Northern Patrol

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Northern Patrol
11th Cruiser Squadron
North Atlantic ocean
Active1904–1917, 1939–1941
Disbanded1917, 1941
Country United Kingdom
Branch Royal Navy
Part of
Garrison/HQScapa Flow
Nickname(s)The Muckle Flugga Hussars
Engagements
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Dudley de Chair
Reginald Tupper
Max Horton
Robert Raikes
Ernest Spooner

The Northern Patrol, also known as Cruiser Force B and the Northern Patrol Force, was a naval force of the Royal Navy during the world wars. The Northern Patrol was part of the British "distant" Blockade of Germany (1914–1919). Its main task was to prevent trade to and from Germany by checking merchant ships and their cargoes. It was also to stop German warships, raiders and other German naval ships from leaving the North Sea for the Atlantic Ocean or entering the North Sea from the Atlantic, to protect Shetland against invasion and to gather intelligence from intercepted neutral ships.[1] The Northern Patrol operated under the command of the Grand Fleet during the First World War. At first, Edgar-class cruisers were used but these were not built for the seas around Scotland in winter and were replaced by civilian ships pressed into service as Armed Merchant Cruisers.

In the Second World War the Northern Patrol was commanded by the Home Fleet and participated in the Blockade of Germany (1939–1945). At first the force comprised elderly C-class cruisers and Danae-class cruisers of 4,000 and 5,000 long tons (4,100 and 5,100 t), built during the First World War. In June 1939 the Admiralty called up reservists for the cruisers and the Northern Patrol was re-established on 6 September 1939. As requisitioned Armed Merchant Cruisers became available, they replaced the cruisers, usually being crewed by their peacetime complements as reservists or on T.124 agreements. On 21 July 1940, the Admiralty extended the Northern Patrol southwards to form the Western Patrol. In November 1940 the Admiralty terminated the Northern Patrol except for the Denmark Strait and reinforce the Western Patrol.

Background

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Blockade, 1815–1914

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For much of the nineteenth century, the Admiralty and much of the navy took it that the main aim was to engage and defeat an opposing fleet. In 1908 war orders to the Channel Fleet were that

The principal object is to bring the main German fleet to decisive action and all other operations are subsidiary to this end.

— 1 July 1908[2]

Success in this object would guarantee command of the English Channel and the North Sea, secure British trade and territory and allow the Expeditionary Force to reach France. The Admiralty expected that the German fleet would sally forth, soon after the declaration of war to contest British command of the sea. An alternative to decisive battle was the close blockade of opposing ports as occurred during the Napoleonic Wars (1803–1815). Swift-sailing frigates cruised off French ports, backed by bigger ships out to sea. The blockading ships were almost immune to attack and with no need to return to port to refuel. The advent of steam power required more frequent returns to port for coal and after 1900, the risks to blockading ships multiplied with the advent of mines, torpedoes, submarines and long-range coastal artillery. By 1912, airships and aircraft could uncover the position of the bigger ships off shore and direct submarines and destroyers towards them. During the Russo-Japanese War (1904–1905), the Japanese fleet, conducting the last close blockade, at Port Arthur, suffered many losses from mines.[3]

Map of the North Sea, Texel is just east of the Dutch border

The Navy policy for blockade evolved; in 1908 the commander of the Channel Fleet ordered that the big ships would move to positions beyond the range at which German destroyers could not reach if sailing at nightfall with orders to return the next morning, reckoned to be 170 nmi (310 km; 200 mi). British ships in the Heligoland Bight should try to cut off German ships sailing from the Elbe or Jade or report the sailing of the High Seas Fleet (Hochseeflotte). The Admiralty had a change of heart in 1911 but by 1912 the war orders stipulated that a close blockade was superseded by an observational blockade formed by cruisers and destroyers, ranged from the Norwegian south-west coast, to half-way between Germany and England, level with Newcastle, then south to Texel with the Battle Fleet cruising to the west of the line.[4]

Plans from 1905 to capture a German North Sea island as a forward base were also abandoned after the Germans fortified Heligoland and the Frisian Islands. The Grand Fleet war plans of June 1914 scrapped the observational blockade for the Grand Fleet to be based in Scotland except for the Channel Fleet which would remain on the south coast. The bases of the Grand Fleet were to block the northern exists of the North Sea and the Channel Fleet to seal the channel. The northerly line would stretch from the Scottish coast and northern islands to Norway, with the Grand Fleet based at Scapa Flow in Orkney, un-armoured cruisers (later named the Northern Patrol) patrolling a line from the Shetlands to the Norwegian coast. The German navy was ignorant of the new policy and expected to find plenty of opportunities to whittle away the numerical superiority of the British.[5]

