during the
-season only, i.e. in the spring and early part of summer on their
-East-bound, and in the latter part of summer and in the autumn on their
-Westbound, voyages. During the remaining months a number of berths were
-empty, and the fares obtainable were correspondingly unprofitable.
-Ballin, in 1902, estimated the unnecessary expenditure to which the
-companies were put in any single year owing to this unbusinesslike state
-of affairs at not less then 50 million marks. The desire to do away with
-conditions such as these by extending the pool agreement so as to
-develop it into a community-of-interest agreement of comprehensive scope
-was one of the two principal reasons leading to the formation of the
-Morgan Trust. The other reason was the wish to bring about a system of
-co-operation between the European and the American interests.
-
-This desire was prompted by the recognition of the cardinal importance
-to the transatlantic shipping companies of the economic conditions
-ruling in the United States. The cargo business depended very largely on
-the importation of European goods into the United States, and on the
-exportation of American agricultural produce to Europe which varied from
-season to season according to the size of the crop and to the consuming
-capacity of Europe. The steerage business, of course, relied in the main
-on the capacity of the United States for absorbing European immigrants,
-which capacity, though fluctuating, was practically unlimited. The
-degree of prosperity of the cabin business, however, was determined by
-the number of people who travelled from the States to Europe, either on
-business, or on pleasure, or to recuperate their health at some European
-watering-place, at the Riviera, etc. Social customs and the attractions
-which the Paris houses of fashion exercised on the American ladies also
-formed a considerable factor which had to be relied on for a prosperous
-season. In the transatlantic shipping business, in fact, America is
-pre-eminently the giving, and Europe the receiving, partner. Thus it was
-natural to realize the advisability of entering into direct relations
-with American business men.
-
-To the Packetfahrt, and especially to Ballin, credit is due for having
-attempted before anybody else to give practical shape to this idea. His
-efforts in this direction date far back to the early years of his
-business career. We possess evidence of this in the form of a letter
-which he wrote in 1891 to Mr. B. N. Baker, who was at the head of one of
-the few big American shipping companies, the Atlantic Transport Company,
-the headquarters of which were at Baltimore, and which ran its services
-chiefly to Great Britain. Mr. Baker was a personal friend of Ballin's.
-The letter was written after some direct discussions had taken place
-between the two men, and its contents were as follows:--
-
- "I replied a few days ago officially to your valued favour of the
- 4th ult. to the effect that in consonance with your expressed
- suggestion one of the Directors will proceed to New York in
- September with a view to conferring with you about the matter at
- issue.
-
- "Having in the meantime made it a point to go more fully into your
- communication, I find that the opinions which I have been able to
- form on your propositions meet your expressed views to a much
- larger extent than you will probably have supposed. I have not yet
- had an opportunity of talking the matter over with my colleagues,
- and I therefore do not know how far they will be prepared to fall
- in with my views. But in order to enable me to frame and bring
- forward my ideas more forcibly here, I think it useful to write to
- you this strictly confidential letter, requesting you to inform
- me--if feasible by cable--what you think of the following project:
-
- "(1) You take charge of our New York Agency for the freight, and
- also for the passage business, etc.
-
- "(2) You engage those of our officials now attached to our New York
- branch whom we may desire to retain in the business.
-
- "(3) You take over half of our Baltimore Line in the manner that
- each party provides two suitable steamers fitted for the transport
- of emigrants. To this end I propose you should purchase at their
- cost price the two steamers which are in course of construction in
- Hamburg at present for our Baltimore Line (320 feet length, 40 feet
- beam, 27 feet moulded, steerage 8 feet, carrying 3,500 tons on 22
- feet and about 450 steeragers, guaranteed to steam 11 knots, ready
- in October this year), and we to provide two similar steamers for
- this service. The earnings to be divided under a pool system.
-
- "(4) Your concern takes up one million dollars of our shares with
- the obligation not to sell them so long as you control our American
- business. I may remark that just at present our shares are
- obtainable cheaply in consequence of the general depression
- prevailing in the European money market, and further, owing to the
- fact that only a small dividend is expected on account of the very
- poor return freight ruling from North America. I think you would be
- able to take the shares out of the market at an average of about 7
- per cent. above par. We have paid in the last years since we
- concluded the pool with the Union Line, viz. in 1886 4 per cent.,
- 1887 6 per cent., 1888 8-1/2 per cent., 1889 11 per cent., 1890 8
- per cent. in the way of dividends, and during this time we wrote
- off for depreciation and added to the reserve funds about 60 per
- cent.
-
- "The position of our Company is an excellent one, our fleet
- consisting of modern ships (average age only about five years), and
- the book values of them being very low.
-
- "I should be obliged to you for thinking the matter over and
- informing me--if possible by cable--if you would be prepared to
- enter into negotiations on this basis. I myself start from the
- assumption that it might be good policy for our Company to obtain
- in the States a centre of interest and a position similar to that
- held by the Red Star Line and the Inman Lines in view of their
- connexion with the Pennsylvania Railroad, etc. It further strikes
- me that if this project is brought into effect one of your concern
- should become a member of our Board. I should thank you to return
- me this letter which, as I think it right expressly to point out to
- you, contains only what are purely my individual ideas."
-
-It may be assumed that the writing of this letter was prompted not only
-by the Packetfahrt's desire to strengthen its position in the United
-States, but also by its wish to obtain a foothold in Great Britain. This
-would enable it to exercise greater pressure on the competing British
-lines, which--indirectly, at least--still did a considerable portion of
-the Continental business. Ballin's suggestion did not lead to any
-practical result at the time, but was taken up again eight years later,
-in 1899, on the advice of Mr. (now Lord) Pirrie, of Messrs. Harland and
-Wolff, of Belfast. Important interests, partly of a financial character,
-linked his firm to British transatlantic shipping; and his special
-reason for taking up Ballin's proposal was to prevent an alliance
-between Mr. Baker's Atlantic Transport Company and the British Leyland
-Line, a scheme which was pushed forward from another quarter. He induced
-Mr. Baker to come to Europe so that the matter might be discussed
-directly. The attractiveness of the idea to Ballin was still further
-enhanced by the circumstance that the Atlantic Transport Line also
-controlled the National Line which maintained a service between New
-York and London, and was, indeed, the decisive factor on the New
-York-London route. Ballin, accordingly, after obtaining permission from
-the Board of Trustees, went to London, where he met Mr. Baker and Mr.
-Pirrie.
-
-It soon became clear, however, that the Board of Trustees did not wish
-to sanction such far-reaching changes. When Ballin cabled the details of
-the scheme to Hamburg, it was seen that 25 million marks--half the
-amount in shares of the Packetfahrt--would be needed to carry it
-through. Thus the discussions had to be broken off; but the attitude
-which the Board had taken up was very much resented by Ballin.
-Subsequent negotiations which were entered into in the early part of
-1900 in Hamburg at the suggestion of Mr. Baker also failed to secure
-agreement, and shortly afterwards the American company was bought up by
-the Leyland Line.
-
-At the same time a movement was being set on foot in the United States
-which aimed at a strengthening of the American mercantile marine by
-means of Government subsidies. This circumstance suggested to Mr. Baker
-the possibility of setting up an American shipping concern consisting of
-the combined Leyland and Atlantic Transport Company lines together with
-the British White Star Line, which was to profit by the expected
-legislation concerning shipping subsidies. Neither the latter idea,
-however, nor Mr. Baker's project assumed practical shape; but the
-Atlantic Transport-Leyland concern was enlarged by the addition of a
-number of other British lines, viz. the National Line, the
-Wilson-Furness-Leyland Line, and the West Indian and Pacific Line, all
-of which were managed by the owner of the Leyland Line, Mr. Ellerman,
-the well-known British shipping man of German descent. The tonnage
-represented by these combined interests amounted to half a million tons,
-and the new combine was looked upon as an undesirable competitor, by
-both the Packetfahrt and the British lines. The dissatisfaction felt by
-the latter showed itself, among other things, in their refusal to come
-to any mutual understanding regarding the passenger business. In the
-end, Mr. Baker himself was so little pleased with the way things turned
-out in practice that he severed his connexion with the other lines
-shortly afterwards, and once more the question became urgent whether it
-would be advisable for the Packetfahrt--either alone, or in conjunction
-with the White Star Line and the firm of Messrs. Harland and Wolff--to
-purchase the Atlantic Transport Line.
-
-That was the time when Mr. Pierpont Morgan's endeavours to create the
-combine, which has since then become known as the Morgan Trust, first
-attracted public attention. Ballin's notes give an exhaustive
-description of the course of the negotiations which lasted nearly
-eighteen months and were entered into in order to take precautions
-against the danger threatening from America, whilst at the same time
-they aimed at some understanding with Mr. Morgan, because the
-opportunity thus presented of setting up an all-embracing organization
-promoting the interests of all the transatlantic steamship concerns
-seemed too good to be lost. Ballin's notes for August, 1901, contain the
-following entry:
-
-"The grave economic depression from which Germany is suffering is
-assuming a more dangerous character every day. It is now spreading to
-other countries as well, and only the United States seem to have escaped
-so far. In addition to our other misfortunes, there is the
-unsatisfactory maize-crop in the States which, together with the other
-factors, has demoralized the whole freight business within an
-incredibly short space of time. For a concern of the huge size of our
-own such a situation is fraught with the greatest danger, and our
-position is made still worse by another circumstance. In the States, a
-country whose natural resources are wellnigh inexhaustible, and whose
-enterprising population has immensely increased its wealth, the creation
-of trusts is an event of everyday occurrence. The banker, Pierpont
-Morgan--a man of whom it is said that he combines the possession of an
-enormous fortune with an intelligence which is simply astounding--has
-already created the Steel Trust, the biggest combination the world has
-ever seen, and he has now set about to lay the foundations for an
-American mercantile marine."
-
-A short report on the position then existing which Ballin made for
-Prince Henckell-Donnersmarck, who had himself called into being some big
-industrial combinations, is of interest even now, although the situation
-has entirely changed. But if we want to understand the position as it
-then was we must try to appreciate the views held at that time, and this
-the report helps us to do. Ballin had been referred to Prince
-Henckell-Donnersmarck by the Kaiser, who had a high opinion of the
-latter's business abilities, and who had watched with lively interest
-the American shipping projects from the start, because he anticipated
-that they would produce an adverse effect on the future development of
-the German shipping companies. The report is given below:--
-
- "In 1830 about 90 per cent. of the United States sea-borne trade
- was still carried by vessels flying the American flag. By 1862 this
- percentage had gone down to 50 per cent., and it has shown a
- constant decrease ever since. In 1880 it had dwindled down to 16
- per cent., and in 1890 to as low a figure as 9 per cent. During
- recent years this falling off, which is a corollary of the customs
- policy pursued by the United States, has given rise to a number of
- legislative measures intended to promote the interests of American
- shipping by the granting of Government subsidies. No practical
- steps of importance, however, have been taken so far; all that has
- been done is that subsidies have been granted to run a North
- Atlantic mail service maintained by means of four steamers, but no
- success worth mentioning has been achieved until now.
-
- "Quite recently the well-known American banker, Mr. J. Pierpont
- Morgan, conjointly with some other big American capitalists, has
- taken an interest in the plan. The following facts have become
- known so far in connexion with his efforts:
-
- "Morgan has acquired the Leyland Line, of Liverpool, which,
- according to the latest register, owns a fleet of 54 vessels,
- totalling 155,489 gross register tons. This purchase includes the
- West India and Pacific Line, which was absorbed into the Leyland
- Line as recently as a twelvemonth ago. The Mediterranean service
- formerly carried on by the Leyland Line has not been acquired by
- Morgan. He has, however, added the Atlantic Transport Company.
- Morgan's evident intention is to form a big American shipping
- trust, and I have received absolutely reliable information to the
- effect that the American Line and the Red Star Line are also going
- to join the combine. The shares of the two last-named lines are
- already for the most part in American hands, and both companies are
- being managed from New York. Both lines together own 23 steamers
- representing 86,811 tons.
-
- "A correct estimate of the size of the undertaking can only be
- formed if the steamers now building for the various companies, and
- those that have been added to their fleets since the publication of
- the register from which the above figures are taken, are also taken
- into account. These vessels represent a total tonnage of about
- 200,000 tons, so that the new American concern would possess a
- fleet representing 430,000 gross register tons. The corresponding
- figures for the Hamburg-Amerika Linie and for the Lloyd, including
- steamers building, are 650,000 and 600,000 tons respectively.
-
- "The proper method of rightly appreciating the importance of the
- American coalition is to restrict the comparison, as far as the two
- German companies are concerned, to the amount of tonnage which they
- employ in their services to and from United States ports. If this
- is borne in mind, we arrive at the following figures: German
- lines--390,000 G.R.T.; American concern--about 430,000 G.R.T. These
- figures show that, as regards the amount of tonnage employed, the
- Morgan Trust is superior to the two German companies on the North
- Atlantic route. It can also challenge comparison with the regular
- British lines--grand total, 438,566 G.R.T.
-
- "In all the steps he has taken, Morgan, no doubt, has been guided
- by his confidence in his ability to enforce the passing of a
- Subsidy Act by Congress in favour of his undertaking. So long as he
- does not succeed in these efforts of his he will, of course, be
- obliged to operate the lines of which he has secured control under
- foreign flags. Up to the present only four steamers of the American
- Line, viz. the _New York_, _Philadelphia_, _St. Louis_, and _St.
- Paul_, are flying the United States flag, whereas the remaining
- vessels of the American Line, and those of the Leyland, the West
- India and Pacific, the American Transport, the National, and the
- Furness-Boston lines, are sailing under the British, and those of
- the Red Star Line under the Belgian flag.
-
- "The organization which Mr. Morgan either has created, or is
- creating, is not in itself a danger to the two German shipping
- companies; neither can it be said that the Government
- subsidies--provided they do not exceed an amount that is justified
- by the conditions actually existing--are in themselves detrimental
- to the German interests. The real danger, however, threatens from
- the amalgamation of the American railway interests with those of
- American shipping.
-
- "It is no secret that Morgan is pursuing his far-reaching plans as
- the head of a syndicate which comprises a number of the most
- important and most enterprising business men in the United States,
- and that the railway interests are particularly well represented in
- it. Morgan himself, during his stay in London a few months ago,
- stated to some British shipping men that, according to his
- estimates, nearly 70 per cent. of the goods which are shipped to
- Europe from the North Atlantic ports are carried to the latter by
- the railroads on Through Bills of Lading, and that their further
- transport is entrusted to foreign shipping companies. He and his
- friends, Morgan added, did not see any reason why the railroad
- companies should leave it to foreign-owned companies to carry those
- American goods across the Atlantic. It would be much more logical
- to bring about an amalgamation of the American railroad and
- shipping interests for the purpose of securing the whole profits
- for American capital.
-
- "This projected combination of the railroad and sea-borne traffic
- is, as I have pointed out, a great source of danger to the foreign
- shipping companies, as it will expose them to the possibility of
- finding their supplies from the United States _hinterland_ cut off.
- This latter traffic is indispensable to the remunerative working of
- our North American services, and it is quite likely that Morgan's
- statement that they amount to about 70 per cent. of the total
- sea-borne traffic is essentially correct."
-
-The negotiations which Ballin carried on in this connexion are described
-as follows in his notes:--
-
- "When I was in London in July (1901), I had an opportunity of
- discussing this American business with Mr. Pirrie. Pirrie had
- already informed me some time ago that he would like to talk to me
- on this subject, but he had never indicated until then that Morgan
- had actually instructed him to discuss matters with me. A second
- meeting took place at which Ismay (the chairman of the White Star
- Line) was present in addition to Pirrie and myself, and it was
- agreed that Pirrie should go to New York and find out from Morgan
- himself what were his plans regarding the White Star Line and the
- Hamburg-Amerika Linie.
-
- "Shortly after Pirrie's return from the States I went to London to
- talk things over with him. He had already sent me a wire to say
- that he had also asked Mr. Wilding to take part in our meeting; and
- this circumstance induced me to call on Mr. Wilding when I passed
- through Southampton _en route_ for London. What he told me filled
- me with as much concern as surprise. He informed me that the
- syndicate intended to acquire the White Star Line, but that, owing
- to my relations with the Kaiser, the acquisition of the
- Hamburg-Amerika Linie was not contemplated. Morgan, he further told
- me, was willing to work on the most friendly terms with us, as far
- as this could be done without endangering the interests of the
- syndicate; but the fact was that the biggest American railroad
- companies had already approached the syndicate, and that they had
- offered terms of co-operation which were practically identical with
- a combination between themselves and the syndicate.
-
- "In the course of the discussions then proceeding between Pirrie,
- Wilding, and myself the situation changed to our advantage, and I
- was successful in seeing my own proposals accepted, the essence of
- which was that, on the one hand, our independence should be
- respected, that the nationality of our company should not be
- interfered with, and that no American members should be added to
- our Board of Trustees; whilst, on the other hand, a fairly close
- contact was to be established between the two concerns, and
- competition between them was to be eliminated."
-
-The draft agreement, which was discussed at these meetings in London
-(and which was considerably altered later on), provided that it should
-run for ten years, and that a mutual interchange of shares between the
-two concerns should be effected, the amount of shares thus exchanged to
-represent a value of 20 million marks (equivalent to 25 per cent. of the
-joint-stock capital of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie). Mutual participation
-was provided for in case of any future increase in the capital of either
-company; but the American concern was prohibited from purchasing any
-additional shares of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie. The voting rights for
-the Hamburg shares should be assigned to Ballin for life, and those for
-the American shares to Morgan on the same terms. Instead of actually
-parting with its shares, the Hamburg company was to have the option of
-paying their equivalent in steamers. The agreement emphasized that,
-whilst recognizing the desirability of as far-reaching a financial
-participation as possible, Ballin did not believe that, with due regard
-to German public opinion and to the wishes of the Imperial Government,
-he was justified in recommending an interchange of shares exceeding the
-amount agreed upon. The American concern was prohibited from calling at
-any German ports, and the Hamburg company agreed not to run any services
-to such European ports as were served by the other party. A pool
-agreement covering the cabin business was entered into; and with respect
-to the steerage and cargo business it was agreed that the existing
-understandings should be maintained until they expired, and that
-afterwards a special understanding should be concluded between both
-contracting parties.
-
-Immediately after Ballin's return to Hamburg the Board of Trustees
-unanimously expressed its agreement in principle with the proposals.
-
-"For my own part," Ballin says in his notes on these matters, "I
-declared that I could only regard the practical execution of these
-proposals as possible if they receive the unequivocal assent of the
-Kaiser and of the Imperial Chancellor. Next evening I was surprised to
-receive two telegrams, one from the Lord Chamberlain's office, and one
-from the Kaiser, commanding my presence on the following day for dinner
-at the Hubertusstock hunting lodge of the Kaiser, where I was invited to
-stay until the afternoon of the second day following. I left for Berlin
-on the same evening, October 16th (1901); and, together with the
-Chancellor, I continued my journey the following day to Eberswalde. At
-that town a special carriage conveyed us to Hubertusstock, where we
-arrived after a two-hours' drive, and where I was privileged to spend
-two unforgettable days in most intimate intercourse with the Kaiser. The
-Chancellor had previously informed me that the Kaiser did not like the
-terms of the agreement, because Metternich had told him that the
-Americans would have the right to acquire 20 million marks' worth of our
-shares. During an after-dinner walk with the Kaiser, on which we were
-accompanied by the Chancellor and the Kaiser's A.D.C., Captain v.
-Grumme, I explained the whole proposals in detail. I pointed out to the
-Kaiser that whereas the British lines engaged in the North Atlantic
-business were simply absorbed by the trust, the proposed agreement would
-leave the independence of the German lines intact. This made the Kaiser
-inquire what was to become of the North German Lloyd, and I had to
-promise that I would see to it that the Lloyd would not be exposed to
-any immediate danger arising out of our agreement, and that it would be
-given an opportunity of becoming a partner to it as well. The Kaiser
-then wanted to see the actual text of the agreement as drafted in
-London. When I produced it from my pocket we entered the room adjacent
-to the entrance of the lodge, which happened to be the small bedroom of
-Captain v. Grumme; and there a meeting, which lasted several hours, was
-held, the Kaiser reading out aloud every article of the agreement, and
-discussing every single item. The Kaiser himself was sitting on Captain
-v. Grumme's bed; the Chancellor and myself occupied the only two chairs
-available in the room, the Captain comfortably seating himself on a
-table. The outcome of the proceedings was that the Kaiser declared
-himself completely satisfied with the proposals, only commissioning me,
-as I have explained, to look after the interests of the North German
-Lloyd.
-
-"On the afternoon of the following day, after lunch, the Chancellor and
-I returned to Berlin, this giving me a chance of discussing with the
-former--as I had previously done with the Kaiser--every question of
-importance. On October 18th I arrived back in Hamburg."
-
-The negotiations with the North German Lloyd which Ballin had undertaken
-to enter upon proved to be very difficult, the Director General of that
-company, Dr. Wiegand, not sharing Ballin's views with respect to the
-American danger and the significance of the American combination. After
-Ballin, however, had explained the proposals in detail, the Lloyd people
-altered their previously held opinion, and in the subsequent London
-discussions, which were resumed in November, the President of the Lloyd,
-Mr. Plate, also took part. Nevertheless, it was found impossible to
-agree definitely there and then, and a further discussion between the
-two directors general took place at Potsdam on November 13th, both of
-them having been invited to dinner by the Kaiser, who was sitting
-between the two gentlemen at the table. Ballin's suggestion that he and
-Dr. Wiegand should proceed to New York in order to ascertain whether the
-shipping companies and the American railroads had actually entered into
-a combination, was heartily seconded by the Kaiser, and was agreed to by
-Dr. Wiegand. The Lloyd people, however, were still afraid that the
-proposed understanding would jeopardize the independence of the German
-lines; but Ballin, by giving detailed explanations of the points
-connected with the financial provisions, succeeded in removing these
-fears, and the Board of Trustees of the Lloyd expressed themselves
-satisfied with these explanations. They insisted upon the omission of
-the clauses dealing with the financial participation, but agreed to the
-proposals in every other respect.
-
-The arrangements for such mutual exchange of shares were thereupon
-dropped in the final drafting of the agreement, and were replaced by a
-mutual participation in the distribution of dividends, the American
-concern guaranteeing the German lines a dividend of 6 per cent., and
-only claiming a share in a dividend exceeding that figure. This change
-owed its origin to a proposal put forward by Mr. v. Hansemann, the
-Director of the Disconto-Gesellschaft, who had taken an active interest
-in the development of the whole matter.
-
-In the course of the negotiations the Lloyd made a further proposal by
-which it was intended to safeguard the German national character of the
-two great shipping companies. It was suggested that a
-corporation--somewhat similar to the Preussische Seehandlung--should be
-set up by the Imperial Government with the assistance of some privately
-owned capital. This corporation should purchase such a part of the
-shares of each company as would defeat any attempts at destroying their
-national character. Ballin, however, to whom any kind of Government
-interference in shipping matters was anathema, would have nothing to do
-with this plan, and thus it fell through.
-
-Ballin thereupon having informed the Kaiser in Kiel on board the
-battleship _Kaiser Wilhelm II_ regarding the progress of the
-negotiations, a further meeting with the Lloyd people took place early
-in December, which led to a complete agreement among the two German
-companies as to the final proposals to be submitted to the American
-group; and shortly afterwards, at a meeting held at Cologne, agreement
-was also secured with Mr. Pirrie. The final discussions took place in
-New York early in February, Ballin and Mr. Tietgens, the chairman of the
-Board of Directors, acting on behalf of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie, and
-President Plate and Dr. Wiegand on that of the Lloyd. Meanwhile,
-Morgan's negotiations with the White Star Line and other British
-companies had also led to a successful termination. Concerning the New
-York meetings we find an interesting entry in Ballin's diary:
-
- "In the afternoon of February 13th, 1902, Messrs. Griscom, Widener,
- Wilding, and Battle, and two sons of Mr. Griscom met us in
- conference. Various suggestions were put forward in the course of
- the proceedings which necessitated further deliberations in private
- between ourselves and the Bremen gentlemen, and it was agreed to
- convene a second general meeting at the private office of Mr.
- Griscom on the 15th floor of the Empire Building. This meeting was
- held in the forenoon of the following day, and a complete agreement
- was arrived at concerning the more important of the questions that
- were still open. I took up the position that the combine would only
- be able to make the utmost possible use of its power if we
- succeeded in securing control of the Cunard and Holland American
- Lines. I was glad to find that Mr. Morgan shared my view. He
- authorized me to negotiate on his behalf with Director Van den
- Toorn, the representative of the Holland American Line, and after a
- series of meetings a preliminary agreement was reached giving
- Morgan the option of purchasing 51 per cent. of the shares of the
- Holland American Line. Morgan undertook to negotiate with the
- Cunard Line through the intermediary of some British friends. It
- has been settled that, if the control of the two companies in
- question is secured to the combine, one half of it should be
- exercised by the American group, and the other half should be
- divided between the Lloyd and ourselves. This arrangement will
- assure the German lines of a far-reaching influence on the future
- development of affairs.
-
- "On the following Thursday the agreements, which were meanwhile
- ready in print, were signed. We addressed a joint telegram to the
- Kaiser, informing him of the definite conclusion of the agreement,
- to which he sent me an exceedingly gracious reply. The Kaiser's
- telegram was dispatched from Hubertusstock, and its text was as
- follows:
-
- "'Ballin, Director General of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie, New York.
- Have received your joint message with sincere satisfaction. Am
- especially pleased that it reached me in the same place where the
- outlines gained form and substance in October last. You must be
- grateful to St. Hubertus. He seems to know something about shipping
- as well. In recognition of your untiring efforts and of the success
- of your labours I confer upon you the Second Class of my Order of
- the Red Eagle with the Crown. Remember me to Henry.--WILHELM I.R.'
-
- "Morgan gave a dinner in our honour at his private residence which
- abounds in treasures of art of all descriptions, and the other
- gentlemen also entertained us with lavish hospitality. Tietgens and
- I returned the compliment by giving a dinner at the Holland House
- which was of special interest because it was attended not only by
- the partners of Morgan, but also by Mr. Jacob Schiff, of Messrs.
- Kuhn, Loeb & Co., who had been Morgan's opponents in the conflict
- concerning the Northern Pacific. During the following week the
- Lloyd provided a big dinner on board the _Kronprinz Wilhelm_ for
- about 200 invited guests.
-
- "Prince Henry of Prussia was one of the passengers of the
- _Kronprinz Wilhelm_ which, owing to the inclemency of the weather,
- arrived in New York one day behind her scheduled time. On the day
- of her arrival--Sunday, February 23rd--I had dinner on board the
- _Hohenzollern_. We also took part in a number of other celebrations
- in honour of the Prince. Especially memorable and of extraordinary
- sumptuousness was the lunch at which Mr. Morgan presided, and at
- which one hundred captains of industry--leading American business
- men from all parts of the States--were present. On the evening of
- the same day the press dinner took place which 1,200 newspaper men
- had arranged in honour of the Prince. Mr. Schiff introduced me to
- Mr. Harriman, the chairman of the Union Pacific, with whom I
- entered into discussions concerning our participation in the San
- Francisco-Far East business."
-
-At the request of the American group the publication of the agreement
-was delayed for some time, because it was thought desirable to wait for
-the final issue of the Congress debates on the Subsidies Bill. A report
-which Ballin, after some further discussion with Morgan and his London
-friends had taken place, made for the German Embassy in London,
-describes the situation as it appeared in April, 1902. It runs as
-follows:
-
- "(1) Acquisition of the joint control of the Cunard Line by the two
- German companies and the American syndicate. On this subject
- discussions have taken place with Lord Inverclyde, the chairman of
- the Cunard Line. Neither Lord Inverclyde nor any of the other
- representatives of British shipping interests objected in any way
- to the proposed transaction for reasons connected with the national
- interest. He said, indeed, that he thought the syndicate should not
- content itself with purchasing 51 per cent. of the shares, but that
- it should rather absorb the whole company instead. The purchase
- price he named appeared to me somewhat excessive; but he has
- already hinted that he would be prepared to recommend to his
- company to accept a lower offer, and it is most likely that the
- negotiations will lead to a successful issue, unless the British
- Government should pull itself together at the eleventh hour.
-
- "(2) Public announcement of the formation of the Combine. Whereas
- until quite recently the American gentlemen maintained that it
- would be advisable to wait for the conclusion of the negotiations
- going on at Washington with respect to the proposed subsidy
- legislation, Mr. Morgan now shares my view that it is not desirable
- to do so any longer, but that it would be wiser to proceed without
- any regard to the intentions of Washington. The combine,
- therefore--unless unexpected obstacles should intervene--will make
- its public appearance within a few weeks.
-
- "(3) The British Admiralty. An agreement exists between the British
- Admiralty and the White Star Line conceding to the former the right
- of pre-emption of the three express steamers _Oceanic, Teutonic,_
- and _Majestic._ This agreement also provides that the White Star
- Line, against an annual subsidy from the Government, must place
- these boats at the disposal of the Admiralty in case of war. The
- First Lord has now asked Mr. Ismay whether there is any truth in
- the report that he wants to sell the White Star Line; and when he
- was told that such was the case, he declared that, this being so,
- he would be compelled to exercise his right of pre-emption.
-
- "It would be extremely awkward in the interests of the combine if
- the three vessels had to be placed at the service of the Admiralty,
- especially as it is probable that they would be employed in
- competition with the combine. Therefore a compromise has been
- effected in such a form that Mr. Morgan is to take over the
- agreement on behalf of the combine for the three years it has still
- to run. This means that the steamers will continue to fly the
- British flag for the present, and that they must be placed at the
- disposition of the Admiralty in case of war. The Admiralty
- suggested an extension of the terms of the agreement for a further
- period of three years; but it was content to withdraw its
- suggestion when Mr. Morgan declined to accept it. The agreement
- does not cover any of the other boats of the line which are the
- biggest cargo steamers flying the Union Jack, and consequently no
- obligations have been incurred with respect to these.
-
- "(4) Text of the public announcement. A memorandum is in course of
- preparation fixing the text of the announcement by which the public
- is to be made acquainted with the formation of the combine. In
- compliance with the wishes emanating from prominent British
- quarters, the whole transaction will be represented in the light of
- a big Anglo-American 'community of interest' agreement; and the
- fact that it virtually cedes to the United States the control of
- the North Atlantic shipping business will be kept in the
- background, as far as it is possible to do so."
-
-The first semi-official announcement dealing with the combine was
-published on April 19th by the British Press, and at an Extraordinary
-General Meeting of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie on May 28th, the public was
-given some carefully prepared information about the German-American
-agreement. At that meeting Dr. Diederich Hahn, the well-known chairman
-of the _Bund der Landwirte_ (Agrarian League), rose, to everybody's
-surprise, to inquire if it was the case that the national interests, and
-especially the agricultural interests of Germany, would be adversely
-affected by the agreement. The ensuing discussion showed Ballin at his
-best. He allayed Dr. Hahn's fears lest the American influence in the
-combination would be so strong as to eliminate the German influence
-altogether by convincing him that the whole agreement was built up on a
-basis of parity, and that the German interests would not be jeopardized
-in any way. The argument that the close connexion established between
-the trust and the American railroad companies would lead to Germany
-being flooded with American agricultural produce he parried by pointing
-out that the interests of the American railroads did not so much require
-an increased volume of exports, but rather of imports, because a great
-disproportion existed between their eastbound and their westbound
-traffic, the former by far exceeding the latter, so that a further
-increase in the amount of goods carried from the western part of the
-country to the Atlantic seaports would only make matters worse from the
-point of remunerative working of their lines.
-
-What Ballin thought of the system of Government subsidies in aid of
-shipping matters is concisely expressed by his remarks in a speech which
-he made on the occasion of the trial trip of the s.s. _Bluecher_, when he
-said: "If it were announced to me to-day that the Government subsidies
-had been stolen overnight, I should heave a sigh of relief, only
-thinking what a pity it was that it had not been done long ago."
-
-In Great Britain the news that some big British shipping companies had
-been purchased by the American concern caused a great deal of public
-excitement. In Ballin's diary we find the following entry under date of
-June 5th:
-
- "In England, in consequence of the national excitement, a very
- awkward situation has arisen. Sir Alfred Jones and Sir Christopher
- Furness know how to make use of this excitement as an opportunity
- for shouldering the British nation with the burden which the
- excessive tonnage owned by their companies represents to them in
- these days of depression. King Edward has also evinced an
- exceedingly keen interest in these matters of late, which goes to
- show that what makes people in England feel most uncomfortable is
- not the passing of the various shipping companies into American
- hands, but the fact that the German companies have done so well
- over the deal. Mr. Morgan has had an interview with some of the
- British Cabinet ministers at which he declared his readiness to
- give the Government additional facilities as regards the supply of
- auxiliary cruisers. We are hopeful that such concessions will take
- the wind out of the sails of those who wish to create a
- counter-combination subsidized by grants-in-aid from the
- Government."
-
-An outcome of the German-American arrangements was that Morgan and his
-friends were invited by the Kaiser to take part in the festivities
-connected with the Kiel Week. The American gentlemen were treated with
-marked attention by the Kaiser, and extended their visit so as to
-include Hamburg and Berlin as well.
-
-At a conference of the transatlantic lines held in December, 1902, at
-Cologne, Ballin put forward once more his suggestion that a cabin pool
-should be established. The proposal, however, fell through owing to the
-opposition from the Cunard Line.
-
-The depression in the freight business which had set in in 1901, and
-which was still very pronounced towards the close of 1902, seriously
-affected the prospects of the transatlantic shipping companies,
-especially those combined in the Morgan Trust, who were the owners of a
-huge amount of tonnage used in the cargo business, and whose sphere of
-action was restricted to the North Atlantic route. "Experience now
-shows," Ballin wrote in his notes, "that we were doing the right thing
-when we entered into the alliance with the Trust. If we had not done
-this, the latter would doubtless have tried to invade the German market
-in order to keep its many idle ships going."
-
-Meanwhile the Cunard Line had concluded an agreement with the British
-Government by which the Government bound itself to advance to the
-company the funds for the building of its two mammoth express liners,
-the _Mauretania_ and the _Lusitania_, while at the same time granting it
-a subsidy sufficient to provide for the payment of the interest on and
-for the redemption of the loan advanced by the Government for the
-building of the vessels.
-
-Further difficulties seemed to be ahead owing to the aggressive measures
-proposed by the Canadian Pacific Company, which was already advertising
-a service from Antwerp to Canada. To ward off the danger threatening
-from this quarter, Ballin proceeded to New York to take up negotiations
-with Sir Thomas Shaughnessy, the president of the Canadian Pacific. He
-went there on behalf of all the Continental shipping companies
-concerned, and the results he arrived at were so satisfactory to both
-parties that Ballin corresponded henceforth on terms of close personal
-friendship with Sir Thomas, who was one of the leading experts on
-railway matters anywhere. These friendly relations were very helpful to
-Ballin afterwards when he was engaged in difficult negotiations with
-other representatives of Sir Thomas's company, and never failed to
-ensure a successful understanding being arrived at.
-
-On the occasion of this trip to America Ballin had some interesting--or,
-as he puts it, "rather exciting"--discussions with Morgan and his
-friends. He severely criticized the management of the affairs of the
-Trust, and tried to make Morgan understand that nothing short of a
-radical improvement--i.e. a change of the leading personages--would put
-matters right. "Morgan," he writes, "finds it impossible to get the
-right men to take their places, and he held out to me the most alluring
-prospects if I myself should feel inclined to go to New York as
-president of the Trust, even if only for a year or two; but I refused
-his offer, chiefly on account of my relations with the Kaiser."
-
-Ballin's suggestions, nevertheless, led to a change in the management of
-the Trust. This was decided upon at meetings held in London, where
-Ballin stayed for a time on his way back to Hamburg. Mr. Pirrie also
-took part in these meetings.
-
-In the meantime the relations between the Cunard Line and the other
-transatlantic shipping companies had become very critical. The Hungarian
-Government, for some time past, had shown a desire to derive a greater
-benefit from the considerable emigrant traffic of the country--a desire
-which was shared by important private quarters as well. The idea was to
-divert the stream of emigrants to Fiume--instead of allowing them to
-cross the national frontiers uncontrolled--and to carry them from that
-port to the United States by direct steamers. Ballin had repeatedly
-urged that the lines which were working together under the pool
-agreement should fall in with these wishes of the Hungarian Government;
-but his proposals were not acted upon, mainly owing to the opposition of
-the North German Lloyd, which company carried the biggest share of the
-Hungarian emigrants.
-
-To the great surprise of the pool lines it was announced in the early
-part of 1904 that the Hungarian Government was about to conclude an
-agreement with the Cunard Line--the only big transatlantic shipping
-company which had remained outside the Trust--by which it was provided
-that the Cunard Line was to run fortnightly services from Fiume, and by
-which the Hungarian Government was to bind itself to prevent--by means
-of closing the frontiers or any other suitable methods--emigrants from
-choosing any other routes leading out of the country. Such an agreement
-would deprive the pool lines of the whole of their Hungarian emigrant
-business. Discussions between Ballin and the representatives of the
-Cunard Line only elicited the statement on the part of the latter that
-it had no power any longer to retrace its steps. An episode which took
-place in the course of these discussions is of special interest now, as
-it enables us to understand why the amalgamation of the Cunard Line with
-the Morgan Trust never took place.
-
-Ballin asked Lord Inverclyde why the attitude of the Cunard Line had
-been so aggressive throughout. The reply was that the Morgan Trust, and
-not the Cunard Line, was the aggressor, because Morgan's aim was to
-crush it. When Ballin interposed that this had never been intended by
-the Trust--that the Trust, indeed, had attempted to include the Cunard
-Line within the combination, that Lord Inverclyde himself had also made
-a proposal towards that end, and that the project had only come to grief
-on account of the strong feeling of British public opinion against
-it--Lord Inverclyde answered that, far from this being the case, the
-Trust had never replied to his proposal, and that he had not even
-received an acknowledgment of his last letter.
-
-In a letter to Mr. Boas, the general representative of his company in
-New York, in which he described the general situation, Ballin stated
-that the statement of Lord Inverclyde was indeed quite correct.
-
-The Hungarian situation became still more complicated after the receipt
-of some information that reached Ballin from Vienna to the effect that
-the Austrian Government intended to imitate the example set by the
-Hungarian Government by running a service from Trieste. After prolonged
-discussions the Austrian Government also undertook not to grant an
-emigration licence to the Cunard Line so long as the struggle between
-the two competing concerns was not settled.
-
-Thereupon this struggle of the pool lines--both the Continental and the
-British ones--against the Cunard Line was started in real earnest, not
-only for the British but also for the Scandinavian and the Fiume
-business. After some time negotiations for an agreement were opened in
-London in July on the initiative and with the assistance of Mr. Balfour,
-who was then President of the Board of Trade. These, however, led to no
-result, and a basis for a compromise was not found until August, 1904,
-when renewed negotiations took place at Frankfort-On-Main. A definite
-understanding was reached towards the close of the same year, and then
-at last this struggle, which was really one of the indirect consequences
-of the establishment of the Morgan Trust, came to an end.
-
-Looked upon from a purely business point of view, the Morgan Trust--or,
-to call it by its real name, the "International Mercantile Marine
-Company," which in pool slang, was simply spoken of as the "Immco
-Lines"--was doubtless a failure. Only the World War, yielding, as it
-did, formerly unheard-of profits to the shipping business of the neutral
-and the Allied countries, brought about a financial improvement, but it
-is still too early to predict whether this improvement will be
-permanent. The reasons why the undertaking was bound to be
-unremunerative before the outbreak of the war are not far to seek, and
-include the initial failure of its promoters to secure the adhesion of
-the Cunard Line--a failure which, as is shown by Ballin's notes, was to
-a large extent due to the hesitating policy of the Hamburg company. To
-make business as remunerative as possible was the very object for which
-the Trust was formed, but the more economical working which was the
-means to reach this end could not be realized while such an essential
-factor as the Cunard Line not only remained an outsider, but even became
-a formidable competitor.
-
-It can hardly be doubted that the adhesion of the Cunard Line to the
-Morgan Trust--or, in other words, the formation of a combine including
-all the important transatlantic lines without exception--would have
-brought about such a development of the pool idea as would have led to a
-much closer linking-up of the financial interests of the individual
-partners than could be achieved under a pool agreement. Under such a
-"community of interest" agreement, every inducement to needless
-competition could be eliminated, and replaced by a system of mutual
-participation in the net profits of each line. This was the ideal at
-which Ballin, taught by many years of experience, was aiming.
-
-Over and over again the pool lines had an opportunity of finding out
-that it paid them better to come to a friendly understanding, even if it
-entailed a small sacrifice, than to put up a fight against a new
-competitor. Sometimes, indeed, an understanding was made desirable owing
-to political considerations. However, the number of participants
-ultimately grew so large that Ballin sarcastically remarked: "Sooner or
-later the pool will have to learn how to get along without us," and he
-never again abandoned his plan of having it replaced by closely-knit
-community of interest agreements which would be worked under a
-centralized management, and therefore produce much better results. In
-other branches of his activities--e.g. in his agreements with the other
-Hamburg companies and in the one with the Booth Line, which was engaged
-in the service to Northern Brazil, he succeeded in developing the
-existing understandings into actual community of interest agreements,
-and it seems that these have given all-round satisfaction. The
-negotiations between himself and the North German Lloyd shortly before
-the outbreak of the war were carried on with the same object.
-
-Throughout the endless vicissitudes in the history of the pool the
-formation of the Morgan Trust decidedly stands out as the most
-interesting and most dramatic episode. At the present time the position
-of the German steamship companies in those days seems even more imposing
-than it appeared to the contemporary observer. To-day we can hardly
-imagine that some big British lines should, one after the other, be
-offered for purchase first to some German, and then to the American
-concerns. Such a thing was only possible because at that time British
-shipping enterprise was more interested in the employment of tramp
-steamers than in the working of regular services, the shipowners
-believing that greater profits could be obtained by the former method.
-The result was a noticeable lack of leading men fully qualified to speak
-with authority on questions relating to the regular business, whereas in
-Germany such men were not wanting. The transatlantic business
-threatened, in fact, to become more and more the prerogative of the
-German-American combination. To-day, of course, it is no longer possible
-to say with certainty whether the Cunard Line could have been induced to
-join that combination, if the right moment had not been missed. The
-great danger with which British shipping was threatened at that time,
-and the great success which the German lines achieved, not only stirred
-British public opinion to its depths, but also acted as a powerful
-stimulus on the shipping firms themselves. This caused a pronounced
-revival of regular line shipping, which went so far that tramp shipping
-became less and less important, and which ultimately led to a
-concentration of the former within the framework of a few large
-organizations which exercise a correspondingly strong influence on
-present-day British shipping in general. These organizations differ from
-the big German companies by the circumstance that they represent close
-financial amalgamations and that they have not, like the German
-companies, grown up slowly and step for step with the expanding volume
-of transatlantic traffic.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE EXPANSION OF THE HAMBURG-AMERIKA LINIE
-
-
-The principal work which fell to Ballin's share during the period
-immediately following his nomination in 1888 on the Board of his company
-was that connected with the introduction of the fast steamers and the
-resulting expansion of the passenger business. Offices were established
-in Berlin, Dresden, and Frankfort-On-Main in 1890, and arrangements were
-made with the Hamburg-South American S.S. Co., the German East Africa
-Line, and the Hansa Line--the latter running a service to Canada--by
-which these companies entrusted the management of their own passenger
-business to the Packetfahrt. Thus, step by step, the passenger
-department developed into an organization the importance of which grew
-from year to year.
-
-The expansion of the passenger business also necessitated an enlargement
-of the facilities for the dispatch of the Company's steamers. This work
-had been effected until then at the northern bank of the main Elbe, but
-in 1888 it was transferred to the Amerika-Kai which was newly built at
-the southern bank; and when the normal depth of the fairway of the Elbe
-was no longer sufficient to enable the fast steamers of considerable
-draught to come up to the city, it was decided to dispatch them from
-Brunshausen, a small place situated much lower down the Elbe. In the
-long run, however, it proved very inconvenient to manage the passenger
-dispatch from there, and the construction of special port facilities at
-Cuxhaven owned by the Company was taken in hand. The accommodation at
-the Amerika-Kai, although it was enlarged as early as 1889, was soon
-found to be inadequate, so that it was resolved to provide new
-accommodation at the Petersen-Kai, situated on the northern bank of the
-Elbe, and this project was carried out in 1893.
-
-The number of services run by the Company was augmented in those early
-years by the establishment of a line to Baltimore and another to
-Philadelphia. In 1889 a new line starting from New York was opened to
-Venezuelan and Colombian ports. The North Atlantic services were
-considerably enlarged in 1892, when the Company took over the Hansa
-Line.
-
-The desire to find remunerative employment for the fast steamers during
-the dead season of the North Atlantic passenger business prompted the
-decision to enter these boats into a service from New York to the
-Mediterranean during the winter months. The same desire, however, also
-gave rise to one of the most original ideas carried into practice
-through Ballin's enterprise, i.e. the institution of pleasure trips and
-tourist cruises. It may perhaps be of interest to point out in this
-connexion that, about half a century earlier, another Hamburg shipping
-man had thought of specially fitting out a vessel for an extended cruise
-of that kind. I do not know whether this plan was carried out at the
-time, and whether Ballin was indebted to his predecessor for the whole
-idea; in any case, the following advertisement which appeared in the
-_Leipziger Illustrierte Zeitung,_ and which I reprint for curiosity's
-sake, was found among his papers.
-
- "AN OPPORTUNITY FOR TAKING PART IN A VOYAGE
- ROUND THE WORLD
-
- "The undersigned Hamburg shipowner proposes to equip one of his
- large sailing vessels for a cruise round the world, to start this
- summer, during which the passengers will be able to visit the
- following cities and countries, viz. Lisbon, Madeira, Teneriffe,
- Cap Verde Islands, Rio de Janeiro, Rio de la Plata, Falklands
- Islands, Valparaiso, and all the intermediate ports of call on the
- Pacific coast of South America as far as Guayaquil (for Quito), the
- Marquesas Islands, Friendly Islands (Otaheite), and other island
- groups in the Pacific, China (Choosan, Hongkong, Canton, Macao,
- Whampoa), Manilla, Singapore, Ceylon, Ile de France or Madagascar,
- the Cape of Good Hope, St. Helena, Ascension Island, the Azores,
- and back to Hamburg.
-
- "The cruise is not intended for business purposes of any kind; but
- the whole equipment and accommodation of the vessel, the time spent
- at the various ports of call, and the details of the whole cruise,
- are to be arranged with the sole object of promoting the safety,
- the comfort, the entertainment, and the instruction of the
- passengers.
-
- "Admission will be strictly confined to persons of unblemished
- repute and of good education, those possessing a scientific
- education receiving preference.
-
- "The members of the expedition may confidently look forward to a
- pleasant and successful voyage. A first-class ship, an experienced
- and well-educated captain, a specially selected crew, and a
- qualified physician are sufficient guarantees to ensure a complete
- success.
-
- "The fare for the whole voyage is so low that it only represents a
- very slight addition to the ordinary cost of living incurred on
- shore. In return, the passenger will have many opportunities of
- acquiring a first-hand knowledge of the wonders of the world, of
- the beautiful scenery of the remotest countries, and of the manners
- and customs of many different nations. During the whole voyage he
- will be surrounded by the utmost comfort, and will enjoy the
- company of numerous persons of culture and refinement. The sea air
- will be of immeasurable benefit to his health, and the experience
- which he is sure to gain will remain a source of pleasure to him
- for the rest of his life.
-
- "Full particulars may be had on application to the undersigned, and
- a stamped envelope for reply should be enclosed.
-
-"ROB. M. SLOMAN,
-
-"_Hamburg, January_, 1845. _Shipowner in Hamburg._"
-
-Ballin's idea of running a series of pleasure cruises did not meet with
-much support on the part of his associates; the public, however, took it
-up with enthusiasm from the very start. Early in 1891 Ballin himself
-took part in the first trip to the Far East on board the express steamer
-_Auguste Victoria_. Organized pleasure trips on a small scale were by no
-means an entire novelty in Germany at that time; the Carl Stangen
-Tourist Office in Berlin, for instance, regularly arranged such
-excursions, including some to the Far East, for a limited number of
-participants. To do so, however, for as many as 241 persons, as Ballin
-did, was something unheard-of until then, and necessitated a great deal
-of painstaking preparation. Among other things, the itinerary of the
-intended cruise, owing to the size and the draught of the steamer used,
-had to be carefully worked out in detail, and arrangements had to be
-made beforehand for the hotel accommodation and for the conveyance of
-passengers during the more extended excursions on shore. All these
-matters gave plenty of scope to the organizing talents of the youthful
-director, and he passed the test with great credit.
-
-The first Far Eastern cruise proved so great a success that it was
-repeated in 1892. In the following year it started from New York, surely
-a proof that the Company's reputation for such cruises was securely
-established not in Germany alone, but in the States as well. Meanwhile,
-however, Hamburg had been visited by a terrible catastrophe which
-enormously interfered with the smooth working of the Company's express
-steamer services. This was the cholera epidemic during the summer of
-1892. It lasted several weeks, and thousands of inhabitants fell victims
-to it. Those who were staying in Hamburg in that summer will never
-forget the horrors of the time. In the countries of Northern Europe
-violent epidemics were practically unknown, and the scourge of cholera
-especially had always been successfully combated at the eastern frontier
-of Germany, so that the alarm which spread over the whole country, and
-which led to the vigorous enforcement of the most drastic measures for
-isolating the rest of Germany from Hamburg, may easily be comprehended,
-however ludicrous those measures in some instances might appear. There
-are no two opinions as to the damage they inflicted on the commerce and
-traffic of the city. The severest quarantine, of course, was instituted
-in the United States, and the passenger services to and from Hamburg
-ceased to be run altogether, so that the transatlantic lines decided to
-temporarily suspend the steerage pool agreement they had just concluded.
-The Packetfahrt, in order not to stop its fast steamer services
-completely, first transferred them to Southampton, and afterwards to
-Wilhelmshaven, thus abstaining from dispatching these boats to and from
-Hamburg. The steerage traffic had to be discarded entirely, after an
-attempt to maintain it, with Stettin as its home port, had failed.
-Financially this epidemic and its direct consequences brought the
-Company almost to the verge of collapse, and the Packetfahrt had to stop
-altogether the payment of dividends for 1892, 1893, and 1894.
-
-Business was resumed in 1893, but at first it was very slow. Every means
-were tried to induce the United States to rescind her isolation
-measures. An American doctor was appointed in Hamburg; disinfection was
-carried out on a large scale; with great energy the city set herself to
-prevent the recurrence of a similar disaster. The Packetfahrt, in
-conjunction with the authorities, designed the plans for building the
-emigrants' halls situated at the outskirts of the city, which are unique
-of their kind and are still looked upon as exemplary. These plans owe
-their origin to the extremely talented Hamburg architect, Mr. Thielen,
-whose early death is greatly to be regretted.
-
-An important innovation was the establishment of regular medical control
-and medical treatment for the emigrants from the East of Europe on their
-reaching the German frontier, a measure which was decided upon and taken
-in hand by the Prussian Government. The expansion of the Packetfahrt's
-business, of course, was most adversely affected by the epidemic and its
-after-effects; and several years of consolidation were needed before the
-latter could be overcome. Consequently, hardly any new services were
-opened during the years immediately following upon the epidemic.
-
-An important step forward, which greatly strengthened the earning
-capacities of the Company's resources, was taken in 1895, when the
-building orders for the steamers of the "P" class were given. These
-vessels were of large size but of moderate speed. They were extremely
-seaworthy, and were capable of accommodating a great many passengers,
-especially steeragers, as well as of carrying large quantities of cargo.
-The number of services run by the Company was added to in 1893 by a line
-from New York to Italy, and in the following year by one from Italy to
-the River Plate. Pool agreements were concluded with the Lloyd and the
-Allan Line with respect to the first-named route, and with the Italian
-steamship companies with respect to the other. The agreement with the
-Italians, however, did not become operative until a few years
-afterwards.
-
-In 1897 the Packetfahrt celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of its
-existence--an event in which large sections of the public took a keen
-interest. Perhaps the most noteworthy among the immense number of
-letters of congratulation which the Company received on that occasion is
-the one sent by the chairman of the Cunard Line, of which the verbatim
-text is given below. It was addressed to one of the directors in reply
-to an invitation to attend the celebrations in person.
-
- "It is with great regret I have to announce my inability to join
- with you in celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of the foundation
- of your Company, to be held on board your s.s. _Auguste Victoria_.
-
- "I the more regret this as I have the greatest possible admiration
- of the skill and enterprise which has directed the fortunes of your
- Company, especially in recent years.
-
- "You were the first to give the travelling public the convenience
- of a speedy and reliable transit between the two great continents
- of the world by initiating a regular service of twin-screw steamers
- of high speed and unexceptionable accommodation.
-
- "You also set the shipping world the example of the great economy
- possible in the transit of the world's commodities in vessels of
- greatly increased capacity and proportionate economy, which other
- nations have been quick to follow and adopt to their great
- advantage.
-
- "Your Company had furthermore met a felt want in giving most
- luxurious and well-appointed accommodation for visiting scenes,
- both new and old, of world-wide interest, and making such
- journeyings, hitherto beset with anxiety and difficulty, as easy of
- accomplishment as the ordinary railway journey at home.
-
- "You have succeeded in this, not through any adventitious aids,
- such as Government subsidies, but by anticipating and then meeting
- the wants of the travelling and commercial public; and no one, be
- his nationality what it was, can, in the face of such facts,
- abstain from offering his meed of praise to the foresight, acumen,
- and ability that have accomplished such great results in such a
- comparatively small time as the management and direction of the
- Hamburg-American Packet Company.
-
- "I would venture, therefore, to thus congratulate you and your
- colleagues, and whilst reiterating my regret at being prevented
- from doing so at your forthcoming meeting, allow me the expression
- of the wish that such meeting may be a happy and satisfactory one,
- and that a new era of, if possible, increased success to the
- Hamburg-American Packet Company may take date from it."
-
-Towards the latter end of the 'nineties, at last, a big expansion of the
-Company's activities set in. In 1897 the Hamburg-Calcutta Line was
-purchased, but the service was discontinued, the steamers thus acquired
-being used for other purposes. Shortly before the close of the same year
-a suggestion was put forward by some Hamburg firms that were engaged in
-doing business with the Far East that the Packetfahrt should run a
-service to that part of the world.
-
-Just then the steamship companies engaged in the Far Eastern trade were
-on the point of coming to a rate agreement among themselves; and the
-management of the Packetfahrt which, owing to the offer held out to it
-by Hamburg, Antwerp, and London firms, could hope to rely on finding a
-sure basis for its Far Eastern business, did not consider it wise to let
-the favourable opportunity slip. Quick decision and rapid action, before
-the proposed agreement of the interested lines had become an
-accomplished fact, were necessary; because, once the gates were closed,
-an outsider would find it difficult to gain admission to the ring.
-
-Hence the negotiations with a view to the Packetfahrt joining in the Far
-Eastern business, which had only been started during the second half of
-December, 1897, came to a close very soon; and in the early days of
-January, 1898, the Packetfahrt advertised its intention of running
-monthly sailings to Penang, Singapore, Hongkong, Shanghai, Yokohama, and
-Hiogo. Six cargo steamers of 8,000 tons burden were entered into the new
-service; and simultaneously an announcement was made to the effect that
-large fast passenger boats would be added to it as soon as the need for
-these should make itself felt.
-
-The participation in the Far Eastern business, and the consequent taking
-over of competing lines or the establishment of joint services with
-them, was not the only important event of the year 1898 as far as the
-development of the Packetfahrt is concerned. In the spring of that same
-year an agreement was made with the Philadelphia Shipping
-Company--which, in its turn, had an agreement with the Pennsylvania
-Railroad Company--by which the Packetfahrt undertook to run a regular
-service of cargo steamers between Hamburg and Philadelphia.
-
-An event of still greater importance, however, was the outbreak of war
-between the United States and Spain which also took place in that year.
-The Spanish Government desired to strengthen the fighting power of its
-navy by the addition of several auxiliary cruisers; and even some time
-before the war broke out an offer reached the Packetfahrt through the
-intermediary of a third party to purchase its two express steamers,
-_Columbia_ and _Normannia_, which were among the fastest ocean-liners
-afloat. Before accepting this offer, the Packetfahrt, in order to avoid
-the reproach of having committed a breach of neutrality, first offered
-these two steamers to the United States Government; but on its refusal
-to buy them, they were sold to the British firm acting on behalf of the
-Spanish Government, and re-sold to the latter. As the Packetfahrt had
-allowed a high rate of depreciation on the two boats, their book-value
-stood at a very low figure; and the considerable profit thus realized
-enabled it to acquire new vessels for the extension of its passenger
-services.
-
-Meanwhile a new express steamer, the _Kaiser Wilhelm der Groesse_, had
-been added to the fleet of the North German Lloyd. Ballin, having made a
-voyage on board this vessel to New York, reported to the Trustees of his
-Company that he considered her a splendid achievement. Owing to the
-heavy working expenses, however, she would not, he thought, prove a
-great success from a financial point of view. He held that the
-remunerativeness of express steamers was negatived by the heavy working
-expenses and, as early as 1897, had projected the construction of two
-steamers of very large proportions, but of less speed. This, however,
-was not carried out. Instead, the Packetfahrt decided to build a vessel
-which was to be bigger and faster still than the _Kaiser Wilhelm der
-Groesse_. The new liner was built by the Stettin Vulkan yard, and
-completed in 1900. She was the _Deutschland_, the famous ocean
-greyhound, a great improvement in size and equipment, and she held the
-blue riband of the Atlantic for a number of years.
-
-About the same time, the express service to New York had been
-supplemented by the inauguration of an additional passenger service on
-the same route, which proved a great success in every way. The steamers
-employed were the combined passenger and cargo boats of moderate speed
-of the "P" class referred to above; and, their working expenses being
-very low, they could carry the cargo at very low rates, so that they
-proved of great service to the rapidly expanding interchange of goods
-between Germany and the United States. Their great size made it
-necessary to accelerate their loading and discharging facilities as much
-as possible. This necessity, among other things, led to the introduction
-of grain elevators which resulted in a great saving of time, as the
-grain was henceforth no longer discharged in sacks, but loose. The
-Company also decided to take the loading and discharging of all its
-vessels into its own hands. To accelerate the dispatch of steamers to
-the utmost possible extent, it was decided in 1898 to enlarge once again
-the Company's harbour facilities, and an agreement was concluded with
-the Hamburg Government providing for the construction of large harbour
-basins with the necessary quays, sheds, etc., in the district of
-Kuhwaerder on the southern banks of the Elbe.
