Read World War II: The Autobiography Online
Authors: Jon E. Lewis
Tags: #Military, #World War, #World War II, #1939-1945, #History
I manœuvred
Walker
to windward of the swimming Germans and as we drifted down on to them, they were hauled on board. Some of them were in the last stages of exhaustion from the cold of those icy northern waters by the time we got them on board. Some indeed would never have made safety had not Leading Seaman Prout gone over the side fully clothed to aid them.
The last to come over the side was obviously the captain, as he swam to
Walker
still wearing his brass-bound cap. We were soon to find out that we had made indeed a notable capture, for the captain was Otto Kretschmer, leading ace of the U-boat arm, holder of the Knight’s Cross with oak leaves and top scorer in terms of tonnage sunk.
On 18 May 1941 the German battleship
Bismarck
slipped her berth in occupied Norway on a hunt for Allied shipping.
THE PURSUIT OF THE
BISMARCK,
24–27 MAY 1940
Lieutenant Ludovic Kennedy RN, HMS
Tartar
I had the first watch that May evening, a day out from the Clyde. With
Somali, Eskimo
and
Mashona
we were escorting the troopship
Britannic
and the battleship
Rodney
westward across the Atlantic. It was, as I recall, an uneventful watch, and at about 9 p.m. while checking bearings and distance from
Rodney
for perhaps the sixth time. I heard the buzzer from the wireless office. Signalman Pearson, with whom I was sharing the watch, a barrel-shaped fellow partial to chocolate “Nutty,” thrust his flabby fist into the voicepipe and hauled up the signal box.
“U-boat Disposition Report, I expect,” he said.
He unraveled the signal, scanned it, then handed it to me. It was prefixed MOST IMMEDIATE, came from the cruiser
Norfolk
and went something like this: IBS ICR 66.40N 28.22W Co220 Sp 30.
“Pearson,” I said, “does that mean what I think it means?”
“Yes, sir. One enemy battleship, one enemy cruiser, position sixty-six forty North, twenty-eight twenty-two West, course 220, speed 30 knots.”
“Christ!” I said, and pressed the captain’s buzzer.
In such a manner did I learn of the break-out into the Atlantic of the giant
Bismarck
together with the
Prinz Eugen,
an event followed by the most exciting week of my life. A glance at the chart showed that the German ships had been picked up in the Denmark Strait, the stretch of water that lies between Greenland and the north of Iceland. Although of intense interest the news did not then affect us personally, as we were 600 miles away and fully occupied with protecting
Rodney
and
Britannic
against U-boats. But it was the one topic of conversation throughout the ship. In the wardroom that night we discussed the likely eventualities into the early hours, and when my servant called me with tea at 7.30 next morning, I was already awake.
“Heard the news, sir?”
“No.”
“Hood’s
gone.”
“No!”
“Yes, and
Prince of Wales
damaged.”
The
Hood
gone – the most famous, most loved of British warships, the one above all others that epitomized the Navy and the country? It seemed impossible to believe. And the brand new battleship
Prince of Wales
damaged! If this is what the
Bismarck
could do in six minutes flat, what might she not achieve against the convoys from America? The question-mark that had arisen at the time of Dunkirk rose again. Loose in the Atlantic and supported by supply ships and tankers, she could prey on our shipping for months and cut the supply line on which we depended for survival.
After breakfast I went to the charthouse where Spider had put up a large scale chart of the Atlantic, and penciled on it the position of the first sighting of the German squadron, the location of the sinking of
Hood,
and the squadron’s present position as received from the signals of the pursuing
Norfolk, Suffolk
and wounded
Prince of Wales.
He had also marked the positions of the British ships closing in on
Bismarck,
and as the day passed and assuming she kept her present course and speed, it looked as though the commander-in-chief, Admiral Tovey, in his flagship
King George V
with the battlecruiser
Repulse
would be the first to engage her in the morning and (if the result was inconclusive) that we would be the second.
