HMS Fidelity (D57)

Last updated

History
Naval Ensign of the United Kingdom.svgUnited Kingdom
NameHMS Fidelity
Builder H. & C. Grayson Ltd., Garston, Liverpool
Launched23 February 1920
Completed1920
Commissioned24 September 1940
FateSunk, 30 December 1942
General characteristics [1]
Type Special Service Vessel
Tonnage2,356  GRT
Length80.7 m (264 ft 9 in)
Beam12.6 m (41 ft 4 in)
Depth5.7 m (18 ft 8 in)
Propulsion252 nhp triple expansion steam engine
Speed10.5 knots (19.4 km/h; 12.1 mph)
Boats & landing
craft carried
Complement280
Armament
Aircraft carried2 × OS2U Kingfisher floatplanes

HMS Fidelity (D57) was a Special Service Vessel of the British Royal Navy during World War II, originally the French merchant vessel Le Rhin.

Contents

Background

The 2,456-ton ship was built by H. & C. Grayson Ltd. of Garston, Liverpool, and completed in 1920 for Compagnie de Navigation Paquet, Marseilles. [2]

In June 1940 Le Rhin was seized by Lieutenant de Vaisseau Claude Andre Michel Peri at Marseilles and sailed for Gibraltar. Peri and his crew wished to continue the fight after the Fall of France and Le Rhin was turned over to the Royal Navy at Barry, Wales. The ship was converted into an auxiliary warship, and commissioned on 24 September 1940 as HMS Fidelity (D57) under the command of Lt. Peri, serving as Lieutenant Commander Jack Langlais RNVR. Her officers included Lt-Cmdr. Albert Guérisse serving as Patrick Albert O'Leary RNVR, and First Officer Madeleine Bayard serving as Madeleine Barclay WRNS. [2] Because they had families in occupied Europe crew members were serving under pseudonyms. Bayard was Peri's mistress and one of very few women to be a commissioned officer on a Royal Navy ship. [3]

Fidelity was classified as a Special Service Vessel, a catch-all designation for vessels that don't fit easily into any other group. In the First World War submarine decoy vessels ("Q-ships") were classed as SSVs, which has led some authors to refer to Fidelity as a Q-ship, but the terms are not synonymous, and there is no evidence she was ever employed as a submarine decoy vessel.

Service history

In 1941 Fidelity operated off the coast of Southern France as a clandestine transport under the direction of the Special Operations Executive (SOE), landing agents and picking up escaped prisoners, disguised as Spanish or Portuguese freighters. [4] She also took part in small-scale sabotage operations. [5]

In 1942 Fidelity was refitted to operate as a commando carrier for operations in south-east Asia. She was armed with four 4-inch guns, four 21-inch torpedo tubes, and carried two OS2U Kingfisher floatplanes, the motor torpedo boat MTB-105, and the landing crafts HMS LCV-752 and LCV-754. [2]

Fate

In December 1942 Fidelity, with T Company, 40 Commando aboard, joined Convoy ON 154. The convoy was attacked by U-boats from 27 December while north of the Azores. On 29 December Fidelity, suffering from engine problems, fell out of the convoy. She launched her aircraft as an anti-submarine patrol while repairs took place. During this time her aircraft reported lifeboats to the southwest and her landing craft was sent to pick them up. These were 44 men from Empire Shackleton, the convoy commodore's ship. During the night Fidelity was making 5 knots towards the Azores, but came under attack twice. She was fired on by U-225, and later by U-615. Both U-boats were driven off when Fidelity fired back. On 30 December she was found by U-435, under the command of Siegfried Strelow at position 43°23′N27°07′W / 43.383°N 27.117°W / 43.383; -27.117 and was torpedoed twice. Strelow observed the sinking, and estimated about 300 survivors in the water, but when he made his report later he was asked "whether their destruction in the prevailing weather can be counted on". [6] This was some months after BdU's infamous Laconia Order, instructing U-boat commanders not to assist survivors in any way, and regarded at the Nuremberg trials as a tacit encouragement to ensure there were none. At the time of her sinking Fidelity had on board some 369 souls (274 crew, 51 Marines and 44 survivors from Empire Shackleton): All were lost. The only survivors were the eight crew of the motor torpedo boat, detached on anti-submarine patrol, who were later picked up by HMCS Woodstock (K238), and two crewmen of a seaplane that had crashed on takeoff on 28 December and been picked up by HMCS St. Laurent (H83). [2] To this day 40 Commando has never reused T as a company designation in memory of the loss. [7]