North Sea

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Map of the northern North Sea and Norwegian Sea

In a naval war with Germany, Britain had the great geographical advantage of obstructing German access to the Atlantic Ocean. Should German ships seek to use the southern exit of the North Sea, they would have to pass through the Strait of Dover and along the English Channel, which for 200 nmi (370 km; 230 mi) was no more than 60 nmi (110 km; 69 mi) wide. Using the northabout route past Scotland would consume a vast amount of coal and ships would have to make passage through another restricted and stormy sea of about 200 nmi (370 km; 230 mi) width between the Orkney Islands and Shetland Islands off the north of Scotland and the Norwegian coast.[6]

A German ship that got as far as Cape Clear Island, at the extreme south-west of Ireland, would have to commandeer coal from captured ships, a risky and unreliable method of re-fuelling.[6] The British could exploit the same geographical and oceanic conditions to intercept German sea traffic and attempts of the Imperial German Navy (Kaiserliche Marine) to operate outside the North Sea. With the Grand Fleet based at Scapa Flow in the Orkneys, the northabout route would be blocked, with the assistance of a cruiser squadron keeping watch on the seas to the east and north of Shetland; other cruiser squadrons would watch a second line to the north.[6]

British preparations

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In 1914, the British government expected that economic pressure would have a great effect on Germany.[7] The Admiralty war plan anticipated that Germany would be the main enemy in a European war and that a distant naval blockade would cut trade to and from Germany, including goods carried in neutral vessels. A special naval force was to patrol the sea routes between the north of Scotland and Norway and intercept traffic from the Atlantic into the North Sea. The Northern Patrol was to be provided by Cruiser Force B (later the 10th Cruiser Squadron) from Scapa Flow in Orkney.[1] The cruiser squadrons of the Grand Fleet based at Cromarty and Rosyth were to form another blockade line further to the south. The administrative complications of the blockade overwhelmed the capacity of Vice-Admiral Francis Miller, the Base Admiral in Chief from 7 August 1914, devolving on the commander in chief, Admiral John Jellicoe.[8] To relieve the administrative burdens on Miller and Jellicoe, the post of the Admiral Commanding, Orkneys and Shetlands was created to oversee the defence of the islands, naval bases and shore duties. Vice-Admiral Stanley Colville was appointed to the command (7 September 1914 – 19 January 1916) with Miller subordinate to him.[9]

First World War

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Cruiser Force B

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Diagram of an Edgar-class cruiser (Brasseys 1897)

The Canadian naval officer, Dudley de Chair, had a steady rise through the naval hierarchy and reached the rank of rear-admiral in 1912. Early in 1913 he became naval secretary to Winston Churchill, the First Lord of the Admiralty (1911–1915). After several full and frank exchanges of views with Churchill, de Chair was denied the command of the 2nd Cruiser Squadron that had been promised as his next appointment. De Chair received instead the post of Admiral of the Training Service, something of a snub, which included eight ageing Edgar-class cruisers built from 1889 to 1894. Under a 1913 war plan, the 10th Cruiser Squadron (10th CS) and 11th Cruiser Squadrons were to close the northabout route past the British Isles between Orkney, Shetland, Iceland and Norway but in 1914, the 11th Cruiser Squadron, as Cruiser Force E, was sent to the Persian Gulf, leaving the 10th Cruiser Squadron to make do.[10]

Mobilisation orders were issued by the Admiralty on 19 July 1914 and on 3 August, de Chair was ordered to take the Edgars to Scapa Flow in the Orkneys. The cruisers were ordered from their ports and en route the 10th CS captured SS William Behrens a German ship carrying timber which was sent to port under a prize crew. Endymion and Theseus made a delayed arrival on 6 August having chased SS Kronprinzessin Cecile, a German liner carrying precious metals, sending it into Falmouth. On 7 August Edgar sank two German trawlers which had tried to run instead of stopping when ordered. The seas between Scotland and Norway were notoriously dangerous; in the summer, mist and sudden high winds were common, for the rest of the year there were gales, stormy seas and long nights, with short, dull days under leaden skies. It was common for winds to reach force 9 or 10 on the Beaufort scale, raising seas higher than ships' masts.[11][a] A local phenomenon, lumps, were waves which had superimposed and which, in a force 10 gale, arrived without warning, damaging ships and occasionally sinking them.[12]

Shetland (boxed) Orkney and Scotland to the south, Faroe Islands to the north-west and Norway to the east

The 10th CS reached full strength on 7 August and commenced operations to,

...intercept German vessels of war and German merchant vessels, and sink or capture them; also to stop all neutral vessels proceeding to German ports, and to deny the anchorage of any harbour in the Shetlands or Orkneys to the enemy.