-
-It was typical of Ballin's policy of the geographical distribution of
-risks and of the far-sighted views he held concerning the international
-character of the shipping business that he attempted at the end of the
-'nineties to gain an extended footing abroad for the Company's
-activities. The Packetfahrt therefore ordered the building of two
-passenger boats in Italian yards, and it was arranged that these vessels
-should fly either the German or the Italian flag. In the end, however, a
-separate Italian shipping company, the Italia, was set up, which was to
-devote itself more particularly to the River Plate trade. When the
-financial results of the new enterprise failed to come up to
-expectations, the shares were sold to Italian financiers in 1905.
-
-The closing years of the nineteenth and the opening years of the
-twentieth century represented a period of extraordinary prosperity to
-shipping business all over the world--a prosperity which was caused by
-the outbreak of the South African war in 1899. An enormous amount of
-tonnage was required to carry the British troops, their equipment,
-horses, etc., to South Africa, and the circumstance that this tonnage
-temporarily ceased to be available for the needs of ordinary traffic
-considerably stiffened the freight rates. The favourable results thus
-obtained greatly stimulated the spirit of enterprise animating the
-shipping companies everywhere.
-
-About the same time the business of the Company experienced a notable
-expansion in another direction. A fierce rate war was in progress
-between the Hamburg-South American S.S. Co. and the firm of A. C. de
-Freitas & Co., and neither party seemed to be able to get the better of
-the other. As early as 1893 Ballin, on behalf of the Hamburg-South
-American S.S. Co., had carried on some negotiations with the firm of de
-Freitas with the object of bringing about an amalgamation of the two
-companies with respect to their services to Southern Brazil. In 1896 he
-had done so again in compliance with the special request of Mr. Carl
-Laeisz, the chairman of the former company, and in 1898 he did so for
-the third time, but in this case on his own initiative. No practical
-results, however, were reached, and as Ballin was desirous of seeing an
-end being put to the hopeless struggle between the two rival firms, he
-took up those negotiations for the fourth time in 1900, hoping to
-acquire the de Freitas Line for his own Company. He was successful, and
-an expert was nominated to fix the market value of the fourteen steamers
-that were to change hands. As the valuation took place at a time when
-the shipping business was in an exceedingly flourishing state, the price
-which he fixed worked out at so high an average per ton as was never
-again paid before the outbreak of the war. The valuer told me that he
-himself considered the price very high, so that he felt in duty bound to
-draw Ballin's attention to it beforehand. Ballin tersely replied: "I
-know, but I want the business," thus making it perfectly clear that he
-attached more than ordinary importance to the deal.
-
-As soon as the purchase of the de Freitas Lines had become an
-accomplished fact, arrangements were made with the Hamburg-South
-American S.S. Company, which provided for a joint service to South
-America, a service which was still further extended when the Packetfahrt
-bought up a British line trading from Antwerp to the Plate, thus also
-securing a footing at Antwerp in connexion with its South American
-business. The necessity for taking such a step grew in proportion as
-Antwerp acquired an increasing importance owing to the increasing German
-export business.
-
-Perhaps there is no country which can be served by the seaports of so
-many foreign countries as Germany. Several Mediterranean ports attract
-to themselves a portion of the South German trade; Antwerp and some of
-the French ports possess splendid railway connexion with Southern and
-Western Germany, and both Antwerp and Rotterdam are in a position to
-avail themselves of the highway of the Rhine as an excellent means of
-communication with the whole German hinterland. Finally, it must be
-remembered that the Scandinavian seaports are also to a certain extent
-competing for the German business, especially for the trade with the
-hinterland of the Baltic ports of Germany. All this goes to show that
-the countries surrounding Germany which have for centuries striven to
-exercise a kind of political hegemony over Germany--or, rather,
-generally speaking, over Central Europe--are not without plenty of
-facilities enabling them to try to capture large portions of the
-carrying trade of these parts of Europe. This danger of a never-ending
-economic struggle which would not benefit any of the competing rivals
-was the real reason underlying Ballin's policy of compromise. He clearly
-recognized that any other course of action would tend to make permanent
-the existing chaos ruling in the realm of ocean shipping.
-
-In this struggle for the carrying trade to and from Central Europe the
-port of Antwerp occupied a position all by itself. The more the
-countries beyond the sea were opened up by the construction of new
-railways and the establishment of industrial undertakings, and the more
-orders the manufacturers in the Central European countries received in
-consequence of the growing demand, the greater became the value of
-Antwerp to the shipping companies in every country. In this respect the
-early years of the twentieth century witnessed an extraordinary
-development, which, in its turn, benefited the world's carrying trade to
-an ever-increasing extent. Never before had so much European capital
-been invested in overseas countries. Again, as a result of the Spanish
-war the political and economic influence of the United States had
-enormously expanded in the West Indian islands, whilst, at the same
-time, the Monroe doctrine was being applied more and more thoroughly and
-systematically. Consequently the attention of the American investors was
-also increasingly drawn towards those same countries. In Central America
-new railway lines were constructed by British and American capital,
-including some right across the country from the Atlantic to the
-Pacific, thus considerably facilitating trade with the Pacific coast of
-America. Other lines were built in Brazil and in the Argentine, and
-harbour and dock facilities were constructed in nearly all the more
-important South American ports. French and Belgian capital shared in
-these undertakings, and some German capital was also employed for the
-same purpose. The Trans-Andine railway was completed, and numerous
-industrial works were added to the existing ones. The great economic
-advance was not exclusively restricted to South America; it extended to
-the Far East, to the great British dominions beyond the sea, especially
-to Canada and Australia, and--after the close of the South African
-War--to Africa also. Russia built the great Trans-Siberian railway, and
-Germany commenced to exploit the resources of her colonies. As a result
-of all these activities the iron and steel manufacturers were
-overwhelmed with export orders. This applies particularly to the German
-iron and steel manufacturers, whose leading organization, the
-Stahlwerks-Verband, largely favoured the route _via_ Antwerp, because it
-was the cheapest, to the great detriment of the German ports. Thus the
-German shipowners were compelled to follow the traffic, and the
-importance of Antwerp increased from year to year. The Hamburg-Amerika
-Linie met this development by opening a special branch office for
-dealing with the Antwerp business.
-
-In 1899, a year before the Hamburg-Amerika Linie established itself in
-the services to Brazil and the River Plate, a line had been started by
-the Company to Northern Brazil and the Amazon River. The conflict with
-the Booth Line which resulted from this step was amicably settled in
-1902 through negotiations conducted by Ballin. Later on, indeed, the
-relations between the two companies became very cordial, and even led to
-the conclusion of a far-reaching community of interest agreement, the
-Booth Line being represented in Hamburg by the Hamburg-Amerika Linie,
-and the latter in Brazil by the British company. An agreement of such
-kind was only feasible when a particularly strong feeling of mutual
-trust existed between the two contracting partners, and Ballin
-repeatedly declared that he looked upon this agreement with the Booth
-Line as the most satisfactory of all he had concluded.
-
-In 1900 the West Indian business was extended by opening a passenger
-service to Mexico, and another noteworthy event which took place during
-the same year was the conclusion of an agreement with the big German
-iron works in the Rhenish-Westphalian district by which the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie undertook to ship to Emden the Swedish iron ore
-needed by them from the ports of Narvik and Lulea. Two special steamers
-were ordered to be exclusively used for this service. Henceforth Emden
-began to play an important part in connexion with the German ore supply,
-and the real prosperity of that port dated from that time.
-
-Early in 1901 Ballin decided to embark on a trip round the world. He
-thought it desirable to do so in order to acquire a first-hand knowledge
-of the Far Eastern situation, which had become of special interest to
-the country owing to the acquisition by Germany of Tsingtau, and to the
-unrest in China. His special object was to study the questions that had
-become urgent in connexion with the organization of the passenger
-service of which the Packetfahrt, in consequence of the agreement with
-the Lloyd, had just become a partner. There was, in addition, the
-project of starting a Pacific service, which engaged his attention. All
-these important details could only be properly attended to on the spot.
-It became necessary to acquire a business footing in the various ports
-concerned, to organize the coast transport services which were to act as
-feeders to the main line, etc. Besides, the Packetfahrt, and the Lloyd
-as well, had special reasons for being interested in Far Eastern
-affairs, as both companies had been entrusted with troop transports and
-the transport of equipment needed for the German contingent during the
-troubles in China. During his Far Eastern trip Ballin wrote detailed
-accounts dealing with the business matters he attended to, and also
-describing his personal impressions of persons and things in general,
-the former kind addressed to the Board of his Company, the latter to his
-mother. These letters are full of interest; they present a more faithful
-description of his character as a man, and as a man of business, than
-could be given in any other way. I shall therefore quote a few extracts
-from the comprehensive reports, commencing with those he wrote to his
-mother:--
-
-"_On board the I.M.S._ '_Kiautschou_'
-"_January 16th, 1901._
-
-
- "The weather was cold and windy when we arrived late at night
- outside Port Said, and midnight was well past when we had taken up
- the pilot and were making our way into the port. The intense cold
- had caused me to leave the navigating bridge; and as I did not
- think it likely that our agent would arrive on board with his
- telegrams until the next morning, I had followed the example of my
- wife and of nearly all the other passengers and had gone to bed.
- However, if we had thought that we should be able to sleep, we soon
- found out our mistake. The steamer had scarcely taken up her
- moorings when several hundreds of dusky natives, wildly screaming
- and gesticulating, and making a noise that almost rent the skies,
- invaded her in order to fill her bunkers with the 800 tons of coal
- that had been ordered. Perhaps there is no place anywhere where the
- bunkers are filled more rapidly than at Port Said, and certainly
- none where this is done to the accompaniment of a more deafening
- noise. Just imagine a horde of natives wildly screaming at the top
- of their voices, and add to this the noise produced by the coal
- incessantly shot into the bunkers, and the shouting of the men in
- command going on along with it. You will easily understand that it
- was impossible for anyone to go to sleep under conditions such as
- these.... After trying for several hours, I gave up the attempt,
- and, on entering the drawing-room, I found that willy-nilly (but,
- as Wippchen would have said, more nilly than willy) practically all
- the other passengers had done the same thing. There I was also
- informed that those who were in the know had not even made an
- attempt to go to sleep, but had gone ashore at 2 A.M. Port Said is
- a typical brigands' den, and relies for its prosperity on the mail
- packets calling there. The shops, the taverns, the music-halls, and
- the gambling places are all organized on lines in accordance with
- the needs of modern traffic. So it was not surprising to see that
- the proprietors of these more or less inviting places of
- entertainment had brightly lit up their premises, and hospitably
- opened their doors despite the unearthly hour, being quite willing
- to try and entice the unwary passengers into their clutches."
-
-"_Between_ ADEN _and_ COLOMBO.
-"_January 24th_, 1901.
-
- " ... We did not stop long at Aden; and as the quarantine
- regulations for all vessels arriving from Port Said were very
- strict, it became impossible for the passengers on board the
- _Kiautschou_ to land on the island. Aden, which the British would
- like to turn into a second Gibraltar, is situated in a barren,
- treeless district, and is wedged in between hills without any
- vegetation. Small fortifications are scattered all over the island.
- It must be a desolate spot for Europeans to live at. The British
- officers call it 'The Devil's Punch Bowl,' and to be transferred to
- Aden is equivalent to them to being deported."
-
-"_January 28th_, 1901.
-
- " ... In the meantime we have spent a most enjoyable and
- unforgettable day at Colombo. The pilot brought the news of Queen
- Victoria's death, which filled us with lively sympathy, and which
- caused a great deal of grief among the British passengers. Shortly
- before 9 o'clock we went ashore: and as the business offices do not
- open until an hour later--thus preventing me from calling on my
- business friends at that hour--I took a carriage-drive through the
- magnificent park-like surroundings of the city. The people one
- meets there are a fit match to the beautiful scenery; but whilst in
- former times they were the rulers of this fertile island, they are
- now, thanks to the blessings of civilization, the servants of their
- European masters....
-
- "When we reached the old-established Oriental Hotel where we had
- our lunch, we met there a number of our fellow-passengers busily
- engaged in bargaining with the Singhalese and Indian dealers who
- generally flock to the terraces of the hotel as soon as a mail
- packet has arrived. The picture presented by such Oriental
- bargaining is the same everywhere, except that the Colombo dealers
- undeniably manifest an inborn gracefulness and gentlemanly bearing.
- When I tried to get rid of an old man who was pestering me with his
- offers to sell some precious stones, he said to me, in the
- inimitable singing tone of voice used by these people when they
- speak English: 'Just touch this stone, please, but do not buy it: I
- only wish to receive it back from your lucky hands.' In spite of
- their manners, however, these fellows are the biggest cheats on
- earth. Another dealer wanted to sell me a sheet of old Ceylon
- stamps for which he demanded fifteen marks--a price which, as he
- stated, meant a clean loss of five marks to him. When I offered him
- two marks instead, merely because I had got tired of him, he handed
- me the whole sheet, and said: 'Please take them; I know that one
- day I shall be rewarded for the sacrifice which I bring.' Later on
- I discovered that the same man had sold exactly the same stamps to
- a fellow-passenger for 50 pfennigs, and that he had told the same
- story to him as to me. Such are the blessings of our marvellous
- civilization....
-
- " ... In the afternoon we went for a magnificent drive to the Mount
- Lavinia Hotel, which is beautifully situated on a hill affording an
- extensive view of the sea. Boys and girls as beautiful as Greek
- statues, and as swift-footed as fallow deer, pursued us in our
- carriage, begging for alms. It was curious to see with what
- unfailing certainty they managed to distinguish the German from the
- English passengers, and they were not slow in availing themselves
- of this opportunity to palm off what little German they knew on us.
- 'Oh, my father! My beautiful mother! You are a great lady! Please
- give me ten cents, my good uncle!' We were quite astonished to meet
- such a large progeny...."
-
-"_February 2nd_, 1901.
-
- ".... The entrance to Singapore is superbly beautiful. The steamer
- slowly wended her way through the channels between numerous small
- islands clad with the most luxurious vegetation, so that it almost
- took us two hours to reach the actual harbour.... The food question
- is extremely complicated in this part of the tropics, which is
- favoured by kind Nature more than is good. The excessive fertility
- of the soil makes the cultivation of vegetables and cereals quite
- impossible, as everything runs to seed within a few days, so that,
- for instance, potatoes have to be obtained from Java, and green
- vegetables from Mulsow's, in Hamburg. I am sure my geography master
- at school, who never ceased to extol the richness of the soil of
- this British colony, was not aware of this aspect of the matter.
-
- "Singapore is a rapidly developing emporium for the trade with the
- Far East. It has succeeded in attracting to itself much of the
- commerce with the Dutch Indies, British North Borneo, the
- Philippines, and the Federated Malay States. To achieve this, of
- course, was a difficult matter, even with the aid of the shipping
- companies, but its clever and energetic business community managed
- to do it. We Germans may well be proud of the fact that our
- countrymen now occupy the premier position in the business life of
- the city....
-
- " ... We spent about thirty-six hours at Saigon. This city has been
- laid out by the French with admirable skill, and there is no doubt
- but that Indo-China is a most valuable possession of theirs. As
- regards the difference in the national character of the French and
- the British, it is interesting to note that the former have just
- erected a magnificent building for a theatre at Saigon, at a cost
- of 2-1/2 million francs. The British would never have dreamt of
- doing such a thing; I am sure they would have invested that money
- in the building of club-houses and race-courses...."
-
-"_February 16th_, 1901.
-
- " ... As far as social life and social pleasures are concerned, it
- must be said that the German colony at Hongkong is in no way
- inferior to that at Singapore. Premier rank in this respect must be
- assigned to the Siebs family. Mr. Siebs, the senior member of the
- Hamburg firm of Siemssen and Co., has been a resident in the East
- for a long term of years--forty-two, if I remember rightly; and he
- now occupies an exceedingly prominent position both in German and
- British society. That this is so is largely due--apart from his
- intimate knowledge of all that concerns the trade and commerce of
- China, and apart from his own amiability and never-failing
- generosity--to his charming wife, who, by means of the hospitality,
- the refinement, and the exemplary management characterizing her
- home, has been chiefly instrumental in acquiring for the house of
- Siebs the high reputation it enjoys. Whoever is received by Mrs.
- Siebs, I have been told, is admitted everywhere in Hongkong
- society.
-
- "Even though I only give here an outline of my impressions, I
- cannot refrain from adding a few details dealing with some aspects
- of everyday life at Hongkong, this jewel among the crown colonies
- of Britain. The offices of the big firms and of the shipping
- companies' agencies, most of them housed in beautiful buildings,
- flank the water's edge; farther back there is the extensive
- shopping quarter, and still more in the rear there is the Chinese
- quarter, teeming with an industrious population. Being myself so
- much mixed up with the means of communication, I am surely entitled
- to make a few remarks concerning this subject in particular. Horses
- are but rarely seen, and are only used for riding, and sporting
- purposes generally. Their place is taken by the coolies, who no
- doubt represent the most pitiable type of humanity--at least, from
- the point of view of a sensitive person. In the low-lying part of
- the town the jinrikishas, which are drawn by coolies, predominate;
- but the greater part of Hongkong is situated on the slopes of a
- hill, and nearly all the private residences are built along the
- beautifully kept, terrace-like roads leading up to the summit of
- the peak. In this part the chair coolies take the place of the
- jinrikisha coolies; and in the low-lying parts also it is
- considered more stylish to be carried by chair coolies. The
- ordinary hired chairs are generally carried by two coolies only,
- but four are needed for the private ones. The work done by these
- poor wretches is fatiguing in the extreme. They have to drag their
- masters up and down the hill, which is very steep in places, and it
- is a horrid sensation to be carried by these specimens of panting
- humanity for the first time. In the better-class European
- households each member of the family has his own chair, and the
- necessary coolies along with it, who are paid the princely wage of
- from 16 marks to 17 marks 50 pfennigs a month. They also receive a
- white jacket and a pair of white drawers reaching to the knee, but
- they have to provide their own food. The poor fellows are generally
- natives from the interior parts of the island. They spend about one
- mark a week on their food; the rest they send home to their
- families. They are mostly married, and the money they earn in their
- capacity as private coolies represents to them a fortune. They
- rarely live longer than forty years; in fact, their average length
- of life is said not to exceed thirty-five. As many as eight coolies
- were engaged to attend to the needs of my wife and myself for the
- time of our stay. The poor creatures, who, by the way, had quite a
- good time in our service, spent the whole day from early in the
- morning to late at night lying in front of a side entrance to our
- hotel, except when they had to do their work for us....
-
- " ... The Chinese have only one annual holiday--New Year. They are
- hard at work during the whole year; they know of no Sundays and of
- no holidays, but the commencement of the New Year is associated
- with a peculiar belief of theirs. To celebrate the event, they take
- their best clothes out of pawn (which, for the rest of the year,
- they keep at the pawnbroker's to prevent them from being stolen).
- To keep the evil spirits away during the coming twelvemonth, they
- burn hundreds of thousands of firecrackers when the New Year
- begins, and also during the first and second days of it,
- accompanied by the noise of the firing of guns. One must have been
- through it all in order to understand it. For the better part of
- two days and two nights one could imagine a fierce battle raging in
- the neighbourhood; crackers were exploding on all sides, together
- with rockets and fireballs, and the whole was augmented by the
- shouting and screaming of the revellers. It was a mad noise, and we
- could scarcely get any sleep at night.
-
- "The houses in the Chinese quarter were decorated up to the roofs
- with bunting, beautiful big lanterns, paper garlands with religious
- inscriptions, and a mass of lovely flowers.
-
- "On such days--the only holidays they possess--the Chinese
- population are in undisputed possession of their town, and the
- British administration is wise enough not to interfere with the
- enjoyment of these sober and hard-working people. I really wonder
- how the German police would act in such cases...."
-
-"SHANGHAI, _March 6th, 1901_.
-
- " ... It is surely no exaggeration to describe Shanghai as the New
- York of the Far East. The whole of the rapidly increasing trade
- with the Yangtse ports, and the bulk of that with the northern
- parts of the country, passes through Shanghai. The local German
- colony is much larger than the one at Hongkong; and here, too, it
- is pleasant to find that our countrymen are playing an extremely
- important part in the extensive business life of the town...."
-
-"_Between_ TSINGTAU _and_ NAGASAKI,
-_on board the s.s_ _'Sibiria_.'
-"_March 18th, 1901._
-
- "Our s.s. _Sibiria_ had arrived in the harbour about ten days ago,
- and was now ready for our use. I had decided first of all to make a
- trip up the Yang-tse-Kiang on board the _Sibiria_, because I wanted
- to get to know this important river, which flows through such a
- fertile tract of country, and on the banks of which so many of the
- busiest cities of China are situated. The Yangtse--as it is usually
- called for shortness' sake--is navigable for very large-sized
- ocean-going steamers for a several days' journey. During the summer
- months it often happens that the level of the water in its upper
- reaches rises by as much as 50 feet, which--on account of the
- danger of the tremendous floods resulting from it--has made it
- necessary to pay special attention to the laying-out of the cities
- situated on its banks. The object of our journey was Nanking. This
- city, which was once the all-powerful capital of the Celestial
- Empire, has never again reached its former importance since its
- destruction during the great revolution of 1862, and since the
- choice of Peking as the residence of the Imperial family. Two years
- ago it was thrown open to foreign commerce; and the Powers
- immediately established their consulates in the city, not only
- because a new era of development is looked forward to, but also
- because Nanking is the seat of a viceroy.
-
- "Our amiable consul, Herr v. Oertzen, received us with the greatest
- hospitality. The German colony which he has to look after consists
- of only one member so far. This young gentleman, who holds an
- appointment in connexion with the Chinese customs administration,
- feels, as is but natural, quite happy in consequence of enjoying a
- practical monopoly of the protection extended to him by the home
- government. He has helped himself to the consul's cigars and to his
- moselle to such good effect that the _Sibiria_ arrived just in time
- to prevent the German colony at Nanking from lodging a complaint
- regarding the insufficiency of the supplies put at its disposal by
- the Government. The consul told us that we should never have a
- chance of coming across another Chinese town that could compare
- with the interior of Nanking, and so we had to make up our minds
- to pay a visit to these parts.
-
- "I had seen plenty of dirt and misery at Jaffa and Jerusalem, but I
- have never found so much filth and wretchedness anywhere as I
- noticed at Nanking. My wife and a charming young lady who
- accompanied us on our Yangtse expedition were borne in genuine
- sedan chairs as used for the mandarins, preceded by the interpreter
- of the consulate, and followed by the rest of us, who were riding
- on mules provided with those typically Chinese saddles, which,
- owing to their hardness, may justly claim to rank among the
- instruments of torture.
-
- "Our procession wended its way through a maze of indescribably
- narrow streets crowded with a moving mass of human beings and
- animals. Everywhere cripples and blind men lay moaning in front of
- their miserable hovels, and it almost seemed that there were more
- people suffering from some disease or other than there were healthy
- ones. When we stopped outside the big temple of Confucius, where
- the ladies of our party dismounted from their chairs, the people,
- in spite of their natural timidity, flocked to see us, because they
- had probably never seen any European ladies until then. We were
- thankful when at last we reached the consulate building again, and
- when, after having had a good bath, we are able to enjoy a cup of
- tea.
-
- " ... In the early hours of March 13th our steamer arrived at
- Tsingtau. I was surprised and delighted with what I saw. There, in
- spite of innumerable difficulties, a city had sprung up in an
- incredibly short space of time.
-
- "Rooms had been reserved for us at the handsome, but very cold,
- Hotel Prinz Heinrich; and in the afternoon of the day of our
- arrival we strolled up the roads, which were still somewhat dusty,
- and in parts only half finished, to the summit of the hill where
- the acting Governor and the officers of higher rank had their
- homes. Even though it is true that up to now military necessities
- have taken precedence in the laying-out of the town, so that the
- needs of trade and traffic have not received due attention, it must
- be admitted that a wonderful piece of constructive work has been
- achieved. All the members of our party--especially those who, like
- Dr. Knappe, our consul-general at Shanghai, had known the place two
- years ago--were most agreeably surprised at the progress that had
- been made.
-
- "Our first few days at Tsingtau were spent much as they were
- everywhere else--plenty of work during the day-time, and plenty of
- social duties in the evenings. But things began to look different
- on Saturday morning, when my old friend and well-wisher,
- Field-Marshal Count Waldersee, arrived on board H.M.S. _Kaiserin
- Auguste_. He had announced that his arrival would take place at 9
- A.M., and his flagship cast anchor with military punctuality. The
- Governor and I went on board to welcome the old gentleman, who was
- evidently greatly touched at meeting me out here, and it was plain
- to see that my presence in this part of the world made him almost
- feel homesick. The Field-Marshal very much dislikes the
- restrictions imposed on his activities; and judging from all he
- told me, I must confess that a great military leader has hardly
- ever before been faced with a more thankless task than he. On the
- one hand he is handicapped through the diplomatists, and on the
- other through the want of unanimity among the Powers. Thus, instead
- of fulfilling the soldier's task with which he is entrusted, he is
- compelled to waste his time in idleness, and to preside at endless
- conferences at which matters are discussed dealing with the most
- trivial questions of etiquette. He really deserves something better
- than that...."
-
-"TOKIO. _March 31st, 1901._
-
- " ... What a difference between Japan and the cold and barren north
- of China! There everything was dull and gloomy, whilst this country
- is flooded with sunshine. Here we are surrounded by beautifully
- wooded hills, and a magnificent harbour extends right into the
- heart of the city. From the windows of our rooms we overlook big
- liners and powerful men-of-war, and our own _Sibiria_ has chosen
- such a berth that the Hapag flag merrily floating in the breeze
- gives us a friendly welcome.
-
- "The difference in the national character of the Chinaman and the
- Japanese clearly proves the great influence which the climate and
- the natural features of a country can exercise on its inhabitants.
- The one always grave and sulky, and not inclined to be friendly;
- the other always cheerful, fond of gossip, and overflowing with
- politeness in all his intercourse with strangers. But it must not
- be forgotten that the integrity of the Chinese, especially of the
- Chinese merchants, is simply beyond praise, whereas the Japanese
- have a reputation for using much cunning and very little sincerity,
- so that European business men cannot put much faith in them.
-
- "The women of Japan are known to us through 'The Mikado' and 'The
- Geisha.' They make a direct appeal to our sympathies and to our
- sense of humour. In one week the stranger will become more closely
- acquainted with the womenfolk and the family life of Japan than he
- would with those of China after half a dozen years of residence in
- their midst. In China the women are kept in seclusion as much as
- possible, but the whole family life of the Japs is carried on with
- an utter indifference to publicity. This is due to a large extent
- to the way their homes are built. Their houses are just as dainty
- as they are themselves; and it is really quite remarkable to see
- that the Japs, who closely imitate everything they see in Europe,
- still build them exactly as they have done from time immemorial.
- They are practically without windows, and in place of these the
- openings in the walls are filled with paper stretched on to frames.
- Instead of doors there are movable screens made of lattice-work;
- and since everything is kept wide open during the day-time one can
- look right into the rooms from the street. In the summer the
- Japanese make their home in the streets, and we are told that then
- the most intimate family scenes are enacted in the open air. I am
- of opinion that this, far from pointing to a want of morality, is
- really the outcome of a highly developed code of morals. Things
- which are perfectly natural in themselves are treated as such, and
- are therefore not hidden from the light of day....
-
- " ... At 9 A.M. on March 23rd we arrived at Kobe, where we had to
- spend several days.
-
- "Our trip is now approaching its end; at least, we now experience
- the pleasant feeling that we are daily nearing home. What will it
- look like when we get back? At almost every port of call some sad
- news has reached us, and our stay at Kobe was entirely overshadowed
- by my grief at the loss of my old friend Laeisz. Even now I cannot
- realize that I shall find his place empty when I return...."
-
-The brief statement in which Ballin summarized the results of his trip
-from a business point of view is appended:--
-
- "Among the business transacted during my trip the following items
- are of chief importance:
-
- "(1) The establishment of a branch of our Company at Hongkong.
-
- "(2) The acquisition of the Imperial Mail Packet Service to
- Shanghai, Tsingtau, and Tientsin, formerly carried on by Messrs.
- Diedrichsen, Jebsen and Co.
-
- "(3) The acquisition of the Yangtse Line, hitherto carried on by
- the firm of Rickmers.
-
- "(4) The joint purchase with the firm of Carlowitz and Messrs.
- Arnhold, Karberg and Co. of a large site outside Shanghai harbour
- intended for the building of docks and quays, and the lease of the
- so-called Eastern Wharf, both these undertakings to be managed by a
- specially created joint-stock company.
-
- "(5) The establishment of temporary offices at Shanghai.
-
- "(6) In Japan discussions are still proceeding concerning the
- running of a line from the Far East to the American Pacific coast.
-
- "(7) In New York negotiations with the representative of the firm
- of Forwood are under way regarding the purchase of the Atlas Line."
-
-This list summarizes the contents of a long series of letters from all
-parts of the world where Ballin's keen insight, long foresight, and
-business acumen suggested to his alert mind possibilities of extending
-Packetfahrt shipping interests. Time translated many of his suggestions
-into flourishing actualities, some of which survived the 1914-18 years;
-others disappeared in the cataclysm; others, again, by the lapse of time
-have not the keen general interest that appertained to the ideas when
-they fell fresh-minted from his pen. The following, however, in regard
-to China and Japan, are worthy of record:
-
-"_Shanghai._
-_March 4th, 1901._
-
- "I am not quite satisfied with the course which the negotiations
- concerning the possible inauguration of a Yangtse line have taken
- so far.
-
- "The vessels employed are of the flat-bottomed kind, some being
- paddle boats, others twin-screw steamers. In their outward
- appearance the Yangtse steamers, owing to their high erections on
- deck, greatly resemble the saloon steamers plying on the Hudson.
- Their draught rarely exceeds 12 feet, and those which occasionally
- go higher up the river than Hankau draw even less. Most of the
- money earned by these boats is derived from the immense Chinese
- passenger traffic they carry.... The chief difficulty we have
- experienced in our preparations for the opening of a Yangtse line
- of our own consists in the absence of suitable pier
- accommodation...."
-
-"_On board the s.s. Sibiria on the Yangtse._
-_March 10th, 1901._
-
- " ... After what I have seen of Nanking, I am afraid that the
- development of that place which is being looked forward to will not
- be realized for a fairly long time to come. Matters are quite
- different with respect to Chin-kiang where we are stopping now, a
- port which is even now carrying on a thriving trade with the
- interior parts of the country. It can scarcely be doubted that, if
- the Celestial Empire is thrown open to the Western nations still
- more than has been done up to now, the commerce of the Yangtse
- ports is bound to assume large proportions. During the summer
- months, i.e. for practically two-thirds of the year, the Yangtse is
- navigable for ocean-going steamers of deep draught, even more so
- than the Mississippi. At that time of the year the volume of water
- carried by the river increases enormously in certain reaches. This
- increase has been found to amount to as much as 38 feet, and some
- of the steamers of the Russian Volunteer Fleet going up to Hankau
- possess a draught which exceeds 25 feet...."
-
-"_On board the Sibiria between_
-TSINGTAU AND JAPAN.
-_March 19th, 1901._
-
- " ... We arrived at Tsingtau on the morning of March 14th. The
- impression produced by this German colony on the new-comer is an
- exceedingly favourable one. Everywhere a great deal of diligent
- work has been performed, and one feels almost inclined to think
- that the building activity has proceeded too fast, so that the
- inevitable reaction will not fail to take place. Looked at from our
- shipping point of view, it must be stated that the work
- accomplished looks too much like Wilhelmshaven, and too little like
- Hongkong. It was, of course, a foregone conclusion that in the
- development of a colony which is completely ruled by the Admiralty
- the naval interests would predominate. However, there is still time
- to remedy the existing defects, and I left Kiautschou with the
- conviction that a promising future is in store for it. Only the
- landing facilities are hopelessly inadequate at present; and as to
- the accommodation for merchant vessels which is in course of being
- provided, it would seem that too extensive a use has been made of
- the supposed fact that mistakes are only there in order to be
- committed, and that it would be a pity not to commit as many as
- possible...."
-
-"_On board the s.s. Empress of China between_
-YOKOHAMA AND VANCOUVER.
-_April 17th, 1901._
-
- " ... In the meantime I have had opportunities of slightly
- familiarizing myself in more respects than one with the conditions
- ruling in Japan.
-
- "The country is faced with an economic crisis. Encouraged by a
- reckless system of credit, she has imported far more than
- necessary; she is suffering from a shortage of money, which is sure
- to paralyse her importing capacities for some time to come.
-
- "It seems pretty certain too, that future development will be
- influenced by another and far more serious factor, viz.: the
- ousting of the German by the American commerce from the Japanese
- market. The exports from the United States to Japan have increased
- just as much as those to China.... I cannot help thinking that in
- the coming struggle America will enjoy immense advantages over us;
- but you must permit me to postpone the presentation of a detailed
- statement showing my reasons for thinking so until my return to
- Hamburg.... I believe we shall be well advised to establish as soon
- as possible a service between the Far East and the Pacific coast of
- America...."
-
-In 1903 far-reaching alterations were made in the relations existing
-between the Hamburg-Amerika Linie and the North German Lloyd, which had
-become somewhat less friendly than usual in more respects than one; and
-in particular the agreement concerning the Far Eastern services of both
-companies was subjected to some considerable modifications.
-
-The year 1903 is also remarkable for an event which, although not of
-great importance from the business point of view, is of interest in
-other respects. This event was the establishment of business relations
-with a Danish company concerning, in the first place, the West Indian
-trade, and later that with Russia also. The Danish concern in question
-was the East Asiatic Company, of Copenhagen. The founder of this company
-was a Mr. Andersen, one of the most successful business men known to
-modern commercial enterprise, and certainly not only the most successful
-one of his own country, but also one of high standing internationally.
-When still quite young he founded a business in Further India which,
-although conducted at first on a small scale only, he was able to
-extend by the acquisition of valuable concessions, especially of
-teak-wood plantations in Siam. In course of time this business developed
-into a shipping firm which, owing to the concessions just mentioned, was
-always in a position to ship cargo of its own--an advantage which proved
-inestimable when business was bad and no other freight was forthcoming.
-When Mr. Andersen returned to Europe he continued to enlarge his
-business, making Copenhagen its centre. He enjoyed the special patronage
-of the Danish Royal Family, and afterwards also that of the Imperial
-Russian family. His special well-wisher and a partner of his firm was
-the Princess Marie of Denmark, who became known in the political world
-because she incurred the enmity of Bismarck, chiefly on account of her
-attempt to stir up ill feeling between the Iron Chancellor and Tsar
-Alexander III. Bismarck, in the second volume of his memoirs, describes
-how he succeeded in circumventing her plans through a personal meeting
-with the Tsar. It was the exceptional business abilities of the Princess
-Marie which brought Mr. Andersen into contact with the Russian Imperial
-family. It is typical of the common sense of the Princess and of her
-unaffected manners that she arrived at the offices of the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie one day without having been previously announced;
-and as she did not give her name to the attendant outside Ballin's
-private office, he could only tell him that "a lady" wanted to see him.
-The two letters addressed to Ballin which are given below are also
-illustrative of her style.
-
- "MY DEAR SIR,
-
-"_January 17th_, 1904.
-
- "I hope you will excuse my writing in French to you, but you may
- reply to me in English. I have had a chat with Director Andersen,
- who told me that your discussions with him have led to nothing. I
- greatly regret this, both for personal reasons and in the interests
- of the business. I am convinced that your negotiations would have
- had the desired result if it had not been for some special
- obstacles with which this new company had to contend. It is such a
- pity that Mr. Andersen had to attend to so many other things. If
- you and he alone had had to deal with it, and if it had been purely
- a business matter, the agreement would certainly have been
- concluded at once. Perhaps you and Andersen will shortly discover a
- basis on which you can co-operate. I personally should highly
- appreciate an understanding between my company and yours if it
- could be brought about, so that you could work together hand in
- hand like two good friends. You _must_ help me with it. Mr.
- Andersen was so charmed with your amiability when he came back. One
- other thing I must tell you, because I possess sufficient business
- experience to understand it, and that is that both he and I admire
- you as a man of business. I should be delighted if you could come
- here; but I request you to give a few days' notice of your arrival.
- Wishing you every success in your undertakings and the best of luck
- during the new year,
-
-"I remain, Yours faithfully,
-(_signed_) "MARIE."
-
-
-
- "MY DEAR DIRECTOR,
-
-"_February 10th, 1905._
-
- "I am so delighted to hear from Mr. Andersen that his company and
- yours intend to co-operate in the Danish West Indies and in Russia
- to your mutual interest. I have always held that such an
- understanding between you and Mr. Andersen would lead to good
- results, and you may feel convinced that I shall extend to you not
- only my personal assistance and sympathy, but also that of my
- family, and that of my Russian family, all of whom take a great
- interest in this matter. I am looking forward to seeing you in
- Hamburg early in March on my way to France. With my best regards,
-
-"Yours faithfully,
-(_signed_) "MARIE."
-
-In June, 1904, after the close of Kiel Week, Ballin paid a visit to
-Copenhagen. There he met the Princess Marie and the King and Queen of
-Denmark, and was invited to dine with them at Bernstorff Castle. The
-business outcome of the negotiations was that in 1905 a joint service to
-the West Indies was established between the Hamburg-Amerika Linie and
-the Danish West Indian Company. Four of the big new steamers of the
-latter were leased to the Packetfahrt, and operated by that company,
-which thus not only increased the tonnage at its disposal, but also
-succeeded in eliminating an unnecessary competition.
-
-At the same time the Packetfahrt bought the larger part of the shares of
-the Russian East Asiatic S.S. Company owned by the Danish firm. The
-object of the purchase was to establish a community of interests with
-the Russian Company. The Kaiser took great interest in this scheme, and
-during his visits to Copenhagen in 1903 and 1905 Mr. Andersen reported
-to him on the subject. It was intended to bring about close business
-relations between Germany, Russia, and Denmark for the special purpose
-of developing Russian trade, and to organize the Russian East Asiatic
-S.S. Company on such lines as would make it a suitable instrument to
-this end. It is to be regretted that the community of interest agreement
-then concluded was not of long duration. The Russian bureaucracy made
-all sorts of difficulties, and it is possible that the representatives
-of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie in Russia did not display as much
-discretion in their dealings with these functionaries as they ought to
-have done. At any rate, the Packetfahrt was so little satisfied with its
-participation in this Russian concern that it re-sold its rights to the
-interested Copenhagen parties in 1906, not without incurring a
-considerable loss on the transaction. The West Indies agreement
-automatically lapsed when the Packetfahrt acquired sole possession of
-the four Danish steamers.
-
-Later on some sort of co-operation with the Russian company was brought
-about once more by the admission of that company to the transatlantic
-steerage pool. The Packetfahrt also had an opportunity of profiting from
-the technical experience gained by the Danish East Asiatic Company,
-which was the first shipping concern to specialize in the use of
-motor-ships. It was enabled to do so by the support it received from the
-shipbuilding firm of Messrs. Burmeister and Wain, of Copenhagen, who had
-applied the Diesel engine, a German invention, to the propulsion of
-ships, and who subsequently built a fleet of excellent motor-ships for
-the East Asiatic Company. One of these vessels was afterwards acquired
-by the Hamburg-Amerika Linie for studying purposes. The new type of
-vessel proved exceedingly remunerative during the war, as it made the
-owners independent of the supply of British bunker coal, and relieved
-them of the numerous difficulties connected with obtaining it. This
-great practical success of the Danish shipbuilders became possible only
-because they applied themselves consistently to the development of one
-particular type of engine, whereas in Germany endless experiments were
-made with a great variety of different types which led to no tangible
-results. It was only when the war came, and when the building of
-numerous submarines became necessary that German engineering skill
-obtained a chance of showing what it could do, and then, indeed, it
-proved itself worthy of the occasion.
-
-In 1904 war broke out between Russia and Japan, an event which exercised
-such an influence on the Packetfahrt that it is hardly an exaggeration
-to say that the rapid progress the company made during the next few
-years amounted to a re-birth. The war provided the company with a chance
-to sell a large number of its units at a considerable rate of profit,
-and the contract concluded with the Russian Government for the coal
-supply added enormously to its revenues. The Russian Government partly
-converted the purchased steamers into auxiliary cruisers for the purpose
-of checking and disorganizing Japanese sea-borne trade, and it partly
-used them to accompany its Baltic fleet on its way to the Far East. As
-an illustration of the magnitude and the complexity of this transaction,
-it may be permitted to quote a few extracts from Ballin's notes
-referring to it:
-
-"_May, 1904._
-
- "Much though my time has been occupied by the Hungarian affair (the
- competition of the Cunard Line in Hungary), and great though the
- strain on my nerves has been on that account, I must say that much
- bigger claims are made on my time and on my nerves by the
- negotiations we are now carrying on with the Russian Government
- concerning the sale of some of our steamers. On Christmas Day I
- sent some representatives to Petrograd who were to approach the
- government in case it intended to acquire any merchant vessels for
- purposes of war. These gentlemen are still staying at Petrograd,
- where they have been all the time with the exception of a few
- weeks, and we have carried on some extremely difficult negotiations
- by cable which so far have led to the definite sale of the _Fuerst
- Bismarck_ and the _Belgia_. The _Auguste Victoria_, which is still
- in dock until the necessary repairs have been executed, has also
- been sold to Russia, and the prospects that the _Columbia_ will
- follow suit are extremely good.
-
- "The sales, of course, necessitate large alterations of the
- existing schedules, and they lead to a great deal of inconvenience.
- A particularly awkward situation has been brought about by the
- circumstance that the _Fuerst Bismarck_ has been chartered to the
- firm of Thos. Cook and Sons for an excursion from Marseilles, in
- which 500 members of a Sunday school are to take part, so that, in
- order to release her, it has become necessary for the _Augusts
- Victoria_ to interrupt her usual trip to the Near East, and for the
- _Columbia_ to take her place....
-
- "Our big coal contract with the Russian Government has, in the
- meantime, been considerably added to. The execution of the
- contract, however, is causing me a great deal of anxiety, as the
- English press, notably _The Times_, is only too glad to make use of
- this circumstance as a pretext for rousing suspicions as to
- Germany's neutrality. As our government is not taking up a very
- firm attitude, the effect of these articles, of course, is highly
- disagreeable. On Friday, September 23rd, I had an opportunity of
- discussing this matter with the Imperial Chancellor at Homburg. The
- Chancellor did not disguise the anxiety he felt concerning these
- contracts, especially as he had just then received a long telegram
- from the German Ambassador in Tokio advising him to proceed with
- much caution. I told the Chancellor that he need not study in any
- way the damage which our company might suffer; that we did not ask
- that any regard should be paid to our business interests in case
- these should clash with those of the country, and that, if the
- Government were of opinion that the interests of the country
- necessitated the cancelling of the whole agreement, I should be
- glad to receive instructions from him to that effect. Failing such
- instructions, of course, I was not entitled to cancel a contract
- which was in every respect a properly drawn-up legal instrument. At
- the same time I pointed out to the Chancellor that Germany, if he
- thought that he had reason to adopt such an attitude, would run the
- risk of offending both antagonists; for it was but reasonable to
- expect that, owing to the agitation carried on by the British, no
- action on Germany's part would cause a change of feeling in Japan,
- but that it would be a fatal blow to Russia, whose Baltic fleet in
- that case would simply be unable to reach the Far East.
-
- "From Frankfort I went to Berlin in order to discuss the question
- of the coal contract with the Foreign Office, which the Chancellor
- had requested me to do. I had a long conference with Richthofen....
-
- " ... _October 1st, 1904._ Meanwhile our negotiations with the
- Russian Government have made good progress, and practically the
- whole of my time is taken up with these transactions, which have
- given us a very exciting time. They compel me to go to Berlin
- pretty frequently, as I consider it both fair to the Foreign
- Office and advisable in our own interests that the former should
- always be fully informed of all the steps I am taking. Several of
- our gentlemen are constantly travelling from Hamburg to Petrograd,
- and conferences of our directors are held nearly every morning,
- necessitated by the telegrams which arrive from Petrograd
- practically every day. In order to be in a position to carry out
- the coal contracts, we have been obliged to charter a large number
- of steamers, so that at times as many as 80 of these are employed
- in this Russian transaction. Besides the old express steamers and
- the _Belgia_ we have now sold to the Russians the _Palatia_ and the
- _Phoenicia_, as well as nine other boats of our company,
- including the _Belgravia_, _Assyria_, and _Granada_ (the remaining
- ones are cargo vessels, mostly taken out of the West Indies
- service), but as regards these latter, we have reserved to
- ourselves the right of redemption.... We have successfully
- accomplished the great task we had undertaken, although, owing to
- the absence of coaling stations, it was thought next to impossible
- to convey such a huge squadron as was the Baltic fleet all the way
- from European to Far Eastern waters. It safely reached its
- destination, because the previously arranged coaling of the vessels
- was carried out systematically and without a hitch anywhere,
- although in some cases it had to be done in open roadsteads. Its
- inglorious end in the Korea Straits cannot, and does not, diminish
- the magnitude of the achievement; and the experiences we have
- gained by successfully carrying out our novel task will surely
- prove of great value to the Government. This whole coaling business
- has been a source of considerable profits to our company, although
- if due regard is paid to the exceptional character of the work and
- to the unusual risks we had to run, they cannot be called
- exorbitant."
-
-A few statistics will show what the whole undertaking meant to the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie from a business point of view. During the years
-1904 and 1905 the company increased its fleet by no less than 21
-steamers--partly new buildings and partly new purchases--representing a
-value of 22-1/2 million marks. To these new acquisitions must be added
-the 19 steamers then building, of a value of 52 million marks, amongst
-them the two big passenger steamers _Amerika_ and _Kaiserin Auguste
-Victoria_ for the New York route, and other big boats for the Mexico,
-the River Plate, and the Far East services. A large fraction of the sums
-spent on this new tonnage--viz. no less than 24 million
-marks--represented the profits made on the sales of ships; another large
-portion was taken out of current earnings, and the remainder was secured
-by a debenture issue. Never again, except in 1913, has the company added
-such an amount of tonnage to its fleet in a single year as it did at
-that time. But the "re-birth" of the company did not only consist in
-this augmentation of tonnage, but also, and chiefly, in the entire
-reorganization of its New York service by the addition to its fleet of
-the _Amerika_ and the _Kaiserin Auguste Victoria_. This event meant that
-the era of the express steamers was being succeeded by one characterized
-by another type of vessel which, though possessing less speed, was
-mainly designed with a view to securing the utmost possible comfort to
-the passengers. The two steamers proved exceedingly remunerative
-investments, and added enormously to the clientele of the company. The
-profits earned on the Russian transaction also made up to a large extent
-for the losses incurred in the keen rate war with the Cunard Line then
-in progress. In spite of this rate war the company was able to increase
-its dividend to 9 per cent. in 1904, and to 11 per cent. in 1905.
-
-Another event which took place in 1904 was the conclusion of a contract
-with the German Government concerning the troop transports to German
-South-West Africa, and the year 1905 witnessed the settlement of a
-short-lived conflict with the North German Lloyd. This conflict
-attracted a great deal of attention at the time, and the Kaiser himself
-thought fit to intervene with a view to terminating it.
-
-When it was seen that German commercial interests in the Middle East had
-considerably increased, the Hamburg-Amerika Linie opened a special line
-to the Persian Gulf in 1906. The year 1907 is chiefly remarkable for a
-rate war affecting the services from Hamburg to the West Coast of
-Africa, of which until then the Woermann Line had considered itself
-entitled to claim a monopoly.
-
-The African shipping business had been jealously nursed by its founder,
-Adolph Woermann, who had always tried hard to guard this special domain
-of his against the encroachments of all outsiders. However much Ballin
-and Adolph Woermann differed in character, they were akin to each other
-in one essential feature--viz. the jealous love they bore to the
-undertaking with which they had identified themselves. Both men, grown
-up in absolutely different environments, yet resembled each other in the
-daring and the fearlessness with which they defended the interests of
-their businesses. The one had trained himself to employ moderation and
-commonsense to overcome resistance where the use of forcible means
-promised no success; the other was a pioneer in the colonial sphere, a
-king in his African empire, the discoverer of new outlets, but broken in
-spirit and bereft of his strength when compelled by circumstances to
-share with others. When Adolph Woermann had died, Ballin honoured his
-memory by contributing to the public Press an appreciation of his
-character, which is perhaps the best that has been written, and which
-ought to be saved from being forgotten. This fact, it is hoped, will be
-sufficient justification for reproducing in this connexion a translation
-of Ballin's article:
-
- "The late Adolph Woermann was a man whom we may truly describe as
- the ideal of what a Hanseatic citizen should be. Secretary of State
- Dernburg himself once told me that he knew quite well that the work
- he was doing for the benefit of our colonies would never come up to
- what Adolph Woermann had achieved in the face of the greatest
- imaginable difficulties.
-
- "Never before, perhaps, has any private shipowner displayed so much
- daring as we see embodied in the business he has built up through
- his labours. Woermann has developed the means of communication
- between Germany and her African colonies to such perfection that
- even the similar work performed by British shipping men has been
- overshadowed. He has done this without receiving any aid from the
- Government; in fact, he had to overcome all sorts of obstacles
- which were put in his way by the bureaucracy. His confidence in his
- work was not shaken when losses had to be faced. Then, more than
- ever, he had his eyes firmly fixed on his goal; and practically
- every vessel which he had built to facilitate communication between
- the German mother country and her colonies represented a fresh step
- forward towards a higher type, thus increasing the immense personal
- responsibility with which he burdened himself. His patriotism was
- of the practical kind; he did his work without asking for the help
- of others, especially without that of the Government.
-
- "And now he has died in bitter disappointment. His striking outward
- appearance has always reminded us of the Iron Chancellor, but the
- similarity in the character of the two men has only become apparent
- during the last few years. It is well known that when the troubles
- in the colonies had been settled he was accused of having enriched
- himself at the expense of the country. He never lost his resentment
- of this accusation; and even though his accusers can point to the
- fact that the court which had to investigate the claims put forward
- by the Government gave judgment to the effect that some of these
- claims were justified, it must be said in reply that this statement
- of the case is inadequate and one-sided. All that was proved was
- that Woermann, who hated red tape, and who never had recourse to
- legal assistance when drawing up his agreements, did not use as
- much caution in this matter as would have been advisable in his
- own interest. The facts that have become known most clearly
- disprove the accusation that he had made large profits at the
- expense of the country, and that he had used the country's distress
- to enrich himself. To the task of carrying out the troop transports
- he devoted himself with his customary largeness of purpose, and he
- accomplished it magnificently. In order to be able to do so, he had
- enlarged his fleet by a number of steamers, and the consequence was
- that, when the work was achieved, he had to admit himself that he
- had over-estimated his strength. When my late colleague Dr.
- Wiegand, the Director-General of the North German Lloyd, and I were
- asked to express an expert opinion on the rates which Woermann had
- charged the Government, we found them thoroughly moderate; in fact,
- we added a rider to the effect that if either of our companies had
- been entrusted with those transports, we could only have carried
- out a very few expeditions at the rates charged by Woermann.
- Woermann, however, carried through the whole task; and when it was
- done he found himself compelled to pass on to the shoulders of the
- Hamburg-Amerika Linie part of the excessive burden which he had
- taken upon himself.
-
- "His iron determination would have enabled him to dispense with the
- assistance thus obtained. But by that time his accusers had
- commenced their attacks on his character, and when the Government
- had officially taken up an attitude against him, he became a prey
- to that resentment to which I have referred before. All those who
- had the privilege of being associated with him during the past few
- years must have noted with grief how this great patriot gradually
- became an embittered critic. The heavy blow also led to the
- breakdown of his health, and during the last years of his life we
- only knew him as a sick man.
-
- "If it is borne in mind how strong, how masterful, and how
- self-reliant a man has passed away with Adolph Woermann, it is sad
- to think that in the end he was not strong enough after all to bear
- on his own shoulders entirely the immense burden of responsibility
- which he had taken upon himself, and that he received nothing but
- ingratitude as the reward of his life's work, although he was
- actuated by truly patriotic motives throughout. Still, this shall
- not prevent us from acknowledging that he was the greatest, the
- most daring, and the most self-sacrificing private shipowner whom
- the Hanseatic cities have ever produced--a princely merchant if
- ever there was one. He was a true friend and an earnest well-wisher
- to the city in which he was born, and to the country which he
- served as a statesman. We are sincerely grateful to him for the
- work he has done, and in honouring his memory we know that we are
- paying tribute to the greatest Hanseatic citizen who had been
- living in our midst."
-
-To complete the enumeration of the many rate wars which occurred during
-the first decade of the twentieth century, we must make brief reference
-to the competition emanating in 1909 from the so-called "Princes' Trust"
-(Fuerstenkonzern) and its ally, viz. a Hamburg firm which had already
-fought the Woermann Line. The object of the fight was to secure the
-business from Antwerp to the Plate. The struggle ended with the
-acquisition of the shipping interests of the Princes' Trust, the
-business career of which came to a sudden end shortly afterwards by a
-financial disaster causing enormous losses to the two princely families
-concerned--the house of Hohenlohe and that of Fuerstenberg. The details
-connected with this affair are still in everybody's memory, and it would
-be beyond the scope of this volume to enter into them. It should be
-mentioned, however, that in connexion with the settlement arrived at the
-two big companies undertook to start some transatlantic services from
-the port of Emden, and in particular to establish a direct line for the
-steerage traffic to North America. The necessary arrangements to this
-end had just been made when the war broke out, and further progress
-became impossible.
-
-The transatlantic pool was considerably extended in scope during those
-years. More than once, however, after the rate war with the Cunard Line
-had come to an end, the amicable relations existing between the lines
-were disturbed, e.g. when the Russian Volunteer Fleet opened a competing
-service--a competition which was got rid of by the aid of the Russian
-East Asiatic S.S. Company; when some British lines temporarily withdrew
-from the steerage pool, and when some differences of policy arose
-between the Hamburg-Amerika Linie and the North German Lloyd. The
-Hamburg company demanded a revision of the percentages, contending that
-the arrangements made fifteen years ago no longer did justice to the
-entirely altered relative positions of the two companies. The
-discussions held in London in February, 1908, under Ballin's
-chairmanship, which lasted several days, and in which delegates of all
-the big Continental and British lines, as well as of the Canadian
-Pacific Railway Company took part, led to the formation of the Atlantic
-Conference (also known as the General Pool). It was supplemented in the
-following year by that of the Mediterranean Conference. Both these
-agreements were renewed in 1911, and further agreements were concluded
-with the Russian and Scandinavian lines to complete the system.
-Agreements on so large a scale had never before been concluded between
-any shipping companies.
-
-This network of agreements existed until it was destroyed through the
-outbreak of the war.
-
-During the fluctuating conditions which characterized the shipping
-business of those years the year 1908 witnessed a depression which, in
-its after-effects, is comparable only to that caused by the cholera
-epidemic sixteen years earlier. Business had been excellent for a fairly
-long time, but it became thoroughly demoralized in the second half of
-1907, and an economic crisis of a magnitude such as has seldom been
-experienced began to affect every country. No part of the shipping
-business remained unaffected by it; hundreds and hundreds of
-ocean-going liners lay idle in the seaports of the world.
-
-Very gradually prospects began to brighten up in the course of 1908, so
-that the worst of the depression had passed sooner than had been
-expected. Indeed, in one respect the crisis had proved a blessing in
-disguise, inasmuch as it had strengthened the inclination of the
-shipping concerns everywhere to compromise and to eliminate unnecessary
-competition--the formation of the general pool, in fact, being the
-outcome of that feeling. The subsequent recovery made up for the losses;
-and the succeeding years, with their very gratifying financial results,
-and their vast internal consolidation, represent the high-water mark in
-the development of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie.
-
-Shortly after the end of the depression a renewed spell of building
-activity set in. First of all a new cargo steamer, possessing a burden
-of 12,000 tons--which was something quite unusual at the time--was
-ordered to be built by Messrs. Harland and Wolff, at a price which was
-also unusually low. It almost created a record for cheapness; and the
-courage of the builders who accepted such an order at such terms was
-greatly admired. A German yard--the Vulkan, of Bremen--then came forward
-with a similar offer, because the German shipbuilders, too, were glad to
-provide their men with work. The result of the combined labour of both
-these firms was a type of cargo boat which proved extremely useful,
-especially in the Far Eastern trade, and which represented a good
-investment to the company.
-
-Gradually the other branches of the business began to increase their
-activity, and the service to North America especially received the close
-attention of the company's management. Meanwhile, other shipping
-companies had added some vessels of the very highest class to their
-fleets. The two big turbine steamers of the Cunard Line, the
-_Lusitania_ and the _Mauretania_, had attracted many passengers, and the
-White Star Line had the mammoth liner _Olympic_ building, which was to
-be followed by two others of the same type, the _Titanic_ and the
-_Gigantic_. The new Cunarder, the _Aquitania_, was to be of the same
-type, so that once more the public was offered the choice of steamers of
-a kind unknown until then. This competition compelled the Packetfahrt to
-follow suit, and Ballin commenced to evolve plans for the building of a
-new vessel which, of course, had to surpass the highest achievement of
-the competing lines, i.e. the _Olympic_. Thus, in co-operation with the
-Vulkan yard, of Stettin, and with Messrs. Blohm and Voss, of Hamburg,
-the plans for the three steamers of the "Imperator" class were designed.
-The competition among the various yards had been extremely keen, and the
-Vulkan yard secured the order for the building of the first unit of this
-class, the _Imperator_. From the point of view of speed, these new
-vessels resembled the fast steamers of the older kind; with regard to
-their equipment, they represented a combination of this type and that of
-the _Kaiserin_, but from the business point of view they were quite a
-novelty, as the basis of their remunerativeness was no longer the cargo
-and steerage business, but the cabin business. If the booking of a
-certain number of cabins could be relied on for each voyage an adequate
-return would be assured. Everything, therefore, was done to attract as
-many cabin passengers as possible. These vessels were a triumph of
-German shipbuilding and engineering skill; and the senior partner of
-Messrs. Blohm and Voss, when the _Vaterland_ was launched, stated with
-just pride that she was the biggest vessel in existence; that she was
-built on the biggest slip; that she had received her equipment under the
-biggest crane, and that she would be docked in the biggest floating dock
-in the world. The launching of the third and biggest of the three
-steamers, the _Bismarck_, represented a red-letter day in the life of
-Ballin and in the history of the company. Nominally she was christened
-by the granddaughter of the Iron Chancellor, but actually by the Kaiser.
