Everything about The Battle Of The Barents Sea totally explained
The
Battle of the Barents Sea took place on
December 31,
1942 between
British ships escorting
convoy JW 51B to
Kola Inlet in the
USSR, and
German surface raiders. The action took place in the
Barents Sea north of
North Cape, Norway.
Approach
Convoy
JW 51B comprised fourteen merchant ships carrying war materials to the
USSR — some 202 tanks, 2,046 other vehicles, 87 fighters, 33 bombers, 11,500 tons of fuel, 12,650 tons of aviation fuel and just over 54,000 tons of other supplies. They were protected by the
destroyers
HMS Achates,
Orwell,
Oribi,
Onslow,
Obedient, and
Obdurate; the
Flower class corvettes
Rhododendron and
Hyderabad; the
minesweeper HMS
Bramble; and two
trawlers Vizalma and
Northern Gem. The overall commander was
Robert St. Vincent Sherbrooke, in
Onslow. The convoy sailed in the dead of winter to preclude attacks by German aircraft that had decimated an earlier Arctic convoy,
PQ-17.
In addition to the convoy escort, two
cruisers,
Sheffield and
Jamaica, were independently stationed in the
Barents Sea to provide distant cover for the convoy. These two ships, known as "Force R", were under the command of Rear-admiral
Robert L. Burnett, in
Sheffield.
The German forces included the
heavy cruiser Admiral Hipper;
pocket battleship Lützow; and
destroyers
Friedrich Eckholdt,
Richard Beitzen,
Theodor Riedel,
Z 29,
Z 30, and
Z 31. These ships were based at
Altafjord in northern
Norway, and were under the overall command of Vice-admiral
Oskar Kummetz in
Hipper.
Convoy JW 51B sailed from Loch Ewe on
December 22,
1942 and met its escort off
Iceland on
December 25. From there the ships sailed northeast, meeting heavy gales on
December 28 and
29 December that caused the ships of the convoy to lose station. When the weather moderated five merchantmen, including the
Oribi and the
Vizalma, were missing and
Bramble was detached to search for them. Three of the straggling merchantmen rejoined the following day; the other ships proceeded independently towards Kola Inlet.
Meanwhile, on
30 December, the convoy was sighted by the German
submarine U-354. When the report was received by the German Naval Staff, Kummetz was ordered to sail immediately with his force to intercept the convoy. Kummetz divided his force into two divisions led by
Hipper and
Lützow, respectively.
The battle
Because the battle took place in the middle of the
polar night and both the German and British forces were scattered and unsure of the positions of the rest of their own forces, much less the enemy's, the entire battle was a rather confused affair. During the battle it wasn't clear who was firing on whom or even how many ships were engaged.
At 08:20 on
December 31,
Obdurate, stationed south of the convoy, spotted three of the German destroyers to the rear (west) of the convoy. Then
Onslow spotted
Admiral Hipper, also to the rear of the convoy, and steered to intercept with
Orwell,
Obedient, and
Obdurate, while
Achates was ordered to stay with the convoy and make smoke. After some firing, the British ships turned to make a feigned
torpedo attack. Heavily outgunned, Sherbrooke knew that his torpedoes were his most formidable weapons and once launched, that threat would be gone. The ruse worked:
Hipper temporarily retired since Kummetz had been ordered not to risk his ships.
Admiral Hipper returned to make a second attack, hitting
Onslow and causing heavy damage to her, although
Onslow would ultimately survive the action. Sherbrooke was badly injured by a large steel splinter, and then command passed to
Obedient.
Hipper then pulled north of the convoy, stumbled across
Bramble, which opened fire;
Hipper returned fire with its much heavier guns.
(External Link
) The destroyer
Eckholdt was ordered to finish
Bramble off, while the
Admiral Hipper shifted target to
Obedient and
Achates to the south.
Achates was badly damaged, but she continued to lay down smoke until she eventually sank. Many of her crew would be rescued by the trawler
Northern Gem. The Germans would report sinking a destroyer, but this was on the basis of the sinking the minesweeper
Bramble which they mistook for a destroyer - they never realized
Achates had been hit.
All this firing attracted the attention of Force R, which was still farther to the north.
Sheffield and
Jamaica approached unseen, and they opened fire on
Admiral Hipper at 11:30, causing some damage. Kummetz initially thought that the attack of the two cruisers was coming from another destroyer, but upon realizing his mistake, he ordered his ships to retreat to the west. In another case of mistaken identity,
Eckholdt mistook
Sheffield for
Admiral Hipper, and she was quickly sunk.
Meanwhile,
Lützow approached from the east and fired ineffectively at the convoy (which was still being hidden by smoke from the doomed
Achates). Heading northwest to join
Admiral Hipper,
Lützow also found
Sheffield and
Jamaica, which opened fire. Coincidentally, both sides decided to break off the action at the same time, each side fearing imminent
torpedo attacks upon their capital ships from the other's remaining destroyers. This was shortly after noon. Burnett with Force R continued to shadow the German ships at a distance until it was evident that they were retiring back to their base, while the ships of the convoy re-formed and continued towards Kola Inlet.
Aftermath
Despite this German attack on convoy JW 51B, all fourteen of its merchant ships reached their destinations in the
USSR.
Even more critically for the outcome of the war,
Adolf Hitler was infuriated at what he perceived as the uselessness of the surface raiders, seeing that two heavy cruisers were driven off by mere destroyers. There were serious implications: this failure nearly made Hitler enforce a decision to scrap the surface fleet, and for the German Navy to concentrate on
U-boat warfare. Admiral
Erich Raeder, supreme commander of the
Kriegsmarine, offered his resignation - which Hitler apparently reluctantly accepted. Raeder was replaced by Admiral
Karl Dönitz, the commander of the U-boat fleet.
On the British side, Captain
Robert St. Vincent Sherbrooke was awarded the
Victoria Cross. He generously acknowledged that it had truthfully been awarded in honour of the whole crew of
Onslow.
At the memorial for
Bramble, Captain Harvey Crombie stated of the crew: "They had braved difficulties and perils probably unparalleled in the annals of the British Navy, and calls upon their courage and endurance were constant, but they never failed. They wouldn't have us think sadly at this time, but rather that we should praise God that they'd remained steadfast to duty to the end."
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)
The battle was the subject of the book
73 North by
Dudley Pope.
Further Information
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