— Dudley de Chair[13]

The Edgars were first-class protected cruisers, old, Victorian ships. The ships carried two 9.2-inch (234 mm) guns and ten 6-inch (150 mm) quick-firers for the ships to fire broadside into opposing ships. The Edgars had been built to patrol the seas, protecting trade and overawing recalcitrant colonials. By 1914 they were in no condition to spend long periods in such dangerous seas; many of the crews were recalled pensioners, somewhat surprised to return to service. De Chair established a base at Swarbacks Minn, an anchorage on the west side of Shetland. On 10 August, de Chair formed the First Division with Crescent, Grafton, Endymion and Theseus; Edgar, Royal Arthur, Gibraltar and Hawke became the Second Division. The Shetland–Faroe gap was watched by the First Division and the Second Division was sent to watch the Orkney–Norway gap.[14] The Edgars were slow in speed and acceleration and had to make frequent returns to port for coaling, reducing each patrol to three ships. During autumn, the weather deteriorated and sometimes was so bad as to preclude boarding ships. The mechanical state of the ships declined, Gibraltar, Royal Arthur and Crescent soon needing repairs.[15]

Painting of an Edgar-class cruiser by William Mackenzie Thomson

During October, de Chair was ordered to patrol further to the south during a big operation to protect a convoy of 33 cruise liners transporting the Canadian Expeditionary Force to Britain. On 15 October, while patrolling off Aberdeen in line abreast at 10 nmi (19 km; 12 mi) intervals, Hawke stopped to collect mail from Endymion then set off at 13 kn (24 km/h; 15 mph) in a straight line to regain position. At 10:30 a.m., Hawke was struck by a torpedo from U-9, capsized and sank. None of the other ships saw the sinking and found out only after U-9 attacked and missed Theseus. The patrol was ordered to head north-west at high speed but Hawke failed to acknowledge the signal. HMS Swift, an extremely fast destroyer, was sent from Scapa Flow to investigate and found a raft with 22 survivors. A Norwegian merchant ship rescued 49 men from a boat and transferred them to a British trawler but 524 members of the crew perished.[16] Before sailing, the captain, Hugh Williams, had visited Crescent and asked de Chair for another two days to make repairs to the engines. De Chair had refused since the ship could still sail at 10 kn (19 km/h; 12 mph). As Williams left the flagship, he was reported saying

...it is pure murder sending the ship with over 500 officers and men on board to sea in this state.[17]

On 21 October, Crescent was surprised to be taken under fire by a tanker, north north-west of Foula. The ship had no identification signs and Crescent replied at 7,000 yd (6,400 m), having been damaged by the tanker. The tanker soon caught fire on the deck and sent up a white flag. Due to the sea state, no boarding party was risked and the ship was escorted to Lerwick, where it was found to have been bought by the Kaiserliche Marine two months earlier, for service as an oceanic U-boat supply ship.[18]

The decrepitude of the Edgars continued to interfere with operations; on 29 October Grafton reported engine-trouble and unstable funnels. Theseus broke down chasing another ship and on 31 October reported more defects, being sent back to Swarbacks Minn to make repairs. Endymion docked at Scapa Flow and reported that it could not sail due to unserviceable engines and trouble with the fore bridge. On 11 November, Edgar had more engine trouble and had to return to Shetland when the weather had improved. Along with the frequent defects arising in the Edgars, Jellicoe ordered sweeps outside the cruisers' patrol areas reducing the Northern Patrol to nearly nothing. On 11 November, Crescent shipped a lump over the forecastle, which carried away de Chair's sea cabin, a whaler and swamped a ventilator, dousing several boilers; Edgar lost a crewmember and a cutter swept overboard. Afterwards, de Chair said that he had doubted that Crescent could survive. Crescent, Royal Arthur and Grafton were sent to the Clyde for repairs but the dockyard director stressed the diminishing returns that repairs would realise. On 20 November the Admiralty ordered the seven Edgars back to their home ports to be paid off. In under five months, the Edgars had boarded more than 300 ships and intercepted many others in storm-wracked seas.[19]

The Edgars

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Edgar-class cruisers, data from Dunn (2016) unless indicated[20]
Ship Notes
HMS Crescent Flagship, built with raised forecastle and two 6-inch guns in place of 9.2-inch gun
HMS Edgar
HMS Endymion
HMS Hawke Sunk by U-9, 15 October 1915, 524 crew killed, 71 rescued[21]
HMS Gibraltar
HMS Grafton
HMS Royal Arthur Ex-Centaur, built with raised forecastle, two 6-inch guns in place of 9.2-inch gun
HMS Theseus