-The bottle of champagne used for the purpose did not break when it left
-the young lady's hands; but the Kaiser seized it, and with a sweeping
-movement of the arm hurled it against the stem of the huge vessel. To
-remove as far as possible the last vestige of the unhappy estrangement
-between the Kaiser and the Chancellor had always been Ballin's earnest
-desire. So it filled him with great joy when he was enabled to dedicate
-the greatest product of his life-work to the memory of the Prince whom
-he admired intensely; and still more was he pleased when the Kaiser
-consented to take part in the ceremony. He had often expressed his
-regret at the unfortunate stage management in connexion with the
-Kaiser's visit to Hamburg after the unveiling of the Bismarck monument,
-when he was driven past it without an opportunity having been arranged
-for him to inspect it. Such a course, Ballin remarked, was bound to
-create the impression that the Kaiser had intentionally been led past
-it. "I wish I had been permitted to speak to the Kaiser about it
-beforehand," he told me afterwards. "I am sure he would have insisted
-upon seeing it." Proper stage management plays so prominent a part in
-the life of royalty, and it can be of such great use in avoiding certain
-blunders and in hiding certain shortcomings that it is much to be
-regretted that the Kaiser had so often to dispense with it.
-
-The entering into the Packetfahrt's service of the "Imperator" type of
-steamers represented an extraordinary increase in the amount of tonnage
-which the company employed on the New York route; and when the North
-German Lloyd refused to allow the Packetfahrt a corresponding addition
-to its percentage share under the pool agreement, which the Packetfahrt
-believed itself justified in asking for, a conflict threatened once more
-to disturb the relations existing between the two companies. As a result
-the position of both was weakened in Austria, where the Government
-cleverly used the situation to its own advantage. Apart from this,
-however, not much damage was done, as negotiations were soon started
-with the object of securing the conclusion of a far-reaching community
-of interest agreement which was not merely to be restricted to the
-transatlantic services of the two companies. If these negotiations could
-be brought to a successful issue, Ballin thought that this would be the
-dawn of a new era in the contractual relations existing between shipping
-firms everywhere, because he believed that such development would not be
-confined to the German lines, but would assume international
-proportions. The agreements actually in force seemed to him obsolete--at
-least in part. That this should be so is but natural, as the factor
-which it is intended to eliminate by the terms of such agreements--man's
-innate selfishness--is, after all, ineradicable. "Nature," in the words
-of the Roman poet, "will always return, even if you expel it with a
-pitchfork." Wherever a human trait like selfishness is to be kept within
-certain bounds by means of written agreements, it becomes necessary not
-only to make small improvements from time to time, but to subject the
-whole system to a thorough overhauling every now and then.
-
-Many events affecting the progress of the company's business have no
-reference in these pages, but the reader can visualize the importance of
-Albert Ballin's life-work if he keeps before his mind the fact that
-while in the early part of 1886 the Hamburg-Amerika Linie maintained but
-a mail service from Hamburg to New York and four lines to Mexico and
-the West Indies, from that date to 1913 fifty new services were added to
-the existing ones.
-
-The fleet possessed by the Hamburg-Amerika Linie in 1886 consisted of 22
-ocean-going steamers, totalling 60,531 G.R.T.[1] By the end of 1913
-these figures had increased to 172 steamers and 1,028,762 G.R.T.
-respectively. During the twenty-eight years 269 vessels of 1,388,206
-tons had been added, either by new building or by purchase, and 101
-steamers of 346,927 tons had been sold. At the end of 1913 19 steamers
-of 268,766 tons were building, so that, including these, the total
-tonnage amounted to 1,360,360 G.R.T. at that date.
-
-During the same period the joint-stock capital of the company had
-increased from 15 to 157-1/2 million marks, the debenture issues from
-5.6 to 69.5 million marks, and the visible reserves from 3,595,285 to
-58,856,552 marks.
-
-The working profits of the company during those twenty-eight years
-amounted to 521,727,426 marks, 2,735,700 of which were Government
-subsidies received during the temporary participation in the Imperial
-Mail Service to the Far East.
-
-The average dividend paid to the shareholders was 7.02 per cent. per
-annum. This figure, to my thinking, proves that the biggest steamship
-company the world has ever known was to a small extent only a
-"capitalist enterprise." Out of a total net profit of over 500 millions,
-no more than 140 million marks went to the shareholders as interest on
-their invested capital; by far the greater part of the remainder was
-used to extend the company's business, so that the country in general
-benefited by it.
-
-Concerning one matter which played an important part in Ballin's career,
-viz., the relations between his company and the North German Lloyd, the
-reader may perhaps desire a more exhaustive account. There certainly
-was no want of rivalry between the two companies. One notable reason for
-this was the fact that at the time when Ballin joined the Packetfahrt
-the latter had fallen far behind its younger competitor in its
-development, both from the business and the technical point of view. The
-Packetfahrt, in particular, had not kept pace with the technical
-progress in steamship construction, and the consequence was that, when
-the pool was set up, it had to content itself with a percentage which
-was considerably less than that allotted to the Lloyd. The enormous
-advance made under the Ballin regime naturally caused it to demand a
-larger share. At the same time the Lloyd also increased its efforts more
-than ever before, and thus a race for predominance was started between
-the two big companies, which greatly assisted them in obtaining the
-commanding position they acquired as the world's leading shipping firms.
-I do not think this is the place to go into all the details of this
-struggle, and I shall confine myself to reproducing an article which
-Ballin himself contributed in 1907 on the occasion of the fiftieth
-anniversary of the foundation of the North German Lloyd. As this article
-throws several interesting sidelights on the development of
-transatlantic shipping enterprise, it may furnish a suitable conclusion
-to the account given in the present chapter:
-
- "The year 1907 is one which will stand out prominently in the
- history of our transatlantic shipping on account of the two
- anniversaries which we are going to celebrate during its course. On
- May 27th it will be sixty years since the Hamburg-Amerika Linie was
- called into existence, and on February 20th the North German Lloyd
- will celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of its foundation. I
- suppose that a more competent pen than mine will present us on that
- day with a detailed account of the development of the great Bremen
- shipping firm, and my only object in writing this article is to
- review in brief the period of more than twenty years during which I
- have had the pleasure of working hand in hand with our Bremen
- friends.
-
- "Until the year 1885 the two big companies, the Lloyd and the
- Packetfahrt, scarcely had any mutually profitable dealings with
- each other; on the contrary, their relations were characterized by
- open enmity. It is true that the attempts at a _rapprochement_,
- which were made from time to time, did in some cases lead to the
- conclusion of an agreement concerning certain rates to which both
- companies bound themselves to adhere, but they never lasted more
- than a short time, and ultimately, far from causing an improvement
- of the existing state of things, they left matters worse than they
- had been before. I think I may congratulate myself on being the
- first to have brought about a better understanding between the two
- companies which, in the end, paved the way to the establishment of
- a lasting friendship which has grown closer and closer during the
- past twenty years.
-
- "In 1886, shortly after I had joined the Hamburg-Amerika Linie,
- when I went to Bremen in order to find out what could be done to
- lessen or, if possible, to remove altogether the competition
- between both companies, the conduct of the firm's business had
- passed from the hands of Consul Meier, who was getting on in years,
- into those of Director Lohmann. Mr. Lohmann was a man of unusual
- energy and possessed of a rare gift for organization. In the annals
- of international shipping his name will be for ever associated with
- the introduction into the North Atlantic route of fast steamers
- under the German flag. He had been fortunate enough to meet with a
- congenial mind on the technical side in the head of the firm of
- Messrs. John Elder and Co., the Glasgow shipbuilders. At their
- yard, starting in 1881, a series of fast steamers were built--the
- _Elbe_, the _Werra_, the _Fulda_, the _Saale_, the _Trave_, the
- _Aller_, and the _Lahn_--which opened up a new and memorable era in
- the progress of the means of communication between the Old World
- and the New. These boats proved of great benefit to the company
- financially, and they were also a considerable boon to the
- passengers owing to their speed and punctuality. I recollect
- talking to the chairman of a big British steamship company on
- board one of his steamers in New York harbour in 1888, when the
- s.s. _Lahn_, of the North German Lloyd, steamed in. My British
- colleague, filled with admiration, glanced at his watch, touched
- his hat by way of salutation, and said with honest enthusiasm:
- 'Wonderful boats; they are really doing clockwork.' He only
- expressed the sentiment felt by the travelling public generally;
- everybody appreciated their reliability and punctuality, and the
- excellence of their service.
-
- "Director Lohmann died very suddenly on February 9th, 1892; he had
- just concluded an address at a general meeting of the company held
- at the 'Haus Seefahrt' when he dropped down dead. During the last
- few years of his life he had not been well advised technically, and
- failed to adopt the twin-screw principle, as had been done by the
- Hamburg company. Thus, when the two fast single-screw steamers, the
- _Havel_ and the _Spree_, were built at Stettin in 1890, they were
- practically obsolete, because the travelling public by that time
- had come to prefer those of the twin-screw type, owing to the
- increased safety they afforded.
-
- "In 1888 Consul Meier retired from the chairmanship of the Lloyd,
- to be succeeded--after the short reign of Mr. Reck--by Mr. George
- Plate. To Mr. Plate, if I am rightly informed, great credit is due
- for having secured the services of Director-General Dr. Heinrich
- Wiegand on the board of the company.
-
- "What the Lloyd has achieved under the Wiegand regime far surpasses
- anything accomplished in the past.
-
- "The Hamburg-Amerika Linie, meanwhile, had been alive to the needs
- of the times; and the consequence was a healthy competition between
- these two steamship companies--by far the biggest the world has
- ever seen--practically on all the seven seas. This competition, by
- intelligent compromise, was restricted within reasonable limits,
- the guiding spirits of the two concerns consciously adopting the
- policy implied by the strategic principle: 'In approaching the
- enemy's position we must divide our forces; in attacking him we
- must concentrate them.'
-
- "It would not be correct to say that this atmosphere of friendship
- had never been clouded--it would, indeed, have been tedious had it
- been otherwise than it was. Up to now, however, Wiegand and I have
- always been able to maintain pleasant relations between our two
- concerns, and in the interests of both of them it is sincerely to
- be hoped that this spirit of mutual understanding will continue to
- animate them in the future."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE TECHNICAL REORGANIZATION OF THE HAMBURG-AMERIKA LINIE
-
-
-In another chapter of this book the big passenger boats of the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie have been described as the outcome of Ballin's
-imaginative brain. This they were indeed, and in many instances it is
-scarcely possible to say how far the credit for having built them is due
-to the naval architect, and how far it is due to Ballin. He was
-profoundly against employing _one_ system throughout, and on accepting
-the views of _one_ expert exclusively; and this aversion was so
-pronounced that he objected on principle to the nomination of any
-technical expert to the Board of his company. The company, he said, is
-surely going to last longer than a lifetime or two. Besides, it must try
-to solve the problem of perpetual youth, and therefore it cannot afford
-to run the risk of staking its fortune on the views held by one single
-man who is apt to ignore the progress of his science without noticing
-it. The same dislike of onesidedness induced him to encourage to the
-best of his capacity a healthy competition among the various shipyards,
-and to avail himself of the experiences gained not only by the German
-yards but by their British rivals also. At an early stage of his career
-close business relations were established between himself and Messrs.
-Harland and Wolff, of Belfast; and a personal friendship connected him
-with the owner of that firm, Mr. (now Lord) Pirrie. Acting upon the
-example set by the White Star Line, Ballin made an agreement with
-Messrs. Harland and Wolff as early as 1898, by which the latter bound
-themselves always to keep a slip at the disposal of the Packetfahrt. The
-reason which prompted Ballin to make this arrangement was, as he
-explained to the Board of Trustees, that the company's orders for new
-construction and repairs had nowhere been carried out more
-satisfactorily and more cheaply than by the Belfast yard, where all the
-new vessels ordered were built under a special agreement, i.e. at cost
-price with a definitely fixed additional percentage representing the
-profits and certain expenditure incurred by the builders. This
-arrangement enabled the Packetfahrt to become acquainted with whatever
-was latest and best in British shipyard production, and, as it were, to
-acquire models which it could improve upon in German yards after they
-had been tested on actual service. Some of the best and most important
-types of vessels which the Packetfahrt has produced owe their origin to
-this system; and it is only fair to say that it exercised an entirely
-beneficial influence on the progress of the German shipbuilding
-industry, the prosperity of which is largely due to the fact that it has
-profited from the century-old experience gained by the British yards and
-by British ocean-shipping.
-
-Ballin held the view that, just as the shipbuilding expert had to watch
-the progress of naval architecture and to make practical application of
-its results, and just as the merchant had to exploit this progress for
-the benefit of his business, the shipowner--especially the one who
-maintains a service of passenger boats--has the special task of making
-every step in the direction of further advance serviceable to the needs
-of the passengers. Being himself, as has been pointed out elsewhere,
-gifted with a strong faculty for appreciating things beautiful, and
-raising no less high demands as regards the beauty and the comfort of
-all his surroundings, Ballin constantly endeavoured to make use of all
-the results of his own observations and of his own experience for the
-greater comfort of the passengers. Those who saw the finished products
-of his imagination, the beautifully appointed "floating hotels," hardly
-realized how many apparently insignificant details--which, after all, in
-their entirety make what we call comfort--owe their origin to his own
-personal suggestions. Each time he made a sea voyage on board a steamer
-of his own, or of some other company, he brought home with him a number
-of new ideas, chiefly such as affected technicalities, and matters
-dealing with the personal comfort of the passengers. Numerous entries in
-the notebooks which he carried on such occasions are there to serve as
-illustrations; the following items, for instance, are selected from
-those which he jotted down, roughly, on a voyage to New York some time
-in the 'nineties. They speak for themselves, in spite of their
-sketchiness:
-
-"List of Moselle purveyors wants revision--notices on board to be
-restricted as much as possible, those which are necessary to be
-tastefully framed--sailing lists and general regulations to be included
-in passengers' lists--state cabin on board _Kaiser Friedrich_: key,
-latch, drawer; no room for portmanteaux and trunks; towels too
-small--_Deutschland_: soiled linen cupboard too small--stewards
-_Oceanic_ white jackets--celery glasses--butter dishes too small--large
-bed pillows--consomme cups--playing cards: Packetfahrt complete name of
-firm--Packetfahrt complete name on Wehber's wine bottles--toast to be
-served in a serviette (hot)."
-
-Rough notes such as these were used to serve Ballin as the material
-underlying the detailed reports and instructions to the company's
-servants which he composed during the voyage, so that not even a long
-sea voyage gave him the unbroken spell of leisure he so badly needed.
-Indeed, the longer it lasted the more chances did it provide for
-thoroughly inspecting the practical working of the steamer. Many other
-reports are in my possession, but the one given will serve to emphasize
-the meticulous quality of observation he possessed, and how practical
-was his mind in regard to details of comfort and convenience, and the
-special climatic needs of different routes.
-
-Even where the peculiar conditions obtaining in tropical climates were
-concerned--conditions with which he was personally quite
-unacquainted--he unfailingly discovered any defects that might exist,
-and also the means by which they could be remedied.
-
-Ballin's connexion with the Packetfahrt practically coincides with the
-whole of that period during which the immense progress of modern
-steamship building from humble beginnings to its present stage of
-development took place; with the only exception that the North German
-Lloyd had already, before Ballin joined the Packetfahrt, established its
-services of fast steamers which were far ahead of those maintained by
-other shipping companies owing to their punctuality and reliability, and
-which Ballin then set himself to improve upon and to excel. Apart from
-this one type of vessel, the science of steamship construction, as seen
-from our modern point of view, was still in its infancy.
-
-In 1886 the steamships owned by the Hamburg-Amerika Linie were mainly of
-two different types, viz., those used in the North Atlantic service
-(principally on the New York route), and those used in the Mexico-West
-Indies service.
-
-The expansion of the Packetfahrt's business after Ballin had joined the
-company, and especially the addition of new services together with the
-increase in the number of ports of departure and of destination, made it
-necessary constantly to increase the size and the carrying capacity of
-the cargo boats, and the size and the speed of the passenger steamers,
-as well as to improve and to modernize the passenger accommodation on
-board the latter. All this, of course, considerably added to the cost
-price of the vessels, so that, as a further consequence, the facilities
-for loading and discharging them had to be improved and extended. Four
-principal types of steamers may be distinguished in the development of
-the company's fleet, especially of that part of it which was engaged on
-the North Atlantic route, where the main development took place.
-
-_Type One_: Fast steamers--twin screws, 18 knots, 8,500
-G.R.T.--possessing accommodation for passengers of all classes and
-provided with comparatively little cargo space, but comfortably and
-luxuriously appointed throughout. The three leading ideas governing
-their construction were safety, speed, and comfort; and progress was
-made to keep abreast of competing lines, until it culminated in the
-vessels of the "Imperator" class. The _Imperator_ was built in 1913.
-They were quadruple screw turbine steamers, possessing no fewer than 42
-multitubular boilers each, and, as they were of a capacity of 52,000
-gross register tons, they were nearly three times the size of the
-_Deutschland_.
-
-_Type Two_: Ships of medium speed and of considerable size, and
-therefore providing a high standard of comfort for passengers combined
-with ample facilities for cargo accommodation.
-
-_Type Three_: Chiefly built as cargo boats, but in such a way that a
-part of their space could be utilized for the accommodation of a large
-number of steerage passengers.
-
-_Type Four_: Cargo steamers without any passenger accommodation.
-
-The difference between the floating palaces of type No. 1 in 1913 and
-those vessels which the Hamburg-Amerika Linie possessed when Ballin
-first entered upon his career as a shipping man was like that between
-day and night. A brief comparison of a few details will be the best
-means of illustrating the enormous progress achieved within less than
-the lifetime of a generation. The size of the vessels had increased from
-3,000 to more than 50,000 tons; the speed from 14 to nearly 25 knots;
-the height of the decks from 6-1/2 to 8 feet in the lower decks, whilst
-that of the upper ones, as far as the social rooms were concerned,
-amounted to as much as 20 feet. Large portions of the upper decks were
-reserved for the social rooms, the finest of which--the ball-room--could
-challenge comparison with almost any similar room in any hotel ashore
-with respect to its size and to the magnificence of its furnishings and
-of its decoration. From a technical point of view, too, the construction
-of such a huge room on board a vessel, which possessed a floor space of
-4,800 square feet, and a ceiling unsupported by any columns or pillars
-of any kind, was an unprecedented achievement. Besides, there were
-immense dining-rooms for each class, smoking-rooms, ladies' saloons, a
-restaurant, a winter garden, a swimming pool, and numerous smaller rooms
-suitable for the relaxation and amusement of the passengers.
-
-On the older boats the arrangement was that the small cabins were all
-grouped round the one and only social room on board, so that the
-occupants of the cabins could hear all that was going on in the social
-room, and _vice versa_. The superficial area at the disposal of each
-passenger was gradually increased from 43 square feet in the double
-cabins to 172 square feet in the cabins of the _Imperator_, so that the
-latter were really no longer mere cabins, but actual rooms. The
-suites-de-luxe comprised up to twelve rooms, the largest of which
-covered an area of 247 square feet.
-
-It must not be thought, however, that the first-class passengers were
-the only ones for whose comfort the company catered. The other classes
-progressed proportionately in added comfort, space, and social
-facilities, not excepting the steerage.
-
-But by far the greatest improvements made were those in connexion with
-the enormous progress of the purely technical side of shipbuilding
-during the whole period under review. The more the vessels increased in
-size, the less were they liable to the pitching and rolling motion
-caused when the weather was rough. Moreover, special appliances, such as
-bilge keels and bilge tanks, were employed to lessen these movements
-still more, even when the sea was high. The reciprocating engines
-gradually gave place to higher types, and later on turbines and
-oil-engines were also introduced. In addition to the propelling
-machinery a number of auxiliary engines were used which were of various
-kinds and for various purposes, such as the ventilation of the cabins
-and the other rooms, the generation of light, the services in connexion
-with the personal welfare of the passengers and with their safety whilst
-on board ship. Instead of single bottoms, double bottoms were used, and
-the additional safety resulting therefrom was still further enhanced by
-dividing the space between the two by means of a whole network of
-partitions. The vessels of the "Imperator" class, indeed, possessed
-practically a double shell, which formed an effective protection against
-the danger of collision. The lifeboats increased in size and in number,
-and their shape and equipment were improved. Emergency lighting stations
-were arranged which could generate a sufficient amount of electric
-current if the ordinary supply should break down at any time. The whole
-vessels were divided into self-contained compartments by water-tight
-bulkheads, the doors of which could be automatically closed. This
-division into many compartments proved an effective protection against
-the risk of fire; but a number of special devices were also adopted to
-serve the same purpose, e.g. an extensive system of steampipes by which
-each single room could be rapidly filled with steam, so that the fire
-could be automatically extinguished. Fire-proof material was used for
-the walls separating adjacent rooms and cabins, and, not content with
-all this, the company provided its mammoth liners with an actual fire
-brigade, the members of which were fully trained for their work. The
-most important improvements affecting the navigation of the steamers
-were the introduction of wireless telegraphy apparatus, the gyroscopic
-compasses, the system of submarine direction indicator signalling, and
-the substitution of two steering gears instead of one, not to mention a
-series of minor improvements of all kinds.
-
-The provisioning on board the German steamers was of proverbial
-excellence, the kitchen arrangements were modelled after those found in
-the big hotels, and were supplied with all manner of supplementary
-devices. The huge store rooms were divided into sections for those
-provisions that were of a perishable nature and for those that were not;
-and for the former refrigerating rooms were also provided in which the
-temperature could be regulated according to the nature of the articles.
-
-Perhaps the most interesting development of the various types of
-steamers is that which type No. 2 has undergone. It originated in Great
-Britain, whence it was taken over in 1894. The first unit of this type
-added to the fleet of the Packetfahrt was the _Persia_, of 5,800 G.R.T.,
-and a speed of 12 knots, built to accommodate a number of cabin and
-steerage passengers, and to carry a considerable amount of cargo as
-well. These boats possessed many advantages over similar ones,
-advantages which were due to their size, their shape, and the loading
-facilities with which they were equipped. Ballin immediately recognized
-the good points of this type, and he improved it until the vessels
-reached a size of 13,000 G.R.T., which still enabled them to travel at a
-speed of 13 knots. They were twin-screw steamers, and were provided with
-every safety device known at the time. A still further improvement of
-this type was represented by the _Amerika_ and the _Kaiserin Auguste
-Victoria_, built in 1905 and 1906 respectively, luxuriously equipped
-throughout; by their large size--they possessed a capacity of very
-nearly 25,000 G.R.T.--extremely seaworthy, and as they could travel at
-the rate of 17-1/2 knots, their speed was scarcely inferior to that
-possessed by the older type of fast steamers. From the point of view of
-actual remunerativeness they were far superior to the fast steamers,
-combining, as they did, all the earning possibilities of the passenger
-and of the cargo vessels.
-
-The development of the types comprising the cargo steamers went hand in
-hand with the expansion of international trade relations, and with the
-constant increase in the amount of goods exchanged between the nations.
-To a certain extent development was limited by the dimensions of the
-Suez Canal. Still, improvements became possible in this respect too when
-the depth of the Canal was increased to 27 feet in 1908, 29 feet in
-1912, and 30 feet in 1914.
-
-Ballin carefully watched this development, incessantly improving the
-existing types of his company's cargo boats, so that they should always
-meet the growing needs of sea-borne trade, and in some instances even
-anticipating them, until, when the war broke out, twin screw cargo boats
-of a capacity of 16,000 tons and possessing a speed of 13 knots were
-being built for the company.
-
-In a brief outline such as this, it is not possible to enter into
-details concerning the expansion of the other lines which became
-affiliated to or otherwise associated with the Packetfahrt in course of
-time. One special type, however, ought to receive a somewhat more
-detailed treatment in this connexion, viz., that of the excursion
-steamers. The running of pleasure cruises, originally nothing but a mere
-expedient to prevent the express steamers from lying idle during the
-dead season, gradually became an end in itself. The Northern and
-Mediterranean cruises were soon followed by others, e.g. those to the
-West Indies and the pleasure trips round the globe. Two special
-steamers, the _Prinzessin Victoria Luise_, and the somewhat smaller and
-less sumptuous _Meteor_, both of them equipped after the style of
-pleasure yachts, were built when it was found advisable to make this
-service independent of the fast steamers and the big passenger boats
-which had also been employed for this purpose. After the loss of the
-_Prinzessin Victoria Luise_ she was replaced first by a British
-passenger boat that had been purchased, and then by the _Deutschland_,
-specially reconditioned for her new purpose, and renamed _Victoria
-Luise_. Both vessels were extremely popular with the international
-travelling public, and year after year they carried thousands of
-tourists to countries and places distinguished for the beauty of their
-natural scenery or for their historical and artistic associations. They
-were largely instrumental in constantly augmenting the number of those
-who formed the regular clientele of the company.
-
-"Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery." In the realm of shipping
-it has always been customary for each company to profit by the
-experience gained and the progress made by its competitors. This applies
-to the Packetfahrt and its management also; but in their case they have
-given infinitely more than they have received, and in the whole history
-of shipping there has never been one single person who has exercised a
-more stimulating influence on its technical progress than Albert
-Ballin.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-POLITICS
-
-
-Notwithstanding the many business controversies in which Ballin took an
-important part, it has occasionally been said that he was not really a
-"fighter." This statement may be allowed to pass quite unchallenged,
-provided that by the term "fighter" we mean a man whose habit it is to
-fight to the bitter end. Ballin never indulged in fighting for its own
-sake, nor was it ever his object to see his vanquished opponent lie
-prostrate before him. Such a mental attitude he, in his own drastic way,
-would have described as a "perverted pleasure." Always and everywhere it
-was his aim to secure to himself and to those he represented the maximum
-benefit obtainable consistent with the realities of the situation, so
-that he has been justly described as "a man of compromise."
-
-This feature of his personality, indeed, forms the key-note both to his
-policy and to the principles on which it was based. Perhaps in other
-spheres of economic activity it is possible for a struggle between two
-competing rivals to end in the complete victory of one of them; in the
-shipping business such an outcome is the exception but not the rule.
-There a really _weak_ opponent is never met with, unless one's rival
-happens to be exceptionally inexperienced or constitutionally unsound.
-The minor competitor, where shipping is concerned, is by no means always
-the less powerful of the two. On the contrary, the contest which
-inflicts small losses on him inflicts heavy losses on his big opponent,
-and may easily exhaust the latter first. The last few decades have
-witnessed the establishment of many new shipping firms under the
-auspices of national sentiment. Governments and whole peoples have
-backed them, and in such cases private undertakings have found it
-difficult to compete.
-
-During his early training Ballin had so thoroughly convinced himself of
-the necessity for co-operation and compromise in matters economic that
-this conviction became the corner-stone of his policy. He also made it
-his principle never to tie an unwilling partner to an agreement which
-the latter considered to be detrimental to his vital interests, and he
-would only approve of an agreement if both parties to it felt satisfied
-that they had done a good stroke of business by concluding it. The
-numerous "community of interest" agreements to which he signed his name
-established, the longer they lasted and the further they were extended,
-an increasingly intimate contact between the shipping firms all over the
-world, thus proving that the consistent application of his principles
-was justified by its success.
-
-In politics, too, he regarded this line of action as the only correct
-one. Over and over again he described the World War as a "stupid war" or
-as the "most stupid of all wars," because its origin, the conflict
-between Austria-Hungary and Serbia, was so utterly meaningless to the
-progress of the world. Its actual outbreak was caused by the strained
-economic relations between Hungary and Serbia, or--to put it quite
-plainly--by the boycott of the Serbian pig, a matter which was surely of
-no importance to the world's trade and traffic at large. "No Bismarck
-was needed to prevent _this_ war," he often said when speaking of its
-immediate origin.
-
-This attitude of his does not mean that he shut his eyes to the
-deep-seated antagonisms which were at the back of these local squabbles,
-viz., the Franco-Russian coalition against Germany, and the
-Anglo-German rivalry. The latter he regarded as sufficient to turn the
-scale; if it could be adjusted a World War, he felt sure, would be
-avoided. The possibility of a universal conflagration had been pointed
-out to him by no less an authority than Prince Bismarck on the occasion
-of the latter's visit to Hamburg, when he was shown over the express
-steamer of the Packetfahrt that was to bear his name. "I shall not live
-to see the World War," Bismarck told him; "but you will, and it will
-start in the Near East."
-
-With ever-increasing anxiety, Ballin noticed how, as a result of the
-German naval armaments, the Anglo-German antagonism came into existence,
-and how in time the position became worse and worse. When the
-Government, about the year 1900, embarked upon its propaganda for the
-creation of a big navy, he lent it his active assistance, but in later
-years he strongly opposed the naval race with Great Britain, trying to
-the best of his ability to circumvent its disastrous consequences.
-
-The British argument against Germany's naval programme was that a nation
-which owned one-third of the inhabited globe and intended to maintain
-its supremacy could not renounce its naval predominance. His knowledge
-of British mentality--gained, as it was, through many years of
-intercourse with the English--told him that this reasoning was certainly
-unassailable from the British point of view, and that England would
-fight for its recognition to the bitter end. Therefore, he considered
-the situation could only be met by an Anglo-German understanding. The
-failure of arriving at such a solution was probably caused--apart from
-personal motives--by the fact that in Germany the spirit of compromise
-was not the predominant one, but that its place was taken by an
-exaggerated opinion of the country's own strength combined with a
-certain ignorance regarding foreign countries.
-
-This mental attitude is typical of the two factions which were
-all-powerful in Germany at the time, viz., what might be called the Old
-Prussian aristocracy, and the representatives of the heavy industries.
-The common platform on which these two groups met was the policy to be
-pursued regarding customs tariffs, which, although it formed the basis
-of the economic greatness of Germany, also prepared the way for serious
-international conflicts. During the war these two groups were in charge
-of what was meant to be the political policy of the country, but which
-was, in fact, nothing but an inferior substitute for it.
-
-Ballin's international position is illustrated by the fact that he was
-the first to be approached in the matter of a projected Anglo-German
-rapprochement, an affair which reached its climax with Lord Haldane's
-visit to Berlin. Owing to its historical interest this episode is worth
-a detailed account.
-
-The first steps in this direction date back as far as the year 1908, and
-the ultimate breakdown of the project did not take place until the
-outbreak of the war. The British negotiator was Sir Ernest Cassel, who,
-a native of Germany, had settled in England when quite young, and who
-had become one of the world's most successful financiers. He was the
-intimate friend of King Edward from the time when the latter was Prince
-of Wales, and he also acted as his banker and as his political adviser.
-The King visited his home almost daily during the last few years of his
-life to take part in a game of bridge. The motives which may have
-prompted Sir Ernest to lend his assistance and his great influence to an
-endeavour which aimed at an understanding between his adopted country
-and the land of his birth need not, in the case of a man so clever and
-so experienced, be very far to seek. Sir Ernest repeatedly referred to
-himself as a German, and as such he was deprived of his
-privy-councillorship during the war. Thus it is quite likely that he
-might have been prompted no less by an inherited predilection for the
-one, than by an acquired preference for the other country. This very
-fact may also have enabled him to see matters with particular clearness
-of vision and without any prejudice. He and his friends reasoned
-somewhat along the following lines:
-
-The policy of King Edward having led to a considerable strengthening of
-the position of France on the Continent, there arose the danger of an
-armed conflict between the continental Powers, especially as many points
-of dispute threatened at the same time to disturb the relations between
-Germany and Great Britain. These differences were caused on the one hand
-by the political activities of Germany as a world power, and on the
-other by her commercial and industrial expansion which bid fair to
-relegate Great Britain to a subordinate position. People in England
-regarded the want of a system of protection similar to the German
-protective tariffs as the real cause of this development, a want which
-retarded the progress of British industrialism, and which prevented
-British financiers from taking an active interest in these matters. The
-German financiers, however, exerted all their influence on behalf of the
-industrial expansion of their country, thus emancipating it more and
-more from foreign capital. The time during which the financing of the
-German industries by French money (the so-called French "pensions"),
-i.e. the discounting by French capitalists of bills drawn by German
-industrialists, played an important part, and even represented a serious
-menace in days of political tension, had only just passed, but, thanks
-to the increasing capital strength of Germany, its effects had now quite
-ceased to make themselves felt.
-
-The advantage to Great Britain of an understanding with Germany was that
-it would guarantee her maritime supremacy which she was resolved to
-maintain at any price, whilst at the same time reducing the burden of
-her naval armaments which, in her case, too, had become wellnigh
-insupportable. The Liberal Government then in power was particularly
-interested in such financial retrenchment, being quite aware that the
-time had arrived for the State to enter upon an era of social
-legislation.
-
-Contact between Ballin and the above-mentioned British groups was
-established through the agency of some friends of his connected with
-German high finance. The fact that the British selected Ballin to start
-these negotiations is probably due to his well-known friendship with the
-Kaiser, which suggested the possibility of approaching the German
-Government--even if only by informal channels in the first instance.
-This first attempt, should it prove successful, might at any moment be
-followed up by direct negotiations between the two governments. In view
-of the traditional close connexion existing in England between business
-circles on the one hand, and the politicians, the parties, and the
-Government on the other, such proceedings did not by any means imply a
-policy of backstairs, but might be relied upon to open up a way for
-sounding German official quarters in the most natural manner.
-
-The general tenor of Anglo-German relations at that time was somewhat as
-follows.
-
-The visit of King Edward to Wilhelmshoehe and that of the German Emperor
-and Empress to Windsor Castle in the summer of 1907 had been of a very
-friendly character, and, together with other manifestations of
-friendship exchanged between various German and British societies, they
-had exercised a favourable impression on public opinion in both
-countries. But very soon this friendly feeling was replaced by one of
-irritation. Great Britain and Russia had concluded an agreement
-concerning their frontiers in the Middle East, and this led to questions
-in the Reichstag as to whether German interests had been properly
-safeguarded. At the same time (in the summer of 1907) the Hague
-Conference came to an end without having led to an understanding
-regarding the limitation of armaments, which many people in England
-would have liked to be brought about. Towards the end of the year the
-German Government submitted to the Reichstag a Navy Bill by which the
-life of the capital ships was to be reduced from 25 to 20 years. This
-was tantamount to asking for the cost of three new ships of the line.
-Simultaneously a powerful propaganda for the navy was started, and when
-Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria resigned the protectorate of the Bavarian
-section of the Navy League, because the League which at that time was
-presided over by the well-known General Keim had engaged in party
-politics, his withdrawal had the undesirable effect of focusing public
-attention on the League's share in this agitation. This step, as was but
-natural, brought about a change in the chairmanship of the League.
-
-In England the agitation against Germany in general, and against her
-naval policy in particular, became very violent in the early part of
-1908. In February _The Times_ announced that the Kaiser, for the express
-purpose of interfering with the British naval budget, had sent a letter
-to that effect to Lord Tweedmouth, the First Lord of the Admiralty. His
-lordship categorically denied in Parliament that the document had any
-political character whatever, but in spite of this denial, and in spite
-of the support which he received from Lord Lansdowne and from Lord
-Rosebery, the matter produced a violent outburst of feeling on the part
-of the British Press and public. During March, 1908, both houses of
-Parliament discussed German and British naval policy in great detail. In
-an article published by the _National Review_, Lord Esher, the chairman
-of the Imperial Maritime League, demanded that for every keel laid down
-by Germany, Britain should lay down two, and General Baden-Powell
-described the danger of a German invasion as imminent. On the other
-hand, Sir Edward Grey, the Foreign Secretary, emphasized in one of his
-speeches the point of view referred to above, viz. that a reduction of
-the naval burdens would also be desirable in the interest of Britain,
-but that he could recommend such a policy only if the other governments
-consented to do the same.
-
-All these considerations might easily suggest to the clear-headed men of
-business on either side of the North Sea how greatly it would be to the
-mutual advantage of both if a way could be found towards a limitation of
-naval armaments.
-
-The first interview between Ballin and Sir Ernest Cassel took place in
-the summer of 1908, and Ballin afterwards gave the Kaiser a detailed
-account of it when the latter visited Hamburg and Kiel at the end of
-June. Another report, based on material supplied by Ballin, was composed
-by the chief of the Press Department of the Foreign Office, Geheimrat
-Hammann, for the use of the Imperial Chancellor and the Foreign
-Secretary, and in the absence of any original account by Ballin himself,
-it may be permitted to give an outline of its contents below.
-
-Sir Ernest opened the conversation by saying that for a long time back
-he had desired to discuss the political situation simply in his capacity
-as a private person, and that he felt qualified to do so because of his
-intimate acquaintance with some of the leading personages and with
-politics in general. He would like to contribute his share towards the
-prevention of a dangerous development of the existing rivalry. The King
-felt very keenly that the rapid increase of the German naval forces
-constituted a menace to Britain's maritime position. He was convinced,
-however, that his nephew would never provoke a wanton conflict, and
-that, in his heart of hearts, he loathed the horrors of war. Although,
-therefore, during his--the King's--lifetime the danger of an
-Anglo-German war was remote, it was nevertheless necessary that, when
-his son succeeded him, the latter should find Britain's maritime
-position so strong that the Kaiser's successor should be unable to
-assail it.
-
-When Ballin interposed at this stage that the British navy, because of
-its unchallenged superiority in numbers, need not be afraid of the newly
-created naval power of Germany, Sir Ernest replied that it was well
-known to British naval experts that the increase of the German navy was
-considerably greater than the official statements made in the Reichstag
-would let it appear. Undoubtedly the British navy would always preserve
-its superiority, not only numerically, but also technically with regard
-to material, construction, and armaments. Nevertheless, the advantages
-possessed by the German system of manning the ships and the great
-efficiency of German naval officers justified an apprehension lest the
-German superiority in the human factor might outweigh the British
-superiority in tonnage. The Boer war had taught England how difficult it
-was to conquer a high-spirited, though numerically weak enemy. He said
-that fear of the German danger formed the driving power of the whole
-policy of the Entente, and that this policy was only meant to guard
-against that menace. Therefore Russia had been advised at the Reval
-meeting to forgo the enlargement of her navy, and to concentrate all her
-energies on her army.
-
-Upon Sir Ernest's intimation that at some date Britain, together with
-France and Russia, might inquire of Germany when she intended to put a
-stop to her naval armaments, Ballin replied that his friend, if he was
-anxious to render a really valuable service to Britain and to the cause
-of peace, could do no better than make it perfectly plain that such an
-inquiry would mean war. Germany would resist with her whole strength any
-such attempt which unmistakably suggested the methods employed at
-Fashoda.
-
-During the progress of the interview Sir Ernest--who showed that he
-possessed excellent information concerning Germany's finances--observed
-that the state of the same would render it very difficult for her to
-make war. In that connexion he pointed out the intimate bearing of
-international finance on political relations, and he emphasized how much
-the borrowing countries were dependent on the lending ones. Still, even
-the creditor nations would sometimes be forced into an uncomfortable
-position, as was, for instance, the case with Great Britain after the
-United States had passed on to her the greater part of the Japanese
-debt. In Japan the disproportion between military burdens and economic
-strength was becoming more and more pronounced, and if the country were
-faced with the alternative of choosing between the total financial
-exhaustion of the people and a stoppage of the payment of interest, it
-would prefer to take the latter course.
-
-In London Ballin was present at the Constitutional Club when a Member of
-Parliament made a speech in which he stated, with the general approval
-of his audience, that the position of Britain was not really so good as
-the policy pursued by the Entente might lead one to believe. The
-national balance-sheet had been much more satisfactory during the reign
-of Queen Victoria; the items now appearing on the credit side being
-partly bad debts incurred by Spaniards, Portuguese, and Japanese, for
-whose political good behaviour Britain paid far too high a price, and
-one should not allow oneself to be misled as to the value of these
-ententes by balance-sheets which were purposely kept vague.
-
-Geheimrat Hammann told Ballin by letter that Prince Buelow, the Imperial
-Chancellor, and Herr v. Schoen, the Foreign Secretary, were very grateful
-to him for his information, and that in the opinion of both gentlemen
-his reply to the suggestion concerning the stoppage of naval armaments
-was "as commendable as it was correct." Meanwhile the Kaiser had also
-supplied the Chancellor with a general resume of Ballin's report to him.
-
-Ballin's visit gave rise to an exchange of letters which it may not be
-inappropriate to reproduce in this place. By way of explanation, it
-should first be said that the Sandjak Railway project, to which
-reference is made in Ballin's letter, had greatly agitated public
-opinion all over Europe during the spring of 1908. In February, Count
-Aehrenthal, the Austrian Foreign Minister, at a committee meeting of the
-delegations, had announced the Government's intention of constructing a
-railway line connecting the Bosnian system with the town of Mitrovitza
-in the Sandjak (or province) of Novi Bazar. This announcement led to a
-violent outburst of the Russian Press, which described this project as a
-political _demarche_ on the part of Austria in the Balkans and as an
-interference with the Macedonian reforms aimed at by the Powers. In
-Austria it was thought that Germany would support her ally as a matter
-of course, and Prince Buelow, in an interview given to a journalist,
-tried to pacify the _Novoie Vremia_. He declared that the Russian papers
-were absolutely mistaken when they alleged that the project was inspired
-from Berlin, and he stated that Austria, like her German ally, pursued
-none but commercial aims in the Balkans.
-
-These remarks will be a sufficient explanation of the allusions
-contained in Ballin's letter of July 13th, 1908, which, after an
-expression of thanks for the hospitality extended to him, reads as
-follows:
-
- "By the way, the views I expressed to you on the matter of the
- Sandjak Railway are now completely borne out by the facts. Both the
- Kaiser and, later, Prince Buelow have given me positive assurances
- that the German Government was just as much taken by surprise on
- hearing of this Austrian project as were the London and Petrograd
- Cabinets.
-
- "I hope that our respective monarchs may soon meet now. There is
- nothing that we on our side would welcome more heartily than the
- establishment and the maintenance of the most friendly and most
- cordial relations between the two sovereigns and their peoples. The
- Kaiser will not return home from his Northern cruise and from his
- visit to the Swedish Royal Court until the middle of August, but I
- think it is probable that the two monarchs may meet when King
- Edward returns from Marienbad, and that their Majesties will then
- fix the date for the official return visit to Berlin. I sincerely
- trust that this Berlin visit will be of the utmost benefit to both
- countries."
-
-Sir Ernest Cassel replied:
-
- "I also feel that the meeting of their Majesties must produce a
- great deal of good, and, as I now hear, it will after all be
- possible to arrange for this meeting to take place on the outward
- journey of the King. I am still as convinced as ever that our side
- is animated by the same friendly sentiments as yours."
-
-The meeting between the Kaiser and King Edward which was suggested in
-these letters actually took place on August 11th at Friedrichshof
-Castle, when the King was on his way to Ischl, and it was accorded a
-friendly reception in the German Press. It was followed up by an
-exchange of equally friendly manifestations on the part of the peoples
-of both countries. Mr. Lloyd George, then Chancellor of the Exchequer,
-went to Germany in August, 1908, to study the German system of workmen's
-insurance against disability and old age, and British workmen came to
-visit German trade unions, and to gather information about German
-industrial conditions. Official Britain also pronounced herself in
-favour of an understanding between the two countries which Mr. Lloyd
-George described as the only means of relieving the European tension,
-and Mr. Churchill professed similar sentiments.
-
-Shortly afterwards, however, at the end of October, an event took place
-which severely compromised the Kaiser's policy, viz. the incident of the
-_Daily Telegraph_ interview. In this the Kaiser, amongst other matters,
-bitterly complained that his friendship for England received such scant
-acknowledgment. As a proof of the friendly sentiments by which his
-actions were guided he stated that he, during the Boer war, had refused
-the humiliating suggestion put forward by France and Russia that the
-three Powers conjointly should compel Britain to put a stop to the war;
-that he had communicated this refusal to King Edward, and that he
-previously had presented Queen Victoria with a plan of campaign mapped
-out by himself, to which the one actually pursued by Britain bore a
-striking resemblance. With regard to Germany's naval programme, he
-emphasized that his country needed a big fleet in order to command
-attention when the question of the future of the Pacific was discussed.
-Finally, with regard to Anglo-German relations, the Kaiser said that the
-middle and lower classes in Germany did not entertain very friendly
-feelings towards England.
-
-The effect which this interview produced all over Germany was one of
-profound consternation. Its publication led to the well-known
-discussions in the Reichstag in November, 1908, during which the Kaiser,
-to the great dismay of the nation, was staying at Donaueschingen with
-Prince Fuerstenberg, where he was hunting. In England, and abroad
-generally, people regarded this interview as proving a great want of
-consistency in the conduct of Germany's foreign policy, and this
-impression was by no means changed when it became known that its
-publication was only due to an unfortunate oversight. The Kaiser had
-sent the account of it, as he was bound to do by the Constitution, to
-Prince Buelow, who was then staying at Norderney. Buelow, however, did not
-read it himself, but passed it on to the Berlin Foreign Office to be
-examined. There, indeed, an examination took place, but only with a view
-to finding out whether it contained any errors of fact, and when this
-was proved not to be the case, it was marked to that effect, passed the
-various ministries without any further examination, and was published.
-This unfortunate chain of accidents did not, however, alter the fact
-that the Kaiser ought to have been aware of the great political
-importance of his utterances. It has always been a chief fault of his to
-speak out too impulsively when it would have been politically more
-expedient to be less communicative. Nor can the entourage of the
-sovereign be excused for not drawing his and the Chancellor's attention
-to the great political significance of his utterances. The Chancellor
-himself and the Foreign Office, profiting from their previous
-experiences with the Kaiser and his appearances in public, ought to have
-used a great deal more circumspection, and it would have been well if
-the permanent officials in the Foreign Office had shown rather more
-political insight.
-
-The endeavours of the official circles to remove the tension existing
-between the two countries were not affected by the incident. On February
-9th, 1909, King Edward and his Queen paid their visit to Berlin, thus
-bringing about the event which Ballin in his letter of July 13th, 1908,
-had described as so very desirable. To appreciate the importance of this
-strictly official visit, we must bear in mind the fact that it did not
-take place until the ninth year of the reign of King Edward. This long
-postponement was no doubt due to a large extent to the estrangement
-between uncle and nephew, and this, in its turn, had its origin in the
-natural dislike which the Kaiser felt for his uncle's mode of conducting
-his private life while still Prince of Wales. It would have been
-preferable, however, to relegate such personal likes and dislikes to the
-background where politics or business were concerned. British official
-comments emphatically underlined the significance of the visit, and the
-German Press followed suit, although voices were not wanting to warn
-against any over-estimation of such acts of courtesy. The reply given in
-the Reichstag by Herr v. Schoen, the Foreign Secretary, to a question as
-to whether any suggestions had been put forward by Great Britain with
-respect to a reduction of naval armaments was very cool in its tone. His
-statement amounted to this: that no formal proposal for an understanding
-which might have served as a basis for negotiations had been received,
-probably for the reason that it was not customary among friendly Powers
-to put forward any proposals of which it was doubtful to say whether
-they would be entertained.
-
-In spite of this cold douche and in spite of other obstacles, the
-promoters of an understanding, Ballin and Sir Ernest Cassel, did not
-cease their efforts in that direction. In July, 1909, Ballin paid a
-second visit to Sir Ernest, during which the political discussions were
-continued. On these latter he reported to the Kaiser as follows:
-
- "My friend to whom I had intimated in a private letter written
- about a week earlier that it was my intention to visit him--at the
- same time hinting that, for my personal information, I should like
- very much to take up the threads of the conversation we had had a
- twelvemonth ago on the subject of the question of the navy--had
- evidently used the interval to supply himself at the proper
- quarters with authoritative information about this matter. During
- the whole of our long talk he spoke with extraordinary assurance,
- and every word seemed to be thought out beforehand.
-
- "At the commencement of our conversation I said to my friend that
- in view of the great excitement which reigned in England on account
- of the German naval armaments, and which was assuming a decidedly
- anti-German character, he would quite understand that I should
- desire to take up once more the interesting discussions which we
- had had on the same subject a year ago. I pointed out that this
- excitement--spread as it was by an unscrupulous press and fostered
- by foolish politicians--was apt to produce results altogether
- different from those which the Government might perhaps consider it
- desirable to bring about within the scope of its programme. I
- emphasized the fact that, of course, I was merely speaking as a
- private citizen, reading with interest the English papers and the
- letters of his English friends, so that all my knowledge of the
- subject was derived from private sources.
-
- "A year ago, I said, my friend, in the clear and concise manner
- that distinguished him, had explained to me the need for an
- understanding between Germany and Britain governing the future
- development of their naval forces, at the same time requesting me
- to exert myself in that sense. This suggestion of his had not been
- made in vain. The fact that I had been successful in establishing
- complete concord amongst Germans, British, French, Italians,
- Austrians, and a whole series of small nations on questions
- affecting their highly important shipping interests, and in
- replacing an unbridled and economically disastrous competition by
- friendly agreements to the benefit of each partner, was bound to
- make me sympathize with any measures that it was possible to take
- in order to bring about a similar result between the Governments if
- only they were met in the right spirit. I, therefore, had made up
- my mind to submit such a plan to our Government, but before doing
- so, it would be necessary for me to know whether Britain still
- adhered to the principles which my friend had enunciated to me at
- our previous meeting.
-
- "Sir Ernest's reply was that as far as Britain was concerned a
- great change had taken place during the interval, and that he was
- no longer able to endorse the views he had held at that time. The
- necessity for his country to maintain her supremacy on the sea at
- all hazards, and subject to no engagements of any kind, was now
- more clearly recognized than it had been a year ago. A one-sided
- understanding between Germany and Britain could no longer be
- thought of, since both Austria and France had now voted large sums
- for the enlargement of their respective navies. Austria would
- certainly be found on the German side, but France could by no means
- be said to be an asset on which it would be safe for Britain to
- rely, to say nothing about the two 'dark horses,' Russia and Italy.
- If Britain, in view of these uncertainties, were to permit Germany
- to nail her down to a fixed programme, she would dwindle down to a
- fifth-rate Power. Germany possessed her overwhelmingly large army
- with which she could keep in check Austria, Italy, Russia, and
- France, but Britain had nothing but her navy to guarantee her
- existence as a world power and to safeguard the roads that linked
- her to her colonies. For many decades Britain had enjoyed
- opportunities for accumulating big fortunes. These times, however,
- had now passed. During the reign of the Emperor William II, who,
- with a consistency which it would be difficult to praise too
- highly, had made his country a commercial power of world-wide
- importance, and who had raised German industrial enterprise and
- German merchant shipping to a condition of undreamt-of prosperity,
- Britain sustained immense losses in her overseas commerce. British
- trade was declining, and there was no doubt but that in the long
- run Britain would be compelled to abandon her principles of Free
- Trade.
-
- "The question of the Austrian naval armaments appeared to trouble
- my friend more than anything, and this circumstance, combined with
- the doubtful attitude of Russia and the uncertainty of the
- situation in France, was evidently a source of great anxiety to the
- King. My friend remarked in this connexion that in his opinion the
- moment chosen for the conclusion of an understanding was very
- favourable to German but very unfavourable to British interests. It
- was useless to talk of an agreement so long as an element of mutual
- fear had to be reckoned with. At present this fear manifested
- itself in Britain in a manner which was most inopportune, so that
- it was bound to make the German public believe that Britain would
- be ready to come to an understanding even if the terms of it were
- detrimental to her own interests. Britain had got behindhand both
- with her commerce and with her naval programme. To fight her
- competitors in the world's trade with a fair chance of success was
- impossible for more reasons than one, but the elimination of the
- disadvantage from which she suffered with respect to her naval
- armaments was merely a question of money. The funds that were
- required to bring the British Navy up to the necessities of the
- international situation would certainly be found, because they had
- to be found.
-
- "I told my friend that I was astonished to hear how completely his
- views had changed on these matters. Not what he did say, but what
- he had left unsaid, made me suspect that official circles in
- England--partly, perhaps, through the fault of the German
- Government--had arrived at the conclusion that the latter would
- refrain from a further strengthening of the navy after the existing
- naval programme had been carried out, and that it would merely
- content itself with the gradual replacement of the units as they
- became obsolete. Such a proceeding could be justified only if the
- same plan were adopted by Britain also. If, however, his remarks
- implied that in the opinion of his Government the moment had now
- arrived for altering the ratio of naval strength existing between
- both countries by a comprehensive programme of new building, it
- would soon become evident that there were some flaws in that
- calculation. In view of any such intentions it was my
- opinion--which, however, was quite personal and unofficial--that
- Germany would have to decide upon such an increase of her navy as
- would enable her to carry on a war of defence with the certainty of
- success. If, therefore, Britain meant to go on building warships on
- a large scale, this would merely lead to an aimless naval race
- between the two countries.
-
- "These remarks of mine concluded our first conversation, and I
- accepted my friend's invitation to dine with him that evening in
- company with some prominent men of his acquaintance.
-
- "In the evening I was greatly surprised to see that I was the only
- guest present. My friend told me that, in order to be alone with
- me, he had cancelled his invitations to the other gentlemen,
- stating that he did not yet feel well enough to see them. It was
- obvious to me that he had, meanwhile, reported on the outcome of
- our conversation, and that the atmosphere had changed. This change
- had without doubt been brought about by my remarks concerning the
- necessity for a further enlargement of the German Navy, if the
- action of Britain compelled our Government to take such a course.
- The long discussions that followed proved that this view of mine
- was correct in every detail.
-
- "Sir Ernest explained that the Liberal Cabinet had acted penny wise
- and pound foolish in dealing with the question of the navy. This
- was the conviction of the great majority of the British people, and
- this action had caused the feelings of apprehension and of
- hostility animating them. The Liberal Government had thus made a
- serious blunder, and had, in his opinion, prepared its own doom by
- doing so. He thought the days of the Liberal party were numbered,
- and another party would soon be in office. Anti-German feeling
- would be non-existent to-day if the Liberal cabinet had not,
- because of its preoccupation with questions of social policy,
- neglected the navy. The whole matter was further aggravated by
- other questions of a political kind. France, on account of the
- French national character, had always been a doubtful asset to
- Britain, and, considering the state of her internal politics, she
- was so now more than ever. Germany, on the other hand, possessed a
- great advantage in that her military preponderance enabled her to
- rely with absolute certainty on her Austrian ally. He would say
- nothing about Russia, because he had never regarded the
- Anglo-Russian _rapprochement_ as politically expedient.
-
- "If it was admitted--and he thought this admission was implied by
- my remarks--that her colonial and her commercial interests made it
- imperative for Britain to maintain an unchallenged supremacy on the
- seas, he felt certain that some reasonable men would, after all, be
- able to discover a formula which would make an understanding
- between both countries possible. A great difficulty, however, was
- presented by my often reiterated demand that Britain must not
- abandon her principles of Free Trade. In questions such as these,
- she could, indeed, speak for herself, but not for her great
- colonies. History had proved that she lost her American colonies as
- soon as she tried to foist her own commercial policy on the
- colonists. He had no doubt that Germany, despite the disagreeable
- surprises which she had experienced when adjusting the system of
- her Imperial finances, possessed sufficient wealth to go on
- increasing her navy in the same proportion as Britain. The great
- mistake committed by the Liberal cabinet and by the other advisers
- of the King had been their assumption that financial considerations
- would prevent Germany from carrying out her naval programme in its
- entirety. German prosperity had grown far more rapidly, he thought,
- than even the German Government and German financial experts had
- believed to be possible. Signs of it could be noticed wherever one
- went, and one would turn round in astonishment if, during the
- season, one heard the tourists in Italy or in Egypt talk in any
- language but German. He, at any rate, felt certain of Germany's
- ability to keep pace with Britain in the naval race, even if that
- pace was very greatly accelerated.
-
- "Reasons of internal policy had convinced him that Britain would
- not in any case abandon her Free Trade principles within a
- measurable period of time, and as it was not intended to conclude a
- perpetual agreement, but only one for a limited number of years, he
- thought it was not at all necessary that Germany should insist
- upon her demand in connexion with this question. As the colonies
- enjoyed complete independence in these as in other matters, the
- difficulties would be insurmountable. In return for such a
- concession on Germany's part, Britain would doubtless be willing to
- meet the views of the German Government in other respects. For
- these reasons he would be quite ready to change the opinion he had
- expressed in the morning, and to agree that it could produce
- nothing but good if either side were to appoint some moderate men
- for the purpose of discussing the whole question. Such a meeting
- would have to be kept absolutely secret, and both parties should
- agree that there should be no victor and no vanquished if and when
- an agreement was concluded. This condition would have to be a _sine
- qua non_.
-
- "I promised Sir Ernest that I would use my best endeavours to this
- end when an opportunity should present itself, and we arranged to
- have another meeting in the near future.
-
- "There is no doubt but that my friend is an extremely
- well-qualified negotiator. I do not recollect that during my long
- experience, extending over many years, I have ever come across a
- man who could discuss matters for hours at a time with so much
- self-reliance, deliberation, and fixity of purpose."
-
-This report was passed on by the Kaiser to Herr v. Tirpitz, the
-Secretary for the Navy, who not only expressed his approval of the
-project, but also recommended that the Imperial Chancellor, Herr v.
-Bethmann-Hollweg, who had succeeded Prince Buelow on July 14th should be
-kept informed of all that was done to bring about an understanding. The
-Chancellor, accordingly, was presented by the Kaiser himself with a copy
-of Ballin's report. This was the correct thing to do, as it avoided a
-_faux pas_ such as, during the chancellorship of Prince Buelow, had
-sometimes been made. Future developments, however, proved that this step
-deprived the whole action of its spontaneity, and its immediate effect
-was that the Secretary for the Navy was relieved of all responsibility
-in the matter. Ballin, in later days, summed up his views on this way of
-dealing with the subject by saying that if Herr v. Tirpitz had been left
-a free hand in the whole matter--if, for instance, _he_ had conducted it
-as Imperial Chancellor--it would hardly have turned out a failure. The
-main object of the negotiations that Ballin had carried on was to ensure
-that a number of "experts and men of moderate views," i.e. naval experts
-in the first instance, should join in conference in order to discuss
-how, without injury to their relative fighting efficiency, both
-countries could bring about a reduction of their naval armaments. This
-plan was so simple and so obviously right that, had it been carried out
-as a preliminary to something else, and had the attention of the experts
-been drawn to the enormous political importance of their decision,
-success would have been assured. The procedure, however, which the
-Chancellor adopted compelled him to combat the active opposition of the
-various departments involved even before a meeting of the naval experts
-could be arranged for, and this was a task which far exceeded the
-strength of Herr v. Bethmann-Hollweg, the most irresolute of all German
-chancellors, the man to whom Fate afterwards entrusted the most
-momentous decision which any German statesman has ever had to make.
