HNoMS Nordkapp

Last updated

HNoMS Nordkapp (1937).jpg
Nordkapp off Iceland
History
Flag of Norway, state.svg Norway
NameNordkapp
Namesake North Cape
Builder Horten naval shipyard
Yard number123 [1]
Launched18 August 1937
Decommissioned29 July 1954
Renamed
  • Skarodd (1956)
  • Tor Hugo (1971)
FateSold to civilian owners in 1956, converted into fishing vessel, sank off West Africa on 27 November 1972 [2]
Service record
Commanders: Lieutenant Commander Jon Seip
Operations:
Victories:
  • 6,031-ton German naval tanker Kattegat,
  • 9 April 1940
General characteristics
Displacement234 tons standard
Length130.5 ft (39.78 m)
Beam21.5 ft (6.55 m)
Draft7.5 ft (2.29 m)
Propulsion
  • Two Sulzer diesel engines with 580 hp,
  • 1 shaft
Speed13.7 knots (25.37 km/h)
Range
  • 3,200 nautical miles (5,926.40 km)
  • at 11 knots (20.37 km/h)
Complement
  • As built:
  • 22 men
  • After UK rebuild: [2] [3]
  • 28 men
Armament
NotesAll the above listed information, unless otherwise noted, was acquired from [4]

HNoMS Nordkapp was the lead ship of the Nordkapp class of fishery protection vessels. She was launched 18 August 1937 at Horten naval shipyard, with yard number 123. [1] She had one sister ship, HNoMS Senja. Nordkapp was named after the North Cape in Finnmark. As was typical of her class, Nordkapp was very unstable in rough seas and was viewed from the beginning as a second-rate vessel. Nordkapp sailed throughout the Second World War and saw service in several theatres. [5]

Contents

Nordkapp in the Norwegian Campaign

When the Germans invaded Norway on 9 April 1940, Nordkapp was stationed in Northern Norway, belonging to the Royal Norwegian Navy's 3rd Naval District [6] and commanded by Lieutenant Commander Jon Seip. [4] During the Norwegian Campaign Nordkapp saw the first actions of her career.

Sinking Kattegat

Background

In the evening of 9 April Nordkapp intercepted the 6,031-ton German tanker Kattegat [7] [8] of Bremen [9] in the Glomfjorden south of Narvik. Kattegat was one of two naval tankers the Germans intended to use in order to quickly refuel the ten destroyers of the Narvik task force, enabling them to escape back to Germany before the Royal Navy could trap and sink them. [10] In preparation of her supply mission, Kattegat had departed the pilot station at Kopervik in Western Norway on 6 April, scheduled to arrive at Narvik on 9 April. [11] The Kriegsmarine support tanker had sailed to Norway from Wilhelmshaven on the German North Sea coast on 3 April in preparation for the invasion. [12] While the other tanker, the 11,766-ton whale oil factory ship Jan Wellem, had reached Narvik from the German Basis Nord at the Bolshaya Zapadnaya Litsa inlet on the Kola Peninsula in Russia before the German attack, [10] [13] [14] the captain of Kattegat had been warned of a British naval mine field in the Vestfjorden (Operation Wilfred) and refused to continue, choosing instead to anchor up in Sandlågbukta, Neverdal at Ørnes in Meløy. [10]

Hailing

After closing to a cable length of Kattegat, Lieutenant Commander Seip hailed the German tanker, demanding that it identified itself. In response the German captain signalled that "Vidkun Quisling had been made the new prime minister of Norway and that all Norwegian naval vessels were under orders to cooperate with the German Kriegsmarine". Seip would receive no information from Kattegat before he himself had given his name and rank. While this signal exchange was going on Kattegat dispatched radio messages asking for Kriegsmarine assistance and escorting the remainder of the way to Narvik. [15]

