Английская Википедия:French submarine Le Héros

Материал из Онлайн справочника
Перейти к навигацииПерейти к поиску

Шаблон:Short description

Шаблон:Other ships

Шаблон:Infobox ship imageШаблон:Infobox ship careerШаблон:Infobox ship characteristics

Le Héros was a French Navy Шаблон:Sclass of the M6 series commissioned in 1934. She participated in World War II on the side of the Allies until June 1940, and then in the naval forces of Vichy France until she was sunk in 1942.

Characteristics

Файл:Casabianca profile view.svg
Profile of Шаблон:Ship, sister ship of Le Héros.

Le Héros was part of a fairly homogeneous series of 31 deep-sea patrol submarines also called "1,500-tonners" because of their displacement. All entered service between 1931 and 1939.

The Redoutable-class submarines were Шаблон:Convert long and Шаблон:Convert in beam and had a draft of Шаблон:Convert. They could dive to a depth of Шаблон:Convert. They displaced Шаблон:Convert on the surface and Шаблон:Convert underwater. Propelled on the surface by two diesel engines producing a combined Шаблон:Convert, they had a maximum speed of Шаблон:Convert. When submerged, their two electric motors produced a combined Шаблон:Convert and allowed them to reach Шаблон:Convert. Also called "deep-cruising submarines", their range on the surface was Шаблон:Convert at Шаблон:Convert. Underwater, they could travel Шаблон:Convert at Шаблон:Convert.

Construction and commissioning

Le Héros was authorized under the 1929 naval program[1] and was laid down along with her sister ship Шаблон:Ship at Arsenal de Brest in BrestFrance, on 1 August 1929[1] with the hull number Q170. Le Héros was launched on 14 October 1932.[2] She completed fitting out for her sea trials on 15 October 1933,[1] successfully finished her trials on 8 January 1934,[1] and completed fitting out on 10 June 1934.[1] Declared complete on 25 June 1934,[1] she was commissioned on 12 September 1934.[1][2]

Service history

World War II

French Navy

When World War II began in September 1939, Le Héros was assigned to the 1st Submarine Division based at Toulon, France.[1][3][4] Her sister ships Шаблон:Ship, Шаблон:Ship, and Шаблон:Ship made up the rest of the division.[1][3][4]

In December 1939, Le Héros was sent in search of the German tanker Шаблон:Ship in the mid-Atlantic Ocean with her sister ships Шаблон:Ship, Шаблон:Ship, Шаблон:Ship, Шаблон:Ship, and Шаблон:Ship.[1][3][5] From 8 to 29 March 1940, she carried out a patrol in the South Atlantic Ocean between Fernando de Noronha and the coast of Brazil, without success.[3][6] In April 1940, the rest of the 1st Submarine Division was transferred to Bizerte in Tunisia, but Le Héros and Le Glorieux were based at Dakar in Senegal.

German ground forces advanced into France on 10 May 1940, beginning the Battle of France, and Italy declared war on France on 10 June 1940 and joined the invasion. The Battle of France ended in France's defeat and armistice with Germany and Italy, which went into effect on 25 June 1940. Le Héros was still assigned to the 1st Submarine Division that day, home-ported at Toulon but apparently stationed at Dakar.[3][note 1]

Vichy France

After France's surrender, Le Héros served in the naval forces of Vichy France. apparently stationed initially at Dakar.[note 1] After the attack on Mers-el-Kébir — in which a British Royal Navy squadron attacked a French Navy squadron moored at the naval base at Mers El Kébir in Oran on the coast of Algeria on 3 July 1940 — Le Héros and Le Glorieux got underway from Dakar at 04:30 on 4 July 1940 in company with a Latécoère 302 flying boat to retaliate by attacking the British heavy cruiser Шаблон:HMS, which was patrolling south of Dakar.[3] The flying boat found Dorsetshire and guided the submarines to her,[1] but the submarines could get no closer to her than Шаблон:Convert.[3] They received orders at 16:00 to return to Dakar.[3] During their return voyage, a seaplane from Dorsetshire attacked them,[3] narrowly missing Le Glorieux with two bombs.[7]

On 7 July 1940, a British naval force arrived off Dakar and, as a part of Operation Catapult, transmitted an ultimatum at 18:00.[3] The French did not reply, and ordered Le Héros and Le Glorieux to put to sea.[3] Many members of their crews initially refused to fight the British, but the commanding officer of Le Héros convinced them to participate in the sortie.[3] The two submarines got underway to conduct the attack, but sources differ on the details of what followed.[3] According to one account, they left Dakar together and anchored southeast of the island of Gorée at 21:30 on 7 July,[3] then set off to attack the British squadron on 8 July 1940, a French sloop-of-war mistakenly opening fire on them as they departed,[3] and submerged off Dakar at 11:20.[3] In another version of the events, Le Héros was still moored in Dakar on 8 July and got underway at dawn that day,[3] while Le Glorieux departed a few hours later;[3] mistaken for a British submarine attempting to infiltrate the harbor, Le Glorieux suffered some light damage when she came under heavy gunfire from three French ships and was bombed by a French seaplane.[3] In either event, both submarines spent the day submerged off Dakar[3] and attempted to attack the British ships there but could not get close enough, and the British departed the area and headed for Freetown after Fleet Air Arm Fairey Swordfish torpedo bombers from the aircraft carrier Шаблон:HMS attacked and seriously damaged the French battleship Шаблон:Ship at Dakar that day.[3][8] Both submarines returned to Dakar during the night of 8–9 July 1940.[3]

By 8 August 1940, Le Héros and Le Glorieux were at Casablanca in French Morocco,[3] From 5 to 7 November 1940, Le Héros and her sister ship Шаблон:Ship operated south of Cabo de Gata, Spain, to reconnoiter Gibraltar.[3][9]