-
-An interview between Ballin and the Chancellor was followed up, with the
-consent of the latter, by an exchange of telegrams between Ballin and
-Sir Ernest Cassel. From these it became clear that official circles in
-London were favourably disposed towards the opening of discussions in
-accordance with the terms laid down in Ballin's report, and Ballin
-approached the Chancellor with the request to let him know whether he
-should continue to work on the same lines as before, or whether the
-Chancellor would prefer a different method, by which he understood
-direct official negotiations. In a telegram to the Chancellor he
-explained that in his opinion Sir Ernest's reference to the friendly
-disposition of official London implied that he was authorized to arrange
-the details about the intended meeting of experts. If, therefore, he
-went to England again, he would have to know what were the views and
-intentions of the Chancellor. The reply of the latter, dated August
-11th, was as follows:
-
- "Many thanks for your welcome telegram, which has found my closest
- attention. I shall send you further details as soon as I have
- interviewed the gentlemen concerned, which I intend to do to-morrow
- and during the next few days."
-
-This reply clearly showed that the Chancellor had made up his mind to
-deal with the matter along official lines and in conformity with his own
-ideas.
-
-The subsequent course of events is indicated by a letter of the
-Chancellor to Ballin, dated August 21st, in which he says:
-
- "I have to-day taken the official steps of which I told you. As Sir
- Ernest Goschen[2] and I have agreed to observe absolute secrecy in
- this matter, and as a statement of your friend to the British
- Government to the effect that I had undertaken an official
- _demarche_, might possibly be regarded as an indiscretion, I
- suggest that if you inform your friend at all, you should word your
- reply in such a way that this danger need not be feared."
-
-This letter shows, and later events have also proved, that the guiding
-spirits of Germany's political destiny were unable to meet on such terms
-as expediency would dictate the overtures of a man like Sir Ernest
-Cassel, whose status and whose good intentions were beyond criticism.
-If, on receipt of this news, Sir Ernest, who had been working so hard
-for an understanding, was not entirely discouraged, it was no doubt due
-to the diplomatic skill with which Ballin--who was a master of this art,
-as of so many others--interpreted the Chancellor's rebuff when
-communicating it to his friend.
-
-That the latter's account of British feeling towards Germany was
-perfectly unbiased, may also be inferred from another piece of news
-which reached Ballin about the same time from a British source, and
-which reads as follows:
-
- "My only object in writing just now is to say that if there is any
- feeling in high quarters in your country favourable to coming to an
- understanding with this country concerning naval matters, I am
- quite satisfied from the inquiries I have made that the present
- would be an opportune time for approaching this question, and that
- the present Government of this country would be found entirely
- favourable to coming to such an arrangement."
-
-However, by that time, the matter was in the hands of the various
-departments, and they proved unable to make a success of it. Why they
-failed, and why the step which Herr v. Bethmann had taken with the
-British Ambassador produced no results, are questions which can only be
-answered by reference to the files of the Foreign Office.
-
-Mr. Asquith, in a speech dealing with the British naval programme
-delivered on July 14th, 1910, explained why no understanding with
-Germany had been arrived at.
-
- "The German Government told us--I cannot complain, and I have no
- answer to make--that their procedure in this matter is governed by
- an Act of the Reichstag under which the programme automatically
- proceeds year by year. That is to say, after the year 1911-12, the
- last year in which under that law four Dreadnoughts are
- constructed, the rate of construction drops in the two succeeding
- years to two each year, so that we are now, we may hope, at the
- very crest of the wave. If it were possible, even now, by
- arrangement to reduce the rate of construction no one would be more
- delighted than his Majesty's Government. We have approached the
- German Government on the subject. They have found themselves unable
- to do anything; they cannot do it without an Act of the Reichstag,
- repealing their Navy Law. They tell us--and no doubt with great
- truth--they would not have the support of public opinion in Germany
- to a modified programme."
-
-As these statements have never been contradicted, it must be assumed
-that the departments concerned sheltered themselves behind the formal
-objection that, owing to public feeling, a repeal or a modification of
-the Navy Law was out of the question. If this assumption is correct, it
-is evident that no touch of political genius was revealed in the
-treatment of this important question. Even the hope that the "crest of
-the wave" had been reached turned out a disappointment, as was proved by
-the introduction of the new Navy Bill in 1912.
-
-The objections which Herr v. Bethmann, on March 30th, 1911, raised to an
-international limitation of armaments can likewise only be described as
-formal ones. He said:
-
- "If it is the intention of the Powers to come to an understanding
- with regard to general international armaments, they must first of
- all agree upon a formula defining the relative position of each....
- Practically, it might be said, such an order of precedence has
- already been established by Great Britain's claim that,
- notwithstanding her anxiety to effect a reduction of her
- expenditure on armaments, and notwithstanding her readiness to
- submit any disputes to arbitration, her navy must under all
- circumstances be equal--or even superior--to any possible
- combination. Great Britain is perfectly justified in making this
- claim, and in conformity with the views I hold on the disarmament
- problem, I am the last person in the world to question her right to
- do so. But it is quite a different matter to use such a claim as
- the basis of an agreement which is to receive the peaceful consent
- of the other Powers. What would happen if the latter raised any
- counter-claims of their own, or if they were dissatisfied with the
- percentage allotted to them? The mere suggestion of questions such
- as these is sufficient to make us realize what would happen if an
- international congress--because one restricted to the European
- Powers alone could not be comprehensive enough--had to adjudicate
- on such claims."
-
-If this explanation is intended to be a reply to such statements from
-the British side as the one just quoted from Mr. Asquith, the fact had
-been disregarded that the most serious problem under discussion--viz.
-the Anglo-German rivalry--could quite well be solved without convening
-an "international congress."
-
-As early as December 10th, 1910, Herr v. Bethmann, in a speech delivered
-before the Reichstag, had enlarged on this same subject from the
-political point of view:
-
- "As to the relations between ourselves and Great Britain, and as to
- the alleged negotiations with the latter country concerning a
- mutual curtailment of naval armaments, I am bound to say that the
- British Government, as everybody knows, has more than once
- expressed its conviction that the conclusion of an agreement fixing
- the naval strengths of the various Powers would conduce to an
- important improvement of international relations.... We, too, share
- Great Britain's desire to eliminate the question of naval
- competition, but during the informal _pourparlers_ which have taken
- place from time to time, and which have been conducted in a spirit
- of mutual friendship, we have always given prominence to our
- conviction that a frank discussion of the economic and political
- spheres of interest to be followed up by a mutual understanding on
- these points would constitute the safest way of destroying the
- feeling of distrust which is engendered by the question of the
- respective strengths of the military and naval forces maintained by
- each country."
-
-The speech which Sir Edward Grey delivered in the House of Commons on
-March 14th, 1911, with special reference to this speech of Herr v.
-Bethmann shows unmistakably that the remarks of the latter did not
-reassure Great Britain with respect to the only point at issue in which
-she was interested, viz. the limitation of the German naval programme.
-Britain, according to Sir Edward, did not desire that her relations with
-any Power should be of such a nature as to impede the simultaneous
-existence of cordial relations with Germany. An Anglo-German agreement
-had been specially suggested. This suggestion required some careful
-thinking over. If he were to hold out any hope that Germany, in
-compliance with the terms of some such agreement would be willing to
-cancel or to modify her naval programme, he would be contradicted at
-once. Only within the limits of this programme would it be possible to
-come to some understanding between the two Governments. It might, for
-instance, be agreed to spread the expenditure voted for the navy over a
-longer term of years, or to arrange that the present German programme
-should not be increased in future. Matters such as these could form the
-subjects for discussion between the two Governments, and it would be
-desirable from every point of view that an understanding should be
-arrived at. To this speech the _North German Gazette_ replied that
-Germany would be quite prepared to fall in with Sir Edward's suggestions
-if agreements such as those outlined by him could in any way allay the
-feeling of distrust governing public opinion in Great Britain. If from
-this semi-official pronouncement it may be inferred that Herr v.
-Bethmann on his part was favourably disposed towards an agreement, the
-question arises: "Why was it not concluded?"
-
-In order to understand why the British Cabinet attached so much value to
-the settlement of the Anglo-German naval questions and to the
-pacification of public opinion, it must be remembered that the Liberal
-Cabinet, owing to its hostile attitude towards the House of Lords, had
-drifted into a violent conflict with the Conservative party, and that
-the latter, in its turn, during the election campaign had accused the
-Cabinet of having neglected the navy, driving home its arguments by
-constantly pointing out the "German danger." Moreover, King Edward had
-died in the meantime (May 6th, 1910), and of his son and successor it
-was said that he, at the time of his accession to the throne, was no
-longer a man of unbiased sentiment, that he was very anti-German, and
-that he was under the influence of a small group of Conservative
-extremists.
-
-It may not be out of place to reproduce in this connexion the text of
-two accounts dealing with the situation in England which Ballin wrote in
-the spring and in the summer of 1910 respectively, when he was staying
-in London, and which he submitted to the Kaiser for his information.
-
-In the early part of 1910 he wrote:
-
- "If I were to say that London was completely dominated by the
- election campaign, this would be a very mild way of characterizing
- the situation as it is. The whole population has been seized with a
- fit of madness. The City men who, until quite recently, had
- preserved an admirable calm, have now lost their heads altogether,
- and are the most ardent advocates of Tariff Reform. Every victory
- of a Conservative candidate is cheered by them to the echo. Under
- these circumstances, even in the City, the fear of war has grown.
- If we ask ourselves what it is that has brought about such an
- extraordinary change in the attitude of commonsense business
- people, we find that there are several reasons for it, viz. the
- general slump in business; the unfortunate policy cf Lloyd George
- with regard to the Irish Nationalists; the advances he made to the
- Labour Party, and the effects of his social legislation which are
- now felt with increasing seriousness.
-
- "Business is bad in England, and up to now very little has been
- seen of the improvement which is so marked in Germany. It is but
- natural that, in view of the extended trade depression which has so
- far lasted more than two years, a people endowed with such business
- instincts as the British should feel favourably disposed towards a
- change of the country's commercial policy. This disposition is
- further strengthened by the constant reiteration of the promise
- that it will be possible to provide the money needed for new
- warship construction and for the newly inaugurated social policy by
- means of the duties which the foreigner will be made to pay.
-
- "It seems pretty certain that the present Government, in spite of
- the great election successes gained by the Conservative party, will
- still retain a slight majority if it can rely on the Nationalist
- vote. That is what I had always predicted. But the majority on
- which the Liberal Cabinet depends will doubtless be a very
- uncomfortable one to work with, and the opinion is general that it
- will hardly take more than a twelvemonth before another dissolution
- of Parliament will be necessary. It is said that the elections that
- will then be held will smash up the Liberal party altogether, but I
- consider this is an exaggeration. In this country everything
- depends on the state of business. If, in the course of the year,
- trade prospects brighten up again, and if everything becomes normal
- once more, the Tariff Reformers in the City will turn Free Traders
- again and will take great care not to kill the goose that lays the
- golden eggs. I am quite convinced that everything hangs on the
- future development of trade and traffic. To-day, as I have said
- before, Tariff Reform and a Zollverein with the Colonies are the
- catchwords that are on everybody's lips, and the anti-German
- feeling is so strong that it is scarcely possible to discuss
- matters with one's oldest friends, because the people over here
- have turned mad and talk of nothing but the next war and the
- protective policy of the near future. Large crowds are spending
- hours every night in the principal squares such as Trafalgar
- Square, where they have come to watch the announcements of the
- election results in the provinces. Their behaviour is exemplary. It
- is a curious thing that in this country the election game is spread
- over several weeks, in consequence of which the political
- excitement of the masses is raised to boiling-point. Within a few
- months' time, I am sure, things will look entirely different
- again."
-
-From the second report, in the summer of 1910, the following is the
-salient extract:
-
- "I am now returned from England, and it may not be out of place to
- report the impressions I received of the political and economic
- conditions over there.
-
- "My previous visit to London coincided with the big election
- campaign, and I have already described the fit of mad excitement
- which had taken possession of the people, and which was directed
- against Germany.
-
- "The situation has now undergone a complete change, which is
- noticeable everywhere and which is caused by the close of the
- election campaign, by the death of the King, and, finally, by the
- visit of the Kaiser on the occasion of the Royal funeral. Everyone
- whom I met in London--Liberals and Conservatives alike--spoke in
- terms of the highest praise of the Kaiser's sympathetic attitude
- displayed during his stay in England, and which was all the more
- commendable as it was not denied that he had suffered many slights
- during the lifetime of his late uncle.
-
- "The attitude of the people towards the new monarch is one of
- reserve, but also--in conformity with the national character of the
- English--one of loyalty and good faith. The situation with regard
- to home politics is as difficult now as it has been all along.
- Unless a compromise between the parties is arrived at new elections
- will be unavoidable in the spring or even before. I have met a
- great many persons of political experience who are of opinion that,
- even if a compromise is made, it will be necessary to submit such
- an arrangement to the decision of the electorate by an appeal to
- the country. It is difficult to predict the result of such new
- elections. The views held by large sections of the Press and of the
- public bear out the truth of the remarks in my previous letter when
- I emphasized the fact that the British are a nation of business men
- who act on the principle of 'leave well alone,' and who will refuse
- to have anything to do with Tariff Reform as soon as there is an
- improvement in trade.
-
- "Business has, indeed, improved in the meantime, but only very
- slightly, and much less than in Germany. This slight improvement,
- however, has not failed to give a fillip to the cause of Free Trade
- among the City men. If elections in the spring are regarded as
- likely, much will depend on the further development of trade. I
- must confess that I take a very pessimistic view as to the future
- of Great Britain in this respect. The British can really no longer
- compete with us, and if it were not for the large funds they have
- invested, and for the sums of money which reach the small
- mother-country from her great dominions, their saturated and
- conservative habits of life would soon make them a _quantite
- negligeable_ as far as their competition with us in the world's
- markets is concerned.
-
- "Of course, their financial strength and their excellent system of
- foreign politics, in which they have now been trained for
- centuries, will always attract business to their country, the
- possession of which we shall always begrudge them (for is not envy
- one of the national characteristics of the German race?)."
-
-Up to the summer of 1911 the feeling remained friendly. Early in July
-Ballin wrote:
-
- "To-day the feeling, as far as the City is concerned, is thoroughly
- friendly towards Germany. The visit in the spring of the Kaiser
- and the Kaiserin, on the occasion of the unveiling of the monument
- to Queen Victoria, has created a most sympathetic impression--an
- impression which has been strengthened by the participation of the
- Crown Prince and Princess in the Coronation festivities. At present
- the Kaiser is actually one of the most popular persons in England,
- and the suggestion of bringing about an Anglo-German understanding
- is meeting with a great deal of approval from all sections of the
- population."
-
-However, this readiness to come to an understanding received a setback
-during the course of the year, when it was adversely affected by the new
-developments in the Morocco affair and by the dispatch of the _Panther_
-to Agadir, which led to fresh complications with France, and later also
-with Great Britain. The grievances of the latter found expression in a
-sharply worded speech by Lloyd George in July, 1911, the main argument
-of which was that Great Britain, in questions affecting her vital
-interests, could not allow herself to be treated as though she were
-non-existent. In Germany this pronouncement led to violent attacks on
-the part of the Conservative opposition against Herr v. Bethmann and
-against England, and it was the latter against whom Herr v. Heydebrand
-directed his quotation from Schiller, to the effect that a nation which
-did not stake her everything on her honour was deserving only of
-contempt. It is also well known that the outcome of the whole affair, as
-well as its sequel, the Franco-German Congo agreement, produced much
-indignation in Germany, where it was felt that the material results
-obtained were hardly worth the great display of force, and that it was
-still less worth while to be drifted into a big war in consequence of
-this incident.
-
-The measure of the anxiety which was felt at that time in business and
-financial circles all over the world may be gauged by reading the
-following letter from Ballin to the Secretary of State, Herr v.
-Kiderlen-Waechter, in which it is necessary to read between the lines
-here and there.
-
- "Baron Leopold de Rothschild has just sent me a wire from London in
- which he says that, on the strength of information he has received
- from the Paris Rothschilds, people there are greatly disappointed
- to see that the German answer--the details of which are still
- unknown there--leaves some important questions still unsolved.
- Public sentiment in the French capital, he says, is beginning to
- get excited, and it would be to the interest of everybody to settle
- matters as speedily as possible.
-
- "I felt it my duty to draw your attention to this statement, and
- you may take it for what it is worth.
-
- "I need not tell your Excellency that people here and, I suppose,
- all over Germany, are watching the progress of events with growing
- anxiety. In this respect, therefore, the desires of the German
- people seem identical with those of the French.
-
- "It would also be presumptuous on my part to speak to your
- Excellency about the feeling in England and the British armaments,
- as the information you derive from your official sources is bound
- to be better still than that which I can obtain through my
- connexions.
-
- "With best wishes for a successful solution of this difficult and
- important problem, I have the honour to remain,
-
-"Your Excellency's most obedient servant,
-(_Signed_) BALLIN."
-
-
-
-A most interesting document, and one which casts a clear sidelight on
-the divergence of opinion held in Germany and Great Britain, and on the
-chances of arriving at an agreement, is an article which dates from the
-latter part of 1911.
-
-This article deals with the Anglo-German controversy and was published
-by the _Westminster Gazette_. It was sent to Ballin by an English friend
-with the remark that it presented a faithful picture of the views on
-foreign affairs held by the great majority of British Liberals. Ballin
-forwarded it to Berlin for the Kaiser's information, with a note saying
-that he had received it from one of the most level-headed Englishmen he
-had ever met. It was subsequently returned to him, with the addition of
-a number of marginal notes and a lengthy paragraph at its close, all
-written in the Kaiser's own handwriting. The numerous underlinings, too,
-are the Kaiser's own work. On account of its historical interest a
-facsimile reproduction of this article is inserted at the end of the
-book. The following is a translation of the Kaiser's criticism at the
-conclusion of the article:
-
- "Quite good, except for the ridiculous insinuation that we are
- aspiring after the hegemony in Central Europe. We simply _are_
- Central Europe, and it is quite natural that other and smaller
- nations should tend towards us and should be drawn into our sphere
- of action owing to the law of gravity, particularly so if they are
- of our own kin. To this the British object, because it absolutely
- knocks to pieces their theory of the Balance of Power, i.e. their
- desire to be able to play off one European Power against another at
- their own pleasure, and because it would lead to the establishment
- of a united Continent--a contingency which they want to prevent at
- all costs. Hence their lying assertion that we aim at a predominant
- position in Europe, while it is a fact that they claim such a
- position for themselves in world politics. We Hohenzollerns have
- never pursued such ambitious and such fantastic aims, and, God
- granting it, we shall never do so.
-
-"(_Signed_) WILHELM I.R."
-
-
-
-The year 1912 opened with several pronouncements of the British Press in
-favour of an Anglo-German understanding. It was even hinted that Britain
-would raise no objections to a possible extension of Germany's colonial
-activities, or, as one paper put it, "to the foundation of a German
-African empire stretching from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean."
-Similar sentiments were expressed in a letter from Sir Ernest Cassel to
-Ballin, dated January 9th, 1912.
-
- "Since writing to you last," says Sir Ernest, "I have had the
- opportunity of a confidential chat with Mr. Winston Churchill. He
- is aware that the position which he has now occupied for some time
- ties him down to some special limitations which will not allow him
- to pay a visit of the kind you suggest so long as the situation
- remains what it is. Should the King go to Germany, and should he
- take Winston with him, he--Winston--would feel highly honoured if
- he were permitted to discuss the important questions that were
- demanding a solution. Such an opportunity would have to come about
- quite spontaneously, and Winston would have to secure the previous
- consent of the Prime Minister and of Sir Edward Grey.
-
- "Thus far Winston. His friendly sentiments towards Germany are
- known to you. I have been acquainted with him since he was quite a
- young man, and he has never made a secret of his admiration of the
- Kaiser and of the German people. He looks upon the estrangement
- existing between the two countries as senseless, and I am quite
- sure he would do anything in his power to establish friendly
- relations.
-
- "The real crux of the situation is that Great Britain regards the
- enormous increase of the German Navy as a grave menace to her vital
- interests. This conviction is a deep-rooted one, and there are no
- two opinions in London as to its significance.
-
- "If it were possible to do something which, without endangering the
- safety of Germany, would relieve Great Britain of this nightmare,
- it is my opinion that people over here would go very far to
- conciliate German aspirations."
-
-The striking fact that after a long interval, and in spite of the
-failure of the previous endeavours, a renewed attempt was made to arrive
-at a naval understanding, and that special pains were taken to ensure
-its success, may be due to various causes. For instance, the Morocco
-incident of 1911 had shown how easily a series of comparatively
-unimportant events might lead within reach of a dangerous catastrophe,
-unless the atmosphere of general distrust could be removed, and it was
-felt in Great Britain that this distrust was largely the result of the
-constant and regular increase of Germany's armaments. Moreover, it was
-known that a new Navy Bill was then forthcoming in Germany which, in its
-turn, would be bound to cause fresh alarm, and growing expenditure in
-Great Britain, and that the Liberal Cabinet would prefer to gain its
-laurels by bringing about a more peaceful frame of mind. Finally, Mr.
-Winston Churchill had been appointed First Lord of the Admiralty in
-October, 1911, and as he was known to be by no means anti-German, his
-entering upon office may have given rise to the hope that, while he was
-administering the affairs of the Navy, it would be possible to settle
-certain purely technical matters affecting his department, which could
-then furnish the conditions preliminary to an understanding with
-Germany. Ballin, at any rate, had cherished the hope--as is borne out by
-the letter quoted above--that Mr. Churchill could be induced to pay a
-visit to Germany, and that an opportunity might then be found to bring
-the naval experts of both countries face to face with each other. Ballin
-had always eagerly desired that such a meeting should take place,
-because his long experience in settling difficult business questions had
-taught him that there was no greater barrier between people, and
-certainly none that hampered their intellectual _rapprochement_ to a
-larger extent, than the fact of their never having come into personal
-contact with one another, and of never having had a chance to actually
-familiarize themselves with the mentality and the whole personality of
-the man representing the other side. It might also be assumed that, once
-the two really responsible persons--Churchill and Tirpitz--had met in
-conclave, the feeling of their mutual responsibility would be too strong
-to allow the negotiations to end in failure.
-
-Unfortunately, such a meeting never took place; all that was achieved
-was a preliminary step, viz. the visit of Lord Haldane to Berlin.
-
-Owing to the lack of documentary evidence it is not possible to say who
-first suggested this visit, but it is clear that the suggestion--whoever
-may have been its author--was eagerly taken up by Sir Ernest Cassel and
-Ballin, and that it also met with a warm welcome on the part of Herr v.
-Bethmann. In reply to a telegram which Ballin, with the approval--if not
-at the actual desire--of the Chancellor, sent to his friend in London, a
-message reached him on February 2nd, 1912, when he was in Berlin engaged
-on these very matters. This reply, which originated with the Foreign
-Office, expressed the sender's thanks for the invitation to attend a
-meeting of delegates in Berlin and his appreciation of the whole spirit
-which had prompted the German suggestion, and then went on to say that
-the new German Navy Bill would necessitate an immediate increase in the
-British naval estimates, because the latter had been framed on the
-supposition that the German programme would remain unaltered. If the
-British Government were compelled to find the means for such an
-increase, the suggested negotiations would be difficult, if not
-impossible. On the other hand, the German programme might perhaps be
-modified by spreading it out over a longer period of time or by some
-similar measure, so that a considerable increase of British naval
-construction in order to balance the German efforts could be avoided. In
-that case the British Government would be ready to proceed with the
-negotiations without loss of time, as it would be taken for granted that
-there was a fair prospect of the proposed discussions leading to a
-favourable result. If this suggestion was acceptable to Germany, the
-British Government thought the next step should be a private--and not an
-official--visit of a British Cabinet Minister to Berlin.
-
-Perhaps it is now permissible to give the text of some documents without
-any further comment, as these latter speak for themselves. The first is
-a letter of the Chancellor addressed to Ballin, and reads as follows:
-
-"BERLIN. _Febr. 4th, 1912._
-
-"DEAR MR. BALLIN,--
-
- "We are still busy wording the text of our reply, and I shall not
- be able to see you at 11 o'clock. As soon as the text is settled, I
- shall submit it to His Majesty for his approval. Under these
- circumstances I think it is doubtful whether we ought to adhere to
- the time fixed for our appointment. I rather fancy that I cannot
- tell you anything definite before 12 or 1 o'clock, and I shall ring
- you up about that time. You have already made such great sacrifices
- in the interest of our cause that I hope you will kindly accept
- this alteration as well.
-
- "In great haste.
-
-"(_Signed_) BETHMANN-HOLLWEG."
-
-
-
-The next document is a letter of Ballin to Sir Ernest Cassel, intended
-to explain the situation.
-
- "The demand raised by your official telegram rather complicates
- matters. The fact is that the Bill as it stands now only asks for
- half as much as was contained in the original draft. This reduced
- demand is much less than the nation and the Reichstag had expected.
- If after this a still further curtailment is decided upon, such a
- step will create the highly undesirable impression that, in order
- to pave the way for an understanding with London, it had become
- necessary to make very considerable sacrifices. This, of course,
- must be avoided at all costs, because if and when an understanding
- is arrived at, there must be neither victors nor vanquished.
-
- "I need not emphasize the fact that our Government is taking up the
- matter with the greatest interest and that it is keenly anxious to
- bring about a successful issue. The reception with which you have
- met on our side must have given you convincing and impressive
- proofs of this attitude.
-
- "I have now succeeded in making our gentlemen promise me--although
- not without much reluctance on their part--that they would not
- object to the formula proposed by your Government, viz. 'It is
- agreed to submit the question of the proposed increase of naval
- tonnage to a _bona fide_ discussion.' Thus there is now a fair
- prospect of reaching a favourable result, and the preliminary
- condition laid down by your Government has been complied with.
-
- "I think that the delegate sent should be accompanied by a naval
- expert. The gentleman in question should also understand that he
- would have to use the utmost frankness in the discussions, and that
- he must be able to give an assurance that it is intended to subject
- the British programme, too, to such alterations as will make it not
- less, but rather more, acceptable than it is now. Surely, your
- Government has never desired that we should give you a definite
- undertaking on our part, whereas you should be at liberty to extend
- your programme whenever you think fit to do so. A clearly defined
- neutrality agreement is another factor which will enter into the
- question of granting the concessions demanded by your Government.
-
- "'Reciprocal assurances' is a term which it is difficult to define;
- if, for instance, the attitude of Great Britain and her action last
- summer had been submitted to a court of law, it would hardly be
- found to have violated the obligations implied by such 'reciprocal
- assurances,' and yet we were at the edge of war owing to the steps
- taken by your people.
-
- "I thought it my duty, my dear friend, to submit these particulars
- to you, so that you, for the benefit of the great cause we are
- engaged in, may take whatever steps you consider advisable before
- the departure of the delegate.
-
- "Our people would appreciate it very much if you would make the
- great sacrifice of coming over to this country when the meeting
- takes place. I personally consider this also necessary, and it
- goes without saying that I shall be present as well.
-
- "P.S.--The Chancellor to whom I have shown this letter thinks it
- would be better not to send it, because the official note contains
- all that is necessary.
-
- "However, I shall forward it all the same, because I believe it
- will present a clearer picture of the situation to you than the
- note. Please convince the delegate that it is a matter of give and
- take, and please come. It entails a great sacrifice on your part,
- but the cause which we have at heart is worth it.
-
- "The bearer of this note is our general secretary, Mr. Huldermann.
- He is a past master of discretion, and fully acquainted with the
- situation."
-
-I was instructed to hand the following note by the German Government to
-Sir Ernest Cassel with the request to pass it on to the British
-Government, and at the same time I was to explain verbally and in
-greater detail the contents of Ballin's letter on the situation.
-
-The text of the official note is as follows:
-
- "We are willing to continue the discussion in a friendly spirit.
- The Navy Bill is bound to lead to a discussion of the naval plans
- of both countries, and in this matter we shall be able to fall in
- with the wishes of the British Government if we, in return, receive
- sufficient guarantees as to a friendly disposition of British
- policy towards our own interests. Any agreement would have to state
- that either Power undertakes not to join in any plans,
- combinations, or warlike complications directed against the other.
- If concluded, it might pave the way for an understanding as to the
- sums of money to be spent on armaments by either country.
-
- "We assume that the British Government shares the views expressed
- in this note, and we should be glad if a British Cabinet minister
- could proceed to Berlin, in the first instance for the purpose of a
- private and confidential discussion only."
-
-On the evening of the same day (February 4th) I left for London. I
-arrived there the following evening and went straight to Sir Ernest
-Cassel. I prepared the following statement for Ballin at the time, in
-which I described the substance of our conversation and the outcome of
-my visit:
-
- "The note which I had brought with me did not at first satisfy our
- friend. He made a brief statement to the effect that we saw a fair
- prospect of reaching a successful solution of the problem was all
- that was needed, and that our answer was lengthy, but evasive. This
- opinion, however, he did not maintain after the close of our
- conversation, which lasted more than two hours. I pointed out to
- him that, as I understood it, the phrase 'We are willing to
- continue the discussion in a friendly spirit' amounted to a
- declaration on the part of the German Government that, in its
- opinion, there was a 'fair prospect,' and that an accommodating
- spirit was all one could ask at present. He thought that Lord
- Haldane had been asked to go to Berlin so that a member of the
- Cabinet should have an opportunity of ascertaining on the spot that
- Berlin was really disposed to discuss matters in a friendly spirit.
- On this point positive assurances were needed before Sir Edward
- Grey and Mr. Winston Churchill went across, who, if they did go,
- would not return without having effected the object of their visit.
- Sir Ernest always emphasized that he only stated his own private
- views, but it was evident that he spoke with the highest authority.
- The demand for three Dreadnoughts, he said, which the new German
- Navy Bill asked for, amounted to a big increase of armaments, and
- Great Britain would be compelled to counterbalance it by a
- corresponding increase, which she would not fail to do. If,
- however, Germany were prepared not to enlarge her existing
- programme, Great Britain would be pleased to effect a reduction on
- her part. When I referred to the apprehension of the German
- Government lest Great Britain should take advantage of the fact
- that Germany had her hands tied, in order to effect big armaments
- which it would be impossible for us to equal, our friend remarked
- that, for the reason stated above, such fears were groundless. In
- spite of this assurance, I repeatedly and emphatically drew his
- attention to the necessity for limiting the British programme just
- as much as the German one. He evidently no longer fancied the
- suggestion previously put forward that the question of agreeing
- upon a definite ratio of strength for the two navies should be
- discussed; because, if this was done, one would get lost in the
- details. Nevertheless, he did not, as the discussion proceeded,
- adhere to this standpoint absolutely. He agreed that the essential
- thing was to establish friendly political relations, and if, as I
- thought, Germany had reason to complain of British opposition to
- her legitimate expansion, one could not do better than discuss the
- various points at issue one by one, similar to the method which had
- proved so successful in the case of the Anglo-French negotiations.
- Great Britain would not raise any objections to our desire for
- rounding-off our colonial empire, and she was quite willing to
- grant us our share in the distribution of those parts of the globe
- that were still unclaimed.
-
- "By keeping strictly to the literal text of the German note, he
- found the latter quite acceptable as far as it referred to the
- question of a declaration of neutrality. He said there was a great
- difference between such declarations, and often it was quite
- possible to interpret them in various ways. I imagined that what
- was in his mind were the obligations which Britain had taken upon
- herself in her agreement with France, and I therefore asked him for
- a definition of the term 'neutrality.' His answer was very guarded
- and contained many reservations. What he meant was something like
- this: Great Britain has concluded agreements with France, Russia,
- and other countries which oblige her to remain neutral where the
- other partner is concerned, except when the latter is engaged in a
- war of aggression.
-
- "Applied to two practical cases, this would mean: If an agreement
- such as the one now under consideration had been in existence at
- the time of the Morocco dispute last summer, Great Britain would
- have been free to take the side of France if war had broken out
- between that country and ourselves, because in this case we--as he
- argued with much conviction--had been the aggressors. On the other
- hand, if we had severed our relations with Italy during the
- Turco-Italian war and had come to the support of Turkey, Great
- Britain would not have been allowed to join Italy in conspiring
- against us if we had an agreement such as the one in question.
-
- "In the interval between my first and my second visit Sir Ernest
- evidently had, by consulting his friend Haldane, arrived at a very
- definite opinion, and when I visited him for the second time he
- assured me most emphatically that Great Britain would concede to us
- as much as she had conceded to the other Powers, but not more. We
- could rely on her absolute loyalty, 'and,' he added, 'our attitude
- towards France proves that we can be loyal to our friends.'
-
- "For the rest, the manner in which he pleaded the British point of
- view was highly interesting. Great Britain, he argued, had done
- great things in the past, but owing to her great wealth a decline
- had set in in the course of the last few decades. ('Traces of this
- development,' he added, 'have also been noticeable in your
- country.') Germany, however, had made immense progress, and within
- the next fifteen or twenty years she would overtake Great Britain.
- If, then, such a dangerous competitor commenced to increase his
- armaments in a manner which could be directed only against Britain,
- he must not be surprised if the latter made every effort to check
- him wherever his influence was felt. Great Britain, therefore,
- could not remain passive if Germany attempted to dominate the whole
- Continent; because this, if successful, would upset the Balance of
- Power. Neither could she hold back in case Germany attacked and
- annihilated France. Thus, the situation being what it was, Britain
- was compelled--provided the proposed agreement with Germany was not
- concluded--to decide whether she would wait until her competitor
- had become still stronger and quite invincible, or whether she
- would prefer to strike at once. The latter alternative, he thought,
- would be the safer for her interests.
-
- "Our friend had a copy of the German note made by his secretary,
- and then forwarded it to Haldane. In the course of the evening the
- latter sent an acknowledgment of its receipt, from which Sir
- Ernest read out to me the words: 'So far very good.' It was evident
- that his friend's opinion had favourably influenced his own views
- on the German note.
-
- "On Tuesday Sir Ernest and Lord Haldane drove to the former's house
- after having attended Thanksgiving Service. Lord Haldane stayed for
- lunch, and was just leaving when I arrived at 3 o'clock. He did not
- want to be accompanied by a naval expert, for, although he did not
- pretend to understand all the technical details, he said that he
- knew all that was necessary for the discussion. He stated that he
- would put all his cards on the table and speak quite frankly.
-
- "Our friend spoke of our German politics in most disparaging terms,
- saying that they had been worth nothing since Bismarck's time. What
- Ballin had attained in his dealings with the shipping companies was
- far superior to all the achievements of Germany's diplomatists."
-
-The positive information which this report contained was passed on to
-the Chancellor.
-
-By way of explanation it may be added that the German Navy Bill, which
-later on, at the end of March, 1912, was laid before the Reichstag,
-provided for the formation of a third active squadron in order to adapt
-the increase in the number of the crews to the increase in the material.
-This third squadron necessitated the addition of three new battleships
-and of two small cruisers, and it was also intended to increase the
-number of submarines and to make provision for the construction of
-airships.
-
-The discussions with Lord Haldane took place at the Royal Castle,
-Berlin, on February 9th, the Kaiser being in the chair. The Chancellor
-did not attend, he had a separate interview with Haldane. The outcome of
-the conference is described in a statement from an authoritative source,
-viz. in a note which the Kaiser dispatched to Ballin by special
-messenger immediately after the close of the conference. It reads as
-follows:
-
-"THE CASTLE, BERLIN.
-"9.2.1912. 6 P.M.
-
-"DEAR BALLIN,
-
- "The conversation has taken place, and all the pros and many cons
- have been discussed. Our standpoint has been explained in great
- detail, and the Bill has been examined. At my suggestion, it was
- resolved to agree on the following basis (informal line of action):
-
- "(1) Because of its scope and its importance, the Agreement must be
- concluded, and it must not be jeopardized by too many details.
-
- "(2) Therefore, the Agreement is not to contain any reference to
- the size of the two fleets, to standards of ships, to
- constructions, etc.
-
- "(3) The Agreement is to be purely political.
-
- "(4) As soon as the Agreement has been published here, and as soon
- as the Bill has been laid before the Reichstag, I, in my character
- of commander-in-chief, instruct Tirpitz to make the following
- statement to the Committee: The third squadron will be asked for
- and voted, but the building of the three additional units required
- to complete it will not be started until 1913, and one ship each
- will be demanded in 1916 and 1919 respectively.
-
- "Haldane agreed to this and expressed his satisfaction. I have made
- no end of concessions. But this must be the limit. He was very nice
- and very reasonable, and he perfectly understood my position as
- commander-in-chief, and that of Tirpitz, with regard to the Bill. I
- really think I have done all I could do.
-
- "Please remember me to Cassel and inform him.
-
-"Your sincere friend,
-"(_Signed_) WILHELM I.R."
-
-
-
-After Lord Haldane's departure from Berlin there was a gap of
-considerable length in the negotiations which had made such a promising
-start, and unfortunately during that time Mr. Churchill made a speech
-which not only the German papers but also the Liberal Press in Great
-Britain described as wanting in discretion. The passage which German
-opinion resented most of all was the statement that, in contrast with
-Great Britain, for whom a big navy was an absolute necessity, to Germany
-such navy was merely a luxury.
-
-For the rest, the following two letters from the Chancellor to Ballin
-may throw some light on the causes of the break in the negotiations:
-
-"BERLIN.
-"2.3.1912.
-
-"DEAR MR. BALLIN,
-
- "Our supposition that it is the contents of the Bill which have
- brought about the change of feeling is confirmed by news from a
- private source. It is feared that the Bill as it stands will have
- such an adverse influence on public opinion that the latter will
- not accept a political agreement along with it. Nevertheless, the
- idea of an understanding has not been lost sight of, even though it
- may take six months or a year before it can be accomplished.
-
- "In consequence of this information the draft reply to London
- requires to be reconsidered, and it has not been dispatched so far.
- I shall let you know as soon as it has left.
-
-"Sincerely yours.
-"(_Signed_) BETHMANN-HOLLWEG."
-
-
-
-"BERLIN.
-"8.3.1912.
-
-"DEAR MR. BALLIN,
-
- "This is intended for your confidential information. Regarding the
- naval question Great Britain now, as always, lays great stress on
- the difficulty of reconciling public opinion to the inconsistency
- implied by a big increase in the Naval Estimates hand in hand with
- the conclusion of a political and colonial agreement. However, even
- if an agreement should not be reached, she hopes that the
- confidential relations and the frank exchange of opinions between
- both Governments which have resulted from Lord Haldane's mission
- may continue in future. The question of a colonial understanding is
- to be discussed in the near future.
-
- "It is imperative that the negotiations should not break down.
- Success is possible in spite of the Navy Bill if the discussions
- are carried on dispassionately. As matters stand, the provisions
- of the Bill must remain as they are. Great Britain has no right to
- interfere with our views on the number of the crews which we desire
- to place on board our existing units. As far as the building dates
- of the three battleships are concerned, I should have preferred--as
- you are aware--to leave our hands untied, but His Majesty's
- decision has definitely fixed 1913 and 1916 as the years for laying
- them down. This is a far-reaching concession to Great Britain.
-
- "Discreet support from private quarters will be appreciated.
-
- "Many thanks for your news. You know that and why I was prevented
- from writing these last few days.
-
-"Sincerely yours,
-"(_Signed_) BETHMANN-HOLLWEG."
-
-
-
-In order to find out whether any foreign influence might have been at
-work in London, I was commissioned to meet Sir Ernest Cassel in the
-South of Europe early in March. Ballin supplied me with a letter
-containing a detailed account of the general situation. Owing to a delay
-in the proposed meeting, I took the precaution of burning the letter, as
-I had been instructed to do, and I informed Sir Ernest of its contents
-by word of mouth.
-
-In this document Ballin gave a brief resume of the situation as it
-appeared to him after his consultations with the various competent
-departments in Berlin, somewhat on the following lines:
-
-(1) After Lord Haldane's return Sir Edward Grey officially told Count
-Metternich that he was highly pleased with the successful issue of Lord
-Haldane's mission, and gave him to understand that he thought it
-unlikely that any difficulties would arise.
-
-(2) A few days later Mr. Asquith made a statement in the House of
-Commons which amply confirmed the views held by Sir Edward Grey, and
-which produced a most favourable impression in Berlin.
-
-(3) This induced the Chancellor to make an equally amicable and hopeful
-statement to the Reichstag.
-
-(4) In spite of this, however, there arose an interval of several weeks,
-during which neither Count Metternich nor anybody in Berlin received any
-news from the proper department in London. This silence naturally caused
-some uneasiness.
-
-(5) Count Metternich was asked to call at the Foreign Office, where Sir
-Edward Grey commenced to raise objections mainly in reference to the
-Navy Bill. "I must add in this connexion--as, no doubt, Lord Haldane has
-also told you verbally--that on the last day of his stay in Berlin an
-understanding was arrived at between the competent quarters on our side
-and Lord Haldane with regard to the building dates of the three
-battleships. As you will remember, it had been agreed not to discuss the
-proposed establishment of the third squadron on an active footing and
-the increase in the number of the crews connected with it, but to look
-upon these subjects as lying outside the negotiations." Quite suddenly
-and quite unexpectedly we are now faced with a great change in the
-situation. Grey, as I have said before, objects--in terms of the
-greatest politeness, of course--to the increase in the number of the
-crews, asks questions as to our intentions with regard to torpedo boats
-and submarines, and--this is most significant--emphasizes that the
-Haldane mission has at any rate been of great use, even if the
-negotiations should not lead to any definite result.
-
-(6) The next event was a further interview with Count Metternich during
-which it was stated that, according to the calculations of the First
-Lord of the Admiralty, the increase in the number of the crews amounted
-to 15,000 men, whilst it had been thought in England that it would be a
-question of from 4,000 to 5,000 men at the outset. It appeared that this
-large increase was looked upon with misgivings, and that it was desired
-to enter into fresh negotiations which would greatly interfere with the
-arrangements made by the German competent quarters with regard to the
-navy. Hence Metternich replied that, in his opinion, these explanations
-could only mean that the Cabinet did not agree to the arrangements made
-by Lord Haldane. Grey's answer was full of polite assurances couched in
-the language of diplomacy, but, translated into plain German, what he
-meant was: "You are quite right."
-
-Ballin's letter went on to say that the German Navy Bill had gradually
-been reduced to a minimum, and that it was not possible to cut it down
-any further. We could not, and we would not, give rise to the suspicion
-that great alterations had been made merely to meet British objections.
-Finally, Ballin requested his friend to go to London in order to make
-inquiries on the spot, and also declared his readiness to go there
-himself.
-
-My report on my conversations with Sir Ernest Cassel, which took place
-at Marseilles on March 9th and 10th, is as follows:
-
- "Our friend arrived about four hours late, but he received me all
- the same at 10 P.M. on that evening. I told him all about my
- journey and related to him verbally the contents of Ballin's
- letter. When I described the incident of how Grey had raised new
- objections at his interview with Metternich, and when I explained
- how, after that, the matter had come to a dead stop, so that
- nothing further was heard of it in Germany, our friend interrupted
- me by saying that since then the British Government had presented a
- memorandum containing the objections raised against the German Navy
- Bill. The latter, he suggested, was the only stumbling-block, as
- could be inferred from a letter which he had received _en route_
- from Haldane.
-
- "When I remarked that Ballin, in a postscript to his letter, had
- expressed an apprehension lest some foreign influence had
- interfered with the course of events, our friend positively denied
- this. France, he said, was on good terms with Great Britain, and
- had no reason for intriguing against an Anglo-German agreement
- destined, as it was, to promote the cause of peace.
-
- "When I then proceeded with my account, drawing his special
- attention to the reduction of the estimates contained in the Navy
- Bill, Sir Ernest interposed that he was not sufficiently _au
- courant_ as to the details. He himself, in his statement prepared
- for the British Government, had only referred to the battleships,
- and he thought he had perhaps given too cursory an account of the
- other factors of the case. He also threw out some fairly plain
- hints that Haldane had gone too far in Berlin, and that he had made
- statements on a subject with which he was not sufficiently
- conversant. Later on, he continued, the Navy Bill had been
- subjected to a careful examination by the British Admiralty, and
- before his departure from Cannes he, Sir Ernest, had received a
- letter from Mr. Churchill, the tone of which was very angry.
- Churchill complained that Germany had presented such a long list of
- the wishes with which she wanted Great Britain to comply, that the
- least one could hope for was an accommodating spirit in the
- question of the Navy. Everything now depended on Churchill; if he
- could be satisfied, all the rest would be plain sailing. He and
- Lloyd George were the greatest friends of the agreement. Sir Ernest
- also made it fairly clear that Great Britain would be content with
- a postponement of the building dates, or in other words with a
- 'retardation of the building programme.' The negotiations would be
- bound to fail, unless Ballin could secure such a postponement. It
- was necessary to strike whilst the iron was hot, and this
- particular iron had already become rather cool. He quite accepted
- Grey's statement that the Haldane mission had not been in vain, as
- the feeling had doubtless become more friendly since then. Some few
- individual indiscretions, such as Churchill's reference to the
- German Navy as an article of luxury, should not be taken too
- seriously. If the German Bill were passed into law in its present
- shape, the British Government would be obliged to introduce one
- asking for three times as much, but it could not possibly do this
- and declare at the same time that it had reached an understanding
- with Germany. Such a proceeding would be absurd. The argument that
- it is inconsistent with common sense to conclude an agreement and
- yet to continue one's armaments, is evidently still maintained in
- Great Britain, and is one which, of course, it is impossible to
- refute.
-
- "In the course of our conversation Sir Ernest produced the letter
- which he had received from Haldane _en route_. This letter stated
- that the discussions with Metternich were then chiefly on the
- subject of the Navy Bill, and that the Admiralty had prepared a
- memorandum for the German Government dealing with these questions.
- The letter was dated February 25th, and its tone was not
- pessimistic; Churchill, however, as stated above, had previously
- written him a 'very angry' letter. In this connexion it must not be
- forgotten that the man on whom everything depends is not the
- amiable negotiator Haldane, but Churchill."
-
-In order to make further inquiries about the state of things and to
-assist in promoting the good cause, Ballin, immediately after my return,
-proceeded to Paris and then to London. He reported to the Chancellor
-upon the impressions he had received in Paris. The following is an
-extract from his report:
-
- "Owing to the brief time at my disposal when I was in Paris, I
- could only learn the views of the members of the '_haute finance_.'
- It is well known that in France the attitude taken up by financial
- circles is always regarded as authoritative. They look upon the
- present situation as decidedly pacific; they are pleased that the
- Morocco affair is settled, and they feel quite sure that the
- political sky is unclouded by complications. They would gladly
- welcome an agreement between Germany and Great Britain. My friends
- assure me that the Government also does not view the idea of such
- an understanding with displeasure; on the contrary, it looks upon
- it as an advantage. It is, however, thought unlikely that an
- agreement will be reached, because it is believed that popular
- feeling in Germany is too much opposed to it. If, notwithstanding
- these pacific views held by influential and competent sections, the
- casual visitor to the French capital is impressed by a certain
- bellicose attitude of the nation as a whole, it is largely due to
- the propaganda carried on by the _Matin_ with the purpose of
- obtaining voluntary subscriptions for the furtherance of aviation.
- The French are enthusiastic over this idea, and as it has a strong
- military bearing, the man in the street likes to connect the French
- aviation successes with a victorious war."
-
-From London Ballin sent me some telegrams which I was instructed to pass
-on to the Chancellor. In these messages he stated that his conversations
-with the German Ambassador and with Haldane had convinced him that
-people in London believed that the increase in the number of the crews,
-if the proposed German Navy Bill became law, would be greater than the
-figures given by Berlin would make it appear. It would therefore be most
-desirable to arrange for a meeting of experts to clear up this
-discrepancy. Ballin's impression was that the British Cabinet, and also
-the King, were still favourably disposed to the whole plan, and that the
-Cabinet was unanimous in this view. A conversation with Churchill, which
-lasted several hours, confirmed these impressions. In London the
-increase in the number of the crews had previously been estimated at
-half of what it would really be, and alarm was felt about the large
-number of torpedo boats and submarines demanded; but since the German
-Government had explained that the figures arrived at in London--i.e.
-those stated in the memorandum which had been addressed to the German
-Government some time before--were not correct, Churchill had agreed that
-both sides should nominate experts who would check the figures and put
-them right. Churchill was anxious to see that the matter was brought to
-a successful issue, and he was still hoping that a neutrality agreement
-would induce the German Government to make concessions in regard to the
-Navy Bill.
-
-When Ballin had satisfied himself as to this state of things, he
-immediately returned to Berlin, as he did not consider it appropriate
-that any private person should do anything further for the time being,
-and as he thought that the conduct of the discussions concerning the
-neutrality agreement were best left to the Ambassador.
-
-Meanwhile, however, the German Government had definitely made up its
-mind that the Navy Bill would have to remain as it stood. This was the
-information Ballin received from the Kaiser and the Chancellor when he
-returned from London on March 16th.
-
-Sir Ernest Cassel then suggested to the British Government that the
-negotiations concerning the neutrality agreement should be re-opened as
-soon as the first excitement caused by the Navy Bill had subsided, which
-would probably be the case within a few months, and that the interval
-should be utilized for clearing up the details. In Berlin, however, the
-discussions were looked upon as having been broken off, as may be seen
-from the following telegram which the Kaiser sent to Ballin on March
-19th in reply to Ballin's information about his last exchange of
-telegrams with London:
-
- "Many thanks for letter. The latest proposals arriving here
- immediately after you had left raised impossible demands and were
- so offensive in form that they were promptly rejected. Further harm
- was done by Churchill's arrogant speech which a large section of
- the British press justly described as a provocation of Germany. The
- 'agreement' has thus been broken by Great Britain, and we have done
- with it. The negotiations must be started afresh on quite a
- different basis. What apology has there been offered to us for the
- passage in the speech describing our fleet as an article of luxury?
-
-"(_Signed_) WILHELM I.R."
-
-
-
-That the negotiations had actually been broken off was confirmed to
-Ballin by a letter of the Chancellor of the same date:
-
-"DEAR MR. BALLIN,
-
- "My cordial thanks for your letter of the 18th. What your friend
- told Metternich is identical with what he wired you. Churchill's
- speech did not come up to my expectations. He really seems to be a
- firebrand past praying for. The Army and Navy Bills will probably
- not go up to the Federal Council until the 21st, as the Army Bill
- requires some amendments at the eleventh hour. Their contents will
- be published simultaneously.
-
- "My opinion is that our labours will now have to be stopped
- altogether for some time. The problem before us suffers from the
- defect that, because of its inherent difficulties, it admits of no
- solution. I shall always remain sincerely grateful to you for your
- loyal assistance. When you come to Berlin next time, please don't
- forget to call at the Wilhelmstrasse.
-
-"With kindest regards,
-"Sincerely yours,
-"(_Signed_) BETHMANN-HOLLWEG."
-
-
-
-The conviction of the inherent impossibility of solving the problem was
-shared by many people in Germany--chiefly, of course, by those connected
-with the Navy; and some critics went so far as to say that Great Britain
-had never honestly meant to arrive at an understanding, or at any rate
-that Haldane--whose honesty and sincerity were beyond doubt--was
-disowned by his fellow-members in the Cabinet.
-
-When Ballin, in compliance with the wishes of the Foreign Office, went
-to London during the critical period before the outbreak of the war in
-1914, he wrote a letter from there to a naval officer of high rank with
-whom he had been on terms of friendship for years. This document is of
-interest now because it shows what Ballin's own standpoint was with
-regard to the views described in the previous paragraph:
-
- "People over here," he wrote, "do not believe that negotiations
- with Great Britain on the subject of a naval agreement could
- possibly be crowned with success, and you yourself contend that it
- would have been better if such negotiations had never been started.
- Your standpoint is that the failure of any efforts in that
- direction would merely tend to aggravate the existing situation, a
- point of view with which I entirely concur.
-
- "On the other hand, however, you cannot deny the soundness of the
- argument that, if the responsible leaders of British naval policy
- keep expressing their desire to enter into a discussion, the
- refusal of Germany to do so must cause the British to believe that
- we are pursuing aims far exceeding those we have openly avowed. My
- somewhat fatigued brain is unable to see whether the German
- contention is right or wrong. But naturally, I always look upon
- things from the business man's point of view, and so I always think
- it better to come to some kind of an agreement with a competitor
- rather than allow him an unlimited measure of expansion. Once,
- however, I have come to the conclusion that for financial or other
- reasons this competitor can no longer keep pace with me, his
- further existence ceases altogether to interest me.
-
- "Thus the views of the expert on these matters and those of the
- business man run counter to each other, and I am entitled to
- dismiss this subject without entering upon a discussion of the
- interesting and remarkable arguments which Winston Churchill put
- before me last night. I cannot, however, refrain from contradicting
- by a few brief words the contention that the motives which had
- prompted the Haldane mission were not sincere. A conversation with
- Sir Edward Grey the night before last has strengthened this
- conviction of mine still further. I regard Sir Edward as a serious,
- honest, and clever statesman, and I am sure you will agree with my
- view that the Haldane mission has cleared the atmosphere
- surrounding Anglo-German relations which had become very strained."
-
-It may be supposed that history, in the meantime, has proved whose
-standpoint was the correct one: that of the business man or that of the
-naval expert.
-
-Not much need be said about the subsequent development of events up to
-the outbreak of the war.
-
-The above-mentioned opinion which the Chancellor held regarding
-Churchill's speech of March 18th, 1912, was probably arrived at on the
-strength of the cabled reports only. Whoever reads the full original
-text of the speech must fail to find anything aggressive in it, and
-there was no harm in admitting that it was a perfectly frank and honest
-statement concerning the naval rivalry of the two Powers. Among other
-things it contained the suggestion that a "naval holiday" should be
-agreed upon, i.e. both countries should abstain from building new ships
-for a definite period. We, at any rate, looked upon Churchill's speech
-as a suitable means of making people see what would be the ultimate
-consequences of the interminable naval armaments. I made a German
-translation of it which, with the aid of one of the committees for an
-Anglo-German understanding, I spread broadcast all over the country.
-However, it proved a complete failure, as there were powerful groups in
-both countries who contended that the efforts to reconcile the two
-standpoints could not lead to any positive result, and that the old
-injunction, _si vis pacem, para bellum_, indicated the only right
-solution. Only a master mind could have overcome these difficulties. But
-Herr v. Bethmann, as we know, considered that the problem, for inherent
-reasons, did not admit of any solution at all, and the Kaiser's initial
-enthusiasm had probably been damped by subsequent influences of a
-different kind. Ballin himself, in later years, ascribed the failure of
-the mission to the circumstance that the Kaiser and his Chancellor,
-between themselves only, had attempted to bring the whole matter to a
-successful issue instead of entrusting this task to the Secretary of
-Foreign Affairs and to Admiral Tirpitz, the Secretary for the Navy.
-
-An interesting sidelight on the causes which led to the failure of this
-last important attempt to reach an understanding is thrown by the
-rumours which were spread in the German Press in March, 1912, to the
-effect that the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, Herr v.
-Kiderlen, wished to resign, because he felt that he had been left too
-much in the dark with regard to the Anglo-German negotiations. It was
-also reported that the Chancellor's position had been shaken, and that
-Admiral Tirpitz felt dissatisfied, because the Navy Bill did not go far
-enough. Probably there was some vestige of truth in all these rumours,
-and this may have been connected with the attitude which the three
-gentlemen concerned had taken up towards the question of the
-negotiations with Great Britain.
-
-Shortly after the visit of Lord Haldane Ballin received a letter from a
-personage belonging to the Kaiser's entourage in which it was said:
-
- "The impression which has taken root with me during the many hours
- which I spent as an attentive listener is that your broad-minded
- scheme is being wrecked by our official circles, partly through
- their clumsiness, and partly through their bureaucratic conceit,
- and--which is worse--that we have failed to show ourselves worthy
- of the great opportunity."
-
-When it had become certain that the last attempt to reach an
-understanding had definitely and finally failed, the ambassador in
-London, Count Metternich, did not shrink from drawing the only possible
-conclusion from it. He had always expressed his conviction that a war
-between Germany and a Franco-Russian coalition would find Great Britain
-on the side of Germany's opponents, and his resignation--which, as
-usual, was explained by the state of his health--was really due to a
-report of his in which he stated it as his opinion that a continuation
-of German armaments would lead to war with Great Britain no later than
-1915. It is alleged that the Kaiser added a very "ungracious" marginal
-note to this report. Consequently, the ambassador, who was a man of very
-independent character, did the only thing he could consistently do, and
-resigned his office. In taking this step he may have been influenced by
-the reception which the failure of the Haldane mission met with in
-Conservative circles in Great Britain, where no stone was left unturned
-to urge the necessity for continuing the policy of big armaments and to
-paint German untrustworthiness in the most glaring colours.
-
-Count Metternich's successor was Herr v. Marschall, a gentleman whose
-appointment the Press and the official circles welcomed with great
-cordiality, and from whose considerable diplomatic abilities, which were
-acknowledged on all sides, an improvement of Anglo-German relations was
-confidently expected. It was said that the Kaiser had sent "his best
-man," thus demonstrating how greatly he also desired better relations.
-But Herr v. Marschall's activities came to a sudden end through his
-early death in September, 1912, and in October his place was taken by
-Prince Lichnowsky, whose efforts in the direction of an improvement in
-the relations are familiar to everyone who has read his pamphlet. Apart
-from the work performed by the ambassadors, great credit is also due to
-the activities displayed by Herr v. Kuehlmann, the then Secretary to the
-Legation and subsequent Secretary of State. The public did not see a
-deal of his work, which was conducted with skill and was consistent. His
-close personal acquaintance with some of the leading British
-politicians, especially with Sir Edward Grey, enabled him to do much
-work for the maintenance of good relations and in the interest of
-European peace, particularly during the time when the post of ambassador
-was vacant, and also during the Balkan War. He had, moreover, a great
-deal to do with the drafting of the two colonial agreements dealing with
-the Bagdad Railway and the African problems respectively, both of which
-were ready for signature in the summer of 1914. The former especially
-may be looked upon as a proof not only that a considerable improvement
-had taken place in Anglo-German relations, but also that Great Britain
-was not inclined to adjust the guiding lines of her policy in Asia Minor
-exclusively in conformity with the wishes of Russia. Anybody who takes
-an interest in the then existing possibilities of German expansion with
-the consent of Great Britain and on the basis of these colonial draft
-agreements cannot do better than read the anonymous pamphlet entitled
-"_Deutsche Weltpolitik und kein Krieg_" ("German World Power and No
-War"), published in 1913 by Messrs. Puttkamer & Muehlbrecht, of Berlin.