Before he confronted the German ship, Nordkapp's commander had been instructed by the 3. Naval District to take her as a prize, but after speaking with two Norwegian pilots who had guided the German tanker a short time earlier he decided that this would be too hazardous an undertaking. [10]

As the pilots, who had entered Nordkapp during the patrol boat's signal exchange with Kattegat, reported that the tanker's thirty-nine-man crew were all armed and wearing naval uniforms, Seip considered it impossible to board and seize the ship, since his own 22-man crew had a total of only four rifles amongst them. [10] [15] He assessed that to control the large German crew all the way into the port of Bodø while being outnumbered and probably out-gunned would have been too difficult. [10] [16]

Sinking

In response to the aggressive signals received from Kattegat, Seip signalled back a short message telling the German crew to abandon ship within 10 minutes or face the consequences. At the end of the ten minutes no reaction from the German crew had been observed and Nordkapp fired a warning shot. [16] As still no reaction could be seen in the protruding darkness, four 47 mm rounds were fired into Kattegat's waterline. As the Germans had opened their ship's valves while leaving the tanker, Kattegat sank quickly. Thirty-four of the crew were brought on board Nordkapp as PoWs from a nearby wharf, while the remaining five managed to escape into the hills after their ship was sunk. [10] [16] [17] The 34 PoWs from the German tanker were brought to Mosjøen and handed over to military authorities there. [16]

Consequences and aftermath

The effect of removing Kattegat from the Germans' supply chain was devastating, [18] the German destroyers at Narvik could only be refuelled two at a time, instead of the planned four at a time. [19] Also, Jan Wellem did not hold enough fuel for all 10 of the German destroyers. [16] [20] Consequently, the German warships at Narvik failed to make their escape in time and were destroyed by the Royal Navy in the Battles of Narvik. [16] [19] As the five-destroyer-strong 2nd Destroyer Flotilla under Commodore Bernard Warburton-Lee entered the Ofotfjord on 10 April to initiate the First Battle of Narvik, Vice Admiral William Whitworth, in charge of the Royal Navy forces in the Narvik area, received a message from Norway stating that Kattegat had been intercepted and sunk 3 nautical miles (5.56 km) off shore. [9]

Kattegat was later salvaged by the Norwegian military, with 1,400 tons of diesel and 207 barrels of grease unloaded at Svolvær. On 15 May, before Kattegat was ready to sail to Tromsø, she was bombed and damaged by a German aircraft. As the damaged ship still held 5,000 tons of oil, the local fishing boat fleet helped themselves to the cargo until the Germans arrived to retake the ship after the capitulation of mainland Norway in June. [21] The short time Kattegat was in Norwegian hands she served under the name MT Bodø. [7]

Guard and escort duties

The next task for Nordkapp after she had dealt with Kattegatt came on 13 April, when she was ordered to go to Brønnøysund. A German Heinkel He 115 seaplane had landed there after running out of fuel and been seized by the local police, who had taken the four German airmen into custody. The aircraft was captured intact with a full bomb load and was later flown to Tromsø by Royal Norwegian Navy Air Service lieutenant Sivertsen and pressed into Norwegian service. [22]

From 16 to 22 April Nordkapp was deployed with a Royal Navy squadron of 14 warships and two troopships that had arrived at Sjonafjord north of Sandnessjøen. As the force split up and some of the destroyers sailed south, Nordkapp followed the main force north. During the time she followed the British vessels, the force was subjected to several German air attacks without the Norwegian ship suffering any damage. [22]

Patrol and bombardment missions

After leaving the British task force, Nordkapp spent most of her time until late May patrolling and guarding a British mine field in the Andfjord in northern Nordland / southern Troms.