Le Héros and Le Glorieux later proceeded to Toulon, where they were placed under guard and maintained in a disarmed and unfueled status under the terms of the 1940 armistice. On 1 June 1941 they began training for a deployment to Dakar and from there to Madagascar in the Indian Ocean.[3][10] They departed Toulon on 28 September 1941 and, after stops at Oran from 1 to 3 October and Casablanca from 5 to 7 October, arrived on 12 October 1941 at Dakar, where they both entered drydock from 15 to 19 October 1941 for hull cleaning.[7]

In October 1941, the British boarded and captured a convoy of four Vichy French cargo ships en route to Dakar.[1][3] To retaliate, the French ordered Le Glorieux and Le Héros to attack British trade routes along the coast of South Africa.[1][3] The two submarines got underway from Dakar in company with a convoy on 27 October 1941 to continue their journey to Madagascar.[7][note 2] On either 15 or 16 November 1941, according to different sources,[7] one of the submarines attacked the 4,000-gross register ton cargo ship Capo Olmo, some sources claiming that Le Glorieux fired two torpedoes at her south of the Cape of Good Hope off Port Elizabeth, South Africa, at Шаблон:Coord and that both missed,[7][11] others that Le Héros made the attack during a storm on 16 November 1940 and claimed to have sunk Capo Olmo.[1][3] At 04:29 on 17 November 1941, Le Héros torpedoed the 5,750- or 5,757-[2]gross register ton (according to different sources) cargo ship Thode Fagelund in the Indian Ocean off East London, South Africa, at Шаблон:Coord.[3][2][11] Thode Fagelund sank at 04:42,[3] but her entire crew survived.[2] Le Héros attempted an attack on another merchant ship during the evening of 17 November, but without success.[1] Le Héros and Le Glorieux rendezvoused off Fort-Dauphin on the southern coast of Madagascar on 23 November 1941[3][7] and proceeded to Diego-Suarez, Madagascar, which they reached in poor condition on 27 November 1941 after a journey of Шаблон:Convert.[7]

On 8 February 1942, Le Héros departed Diego-Suarez to escort the auxiliary cruiser Шаблон:Ship, which was loaded with Шаблон:Convert of food, to resupply Djibouti in French Somaliland,[1][3] which was under a British blockade.[1] After arriving at Djibouti, Le Héros conducted a patrol in the Gulf of Tadjoura off French Somaliland from 27 February to 2 March 1942.[1][3] She got underway from Djibouti on 17 March 1942 to return to Madagascar and arrived at Diego-Suarez on 27 March 1942.[1][3]

On 2 May 1942, Le Héros departed Diego-Suarez to escort another cargo ship carrying supplies to Djibouti.[1][3] Fearing a Japanese attack on Madagascar, which would compromise India's security and supplies, the British invaded Madagascar, beginning with amphibious landings in Courrier Bay near Diego-Suarez at dawn on 5 May 1942.[1][3][12] In the Indian Ocean Шаблон:Convert north of Madagascar at the time, Le Héros accompanied the cargo ship she was escorting as it altered course to steer for the Comoro Islands.[1] After seeing the ship safely to the Comoros, Le Héros made for Diego-Suarez on the surface at Шаблон:Convert.[1][3] Throughout the afternoon of 5 May, she received more and more alarming reports from Madagascar about British progress in the invasion.[3] She was still Шаблон:Convert from Diego-Suarez when a British aircraft forced her to dive at 15:00 on 6 May 1942.[1][3] By the time she resurfaced at 15:30, the weather had deteriorated, forcing her to reduce speed to Шаблон:Convert.[1][3] At 23:15 on 6 May 1942, she was Шаблон:Convert off Madagascar, near Cap d'Ambre (the northern tip of the island) and east-northeast of the Alizès Pass.[1][3]

Loss

At 03:10 on 7 May 1942, Le Héros passed around the northern tip of Madagascar,[1] heading for Courrier Bay on the northwestern coast to attack the British invasion fleet there.[3] After skirting a French minefield,[1] she reached a position off Courrier Bay at 04:30.[1] At dawn, a flight of eight Fairey Swordfish torpedo bombers from the aircraft carrier Шаблон:HMS surprised her on the surface either north or west of Courrier Bay, according to different sources, and attacked her with depth charges.[1][2] She crash-dived, but a violent explosion shook her, knocking out her electrical power, rupturing her compressed air and diesel fuel systems, damaging her forward diving planes, and creating a leak which allowed seawater to enter her forward battery room, causing the release of poisonous chlorine gas.[1] The exploding depth charges forced her to the surface, and her commanding officer ordered her crew to abandon ship.[1][3] She sank 15 minutes after the attack, at 05:08, in Шаблон:Convert of water in the Indian Ocean at Шаблон:Coord.[1][3][2]

Le Héros′s entire crew of 72 men was left drifting in rough seas, and those without lifebelts quickly became exhausted and sank to their deaths.[1] Sometime later, sharks began to attack the survivors.[1] British ships reached the scene four hours after Le Héros sank, and the infantry landing ship Шаблон:HMS rescued 52 survivors.[1][3] One source claims that other survivors reached the coast of Madagascar on their own.[3] Sources disagree on the number of men lost, claiming 19,[3] 20,[1] and 24[3][13] men missing.

Notes

Шаблон:Reflist

References

Footnotes

Шаблон:Reflist

Bibliography

Шаблон:Redoutable class submarines (1928) Шаблон:WWII French ships Шаблон:May 1942 shipwrecks


Ошибка цитирования Для существующих тегов <ref> группы «note» не найдено соответствующего тега <references group="note"/>