-The author is Dr. Plehn, the then representative of the _Cologne
-Gazette_ in London, and it partly reflects the views of Herr v.
-Kuehlmann.
-
-In this connexion I should like to refer briefly to an episode which
-took place towards the close of 1912. The German periodicals have
-already discussed it, especially the _Sueddeutsche Monatshafte_ in June,
-1921, in a review of the reports which Count Lerchenfeld, the Bavarian
-minister to the Court of Berlin, had made for the information of his
-Government. In these reports he mentions an event to which the Kaiser
-had already referred in a letter to Ballin dated December 15th, 1912.
-The Kaiser, in commenting on the state of tension then existing between
-Austria and Serbia, made some significant remarks concerning the policy
-of Germany towards Austria-Hungary. When the relations between Vienna
-and Petrograd, he wrote, had assumed a dangerous character, because it
-was recognized that the attitude of Serbia was based on her hope of
-Russian support, Germany might be faced with the possibility of having
-to come to the assistance of Austria.
-
- "The Slav subjects of Austria," the letter continued, "had become
- very restless, and could only be brought to reason by the resolute
- action of the whole Dual Monarchy against Serbia. Austria had
- arrived at the cross roads, and her whole future development hung
- in the balance. Either the German element would retain its
- ascendancy, in which case she would remain a suitable ally, or the
- Slav element would gain the upper hand, and she would cease to be
- an ally altogether. If we were compelled to take up arms, we should
- do so to assist Austria not only against Russian aggression, but
- also against the Slavs in general, and in her efforts to remain
- German. That would mean that we should have to face a racial
- struggle of the Germanic element against Slav insolence. It is
- beyond our power to prevent this struggle, because the future of
- the Habsburg monarchy and that of our own country are both at
- stake. (This was the real meaning of Bethmann's very plain
- speaking.) It is therefore a question on which depends the very
- existence of the Germanic race on the continent of Europe.
-
- "It was of great importance to us that Great Britain had so far
- supported the Austro-German standpoint in these matters. Now, since
- a war against Russia would automatically imply a war with France as
- well, it was of interest to us to know whether, in this purely
- continental case, Great Britain could and would declare her
- neutrality in conformity with her proposals of last February.
-
- "On December 6th, Haldane, obviously sent by Grey, called on
- Lichnowsky and explained to the dumbfounded ambassador in plain
- words that, assuming Germany getting involved in war against Russia
- and France, Great Britain would _not_ remain neutral, but would at
- once come to the assistance of France. The reason given for this
- attitude was that Britain could not and would not tolerate at any
- time that we should acquire a position of continental predominance
- which might easily lead to the formation of a united continent.
- Great Britain could therefore never allow France to be crushed by
- us. You can imagine the effect of this piece of news on the whole
- of the Wilhelmstrasse. I cannot say that I was taken by surprise,
- because I, as you know, have always looked upon Great Britain as an
- enemy in a military sense. Still, this news has decidedly cleared
- matters up, even if the result is merely of a negative character."
-
-Ballin did not omit to ask his friend for some details concerning the
-visit of Lord Haldane mentioned in the Kaiser's letter, and was
-furnished with the following explanation by Lord Haldane himself.
-
-Nothing had been further from his intentions, he said, than to call on
-Prince Lichnowsky for the express purpose of making any such
-declaration; and Balkan questions, to the best of his recollection, had
-not been touched at all. He had spent a very pleasant half-hour with the
-Prince, and in the course of their conversation he had seen fit to
-repeat the formula which had been discussed during his stay in Berlin,
-and which referred to Britain's interest in the preservation of the
-integrity of France. This, possibly, might have given rise to the
-misunderstanding.
-
-Prince Lichnowsky himself, in his pamphlet entitled "My London Mission,"
-relates the incident as follows:
-
- "In my dispatches sent to Berlin I pointed out again and again that
- Great Britain, being a commercial country, would suffer enormously
- through any war between the European Powers, and would prevent it
- by every means within her power. At the same time, however, she
- could never tolerate the weakening or the crushing of France,
- because it would disturb the Balance of Power and replace it by the
- ascendancy of Germany. This view had been expressed to me by Lord
- Haldane shortly after my arrival, and everybody whose opinion
- counts for anything told me the same thing."
-
-The failure of the negotiations aiming at an understanding led to a
-continuance of the increase in the British armaments, a concentration of
-the British battle fleet in the North Sea, and to that of the French
-fleet in the Mediterranean. The latter arrangement was looked upon in
-Germany as a menace directed against Italy, and produced a sharp
-semi-official criticism in the _Frankfurter Zeitung_. In spite of all
-this, however, friendly messages from London concerning the
-possibilities of an understanding, the "naval holiday," etc., reached
-Germany from time to time.
-
-How closely Ballin clung to his favourite idea that the naval experts of
-both countries should come to an understanding is demonstrated by the
-circumstance that in 1914, when the British squadron was present during
-the Kiel yachting week, he tried to bring about a meeting and a personal
-exchange of views between Churchill and Tirpitz.
-
-Churchill was by no means disinclined to come to Germany for this
-purpose, but unfortunately the desire was expressed by the German side,
-and especially by the Kaiser, that the British Government should make an
-official inquiry whether his visit would be welcomed. The Government,
-however, was not disposed to do so, and the whole thing fell through,
-although Churchill sent word that, if Tirpitz really wanted to see him,
-he would find means to bring about such a meeting.
-
-Thus the last attempt at an understanding had resulted in failure, and
-before any further efforts in the same direction could be made, Europe
-had been overtaken by its fate.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-THE KAISER
-
-
-The origin of the friendship between Ballin and the Kaiser, which has
-given rise to so much comment and to so many rumours, was traced back by
-the Kaiser himself to the year 1891, when he inspected the express
-steamer _Auguste Victoria_, and when he, accompanied by the Kaiserin,
-made a trip on board the newly-built express steamer _Fuerst Bismarck_.
-Ballin, although he received the honour of a decoration and a few
-gracious words from His Majesty, did not think that this meeting had
-established any special contact between himself and his sovereign. He
-told me, indeed, that he dated their acquaintance from a memorable
-meeting which took place in Berlin in 1895, and which was concerned with
-the preparations for the festivities in celebration of the opening of
-the Kiel Canal.
-
-The Kaiser wanted the event to be as magnificent as possible, and his
-wishes to this effect were fully met by the Hamburg civic authorities
-and by the shipping companies. Although Ballin had only been a short
-time in the position he then held, his versatile mind did not overlook
-the opportunity thus offered for advertising his company. The Kaiser was
-keenly interested in every detail. After some preliminary discussions
-with the Hamburg Senate, all the interested parties were invited to send
-their delegates to Berlin, where a general meeting was to be held in the
-Royal Castle with the Kaiser in the chair. It was arranged that the
-North German Lloyd and the Hamburg-Amerika Linie should provide one
-steamer each, which was to convey the representatives of the Government
-departments and of the Reichstag, as well as the remaining guests,
-except those who were to be accommodated on board the _Hohenzollern_,
-and that both steamers should follow in the wake of the latter all the
-way down the Elbe from Hamburg to the Canal. When this item was
-discussed the Kaiser said he had arranged that the _Hohenzollern_ should
-be followed first by the Lloyd steamer and then by the Hamburg-Amerika
-liner. Thereupon Ballin asked leave to speak. He explained that, since
-the journey was to start in Hamburg territorial waters, it would perhaps
-be proper to extend to the Hamburg company the honour of the position
-immediately after the Imperial yacht. The Kaiser, in a tone which
-sounded by no means gracious, declared that he did not think this was
-necessary, and that he had already given a definite promise to the Lloyd
-people. Ballin replied that, if the Kaiser had pledged his word, the
-matter, of course, was settled, and that he would withdraw his
-suggestion, although he considered himself justified in making it.
-
-At the close of the meeting Count Waldersee, who had been one of those
-present, took Ballin's arm and said to him: "As you are now sure to be
-hanged from the Brandenburger Tor, let us go to Hiller's before it comes
-off, to have some lunch together." Ballin never ceased to be grateful to
-the Count for this sign of kindness, and his friendship with him and his
-family lasted until his death. The arrangements made by the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie for the reception of its guests were carefully
-prepared and carried out. It is not easy to give an idea to a non-expert
-of the great many minute details which have to be attended to in order
-to accommodate a large number of exacting visitors on a steamer in such
-a manner that nobody finds anything to complain of, especially if, as is
-but natural on an occasion such as this, an endless variety of
-questions as to precedence and etiquette have to be taken into account.
-Great pains and much circumspection are necessary to arrange to
-everybody's satisfaction all matters affecting the reception of the
-guests, the provision of food and drinks, the conveyance of luggage,
-etc. Thanks to the infinite care, however, with which Ballin and his
-fellow-workers attended to this matter, everything turned out eminently
-satisfactory. In the evening, when the guests of the Hamburg-Amerika
-Linie were returning to their steamer at the close of the festivities,
-the company agreeably surprised them by providing an artistically
-arranged collation of cold meats, etc., and the news of this spread so
-quickly that from the other vessels people who felt that the official
-catering had not taken sufficient account of their appetites, lost no
-time in availing themselves of this opportunity of a meal.
-
-This event, at any rate, helped to establish the reputation of the
-company's hospitality.
-
-It may be presumed that this incident had shown the Kaiser--who,
-although he did not object to being contradicted in private, could not
-bear it in public--that the Hamburg Company was animated by a spirit of
-independence which did not subordinate itself to other influences
-without a protest, and which jealously guarded its position. It must be
-stated that the Kaiser never bore Ballin any ill will on account of his
-opposition, which may be partly due to the great pains the Packetfahrt
-took in order to make the festivities a success. The event may also have
-induced the Kaiser to watch the progress of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie
-after that with particular attention. His special interest was centred
-round the provision for new construction, and in this matter he exerted
-his influence from an early time in favour of the German yards.
-
-The first occasion of the Kaiser's pleading in favour of German yards
-dates from the time previous to his accession to the throne. Ballin, in
-a speech which he delivered when the trial trip of the s.s. _Meteor_
-took place, stated the facts connected with this intervention as
-follows: The directors had just started negotiations with British
-shipbuilding firms for the building of their first express steamer when
-the Prussian Minister to the Free City of Hamburg called to inform them,
-at the request of Prince Bismarck, that the latter, acting upon the
-urgent representations of Prince Wilhelm, suggested that they should
-entrust the building of the big vessel to a German yard. The Prince was
-profoundly convinced that Germany, for the sake of her own future, must
-cease to play the part of Cinderella among the nations, and that there
-was no want of engineers among his countrymen who, if given a chance,
-would prove just as efficient as their fellow-craftsmen in England. The
-Packetfahrt thereupon entrusted the building of the vessel to the
-Stettin Vulkan yard. She was the fast steamer _Auguste Victoria_, and
-was christened after the young Empress. Launched in 1888, she
-immediately won "the blue riband of the Atlantic" on her first trip.
-
-Another and still more practical suggestion of the Kaiser was put
-forward at the time when the company were about to build an excursion
-steamer. The satisfactory results which their fast steamers had yielded
-during the dead season in the transatlantic passage business when used
-for pleasure cruises had induced them to take this step, and when the
-Kaiser's attention was drawn to this project, he, on the strength of the
-experience he had made with his _Hohenzollern_, designed a sketch and
-composed a memorandum dealing with the equipment of such a steamer. It
-was Ballin's opinion that this Imperial memorandum contained some
-suggestions worth studying, although it was but natural that the
-monarch could not be expected to be sufficiently acquainted with all the
-practical considerations which the company had to bear in mind in order
-to make the innovation pay, and that, therefore, some of his
-recommendations could not be carried out.
-
-If we remember what vivid pleasure the Kaiser derived from his own
-holiday cruises, it cannot surprise us to see that he took such a keen
-interest in the company's excursion trips. How keen it was may be
-inferred from an incident which happened early in his reign, and to
-which Ballin, when describing his first experiences on this subject,
-referred in his above-mentioned speech on the occasion of the trial trip
-of the _Meteor_. Ballin said: "Even among my most intimate associates
-people were not wanting who thought that I was not quite right in my
-mind when, at the head of 241 intrepid travellers, I set out on the
-first pleasure cruise to the Far East in January, 1891. The Kaiser had
-just inspected the vessel, and then bade farewell to the company and
-myself by saying: 'That's right. Make our countrymen feel at home on the
-open sea, and both your company and the whole nation will reap the
-benefit.'"
-
-In after years the Kaiser's interest in the company chiefly centred
-round those landmarks in its progress which marked the country's
-expansion in the direction of _Weltpolitik_, e.g. its participation in
-the Imperial Mail Service to the Far East, its taking up a share in the
-African trade, etc. In fact, after 1901, when the Kaiser had keenly
-interested himself in the establishment of the Morgan Trust and its
-connexion with German shipping companies, there was scarcely an
-important event in the history of the company (such as the extension of
-its services, the addition of a big new steamer, etc.) which he allowed
-to pass without a few cordial words of congratulation. He also took the
-liveliest interest in the personal well-being of Ballin. He always sent
-him the compliments of the season at Christmas or for the New Year,
-generally in the shape of picture post-cards or photographs from his
-travels, together with a few gracious words, and he never failed to
-remember the anniversaries of important events in Ballin's life or to
-inquire after him on recovering from an illness. Ballin, in his turn,
-acquainted the Kaiser with anything which he believed might be of
-interest to His Majesty, or might improve his knowledge of the economic
-conditions existing in his own as well as in foreign countries. He kept
-him informed about all the more important pool negotiations, e.g. those
-in connexion with the establishment, in 1908, of the general pool, and
-those referring to the agreements concluded with other German shipping
-companies, etc. Whenever he noticed on his travels any signs of
-important developments, chiefly those of a political kind, he furnished
-his Imperial friend with reports on the foreign situation.
-
-In 1904 the Kaiser's interest in Ballin took a particularly practical
-form. Ballin had suffered a great deal from neuralgic pains which, in
-spite of the treatment of various physicians, did not really and
-permanently diminish until the patient was taken in hand by Professor
-Schweninger, the famous medical adviser of no less a man than Bismarck.
-Ballin himself testified to the unvaried attention and kindness of Dr.
-Schweninger, and to the great success of his treatment. It is to be
-assumed that Schweninger, because of his energetic manner of dealing
-with his patients, was eminently suited to Ballin's disposition, which
-was not an easy one for his doctor and for those round him to cope with.
-
- "As early as January, 1904," Ballin remarks in his notes, "the
- Kaiser had sent a telegram inviting me to attend the _Ordensfest_
- celebrations in Berlin, and during the subsequent levee he favoured
- me with a lengthy conversation, chiefly because he wanted to tell
- me how greatly he was alarmed at the state of my health. His
- physician, Professor Leuthold, had evidently given him an
- unfavourable account of it. The Kaiser explained that he could no
- longer allow me to go on without proper assistance or without a
- substitute who would do my work when I was away for any length of
- time. This state of things caused him a great deal of anxiety, and,
- as it was a matter of national interest, he was bound to occupy
- himself with this problem. He did not wish to expose himself to a
- repetition of the danger--which he had experienced in the Krupp
- case--that a large concern like ours should at any moment be
- without a qualified steersman at the helm. He said he knew that of
- all the gentlemen in his entourage Herr v. Grumme was the one I
- liked best, and that I had an excellent opinion of him. He also
- considered Grumme the best man he had ever had round him, and it
- would be difficult to replace him. Nevertheless he would be glad to
- induce Grumme to join the services of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie, if
- I thought that this would solve the difficulty he had just referred
- to, and that such a solution would fall in with my own wishes. He
- was convinced that I should soon be restored to my normal health if
- I were relieved of some part of my work, and that this would enable
- me to do much useful service to the nation and himself; so he would
- be pleased to make the sacrifice. I sincerely thanked His Majesty,
- and assured him that I could not think of any solution that I
- should like better than the one he had proposed, and that, if he
- were really prepared to do so much for me, I would beg him to
- discuss the matter with Grumme. That very evening he sent for
- Grumme, who immediately expressed his readiness to enter the
- services of our company if such was His Majesty's pleasure."
-
-The lively interest which the Kaiser took in the development of our
-mercantile marine was naturally closely connected with the growth of the
-Imperial Navy and with our naval policy in general. The country's
-maritime interests and the merchant fleet were the real motives that
-prompted his own naval policy, whereas Tirpitz chiefly looked upon them
-as a valuable asset for propaganda purposes. During the first stage of
-the naval policy and of the naval propaganda--which at that time were
-conducted on quite moderate lines--Ballin, as he repeatedly told me,
-played a very active part. It was the time when the well-known
-periodical _Nautikus_, afterwards issued at regular annual intervals,
-was first published by the Ministry for the Navy, and when a very active
-propaganda in favour of the navy and of the country's maritime interests
-was started. Experience has proved how difficult it is to start such a
-propaganda, especially through the medium of a Press so loosely
-organized as was the German Press in those days. But it is still more
-difficult to stop, or even to lessen, such propaganda once it has been
-started, because the preliminary condition for any active propaganda
-work is that a large number of individual persons and organizations
-should be interested in it. It is next to impossible to induce these
-people to discontinue their activities when it is no longer thought
-desirable to keep up the propaganda after its original aim has been
-achieved. Germany's maritime interests remained a favourite subject of
-Press discussions, and the animation with which these were carried on
-reached a climax whenever a supplementary Navy Bill was introduced. Even
-when it was intended to widen the Kiel Canal, as it proved too narrow
-for the vessels of the "Dreadnought" type, the necessity for doing so
-was explained by reference to the constantly increasing size of the new
-steamers built for the mercantile marine; although, seeing that the
-shallow waters of the Baltic and of the channels leading into it made it
-quite impossible to use them for this purpose, nobody ever proposed to
-send those big ships through the canal. In later years Ballin often
-spoke with great bitterness of those journalists who would never leave
-off writing about "the daring of our merchant fleet" in terms of
-unmeasured eulogy, and whom he described as the greatest enemies of the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie.
-
-But it was not only the propaganda work for the Imperial Navy to which
-the Kaiser contributed by his own personal efforts: the range of his
-maritime interests was much wider. He gave his assistance when the
-problems connected with the troop transports to the Far East and to
-South West Africa were under discussion; he studied with keen attention
-the progress of the German mercantile marine, the vessels of which he
-frequently met on his travels; he often went on board the German tourist
-steamers, those in Norwegian waters for instance, when he would
-unfailingly make some complimentary remarks on the management, and he
-became the lavish patron of the sporting events known as Kiel Week, the
-scope of which was extending from year to year. The Kiel Week,
-originally started by the yachting clubs of Hamburg for the
-encouragement of their sport, gradually developed into a social event of
-the first order, and since 1902 it became customary for the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie to dispatch one of their big steamers to Kiel,
-where it served as a hotel ship for a large number of the visitors. From
-1897 Kiel Week was preceded by a visit of the Kaiser--and frequently of
-the Kaiserin as well--to Hamburg, where their Majesties attended the
-summer races and the yachting regatta on the lower Elbe. In 1897 the
-Kaiser had the intention of being present at a banquet which the
-Norddeutsche Regatta-Verein was giving on board the Packetfahrt liner
-_Columbia_, and he was only prevented from doing so at the last moment.
-In the following year the Hamburg-Amerika Linie sent their s.s.
-_Pretoria_ to Kiel. On this vessel the well-known "Regatta dinner" took
-place which the Kaiser attended, and which, on future occasions, he
-continued to honour with his presence. Ballin received a special
-invitation to visit the Kaiser on board his yacht _Hohenzollern_. He
-could not, however, avail himself of it, because the message only
-reached him on his way home to Hamburg. The year after, the Kaiser
-commanded Ballin to sit next to him at the table, and engaged him in a
-long conversation on the subject of the load-line which he wanted to see
-adopted by German shipping firms for their vessels. The Packetfahrt
-carried this suggestion into practice shortly afterwards, and in course
-of time the other companies followed suit.
-
-On the occasion of these festivities the Kaiser in 1904 paid a visit to
-the new premises of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie. In 1905 and in subsequent
-years he also visited Ballin's private home and took lunch with him. The
-speeches which he made at the regatta dinners given in connexion with
-the regatta on the lower Elbe frequently contained some political
-references. In 1908, for instance, he said:
-
- "Although we do not possess such a navy as we ought to have, we
- have gained a place in the sun. It will now be my duty to see to it
- that we shall keep this place in the sun against all comers.... I,
- as the supreme head of the Empire, can only rejoice whenever I see
- a Hanseatic citizen--let him be a native of Hamburg, or Bremen, or
- Luebeck--striking out into the world with his eyes wide open, and
- trying to find a spot where he can hammer a nail into the wall from
- which to hang the tools needed to carry on his trade."
-
-In 1912 he quoted the motto from the Luebeck Ratskeller:
-
- "It is easy to hoist the flag, but it costs a great deal to haul it
- down with honour."
-
-And in 1914, after the launch of the big steamer _Bismarck_, he quoted
-Bismarck's saying, slightly altered:
-
-"We Germans fear God, but nothing and nobody besides."
-
-Kiel Week never passed without a great deal of political discussion. The
-close personal contact on such occasions between Ballin and the Kaiser
-furnished the former with many an opportunity for expressing his views
-on politics. Much has been said about William II's "irresponsible
-advisers," who are alleged to have endeavoured to influence him in the
-interests of certain cliques, and it cannot, of course, be denied that
-the men who formed the personal entourage of the monarch were very far
-from representing every shade of public opinion, even if that had been
-possible. The traditions of the Prussian Court and of princely education
-may have contributed their share to this state of things. The result, at
-any rate, was that in times of crises--as, for instance, during the
-war--it was impossible to break through the phalanx of men who guarded
-the Kaiser and to withdraw him from their influence. Events have shown
-how strong this influence must have been, and how little it was suited
-to induce the Kaiser to apply any self-criticism to his preconceived
-ideas. Added to this, there was the difficulty of obtaining a private
-conversation with the Kaiser for any length of time--a difficulty which
-was but rarely overcome even by persons possessing very high
-credentials. It has already been mentioned that the Kaiser did not like
-to be contradicted in the presence of others, because he considered it
-derogatory to his sovereign position. Ballin repeatedly succeeded in
-engaging the Kaiser in private conversations of some length, especially
-after his journeys abroad, when the Kaiser invited him to lunch with
-him, and afterwards to accompany him on a walk unattended.
-
-Ballin's notes more than once refer to such conversations with the
-Kaiser, e.g. on June 3rd, 1901, when he had been a member of the
-Imperial luncheon party:
-
- "After lunch the Kaiser asked me to report on my trip to the Far
- East, and he, in his turn, told me some exceedingly interesting
- pieces of news relating to his stay in England, and to political
- affairs connected with it."
-
-The following passage, referring to the Kiel Week, is taken from the
-notes of the same year:
-
- "I received many marks of the Kaiser's attention, who, on July
- 27th, summoned me to Kiel once more, as he wished to discuss with
- the Chancellor and me the question of the Japanese bank."
-
-During his trip to the Far East Ballin had taken a great deal of trouble
-to bring about the establishment of a German-Japanese bank.
-
-The following extracts are taken from the notes of subsequent years:
-
- "On December 10th (1903) I received a wire asking me to see the
- Kaiser at the _Neues Palais_. To my infinite joy the Kaiser had
- quite recovered the use of his voice. He looked well and fit, and
- during a stroll through the park I had a long chat with him
- concerning my trip to America and other matters. In February the
- Kaiser intends to undertake a Mediterranean cruise on board the
- _Hohenzollern_ for the benefit of his health. He will probably
- proceed to Genoa on board one of the Imperial mail packets, which
- is to be chartered for him."
-
- (April 1904). "The Kaiser had expressed a wish to see me in Italy.
- On my arrival at Naples I found a telegram waiting for me in which
- I was asked to proceed to Messina if necessary. Owing, however, to
- the state of our negotiations with the Russian Government, I did
- not think it desirable to meet the Kaiser just then, and thus I had
- no opportunity of seeing him until May 3rd when I was in Berlin to
- attend a meeting of the _Disconto-Gesellschaft_, and to confer with
- Stuebel on the question of some further troop transports to South
- West Africa. I received an invitation to join the Imperial luncheon
- party at which the birthday of the Crown Prince was to be
- celebrated in advance, since his Majesty would not be in town on
- May 6th. The Kaiser's health had much improved through his cruise;
- he had lost some of his stoutness, and the Kaiserin, too, was
- greatly pleased to see him looking so well. We naturally discussed
- the topics of the day, and the Kaiser, as always, was full of
- kindness and goodwill towards me."
-
- "On June 21st, 1904, the usual Imperial Regatta took place at
- Cuxhaven, and the usual dinner on board the _Bluecher_. These events
- were followed by Kiel Week, which lasted from June 22nd to 28th. We
- stayed on board the _Victoria Luise_, and I was thus brought into
- especially close contact with the Kaiser. I accompanied him to
- Eckernfoerde on board the _Meteor_, and we discussed the political
- situation, particularly in its bearing on the Morocco question and
- on the attitude of Great Britain."
-
- "On June 19th, 1904, the Kaiser, the Kaiserin, and some of their
- sons were staying in Hamburg. I dined with them at Tschirschky's
- (the Prussian Minister in Hamburg), and we drove to the races. On
- June 20th we proceeded to Cuxhaven, where, on board the
- _Deutschland_, I heard the news--which the Kaiser had just
- communicated to Kaempff (the captain of the _Deutschland_)--that
- the North German Lloyd steamer _Kaiser Wilhelm II_, in consequence
- of her being equipped with larger propellers, had won the speed
- record. Late at night the Kaiser asked me to see him on board the
- _Hohenzollern_, where he engaged me in a long discussion on the
- most varied subjects. On June 21st the regatta took place at
- Cuxhaven. The Kaiser and Prince Heinrich were amongst the guests
- who were entertained at dinner on board the _Deutschland_. The
- Kaiser was in the best of health and spirits. Owing to the
- circumstance that Burgomaster Burchard--who generally engages the
- Kaiser in after-dinner conversation--was prevented by his illness
- from being present, I was enabled to introduce a number of Hamburg
- gentlemen to His Majesty. As the Kaiser had summoned me to dine
- with him on board the _Hohenzollern_ on the 22nd, I could not
- return to Hamburg, but had to travel through the Kiel Canal that
- same night on board a tug steamer. On the 22nd I stayed at the club
- house of the Imperial Yachting Club, whilst at my own house a
- dinner party was given for 36 persons. On the 23rd I changed my
- quarters to the _Prinzessin Victoria Luise_, and the other visitors
- arrived there about noon. A special feature of Kiel Week of 1904
- was the visit of King Edward to the Kaiser whom he met at Kiel. For
- the accommodation of the ministers of state and of the other
- visitors whom the Kaiser had invited in connexion with the presence
- of the King, we had placed our s.s. _Prinz Joachim_ at his
- disposal, in addition to the _Prinzessin Victoria Luise_. We also
- supplied, for the first time, a hotel ship, the _Graf Waldersee_,
- all the cabins of which were engaged. On June 27th my wife and I,
- and a number of other visitors from the _Prinzessin Victoria
- Luise_, were invited to take afternoon tea with the Kaiser and
- Kaiserin on board the _Hohenzollern_, and I had a lengthy
- conversation with King Edward."
-
-Whenever the Kaiser granted Ballin an interview without the presence of
-witnesses he cast aside all dignity, and discussed matters with him as
-friend to friend. Neither did he object to his friend's counsel and
-admonitions, and he was not offended if Ballin, on such occasions,
-subjected his actions or his opinions to severe criticism.
-
-On such occasions the Kaiser, as Ballin repeatedly pointed out, "took it
-all in without interrupting, looking at me from the depth of his kind
-and honest eyes." That he did not bear Ballin any malice for his
-frankness is shown by the fact that he took a lively and cordial
-interest in all the events touching the private life of Ballin and his
-family, his daughter's engagement, for instance--an interest which still
-continued after Ballin's death.
-
-In spite of this close friendship between Ballin and the Kaiser, it
-would be quite wrong to assume that Ballin exercised anything resembling
-a permanent influence on His Majesty. Their meetings took place only
-very occasionally, and were often separated by intervals extending over
-several months, and it happened only in rare cases that Ballin availed
-himself of the privilege of writing to the Kaiser in person. It is true
-that the latter was always pleased to listen to Ballin's explanations of
-his views, and it is possible that every now and than he did allow
-himself to be guided by them; but it is quite certain that he never
-allowed these views to exercise any actual influence on the country's
-politics. The events narrated in the chapter of this book dealing with
-politics show that in a concrete case, at any rate, Ballin's
-recommendations and the weight of his arguments were not sufficient to
-cope successfully with the influence of others who were the permanent
-advisers of the sovereign, and who had at all times access to His
-Majesty.
-
-If thus the effect of Ballin's friendship with the Kaiser has frequently
-been greatly overrated in regard to politics, the same holds good--and,
-indeed, to a still greater extent--in regard to the advantages which the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie is supposed to have derived from it. One of
-Ballin's associates on the Board of the company was quite right when he
-said: "Ballin's friendship with the Kaiser has done more harm than good
-to the Hamburg-Amerika Linie." Indirectly, of course, it raised the
-prestige of the company both at home and abroad. But there is no doubt
-that it had also an adverse effect upon it: at any rate, outside of
-Germany. It gave rise to all sorts of rumours, e.g. that the company
-obtained great advantages from the Government; that the latter
-subsidized it to a considerable extent; that the Kaiser was one of the
-principal shareholders, etc. It is also quite certain that these beliefs
-were largely instrumental in making the Hamburg-Amerika Linie, as Ballin
-put it, one of the war aims of Great Britain, and it is even alleged
-that, at the close of the war, the British Government approached some of
-the country's leading shipping firms with the suggestion that they
-should buy up the Hamburg-Amerika Linie or the North German Lloyd. This
-was at the time when it became desirable to secure the necessary
-organization for the intended commercial conquest of the Continent. It
-is quite possible--and, I am inclined to think, quite probable--that
-this suggestion was put forward because such a step would be in harmony
-with that frame of mind from which originated such stipulations of the
-Versailles treaty as deal with shipping masters, and with the assumption
-that German shipping--which was supposed to depend for its continuance
-mainly on the existence of the German monarchial system--would
-practically come to an end with the disappearance of the latter. It
-would, indeed, be difficult to name any historical document which pays
-less regard to the vital necessities of a nation and which actually
-ignores them more completely than does the treaty signed at Versailles.
-
-The allegation that Ballin should ever have attempted to make use of his
-friendship with the Kaiser for his own or for his company's benefit is,
-moreover, diametrically opposed to the established fact that he knew the
-precise limits of his influence, and that he never endeavoured to
-overreach himself. His "policy of compromise" was the practical outcome
-of this trait of his character.
-
-The opinion which my close observation of Ballin's work during the last
-ten years of his life enabled me to form was, as far as its political
-side is concerned, confirmed to me in every detail by no less a person
-than Prince Buelow, who, without doubt, is the most competent judge of
-German affairs in the first decade of the twentieth century. When I
-asked the Prince whether Ballin could be accused of ever having abused
-the friendship between himself and the Kaiser for any ulterior ends
-whatever, he replied with a decided negative. Ballin, he said, had never
-dreamt of doing such a thing. He had always exercised the greatest tact
-in his relations with the Kaiser, and had never made use of them to gain
-any private advantage. Besides, his views had nearly always coincided
-with those held by the responsible leaders of the country's political
-destinies. Once only a conflict of opinion had arisen between Ballin and
-himself on a political question, and this was at the time when the
-customs tariffs were under discussion. Ballin held that these were
-detrimental to the country's best interests, and it is a well-known fact
-that, at that time, there was a widespread feeling as to the
-impossibility of concluding any commercial treaties so long as those
-tariffs were in operation.
-
-During the most critical period of the existence of the monarchy--i.e.
-during the war--Ballin's influence on the Kaiser was but slight. Only on
-a very few occasions was he able to meet the Kaiser, and he never had an
-opportunity of talking to him privately, as in former times. It was the
-constant aim of the Kaiser's entourage to maintain their controlling
-influence over the Kaiser unimpaired. Even when they last met--in
-September, 1918--and when Ballin, at the instance of the Supreme Army
-Command, was asked to explain to the Kaiser the situation as it actually
-was, he was not permitted to see the Kaiser without the presence of a
-witness, so that his influence could not assert itself. The fact that
-the Kaiser was debarred from knowing the truth was the cause of his and
-of his country's ruin. "The Kaiser is only allowed to know the bright
-side of things," Ballin used to say, "and therefore he does not see
-matters as they really stand."
-
-This is all the more regrettable because, as Ballin thought, the Kaiser
-was not wanting in either the capacity or the independence of mind which
-would have enabled him to pursue a policy better than the one in which
-he actually acquiesced. More than once, Ballin said, the Kaiser's
-judgment on a political issue was absolutely sound, but he did not wish
-to act contrary to the recommendations of his responsible advisers.
-When, for instance, it was decided that the gunboat _Panther_ should be
-dispatched to Agadir, a decision which was arrived at during Kiel Week
-of 1911, the Kaiser exclaimed, with much show of feeling, that a step of
-such far-reaching importance could not be taken on the spur of the
-moment and without consulting the nation, and he only gave his consent
-with great reluctance. Moreover, Ballin stated, he was by no means in
-sympathy with Tirpitz, and the latter was not a man after his own heart,
-but he was content to let him have his way, because he believed that the
-naval policy of Tirpitz was right, so that he was not entitled to
-jeopardize the interests of his country by dismissing him. The Kaiser
-was not moved by an ambitious desire to build up a powerful navy
-destined to risk all in a decisive struggle against Great Britain, and
-the numerous passages in his public speeches which foreign observers
-interpreted as implying such a desire, must be regarded as the explosive
-outbursts of a strong character which was sometimes directed into wrong
-channels by a certain sense of its own superiority, and which, in
-seeking to express itself, would occasionally outrun discretion. His
-inconsistency which made him an easy prey to the influence of his
-entourage, caused him to be looked upon by foreign critics as
-vacillating and unstable, and this impression--as was discovered when
-too late--discredited his country immensely in the eyes of Great
-Britain, who, after all, had to be reckoned with as the decisive factor
-in all questions relative to world policy. Such a character could be
-guided in the right direction only if the right influence could be
-brought permanently to bear on it. But who was to exercise such
-influence on the Kaiser? Certainly his entourage did not include anyone
-qualified to do so, because it was not representative of all sections of
-the nation; neither was any of the successive Chancellors able to
-undertake such a task, since none of them succeeded in solving the
-questions of internal policy in a manner approved by a reliable and
-solid majority in the Reichstag. The Kaiserin also was not free from
-prejudice as to the war and the causes of its outbreak. Ballin relates
-how, on one of the few occasions when he was privileged to see the
-Kaiser during the war, Her Majesty, with clenched fists, exclaimed:
-"Peace with England? Never!" The Imperial family considered themselves
-betrayed by England and the English court. Why this should be so is
-perhaps still more difficult to say now than Ballin could understand in
-those days. Arguments, however, were useless in such a case, and could
-produce nothing but harm. The Kaiser did not bear Ballin any malice
-because of the frankness with which he explained his views that day; on
-the contrary, members of the Kaiser's entourage have confirmed that,
-after Ballin had left that evening, he even tried to make the Kaiserin
-see his (Ballin's) point of view. Putting himself into Ballin's
-position, he said, he could perfectly understand how he felt about it
-all; but he himself could not help thinking that his English relatives
-had played him false, so that he was forced to continue the struggle
-with England tooth and nail.
-
-When Ballin, during the summer of 1918, gave me a character sketch of
-the Kaiser, of which the account I have endeavoured to present in the
-preceding paragraphs is an outline, he added: "But what is the good of
-it? He is, after all, the managing director, and if things turn out
-wrong he is held responsible exactly as if he were the director of a
-joint-stock company."
-
-This comparison of the German Empire and its ruler with a joint-stock
-company and its board of directors used to form a frequent subject of
-argument in our inner circle, and even before the war these discussions
-regularly led to the conclusion that, what with the policy carried on by
-the Government and that carried on by the parties in the Reichstag, the
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie would have gone bankrupt long ago if its affairs
-had been conducted on such lines as those of the German Empire. It was a
-never-ending cause of surprise to us to learn how completely the
-European situation was misjudged in the highest quarters, when, for
-instance, the following incident, which was reported to Ballin during
-the war, became known to us. One day, when the conversation at lunch in
-the Imperial headquarters turned to the subject of England, the Kaiser
-remarked: "I only wish someone had told me beforehand that England would
-take up arms against us," to which one of those present replied in a
-quiet whisper: "Metternich." It would have been just as proper, Ballin
-added, to have mentioned my own name, because I also warned the Kaiser
-over and over again. On another page in this book reference is made to
-the well-known fact that the reason why Count Metternich, the German
-ambassador at the Court of St. James, had to relinquish his post was
-that he, in one of his reports, predicted that Germany would be involved
-in war with Great Britain no later than 1915 unless she reduced the pace
-of her naval armaments. This was one of those numerous predictions to
-which, like so many others, especially during the war, no one wanted to
-listen. Even in the late summer of 1918, when Ballin saw the Kaiser for
-the last time, such warnings met with a deaf ear. This meeting, to which
-Ballin consented with reluctance, was the outcome of a friendship which,
-politically speaking, was devoid of practical results. A detailed
-account follows.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE WAR
-
-
-About the middle of the month of July, 1914, Ballin, when staying at
-Kissingen for the benefit of his health, received a letter from the
-Foreign Secretary, Herr v. Jagow, which made him put an immediate end to
-his holiday and proceed to Berlin. The letter was dated July 15th, and
-its principal contents were as follows:
-
-The _Berliner Tageblatt_, it said, had published some information
-concerning certain Anglo-Russian agreements on naval questions. The
-Foreign Office did not attach much value to it, because it was at
-variance with the general assumption that Germany's relations with Great
-Britain had undergone a change for the better, and also with the
-apparent reluctance of British statesmen to tie their country to any
-such agreements. The matter, however, had been followed up all the same,
-and through very confidential channels it had been ascertained that the
-rumours in question were by no means devoid of an actual background of
-fact. Grey, too, had not denied them point blank at his interview with
-Lichnowsky. It was quite true that Anglo-Russian negotiations were
-proceeding on the subject of a naval agreement, and that the Russian
-Government was anxious to secure as much mutual co-operation between the
-two countries as possible. A definite understanding had not, so far,
-been reached, notwithstanding the pressure exercised by Russia. Grey's
-attitude had become somewhat uncertain; but it was thought that he
-would ultimately give his consent, and that he would quieten his own
-conscience by arguing that the negotiations had not really been
-conducted between the Cabinets, but between the respective naval
-authorities. It was also quite likely that the British, who were adepts
-at the art of making nice distinctions, would be negotiating with the
-mental reservation that they would refrain from taking an active part
-when the critical moment arrived, if it suited them not to do so; and a
-_casus foederis_ would presumably not be provided for in the
-agreement. At any rate, the effect of the latter would be enormously to
-strengthen the aggressive tendencies of Russia. If the agreement became
-perfect, it would be useless for Germany to think any longer of coming
-to a _rapprochement_ with Great Britain, and therefore it would be a
-matter of great importance to make a last effort towards counteracting
-the Russian designs. His (v. Jagow's) idea was that Ballin, who had
-intimate relations with numerous Englishmen in leading positions, should
-send a note of warning across the North Sea. This suggestion was
-followed up by several hints as to the most suitable form of wording
-such a note, and the letter concluded with the statement that the matter
-was one of great urgency. A postscript dated July 16th added that a
-further article had been published by the _Berliner Tageblatt_,
-according to which the informants of the author also took a serious view
-of the situation.
-
-Ballin, in response to the request contained in the letter, did not
-content himself with sending a written note to his London friends, but
-he immediately went to Berlin for the purpose of gaining additional
-information on the spot, with special reference to the general political
-outlook. He learned that Austria intended to present a strongly worded
-note to Serbia, and that it was expected that in reply a counter-note
-dictated by Russia would be received. He was also told that the
-Government not only wanted some information regarding the matter which
-formed the special subject of Herr v. Jagow's letter, but also regarding
-the general political situation in London, as it was doubted whether the
-reports received from the ambassador were sufficiently trustworthy and
-complete. This was all that Ballin was told. Since then many facts have
-become known which throw a light on the way in which political questions
-were dealt with by the Berlin authorities during the critical period
-preceding the war, and if we, knowing what we know now, read the letter
-of Herr v. Jagow, we ask ourselves in amazement what was the object of
-the proposed action in London? Could it be that it was intended to
-intimidate the British Government? This could hardly be thought
-possible, so that some other result must have been aimed at. We can only
-say that the whole affair is still surrounded by much mystery, and we
-can sympathize with Ballin's bitter complaints in later days that he
-thought people had not treated him with as much openness as they should
-have done, and that they had abused his intimate relations with leading
-British personages.
-
-Ballin then left Berlin for Hamburg. He gave me his impressions of the
-state of political affairs--which he did not regard as critical--and
-went to London, ostensibly on business. In London he met Grey, Haldane,
-and Churchill, and there also he did not look upon the situation as
-critical--at least, not at first. When, however, the text of the
-Austrian note became known on Thursday, July 23rd, and when its full
-significance had gradually been realized, the political atmosphere
-became clouded: people asked what was Austria's real object, and began
-to fear lest the peace might be disturbed. Nevertheless, Ballin returned
-from London on July 27th with the impression that a fairly capable
-German diplomat might even then succeed in bringing about an
-understanding with Great Britain and France which, by preventing Russia
-from striking, would result in preserving the peace. Great Britain and
-the leading British politicians, he said, were absolutely in favour of
-peace, and the French Government was so much against war that its
-representatives in London seemed to him to be rather nervous on the
-subject. They would, he thought, do anything in their power to prevent
-war. If, however, France was attacked without any provocation on her
-part, Great Britain would be compelled to come to her assistance.
-Britain would never allow that we, as was provided for in the old plan
-of campaign, should march through Belgium. It was quite true that the
-Austrian note had caused grave anxiety in London, but how earnestly the
-Cabinet was trying to preserve peace might be gauged by the fact that
-Churchill, when he took leave of Ballin, implored him, almost with tears
-in his eyes, not to go to war. These impressions of Ballin are confirmed
-by the reports of Prince Lichnowsky and other members of the German
-Embassy in their observations during the critical days.
-
-Apart from these politicians and diplomatists on active service there
-were other persons of political training, though no longer in office,
-who did not think at that time that there was an immediate danger of
-war. In this connexion I should like to add a report of a very
-remarkable conversation with Count Witte, which took place at Bad
-Salzschlirf on July 24th. The Count--whose untimely death was greatly
-regretted--was without any doubt one of the most capable statesmen of
-his time--perhaps the only one with a touch of genius Europe
-possessed--and he certainly knew more about the complicated state of
-things in Russia than any living person. For these reasons his views on
-the events which form the first stage of the fateful conflict are of
-special interest. I shall reproduce the report of this conversation
-exactly as we received it at the time, and as we passed it on to Berlin.
-The authenticity of the statements of Count Witte as given here is
-beyond question.
-
- "Yesterday (on July 24th) I paid a visit to Count Witte who was
- staying at Bad Salzschlirf, and in the course of the day I had
- several conversations with him, the first of which took place as
- early as ten o'clock in the morning. After a few words of welcome,
- and after discussing some matters of general and personal interest,
- I said to the Count: 'I should like to thank you for your welcome
- letter and for your telegram. The question which you raise in them
- of a meeting between our two emperors appears of such fundamental
- importance to me that I may perhaps hope to be favoured with some
- details by you personally.'
-
- "Witte replied: 'In the first instance I wish to reaffirm what I
- have repeatedly told you, both verbally and by letter, viz. that I
- am not in the least anxious to be nominated Russian delegate for
- the proposed negotiations concerning a commercial treaty between
- Germany and Russia. Whoever may be appointed from the Russian side
- will gain no laurels. I think a meeting between the Kaiser and the
- Tsar some time within the next few weeks would be of very great
- importance. Have you read the French papers? The tone now assumed
- by Jules Hedeman is a direct challenge. I know Hedeman, and I also
- know that he only writes what will please Sasonov, Poincare and
- Paleologue (the French ambassador in Petrograd). Now that the
- Peterhof meeting has taken place the language employed by all the
- French and Russian papers will become more arrogant than ever. It
- is quite certain that the Russian diplomatists and their French
- colleagues will now assume a different tone in their intercourse
- with the German diplomatists. The _rapprochement_ with Great
- Britain is making considerable progress, and whether a naval
- convention exists or not, Great Britain will now side with Russia
- and France. If even now a meeting could be arranged between the two
- Emperors, this would be of immense significance. The
- mischief-makers both in Russia and in France would be made to look
- small, and public opinion would calm down again."
-
- "I asked Witte: 'Do you think, Sergei Yulyevitch, that the Tsar
- would avail himself of a possible opportunity of meeting the
- Kaiser?'
-
- "Witte replied: 'I am firmly convinced of it; I may, indeed, state
- without hesitation that the Tsar would be delighted to do so. The
- personal relations between the Tsar and the Kaiser are not of an
- ordinary kind. They converse with each other in terms of intimate
- friendship, and each time the Tsar has had a chat with the Kaiser
- he has been in better spirits. Believe me, if this meeting comes
- off, the impression which the French visit has left on the Tsar
- will be entirely wiped out. The effect of the showy reception of
- the French visitors which the press agitators have not failed to
- use for their own ends will be obliterated. Such a meeting will
- express in unambiguous terms that, whatever value the Tsar attaches
- to the Franco-Russian alliance, he insists on the maintenance of
- amicable relations with Germany. The meeting will have to be
- arranged without loss of time, in about four or six weeks, because
- in two months from now the Tsar will be leaving for Livadia. The
- army manoeuvres will be held within the next few weeks, and the
- Tsar will then go to the Finnish skerries where, in my opinion, the
- meeting might take place without difficulty.'
-
- "I asked Witte: 'Do you not think that, if the meeting were
- officially proposed by Germany, it might be looked upon as a sign
- of weakness on her side, especially in view of the now existing
- tension between the two countries?'
-
- "Witte replied: 'By no means. One has always to take into account
- the fact that the relations between the Tsar and the Kaiser, as I
- explained before, are in the highest degree friendly and intimate.
- I do not know how the Kaiser would feel on the subject, but I am
- convinced that he is possessed of the necessary political sagacity
- to find the way that will lead to a meeting. He might, e.g., write
- to the Tsar quite openly that, as the relations between their two
- countries had lately been somewhat under a cloud in consequence of
- the inefficient diplomacy of their respective representatives, he
- would be particularly happy to meet him at this juncture. Or the
- suggestion might reach the Tsar _via_ the Grand Duke of Hesse and
- his sister, the Tsarina. But this is immaterial, because the Kaiser
- is sure to find the right way. I can only repeat that the effect of
- the meeting would be enormous. The Russian press and Russian
- society would change their whole attitude, and the agitation in the
- French press would receive a severe setback.'
-
- "I said to Witte: 'I shall communicate the gist of our conversation
- to Mr. Ballin. As it is quite possible that he will be ready to
- endorse this suggestion, I should like to know your answer to one
- more question, viz., whether, if Mr. Ballin were to submit the
- proposal to the proper quarters, you would allow him to refer to
- you as the originator of the suggestion.'
-
- "Witte replied: 'Certainly. He may say that I look upon this
- meeting as an event of the utmost importance to both countries at
- the present moment.'
-
- "I said: 'Seeing that you will be leaving Germany within five days
- from now, would you be prepared to go to Berlin if the Kaiser would
- receive you unofficially?'
-
- "Witte replied: 'Certainly. At any moment.'
-
- "When we went for a walk in the afternoon, Witte made reference,
- amongst other things, to various political questions. I shall
- confine myself to quoting only a few of his remarks.
-
- "'Practically speaking,' he said, 'I think that there will be no
- war, although theoretically the air is thick with difficulties
- which only a war can clear away. But nowadays there is nobody who,
- like William the First, would put his foot down and say: "Now I
- will not yield another inch!" The spot at Ems where this happened
- is now adorned with a monument. Within a few years when the
- armaments which for the present are on paper only, shall be
- completed, Russia will really be strong. But even then, one has
- still to reckon with the possibility of internal complications.
- France, however, need not fear any such difficulties, because
- countries possessing a constitution acknowledged by all their
- inhabitants are not liable to revolutionary movements, no matter
- how often their governments change.'
-
- "In speaking of Hartwig, Witte remarked: 'His death is the severest
- blow to Russian diplomacy. He was unquestionably the most gifted
- Russian diplomatist. When Count Lammsdorff, who was a great friend
- of mine, was Minister for Foreign Affairs, he used to do nothing
- without first asking my advice. Hartwig, at that time, was the
- chief of his departmental staff, and he often came to see me. Even
- in those early days I had an opportunity of admiring his eminent
- diplomatic gifts.'"
-
-The suggestion which formed the principal subject of the above
-conversations--viz. that a personal meeting of the two Emperors should
-be arranged in order to remove the existing tension--was not followed
-up, and the proposal would in any case have been doomed to failure,
-because the politicians who were responsible for the conduct of affairs
-at that time had done nothing to prevent the Kaiser from embarking on
-his customary cruise in Northern waters.
-
-The latter end of July was full of excitement for the directors and the
-staff of the Hamburg-Amerika Linie. We endeavoured to acquaint the
-vessels that were under way with the critical situation, and we
-instructed each captain to make for a neutral port in case war should
-break out. The naval authorities warned us not to allow any ships to put
-to sea, and we were particularly asked not to permit the sailing of the
-s.s. _Imperator_, which was fixed for July 31st, because the attitude of
-Great Britain was uncertain. At a midnight meeting held at Ballin's
-private residence it was decided to postpone the departure of the vessel
-"on account of the uncertain political situation." Every berth on the
-steamer was booked, and hundreds of passengers were put to the greatest
-inconvenience. Most of them proceeded to a neutral or to a British port
-from which they subsequently embarked for the United States.
-
-After this, events followed upon each other's heels in swift succession.
-When war broke out, most of the ships succeeded in reaching neutral
-ports, so that comparatively few of them were lost in the early part of
-the war. By August 5th the cables had been cut. This circumstance made
-it very difficult to keep up communications with New York, and compelled
-the majority of our agencies and branches abroad to use their own
-discretion as to what to do. The place of regular business was taken by
-the work involved in carrying out the various agreements which the
-company had entered into during peace time, viz. those for the
-victualling and bunkering of various units of the Imperial Navy, for the
-supply of auxiliary vessels, and for the establishment of an
-organization which was to purchase the provisions needed by the navy.
-
-In the meantime, the Ministry of the Interior had started to devise
-measures for provisioning the country as a whole, as far as that was
-still possible. It is well known that the responsible authorities had
-done far too little--indeed, hardly anything at all--to cope with this
-problem, because they had never taken a very serious view of the danger
-of war. Even the arrangements of the military authorities in connexion
-with the plans of mobilization were utterly deficient in this respect.
-
-The first who seriously studied the question as to what would have to be
-done for the provisioning of the military and civil population if
-Germany had to fight against a coalition of enemies, and if the overseas
-supplies were stopped, was General Count Georg Waldersee, who became
-Quartermaster General in 1912. In a letter which he wrote to Ballin
-about that time, he gave a very clear description of the probable state
-of things in such an emergency. He pointed out that the amount of
-foodstuffs required during a war would probably be larger than the
-quantities needed in peace time--a contingency which had escaped
-attention in Germany altogether--and that above all there would be an
-enormous shortage of raw materials. Therefore, he said, if it was
-desired to guard the country against disagreeable surprises, it was
-imperative to make certain preparations for an economic and a financial
-mobilization. The military authorities at least had studied this problem
-theoretically, but the civil authorities would not make any move at all.
-The general said he thought it desirable that this question should
-receive more attention in the future, and he asked Ballin to let him
-know his views on the matter, and to give him some practical advice. The
-anxiety felt in military quarters was largely augmented by the receipt
-of disquieting rumours about the increase of Russian armaments.
-
-In reply we furnished Count Waldersee with a brief memorandum written by
-myself in which, amongst other items, I referred him to some suggestions
-put forward by Senator Possehl, of Luebeck, in the course of a lecture
-delivered about the same time before a selected audience. In view of the
-fact that Germany depended for her food supply and for her raw materials
-to an increasing extent on foreign sources, there could be no doubt as
-to the necessity for making economic preparations against the
-possibility of a war, if a war was considered at all probable.
-
-Nevertheless, and in spite of the newly awakened interest on the part of
-the military authorities, these economic preparations had, before the
-war, made absolutely no progress worth mentioning. The only practical
-step which, as far as my knowledge goes, had been taken by the civil
-authorities, was the conclusion of an agreement entered into with a
-Dutch firm dealing with the importation of cereals in case of war. When,
-in the fateful summer of 1914, this contingency arose, the firm in
-question had chartered some British steamers, which instead of carrying
-their cargoes to Rotterdam took them to British ports.
-
-Thus, no serious efforts of any kind had been made to grapple with the
-problem. On Sunday, August 2nd, Geheimrat Frisch, who afterwards became
-the director of the _Zentral-Einkaufs-Gesellschaft_ (Central Purchasing
-Corporation), came to Hamburg, in order to inform Ballin, at the request
-of the Ministry for the Interior, that the latter felt very anxious in
-regard to the quantity of food actually to be found in Germany, which,
-it was feared, would be very small, and that it was expected that a
-great shortage would arise after a very brief period. He therefore asked
-him to use his best endeavours in order to secure supplies from abroad.
-A Hamburg firm was immediately requested to find out how much food was
-actually available in the country, and, although the figures obtained
-were not quite so bad as it was expected, steps were taken at once to
-remedy the deficiencies by importing food from neutral countries. A
-great obstacle to the rapid success of these efforts was the absolute
-want of any preparatory work. The very attempt to raise the necessary
-funds abounded with difficulties of every kind, because no money had
-been set aside for such expenditure in connexion with the scheme of
-mobilization, and the time taken by the attempts made in this direction,
-as well as the circumstance that communication with the United States
-could only be maintained _via_ neutral countries, were the causes of a
-great deal of serious delay.
-
-At Ballin's suggestion the _Reichseinkauf_ (Government Purchasing
-Organization) was then formed. For this organization the Hamburg-Amerika
-Linie was to do all the purchasing, and it was arranged that it should
-put at the disposal of the new body all those members of its staff who
-were not called up, and who were considered suitable for the work.
-Buyers were sent to every neutral country; but the mobilization then in
-progress led to a complete stoppage of railway travelling for the civil
-population, thus causing no end of difficulties to these buyers, and
-making personal contact with the Berlin authorities almost impossible.
-Added to all this, there was the inevitable confusion which the
-replacement of the civil administration by the army commands brought in
-its train. It had, in fact, been assumed that this war would resemble
-its predecessors in every respect, and no one was prepared for a world
-war. Hence, such important matters as the importation of foodstuffs from
-abroad and the work of supplying political information to neutral
-countries concerning the German standpoint were sadly neglected;
-everything had to be provided at a moment's notice, and had to be
-carried through in the face of a great deal of opposition. Funds and
-energy were largely wasted; the military, naval, and civil organizations
-were working against one another instead of co-operating; and it took a
-long time before a little order could be introduced into the chaos. It
-was also found that the German credits abroad were quite inadequate for
-such enormous requirements. An attempt to dispose of some treasury bills
-in New York was only moderately successful, and in consequence of this
-lack of available funds the supplies obtained from the United States
-were but small. Even the fact that the Hamburg-Amerika Linie immediately
-succeeded in establishing the necessary connexions with American
-shippers, and in securing a sufficient amount of neutral tonnage, did
-not improve matters in the least. To obtain the required funds in
-Berlin, as has been explained before, involved considerable loss of
-time; and as the months passed the British blockade became more and more
-effective. Thus, as the war continued, large quantities of food could
-only be procured from European countries.
-
-Ballin took a large personal share in the actual business transacted by
-the _Reichseinkauf_. He did so, if for no other reason, because he
-needed some substitute for the work connected with the real shipping
-business which was rapidly decreasing in extent. The only benefit his
-company derived from its new work was that it gave employment to part of
-the members of its staff, thus reducing in some measure the expenses.
-With the stoppage of the company's real business its principal source of
-income ran dry in no time, and the small profits made out of the supply
-of provisions to the navy was only a poor compensation.
-
-The world's economic activities in those days presented a picture of
-utter confusion. All the stock exchanges were closed; all dealings in
-stocks and shares had ceased, so that no prices could be quoted; several
-countries had introduced a moratorium, and numerous banks had stopped
-payment. Germany had no longer any direct intercourse with the overseas
-countries; the British censorship was daily increasing its hold on the
-traffic proceeding _via_ neutral ports. At first those foreign steamship
-companies which maintained passenger services to America did splendid
-business, because Europe was full of American tourists and business men
-who were anxious to secure a berth to get home, and numerous cabin
-passengers had to be content with steerage accommodation. When this rush
-was past, however, shipping business, like international commerce,
-entered upon its period of decline. The freight rates came down, the
-number of steamers laid up assumed large proportions, and the world's
-traffic, in fact, was paralysed.
-
-After a comparatively brief period it was found too difficult to conduct
-the _Reichseinkauf_ organization with its headquarters at Hamburg,
-because the intercourse with the Imperial Treasury at Berlin, which
-provided the funds, took up too much time, and also because it seemed
-highly advisable to purchase the foreign foodstuffs needed by the
-military as well as the civil population through one and the same
-organization. The state of things in respect to these matters was
-simply indescribable; indeed, if it had been purposely intended to
-encourage the growth of war profiteering, it would have been impossible
-to find a better method of setting about it. Numerous buyers,
-responsible to different centres, not merely purchased without regard to
-each other, but even outbid each other, thus causing a rise in prices
-which the public had to pay. Conditions such as these were brought about
-by the utter unpreparedness of the competent civil authorities and by
-the fact that the military authorities could dispose of the vast amounts
-of money placed at their command at the outbreak of the war. These
-conditions were doubtless the soil from which sprang all the evils which
-later on developed into the pernicious system we connect with the name
-of _Kriegswirtschaft_, and for which it will be impossible to demand
-reparation owing to the lost war and to the outbreak of the revolution.