At 24 May she called at Bodø, and by 30 May the evacuation of 4,000 British Army troops from the Bodø region began. By that time Bodø had been heavily bombed by the Luftwaffe over several days, and German troops was observed advancing towards Røsvik north-east of Bodø. On 3 June Nordkapp was despatched together with the 463-ton British-operated Q-ship Ranen [23] to the Leirfjord to try to stop the advance of the enemy by sea. The two ships bombarded German forces in the area before splitting up and heading north, Nordkapp sailing to Svolvær. [22]

Friendly fire incident and evacuation

On 7 June 1940 Nordkapp arrived at Svolvær and received the order that had been given by the Norwegian High Command to evacuate all operational naval vessels to allied ports. While most of the thirteen navy ships that escaped the capitulation of mainland Norway started their journeys that day, Nordkapp remained until the early hours of the next day in order to give refugees and volunteers more time to gather for the voyage to the United Kingdom. According to Lieutenant Commander Seip's orders, his ship's first destination abroad was to be the Faroe Islands. [24]

In the evening of 7 June German aircraft bombed and destroyed an oil tank facility in the town. At around 0200hrs, before Nordkapp was ready to sail west and start five years of service in exile, two ships arrived at Svolvær and started destroying the remaining oil tanks with artillery fire. Assuming the ships to be German the second in command of Nordkapp, Ensign Andersen, who was in command of the ship as Lieutenant Commander Seip was in a conference on land at the time, sailed out and attacked the two unknown ships. As he opened up on the two ships with his single cannon, they quickly returned fire and a 45-minute artillery duel ensued. Neither side managed to hit their adversary during the fight, and eventually the two sides discovered each other's true identity. The ships Nordkapp had been battling for three-quarters of an hour were Ranen and the 655-ton Royal Navy ASW trawler Northern Gem. [25] Ranen had been bombarding German positions together with Nordkapp just four days previously. [24]

After the nearly fatal friendly fire incident, Nordkapp returned to Svolvær and took on board volunteers before leaving port at 0300hrs on 8 June. [26] The passengers included 19 Royal Norwegian Navy personnel, many of whom were crew members of vessels sunk in the preceding two months. [27]

On 9 June Nordkapp joined the British evacuation convoy. During the journey west the ships were attacked by German bombers but avoided suffering any damage. [28]

After four days at sea Nordkapp reached Tórshavn on the Faroe Islands on 12 June, [4] resupplying before continuing on to the United Kingdom.

Service abroad

Iceland and the Shetland Bus

After arrival at Rosyth in Scotland on 18 June 1940 Nordkapp was rebuilt and rearmed [3] and was declared operational on 14 September 1940. [2] She was posted to Iceland from 21 September 1940. [4] On Iceland she served as a patrol vessel until 9 September 1943 when she was transferred to Shetland in order to support the Shetland bus operations. At Shetland she operated from 22 September 1943 [2] together with the RNoN patrol vessels Horten, Molde, Narvik and Risør. [29]

Operation Neptune and Scapa Flow

Between D-day and 18 June 1944 Nordkapp took part in Operation Neptune, the naval part of the invasion of Normandy. On 6 June she escorted a convoy of transports from Southend-on-Sea on the Eastern coast of the UK to the British invasion beaches and thereafter escorted ships along the coast of Normandy. [30] The main threat from which she protected allied shipping was that of German E-boat and U-boat attacks. [31]

On 11 September 1944 she sailed from Portland to Aberdeen for maintenance and stayed there until 15 December 1944 when she was again transferred, [32] this time to guard duties at the Home Fleet's main base at Scapa Flow, a role she would continue until 1 January 1945. Thereafter she moved to Lerwick, Shetland where she was based until VE day. [2]

Return to Norway

On 18 May 1945, ten days after the final German surrender in Norway, Nordkapp left her exile in Methil in the United Kingdom and sailed for home. Two days later, on 20 May, she arrived at her new base at the south-western port of Stavanger, ending almost five years of exile. [32]

Post-war

After the end of the Second World War Nordkapp resumed her pre-war duties as a coast guard vessel until being decommissioned and laid up in Horten on 29 July 1954. She was sold off to civilian ownership in 1956, finding a new career as a fishing vessel under two owners, first as Skarodd and then from 1971 as Tor Hugo. Her long career ended on 27 November 1972, when she sank off West Africa after suffering leaks and disastrous hull failure. [2]

See also

Related Research Articles

The Battles of Narvik were fought from 9 April to 8 June 1940 as a naval battle of the Ofotfjord and as a land battle in the mountains surrounding the north Norwegian town of Narvik as part of the Norwegian Campaign of the Second World War.