Guérisse was not aboard when Fidelity sank, having earlier been stranded in France. He became the namesake of the Pat O'Leary escape line which helped more than 650 allied soldiers and downed airmen escape occupied France. [8] A memorial to the men of T Company is located in the Parish Church of St Andrew, Chale, Isle of Wight, near where their training took place.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Q-ship</span> Heavily armed merchant ships with concealed weaponry

Q-ships, also known as Q-boats, decoy vessels, special service ships, or mystery ships, were heavily armed merchant ships with concealed weaponry, designed to lure submarines into making surface attacks. This gave Q-ships the chance to open fire and sink them. The use of Q-ships contributed to the abandonment of cruiser rules restricting attacks on unarmed merchant ships and to the shift to unrestricted submarine warfare in the 20th century.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Albert Guérisse</span> Belgian Resistance fighter

Major General Count Albert-Marie Edmond Guérisse was a Belgian Resistance member who organized French and Belgian escape routes for downed Allied pilots during World War II under the alias of Patrick Albert "Pat" O'Leary, purportedly the name of a peace-time Canadian friend. His escape line was dubbed the Pat O'Leary Line.

German submarine <i>U-47</i> (1938) World War II German submarine

German submarine U-47 was a Type VIIB U-boat of Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine during World War II. She was laid down on 25 February 1937 at Friedrich Krupp Germaniawerft in Kiel as yard number 582 and went into service on 17 December 1938 under the command of Günther Prien.

HMS <i>Legion</i> (G74) Royal Navy ship

HMS Legion was an L-class destroyer of the Royal Navy. She entered service during the Second World War, and had a short but eventful career, serving in Home waters and the Mediterranean. She was sunk in an air attack on Malta in 1942. The ship had been adopted by the British civil community of the Municipal Borough of Cheltenham, Gloucestershire in November 1941.

HMS <i>Arbutus</i> (K86) Flower-class corvette

HMS Arbutus was a Flower-class corvette of the Royal Navy, which was active during the Second World War. She was a successful escort vessel, and took part in the destruction of two U-boats during the Battle of the Atlantic. Arbutus was sunk in the North Atlantic in February 1942.

German submarine <i>U-509</i> German World War II submarine

German submarine U-509 was a Type IXC U-boat of Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine during World War II. The submarine was laid down on 1 November 1940 at the Deutsche Werft yard in Hamburg as yard number 305. She was launched on 19 August 1941, and commissioned on 4 November 1941 under the command of Korvettenkapitän Karl-Heinz Wolff.

German submarine <i>U-99</i> (1940) German World War II submarine

German submarine U-99 was a Type VIIB U-boat of Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine during World War II. She was laid down on 31 March 1939 at the Friedrich Krupp Germaniawerft in Kiel as yard number 593. She was launched on 12 March 1940 under the command of Korvettenkapitän Otto Kretschmer and was assigned to the 7th U-boat Flotilla based in Kiel and later in St Nazaire.

HMS P32 was a Royal Navy U-class submarine built by Vickers-Armstrong at Barrow-in-Furness.

German submarine <i>U-96</i> (1940) German World War II submarine

German submarine U-96 was a Type VIIC U-boat of the German Navy (Kriegsmarine) during World War II. It was made famous after the war in Lothar-Günther Buchheim's 1973 bestselling novel Das Boot and the 1981 Oscar-nominated film adaptation of the same name, both based on his experience on the submarine as a war correspondent in 1941.