-
-In order to facilitate the intercourse with the proper Government
-boards, and to centralize the purchasing business as much as possible,
-Ballin's suggestion that the seat of the organization should be removed
-to Berlin was adopted, and at the same time the whole matter was put on
-a sounder footing by its conversion into a limited company under the
-name of _Zentral-Einkaufs-Gesellschaft_ (Central Purchasing
-Corporation). The history of the Z.E.G. is well known in the country,
-and its work has been subject to a great deal of criticism, largely due
-to the fact that all the annoyance caused by the many restrictions which
-the Government found it necessary to impose, and which had to be put up
-with during the war, was directed against this body. Generally speaking,
-this attitude of the population was very unfair, because the principal
-grievances concerned the distribution of the foodstuffs, and for this
-part the Z.E.G. was not responsible. Its only task was to obtain the
-necessary supplies from abroad. If it is remembered that the
-transactions of the corporation reached enormous proportions, and that,
-after all, it was improvised at a time of war, we cannot be surprised to
-see that some mistakes and even some serious blunders did occur
-occasionally, and that the right people were not always found in the
-right places. Moreover, some of the really amazing feats accomplished by
-the Z.E.G--e.g. the supply of grain from Roumania, which necessitated
-enormous labour in connexion with the transhipment from rail to steamer
-and with the conveyance up the Danube--were only known to a few people.
-It is obvious that nothing could be published during the war about these
-achievements nor about the agreements concluded, after endless
-negotiations, with neutral countries and thus the management of the
-Z.E.G. was obliged to suffer in silence the criticisms and reproaches
-hurled at it without being able to defend itself.
-
-The volume of the work done by the Z.E.G. may be inferred from the fact
-that the goods handled by the organization during the four years from
-1915 to 1918 represented a value of 6,500 million marks, in which
-connexion it must not be forgotten that at that time the purchasing
-power of the mark was still nearly the same as before the war. When the
-Roumanian harvest was brought in the daily imports sometimes reached a
-total of 800 truck-loads. However, the greatest credit, in my opinion,
-is due to the Z.E.G. for putting a stop to the above-mentioned confusion
-in the methods of buying abroad and for establishing normal conditions.
-To-day it is scarcely possible to realize how difficult it was and how
-much time it required to overcome the opposition often met with at home.
-
-Not much need be said here about the activities of the Hamburg-Amerika
-Linie during the war. The longer the struggle lasted, and the larger the
-number of countries involved in the war against Germany became, the
-heavier became the company's losses of tonnage and of other property.
-All the shore establishments, branch offices, pier accommodation, etc.,
-situated in enemy countries, were confiscated, and the anxiety about the
-post-war reconstruction grew from month to month. Ballin never lost
-sight of this problem, and it is chiefly due to his efforts that the
-Government and the Reichstag passed a Bill (1917) providing the means
-for the rebuilding of the country's mercantile marine. Along with this
-he tried to keep the company financially independent by cutting down
-expenses, by finding work for the inland offices of the company, by
-selling tonnage, and by other means. The families and dependents of
-those employees who had been called to the colours were assisted as far
-as the funds at the company's disposal permitted. Of all these measures
-the company has already given the necessary information to the public,
-and I can confine myself to these brief statements. There is only one
-circumstance which requires special mention.
-
-It is universally acknowledged that no German industry has suffered so
-greatly through the action of the German Government as the shipping
-business. When the discussions as to the rebuilding of the merchant
-fleet were being carried on, the Government frankly admitted this fact.
-I am not thinking, in this connexion, of those measures which were
-imposed upon the Government by the Versailles Treaty, such as the
-surrender of the German mercantile marine, but what I have in mind is
-the steps taken whilst the war was in actual progress. These have one
-thing in common with those imposed by the enemy: their originators have,
-more or less, arrived at the belated conviction that they have
-sacrificed much valuable property to no purpose. In Great Britain it is
-admitted quite openly that the confiscation of the German merchant
-fleet has very largely contributed to the ensuing collapse of the
-world's shipping markets, and to the confusion which now prevails on
-every trade route. The war measures of the German Government--or,
-rather, of the German naval authorities--have sacrificed enormous values
-merely for the sake of a phantom, thus necessitating the compensation
-due to the shipowners--a compensation far from sufficient to make good
-even a moderate fraction of the loss. The vessels that can be built for
-the sums thrown out for this purpose will not be worth the twentieth
-part of the old ones, if quality is taken into account as well as
-quantity. This will become apparent when the compensation money has been
-spent, and when it will be possible to compare the fleet of German
-passenger boats then existing with what the country possessed previous
-to the war.
-
-The phantom just referred to was the foolish belief that it would be
-possible to eliminate all ocean tonnage from the high seas--a belief
-which was in itself used to justify the submarine war, and which was
-responsible for the assumption that the withdrawal of German tonnage
-from the high seas would affect the food and raw material supply of the
-enemy countries. This mistaken idea was also the reason for prohibiting
-the sale of the German vessels in neutral ports, and for ordering the
-destruction of their engines when it became impossible to prevent their
-confiscation. The latter measure, and in particular the manner in which
-it was carried out, prove the utter inability of the competent
-authorities to grasp the very elements of the great problem they were
-tackling, and in view of such lack of knowledge it is easy to understand
-the bitterness of tone which characterizes Ballin's criticism of these
-measures as contained in his memorandum to the Minister of the Interior
-(1917). He wrote:
-
- "When Your Excellency decided to permit the sale of our vessels in
- the United States it was too late to do so, because the U.S.
- Government had already seized them. Previous to that, when we saw
- that war would be inevitable, and when we had received an
- exceedingly favourable purchasing offer from an American group, we
- had asked permission to sell part of our tonnage laid up in that
- country.
-
- "Your Excellency, acting on behalf of the Chancellor, declined to
- grant this permission. I am quite aware that neither the Chancellor
- nor Your Excellency as his representative were responsible for this
- refusal, but that it was due to a decision of the Admiralty Staff.
- However, the competent authority to which the protection and the
- furtherance of the country's shipping interests are entrusted is
- the Ministry of the Interior. With the Admiralty Staff itself, as I
- need not remind Your Excellency, we have no dealings whatever, and
- we are not even entitled to approach that body directly in such
- matters.
-
- "Our company which was the biggest undertaking of its kind in the
- world, and which previous to the war possessed a fleet aggregating
- about 1,500,000 tons, has lost practically all its ships except a
- very few. The losses are not so much due to capture on the part of
- the enemy as to the measures taken by our own Government. If our
- Government had acted with the same foresight as did the
- Austro-Hungarian Government with respect to its ships in United
- States and Chinese waters, the German vessels then in Italy,
- Portugal, Greece, the United States, Brazil, and elsewhere, might
- have been either retained by us or disposed of at their full value.
-
- "The Austrian ships, with their dismantled engines were, at the
- instance of the Austrian Government, sold in such good time that
- the shipping companies concerned are not only in a position to-day
- to refrain from asking their Government to pass a Shipowners'
- Compensation Bill, as we are bound to do, but they have even
- enriched the Austrian national wealth by such handsome additions
- that their capital strength has reached a sum never dreamt of
- before, and that they are now able to rebuild their fleet by
- drawing upon their own funds, and to make such further additions to
- their tonnage that in future we shall not only be compelled to
- compete with the shipping companies of neutral and enemy
- countries--which have accumulated phenomenal profits--but with the
- Austrian mercantile marine as well.
-
- "From the point of view of our country's economic interests it is
- greatly to be regretted that the policy of the Government has not
- changed in this respect even now. We have received reliable news
- from private sources to the effect that the engines of the German
- vessels now in Argentine waters have been destroyed without Your
- Excellency having so far informed us of this action, and without
- Your Excellency having asked us to take steps to utilize the
- vessels, if possible, for the benefit of the country's economic
- interests and for that of the completely decimated German merchant
- fleet.
-
- "Moreover, a wire sent by His Excellency Herr v. Jonquieres to the
- competent Hamburg and Bremen authorities states that the ships in
- Uruguayan waters are also in great jeopardy. The Government of that
- country, according to this report, would prefer to purchase them
- rather than confiscate them. After what has been done before, we
- fear that the Admiralty Staff will either not permit the sale at
- all, or only grant its permission when it is too late.
-
- "Your Excellency, I am sure, is fully aware of the fact that the
- methods of the Admiralty Staff--ignoring, as it does, all other
- considerations except its own--have caused one country after the
- other to join the ranks of Germany's enemies. In view of the
- shortage of tonnage which Great Britain and other of our enemies
- systematically try to bring about--evidently with the intention of
- inconveniencing neutral countries as much as possible--these latter
- feel compelled, for the very reason of this lack of tonnage, to
- declare war upon us, because the politics of our country are guided
- by a body of men who, unfortunately, shut their eyes to the
- economic and political consequences of their decisions.
-
- "Several months ago, at a time when nobody thought of unrestricted
- submarine warfare, an opportunity presented itself to us of
- concluding an agreement with the Belgian Relief Committee by which
- it would have been possible for us to withdraw our steamers, one
- after the other, from American ports and, under the flag of that
- committee, to bring them to Rotterdam. At that time, it was again
- the Admiralty Staff which prevented the conclusion of this
- agreement, because, for reasons best known to itself, it would
- grant permission for only three of these vessels, although Great
- Britain had agreed that the whole of our fleet interned in U.S.
- ports, representing 250,000 tons in all, could sail under the terms
- of the proposed agreement, and although the Allies as a whole had
- signed a written declaration to the effect that they would not
- interfere with our ships so long as they were used for the
- provisioning of Belgium. I took the liberty of pointing out to
- Captain Grashoff, the representative of the Admiralty Staff, that
- nothing could have prevented us from letting the ships remain at
- Rotterdam after they had completed their mission, and that
- afterwards, as has been borne out by later facts, they could have
- been safely taken to Hamburg.
-
- "I respectfully ask Your Excellency whether it is not possible to
- enter a protest against such unnecessary dismemberment of part of
- the German national assets....
-
- " ... I must also protest most emphatically against the
- insinuation--which is sure to be made--that I have no right to
- criticize any steps which the Admiralty Staff has regarded as
- necessary for reasons of our naval strategy. Without reservation
- the German shipowners agree to any measures which are strategically
- necessary, however greatly they may injure their interests. The
- criticism which I beg to make on behalf of German
- shipping--although possessing no formal mandate--concerns itself
- with those steps which might have been taken without jeopardizing
- the success of our naval strategy if the vital necessities of
- German mercantile shipping had been studied with as much
- consideration as this branch of the economic activities of our
- country has a right to claim.
-
- "What we principally take exception to in this connexion is that no
- information was sent to us before the decision to destroy the
- engines of our ships was arrived at, and that we were not assisted
- in making use of these dismantled vessels in the financial
- interests of our country. Nothing of this kind was done, although
- it was the most natural thing to do so, and although such action
- would have deprived many a country of a reason to declare war upon
- Germany."
-
-To a man of the type of Ballin--who had, throughout his life, been
-accustomed to perform a huge amount of successful work--a period of
-enforced inactivity was unbearable. The longer it lasted the more he
-suffered from its effects, especially because the preparatory work for
-the post-war reconstruction, the work connected with the war
-organization of the German shipowners, etc., was only a poor substitute
-for the productive labour he had been engaged in during more than thirty
-years of peace. There is no doubt but that the Government could have
-made better use of Ballin's gift of organization, but it must be
-remembered that there was really no effective central Government in
-Germany throughout the war. The civil administration was not exactly
-deposed, but it was subordinated to the military one from the very
-beginning, and the latter carried on its work along the guiding lines
-laid down in the scheme of mobilization. The authorities to whose care
-the economic aspects of the war were entrusted did not often--if at
-all--avail themselves of Ballin's advice; and to offer it unbidden never
-entered his mind, because he was cherishing the hope that the war would
-not last long, and because it was his belief that the world would be
-sensible enough to put an end to the wholesale destruction before long.
-It was a bitter disappointment to him to find how greatly he was
-mistaken, and to see that the forces of unreason remained in the
-ascendancy, especially as he was always convinced that Time would be on
-the side of Germany's enemies. The sole aim of his political activities
-during the war was to bring about peace as early as possible.
-
-Of all the attempts at mediation known to me, the one which seemed to be
-most likely to succeed passed through the hands of Ballin. To give a
-detailed account of it must be left to a time which need no longer pay
-regard to governments and individuals. Ballin's share in it was brought
-about through his former international connexions. Through him it
-reached the Kaiser and the Chancellor, and owing to his untiring
-efforts, which lasted for two years, the position in the early part of
-1917 was such that the establishment of direct contact between the two
-sides was imminent. Then the unrestricted submarine war began, the
-intended direct contact could not be established, and the carefully
-woven thread was definitely snapped asunder; because from that time on
-the Allies were certain that the United States would join them, and they
-felt assured of victory. No other mediation scheme with which I am
-acquainted has been pursued with so much unselfishness, devotion, and
-energy as this one. This attempt, however, no more than any other, could
-have procured for us that kind of peace which public opinion in Germany
-had been led for years to expect, thanks to the over-estimation of the
-country's strength, fostered by the military censorship and by the
-military reports.
-
-From such exaggerated opinions Ballin always held himself aloof. He
-recognized without reservation the immense achievements of Germany in
-the war, but he was fearful lest the strength of the country could not
-cope in the long run with the ever-increasing array of enemies, and he
-therefore maintained that, if it was desired to bring about peace, the
-Government would have to be moderate in its terms. A much discussed
-article which he contributed to the _Frankfuerter Zeitung_ on January
-1st, 1915, under the heading of "The Wet Triangle," is not inconsistent
-with these views of his. In it he pointed out that Germany's naval
-power, in order to make a future blockade impossible, should no longer
-be content to be shut up in the "wet triangle," i.e. the North Sea, but
-ought to establish itself on the high seas. This statement has been
-alleged to refer to Belgium, and Ballin has been wrongly claimed a
-partisan by those who supported the annexation of that country. What he
-really meant was that Germany should demand a naval base on the
-Atlantic, somewhere in the northern parts of Africa, and this idea
-seemed to be quite realizable if taken in conjunction with the terms of
-peace he had in view, viz. no annexations, no indemnities, economic
-advantages, a permanent political and naval understanding with Great
-Britain, based on her recognition that a military defeat of Germany was
-impossible. All this would be somewhat on the lines of the article
-published by the _Westminster Gazette_, referred to in the eighth
-chapter and a facsimile of which is given at the end of the book. Ballin
-was firmly convinced that, even if a mere peace of compromise was the
-outcome, i.e. one which left Germany without any territorial gains and
-without any indemnities, the impression which the German achievements
-during the war would produce on the rest of the world would be so
-overwhelming that the country would secure indirectly far greater
-advantages than could be gained by means of the largest possible
-indemnity and the most far-reaching annexations. Besides, the
-experiences of former times had proved that Germany would be quite
-unable to absorb such large accessions of territory as certain people
-had in mind. These views of Ballin, of course, were looked upon as those
-of a "pacificist," and Ballin was classified among their number.
-
-In a letter which Ballin wrote to a friend of his, a naval officer, in
-April, 1915, he puts up a highly characteristic defence of himself
-against the accusations implied by describing him as "pacificist" and
-"pro-English."
-
- "If," he wrote, "the fact that I have been privileged to spend a
- considerable part of my life in close contact with you, entitles me
- to add a few personal remarks, I should like to say that I have
- made up my mind to retire from my post after the end of the war
- altogether. I told you shortly after the outbreak of the war that
- my life's work was wrecked. To-day I am convinced that it will soon
- come to life again, but my youth would have to be restored to me
- before I could ever dream of taking up again that position in
- international shipping which I held before the war. I cannot
- imagine that I would ever go to London again and take the chair at
- the conferences at which the great problems of international
- shipping would come up for discussion, and nobody, I think, can
- expect that I should be content to play second fiddle at my age.
- Indeed, I cannot see how I could ever re-enter upon intimate
- relations with the British, the French, the Italians, and
- especially with the Americans. Strangely enough, influential
- circles on our side, and even His Majesty himself, look upon me as
- 'pro-English,' and yet I am the only German who can say with truth
- that he has been fighting the English for supremacy in the shipping
- world during the last thirty years. During this long period I have,
- if I am allowed to make use of so bold a comparison, conquered one
- British trench after the other, and I have renewed my attacks
- whenever I could find the means for doing so."
-
-It is no secret that during the war many prominent politicians and
-economists--men of sound political training--viewed the question of the
-war aims which it was desirable to realize very much in the same light
-as did Ballin, but that the censorship made it impossible for anyone to
-give public expression to such opinions. Ballin's appreciation of the
-probable gain which Germany would derive from a peace by compromise has
-now been amply confirmed by the undeniable fact that the rest of the
-world has been tremendously impressed by Germany's achievements, an
-impression which has made foreigners regard her chances of recovery with
-much more confidence than she has felt herself, stunned as she was by
-the immensity of her _debacle_.
-
-The following notes, which are largely based on Ballin's own diary, are
-intended to supplement the information given so far as to his political
-activities during the war.
-
-The outbreak of war, as may be inferred from what has already been
-related, took him completely by surprise, and he did not think that the
-struggle would last very long. "The necessities of the world's commerce
-will not stand a long war," was his opinion during the early days. For
-the rest, he tried to find work for himself which would benefit his
-country. "What we need to-day," he wrote to a friend, "is work. This
-will lift us up and keep us going, and will make those of us who are no
-longer fit to fight feel that we are still of some use after all." But
-in connexion with this thought another one began to occupy his mind. He
-anxiously asked: "Which of the men now at headquarters will have the
-strength and the wisdom required to negotiate a successful peace when
-the time comes?" All his thoughts centred round the one idea of how to
-secure peace; what advantages his country would derive from it; and how
-it would be possible to bring about an international grouping of the
-Powers which would be of the greatest benefit to Germany. On October
-1st, 1914, he wrote to Grand Admiral v. Tirpitz:
-
- " ... I quite agree with what you say in your welcome letter.
- Indeed, you could not view these matters[3] with graver anxiety
- than I do myself. I hope I shall soon have the opportunity I desire
- of discussing these things with you personally.
-
- "To win the peace will be hardly less difficult than to win the
- war. My opinion is that the result of this world war, if it lasts
- 12 months, will be exactly the same as if it lasts six months. I
- mean to say that, if we do not succeed in acquiring the guarantees
- for our compensation demands within a few months, the further
- progress of events will not appreciably improve our chances in this
- direction.
-
- "What we must aim at is a new grouping of the Powers round an
- alliance between Germany, Great Britain and France. This alliance
- will become possible as soon as we shall have vanquished France and
- Belgium, and as soon as you shall have made up your mind to bring
- about an understanding with Great Britain concerning the naval
- programme.
-
- "I am aware that this idea will find but slight favour with you,
- but you will never secure a reasonable peace with Great Britain
- without a naval agreement.
-
- "By a reasonable peace I mean one which will enable both Germany
- and Britain to sheathe their swords in honour, and which will not
- burden either nation with a hatred which would contain within it
- the germs of future war.
-
- "We have had no difficulty in putting up with the French clamour
- for _revanche_ for a period of 44 years, because in this case we
- had only to deal with a small group of nationalist firebrands, but
- a British clamour for revenge would produce an exceedingly adverse
- effect on the future of our national well-being and of our share in
- the world's trade and commerce.
-
- "For a long time past it has been my conviction that the era of the
- super-Dreadnoughts has passed, and some time ago I asked Admiral
- von Mueller if it was not possible to consider the question of a
- naval understanding simply on the basis of an agreement as to the
- sum of money which either Government should be entitled to spend
- annually on naval construction, leaving it to the discretion of
- each side how to make use of the money agreed upon for the building
- of the various types of ships.
-
- "Great Britain is putting up a fight for her existence just as much
- as we do, if not to an even greater extent. Her continuance as a
- world power depends on the superiority--the numerical superiority
- at least--of her navy.
-
- "I am convinced--always supposing that we shall succeed in
- conquering France and Belgium--that the British terms concerning
- her naval supremacy will be very moderate, and I cannot help
- thinking that a fair understanding regarding naval construction is
- just as important to Germany as it is to Great Britain.
-
- "The present state of things is the outcome of a _circulus
- vitiosus_, and is bound to produce a soreness which will never
- permit of a sound understanding....
-
- " ... And what about the further course of the war? I sincerely
- hope that your Excellency will not risk the navy. The expression
- 'The Fleet in being' which has never left my memory, and which has
- lately been heard of again, implies exactly all I mean.
-
- "The navy, in my opinion, has never been, and never ought to be,
- anything but the indispensable reserve of a healthy international
- policy. Just as a conscientious director-general would never dream
- of reducing the reserve funds of his company, unless compelled to
- do so by sheer necessity, we ought not to drag the navy into the
- war, if it could possibly be avoided.
-
- "What would it profit you to risk a naval battle on the high seas?
- Not only our own, but British experts as well, believe that our
- ships, our officers, and our crews are superior to the British, and
- King Edward emphasized at every opportunity that the crews on
- British warships are not a match to those on German vessels. But
- what are you going to do? Are you going to make them fight against
- a numerically superior enemy? Such a course would be open to great
- objections, and even, if the battle turned out successfully, the
- victors would not escape serious damage.
-
- "I do not know how your Excellency, and their Excellencies v.
- Mueller and Pohl look upon these matters, but since you yourself
- have asked me to state my views, I hope you will not take it amiss
- if my zeal causes me to enlarge upon a subject which is not quite
- within my province. Besides, I have another reason for doing so.
-
- "It is our duty to prepare ourselves in good time for the peace
- that is to come. Does your Excellency believe it would augur well
- for the future peace if Germany succeeded in inflicting a naval
- victory on the British? I do not think so myself, but I rather
- fancy that the opposite effect would take place.... If the British
- should suffer a big naval defeat, they would be forced to fight to
- the bitter end. That is inherent in the nature of things; even
- those who can only argue in terms of a Continental policy must
- understand it.
-
- "Even a partial loss of her naval prestige would spell ruin to
- Great Britain. It would imply the defection of the great dominions
- which now form part of her world empire. The _raison d'etre_ for
- Great Britain's present position ceases to exist as soon as she has
- lost her naval supremacy....
-
- " ... And, please, do not lose sight of one further consideration.
- We must find our compensation by annexing valuable territories
- beyond the seas; but for the peaceful enjoyment of such overseas
- gains we shall be dependent on the good will of Great Britain....
- At present, men of German blood occupy leading positions in the
- economic life of almost every British colony, and the open door has
- been the means by which we have acquired a great deal of that
- national wealth of ours which caused the smooth working of our
- financial mobilization when the war broke out.
-
- " ... For all these reasons I consider it a great mistake that the
- press should be allowed to excite German public opinion against
- Great Britain to the extent it is done. I was in Berlin during the
- week, and I was alarmed when I became acquainted with the wild
- schemes which are entertained not only by the people of Berlin, but
- also by distinguished men from the Rhineland and Westphalia."
-
-Apart from the peace problem there was another matter which gave Ballin
-grave cause for anxiety. This was the circumstance that the Kaiser,
-because of his long absences from Berlin, lost the necessary touch with
-the people, and could not, therefore, be kept properly informed of
-popular feeling. He expressed his fears on this account in a letter to a
-friend of his amongst the Kaiser's entourage in which he wrote:
-
- "I hope you will soon be able to induce His Majesty to remove his
- winter quarters to Germany. My common sense tells me that, if a war
- is waged on French and Russian soil, the headquarters ought to be
- situated in Germany. From the point of view of security also I
- consider this very desirable, and I feel a great deal of anxiety
- concerning His Majesty.... Whether it is wise to exercise the
- censorship of the press to the extent it is done, is a question on
- which more opinions than one are possible.... I have just had a
- call from a Mr. X., a former officer, and an exceedingly reliable
- and capable man. He complained bitterly of the rigid censorship,
- and he thought it would be a mistake from which we should have to
- suffer in days to come. It would certainly be a blessing if such a
- man who is highly esteemed by the Foreign Office could be given a
- chance of explaining his views at headquarters."
-
-Among the problems of foreign policy with which Germany saw herself
-faced in the early part of the war, those referring to Italy and
-Roumania were of special interest to Ballin. The question was how to
-prevent these two countries from joining the ranks of Germany's enemies.
-Ballin did all he could to bring about the Italian mission of Prince
-Buelow. He not only urged the Chancellor to select Buelow for this task,
-but he also tried hard to induce the Prince to undertake the thankless
-errand involved. In addition to the political importance of the mission,
-he laid great stress on its bearing on the food problem.
-
- "The question of provisioning the German people," he wrote in a
- letter to the Army Headquarters, "is closely connected with the
- solution of the Italian and Roumanian difficulties. No pressure is,
- in my opinion, too strong in order to make it perfectly clear to
- Austria that some sort of an agreement with Italy is a _sine qua
- non_ for the successful termination of this war. If it were argued
- that Italy would come forward with fresh demands as soon as her
- original claims had been satisfied, I think the German Government
- could combat this objection by insisting upon a written promise on
- the part of Italy to the effect that she would not extend her
- demands.
-
- " ... Political and military considerations make it plain beyond
- any question of doubt that Italy, who will be armed to the teeth in
- March, will not be able to lay down her arms again unless Austria
- arrives at an understanding with her. Thus our greatest danger is
- the uncertainty as to what these neutrals will do, and I hope that
- the ministerial changes in Austria will smooth the way for a
- reasonable attitude towards this regrettable but unavoidable
- necessity. Our aim should be to prevent the scattering of our
- forces, for the burden imposed upon ourselves because of the
- inadequacy of our allies is almost superhuman, and contains the
- danger of exhaustion."
-
-The German mission to Italy suffered through the vacillations of
-Austrian politics, and was therefore doomed to failure. Austrian feeling
-concerning a compromise with Italy was always dependent on the news from
-the Italian front; if this was favourable, people did not want to hear
-of it, and in the opposite case they would only discuss such an
-understanding most unwillingly. The proposed compromise was looked upon
-as a heavy sacrifice, and people were by no means favourably disposed
-towards German mediation. Prince Buelow was accused of having "presented
-Italy with the Trentino." Disquieting news which Ballin received from
-Vienna induced him to report to the Chancellor on the state of Austrian
-feeling, and to offer his services if he thought that his
-old-established relations with Vienna could be of any use. His offer was
-also prompted by his conviction that the German diplomatic
-representation in Vienna was not adapted to Austrian mentality.
-
-Thereupon Ballin, early in March, 1915, entered upon a semi-official
-mission to Vienna. He first acquainted himself with the actual state of
-the Austrian mind by calling on his old friend, his Excellency v.
-Schulz, the Vice-President of the Austrian Chief Court of Audits, who
-was regarded as one of the best informed personages in the capital, and
-who was one of the regular partners of the old Emperor Francis Joseph
-for his daily game of tarock. This gentleman told Ballin that the
-people of Austria felt a good deal of resentment towards Germany, who
-had stepped in far too early as the "advocate of Italy," at a time when
-Austria was still hoping to settle Serbia all by herself. This hope,
-indeed, had proved an illusion; but Germany's strategy had also turned
-out a failure, because she had misjudged the attitude of Great Britain,
-and had not finished with France as rapidly as she had expected to do.
-Now Austria, confronted by stern necessity, would have to make
-concessions to Italy which every true Austrian would view with bitter
-grief; and, to bring about the active assistance of Roumania, Count
-Tisza would consider a sacrifice in the Bukovina debatable, but never
-one in Transylvania. Ballin told his friend that, as far as Roumania was
-concerned, he would have to leave it to Austria to settle that question
-by herself; and that his mission with regard to Italy was so difficult
-that he preferred not to make it more so by trying to solve the
-Roumanian problem as well.
-
-Ballin's subsequent interviews with the Prime Minister, Count Stuergkh,
-and with the Minister v. Koerber, as well as those with other
-influential personages, confirmed these impressions, and he left Vienna
-buoyed up by the hope that the conference between German, Austrian, and
-Italian delegates which it was proposed to hold at Vienna would lead to
-a successful result. Such, however, was not the case, and it is quite
-probable that the possibility of arriving at an understanding with Italy
-had passed by that time, or, assuming the most favourable circumstances,
-that only immediate and far-reaching Austrian concessions could have
-saved the situation; but these were not forthcoming.
-
-The next subject which caused much anxiety to Ballin was the question as
-to what Roumania would do, a country to whose attitude, considering her
-importance to Germany as a food-producing area, he attached even more
-value than to that of Italy. In his notes dating from that time he said:
-
- " ... June 21st, 1915. The news which I received from X. regarding
- the political situation in Roumania and Bulgaria was so serious
- that I felt bound to send copies of these letters to the Chief of
- the General Staff, General v. Falkenhayn, and to inform him that,
- in my opinion, our Foreign Office had now done all it could
- possibly do, and that nothing but some forcible military pressure
- such as he and Baron Conrad could exercise on Count Tisza would
- induce this obstinate gentleman to settle his differences with the
- Balkan States...."
-
- " ... On this occasion X. expressed a great deal of contempt at the
- suggestion that we should draw upon the members of the old
- diplomacy for additional help. On the whole, he seemed to be very
- proud of the achievements of the Foreign Office, whereas I am of
- opinion that this body has entirely failed, and is of no practical
- use any longer. Things must be in a pretty bad state if Herr
- Erzberger, of all people, is looked upon as the last hope of the
- country. I suggested to the gentlemen that it would do some good if
- the Chancellor were to request the more virulent of the Pan-Germans
- to see him, and to ask Hindenburg to explain to them the military
- situation without any camouflage. This suggestion was favourably
- received, and it is to be passed on to the Chancellor....
-
- " ... The Chancellor informed me that he was considering whether,
- if Roumania remained neutral, and if the operations against the
- Dardanelles terminated successfully for us, he ought to submit any
- official proposals for peace to our enemies. I expressed my
- admiration of the plan, but told the Chancellor of my objections to
- its practical execution. The Entente, I feared, would refuse to
- entertain the proposals, and the German people would regard it as a
- sign of weakness. The Chancellor asked me to refrain from
- pronouncing a definite opinion for the present, but to think it
- over until our next meeting."
-
-In a letter of July 31st, 1915, Ballin wrote as follows:
-
- "I should like to express my heartfelt gratitude to you for sending
- on to me the report which contains some of the finest observations
- that have come to my knowledge since the outbreak of the war.
-
- " ... The writer lays great stress on the belief prevalent in enemy
- and neutral countries alike that Germany is making a bid for
- universal supremacy and for supremacy on the high seas--a belief
- which has spurred on the resistance of the enemy to the utmost, and
- has caused a good deal of bad feeling amongst the neutrals. I
- repeatedly brought this fact to the knowledge of the Chancellor and
- I urgently suggested to him that in some way--e.g., by an Imperial
- proclamation on the anniversary of the outbreak of war, or by some
- other suitable means--we should announce to all and sundry that
- such hare-brained schemes are not entertained by any responsible
- person or body of persons in Germany. I sincerely trust that some
- such steps will be taken at an early opportunity, because otherwise
- I do not see when the war will be over. Though not a pessimist I do
- not believe in taking too rosy a view of things. I envy the British
- because they have the courage openly to discuss in their press and
- parliament the reverses as well as the successes they have had.
-
- " ... You see I am not taking too cheerful a view of matters. I
- have nothing but the most enthusiastic admiration for the
- achievements of the German people, both at the front and at home.
- Although not gifted politically this people could do wonders if led
- by great statesmen and by great politicians."
-
- " ... August 10th, 1915. This morning I spent an hour with the
- Chancellor, who had requested me to call on him.... We had a long
- discussion as to the advisability of publishing a statement to the
- effect that Germany would be ready at any moment to discuss an
- honourable peace. She had achieved great successes in the field,
- she was in possession of important mortgages, her armies were
- occupying large tracts of the enemy's country, and she was not
- carrying on a war of aggression but one of defence: therefore such
- a step could not be regarded as a sign of weakness. The
- Chancellor, nevertheless, was afraid that such a step might after
- all be interpreted in that sense. I suggested to him that it might
- be of some use if the Pope could be induced to address a peace
- message to the rulers of the various countries.
-
- "I also called the Chancellor's urgent attention to the need for
- dealing with the food problem during the ensuing winter, especially
- with relation to the price of meat."
-
- " ... August 12th, 1915. The United States Ambassador, Mr. Gerard,
- had expressed the desire to discuss with me the question as to the
- advisability of suggesting that President Wilson should mediate
- between the belligerents. I therefore called on him on Tuesday,
- August 10th, and advised him to refrain from any official action in
- that direction, but said that I thought he might ask the President
- to sound opinion in Great Britain as to the chances of such peace
- proposals."
-
-In the early part of September, 1915, Admiral v. Holtzendorff was
-appointed Chief of the Admiralty Staff. This appointment gave rise to a
-conflict with Grand Admiral v. Tirpitz, who threatened to resign
-because, _inter alia_, the Kaiser had issued instructions to the effect
-that the Chief of the Admiralty Staff should no longer be subject to the
-authority of the Secretary for the Navy, but that he could communicate
-with the Kaiser and with the Chancellor direct. Ballin thought a
-possible resignation of Admiral v. Tirpitz would be fraught with serious
-consequences at that moment, as it would produce a bad impression on
-public opinion and be inimical to the position of the Kaiser. These
-considerations caused Ballin to intervene in person with Admiral v.
-Tirpitz and with the Chief of the Naval Cabinet, with the result that
-the Grand Admiral withdrew his intended resignation.
-
-The following extracts are taken from Ballin's notes during the next few
-months:
-
- " ... October 20th, 1915. I am annoyed at the importunity with
- which some interested parties, such as the Central Association of
- German Manufacturers and the representatives of agriculture, are
- pushing forward their views on the peace terms. Moreover, my
- alleged readiness to conclude a 'bad peace' with Great Britain is
- being talked about so widely that even His Excellency Herr v.
- Zimmermann has drawn my attention to the ill effects of such
- calumnies. All this has prompted me to avail myself of the
- opportunity presented by the annual meeting of the Association of
- Hamburg Shipowners of making a speech in which I have explained my
- views as to the freedom of the seas.
-
- "Prince Buelow will be leaving for Lucerne to-day where he intends
- to stay for some time, and the Prussian _charge d'affaires_, Herr
- v. Mutius--of whom it has been alleged that the Chancellor
- appointed him to his post on the death of his predecessor (the
- excellent Herr v. Buelow, Prussian Minister to Hamburg) for the
- reason that he might have a watchful eye on Prince Buelow and
- myself--has been promptly transferred to Warsaw. Evidently the
- Berlin authorities now think the danger has passed, since Prince
- Buelow has left."
-
- " ... November 23rd, 1915. Hammann[4] asked me why I did not call
- on the Chancellor, and I told him that I thought the Chancellor
- might feel annoyed with me for my interference in favour of
- Tirpitz, which, however, would not affect me in any way, because I
- was convinced that I had acted in the best interests of the Kaiser,
- and that it would have been unwise to remove Tirpitz from his post
- so long as the war lasted."
-
- " ... The Chancellor asked me to see him on Wednesday at 6.30 p.m.,
- and I spent nearly two hours with him. I urgently advised him to
- make a frank statement in the Reichstag as to our readiness for
- peace, and to do so in such a form that it could not possibly be
- looked upon as a sign of weakness."
-
- " ... On January 10th, 1916, I was commanded to dine with Their
- Majesties at the _Neues Palais_. The only other guests apart from
- myself were the Minister of the Royal Household, Count Eulenburg,
- and the Minister of Agriculture, Herr v. Schorlemer. None of the
- suite were present so that the company consisted of five persons
- only. The Kaiser was in high spirits and full of confidence. The
- after-dinner conversation extended to such a late hour that we did
- not catch the train by which we intended to return, and we were
- obliged to leave by the last train that night.
-
- "A remark of mine concerning the possibility of an extension of
- submarine warfare had, as the Chancellor had been informed, caused
- the Kaiser to assume that I completely shared the point of view of
- Admirals v. Holtzendorff and v. Tirpitz, who now recommend a
- submarine campaign against Great Britain on a large scale. I
- therefore, at the Chancellor's request, addressed the following
- letter to the Kaiser:
-
- "'A few days ago I had occasion to discuss with Grand Admiral v.
- Tirpitz and Admiral v. Holtzendorff the question of a resumption of
- the submarine campaign.
-
- "'I was then given confidential information as to the number of
- submarines at our disposal, and I am bound to say that even if due
- allowance is made for the activity of the mine-seeking auxiliaries
- I regard the number of large submarines as insufficient for the
- purposes of such a finally decisive measure.
-
- "'The first attempt at submarine warfare proved unsuccessful on
- account of the insufficiency of the means employed to carry it
- through; and it is my humble opinion that a second attempt should
- only be undertaken if its success were beyond the possibility of a
- doubt. If this cannot be guaranteed the consequences of such a
- measure appear to me to be out of all proportion to the risks
- attached to it.
-
- "'I therefore beg to respectfully suggest to Your Majesty that the
- work of the mine-laying auxiliaries should be carried on as
- hitherto, and should even be extended. I also consider that the
- submarines should be made use of to the fullest extent of their
- capacity, with the proviso, however, that their employment against
- passenger steamers should be subject to the restrictions recently
- laid down by Your Majesty.
-
- "'When the number of the big submarines shall be sufficient
- effectively to cut off the British food supply, I think the time
- will have arrived for us to employ this weapon against Great
- Britain without paying regard to the so-called neutrals.
-
- "'At present about two hundred ocean steamers or more enter
- British ports every day, and an equal number leave for foreign
- ports. If we sink a daily average of 30 or 40 we can, indeed,
- greatly inconvenience England, but we shall assuredly not be able
- to compel her to sue for peace.
-
- "'I humbly apologize to Your Majesty for thus stating my views on
- this matter; but I am of opinion that the extreme importance of the
- proposed steps will be a sufficient excuse for me.'"
-
-In the early part of 1916 Ballin went on a second mission to Vienna, and
-afterwards he prepared a detailed report for the Chancellor dealing with
-the state of public feeling as he found it. This document presents a
-faithful picture of the precarious conditions in that capital which the
-German Government had constantly to reckon with, and may therefore be of
-interest even now. The following passages are extracts from it:
-
- "If we desire to keep the Austrian fighting spirit unimpaired we
- must avoid at all hazards suggesting the possibility of an
- understanding with Italy. The Italian war is popular down to the
- lowest classes of the people, and the successful stand against
- Italy is a subject of pride and hope to all Austrians.
-
- "Hence the circumstance that Prince Buelow has temporarily taken up
- his abode at Lucerne has roused a considerable amount of suspicion.
- Even the officials in the various ministerial departments fear that
- the Prince might intend to make unofficial advances to Italy when
- in Lucerne, and that these steps might be followed in Berlin by a
- movement in favour of a separate peace with Italy by which Austria
- would have to cede the Trentino. People were obviously pleased and
- relieved when I could explain to them that the Prince was greatly
- embarrassed on account of having lost his Villa Malta, and that the
- choice of a suitable residence during the winter had been very
- difficult. They were particularly gratified when I told them--what
- I had heard from the Prince's own lips--that he had had no official
- mission, and that he had not been engaged upon any negotiations.
-
- "People are especially proud of the Isonzo battles, but they do not
- shut their eyes to the uncertain prospects of a successful Austrian
- offensive. They really consider that Austria has gained her war
- aims, and the old Emperor described the military situation to Frau
- Kathi Schratt by saying that the war was in many respects like a
- game of tarock, in which the winner was not allowed to cease
- playing because the losers insisted upon him going on with the game
- so that they might have their revenge. Matters at first had been to
- the advantage of our enemies: the Russians had overrun Galicia, the
- Serbians had defeated the Austrians at Belgrade, and the French had
- looked upon the retreat from the Marne as a great success. Now,
- however, the war was all in favour of Germany and Austria, and
- therefore our opponents did not want to call a truce just yet.
-
- "If this comparison which the venerable old gentleman has borrowed
- from his favourite game of cards is correct, the war will not be
- over until one side has nothing further to stake, and the decision
- will be brought about by that side whose human and financial
- resources shall last longest.
-
- "Banking circles, of course, view the financial situation with the
- utmost gravity, but the general public--in spite of the high prices
- ruling here, and in spite of the great want of food which is much
- more noticeable than with us--regard matters a great deal more
- serenely. This is simply due to the greater optimism so
- characteristic of the Austrians, whose motto is: 'Life is so short,
- and death so very, very long.' They prefer to assign to future
- generations the worries which would spoil their sublunary
- existence.
-
- "The present Cabinet is looked upon as weak and mediocre. The old
- Emperor clings to Count Stuergkh because of the extensive use to
- which the latter puts the celebrated paragraph 14 of the
- Constitution, by which Parliament is eliminated altogether, and
- which provides the Government with every conceivable liberty of
- action. The all-powerful Tisza gives his support to Count Stuergkh
- just because of his weakness. Hence the attempt to replace the
- latter by Prince Hohenlohe, the present Minister of the Interior,
- is beset with much difficulty. The Emperor wants to avoid a break
- with Tisza at all costs. This state of things makes people feel
- very worried. The strain in the relations between Austria and
- Hungary has greatly increased since my last visit, whereas the
- friendly feelings for Germany are now more pronounced than ever.
-
- "Our Kaiser everywhere enjoys an unexampled veneration. Within the
- next few days he will be made the subject of great celebrations in
- his honour. Although the tickets of admission are sold at enormous
- prices, even General v. Georgi, the Chief of the National Defence
- Organization--whom I met last night--did not succeed in obtaining a
- box, notwithstanding his high connexions. This morning the
- well-known member of the Hofburg Theatre, Herr Georg Reimers, read
- to me two poems dedicated to the Kaiser which he is going to recite
- that night, and I feel bound to say that it can hardly be an
- unmixed pleasure to the members of the court to witness this act of
- enthusiastic homage paid to our ruler.
-
- "The Roumanian question, particularly in its bearing on the food
- supply, is regarded by people who are able to judge with great
- anxiety. It is believed that the only thing to do is to send to
- Bucharest experienced men connected with the supply and the
- distribution of food who must be properly authorized to purchase as
- much grain as possible for ourselves and for our allies.
-
- "The big Austro-German _Zollverein_--or by whatever other name it
- is intended to describe the proposed customs union--is looked upon
- with very mixed feelings. Last night Baron Skoda (the Austrian
- Krupp) explained to me after a dinner given at his house, with the
- lively consent of members of the court and of the big
- manufacturers, that the Austrian interests might indeed profit from
- such a union with the Balkan States, but that it would be better
- that Germany should remain an outsider for a period of fifteen
- years. This is evidently a case of _timeo Danaos, et dona
- ferentes_, and people feel that Austria, owing to her economic
- exhaustion, would be easily absorbed by Germany after the
- conclusion of the war. The Hungarians, naturally, view matters from
- a different angle, not only because the Hungarian farmers would
- like to sell their grain to Germany free of any duty, and because
- industry counts for very little in their country, but also because
- they dislike the Austrians.
-
- " ... I also dined with Count Tisza. He is a purely Magyar
- politician who regards the international situation from his
- Hungarian point of view, and in conformity with his Magyar
- inclinations. He is evidently a strong if obstinate character, and
- he does not impress me as a man who will give up his post without a
- protest. He, too, thinks the real war aims of Austria-Hungary have
- been accomplished. Serbia is crushed, Galicia liberated, and
- Russian supremacy in the Balkans--formerly viewed with so much
- apprehension--is a thing of the past. All that is wanting now is to
- bring the Italian campaign to a successful conclusion and the war
- may be regarded as over as far as Austro-Hungarian interests are
- involved.
-
- "Both Tisza and the Austrian society showed strong symptoms of an
- Anglophile leaning. Frau Schratt, who in such matters simply
- re-echoes the views of the old Emperor, seemed very pro-English,
- and had something to say about 'German atrocities.'
-
- "I mention these facts because I cannot help thinking that,
- notwithstanding the war, some friendly threads must have been spun
- across from England to Austria."
-
-The subject of an unrestricted submarine war, already touched upon by
-Ballin in his above-mentioned letter to the Kaiser written in January,
-1916, was discussed with much animation in the course of the year, and a
-powerful propaganda in its favour was started by certain quarters.
-Ballin's attitude towards this question, and particularly towards its
-bearing on the possible entry of the United States into the war, is
-described with great clearness in a letter addressed to a friend of his
-attached to the Army Headquarters. In this message he wrote:
-
- " ... You ask me to tell you something about the political and
- military situation as I see it, and I shall gladly comply with your
- wish.
-
- "The American danger seems to be averted for the moment at least. A
- severance of diplomatic relations with the United States would
- have been nothing short of fatal to Germany at the present stage.
- Just because the war may be looked upon as won in a military sense,
- we were obliged to avoid such a catastrophe at all costs. As far as
- military exertions are concerned, it is quite correct to say that
- Germany has won the war, because in order to turn the present
- position into a military defeat our enemies, in the first instance,
- would have to gain military victories in Russia, France, and
- Belgium. These would have to be followed up by our retreat from the
- occupied countries and by their invasion of ours, and they would
- have to defeat us at home. Every sensible critic must see that
- neither their human material nor their organizing powers are
- sufficient for such achievements. The fact is that we have reached
- the final stage of a progressive war of exhaustion, which nothing
- but the intervention of the United States could have prolonged.
-
- "The accession of Italy to the ranks of our opponents has shown
- what it means if an additional Power enters the war against us.
- From a military point of view the entry of Italy did not materially
- aggravate our position; but the whole aspect of the war, as viewed
- by our enemies, underwent a complete change, and Grey, who shortly
- before had announced that 'there is nothing between us and Germany
- except Belgium,' stated a few weeks subsequent to the Italian
- _volte-face_ that he could not find a suitable basis for peace
- negotiations anywhere.
-
- "The entry of the United States would have been of immeasurably
- greater effect on the imagination and the obstinacy of our enemies.
-
- "The very intelligent gentlemen who even now preach the
- unrestricted submarine war, especially the leading members of the
- Conservative and National Liberal parties, are misinformed about
- what the submarines can do. They not only regard it as possible,
- but even as practically certain, that the starvation of Great
- Britain could be achieved if the unrestricted submarine war were
- introduced. I need not tell Your Excellency that such an assumption
- fails to estimate things at their true value. Great Britain will
- always be able to maintain her connexion with the French Channel
- ports. Quite apart from that, she will always succeed in importing
- the 14,000 tons of cereals which she needs every day to feed her
- population even if the number of our submarines is trebled, because
- it must not be forgotten that the submarines cannot operate during
- the night.
-
- "Hence the whole problem is now, as ever, governed by the axiom to
- which I have over and over again drawn the attention of the heads
- of the Berlin economic associations, viz. that we can no more force
- the British into subjection through our submarines than they can
- hope to wear us out by their starvation blockade. Both the
- submarine war and the blockade are extremely disastrous measures,
- inflicting heavy losses on either side; but neither of them can
- determine the fate of the war nor bring about a fundamental
- improvement in the position of either of the belligerent groups of
- Powers. That, apart from all other considerations, the unrestricted
- submarine war would have exposed us to the open hostility of the
- neutral countries, and might even have caused them to join the
- ranks of our enemies, is an additional contingency which the
- submarine enthusiasts have found it most convenient to dismiss by a
- wave of the hand.
-
- "If after the war Germany remains isolated from the rest of the
- world, she cannot feed her population, and the doctrine of Central
- European brotherhood promulgated by some of our amiable poets has
- given rise to a movement which is apt to be of the greatest
- detriment to the interests of our country when the war is over.
-
- "If we had wished to invest large parts of our German national
- wealth in countries like Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, and Turkey,
- nothing could have prevented us from realizing such a plan at any
- time previous to the war, provided we had thought it economically
- sound.
-
- "Such a return to a continental policy, I maintain, would be a
- disaster to Germany. Our needs and our aspirations have increased
- to such an extent that we can no longer hope to satisfy them by
- economic isolation or within the framework of a Central European
- economic league of states.
-
- "It is not because I am at the head of the biggest German shipping
- concern that I tell you these things, but I do so with the
- disinterestedness of a man who hopes to be allowed to retire into
- private life when this terrible war is over. No one can perform
- his life's work more than once, and no one can make a fresh start
- at the age of sixty.
-
- "The war has considerably strengthened the moral fibre of the
- Chancellor; he has learnt to take upon his shoulders
- responsibilities which, I think, he would formerly have shirked. It
- is much to be regretted that the Conservative party cannot see eye
- to eye with him in so many questions. He is blamed for the fact
- that the Kaiser is so difficult of access, and that he does not
- every now and then receive the leaders of our political and
- economic life, as he should do considering the fateful time through
- which the Empire is passing.
-
- "If the Chancellor is to succeed in carrying through the huge tasks
- still before him, it is, in my opinion, imperative that he should
- not lose touch with Conservative circles, and I think there is no
- reason why the Kaiser should not ask men like Herr v. Wangenheim,
- Count Schwerin-Loewitz, etc., to visit him from time to time at
- headquarters, and to acquaint him with their wishes and anxieties.
-
- "I cannot help telling you that the whole nation views with
- profound regret the Kaiser's isolation. Since the outbreak of the
- war I have only once had an interview with His Excellency v.
- Falkenhayn, and the main purpose of my asking for it was to request
- him to bring about a change in this state of things by using his
- influence with the Kaiser. His Excellency frankly told me that he
- had some objections to doing this, but he promised me nevertheless
- that he would exercise his influence in this direction. I am only
- afraid that, because of the excessive burden of work he has to get
- through, the matter has slipped his memory...."
-
-Ballin was not the only one who, as early as 1916, regarded with such
-alarm the devastating effects of a possible entry of the United States
-into the war; other men of political training thought so too, although
-their number was not large. The following passages, taken from two
-letters which Ballin received from a member of the German diplomatic
-service, show that the feeling was there:
-
- "February 16th, 1916. My chief apprehensions are purely political.
- Although it seems that for the moment our differences with the
- United States will be smoothed over, there can be no doubt but that
- at times the tension has been so great that a wrong move at the
- critical moment would have caused America to take up arms against
- us. Contrary to what most people seem to think, I regard this
- danger as having by no means passed; in fact I look upon it as
- always lurking in the background. Those who, like myself, have seen
- that the secret ideal of British policy is an alliance and
- permanent co-operation with America, will agree with me that such
- an Anglo-American understanding for the period of this war would be
- of lasting detriment to our whole future. You know England, and you
- know that the course of events has turned the Entente automatically
- into an alliance, although the British, especially those who look
- beyond the actual present, have always felt a great deal of
- aversion towards such a development. The individual Frenchman,
- indeed, is mostly looked upon as a somewhat grotesque and slightly
- ludicrous character, but all the same there exists some sympathy
- with the French as a nation, however artificially this may have
- been brought about; but towards Russia the average Englishman never
- felt anything but an icy aloofness and a great deal of antipathy.
- Hence, the so-called allies of the British have never been the
- cause of unalloyed joy to them.
-
- "On the other hand, to establish permanent relations with that part
- of the Anglo-Saxon race inhabiting the huge continent across the
- Atlantic has at all times been the aim pursued by every really
- far-sighted British statesman. By means of such an alliance, it is
- hoped to consolidate and to strengthen for many generations the
- foundations on which the venerable but also slightly dilapidated
- structure of the United Kingdom rests. From a purely maritime point
- of view, such an alliance would be of overwhelming strength. In my
- opinion it would be perfectly hopeless for our country, constantly
- menaced as it is by serious Continental complications, to gain the
- trident of Neptune in opposition to these two Powers. I believe an
- Anglo-American league, whose object it would be to prevent us from
- becoming a commercial, naval, and Continental Power, would
- restrict us once more to a purely Continental policy, a policy
- which we have so successfully discarded since the accession of our
- present Kaiser.
-
- "To frustrate such an alliance must be our principal task. To call
- it into being or even to facilitate its conclusion would be the
- greatest crime against Germany's future which anyone could commit.
-
- "Let us by all means sink as much enemy tonnage as possible, let us
- lay mines, and let us proceed with our submarine warfare as
- hitherto, or even with more energy, but let the people who are at
- the head of the whole movement be aware of the immense
- responsibility that rests on their shoulders. If our leading men
- speak of a war with America just as cheerfully as though San Marino
- or Montenegro were involved, I cannot help viewing such an attitude
- with the utmost apprehension. The British will use all their
- astuteness and all their energy to exploit any mistakes committed
- by Germany. If they succeed in this, and if, in consequence, our
- relations with the United States become very strained again or
- drift towards a rupture, I fear that we shall not be able to bring
- this war to a successful close, or derive from it any security for
- our future development.
-
- "Berlin, February 26th, 1916. During the two days I have now been
- here it has greatly depressed me to see a number of fanatics who
- cannot gauge the consequences of their doings attempting to drive
- this splendid German people towards a new abyss. Alas! delusions
- and folly are rampant everywhere. If I were you, I should now
- disregard every other consideration, and explain to the Kaiser as a
- friend that everything is being gambled away: the existence of his
- Empire, his crown, and possibly the fate of the dynasty. It is like
- living in a madhouse; everyone talks about war with Holland,
- America, Denmark and Roumania as though a mere picnic were
- concerned."
-
-During the war Ballin tried over and over again to make the responsible
-authorities see the position in the same light as his own observations,
-and his repeated discussions with unprejudiced and clear-headed men had
-led him to see it himself. The letter reproduced below contains a
-description of the general situation at the time of writing (July,
-1916). It was addressed to a friend of his in the diplomatic service who
-was looking after German interests in one of the countries allied with
-Germany, and who had asked him for some information concerning the
-situation at home:
-
- "I am sorry that I can send you no good news at all. The conduct of
- the war and its probable outcome are more of a mystery now than
- ever, and with all that I cannot help feeling that our responsible
- quarters do not even now realize the profound gravity of the
- situation. The political and the military leaders are frequently at
- variance. There is a lack of proper co-operation between Berlin and
- Vienna. We imagine ourselves to be the rider, but we are only the
- horse. The road between Berlin and Vienna is studded with
- compromises of doubtful value, and incapable archdukes are given
- the most important positions.
-
- "The military situation was favourable until the Austrians thought
- their day of reckoning with Italy had come, and when our own
- Supreme Command set out to cover themselves with laurels in France.
-
- "Both these undertakings turned out to be political and military
- failures. For hundreds of reasons an early peace is imperative to
- us. As matters stand at present only Great Britain and Russia can
- conclude peace, because France and Italy must be regarded as mere
- British vassals.
-
- "Since the Cabinets of London and Petrograd remain absolutely deaf
- to our publicly expressed overtures for peace, we have no choice
- but to try to utterly defeat the one or the other of these, our
- principal enemies, either Russia or Great Britain.
-
- "We could have finished with Great Britain if we had had at least
- 300 first-class submarines, and in that case we might have regarded
- a war against America with complacency.
-
- "However, even if we possessed, as some optimists believe, as many
- as 150 first-class submarines, we could not strike a mortal blow at
- Great Britain and defy the United States as well. Therefore, we
- have only one choice left: we must force Russia, our second chief
- enemy, to her knees.
-
- "Russia has been badly hit through the loss of the industrial
- regions of Poland. If we had exerted all our strength in that
- direction, and if we had taken Kiev, the economic key to Russia,
- the Tsar would have had no alternative but to conclude a separate
- peace, and this would have settled the Roumanian question at the
- same time.
-
- "With less certainty, but also, perhaps, with less exertion, it
- might have proved possible to make peace _via_ Petrograd. But what
- have we done instead? We have squandered our forces. The Eastern
- theatre of war was denuded of troops, because at first Falkenhayn
- felt sure he could take Verdun in a fortnight, then by Easter, and
- finally by Whitsuntide. All our forces have been hurled at Verdun;
- rivers of blood have been spilt, and now, in July, we are still
- outside it. And what does it profit us if we do get it? We shall
- only find other and more formidable lines behind it.
-
- "In the meantime our good Austrians have transferred all their
- reliable officers and men to the Tyrol, and have left nothing but
- the rubbish and their inefficient generals to guard the points of
- danger. And what are the results? A graceful retirement for
- Salandra and the formation of an anti-German coalition government
- in Italy on the one hand, and a manifestation of Austrian
- superiority on the other, but a failure, nevertheless, because the
- Austrians were not strong enough numerically to get down into the
- plain. And even if they had compelled the evacuation of Venetia
- nothing would have been gained. The fate of Italy, as it happens,
- does not depend on Austria, but on Great Britain, who will rather
- watch her starve and perish for want of coal than permit her to sue
- for peace.
-
- "Although all this is perfectly plain to everyone, our Supreme
- Command seems to be undecided as to whether an offensive with all
- the means at our disposal should be started on the Western Front
- simultaneously with one against Russia, or whether it should be
- directed against Russia only. As far back as last year I exerted
- all my influence--small though it has become--in favour of an
- energetic and whole-hearted offensive against Russia.
-
- "Well-informed and far-seeing men have justly pointed out that, if
- fortune so wills it, the Kaiser, arm in arm with Hindenburg and
- Ludendorff, could risk a 'bad peace' without danger to himself and
- his dynasty, but it appears beyond doubt that the influence of
- Falkenhayn is all-powerful.
-
- " ... If we were to arrive at an understanding with Russia to-day,
- we should be able to go on with the war against Great Britain for a
- long time to come, and, by means of unimpeded submarine activity,
- to carry it to a successful issue. In that case we could also
- estimate the danger threatening us from America at as low a figure
- as many who are unacquainted with the position are putting it now.
-
- "Thus it is my view that it is necessary to abandon definitely the
- belief that the war can be brought to a successful issue on the
- Western Front, and without first defeating Russia. It is greatly to
- be deplored that many observers assert that the Western Powers will
- make peace when they have found out that the big offensive now in
- progress remains without any visible success. Only people who do
- not know Great Britain can put forward such a proposition, but how
- many people are there at the Wilhelmstrasse who do know Great
- Britain? Very few indeed, if any....
-
- " ... You said you would rejoice to hear from me, and I can only
- regret with all my heart that I have not been able to report
- anything to you in which it would really be possible to rejoice."
-
-A still more serious note is struck in the following letter written in
-September, 1916:
-
- "Very many thanks for your welcome letter of yesterday's date, with
- the contents of which I agree in every detail.