The German operation for the invasion of Denmark and Norway in April 1940 was code-named Weserübung, or "Weser Exercise." Opposing the invasion were the partially mobilized Norwegian military, and an allied expeditionary force composed of British, French, and Free Polish formations. The following list formed the order of battle for this campaign.

HNoMS <i>Fridtjof Nansen</i> (1930)

Fridtjof Nansen was the first ship in the Norwegian armed forces to be built specially to perform coast guard and fishery protection duties in the Arctic. She saw service in the Second World War with the Royal Norwegian Navy until she ran aground on an unmarked shallow at Jan Mayen in November 1940.

HNoMS <i>Trygg</i> (1919)

HNoMS Trygg was a torpedo boat of the Royal Norwegian Navy. Her hull was built in Moss and she was finished in Horten, with build number 109. Trygg had two sister ships: HNoMS Snøgg and HNoMS Stegg. Together the three vessels formed the Trygg class of torpedo boats.

HNoMS <i>Draug</i> (1908)

HNoMS Draug was the lead ship of the three-ship Draug class of destroyers built for the Royal Norwegian Navy in the years 1908–1913. The four-stacked destroyer was kept in service long after she was obsolete, and took part in the defence of Norway during the German invasion in 1940.

<i>Sleipner</i>-class destroyer

The Sleipner class was a class of six destroyers built for the Royal Norwegian Navy from 1936 until the German invasion in 1940. The design was considered advanced for its time, and it was the first class of vessels for the Norwegian Navy that used aluminium in the construction of the bridge, the mast and the outer funnel. Extra strength special steel was used in the construction of the hull. Unlike the earlier Draug class the Sleipner class had comparatively good capabilities in both main guns, anti-aircraft artillery and anti-submarine weapons. The class was named after Sleipnir, the eight-legged horse of Odin.

HNoMS <i>Olav Tryggvason</i>

The minelayer HNoMS Olav Tryggvason was built by the naval shipyard at Horten in the early 1930s and had build number 119. She served in the Royal Norwegian Navy until captured by the Germans in 1940. The Germans renamed her first Albatros II, and a few days later Brummer. She was wrecked in a British bombing raid in northern Germany in April 1945.

HNoMS <i>King Haakon VII</i>

HNoMS King Haakon VII was a Royal Norwegian Navy escort ship during World War II, named after King Haakon VII of Norway. She was given to the RNoN by the United States on 16 September 1942, in the presence of President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Norwegian Crown Princess Märtha.

HNoMS <i>Kjell</i> Norwegian navy torpedo boat

HNoMS Kjell was the final ship of twenty-seven 2nd class torpedo boats built for the Royal Norwegian Navy, launched at the Royal Norwegian Navy's shipyard in Horten on 12 March 1912 with build number 106. Kjell saw more than 32 years of service, the first 28 years in the Royal Norwegian Navy during the First World War and in the interwar period, the last four in the Kriegsmarine, having been captured in the first days of the 1940 Norwegian campaign. After being rebuilt as a minesweeper by the Germans, she was sunk by Royal Air Force de Havilland Mosquito fighter bombers on 28 September 1944. Divers rediscovered the shipwreck in 2006.