HMS <i>P48</i> (1942) Submarine of the Royal Navy

HMS P48 was a Royal Navy U-class submarine built by Vickers-Armstrong at Barrow-in-Furness. Commissioned on 18 June 1942, she spent most of her career in the Mediterranean Sea.

German submarine <i>U-123</i> (1940) German World War II submarine

German submarine U-123 was a Type IXB U-boat of Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine that operated during World War II. After that conflict, she became the French submarine Blaison (Q165) until she was decommissioned on 18 August 1959.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Convoy HX 79</span> Convoy during naval battles of the Second World War

HX 79 was an Allied convoy in the North Atlantic of the HX series, which sailed east from Halifax, Nova Scotia. The convoy took place during the Battle of the Atlantic in the Second World War. One ship dropped out and returned to port, leaving 49 to cross the Atlantic for Liverpool. Two armed merchant cruisers and a submarine escorted the convoy to protect it from German commerce raiders.

HMS Marigold was a Flower-class corvette of the Royal Navy. She was launched on 4 September 1940 and was sunk by an Italian air-dropped torpedo on 9 December 1942.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Convoy ON 154</span> Convoy during naval battles of the Second World War

Convoy ON 154 - also ON(S) 154 or ONS 154 - was a North Atlantic convoy of the ON series which ran during the battle of the Atlantic in World War II. It was the 154th of the numbered series of merchant ship convoys Outbound from the British Isles to North America. It came under attack in December 1942 and lost 13 of its 50 freighters. One of the attacking U-boats was destroyed.

First Officer Madeleine Victorine Bayard, who served as Madeleine Barclay aboard HMS Fidelity on agent-running operations into Vichy France, was a French agent of the Special Operations Executive during World War II. She was lost, with the rest of the crew, when the ship was sunk in 1943.

German submarine U-198, was a Type IXD2 U-boat which fought in World War II. She was built by the Deschimag DeSchiMAG AG Weser in Bremen. She was laid down on 1 August 1941 as yard number 1044, launched on 15 June 1942 and commissioned on 3 November under Kapitän zur See Werner Hartmann.

HMS <i>Vervain</i> Flower-class corvette

HMS Vervain was a Flower-class corvette of the Royal Navy. She served during the Second World War.

German submarine U-65 was a Type IXB U-boat of Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine during World War II. Over the course of six war patrols between 9 April 1940 and 28 April 1941, she sank twelve ships and damaged three others for a total loss of 88,664 gross register tons (GRT).

German submarine U-435 was a Type VIIC U-boat built for Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine for service during World War II. She was laid down on 11 April 1940 by F Schichau GmbH in Danzig as yard number 1477, launched on 31 May 1941 and commissioned on 30 August 1941 under Korvettenkapitän Siegfried Strelow.

Jack Langlais was the nom de guerre of former French naval officer Claude Andre Michel Peri during the Second World War. Langlais was the leader of an independent group of displaced Frenchmen, operating the armed merchant vessel HMS Fidelity in collaboration with the Special Operations Executive. Langlais and his crew died in December 1942 when Fidleity was sunk en route to the Far East.

References

  1. "FIDELITY CARGO SHIP 1920-1942". wrecksite.eu. 2013. Retrieved 2 February 2013.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Helgason, Guðmundur (2013). "HMS Fidelity (D57)". uboat.net. Retrieved 2 February 2013.
  3. "Not so fair in love and war," The Telegraph, , accessed 11 December 2019
  4. Kinross-Purser, John (15 December 2005). "A Marine on HMS Fidelity". BBC WW2 People's War. Retrieved 2 February 2013.
  5. "The Pat O'Leary Line". WW2 Escape Lines Memorial Society. 2013. Archived from the original on 21 February 2013. Retrieved 2 February 2013.
  6. Brooks Richards (1996) Secret Flotillas HMSO: p 368-9 ISBN   978-0-11-630960-0
  7. 40RM Commando- HMS Fidelity at Commando Veterans Archive
  8. "The Pat O'Leary Line," , accessed 11 December 2019