-
- "I quite share your belief that Hindenburg and Ludendorff must each
- feel like a great physician who is only called in when it is too
- late. Two declarations of war within 24 hours were necessary to
- bring about this change which the German people had been looking
- forward to for months and months. The Chancellor is justly
- reproached for not having had the courage to insist upon the
- appointment of these two men and on the resignation of Falkenhayn
- long ago. It is contended that he should have tendered his own
- resignation if his recommendations were refused, and his neglect to
- do so makes him principally responsible for the fate that is in
- store for us. For a long time back I have kept emphasizing the need
- for transferring our main activities to the Eastern theatre of war,
- and for definitely settling these personal questions.
-
- "The Chancellor clings to his post because he believes that there
- is no one better qualified than himself to be at the head of
- affairs. Such an attitude reminds me of the old gentleman who
- neither wanted to die nor to retire from his post as president of
- the Berlin Chamber of Commerce, and who bitterly complained to
- those who came to congratulate him on his ninetieth birthday that
- he was compelled to stick to his office, in spite of his advanced
- years, because he could not see a better man to succeed him.
-
- "It is very sad that we have arrived at such an _impasse_, and I am
- convinced that the present internal political situation is
- untenable. No German Chancellor can possibly carry the business of
- the country to a successful issue if, in the midst of a terrible
- war, he is obliged to fight against an opposition consisting of the
- Conservatives, the representatives of the Heavy Industries, and the
- majority of the National Liberals.
-
- "As far as I can make out, the Chinese wall surrounding the Kaiser
- has not disappeared with the exit of Falkenhayn from the scene. No
- one is granted access to him who knows something about the events
- that led up to this war, and who, in the interests of his dynasty
- as well as his own, would tell him the unvarnished truth. We are,
- after all, a constitutional country. It would doubtless be best to
- transfer General Headquarters to Berlin, but, of course, people are
- not wanting who object to such a proceeding, asserting that it
- would enable outside influences to acquire a hold on the conduct of
- affairs.
-
- "How badly people are informed with regard to the actual situation
- was brought home to me when I was in Berlin a short while ago, and
- when X. contended with great emphasis that we should have to attach
- more value to huge indemnities than to annexations. If it is
- possible that the men round the Kaiser count on heavy indemnities
- even now, it shows how sadly they misjudge the real state of
- affairs.
-
- "My feeling tells me that the present Cabinets, containing as they
- do men who are compromised by their actions since the outbreak of
- war, cannot give us peace. How can anyone imagine that men like
- Bethmann, Asquith and Grey, who have hurled such incredible insults
- at each other, can ever sit together at the same table?
-
- "The question as to who is to succeed them, of course, abounds with
- difficulties.
-
- "I recently met some Austrian gentlemen in Berlin. They are
- completely apathetic; they have lost all interest in the future,
- and they themselves suggest that Germany should no longer permit
- Austria to have a voice in the conduct of affairs. Her food supply
- will only last until March 1st. After that date she will depend on
- Hungary and ourselves for her food. She fears that she is not
- likely to get much, if anything, from Hungary; on the other hand,
- she feels sure that we are compelled for our own sake to save her
- from famine.
-
- "Constantinople, too, has only supplies for a few more weeks.
-
- "With us at home the paraffin question is becoming very serious. In
- country districts it may be possible to tell people to go to bed at
- curfew time, but the working population of our large cities will
- never consent to dispense with artificial light. Serious riots have
- already taken place in connexion with the fat shortage.
-
- "I am afraid that Great Britain is trying to bring about such a
- change in the situation as will enable her shortly to tell the
- small neutral countries that no one in Europe will be permitted any
- longer to remain neutral, and that they must make up their minds to
- enter one or the other of the two big syndicates. You see nothing I
- can write to you has even a semblance of comfort in it. I regard
- the future with the utmost apprehension."
-
-In contrast to such views as were expressed in the foregoing letters,
-the men who were at the head of affairs at that time maintained that
-nothing but the application of rigorous force, or, in other words, the
-unrestricted use of the submarine weapon against Great Britain, would
-lead to a successful termination of the world war. The propaganda in
-favour of that measure is still in everybody's memory. Whatever may be
-said in defence of the authors of this propaganda, there is one reproach
-from which they cannot escape, viz. that they left no stone unturned to
-prevent their opponents from stating their views, and this, on account
-of the strict censorship to which the expression of every independent
-opinion was subject, was not a difficult matter. Their one-sided policy
-went so far that, when a pamphlet on the question of submarine warfare
-was written by order of the Admiralty Staff and circulated among a
-number of persons, including leading shipping men, Ballin was purposely
-excluded, because it was taken for granted that he would not express
-himself in favour of the contents. It is not likely, however, that the
-methods of reasoning put forward in this document--which was much more
-like an academic dissertation than an unprejudiced criticism of a
-political and military measure affecting the whole national existence of
-Germany--would have induced Ballin to change his views on the submarine
-war. Once only, and then merely for a brief period, was he in doubt as
-to whether his views on that question were right, but he soon returned
-to his first opinion when he found that he had been misinformed
-regarding the number and the effectiveness of submarines available.
-
-The inauguration of unrestricted submarine warfare in January, 1917, not
-only put a sudden end to the peace movement in which Ballin, as has been
-explained on a preceding page, played an important part, but also to the
-attempt of President Wilson to bring the two sides together. The details
-of the President's endeavours have meanwhile become public property
-through the revelations of Count Bernstorff, the German ambassador in
-Washington. In both instances a few weeks would have sufficed to
-ascertain whether the proposed action was likely to bring about the
-desired end, and the former attempt had even led to the impending
-establishment of mutual contact between the belligerents. The inability
-of the German political leaders to avail themselves of this opportunity,
-or at least their failure to do so, has doubtless been the greatest
-misfortune from which Germany had to suffer during the whole war.
-
-Notwithstanding the successful exploits of the submarines, Ballin's
-apprehensions never left him, and they were not allayed by the
-development of the position at home. The letter published below, which
-he wrote to the Chief of the Kaiser's Civil Cabinet, believing that this
-gentleman would be most likely to assist him in laying his views before
-the Kaiser, admirably sums up his feelings, and testifies both to his
-real patriotism and to his presentiment of the fate that was to overtake
-his country:
-
- "YOUR EXCELLENCY,
-
-"_April 4th, 1917_.
-
- The internal conditions of our country fill me with grave alarm,
- and I therefore venture to approach Your Excellency privately with
- this expression of my apprehensions.
-
- "I do not doubt for a moment that our competent authorities intend
- to extract the utmost advantage to ourselves from the situation
- which is developing in Russia. This Russian revolution may enable
- us to bring the war to a close, and to obtain peace terms which,
- relatively speaking, are not unfavourable.
-
- "What Germany has achieved in this war is beyond all praise. A
- glance at the map shows how small she is compared with her
- opponents in the field; and yet she is bravely struggling against a
- world in arms in which even the few countries that have remained
- neutral are not our friends. It is, indeed, one grand epic. But
- unfortunately the position at home becomes more untenable every
- day.
-
- "If we find ourselves compelled to reduce the bread ration still
- more, you will, I am sure, agree with me that the bulk of the
- people will suffer enormously through being underfed. In Austria,
- conditions are said to be worse still, and I am afraid that we
- shall even have to part with some of our stores to feed her
- population.
-
- "At first sight the Chancellor's speech in the Prussian House of
- Deputies appeared to be somewhat too comprehensive in its range of
- vision; but a few days later, when the news of the Russian
- revolution arrived, it almost seemed that his words had been
- prompted by Divine inspiration. After this Russian news had become
- known, it would have been impossible for him to make this speech
- without giving rise to the suspicion that these events had cast
- their shadow in advance on the Prussian Parliament. Unfortunately,
- however, this favourable development was not followed up by the
- right steps. On the contrary, the Chancellor, after his breezy
- advance in the House of Deputies, has now retired from the position
- he then took up, thus creating the impression that our policy is
- constantly shaped by all sorts of mutually contradictory views and
- currents. Up to now, although the people have to suffer greatly
- through the shortage of food and fuel, their patriotism has put up
- with it because of their faith in the promised electoral reforms.
- It would have been so simple to reiterate this promise, and at the
- same time to point out that so many other things claimed precedence
- during the war, and that so much was at stake, that it would hardly
- be advisable to introduce this great reform at present, seeing that
- there was no time to give proper attention to the careful working
- out of all the details.
-
- "If now, however, such bills as those dealing with the entailed
- property legislation and with the repeal of the Polish laws are to
- be discussed, such a postponement is no longer justifiable.
-
- "It almost seems as if the Government is unable to read the signs
- of the times. The fate of the Prussian suffrage reform bids fair to
- resemble that of the sibylline books, of which it was said that
- the longer one hesitated to buy them the more expensive they
- became. To-day the people would still be content to agree to plural
- voting, but when the war is over, and when the Socialist leaders
- are demobilizing their men, inducing tens of thousands of them,
- decorated with the Iron Cross, to air their grievances, it will be
- too late to stop the ball from rolling. It is true that people say
- revolutions are impossible in the era of the machine-gun. I have no
- faith in this theory, especially since the events that have
- happened in Petrograd have become known to us. That, in a country
- like Russia, the reigning family could disappear from the scene
- without any opposition, and without a single Grand Duke or a single
- soldier attempting to prevent it, is certainly food for much
- reflection.
-
- "I hope Your Excellency will pardon me for thus frankly expressing
- my anxieties, but I considered it my duty to let Your Excellency
- know my feelings."
-
-In May, 1917, Ballin accepted an invitation received from the Supreme
-Army Command and paid a visit to General Headquarters, where he found a
-great deal of discontent prevailing with the policy of the Chancellor.
-He also met the Kaiser, and reports on his visit as follows:
-
- "After sharing the Kaiser's repast--which was plain and on a war
- diet--I had several hours' private conversation with His Majesty. I
- found him full of optimism, far more so than I thought was
- justified. Both he and Ludendorff seem to put too much faith in the
- success of the submarines; but they fail to see that this weapon is
- procuring for us the enmity of the whole world, and that the
- promise held out by its advocates, viz., that Great Britain will be
- brought to her knees within two months, is, to put it mildly,
- extremely doubtful of realization, unless we can sink the ships
- which carry ammunition and pit-props to England."
-
-In a letter addressed to a gentleman in the Kaiser's entourage he gave a
-further detailed account of his views on the optimism prevailing in high
-places:
-
- "I cannot help thinking of the enthusiastic and at the same time
- highly optimistic letter which you had the great kindness to show
- me last night. My opinion is that the gentlemen who form the
- entourage of His Majesty ought not to view matters as that
- interesting epistle suggests that they do.
-
- "You are a believer in the statistics of Mr. X. I took the liberty
- of telling you last night that statistics are a mathematical form
- of telling a lie, and that, to use the expression of a clever
- Frenchman, a statistical table is like a loose woman who is at the
- service of anyone who wants her. 'There are different ways of
- arranging figures,' as they say in England. I do not know Mr. X,
- neither do I know his statistics, but what I have been told about
- them seemed foolish to me. If we carry on the war, and particularly
- the unrestricted submarine war, on the basis of statistics such as
- he and other jugglers with figures have compiled, we are sure to
- fail in the ends we are aiming at.
-
- "As concerns the unrestricted submarine war itself, I still
- maintain the view I have always held, viz., that we shall never
- succeed in starving out Great Britain to such an extent as to force
- her Government to sue for a peace of our dictation.
-
- "I have just had a visit from a Danish friend whom His Majesty also
- knows quite well, and who, together with a committee of delegates
- sent by the Danish Government, will be leaving for England
- to-night. The two members of this committee who represent the
- Ministry of Agriculture have been instructed, _inter alia_, to
- complain that Great Britain now imports much less bacon, butter,
- and other articles from Denmark than she had undertaken to do, and
- that the prices she pays for these imports are much below those
- originally stipulated.
-
- "Apart from the cargo carried by two small steamers that have been
- torpedoed, Denmark has been able, notwithstanding our submarines,
- to supply Great Britain with all the food required of her. The
- vessels remain in territorial waters until a wireless message
- informs them of the spot where they will meet the British convoy
- which is to take them safely to England. They have to pass through
- only a small danger zone which, as I have said, has hitherto proved
- fatal to no more than two vessels.
-
- "This fact, to my mind, points to the limits of the success
- obtainable by our submarines. I have constantly explained,
- especially to the Chief of the Admiralty Staff, that I can only
- regard the submarine as a successful weapon if it enables us to cut
- off the British supplies of ore from Spain and Sweden, and also
- those of pit-props, because without the possession of these two
- necessities, Great Britain is no longer able to continue the war. I
- have been assured that our submarines would achieve this task, even
- if torpedo boats were employed as convoys; but the experiences
- gained so far do not bear out these predictions. We succeed,
- indeed, in sinking a few vessels out of many; but suppose there are
- ten ships in a convoy, it still means that nine of them, with their
- supplies of ore and pit-props, safely reach their destination.
-
- "Let me repeat, the starvation of Great Britain is impossible;
- because, in addition to her own harvests, she only needs from
- twelve to fifteen thousand tons of cereals every day, and these she
- can, if necessary, always obtain at night-time through her Channel
- service, _via_ Spain and France. Even this necessity will hardly
- arise, because two medium-sized steamers are sufficient to carry
- the fifteen thousand tons, and things would have to be very bad,
- indeed, if these did not succeed in reaching a British port. And if
- our statistical tricksters juggle with crop failures, please do not
- forget that new harvests are soon to be expected, and that it will
- not do always to count on crop failures.
-
- "You will be doing a good work if you can persuade people at
- headquarters to abandon their belief that Great Britain can be
- starved to submission. Unfortunately their other belief, viz., that
- we can cut off her supplies of ore and pit-props, will also have to
- be abandoned.
-
- "Certainly, the achievements of our submarines have been amazing.
- At their present rate they will enormously diminish the British
- tonnage figures, and raise the hatred of everything German to
- boiling point; but they will not, unfortunately, lead to such an
- end of the war as our Pan-Germans desire. It is a thousand pities!
-
- "When the submarine problem began to assume practical shape, I
- pointed out to the Chief of the Admiralty Staff that, to be
- successful, the submarine war must be brief; that its principal
- object was not to sink a large number of ships, but to produce such
- a feeling of alarm in neutral countries as to prevent them from
- risking their ships (1) because of the great value of tonnage
- immediately after the war, (2) because of the impossibility of
- finding crews, and (3) because of the insurance difficulty. These
- conditions of success were, indeed, realized during the first four
- weeks; but since that time people, as I had predicted, have got
- used to the danger. The crews are coming forth again, the insurance
- companies issue their policies again, and the ships are put to sea
- again.
-
- "If the Admiralty Staff, who is doubtless in possession of the
- figures, would submit to you a list of the number of vessels laid
- up in Dutch and Scandinavian ports on March 1st, owing to the
- submarine danger, and another one showing the position as it is
- to-day, you would discover that, at a low estimate, at least 30 per
- cent, of the cargo vessels are running again, and that, after
- another month or so, the number of those still idle will have
- dwindled down to 20 per cent, or less.
-
- "These are my views on the situation. If we have no other means of
- finishing the war but the submarine menace, it will go on for
- years. I should like to protest in anticipation against any
- suggestion to the effect that I am trying to minimize the
- achievements of the submarines. On the contrary, I have nothing but
- the highest admiration for them, and I really find it quite
- impossible to praise in ordinary prose all that our country has
- done during this war; the whole achievement is one grand epic.
-
- "Within the next few months the problem will have to be solved how
- to put an end to this devastating catastrophe which is ruining the
- progress of the world. There is no need for me to tell you that the
- position of Germany has grown considerably worse through the active
- intervention of the United States. The fact that this enormously
- wealthy country with its one hundred million inhabitants has turned
- against us is fraught with the most dangerous consequences. Now it
- will no longer be possible for us to continue the war for several
- more years, and then to enforce a peace on lines such as are laid
- down by a noisy section of our people, unless we succeed in
- exploiting the extremely fortunate change in the Russian situation
- in such a way that the vast resources of that country will be at
- our disposal.
-
- "This letter has become longer than it ought to be, but the gravity
- of the subject with which it deals must be my excuse for going into
- so many details. Perhaps I may avail myself of some future occasion
- to acquaint you with my hopes and fears on other political matters;
- because, as I have already explained, the present state of affairs
- makes it urgently desirable that the gentlemen whose privilege it
- is to be near His Majesty should see things as they really are, and
- not as they would wish them to be.
-
- "Compare, if you have a chance, the advertisement pages of an
- English paper with those of a German one. I have just come across a
- copy of the _Daily Telegraph_ which I beg to enclose for this
- purpose. I have been in the habit of studying these advertisements
- for many months; they are excellent means of gauging the difference
- in the effects of the war on the two countries."
-
-During the remaining part of 1917, and during the first months of 1918
-as well, Ballin took an active interest in the preparations for the Bill
-dealing with the rebuilding of the German mercantile marine; in other
-respects, especially with regard to political matters, the course of
-events condemned him to remain passive. His notes during this period are
-few. I select the following passages from them:
-
- " ... July 17th, 1917. The Erzberger resolution which was chiefly
- aimed at Helfferich and the naval authorities has made the
- Chancellor's position untenable. Everybody turned against Herr von
- Bethmann, and General von Ludendorff informed me by telephone that
- he would resign if Bethmann remained in office.
-
- "I then had a lengthy talk with His Excellency v. Valentini who
- agreed that it was necessary for the Chancellor to retire; but he
- found it just as difficult as other people to name a suitable
- successor. Vienna had raised strong objections to the appointment
- of Prince Buelow, and, acting upon Valentini's suggestion, I made
- up my mind to approach the Kaiser with a view to discussing with
- him the situation which appeared to me fraught with the greatest
- danger. I therefore asked His Excellency von Reischach to arrange
- such a meeting for me, but on Thursday night I was rung up from
- headquarters and informed that Hindenburg and Ludendorff were
- already on their way to the Kaiser to report to His Majesty on this
- subject. Under these circumstances I did not like to interfere, and
- on Friday I withdrew my application for an interview. The Kaiser
- has told the two generals that he had accepted Bethmann's
- resignation the previous evening. He is thus able to save himself
- from a perplexing situation by contending that he had to give in to
- the wishes of the Supreme Army Command.
-
- " ... July 25th, 1917. Yesterday I called on Prince Buelow at his
- Flottbek residence, and found him looking better than I had seen
- him for years. After I had left him I had the feeling that the
- Prince, who regards the whole situation with a great deal of
- misgiving, would even be willing to accept the post of Foreign
- Secretary under Michaelis himself, in order to be able to guide our
- foreign policy along sensible lines once more. Contrary to the
- reserve which he formerly showed, he now condemns Bethmann's policy
- with great bitterness. Bethmann, he maintains, by yielding to the
- demand for universal suffrage, acted like a banker on the day
- before bankruptcy who would try to save himself from disaster by
- using his clients' deposits.
-
- "The Mexico telegram[5] he treated with a good deal of sarcasm,
- remarking that it was the maddest prank since the exploits of the
- Captain of Koepenick, with which I agreed. If anyone, he said, ever
- wrote a comedy on the subject, he would scarcely venture to lay the
- plot in modern times, but would go back to the period when pigtails
- and wigs were the fashion.
-
- " ... July 30th, 1917. I had several messages over the telephone,
- as well as a visit, from Lieutenant-Colonel von Voss, the Chief of
- Staff with the Altona Army Command, who wanted to consult me as to
- whether Prince Buelow should be offered the post of Foreign
- Secretary. I am afraid, however, that there is not much chance of
- his being appointed. The Prince shares this opinion, and would not
- like the Press to make any propaganda in his favour.
-
- " ... Sept. 14th, 1917. In the meantime, on August 19th, the Kaiser
- has been to Hamburg on a one day's visit. He came from Heligoland,
- and was brimful of optimism.
-
- "He pretended to be very well satisfied with his new Chancellor,
- and was very optimistic as to a German victory, an attitude which,
- I am afraid, is not in the least justified by the situation as it
- is."
-
-In the month of September, 1917, Ballin wrote a memorandum for Dr.
-Schwander, the newly appointed Secretary of State for National Economy.
-Apart from politics this document deals with economic matters, and in
-particular with the legislation concerning these during the period of
-transition which would succeed the close of the war. Ballin gave a great
-deal of thought to these questions, and I shall refer to them later on.
-Meanwhile I will quote the text of the memorandum:
-
-_"September 6th, 1917._
-
- "The fall of Riga shows once more how far superior our military
- achievements are to the work performed by our politicians. With the
- dispatch of the Mexico telegram their folly appeared to me to have
- reached its height; but the descent from that point is but slow.
- The news recently published by the Press to the effect that the
- Federal Council is to deal with the question of the constitutional
- and administrative reforms which are to be granted to
- Alsace-Lorraine, makes me fear that some big political blunder is
- going to be committed again. It is evidently believed that, if
- Alsace-Lorraine were to be established as an independent federal
- state with perhaps some South German prince as its Grand Duke, such
- a measure would remove an obstacle to peace. I, however, consider
- it a great tactical mistake to attempt such a solution of the
- Alsace-Lorraine problem before the war is over. We must never lose
- sight of the fact that each one of the leading actors in the
- political drama has to play to his own gallery, and that therefore
- at the conclusion of peace--which in my opinion can only be one of
- compromise--French diplomacy must be able to show up something
- which the man in the street can be induced to regard as a _succes
- d'estime_. No doubt it would be easier and more to our liking to
- solve the problem in our own way, and at the initiative of our
- Government; but by doing so we would deprive ourselves of another
- possibility for compromising which we ought to keep in order to
- enable the French to retire from the struggle with a fair measure
- of success.
-
- "We have a bad habit of spoiling the chances of peace by premature
- actions intended to help it on and to prepare the way for it. Just
- think of what we did in Poland! In the same way we deliberately
- diminished the great value of the important asset which we possess
- in the shape of Belgium when we set up the Council of Flanders and
- introduced the administrative partition of that country.
-
- "Besides these political matters there are others which were better
- left alone for the present. I am thinking of the steps taken to
- regulate our economic restoration after the war. War corporations
- are springing from the ground like mushrooms after rain, and the
- preparations made in order to solve the difficult economic post-war
- problems have an ugly tendency toward establishing too many
- Government-controlled organizations. To my mind the appointment of
- a 'Government Commissioner for the period of Economic Transition'
- is altogether superfluous. We must refrain from all attempts at
- interfering by artificial means with the natural development of
- events. This, however, is precisely what the Commissioner would
- have to do. He would have to act according to instructions received
- from the Bank of Germany or from some specially created body
- dealing with the question of the foreign exchanges and the
- provision of foreign bills.
-
- "My belief is that our foreign exchanges which have so completely
- got out of order will prove an excellent means of diminishing the
- hatred against us and of making our enemies less disinclined to
- resume business with us. The Americans who are now able to obtain
- goods to the value of M 6.20 for their dollar, instead of M 4.20,
- as they used to do, will soon discover their liking for us again.
-
- "Another point is that the coming peace, even if we derive no other
- gain from it, will enormously raise German prestige all over the
- world. Prussia became a European Power after the Seven Years' War,
- in spite of the fact that the peace treaty brought her neither a
- territorial nor a financial gain, merely confirming the right of
- Frederick the Great to the possessions he had defended in the war.
- Prestige, however, means credit, and this circumstance makes me
- believe that all these anxious discussions of the foreign exchange
- question and of the need for controlling German payments abroad are
- just as superfluous as the Government control of our economic
- activities during the period of transition.
-
- "The nations now at war will be impoverished after the war, and the
- state of our exchange and the high prices of raw material will
- compel us to live from hand to mouth as far as the importation of
- raw material is concerned. Pending the return of normal conditions,
- no sensible manufacturer will want to import more raw material than
- he urgently requires.
-
- "I therefore think we ought to try to induce the Government to
- desist from its proposed control of trade and industries, and to
- restore the old conditions. If the Government's proposal to carry
- on under its own management large sections of our import and export
- trade--in order to make these valuable sources of profit available
- for the reduction of its debts--were allowed to materialize, our
- economic doom would be certain, however attractive the plan might
- be in view of the huge national debt. One must be careful not to
- ignore the fact that the flourishing state of trade and
- manufactures is always largely due to the existence of personal
- relations.
-
- "If I think of the lessons of the past forty years--a period during
- which the freedom of trade, the freedom of industrial enterprise,
- and the freedom of shipping have led to marvellous successes and to
- the accumulation of huge wealth--I ask myself: 'How is it possible
- that a wise statesman could seriously occupy himself with the plan
- of establishing a Government-bound system in place of it?' How, I
- ask you, can a State-managed industrial organization avail itself
- of the advantages to be had when trade is booming, or to guard
- itself against the losses when there is a slump? What will be the
- attitude of such an organization towards dealings in futures and
- speculation, both of which are indispensable forms of modern
- business enterprise? True, it has been suggested that these
- difficulties could be overcome if some business men were requested
- to accept appointments under this system, and if so-called 'mixed'
- concerns worked by the co-operation of public funds and private
- capital were established. May Heaven grant that this will never be
- done! I am sure you have had even more to do than I with business
- men who had been promoted to the higher dignity of Government
- officials. Most of them have turned out complete failures in their
- new spheres; they have become more bureaucratic than our
- bureaucrats themselves; their initiative and their eagerness to
- take upon themselves responsibilities have never lasted very long.
- Let there always be a fair field and no favour! Personal relations
- and personal efficiency are all that we need for the rebuilding of
- our national economic system. The 'mixed' concerns are bad because
- they lack the necessary elasticity, because they disregard the
- personal equation, and because they impede the indispensable
- freedom of action.
-
- "I am quite prepared for these views of mine to meet with much
- criticism. People will say: 'All that is very well, but the
- Government's huge indebtedness compels it to take recourse to
- extraordinary measures.' Quite right, but would it not be much
- wiser to reduce this indebtedness by increasing direct and indirect
- taxation, instead of depriving those who have proved during the
- past few decades what they can do of the means that have made them
- so efficient?
-
- "Even among the efficient business men, unless they be born
- geniuses, a distinction must be drawn between those who can make
- profits and those who can organize. The former kind--who are,
- moreover, but few and far between--will never submit to the
- personal restrictions to which they would be subjected in
- state-managed or 'mixed' concerns. The second kind alone, however,
- would never make any concern prosper.
-
- "Another consideration is that the enemy countries would view with
- much suspicion any such institutions controlled partly or wholly
- by the Government. I remember quite well the scant respect with
- which the French delegates were treated at the International
- Shipping Conferences before the war. Everyone knew that the big
- French shipping companies, owing to the huge Government subsidies,
- had to put up with a great deal of supervision on the part of the
- Government, and that they could often vote neither for nor against
- the most important proposals with which the Conference had to deal,
- because they had first to obtain the consent of the Government
- commissioner. They were, therefore, simply ignored, as it was clear
- that they could raise no counter-proposals at their own initiative.
-
- "And truly there is every reason for us to use the utmost caution
- whenever any questions connected with the reconstruction of our
- country are concerned. The excellent Dr. Naumann, with his
- 'Berlin--Bagdad' slogan, has already smashed a good many window
- panes which will have to be paid for after the war by the producing
- classes. The suggestion that an economic union of the Central
- European countries should be established was put forward at a most
- inopportune moment, and the propaganda in its favour was bound to
- bring about the retaliatory measures agreed upon by our enemies at
- the Paris Economic Conference.
-
- "The resolutions of this Conference were of little practical
- importance to us until the day when America entered the field
- against us. If the United States assents to them, it will become
- possible to enforce them, and for this reason I am watching the
- further development of the economic question with growing concern.
- I maintain that peace negotiations should only be started after a
- previous agreement has been arrived at between the belligerents to
- the effect that, on the conclusion of peace, the commercial
- relations formerly existing between them should be restored as far
- as possible, and that the resolutions passed at the Paris Economic
- Conference and at the Central European Conference should be
- rescinded. Such an attitude, however, can only be taken up by our
- delegates if they agree that the former commercial treaties, no
- matter whether they are still running or whether they have elapsed,
- should automatically become valid again for a fairly extensive
- period of time after the close of the war. The disadvantages which
- some of these treaties involve for us are easily outbalanced by the
- advantages secured by the others.
-
- "Our Government cannot be reminded too often that it is necessary
- to consult experienced men of business in all such questions. Since
- the early days of the war I have vainly tried to convince Herr v.
- Bethmann of this necessity. After all, nobody can possibly be an
- expert in everything. Yesterday, when reading the letters of Gustav
- Freytag to his publisher, Mr. Hirzel, I came across the following
- admirable piece of self-criticism: 'I do not know yet what is to
- become of my work; but I fear I am doing what others, better
- qualified than I, ought to be doing, and that I am leaving undone
- what I ought to do.' Every great leader in our political and
- economic life must have experienced that it is extremely
- unsatisfactory to waste one's time and energy on work which another
- man could do just as well as, or even better than, oneself. This
- the Government should remember whenever it attempts to interfere
- with the big industrial combines, such as trusts, syndicates, etc.
- Wherever a syndicate is necessary in the best interests of any
- industry, a leader will be forthcoming who will create it; and only
- in cases where inferior minds, acting for selfish reasons of their
- own, do not wish to acknowledge the need for combining, the
- Government should be asked to exercise whatever pressure it
- considers advisable in order to further the great aims that are
- involved.
-
- "I am afraid that after the war we shall lack the funds needed for
- the solution of the traffic problems with which we shall then be
- confronted, especially with regard to our inland waterways. At any
- rate, if we do build the necessary canals immediately after the
- war, we shall find ourselves compelled to charge such high rates to
- the vessels using these waterways that their advantages will
- largely tend to become illusory. Even as it is now, our trade and
- our manufactures are seriously handicapped by the high canal dues
- existing, by the tugboat monopoly, etc. A really far-sighted policy
- which would make it its principal object to assist the progress of
- our foreign trade would have to guard against the mistaken idea
- that the levying of high rates was the only means of obtaining
- interest on the capital invested. After all, even the turnpikes had
- to be abolished in the end.
-
- "The agitation in favour of separating from Russia the Ukraine,
- Finland, and other parts inhabited by alien peoples--an agitation
- which is becoming noisier every day--troubles me very much. Since
- the early days of the war I have maintained that it must be our
- main war aim to detach Russia from the Entente, and that we must
- endeavour to establish close relations between our own country and
- Russia so that the two of us shall be strong enough to face a
- possible alliance between Great Britain, the United States, and
- France. This should be our aim even now. But if we are going
- deliberately to dismember the Russian Empire and to parcel it out
- into a number of independent units, our political influence after
- the war will be slight indeed, and the result must necessarily make
- itself felt to the detriment of our whole economic life."
-
-At Ballin's suggestion, the members of the Reichstag were invited to
-attend a meeting which was to be held in Hamburg during the summer of
-1918. Large sections of people in the three Hanseatic cities viewed with
-grave concern the plans which the Government entertained for the
-economic development after the war, and the meeting had been called to
-draw the attention of the visitors to this state of affairs. Three
-principal speeches were delivered, and at the close of the meeting
-Ballin briefly recapitulated the main arguments against too much
-Government interference. Much of what he said on that occasion, and much
-of what he had written in the memorandum quoted above, has been borne
-out by the events of the recent past, even though the actual terms of
-the peace imposed on Germany were much more unfavourable than he had
-expected them to be. In addressing himself to the Vice President of the
-Reichstag, Geheimrat Dove, and the large number of the elected
-representatives of the German people who accepted the invitation, Ballin
-said:
-
- "We should be glad if you would see to it that the Government does
- not put a halter round our necks, and that it refrains from the
- dangerous attempt to employ barrack-room methods where economic
- questions of national and international importance are at stake.
- Let us have air, and light, and freedom to act; and we, by availing
- ourselves of our relations with the overseas countries, shall be
- able to carry out the work that lies before us....
-
- " ... I am convinced that all the measures which are contemplated
- to stabilize economic conditions during the period of transition
- from war to peace will do more harm than good. If carried into
- practice, they will merely prepare the soil for an economic
- struggle to succeed the present war of arms. We need a peace that
- is doubly secure! We cannot ask our enemies to give us freedom
- where we impose compulsion. We cannot fight for the freedom of the
- seas, and at the same time surround Central Europe with a barbed
- wire.
-
- "I do not wish to deny that in order to carry out our economic
- tasks a certain amount of Government control will be necessary.
- That, of course, goes without saying; but anything beyond it is an
- unmixed evil. If it is said to-day that the measures to be adopted
- during the period of economic transition are, in some instances,
- intended to remain in force for three years, and if it is announced
- semi-officially that the thousand and one war corporations are to
- be made use of for the purposes of this policy, and that their
- disappearance is to be very gradual--I can only sound a serious
- note of warning against any such designs. When the war is over all
- those who can do efficient work will return to their normal
- occupations; and those who then prefer to remain attached to the
- war corporations in one capacity or other are surely to some extent
- people who have discovered some hidden charms in these
- institutions, or, if not, they are persons who, fearful of the
- risks connected with the unfettered interplay of forces, feel that
- they are better off under the protecting wing of the Government. If
- you are going to entrust the future of our country to such
- organizations for better or worse, the economic war after the war,
- as I have said before, will be sure to follow, and you will have to
- face a war that will last years and years."
-
-As regards the closing months of the war--which are also the closing
-months of Ballin's life--it must suffice to refer here to one event
-only; one, however, which is of dramatic significance. I am speaking of
-Ballin's last meeting with the Kaiser. His notes on this subject,
-roughly sketched though they are, require no further comment. I
-reproduce them in full:
-
-_"Hamfelde, August 25th (Sunday), 1918._
-
- "Last Tuesday Herr Deters[6] rang me up to ask me on behalf of Hugo
- Stinnes if I would meet him in Berlin on the Thursday.
- Lieut.-Colonel Bauer, one of Ludendorff's aides-de-camp, a
- gentleman largely responsible for the Pan-German leanings of the
- General and for his close association with the interests of the big
- manufacturers, had been to see Stinnes, and on the strength of the
- information he had received from Lieut.-Colonel Bauer he thought it
- advisable to have a talk with me. I declined the invitation because
- I expected that the work they wanted me to do would be anything but
- pleasant.
-
- "Next morning Herr Deters rang me up again and told me that Stinnes
- would call on me in Hamburg on Friday morning.
-
- "I left for Hamfelde on Wednesday afternoon, but returned to town
- again on Thursday, because Stinnes had arranged to call on me as
- early as 10.30 a.m. on Friday.
-
- "The proposed meeting thus took place on Friday, August 23rd, from
- 10.40 a.m. to 1.15 p.m. Stinnes, with admirable frankness and
- directness, started our conversation by stating that the military
- situation had become much worse. Our troops, he said, began to fail
- us in our task, and the number of deserters had been very large
- lately (he mentioned, I believe, that their number was 32,000).
- Ludendorff had told the Crown Prince the plain truth; but it was
- still necessary to explain the true state of affairs to the Kaiser,
- and to make it clear to His Majesty that Hertling, who was
- completely laid up with sickness, could no longer effectively fill
- his post. The real work was done by his son, Captain v. Hertling,
- and no efforts were being made to come to a cessation of
- hostilities. In other directions, too, matters were drifting
- towards a catastrophe. The Minister of War, v. Stein, lacked the
- necessary authority. In many instances the men called up did not
- enlist at all; in Silesia large numbers of them had concealed
- themselves in the woods and forests, and their wives provided them
- with food, while no energetic steps to check these occurrences were
- taken by the Chief Army Command. I replied to Stinnes that if
- Ludendorff agreed I would be ready to undertake the unpleasant task
- of informing the Kaiser, but that it would first be necessary that
- Ludendorff and myself should come to an understanding as to whom to
- propose to His Majesty for the Chancellorship.
-
-_"Continuation. Hamburg, August 26th, 1918._
-
- "Stinnes said he thought that Ludendorff had Prince Buelow in his
- mind. I told Stinnes that Buelow, in my opinion, might perhaps be
- suitable at the head of a peace delegation, but that it was too
- late to think of him as a possible Chancellor, and that the German
- people--more particularly the Socialists--had not now the requisite
- confidence in his ability to fill the post of Chancellor. Neither
- would he be acceptable to our enemies. It would be difficult to
- persuade Great Britain, the United States and France that a prince,
- especially Prince Buelow, would seriously carry out the
- democratization of Germany. If, however, we really were to discuss
- peace at last it would be necessary that the office of Chancellor
- should be vested in a man to whom our enemies could take no
- possible exception. Stinnes perfectly agreed with me in this
- matter.
-
- "We continued to discuss other possible candidates for the post,
- but we could not agree on anyone. Finally Stinnes proposed that we
- should both go to Berlin and there continue the discussion together
- with Lieut.-Colonel Bauer, Ludendorff's representative. He would in
- the meantime report to Berlin about our conversation, and he was
- hopeful that we could see Bauer either to-night (Monday), or
- to-morrow (Tuesday, August 27th).
-
- "This morning Stinnes informed me through Deters that he had sent
- me a wire stating that the proposed meeting could not take place
- until Monday next, September 2nd, at 8 p.m. He proposed that we
- should have a preliminary meeting at the Hotel Continental at 7
- p.m. the same evening. I suggested that it would be better to fix
- this preliminary meeting at 6.30 p.m.
-
- "I must add that Bauer's (that is Ludendorff's) suggestion was that
- I should not see the Kaiser by myself, but together with Stinnes,
- Duisburg, and Krupp v. Bohlen.
-
- "I replied to Stinnes that I considered it very inadvisable for
- such a deputation to visit the Kaiser, who would never tolerate
- that four gentlemen--two of whom were perfect strangers to
- him--should speak to him about such matters. It would be better
- that Herr v. Bohlen, or, if Ludendorff attached special value to
- it, I myself should call on the Kaiser in private, and that either
- Herr v. Bohlen or I should then endeavour to induce the Kaiser to
- see the other three gentlemen as well.
-
- "Stinnes was greatly depressed and took as grave a view of the
- situation as I did myself."
-
-Ballin's notes on the Berlin meeting are confined to a few jottings,
-from which it appears that not Lieutenant-Colonel Bauer but Major v.
-Harbou in his stead took part in it, and that the question of selecting
-a suitable candidate for the Chancellorship proved impossible of a
-satisfactory solution. As a last resort, if everything else should fail,
-Ballin thought of proposing Stinnes himself, because in his opinion the
-situation demanded a man of dictatorial character and with the authority
-of a dictator.
-
-Concerning his interview with the Kaiser, Ballin wrote down the
-following notes:
-
- "I arrived at Wilhelmshoehe on the morning of September 5th, and I
- was asked to 'report' to the Kaiser at 12.45 p.m. This expression
- was chosen because the new head of the Kaiser's Civil Cabinet, Herr
- v. Berg, evidently wished to invest my visit with an official
- character which would enable him to be in attendance. After a
- while, however, the Kaiser became impatient and did not wish to
- wait till the hour appointed for the interview. So I was requested
- by telephone to hold myself in readiness by 11 o'clock.
-
- "I went to the Castle at that hour and waited in the room of the
- aide-de-camp until the Kaiser came and asked me to go for a walk
- with him. However, Herr v. Berg was also there and accompanied us.
- Consequently the conversation lost much of the directness which
- would have been highly desirable in the Kaiser's own interest, as
- well as in that of the country.
-
- "I found the Kaiser very misinformed, as usual, and full of that
- apparent buoyancy of spirit which he likes to display in the
- presence of third persons. The facts have been twisted to such an
- extent that even the serious failure of our offensive--which, at
- first, had depressed him very much--has been described to him as a
- success. It is now intended to retire to the old Hindenburg line,
- so that the only result of the offensive has been the loss of
- several hundreds of thousands of valuable lives. All this, as I
- have said, is dished up to the poor Kaiser in such a fashion that
- he remains perfectly blind to the catastrophic effect of it.
-
- "He now puts his whole trust in Herr v. Hintze, whom he evidently
- looks upon as a great light.
-
- "I told the Kaiser of my grave misgivings and made him clearly
- understand that I did not think there would be much use in entering
- into peace negotiations with Great Britain. I urged that no time
- should be lost in immediately approaching Wilson, who was an
- idealist and who had no territorial aspirations in Europe. If,
- however, the war should continue much longer Wilson would most
- probably become subject to the influences of a war party, and then
- we could no longer hope that he would still insist upon a
- settlement along the lines of his idealist programme.
-
- "The Kaiser agreed that my views were well founded, but he thought
- we ought not to enter into peace negotiations before the approach
- of autumn, by which time we should have returned to the safe
- position afforded by the Hindenburg line. Then, he thought, we
- should avail ourselves of the offer of mediation which had been
- made by the Queen of Holland.
-
- "Whenever I was too frank in my criticisms and suggestions, Herr v.
- Berg skilfully interposed. He declared to me when the Kaiser had
- left that it would not do to make His Majesty too pessimistic.
-
- "I also discussed with the Kaiser the question of doing away with
- the restrictions imposed upon the sale of perishable articles of
- food, such as butter, eggs, etc.; and I pointed out to him that the
- fixing of maximum prices and the issuing of regulations dealing
- with illicit trading merely forced the people to pay exorbitant
- prices, at the same time helping those engaged in underhand trading
- to amass huge fortunes. On this subject, too, the Kaiser fell in
- with my own views, and it was decided to release at least the
- perishable articles, and to allow them to be sold once more through
- the ordinary channels without restriction.
-
- "The Kaiser also declared that this war would soon be followed by
- another, to which he referred as the Second Carthaginian War. He
- spoke a great deal of an Anglo-American alliance which would, of
- course, be directed against Japan, and the views on political
- subjects which he expressed in this connexion showed that he is
- being very badly advised indeed.
-
- "Herr v. Berg is obviously conservative and Pan-German in his
- politics, and it seems that his influence is predominant at Court.
- Only on the Prussian suffrage question did he agree with my own
- standpoint, which is that universal suffrage must be granted now
- that the King has promised it.
-
- "Since the Kaiser and the Kaiserin, on account of the latter's
- illness, were dining alone, I joined the so-called 'Court Marshal's
- table,' together with the Countesses Keller and Rantzau, the
- gentlemen-in-waiting on the Kaiser, and the physician-in-ordinary
- and the chamberlain of the Kaiserin. The duty of acting as court
- marshal fell to General v. Gontard, as Herr v. Reischach had
- unfortunately fallen seriously ill."
-
-In order to illustrate further what has been shown to be Ballin's views
-on the character of the Kaiser, I here quote the first part of a letter
-of his, dated October 25th, 1918:
-
- "In the meantime," he writes, "Wilson's reply has been received,
- and it is certain that compliance with its terms will be equivalent
- to capitulation.
-
- "To my mind Wilson's note clearly shows that he and his allies will
- demand that the Hohenzollerns, or at any rate the Kaiser and the
- Crown Prince, shall relinquish their rights to the throne, and
- that, in consideration of such an act, they will ease their terms
- of peace.
-
- "Each of the men who are at the head of their respective
- Governments has to play to his gallery, and if these men desire to
- give their audience a convincing proof of the completeness of the
- success they have achieved, they can do no better than demand
- condign punishment for the man who has been held responsible for
- the war, and inflict it upon him. I do not believe that the Kaiser
- would grieve very much if he were given a chance now of retiring
- into private life without much loss of dignity. The war, which was
- something absolutely uncongenial to his whole nature, has had such
- bad effect on his health that it would be desirable in his own
- interest if he were enabled to retire comfortably into private
- life. He must see the force of this argument himself, and it is not
- likely that he would refuse to accept such a chance, as a refusal
- would prejudice the best interests of his country. The Kaiserin,
- however, may be expected to oppose any such solution with much
- feeling. If the Kaiser's grandson were now appointed his successor,
- and if a regent were nominated in whom everybody had confidence,
- the whole German situation would lose much of its seriousness. Of
- course, the abdication of the Kaiser would not take place without
- certain disturbances, but it would be necessary to face these
- disadvantages with a good grace. No doubt the outlook would be
- better if they could be avoided, and if the Kaiser, without losing
- his position, could be invested with rights and duties similar to
- those of the British king, who, broadly speaking, enjoys all the
- advantages of his dignity without having to take upon himself
- responsibilities which he is unable to bear. I quite believe that
- the Kaiser never derived much pleasure from his sovereign powers;
- at any rate, if he did, he has ceased to do so since this
- unfortunate war has been forced upon him."
-
-Ballin's last entry in his diary contains the following passage:
-
- "Stinnes has sent word to me that the Socialist and Centre parties
- are of opinion that I ought to be nominated to conduct the peace
- negotiations. I have told him that I should not shirk it, but that
- I should be much better pleased if somebody else would do it."
-
-This note was written on November 2nd, 1918. One short week later, on
-November 9th, his heart had ceased to beat--a heart which had so warmly
-responded to the call of his Kaiser and country, and which had succumbed
-to its excessive load of grief and sorrow.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS
-
-
-To present an exhaustive description of Albert Ballin's life-work within
-the compass of this volume is an impossible task, and the more the
-writer entered into the details of his attempt to do so, the more
-thoroughly did he realize this impossibility.
-
-The story of a life comprising thirty-two years of incessant hard work,
-only interrupted when nature's law or a very imperative behest of his
-medical adviser made it necessary, and spent at the head of an
-undertaking which, as a result of this work, developed into one of the
-greatest that the economic history of the generation just passed has
-known, cannot be told in full by means of a mere description unless it
-be accompanied by volumes of statistics which, however, convey no
-meaning to anyone except the initiated.
-
-The author, therefore, had to content himself with delineating a picture
-of his hero with a background formed by the events which he himself had
-helped to shape, and which, in many instances, had received their
-distinguishing stamp through his own genius. The essence of his
-character, and the importance of his work to his contemporaries, must
-stand out from this background as the portrait of a painter--as seen by
-himself--would stand out from a mirror. What the mirror does not show,
-and cannot show, is the immensity of the mental forces hidden below the
-surface which alone give expression to the portrait; all the factors
-which have brought about the final result--the strength, the courage,
-the daring, and the feeling of responsibility without which it would
-never have been achieved.
-
-Still more difficult it is to interpret the very essence of the
-character of him whose work we see before us, or, indeed, to give a
-comprehensible account of it to the stranger.
-
-The only way of doing justice to a man of such commanding genius as
-Ballin is to try to discover first of all the one essential root
-principle of his personality. Having succeeded in that, we shall find no
-more difficulty in reconciling the great number of apparently mutually
-contradictory traits of his character. This principle is the focus where
-all the rays of light are collected from all directions, and which forms
-the source of light, warmth, and vital energy.
-
-Albert Ballin was a born business man if ever there was one. To him the
-noble words of Schiller's lines apply: "The treasures which his ships
-carry across the oceans spell untold blessings to all who receive them."
-His whole mind was drawn towards the sea; his inborn inclinations and
-the surroundings amidst which he grew up had destined him to be a
-shipping man. To the boy Ballin the Hamburg harbour was the favourite
-playground; and the seven seas were just large enough to serve as a
-field of action for the youth and the man. There was his real home, and
-there he felt at rest. How often, indeed, has he assured us that the
-sleeplessness to which he fell an unfortunate victim whenever he was
-ashore left him as soon as he was on board ship, and that a miserable
-river barge was sufficient to have this effect on him. He was proof
-against sea-sickness, both bodily and mentally. Thus he became a
-shipping man, because it was his natural vocation; and in this chosen
-profession of his he became one of the greatest and most brilliantly
-gifted rulers the world has ever seen.
-
-Whenever there was a problem to be solved he attacked it in a spirit of
-boldness, yet tempered by the utmost conscientiousness and caution. No
-task he encountered was so big that his daring could not tackle it and
-overcome its difficulties; nothing was so insignificant that he would
-not attend to it somehow. Whatever decision his infallible instinct
-intuitively recognized as right, and to whatever idea his impulsive
-nature had given practical shape, had to pass muster during the
-sleepless hours of the night before the tribunal of his restless mind
-when, as he used to say, "everything appears wrapt up in a grey mist."
-At such times his reason began to analyse and to criticize the decisions
-he had reached during the day. Then he would often shudder at his own
-boldness, and the torments of doubt would be aggravated by the thought
-of the enormous responsibility which he bore towards his company. For it
-must be understood that from the day he joined the Hamburg-Amerika Linie
-his interests and those of the company became parts of an inseparable
-whole.
-
-The company's affairs absorbed all his thoughts at all times; the
-company's well-being was the object of his constant care; he devoted
-himself exclusively to the service of the company, and the opinions
-which he formed in his mind regarding persons and things were
-instinctively coloured according to their relationship to the company's
-affairs. The gradual progress during its infancy, the later expansion,
-and the final greatness of the company, were as the events of his own
-life to him; when the proud structure which he had raised collapsed his
-life was ended. His thoughts incessantly converged towards this very
-centre of his being. All his work, all his words and deeds, were devoted
-to the furtherance of the company's interests. He identified himself so
-completely with the company that he actually was the Packetfahrt, and
-the Packetfahrt was he. Even his love and hatred were rooted in the
-company. He remained a grateful and lifelong friend to anyone who had
-been of service to the company or to him as representing it.
-
-This highly subjective and indissoluble relationship between himself and
-the company--which it had been the dream of his life to raise to the
-highest pinnacle of prosperity--is the key to the fundamental principle
-which lies at the root of his whole complex personality. But however
-well-defined his personal individuality stood out, his subjectivity was
-nevertheless animated by a strong sense of duty. His views, for
-instance, on the essential principles governing the most perfect
-organization which modern capitalism has produced--i.e. the joint-stock
-company--were free from any tinge of personal considerations whatever.
-He was himself the responsible head of a big joint-stock company, and
-instinctively this fact exercised such a powerful influence on all his
-thoughts and feelings that it is quite impossible to arrive at a just
-appreciation of his character unless this circumstance is borne in mind.
-His character which appears so complicated to the cursory onlooker, but
-which is in reality of singular simplicity and consistency, is best
-illustrated by his reply to a question of one of his friends who had
-asked him why he did not allow some piece of scathing criticism which he
-had just expressed in private to be made public. "My dear friend," he
-said, "you forget that you are not the chairman of the board of
-directors of a joint-stock company." What he meant to convey was that
-the enmity which he would incur by expressing those views in public
-would adversely affect the firm of which he was the head, and that the
-interests of his company compelled him to impose upon himself
-restrictions which he could ignore in his private capacity.
-
-Although he had nothing but scorn for the very suggestion that this
-company should receive at any time any subsidies from public funds, he
-made it to the fullest extent subservient to the needs of the public and
-of the nation at large. He often remarked that such gigantic concerns
-as, e.g., the Hamburg-Amerika Linie, are no longer private ventures
-purely and simply. The ties that bind them to the whole economic life of
-the nation--and, for the matter of that, to the world in general--are so
-close and so manifold that it would be disastrous to ignore them or to
-sever them. Hundreds of industrial, commercial, and agricultural
-enterprises were lavishly supplied with work through the orders they
-received from the Hamburg-Amerika Linie in connexion with the building
-and the equipment of its steamers and with the needs of its
-organizations on shore. Its hundreds of thousands of passengers and
-emigrants, and the huge volume of German-made products and manufactured
-articles carried on board its vessels, spread the German name and German
-fame throughout the civilized world. Hence, to Albert Ballin the
-national flag and that of the Hapag were two symbols expressive of but
-one idea.
-
-A man who, like Ballin, was at the head of the biggest German shipping
-company and therefore also, by implication, one of the leading spirits
-in the economic life of Germany, could not very well hold himself aloof
-where high politics were concerned. The more the economic problems
-gained in importance, the greater became their bearing on the course of
-the country's politics. Ballin, however, would never have become a
-professional politician from inclination, because he invariably refused
-to be mixed up with the strife of parties. He never officially belonged
-to any political party; and although he made friends with members of all
-the non-Socialist parties, his general outlook on politics was mainly
-coloured by Liberal views, and he was a firm believer in Free Trade.
-Whenever questions dealing with the interests of shipping and trade were
-involved, he had no difficulty in making the responsible people listen
-to his claims and to his suggestions, but he never tried to make his
-influence felt on purely political affairs unless they affected the
-country's vital international interests. His lengthy and extensive
-travels to the countries of Europe, to the North American continent, and
-to the Far East, had broadened his outlook. His profession as a shipping
-man not only brought him into frequent contact with the heads of the big
-shipping companies all the world over, but also with a number of the
-financial magnates and industrial captains of Great Britain, the United
-States, and other countries of economic importance. He took rank with
-the greatest economic leaders as an equal, and this unchallenged
-position of commanding authority was reflected by the esteem in which he
-was held by the principal statesmen and parliamentarians. He was
-familiar with the essential and vital needs of other nations, and he
-therefore not only stood up for the national rights whenever they
-appeared in jeopardy, but he also raised his warning voice against a
-policy provocative of conflicts whenever he thought it possible to avoid
-them. Whoever is conscious of his strength is also aware of the
-limitations set to his power.
-
-In politics as well as in business he held that "a lean compromise was
-preferable to a fat lawsuit," as the German proverb puts it. It has been
-mentioned elsewhere in this volume that Ballin was essentially the man
-of compromise. It is very probable that the experiences of his early
-life had helped to develop this outstanding feature of his personality.
-It may be assumed that he, a young man of unknown Jewish family, found
-his path beset with difficulties in a city-state like Hamburg, where the
-influence of the wealthy patriciate of the merchant classes was
-supreme, and that he was looked upon as an upstart even after he had
-reached a prominent position himself. The casual observer is far too
-much inclined to underestimate the conservative character--both
-politically and socially--of the three Hanseatic cities. Still, evidence
-is not wanting that Ballin's unusual gifts were occasionally recognized
-and appreciated even in the days of his early career. An English
-journalist, for instance, who met him some time about 1895,
-characterized him by the following words: "He struck me as a great man;
-otherwise nothing so incongruous as such a type of man at the head of a
-big steamship line could be imagined." That Field-Marshal Count
-Waldersee honoured him by his friendship at an early period has been
-mentioned in a different chapter of this volume. And even in patrician
-Hamburg he found an immensely powerful friend and patron shortly after
-he had entered the services of the Packetfahrt. This was no less a man
-than the shipowner Carl Laeisz, the most eminent representative of the
-"House of Laeisz."
-
-The firm of F. Laeisz, which was successfully owned by its founder,
-Ferdinand, his son Carl, and his grandson Carl Ferdinand, has stood
-sponsor to all the more important shipping companies established in
-Hamburg, and through its great authority helped them all to get over the
-critical years of their early youth. The sound principles by which the
-firm was guided might sometimes lead to much disappointment on the part
-of the shareholders, but they proved to be of unsurpassable benefit to
-the companies concerned, and nothing illustrates them better than the
-oft-told episode of the shareholder who went to see Carl Laeisz,
-complaining that the Hamburg South American S.S. Company did not pay any
-dividend. "The object of the company is to carry on the shipping trade,
-and not to distribute dividends," was the blunt but characteristic
-reply. Being thoroughly unconventional in his habits, Carl Laeisz--no
-less than his singularly gifted son, who was one of those rare men whom
-it was really impossible to replace--nevertheless did invaluable service
-in connexion with the establishment of new firms in Hamburg, and with
-the encouragement of existing ones.
-
-It was a great compliment to Ballin that in 1888, when he had only been
-associated with the Packetfahrt for a couple of years, and when the
-directors asked for authority to increase the joint-stock capital of the
-company from 20 to 25 million marks, Carl Laeisz informed them in
-advance that, at the general meeting of the shareholders, he would move
-an increase of 10 instead of 5 millions, and that this motion was
-unanimously carried. Those who have known Carl Laeisz personally will
-appreciate what it meant to Ballin when, by way of giving him an
-introduction to the London firm of Messrs. J. Henry Schroeder, Laeisz
-scribbled the following note on the back of one of Ballin's visiting
-cards:
-
- "It gives me pleasure to introduce to you the bearer of this card,
- whom I am proud to name my friend, and to recommend him to your
- protection and to your unfailing kindness.
-
-"Sincerely yours,
-"(_Signed_) LAEISZ."
-
-
-
-As this card was found among the papers and documents which Ballin left
-at the time of his death, it would seem that it was not used for its
-intended purpose, but that he preferred to keep it as a souvenir of the
-man whom he always remembered with gratitude and affection, and of whose
-life he could tell a good number of characteristic anecdotes. The
-telegram of which the text is given below is also highly typical of Carl
-Laeisz. I have not been able to discover what was the occasion of
-sending it, but I am inclined to think that it must be in some manner
-connected with the conference held in the Berlin Royal Castle, and
-referred to on an earlier page, at which Ballin first attracted the
-Kaiser's attention. The text is as follows:
-
- "Persons who give in without a protest are miserable creatures, and
- being such, they are deserving of nothing but contempt. Suggest
- that you obstinately stick to Hamburg point of view, not only from
- personal conviction, but for other weighty reasons as well. Meeting
- hardly convened simply to induce you to give in."
-
-Although there is scarcely anyone to whom the name of a Hamburg patriot
-can be applied with greater justice than to Ballin, and although there
-are few people who have done more to promote the well-being and the
-prosperity of their native city, and who have had a better appreciation
-of one of the most lovable features of her inhabitants, viz. their dry,
-unconventional, and kindly humour, it would be wrong to assume that this
-local patriotism of Ballin made him blind to the shortcomings and
-deficiencies of his native city. On the contrary, his eminent sense of
-the realities of life made him see most clearly the points of weakness
-in the position of Hamburg, e.g. those connected with the system of her
-finances. The so-called Koehlbrand agreement, which, after a hard
-struggle, put an end to the long controversy between Hamburg and Prussia
-by stipulating that the course of the lower Elbe should be regulated
-without detriment to the interests of the town of Harburg, imposed such
-a vast amount of expenditure upon Hamburg, and the Prussian local
-authorities concerned insisted on securing the payment of such large
-compensations to the owners whose rights were adversely affected by the
-improvement of the waterway, that it might well be doubted whether
-Hamburg could shoulder these enormous burdens.
-
-It speaks volumes for Ballin's unprejudiced mind that he frequently
-maintained nothing would be of greater benefit to Hamburg than her
-renunciation of her sovereignty as a city-state in favour of
-incorporation with Prussia. Prussia, he argued, was her natural
-hinterland, after all; and if she consented to be thus incorporated, she
-would be such a precious jewel in the crown of Prussia that she could
-secure without an effort all the advantages and privileges which
-Prussia, by pursuing the strictly Prussian line in her politics, now
-actually prevented her from acquiring. In course of time, however, her
-present isolation would undermine the foundations of her existence,
-especially if and when the increasing volume of traffic passing through
-her port should demand a further expansion of the latter, and,
-consequently, a further rise in the financial burdens. In that case the
-unnatural position which resulted from the fact that the "Elbe delta"
-belonged to two different states, and which had its origin in the
-political history of the district, would make itself felt with all its
-drawbacks, and the ultimate sufferer would be the country as a whole of
-which Hamburg, after all, was the connecting link with the nations
-beyond the sea.