HNoMS <i>Æger</i> (1936)

HNoMS Æger was a Sleipner-class destroyer launched at Karljohansvern naval shipyard in Horten in 1936. The Sleipner class was part of a Norwegian rearmament scheme started as war became ever more likely in the 1930s. When the Germans invaded Norway on 9 April 1940, Æger intercepted and sank the clandestine German supply ship Roda. She was shortly afterwards attacked and sunk by German bombers, claiming two of the attacking aircraft with her anti-aircraft armament before being taken out of action by a heavy bomb.

HNoMS <i>Sleipner</i> (1936)

HNoMS Sleipner was a destroyer commissioned into the Royal Norwegian Navy in 1936. The lead ship of the Sleipner class, she gained near-legendary status in Norway by enduring over two weeks of intense air attack by Luftwaffe bombers following the 9 April 1940 invasion of Norway. After the resistance in South Norway started unravelling she made her way over the North Sea to continue the fight against the Germans from exile. After serving as a convoy escort along the coast of the United Kingdom, she was decommissioned in 1944. She was recommissioned in 1948 after being converted to a frigate. Along with her surviving sister ships she was sold for scrapping in 1959.

HNoMS <i>Odin</i> (1939)

HNoMS Odin was a Sleipner-class destroyer that entered service with the Royal Norwegian Navy in 1939. She and the other Sleipner-class vessels were built as part of a Norwegian rearmament scheme in the last years leading up to the Second World War. In 1940, she had taken part in protecting Norwegian neutrality, before being caught in the German invasion of Norway on 9 April 1940. After fighting the invasion forces at Kristiansand, she was captured and pressed into Kriegsmarine service for the duration of the war. After the end of the war, she was returned to Norway. In 1948, she and her surviving sister ships were converted to frigates and remained in service until sold for scrapping in 1959.

HNoMS <i>Heimdal</i> (1892)

HNoMS Heimdal was a Norwegian warship built at Akers mekaniske verksted in Kristiania, Norway in 1892 with build number 137.

HNoMS <i>Sæl</i>

HNoMS Sæl was the penultimate vessel of the ten 1. class torpedo boats of the Royal Norwegian Navy. She was built at the Royal Norwegian Navy Shipyard in Horten in 1901, with yard number 85. She was to see close to 40 years service with the Royal Norwegian Navy, taking part in the preparations for war in connection with the dissolution the union with Sweden in 1905, enforcing Norwegian neutrality during the First World War and opposing the German invasion of Norway in 1940. She was lost in battle with Kriegsmarine vessels at Ånuglo in the Hardangerfjord on 18 April 1940.

HNoMS <i>Honningsvåg</i>

HNoMS Honningsvåg was a naval trawler that served throughout the Second World War as a patrol boat in the Royal Norwegian Navy. She was launched at the North Sea harbour of Wesermünde in Hanover, Germany in February 1940 as the fishing trawler Malangen and was captured by Norwegian militiamen at the North Norwegian port of Honningsvåg during her maiden fishing journey to the Barents Sea. Having taken part in the defence of Norway in 1940 she spent the rest of the war years patrolling the ocean off Iceland. She was decommissioned in 1946, sold to a civilian fishing company in 1947 and scrapped in 1973.

HNoMS Tor was a Sleipner-class destroyer of the Royal Norwegian Navy that was launched in September 1939. She was under outfitting and testing when Nazi Germany invaded Norway on 9 April 1940. Although scuttled by Norwegian naval personnel to prevent her from being captured by the invading forces, she was soon salvaged by the Germans and put into service with the Kriegsmarine. Under the name Tiger she served out the war as an escort and training vessel, being recovered by the Norwegians in Denmark after the German capitulation in 1945. After the war she was converted to a frigate and served until 1959.

SS <i>Empire Endurance</i> German steam cargo liner

Empire Endurance was a 8,514 GRT steam cargo liner that was built in 1928 as Alster by Deschimag Werk Vulkan, Hamburg, Germany for the shipping company Norddeutscher Lloyd. In the years leading up to the Second World War Alster carried cargo and passengers between Germany and Australia. After the outbreak of war she was requisitioned by the Kriegsmarine for use as a supply ship.