Eskimo
and
Britannic
went off to the west, while we steamed south-westward all day, the seas getting higher, the wind rising hourly. Inevitably that evening, as the gap between us gradually narrowed, one’s thoughts turned to the action that lay ahead. Inevitably too one had mixed feelings, partly a desire to stop the
Bismarck
at all costs and by so doing perhaps win honor and glory, partly – and I’m not sure if it wasn’t the stronger part – a reluctance to get embroiled at all. Our task, if we met, was to close in to some 6000 yards to deliver our four torpedoes. With
Rodney
soon outdistanced by the swifter enemy, we would have to undergo the full weight of his broadsides during the run-in; and we knew, without having to say it, that if we survived that, it would be a miracle.
When I came on watch again at midnight, it was blowing a gale. We had had to reduce speed to 15 knots, while
Rodney
with her long dachshund’s snout pushing through the crests had lumbered past at her maximum 22 knots and was now out of sight ahead. I think that was the most uncomfortable watch I ever kept. The motion was like that of a hovercraft in a bumpy sea, greatly magnified, for we lunged at the waves rather than rode them. Throughout the watch the signals from the shadowers kept coming in, and it looked as though the commander-in-chief would make contact with the enemy at around noon. When I reached my cabin via the engine-room and boiler-room (for there was a danger of being washed overboard along the upper deck) I found the place a shambles – books, wireless and broken water carafe strewn about the deck. I left them where they were and clambered into bed.
“Sir?”
Where was I?
“Seven-thirty. Here’s your tea. I’ve cleaned up the mess on the deck. And Jerry’s done a bunk.”
I thought sleepily, this man has got his priorities right.
“Lost contact, have we?”
“Not a whisper since you came off watch. Can’t say I’m altogether sorry.”
This is not the place to recount the changing events and fortunes of either side during the rest of the operation, for we had little knowledge of them at the time . . . Suffice it to say that two days later when we had begun to think that
Bismarck
had disappeared off the face of the waters, she was spotted alone (for she had detached
Prinz Eugen
for independent warfare) some 700 miles north-west of Brest. Her speed was down to 20 knots which suggested damage or a fuel problem (it was both) but which would bring her under German air cover within twenty-four hours. At that time
Rodney, Tartar
and
Mashona
(
Somali
had left us to refuel) were still bucketing around the ocean at high speed, but we were some 150 miles to the north of her, and with only a couple of knots’ advantage had virtually no chance of catching up.
There was still however one British group between
Bismarck
and France, Vice-Admiral Somerville’s Force H. steaming north from Gibraltar; it included the aircraft-carrier
Ark Royal,
and if one of her torpedo-planes could slow down
Bismarck
a little more, there might still be a faint chance of bringing her to book. At six that evening Admiral Tovey in
King George V
thundered over the horizon to join us, and took station in the van.
Presently a signal lamp began flashing from the flagship’s bridge. “To
Rodney,”
sang out our signalman, “from C-in-C. What is your best speed?”
Then it was
Rodney’s
turn.
“To C-in-C. From
Rodney.
Twenty-two knots.”
Gradually the distance between the two ships lengthened and
Rodney’
s lamp began flashing again.
“To C-in-C,” shouted the signalman, “from
Rodney.
I am afraid that your twenty-two knots is faster than mine.”
The flagship dropped back, and we all steamed on, less with any real hope of
Bismarck
being delivered to us than for the lack of any alternative; if failure had to be admitted, let it not be admitted until the last possible moment. At 6.30 p.m. Tovey signaled the Admiralty that unless
Bismarck’s
speed had been reduced by midnight,
King George V
would have to return to harbor for lack of fuel;
Rodney,
with
Tartar
and
Mashona
also very short of fuel, could continue until eight the next morning. A little later came a report from Admiral Somerville that he had launched a torpedo attack with Swordfish aircraft, but they had registered no hits: if the light held, he aimed to launch another. For two hours we waited in anticipation of this, praying, hoping that it might be successful. Then came a second signal: “Attack completed. Estimate no hits.”