-
-These are the same arguments and considerations which are used when the
-modern problem of a "Greater Hamburg" is under discussion, with this
-difference only, that in Ballin's time the only solution which was
-regarded as possible was that Hamburg should cast in her lot with her
-Prussian neighbour.
-
-Ballin repeatedly vented the full force of his sarcasm against the
-advocates of an "out-and-out Hamburg policy" to whom his own views
-sounded like heresy, a policy which found perhaps its most comic
-expression in the speech of a former Hamburg burgomaster who referred to
-the King of Prussia as "our illustrious ally." Ballin did not recognize
-the existence of a line of demarcation which, as many lesser minds
-imagined, separated republican Hamburg from the rest of Germany. In
-reality there is no such separation; Hamburg, indeed, receives year
-after year a constant influx of human material and of ideas from her
-German hinterland, without which she could not exist at all, and in
-spite of which she has never had a superfluity, but--at times, at
-least--rather a deficiency of specially gifted citizens. This latter
-circumstance and the frequent absence of that quality of mental
-alertness which Bismarck, in speaking of the German character in
-general, used to designate as the missing "dash of champagne in the
-blood" once made Ballin say: "I quite see that what this town wants is
-10,000 Jews. I do not, by any means, shut my eyes to the disagreeable
-qualities of the Jewish character, but still, another 10,000 of them
-would be a decided advantage." This utterance confirms how free from
-prejudice he was where the Jewish question was concerned. Although not
-at all orthodox, but rather indifferent in his religious views, he was
-far too proud to disavow his origin or his religion, or to change the
-latter. Of someone who had changed his name, he said, in a tone of
-bitter reproach, that he had insulted his father.
-
-Ballin's relations with the working classes and his attitude towards the
-Labour question were not such as the Socialist papers were fond of
-alleging, especially at the time when the Labour controversy was at its
-height, and when strikes were constantly occurring or threatening. The
-first big strike affecting Ballin's special sphere of activity was that
-of the Hamburg dock labourers in 1896. It was caused by wages disputes
-which the Packetfahrt tried in vain to settle by raising the wages paid
-to the men. The interests of the employers in the ensuing struggle were
-not, however, specially represented by the associations of the shipping
-firms, but were looked after by the big "Association of Employers of
-Labour," and therefore the attitude taken up by the employers as a whole
-was not determined by practical considerations from the point of view of
-the shipping companies. The Packetfahrt, however, seems to have
-emphasized the necessity of being guided by such practical
-considerations, as may be inferred from the fact that the Packetfahrt
-was the only one among the large firms of employers which advocated from
-the outset that certain concessions should be granted in respect of the
-demands put forward by the workmen. Although, as has been remarked, the
-company succeeded in seeing its recommendation adopted, the strike
-started on November 18th, 1896. At first it was restricted to the
-dockers, but the number of the strikers was soon swelled by the adhesion
-of the quay-labourers and of several other categories of port-labourers
-and seamen. When this had occurred, and when the Packetfahrt suggested
-that steps should be taken on the part of the employers with the object
-of reaching a friendly settlement, these suggestions did not secure a
-majority in the counsels of the employers, and it was in regard to this
-that Ballin's notes, under date of December 9th, contain the following
-entry: "We are continuing our efforts to induce the Employers'
-Association and the Shipowners' Association to give the strikers a
-chance of an honourable retreat. What we propose in detail is that the
-men should be asked to resume work of their own accord in consideration
-of which the employers would promise to submit their grievances to a
-_bona fide_ examination. All our efforts have failed because of the
-attitude taken up by the Employers' Association. We can only hope that
-the Senate will consent to mediate in the conflict." This body, however,
-was afraid of being accused of prejudice in favour of the employers, and
-declined to act as mediator. "It is very much against my wish,"
-Ballin's notes continue, "that our own interests are represented by the
-Employers' Association," and on December 23rd, he wrote: "Meanwhile, the
-Senate, in reply to the resolution passed by the men, has asked them to
-resume work unconditionally against the promise to look into their
-grievances, and as far as they appeared to be justified, to redress them
-after a joint conference had been held between the employers and the
-strikers. This offer of a compromise was rejected by the workmen." The
-employers were able to get the most urgent work done by substitute
-labour, and the strike came to an end in the early days of February.
-
-Among the subsequent Labour troubles those of 1907 are of special
-significance. In that year, after a strike of the dockers and the
-seamen, all those employers who had occasion to employ any workmen in
-the port of Hamburg founded an organization somewhat on the lines of a
-Labour Bureau, called the _Hafenbetriebsverein_. The termination of the
-strike just referred to was brought about by Ballin's personal
-influence, and it was he who conducted the prolonged negotiations with
-the heads of the Labour organization. Later on, in 1911, when the
-_Hafenbetriebsverein_ began to conclude agreements with this
-organization by which the wages for the various categories of dock
-labourers were fixed--a policy which did not exactly meet with the full
-approval of large sections of employers, it was again due to Ballin's
-influence that these agreements were generally accepted. It is just
-possible that a certain event, insignificant in itself, may have
-strengthened Ballin's natural tendency towards a settlement along the
-lines of a compromise. As has been said before, the year 1907, which,
-from the business point of view, had been excellent (at least, during
-the first six months), and during which the above-mentioned strike
-occurred, was succeeded by a year which brought exceedingly
-unsatisfactory earnings to the company. Ballin did what he had done on a
-previous occasion, in 1901: he sent a memorandum to all the employees of
-the firm asking them to cut down expenses to the lowest possible extent,
-to contribute their share towards a more economical working of every
-department, and to submit to him any suggestions of their own as to how
-the necessary retrenchment could be effected. I was instructed to
-examine the general expenses account with a view to finding out in what
-way a reduction would be possible, and I drew Ballin's attention to the
-fact that the considerable sums which had to be spent in 1907 in
-consequence of the strike would, of course, not appear again in the
-balance-sheet for 1908, so that this would lead to an automatic
-reduction of the working expenses. Ballin was surprised to see how large
-this particular item was, and the whole occurrence proved once more that
-a lean agreement would have been preferable to a fat lawsuit.
-
-As Ballin was pre-eminently a man whose mind was bent on practical work
-and on the production of practical results, it is but natural that he
-was greatly interested in the practical aspects of social politics, and
-that he applied its principles to the activities in which he was engaged
-as far as he thought he was justified in doing so. Not in peace times
-only, but also during the war did he hold these views, and when he was
-connected with the work of provisioning the civil population, and,
-later, with that of preparing the economic post-war reconstruction, he
-was frequently brought into contact with men who occupied prominent
-positions in the world of Labour.
-
-His capacity for work was enormous and seemed wellnigh inexhaustible. He
-made a most lavish use of it, especially in the early part of his life,
-and the personal assistance he required with his work was of the
-slightest. His greatest aid, indeed, was his marvellous memory, which
-almost enabled him to do his work without ever referring to the files of
-letters and documents. He could always recall to his mind every phase of
-past events, and every detail of all the ships he had built or
-purchased, and he was never wavering in the opinion he had formed of
-anyone who had ever crossed his path, because such opinion was founded
-on facts.
-
-Very gradually only did his fellow-members on the Board of Directors
-succeed in persuading him to refrain from putting in an appearance at
-his office on Sundays, and to do such Sunday work as he wanted to do at
-home. The telegraph and the telephone always kept him busy, both on
-weekdays and on Sundays. Even on his travels and on his holidays he
-wanted to be informed of all that was going on, and he could be very
-annoyed when any important news had been withheld from him, or when he
-believed that this had been the case, so that his secretariat, to be on
-the safe side, had gone rather far in forwarding on his correspondence
-when he was away from town. When I first entered upon my duties with him
-he had just returned from a rest cure at Kissingen. He pointed at the
-huge pile of letters that had been forwarded to him on his so-called
-holiday, adding, in a tone of bitterness: "You see, every expansion of a
-business becomes a curse to its leader." Sometimes his absences from
-Hamburg would amount to as much as eight months per annum, and it was
-certainly no easy task always to know what to send on and what to hold
-over until after his return. To do so one had to be well acquainted with
-all the details of each transaction and to know what was important,
-especially what was important to him; and if one wished to see his mind
-at ease it was necessary never to let him think that anything was kept
-back from him. Any apparent neglect in this respect he was apt to
-regard as a personal slight. And yet the time which he had at his
-disposal for attending to current correspondence, both when at the
-office and when travelling, was but limited.
-
-The waiting-room outside his private office was nearly always crowded
-with intending visitors. The callers were carefully sifted, and all
-those who were strangers and those who had come without having an
-appointment were passed on to someone else as far as this was possible.
-Great credit is due to his ever faithful personal attendant at home and
-on his travels, Carl Fischer, for the perfect tact which he showed in
-the performance of this difficult task.
-
-In spite of all this sifting, however, the time left for getting through
-a day's mail was not sufficient. I therefore, shortly after entering the
-company's services, made it a point to submit to his notice only those
-letters which I considered of real importance. According to the mood in
-which he seemed to be I then acquainted him with the contents of as much
-of the remainder as I thought it wise to do. I believe I gradually
-succeeded in acquiring a fair amount of skill in reading his mind, and
-this facility enabled me to avoid more dangerous rocks than one. I tried
-to proceed along similar lines when he was away from Hamburg, especially
-when he was taking a holiday. On such occasions I forwarded on to him
-only the important letters, taking great care, however, that he was not
-kept out of touch with any matter of real consequence, so that he should
-never feel that he was left in the dark about anything. After some time
-I had the satisfaction of being told by him when he returned from a
-holiday that that had been "his first real holiday since he had joined
-the Packetfahrt."
-
-Once one had learnt to understand his way of reasoning and his
-individual traits, it was not difficult to know how to treat him. If a
-mistake had been made, or if some oversight had taken place, the most
-foolish thing would be not to tell him so at once. To act otherwise
-would mean the immediate and permanent forfeiture of his confidence,
-whilst an open admission of the mistake would strengthen his faith
-enormously. He hated to be shut out from the actual practice of the
-company's business by a Chinese wall of bureaucratic control. Whenever
-such a wall was in process of erection he quickly and inexorably pulled
-it down, and he always remained in personal contact with every
-department and with every prominent member of the staff as far as the
-size of the huge undertaking enabled him to do so. For this reason he
-but rarely, and only when the pressure of other business was encroaching
-too much on him, omitted to receive at his private office the captains
-who came to make their reports to the directors. He knew, of course,
-every one of them personally, as he had appointed many of them himself
-years ago. He was no stranger to their various idiosyncrasies, and he
-knew all their good qualities. He was also personally acquainted with a
-great many of those unconventional and often somewhat blunt but always
-good-natured individuals of humble rank who seem to thrive wherever much
-shipping is going on. He was not too proud to write an appreciative
-article on the death of one of them, which, since it reflects high
-credit on his own generosity and kindness of heart, ought not to be
-allowed to be forgotten altogether. It was published by the _Hamburger
-Fremdenblatt_, to the staff of which the subject of his appreciation
-might, in a sense, be said to have belonged.
-
- KUSKOP.
-
- "It was not until my return from England that I learnt, through
- reading the _Fremdenblatt_, the news of the death of Karl
- Kuskop--news which made me feel very sad indeed. Kuskop ranked high
- among the few remaining real 'characters' of whom he was a type,
- and as I was not able to pay my last respects to him I feel a
- desire to do honour to his memory by a few words of personal
- recollection, although Dr. Obst has already done so by means of an
- excellent article of his own. For I believe I owe a few words of
- farewell to a man of whom I have heard nothing but what was good
- and generous throughout the better part of thirty years.
-
- "Karl Kuskop was a 'character' in the best sense of the term. He
- was as harmless as a big child; and although he could scarcely be
- said to be prominently gifted for his work, he did, indirectly at
- least, a great deal of good within his humble sphere. His
- popularity amongst all sorts and conditions of men connected with
- shipping was tremendous. My personal acquaintance with him dates
- back to the early trial trips of our steamers and similar
- occasions--occasions at which Kuskop was present as the
- 'representative' of the _Fremdenblatt_. I still have a vivid
- recollection of a magnificent summer evening when we, a party of
- about eighty people, left the passenger reception halls by our
- saloon-steamer _Blankensee_ on our way to Brunshausen where we
- intended to go on board one of our new boats which was ready for
- her trial trip. Kuskop, who was wearing his yachting cap and was
- armed with a pair of huge binoculars, had taken up a position on
- deck. He stood out very conspicuously, and a port labourer who was
- working on board an English steamer as soon as he saw him, raised
- the cry of _'Fremdenblatt_.' This cry was immediately taken up by
- the people on the quay-sides, on the river-vessels, on the
- ferry-boats, on the barges, and all other vessels in the
- neighbourhood, and developed into quite an ovation which was as
- spontaneous as it was popular. The worthy Kuskop appeared to be
- visibly gaining in importance; he had taken off his cap, and the
- tears trickled down his kindly face.
-
- "He well deserved this popularity. For years and years he
- unfailingly saw to it that the Hamburg steamers, at whatever port
- of the globe they arrived, found a _Fremdenblatt_ waiting for them,
- thus providing a valuable and much appreciated link between the
- crews and the old home. I myself have also reaped the benefit of
- his attentive care. Years ago when I was making a trip round the
- world I found the _Fremdenblatt_ waiting for me wherever I went;
- and after having been so much out of touch with the civilized world
- for weeks, that even Kuskop's genius could not discover my
- whereabouts, I was agreeably surprised to find on arriving at
- Vancouver all the old copies of the _Fremdenblatt_ that had failed
- to reach me, carefully piled up in one of the sleeping compartments
- of the saloon carriage which had been placed at my disposal for the
- railway journey from the Pacific to the Atlantic seaboard.
-
- "At that time I personally experienced the pleasant sensation--of
- which our captains and the other officers had often spoken to
- me--which one feels on reading the back copies of old newspapers,
- calling up, as it does, vivid recollections of home. In company
- with my wife, and some German officers who were returning from the
- scene of unrest in China in order to complete their convalescence
- at home, I greedily devoured the contents of the old papers from
- beginning to end, thus passing in a delightful way the time taken
- by travelling the long distance from Vancouver to Montreal. The
- idea, which was afterwards made use of by Oskar Blumenthal in a
- witty article, occurred to me to edit a paper which would publish
- the news of the day a week after it had been reported, and even
- then only as much of it as had proved to be true. Such a newspaper
- would save us a great deal of unnecessary worry, as the contents of
- this 'Periodical for the Dissemination of Truthful News' would be
- sifted to a minimum.
-
- "But it is time to cut short this digression. When I met my friend
- Kuskop again after my trip, it was at Stettin on the occasion of a
- launch. He happened to be in especially high spirits, and even more
- communicative than usual. He then told me the tale of his friend
- Senator Petersen, and it is such a good story that it would be a
- pity not to record it here.
-
- "It had become customary for the ships' captains and the other
- ships' officers who could boast his friendship to treat poor Kuskop
- to the wildest canards in return for his supplying them with
- reading matter from their far-away home. One afternoon, when they
- were sitting over a bottle of old port in Hermann Bade's wine
- restaurant at Stubbenhuk and it was getting late, one of them--he
- always referred to them as 'them young fools'--told him that a
- river barge loaded with arsenic had just sprung a leak in the
- harbour, so that it might become necessary to prohibit the use of
- water for drinking purposes for some time. It was about five
- o'clock and Kuskop, according to his own account, did not even stop
- to finish his glass of port, but hurried to the offices of 'his'
- paper which, in its next edition, published it as a fact that a
- quantity of arsenic had vitiated the water of the Elbe. Next
- morning, when Kuskop was still soundly asleep, two detectives
- appeared at the house in which he lived, and escorted him to
- headquarters, where he was locked up. At ten o'clock he was taken
- up before Mr. Livonius--or whoever was the chief of police at that
- time--who, with much abuse, demanded particulars concerning the
- arsenic affair. Kuskop, seeing at once that one of 'them young
- fools' had been pulling his leg, refused to supply any information
- whatever. He was then brought before Senator Petersen, who, with a
- great display of persuasion, tried to make him reveal the name of
- his informant. Kuskop, however, remained obstinate, and the
- Senator, changing his methods from persuasion to coercion, had him
- locked up again. He remained in confinement till five o'clock in
- the afternoon, and was then taken before Senator Petersen for the
- second time, who now peremptorily demanded that he should state his
- informant's name. Kuskop replied: 'Herr Senator, if you were in my
- position, you would not give him away yourself.' The Senator turned
- round to the police officials and said: 'Mr. Kuskop is a gentleman,
- you see. We shall not get anything out of him. The best thing you
- can do is to chuck him out,' which suggestion was thereupon
- promptly and most efficiently carried out by some of those who were
- present.
-
- "Another of his adventures he confided to me when a trial trip had
- taken us right out into the North Sea. One of 'them young fools,'
- he said, whom he regularly met at Mutzenbecher's tavern, had told
- him as the very latest news that Captain Kier had been taken into
- custody at Rio on the unfounded allegation of having committed
- theft. Kuskop, feeling somewhat sceptical on hearing this
- intelligence, but not believing himself justified in depriving the
- readers of the _Fremdenblatt_ of such a highly interesting item of
- news, thought he would be extra careful this time, and so did not
- mention the captain by name, but merely referred to him as 'a Mr.
- K----, captain of a Hamburg steamer.' This happened in the good old
- times when there were still real winters in Hamburg, and when the
- Elbe was sometimes ice-bound for months. The Hamburg steamers were
- then compelled to take up winter quarters at Glueckstadt--of all
- places--and Kuskop used to establish a 'branch office' at that town
- on such occasions. As bad luck would have it, he was fated one day
- to meet Captain Kier there, who, with some of his friends, was
- dining at his hotel. A huge tureen of soup with an enormous ladle
- stood on the table in front of the captain, who was just about to
- serve the soup when Kuskop entered the room. Without a moment's
- hesitation the captain seized the ladle, the tureen, and everything
- he could lay his hands on, and hurled them at him. He was, as the
- latter afterwards confessed to me with the most innocent
- expression, offended by the newspaper report, because, as it
- happened, he was the only captain K---- on the route from Hamburg
- to Rio at that particular time. He subsequently brought an action
- against Kuskop, who had to retire from his business for some weeks
- in order to get over the consequences of the mistake he had made.
-
- "These are only two of the minor adventures from Kuskop's ample
- store of reminiscences. It is a pity that our sea-faring men are so
- reticent; otherwise they would be able to furnish a volume of
- material concerning Kuskop that would far exceed that relating to
- Kirchhoff, that other well-known Hamburg 'character.' I wish
- someone would collect all the Kuskop stories; for I do not believe
- that we shall ever again come across such a perfect specimen of his
- kind as he was, and it would be sad to allow such a man to be
- forgotten.
-
- "Kuskop, however, was not only a 'character': he was also a 'real
- good sort,' and he has been of real service to all those who have
- ever travelled on Hamburg vessels. Because of that it is certain
- that he will long be remembered; for it is not to him that the
- following quotation can be applied: 'May each one of us--whether he
- works with his hands or with his brain to earn a living
- wage--always bear in mind that all that is best in him is gradually
- lost in the process of toil, and that, after he has departed this
- life, nobody will remember that he ever existed.'
-
- "Our friend Kuskop never lost his good qualities in the process of
- toil, and he was always a friend and a helpmate to all decent
- people. I am sure in saying this I have the support of all who knew
- him, and so with us his memory will always be kept green."
-
-Ballin very frequently went to New York--which might be called the most
-prominent outpost of the company--because he recognized the value of
-being in constant touch with every aspect of the many activities carried
-on by the Packetfahrt, and especially with those persons whose interests
-it was of importance to the company to cultivate. The numerous pool
-conferences often took him to London, where he always made a point of
-keeping on friendly terms with the leading British shipping firms, and,
-later on, with some of the leading politicians as well. There were few
-people in Germany who could rival him in his knowledge of the psychology
-of the American or the British mind. This knowledge resulted from his
-great capacity for rapidly and correctly summing up the character of
-anyone with whom he had to deal. He had developed to a high degree the
-art of treating the different types of people he met according to their
-different individualities. His kindness of heart, his brilliant powers
-of conversation, his prodigious memory, his quickness of repartee, and
-his keen sense of humour made him a favourite wherever he cared to be
-one. One felt his charm as soon as one came into personal contact with
-him. His wonderfully alert eye, which could express so much kindness,
-the soothing tones of his melodious voice, and the firm and friendly
-grip of his hand, made one forget that he was not a handsome man,
-although his powerfully developed forehead and his head which, in later
-years, was almost bald, were of classic perfection.
-
-Albert Ballin would never have gained the commanding position he held if
-the keenness of his intellect and the force of his character had not
-been supplemented by that pleasing amiability which distinguishes all
-really good men. To him was given a large measure of that noble courtesy
-which springs from the heart. He who could be hard and unyielding where
-the business interests entrusted to his care were at stake, was full of
-generosity and sympathy towards the members of his family circle and his
-friends. Nothing delighted him more than the happiness of others. Those
-whom he cared for he treated with a tender regard which was deeply
-touching. He loved to give presents, and did so with the most delicate
-tact. He never expected any thanks; it was sufficient for him to see the
-happy face of the recipient. And if he ever met with ingratitude or
-spitefulness, he ignored it and dismissed it from his mind.
-
-Personally generous to the limit of extravagance, he never spent a penny
-of the funds of his company without being convinced that it would be to
-its benefit. He left nothing undone when he thought he could realize a
-profit to the company, or cut down expenses. Money, to him, was only a
-means to an end; and the earnings of the company were in the first place
-intended to be spent on increasing its scope and prosperity wherever
-possible. Those who know what remuneration the heads of other concerns
-receive may well be surprised to see how little Ballin made for himself
-out of his position, but they would do him a great injustice if they
-thought he ought to have made more out of it. He even spent the greater
-part of his income for purposes of representation in the interests of
-his company. His amiable charm of manner and his brilliant
-conversational gifts did much towards making the entertainments he
-provided the successes they invariably were; and even if so much
-representation, especially that in connexion with Kiel Week, became
-somewhat of a burden to him, his company reaped rich benefit from his
-munificence.
-
-But to appreciate to the full the charm of his personality one must have
-been his guest at his beautiful home in Hamburg or at his beloved
-country seat near Hamfelde, and have listened to his conversation while
-sitting round the fire of an evening, or been his companion on his long
-walks and rambles through the neighbouring Forest of Hahnheide. His
-conversation was always animated, his witty remarks were always to the
-point, and he was unsurpassed as a raconteur. He was excellent as a
-speaker at committee meetings, and he always hit upon the right words
-suitable for a political toast. The skill with which he wielded the pen
-is proved by numerous newspaper articles, memoranda, and descriptions of
-his travels, but above all by his voluminous correspondence. He was
-probably one of the most versatile letter-writers, and yet so
-conscientious in this as to be almost pedantic. In his early years he
-had also tried his hand at poetry. His beautiful home, which was adorned
-with pictures and sculptures by eminent masters, was a source of great
-pleasure to him. He was very fond of music and congenial company, and he
-knew how to appreciate the pleasures of a full and daintily arranged
-table.
-
-When I intimated to one of Ballin's old friends that I intended to write
-his Life, he told me that this would not be an easy task, and that he
-hoped I would not forget to depict Ballin as the amiable _charmeur_ to
-which side of his character so many of his successes were due, and which
-was the secret of much of his great popularity. The number of people
-who claimed to be his friends, both before and after his death, but
-especially when they were trying to get some advantage out of the
-company, was surprisingly large. They were, in fact, so numerous that
-such a claim, when put forward, was generally--and rightly--looked upon
-with a great deal of suspicion. Very often, when such self-styled
-friends were announced to him, Ballin would reply: "I do not know the
-man," or "I do not remember him, but I may have met him." Ballin may
-justly be described as a man of world-wide fame, and whenever he went
-abroad the papers eagerly followed his movements. In New York especially
-it required all his cunning and resourcefulness to escape from the
-reporters desiring to interview him.
-
-Owing to his prominent position before the public he received an
-abundance of honours during his life. The many distinctions and presents
-which the Kaiser bestowed on him were a source of gratitude and delight
-to him, and he valued them because they were a symbol of the personal
-ties that linked him to the Kaiser; but the foreign decorations, of
-which he also received a great many, were of so little interest to him
-that he did not even trouble to have those of them replaced which once
-were stolen from him. It was a great disappointment to him, however, not
-to be able to recover the Japanese ornamental swords which were taken on
-the same occasion, and which he had always carefully treasured because
-of their high artistic value. They were a present from the Marquis Ito,
-whom Ballin had once helped to obtain an audience of the Kaiser--an
-audience which, he hoped, would lead to the establishment on a permanent
-footing of Germany's relations with the Empire of the Mikado. It would
-appear, indeed, that, if the leaders of Germany's political destiny had
-shown some more circumspection, the same friendly relations might have
-been brought about between Germany and Japan as were entered into later
-on between Great Britain and the latter country. Personal souvenirs,
-like those just mentioned, were prized so highly by Ballin that no
-persuasion would induce him to part with them, and even Professor
-Brinckmann, the Director of the Hamburg Museum for Arts and Crafts, who
-was one of the leading authorities on the subject of Japanese applied
-art, and who tried hard to secure possession of them for his museum, met
-with a flat refusal.
-
-Every year Ballin spent at least six months, and often more, away from
-Hamburg, and during such absences the work he had to accomplish was not
-less, but rather more than that which he did when in Hamburg.
-Conferences followed upon each other in quick succession at all times of
-the day, and the time that was left was filled up by visits. Often the
-amount of work was so great that he had to get through a whole series of
-difficult problems in a single day. The number of visits he had arranged
-was always considerably augmented by numerous others not allowed for in
-his arrangements for the day; because wherever he went the news of his
-arrival spread immediately. He could never even think of travelling
-incognito. It is literally true that he was known to every hotel porter
-all over the world. He was in the habit of extending his hospitality
-twice a day to a larger or smaller number of business friends when he
-was travelling. At first his love of congenial society had prompted him
-to do this, but in after years he continued it because he wanted to
-secure some benefit for his company even in his hours of relaxation.
-Still, he was often quite glad when, late at night, he had come to the
-close of his day's work, and when he could let the happenings of the day
-pass before his mind's eye in the quiet solitude of his room, or, as he
-liked to express it, "to draw the balance of the day's account."
-
-Even before 1900 the never-tiring energy of his mind and the excessive
-strain on his nervous system brought about a practically permanent
-insomnia which never left him either in Hamburg or on his travels. Only
-when he was on the sea, or was staying at his country house, did he
-obtain any relief; and at such times he could dispense with the drugs to
-the use of which he had become a victim more and more regularly and
-extensively as time went on. The fact that this habit did not entirely
-ruin his nervous system proves that he was possessed of an iron
-constitution, which only gave way under the huge strain caused by the
-war. When he saw that his life's work had been broken to fragments, and
-when he felt that he had not enough strength left for a second attempt
-of such magnitude, even his immense nerve force collapsed under the
-blow.
-
-The anxieties caused by the war--a war which he knew would be
-lost--weighed more and more heavily on his mind the longer it lasted.
-Outwardly he bore himself bravely and steadfastly, but his mind was full
-of dark forebodings, especially when he was by himself. If he had not
-had the unvarying sympathy of the faithful partner of his life, with
-whom he shared thirty-five years of mutual happiness, and if he had not
-always derived fresh consolation from his beloved adopted daughter and
-from his grandchildren, he would indeed many a time have felt very
-lonely. In spite of his apprehensions as to the result of the war, he
-yet remained faithful to the task of his life, and he hoped against
-hope. His ardent love of his work was constantly struggling with his
-reason, which foretold him the ruin of the Empire and in consequence
-that of German shipping.
-
-This fact explains some apparent contradictions in his views and
-actions. What was the general public to think of a man who was watching
-the progress of the war with the greatest pessimism, whilst at the same
-time bringing all his influence to bear on the passing of a law which
-was to make possible the reconstruction of Germany's merchant fleet,
-knowing that such reconstruction could only be achieved if the Empire
-which was to set aside the funds were to remain intact. In this matter,
-as in others, it was the intuition of the born business-man which guided
-him, or perhaps a sort of instinct which made him discover new ways when
-the old ones had failed. These forces of his mind had nothing in common
-with logical reasoning, and they prevented him from drawing the
-practical inference from the sentiment so often expressed by us during
-the war: "If the Empire falls to pieces, we shall all be ruined; and if
-the Empire becomes bankrupt, we shall be insolvent too." Events have
-shown that this sentiment was not justified by facts. Empires and
-individuals may perish; but the nations, and their trade and commerce
-which are the outcome of their economic needs and of their geographical
-position, will outlast them.
-
-Neither is it likely that the life-work of those men who have left their
-mark on their epoch will ever be in vain. There are two great
-achievements which, it appears, will always stand out like two pillars
-in the wreck of destruction that has fallen upon Germany, viz.
-Bismarck's work of political unification, and--a necessary preliminary
-of it--the powerful economic foundations laid with incessant toil by the
-great industrial leaders of whom Germany had so many during the era of
-her prosperity.
-
-Albert Ballin was one of the most gifted among their number, and the
-world-wide fame of his achievements has outlived his death. When, after
-five years of isolation from the rest of the world, Germany appeared
-once more amongst the nations, she did so with the knowledge that the
-foundations of the proud structure which Ballin had built up were still
-unshaken, and this knowledge has proved one of her greatest assets when
-she entered upon the task of reconstruction.
-
-If German shipping is to flourish again, and if German steamers are now
-ploughing the oceans once more, credit is due to Albert Ballin. His work
-it is from which new life is emanating, and it is to be hoped that his
-spirit will continue to animate German shipping both now and in the
-future.
-
-[Illustration: Extract Annotated by William II]
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
-Aden, 85
-
-Adler Line, 7
-
-Aehrenthal, Count, 141
-
-Agadir incident, 162
-
-Agents, emigration, work of, 8
-
-Alsace-Lorraine, problem of, 272
-
-_America_, 12
-
-_Amerika_, 25, 106, 129
-
-Andersen, Mr., and the Danish Royal Family, 99
-
-Anglo-American Alliance, Ballin's opinion of, 256
-
-Anglo-German rapprochement, 134
- shipping agreement, 18
- understanding, 164, 165
- advantage of, 136
- Ballin as negotiator, 136
- failure of, 133
-
-Anglo-Russian agreement, 137
-
-Antwerp, 81, 82
-
-_Aquitania_, 113
-
-Asquith, Mr. H. H., 262
- on Lord Haldane's mission, 177
- speech on Navy, 154
-
-Atlantic Conference, 111
-
-Atlantic Transport-Leyland Co., enlargement of, 45
-
-_Auguste Victoria_, 25, 27, 72, 75, 193, 196
-
-_Australia_, 12
-
-Austria, need of compromise with Italy, 242
-
-Austria-Hungary, strained relations between, 251
-
-Austro-German _Zollverein_, 251
-
-
-Baden-Powell, General, and the German menace, 138
-
-Bagdad Railway, 189
-
-Baker, B. N., American shipping magnate, 42
- comes to Europe, 44
-
-Baker, B. N., discusses terms of community of interest agreement, 42
-
-Balkan States, and Germany, 251
-
-Ballin, Albert, adopts Lord Pirrie's advice, 44
- advises peace overtures, 245
- after the war problems, 255
- agreement with Harland and Wolff, 122
- American appreciation of, 308
- an English journalist on, 293
- ancestry of, 2
- and Admiral v. Tirpitz, 237
- and Adolph Woermann, 107
- and Anglo-German rapprochement, 134
- and Carl Laeisz, 294
- and Count Tisza, 252
- and Count Waldersee, 194
- and Government subsidies, 60
- and Hamburg-Amerika Linie, 69
- and Hugo Stinnes, 280
- and Mr. Gerard, 246
- and labour questions, 297
- and politics, 131
- and North German Lloyd, 116
- and Princess Marie of Denmark, 99
- and Reichstag, 279
- and submarine warfare, 252, 254
- and the Russo-Japanese War, 104
- and Union Line, 19
- and working classes, 297
- and world war, 132
- anxiety as to Roumania, 244
- article in _Frankfurter Zeitung_ on blockade, 234
- as Anglo-German negotiator, 136
- as arbitrator, 79
- as general representative of Carr Line, 12
- as head of Packetfahrt passenger department, 18, 21
- at Constitutional Club, 140
- at Neues Palais, 204
- at the German front, 266
- attempts at mediation during war, 233
- boldness of, 289
- business principle of, 132
- capacity for work of, 300
- chairman of Pool Conference, 36
- complains of German official high-handedness, 232
- conducts London emigration discussions, 1898, 38
- death of, 286
- defends himself, 235
- dines with Danish Royal Family, 100
- disagrees with use of submarines, 229
- discusses Morgan Trust with William II, 53
- early biographical details of, 6
- education of, 3, 4
- establishes German-Japanese Bank, 204
- estimates British naval staying-power, 253
- Far East investigations, 84
- favours peace by compromise, 236
- forcing the British Lines, 36
- friendliness of William II toward, 206
- further reports on Morgan Trust negotiations, 49-50
- grave warning in 1918, 279
- Hamfelde, his country home, 310
- handling of labour troubles, 298-9
- his father's death, 5
- his life-work, 115
- his 1901 trip epitomized, 95
- his observation of details, 123
- his view on evading war, July 27, 1914, 216
- ideal in forming Pool, 66
- impressions of Paris after Morocco affair, 181
- in London discussing Austrian ultimatum, 215
- in Vienna, 1916, 249
-
-Ballin, Albert, intense patriotism of, 291
- international services of, vii
- interview with Bethmann-Hollweg, 152
- interview with Grey, Haldane, and Churchill, 215
- last diary entry, 286
- last meeting with William II, 209, 280
- letter from William II, 175
- letter to Kiderlen-Waechter, 163
- letters to General v. Falkenhayn, 244
- made Packetfahrt Director, 27
- meets Sir Ernest Cassel, 138
- mental versatility of, 2
- mission to Vienna, 1915, 242
- negotiations with Booth Line on Brazilian trade, 83
- notes of conversations with William II, 203
- official thanks to, 141
- on Agadir incident, 163
- on _Bluecher_, 60
- on death of Edward VII, 160
- on engineering problems, 121
- on foreign exchange, 274
- on _Hohenzollern_, 202
- on London in election time, 158
- on naval armaments, 147
- on neutrals, 245
- on peace problems, 239
- on sale of confiscated fleet, 230
- on Sandjak Railway, 142
- on security of William II, 241
- on Serbian situation, 214
- on war's failures, 258 _et seq._
- opinion of German Chancellor, 259
- opinion of war's duration, 237
- personal characteristics of, 287
- pioneer in steerage business, 11
- policy of, 79
- political views, 291
- premier position at twenty-nine, 19
- present from Marquis Ito, 311
- prodigious memory of, 4
- report on British attitude to Germany, 161
- report on development of German shipping, 47
- reticence of, 3
- reviews war position in 1916, 258
- ridicules submarine warfare, 268-9
- stimulating influences of his life, 2
- strain of war on health, 313
- sturdy honesty of, 309
- suggested as negotiator of peace, 286
- suggests Pool, 24
- talks with Prince Buelow, 271
- talks with William II on submarine war, 248
- threatens British traffic, 22
- trip round the world, 83
- value of wonderful memory, 35
- views on character of William II, 285
- visits London in 1914, 184
- war problems of foreign policy, 241
- William II discusses politics with, 203
- William II writes to, on Navy Bill, 183
- William II's personal interest in, 198
- wire from Leopold de Rothschild, 163
- with Prince Henry of Prussia on the _Hohenzollern_, 57
- with William II at Front, 266
- with William II in Italy, 204
- with William II on _Kaiser Wilhelm II_, 55
- work in _Reichseinkauf_, 224
- writes frank letter on war to William II, 1916, 252 _et seq._
- writes on Morgan Trust, 46
- writes to William II, April, 1917, 264
-
-Bauer, Lieut.-Col., 280
-
-Beck, Edward, 27
-
-Berg, Herr von, 282
-
-_Berliner Tageblatt_ on Anglo-Russian naval agreement, 213
-
-Bernstorff, Count, 264
-
-Bethmann-Hollweg, von, 151, 152, 156, 262, 270, 277
- attacked respecting Agadir, 162
- on British delegation, 166-7
- telegram to Mexico, 271
-
-_Bismarck_, launch of, 202
-
-Bismarck, Prince, 114
-
-Blockade, German, futility of, 267
-
-Blohm and Voss, 113
-
-_Bluecher_, Ballin on trial trip, 60
-
-Boer War, European move to stop, 143
- lesson of, 139
-
-Bohlen, Krupp v., 282
-
-Bolten, August, 10
-
-British argument against German naval expansion, 133
- Cabinet and German naval expansion, 182
- confiscation of German merchant fleet, 229
- convoys, how they outwitted the Germans, 267
- emigration, comparison with German, 15
- excitement over Morgan Trust, 60
- feeling in Russo-Japanese war, at German attitude, 104
- Ludendorff's promise to crush, 266
- Navy, Ballin on, 239
- opinion on shipping deals, 67
- rivalry with Germany, 133
- shipbuilding, developments in, and Hamburg-Amerika Linie, 128, 208
- shipbuilding, German move against, 17
- shipping companies, Pierpont Morgan and, 55
- shipping lines, and emigration, 7-14;
- agreement with, 23;
- join the Continental Pool, 23;
- offered to German companies, 67
- supremacy, Ballin on, 241
-
-Buelow, Prince, 141, 247, 270
-
-
-Canadian Pacific Railway, 62, 111
-
-Cargo and steerage shipping, 13
-
-Carr, Edward, 12
-
-Carr Line, the, 12 _et seq._
- and Packetfahrt, 12
-
-Cassel, Sir Ernest, 134
- and Winston Churchill, 165
- meets Ballin, 138
- on Anglo-German understanding, 165
- on naval problem, 179
- on Sandjak Railway, 142
- report of interview with, on Navy, 171
- work for reduction of naval armaments, 134 _et seq._
-
-Cholera, epidemic at Hamburg, 36, 72
-
-Christiansand, port of, 21
-
-Churchill, Mr. Winston, 166
- at Kiel, 1914, 192
- complains of Germany, 180
- Sir Ernest Cassel on, 165
- speech on Navy, 175
- suggests a naval holiday, 186
-
-Colombo, 86
-
-_Columbia_, 77, 201
-
-Community of interest agreement (_see_ "Pool" and "Morgan Trust")
-
-Congo, Franco-German agreement, 162
-
-Coolies, Chinese, 89
-
-Cunard Line, and Austrian Government, 65
- and Hungarian Government, 63
- effect on Pool, 65
- introduces turbines, 111
- new liners, 113
- opposition to cabin Pool, 61
- refuses to join Pool, 37
-
-Cuxhaven, development of, 69
- regatta at, 205
-
-
-_Daily Telegraph_, sent to William II, 270
- the William II interview, 144
-
-Dardanelles, the, operations in, 245
- de Freitas and Co., A. C., 79
- de Freitas Line, purchase of, 80
-
-Denmark, emigration from, 13
- Royal Family of, their interest in shipping, 99
-
-_Deutschland_, 25, 78, 130
-
-Diesel engine, application to steamship, 102
-
-Dreadnoughts, 200
-
-
-Eastern Asiatic Co., 98
-
-Edward VII, 134
- and Morgan Trust, 61
-
-Edward VII, chances of Anglo-German war, during reign of, 139
- death of, 158
- policy of, 135
- the Kiel week, 206
- visit to Wilhelmshoehe, 136
- visits Berlin, 145
- visits Kaiser at Friedrichshof, 142
-
-Elbe, enlargement of harbour facilities on the, 69, 70, 79
-
-Ellerman, Mr., of Leyland Line, 45
-
-Emden, rise of, 83
-
-Emigrants, early accommodation of, 7, 8, 14
-
-Emigration, anti-British action, 17
- Ballin's work for, 9
- beginnings of pooling, 12
- British and German, 15
- British rates, 22
- business, how controlled, 8
- comparisons of Carr Line and Packetfahrt, 15
- cost of, 12
- Danish, 13
- Hungarian, 63
- in the 'seventies, 8
- medical control established, 74
- on pre-paid basis, 9 _et seq._
- rate war begins, 14
- statistics of, 103
- stopped by Hamburg cholera epidemic, 36
-
-Emigration Law, German, 23
-
-Erzberger, Herr, 244
-
-Esher, Lord, and the Admiralty, 138
-
-Europe, concerted inquiry to Germany, 140
- situation in September, 1916, 262
-
-
-Falkenhayn, General v., Ballin and, 244
-
-Finland, 278
-
-Forced draught, first vessels under, 26
-
-Foreign exchange, Ballin on, 273
-
-Francis Joseph, Emperor, 250
- and Count Tisza, 250
-
-Frederick the Great on experience, viii
-
-Frisch, Geheimrat, 223
-
-Furness, Sir Christopher, and Morgan Trust, 61
-
-_Fuerst Bismarck_, 193
-
-Fuerstenkonzern, 110
-
-
-George V, King, Ballin's letter respecting, 160
-
-George, Mr. Lloyd, speech on Agadir incident, 162
- visits Germany, 143
-
-Gerard, Mr., and Ballin, 246
-
-German-British shipping agreement, 18
-
-German emigration fleet, in 1882, 10
-
-German Government, note to British Government, 170
-
-German Naval Bill, 137
-
-German Navy, the 1908 affair, 138
-
-Germany, and Belgian Relief Committee, 231
- and the Merchant Service Bill, 228
- bad feeling among neutrals to, 245
- Ballin cries "everything is being gambled away," 257
- Ballin discusses after-the-war problems, 255
- big naval programme, 143
- British agitation against, 137
- confiscation of merchant fleet, 229
- control of trade and industries, 274
- failure of political leaders, 264
- favourable shipping situation of, 80
- feeling towards British, 143
- food problem, September, 1918, 284
- habit of premature actions, 273
- ignorance of British character, 260
- internal condition in August, 1914, 223 _et seq._
- lack of effective administration during war, 233
- mental attitude of, 134
- plans to approach President Wilson, 283
-
-Germany, state in 1916 "like living in a madhouse," 257
- useless sacrifices of, 229
- war condition of, 257
- war-hopes in ruins, 269
-
-Germany's industrial growth, 7
-
-_Gigantic_, 113
-
-Goschen, Sir Ernest, 153
-
-Gothenburg, port of, 21
-
-Grey, Sir Edward, 262
- on Lord Haldane's mission, 177
- on naval armaments, 157
- on the Navy, 138
-
-Great War (_see_ World War)
-
-Grumme, Capt. v., joins Hamburg-Amerika Linie, 199
- with William II at Morgan Trust discussion, 53.
-
-
-Hague Conference, 137
-
-Hahn, Dr. Diederich, Chairman Agrarian League, 59
-
-Haldane, Lord, 171
- and British neutrality, 190
- Cabinet's attitude toward, 184
- explains to Ballin, 191
- German opinion respecting, 187
- success of his mission, 177
- visits Berlin, 134, 167
- William II's discussions with, 174 _et seq._
-
-Hamburg, absorption into Prussia, 296
- birthplace of Ballin, 1
- cholera epidemic in, 36, 72
- dock strike, 299
- in the nineteenth century, 1-6
-
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie, and Great Britain, 207
- and Persia, 107
- and Russo-Japanese war, 105
- buys foodstuffs for isolated Germany, 223
- far-reaching alterations, 98
- fate of ships when war broke out, 220
- financial stability of, 116
- fleet of, 116
- instructions to ships on eve of war, 220
- new premises, 202
- sixtieth anniversary, 117
- William II and, 195
-
-Hamburg-Amerika Linie (_see also_ Packetfahrt)
-
-Hamburg-Amerikanische Packetfahrt-Actien-Gesellschaft, 7
-
-Hamburg Regattas, William II at, 201
-
-Hamburg-South American S.S. Co., 79
-
-Hammann, Geheimrat, 138, 141
-
-_Hammonia_, 24
-
-Hansa Line, 69
- taken over by Hamburg-Amerika Linie, 70
-
-Hansemann, v., director Disconto-Gesellschaft, 55
-
-Hansen, President, Chief of Arbitration Court Pool, 35
-
-Harbou, Major v., 282
-
-Harland and Wolff, 112, 121
-
-Henckell-Donnersmarck, Prince, Kaiser's interest in, 47
-
-Hintze, Herr v., 283
-
-_Hohenzollern_, 194
-
-Holland-America Line, 7
-
-Holland, Queen of, offers mediation, 283
-
-Holtzendorff, Admiral v., 246
-
-Hongkong, 88
-
-Huldermann, Bernhard, and Count Witte on averting war, 217
- and Navy Bill, 170
-
-
-Immco Lines, Pool name for Morgan Trust, 65
-
-Immigrants, Scandinavian trade, 36
-
-_Imperator_, 31, 113, 125, 126
-
-International Mercantile Marine Company (_see_ Morgan Trust)
-
-Inverclyde, Lord, and Morgan Trust, 64
-
-Italia Company, the, started, 79
-
-Italy, agreement with, necessary to success of war, 241
- Germany's failure in, 242
-
-
-Jagow, Herr v., 213, 214
-
-Jewish ancestry of Ballin, 2
-
-Jones, Sir A., and the Morgan Trust, 6
-
-Jonquieres, Herr v., 231
-
-_Kaiser Wilhelm der Groesse_, 77
-
-_Kaiser Wilhelm II_, 205
-
-_Kaiserin_, 113
-
-_Kaiserin Auguste Victoria_, 25, 106, 129
-
-Kaiserin, the, and the war, 211
- opposition to private life, 285
-
-Kiautschou, 97
-
-Kiel Canal, widening the, 200
- Edward VII at, 206
- Week, origin of, 201
-
-Kirchheim, Chief Inspector Emil F., viii
-
-Koehlhrand, agreement the, 295
-
-Kuehlmann, Herr v., 189
-
-Kunhardt, M., 27
-
-Kuskop, Karl, 303
-
-
-Laeisz, Carl, 293
-
-Laeisz, F., 293
-
-Laird's, orders to, 26
-
-Law, German Emigration, of 1887, 23
-
-Leuthold, Prof., 199
-
-Leyland Line, acquired by Pierpont Morgan, 48
-
-Liberal Cabinet, and naval armaments, 149
-
-Liberal Government, and Anglo-German understanding, 136
-
-Lichnowsky, Prince, 188
- view on Haldane's "neutrality" conversation, 191
-
-Liners, developments in, 125 _et seq._
-
-Lohmann, Mr., 10
- Director-General of Lloyd Line, 32
-
-Ludendorff, and the Crown Prince, 280
- and "to her knees" promise, 266
-
-_Lusitania_, 62, 113
-
-
-Marie, Princess, of Denmark, 99
-
-Marine engineering, Ballin's enterprise in, 122
- development of, 119
- Packetfahrt types, 125
- progress in, 127
-
-Marschall, Bieberstein v., 188
-
-_Mauretania_, 62, 113
-
-Mediterranean Conference, 111
-
-_Meteor_, 197
-
-Metternich, Count, at St. James's, 212
- on Anglo-German understanding, 187
- predicts Great War, 188
- sees Sir Edward Grey, 178
-
-Morgan, Pierpont, guest of William II at Kiel, 61
-
-Morgan, Trust, the, 40 _et seq._
- agreement reached, 52
- announced to British Press, 59
- effect of freight slump, 61
- final discussions in New York, 55 _et seq._
- financial aspect, 45
- inception of, 45
- International Mercantile Marine Co., formal name of, 65
- King Edward VII and, 61
- outline of draft agreement, 51
- Pierpont Morgan at London Conference, 49
- Pierpont Morgan's operations attract public attention, 46
- telegram from William II, 56
- terms of agreement, 58
- William II discusses, 53
-
-Morris and Co., 1 _et seq._
-
-Mutius, Herr v., 247
-
-
-Nanking, 92
-
-Naumann, Dr., and "Berlin to Bagdad," 276
-
-_Nautikus_, naval propaganda in, 200
-
-Naval armaments, a cause of unrest, 133
- Ballin's report on, 146 _et seq._
- big navy propaganda, 133
- Reichstag and reduction of, 145
-
-Naval Bill of 1912, 155
- Ballin writes to Sir Ernest Cassel on, 168
- British alarm at, 166
-
-Naval holiday, Mr. Churchill suggests a, 186
-
-Navy, a bigger British, 171
-
-Navy League, German, 137
-
-_New York_, 49
-
-New York, emigration to, in the 'eighties, 7 _et seq._
- steerage passengers to, statistics, 29
-
-_Normannia_, 77
-
-North Atlantic Steamship Lines Association, history of, 32
-
-_North German Gazette_, 157
-
-North German Lloyd, 7, 98, 106, 111
- competes with Packetfahrt, 10
- jubilee of, 117
-
-
-Oertzen, Herr v., 91
-
-_Olympic_, 113
-
-
-Packetfahrt, the, a founder of, 10
- agreement with Philadelphia Shipping Co. and Pennsylvania Railroad Co., 77
- and Ballin, 289
- and Carr Line, 12
- and emigrants, 10
- and Harland and Wolff, 121
- and Russian coal, 104
- and the Russo-Japanese War, 103
- Ballin made director of, 27
- celebration of jubilee, 74
- 1886 Pool, 21
- extension of South American business, 80
- improved appointments and accommodation on vessels, 26
- increase of capital, 26
- letter from chairman of Cunard Company, 75
- more new vessels built, 25, 74
- New York branch established, 27
- passenger department created, 19
- service to Mexico, 83
- statistics (1886), 19
- (_see also_ Hamburg-Amerika Linie)
-
-_Panther_, William II and, 210
-
-Paris Economic Conference, 276
-
-Passenger traffic, improvements in, 41
-
-Peace negotiations, Ballin and, 286
-
-Peters, Heinrich, central offices of, 34
- secretary of Pool, 31
-
-_Philadelphia_, 49
-
-Pirrie, Lord, 121
- advises Ballin, 44
- discusses Morgan Trust, 63
-
-Pleasure cruises, inception of, 70 _et seq._
-
-Pool accommodation discussions (1898), 38
- actuarial basis of, 34
- agreement on (1891), 24
- agreement with Allan Line, 74
- agreement with Italian Lines, 74
- agreement with Lloyd Line, 74
- Ballin's opinions upon, 115
- British Lines refuse (1892), 33
- cardinal principles of, 30
- Cunard Line refuses to join, 37
- details of the, 28
- Heinrich Peters, secretary of, 31
- its most dramatic episode, 67
- more internal troubles, 115
- negotiations for a greater, 35
- North Atlantic Steamship Lines Association, formal name of, 33
- proposed by Ballin, 1886, 24
- special, for Mediterranean business, 34
- terms definitely made, 33
- the General, 111
- the transatlantic, 110
- tonnage and passenger statistics, 29
- U.S.A. Railway pool compared, 28
- world war's effect upon, 111
-
-Port Said, 85
-
-_Pretoria_, 201
-
-Princes' Trust, 110
-
-_Prinzessin Victoria Luise_, 130
-
-Prussia, Prince Henry of, 57
-
-
-Rate war, the, 14, 110
-
-Red Star Line, 7
-
-_Reichseinkauf_, the, formation of, 223
-
-Reuchlin, Mr., of Holland-American Line, 32
-
-Richardson, Spence and Co., 9
-
-Riga, fall of, 272
-
-Roumania, anxiety regarding food from, 251
- neutrality of, 244
- supplies grain during war to Germany, 227
-
-Rupprecht of Bavaria, Prince, 137
-
-Russia, army of, 139
-
-Russian East Asiatic S.S. Co., 101
-
-Russian Press, outburst against Sandjak Railway, 141
-
-Russian Volunteer Fleet, 111
-
-Russo-Japanese War, 102
- coaling problems for Russian fleet, 105
- ships for, 25
-
-
-_St. Louis_, 49
-
-_St. Paul_, 49
-
-Sandjak Railway, 141
-
-Scandia Line, 21
-
-Scandinavian emigration, 21
-
-Schoen, Herr v., 141
-
-Schratt, Frau Kathi, 250
- pro-English sympathies of, 252
-
-Schwander, Dr., 272
-
-Shanghai, 90
-
-Shaughnessy, Lord, 62
-
-Shipping agreement on rates, 17
- agreements, enormous range of, 111
- British tonnage in 1901, 49
- crisis of 1907, 111
- Imperial Government's interest in, 55
- some tonnage comparisons, 49
- statistics (1881-1885), 29
- transatlantic business, trend of, 67
-
-Ships, speed of, in 1882, 10
-
-Singapore, 87
-
-Skoda, Baron, 251
-
-Sloman and Co., R. M., 18
-
-South African War, 79
-
-South America, development of, 82
-
-Southampton, Packetfahrt service transferred to, 73
-
-Spanish-American War, ships for, 25
-
-Steinhoeft, Hamburg, 1
-
-Stettin, Vulkan Yard, 78, 113
- orders to, 26
-
-Stinnes, Hugo, 280
-
-Storm, Director A., viii
-
-Strasser, Mr., of the Red Star Line, 32
-
-Stuergkh, Count, 243
- Francis Joseph and, 250
-
-Submarine warfare, 248, 252, 258
- amazing achievements, 268
- unrestricted, beginning of, 263
-
-Thingvalla Line, 21
-
-_Times, The_, on German neutrality, 104
-
-Tirpitz, Admiral v., 151, 152, 199
- and Ballin, 237
- threatens resignation, 246
-
-Tisza, Count, 243
- and Count Stuergkh, 250
-
-_Titanic_, 113
-
-Tokio, 93
-
-Trans-Andine Railway, completion of, 82
-
-Tsingtau, 92, 97
-
-Tweedmouth, Lord, and the Kaiser, 137
-
-
-Ukraine, the, 278
-
-U.S.A., application of Monroe doctrine in, 82
- cholera and isolation in, 73
- devastating effects of entry into war, 255
- economic depression of the 'eighties, 9
- enters the war, 269
- German fears of intervention, 252
- immigration from Scandinavia, 21
- Railway Pool, 29
- railways and shipping co-operation, 44
-
-
-_Vaterland_, 113
-
-Versailles treaty, German view of, 208
-
-Vienna, conditions in, 249
-
-Vulkan Yard, Stettin, 26, 78, 113
-
-
-Waldersee, General Count Georg, and Ballin, 194
- on rationing Germany, 221
-
-_Westminster Gazette_ (article in facsimile at end), 163, 235
-
-White Star Line, and Pierpont Morgan, 55
- new liners, 113
-
-Wiegand, Dr. Heinrich, 119
- and Morgan Trust, 54
-
-Wilding, Mr., Ballin's friendship for, 9
-
-William II, and "a place in the sun," 202
- and British Navy, British feeling aroused, 137
- and _Daily Telegraph_ interview, 143
- and Nicholas, suggested talk to avert war, 220
- and President Wilson's note, 285
- and the _Bismarck_, 114
- at Hamburg, 193
- Ballin explains situation in September, 1918, 209
- Ballin reports to, on navy problem, 138
- Ballin tells him the ugly truth in 1917, 267
- blind to situation, September, 1918, 283
- "brimful of optimism," 272
- comments on _Westminster Gazette_ article, 163
- designs excursion steamer, 196
- discusses Morgan Trust with Ballin, 53
- discusses Morocco question, 205
- facsimile comments on _Westminster Gazette_ article (_see_ end of book)
- interest in German shipbuilding, 196
- interest in Morgan Trust, 197
- intervenes in shipping struggle, 106
- isolation of, 255
- last meeting with Ballin, 280
- letter on British Navy, 137
- maritime interests of, 201
- monarchical discussions, Ballin and, 285
- on balance of power, 165
- on Germany's Austro-Hungarian policy, 189
- on the Churchill speech, 183
- outspoken letter in 1916 from Ballin, 252 _et seq._
- personal interest in Ballin, 198
- persuaded to retire into private life, 285
- sees Edward VII at Friedrichshof, 142
- supports Ballin's mission of inquiry
- to U.S.A., 54
- telegram to Morgan Trust, 56
- venerated in Austria, 251
- visits Windsor, 136
- wants apology from Great Britain, 183
- writes to Ballin on Haldane interview, 175
-
-Wilson, President, 263
-
-Witt, Mr. Johannes, 27
-
-Witte, Count, on situation July, 1914, 217
-
-Woermann, Adolph, 107
- character sketch of, 108
-
-World war, the, 213
- Ballin attempts mediation, 233
- Ballin describes 1917 situation to William II, 265
- Ballin favours a compromise, 236
- Ballin on neutrals, 245
- Ballin on the blockade, 234
- Ballin on the crisis, 215
- Bismarck's prophecy regarding, 133
- British censorship in, 225
- coal problems during, 102
- Count Witte on situation, July 24th, 1914, 217
- defection of German conscripts, 281
- effect on Pool, 111
-
-World war, the, entry of U.S.A., effect of, 253 _et seq._
- food problems of Germany, 222
- forced upon William II, 285
- foreign policy and food during, 241
- German mistakes in, 258-9
- Germany stunned by _debacle_, 236
- grain from Roumania, 227
- indemnities, 261
- Mexico telegram, 271
- outbreak of, 132
- peace overtures, 245
- position in 1916, 258
- provisioning Germany, 221
- shipping profits during, 65
- submarine warfare in, 229
- the British blockade, 224
- Tyrol, failure in the, 259
- Verdun and Italian campaigns, political and military failures, 258
-
-World's shipping collapse, cause of, 229
-
-
-Yang-Tse-Kiang, the, 91, 96
-
-
-Zentral-Einkaufs-Gesellschaft, 226 _et seq._
-
- PRINTED IN ENGLAND BY CASSELL & COMPANY, LIMITED, LONDON, E. C. 4.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] Gross registered tonnage.
-
-[2] Then British Ambassador in Berlin.
-
-[3] This refers to the political events in Berlin immediately prior to
-the outbreak of war.
-
-[4] The head of the Press Department of the Foreign Office.
-
-[5] The telegram which the Foreign Office sent to the German Minister
-in Mexico, and which was partly responsible for the entry of the United
-States into the war.
-
-[6] Director of the Hamburg branch of the firm of Hugo Stinnes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Typographical errors corrected by the etext transcriber:
-
-aded to their fleets=> added to their fleets {pg 48}
-
-in the era on the machine-gun=> in the era of the machine-gun {pg 266}
-
-aready explained=> already explained {pg 270}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Albert Ballin, by Bernhard Huldermann
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ALBERT BALLIN ***
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