HNoMS <i>Storm</i> (1898)

HNoMS Storm was a 1.-class torpedo boat constructed in 1898. Storm served the Royal Norwegian Navy for almost 42 years, including neutrality protection duties during the First World War. She was lost in the 1940 Norwegian campaign of the Second World War. During the Norwegian Campaign, she was the only Norwegian warship that launched a torpedo against the invading Germans.

MTB 345 was an experimental motor torpedo boat constructed in 1941, which saw limited service with the Royal Navy before being transferred to the exiled Royal Norwegian Navy on 16 March 1943. She sailed with the Royal Norwegian Navy for three months in 1943, until captured by German forces on 28 July 1943, during her second mission to the coast of occupied Norway. Two days after their capture, the crew of MTB 345 were executed by the Germans based on Hitler's Commando Order. Following their capture of MTB 345, the Germans pressed the motor torpedo boat into Kriegsmarine service, renaming her SA 12. The fate of SA 12 since December 1943 is unknown.

Niels Larsen Bruun was a Norwegian officer who served in the Royal Norwegian Navy for more than four decades. Bruun took part in neutrality protection duties during the First World War, seeing service on several naval vessels and assuming his first command. He continued his service in the inter-war years, teaching at naval schools in addition to shipboard service.

References

  1. 1 2 "Nordkapp (6110276)" . Miramar Ship Index . Retrieved 3 February 2009.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Abelsen 1986: 85
  3. 1 2 3 Sivertsen 1999:206
  4. 1 2 3 4 Abelsen 1986:: 211
  5. Sivertsen 2000: 31
  6. Niehorster, Leo. "Scandinavian Campaign: Administrative Order of Battle Royal Norwegian Navy 3rd Naval District" . Retrieved 3 February 2009.
  7. 1 2 Lawson, Siri Holm. "M/T Bodø". Warsailors.com. Retrieved 3 February 2009.
  8. "5606813" . Miramar Ship Index . Retrieved 3 February 2009.
  9. 1 2 Waage 1963: 83
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Sivertsen 2000: 23
  11. Waage 1963: 80
  12. Smith, Gordon. "Naval Events, April 1940, Part 1 of 4 Monday 1st – Sunday 7th". naval-history.net. Retrieved 3 February 2009.
  13. "5605562" . Miramar Ship Index . Retrieved 9 January 2009.
  14. Kovalev, Sergey (2004). "The Basis Nord Mystery". Oil of Russia International Quarterly Edition (2).
  15. 1 2 Waage 1963: 81
  16. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Waage 1963: 82
  17. Andresen, Dag-Jostein (2 April 2004). "Sjøslagene ved Narvik 10. april 1940". Vrakdykking i Nord- og Midt-Norge (in Norwegian). Archived from the original on 19 January 2009. Retrieved 3 February 2009.
  18. O'Hara, Vincent P. (2004). The German Fleet at War, 1939–1945. Naval Institute Press. p. 32. ISBN   978-1-59114-651-3.
  19. 1 2 Sivertsen 2001: 86
  20. Dildy, Douglas C.; John White (2007). Denmark and Norway 1940. Osprey Publishing. p. 47. ISBN   978-1-84603-117-5.
  21. Sivertsen 2000: 24
  22. 1 2 3 Sivertsen 2000: 32
  23. Lawson, Siri Holm. "D/S Ranen". Warsailors.com. Retrieved 3 February 2009.
  24. 1 2 Berg 1997: 32
  25. Helgason, Guðmundur. "HMS Northern Gem (FY 194)". uboat.net. Retrieved 3 February 2009.
  26. Berg 1997: 33
  27. Berg 1997: 33–34
  28. Berg 1997: 34
  29. Berg 1997: 104
  30. Berg 1997: 142
  31. Berg 1997: 136
  32. 1 2 Thomassen 1995: 229

Bibliography