So that was it. The long week’s night was over: we had lost
Hood
and gained nothing in exchange, and
Bismarck
was freed to fight another day. In
Rodney
the captain told the crew over the public address system that their last chance of bringing the enemy to action had gone, and his commander ordered guns’ crews to stand down. As for
Tartar,
it is difficult to convey the extent of the gloom in which we sat down to supper in the wardroom; nor, now that the week-long tension had been broken and the banging and buffeting were almost over, the overwhelming sense of exhaustion we all felt.
And then a most extraordinary thing happened. A signal was received from the cruiser
Sheffield,
shadowing
Bismarck
from astern: “Enemy’s course 340°.” Now 340° was almost due north, toward us, almost the opposite of the course of around 120° which she had been steering for Brest. On the bridge the general feeling was that the captain of the
Sheffield
must have made a mistake and thought
Bismarck
was steaming from right to left instead of left to right, understandable enough in the prevailing weather. But a few minutes later came a confirmatory signal, “Enemy’s course North,” and when further signals came in saying her speed was no more than a few knots, we all realized that
Bismarck
had been crippled by the last Swordfish attack (one torpedo had hit and jammed her rudder) and that she was going to be delivered to us after all.
So we made preparations for a battle which – unless
Bismarck
was able to slip away in the night-now looked inevitable; I stowed away all things breakable in my cabin, put on clean underwear and filled the brandy flask, mounted to my action station at the pom-pom, and wondered how it might be when the time came.
And then an odd thing occurred. An army officer, what the Navy calls a pongo, had come aboard when we first sailed as a wardroom guest; he had been given a week’s leave, was hoping for a spot of sea breezes, had not thought to get involved in this. After dinner, not knowing the rules and having nothing to do, he had got rather tipsy, and now he appeared on the upper deck singing to the wild night his repertoire of pongo songs. When it was reported to the captain, he was ordered to go to his cabin and stay there. In former times, I suppose, he would have been clapped in irons or shot.
The weather worsened as the night wore on. The same headwind into which
Bismarck
had involuntarily turned gave us a following sea; one in which the bows yawed sideways like a car in a skid, so that the ship leaned heavily to starboard and stayed there like a determined drunk until the quartermaster gradually eased her back to the given course. All night long we stayed at action stations while the ship slewed first one way and then the other and great rafts of spray, flung up from the bows, slapped at our oilskins and sou ’westers. At first I had turned over in my mind what our role might be – perhaps a night torpedo attack – but soon anything beyond the next five or ten minutes seemed remote and irrelevant. After what felt like an eternity dawn came, with curling wave-tops, a leaden sky, wretched visibility. Presently the commander-in-chief sent a signal asking
Tartar
and
Mashona
their fuel situation. When he had been told, he sent another signal: “On receipt of executive signal, proceed as convenient to refuel at Plymouth or Londonderry.” Were we not going to be allowed to be in at the kill?
During the morning watch guns crews were allowed to go off in ones and twos for breakfast, and around 8 a.m. I went down to the wardroom for mine. Returning, I saw that
Rodney
and
King George V
had drawn well ahead of us, so popped up to the bridge for the latest news. There I found long faces and silence. I looked at the Yeoman of Signals quizzically and he handed me the signal log.
“Tartar
and
Mashona
from C-in-C,” I read. “Proceed in execution of previous orders.” So, thanks to our critical fuel situation (for if ordered in to a torpedo attack at speed, we would use up a great deal more), we were to be denied any part in the battle. But Tovey’s original signal had said to proceed to refuel
as convenient
– “and what I’m going to find convenient,” said the captain, “is to stick around for a bit and watch.” I had reason for disappointment too. I had with me both my grandmother’s Kodak and also a 16-millimeter Bell and Howell movie camera lent me by the father of a girlfriend; and with the pom-pom gun having no role to play, I could, had we been sent in on a torpedo attack, have obtained some unique footage.