Armed merchant cruisers

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In mid-August 1914 the first AMC started operations with the Northern Patrol and soon enough AMCs were available to take over from the Edgars.[22] The AMCs were faster, longer-ranged, had better sea-keeping and more reliable machinery than the Edgars and provided their crews with far more comfortable quarters.[23] Later, armed trawlers were added to the force and warships from the Grand Fleet or other commands would temporarily be attached to the patrol. Admiral de Chair was replaced in March 1916 by Rear-Admiral (later vice-admiral) Reginald Tupper, who commanded the 10th Cruiser Squadron until it was disbanded on 29 November 1917.[24] The entry of the United States, the main source of contraband, into the war drastically reduced the need for the blockade. The ships of the force were transferred to convoy and anti-submarine work.[25] Royal Navy officers were appointed to command the AMCs and most of their masters stayed on as advisers. Many of their other mercantile officers were retained and the crews were drawn from the Royal Naval Reserve and the Mercantile Marine (many of whom had crewed the vessels in peacetime) with a "small number" from the Royal Fleet Reserve.[26]

AMC list

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Northern Patrol Armed Merchant Cruisers. Data from Hampshire (1980) and Dunn (2016)[27]
Ship GRT Year Speed Owner Notes
HMS Alcantara 15,300 1913 Royal Mail Steam Packet Company One of four A-series liners requisitioned as armed merchant cruisers. In the action of 29 February 1916 she was torpedoed while engaging the merchant raider SMS Greif, both sank.[28]
SS Almanzora Royal Mail Steam Packet Company From August 1915[29]
SS Alsatian (flagship) 18,481 1913 18 kn Allan Shipping Line First RN ship painted in dazzle camouflage (August 1917)[30]
HMS Ambrose 4,500 1903 14 kn Alfred Booth and Co.
Andes 15,620 Royal Mail Steam Packet Company
HMS Arlanza 15,044 1911 15–16 kn Royal Mail Steam Packet Company
Armadale Castle Union-Castle Line
HMS Avenger 15,000 1915 Union Steam Ship Company of New Zealand Ex-Aotearoa, December 1915, torpedoed west of Shetland by U-69, June 1917, one man killed and one injured[31]
SS Bayano 6,000 1913 14 kn Elders & Fyffes Torpedoed and sunk by U-27, 11 March 1915, off Galloway, 195 crew killed, 26 survivors.[32][b]
Calyx 2,800 1904 12 kn Thomas Wilson Sons & Co. Ex-Calypso, paid off as unsuitable.[33]
HMS Caribbean 5,800 1890 14 kn Royal Mail Steam Packet Company Requisitioned as AMC but converted to accommodation ship in May 1915, sank en route to Scapa Flow 26 September 1915
RMS Cedric 21,000 1903 17 kn White Star Line Returned to owners, too large
HMS Champagne 21,000 Returned to 10th Cruiser Squadron 1916 with French crew; sunk by torpedo, North Atlantic, October 1917, 65 killed.[34]
SS Changuinola 6,000 1912 14 kn Elders & Fyffes
Clan McNaughton 5,000 1911 11 kn Clan Line Foundered, 3 February 1915, north of Ireland, all 281 crew, including 50 boys recently trained at HMS Ganges.[35][c]
HMS Columbella 8,200 1902 17 kn Anchor Line
SS Digby 4,000 1913 14.5 kn Furness Warren Taken into French service as Artois 25 November 1915, rejoined 10th Cruiser Squadron with French crew[29]
Ebro 8,470 Royal Mail Steam Packet Company
HMS Eskimo 3,300 1910 14 kn Thomas Wilson Returned to owner, later captured
Gloucestershire Bibby Line From December 1915[29]
HMS Hilary 6,200 1908 14 kn Alfred Booth and Co. Torpedoed and sunk by U-88, 25 May 1917, 40 nmi (46 mi; 74 km) west of Lerwick, Shetland, 4 men killed, 248 survivors[37]
HMS Hildebrand 7,000 1911 14.5 kn Alfred Booth and Co.
India 7,940 1896 18 kn P&O Torpedoed and sunk by U-22 August 1915, off Helligvær, Norway, 160 crew killed[38]
Kildonan Castle 9,652 1899 18 kn Union Castle Line
SS Mantua P&O
Moldavia 9,500 1903 18.5 kn P&O Torpedoed by U-boat, 23 May 1918, English Channel[39]
SS Motagua 6,000 1912 14 kn Elders & Fyffes
RMS Oceanic 17,274 1899 21 kn White Star Line Ran aground off Foula, west of the Shetland mainland, wrecked, 8 September 1914[40][d]
Ophir Orient Steam Navigation Company
Orbita Pacific Steam Navigation Company
Orcoma 11,500 Pacific Steam Navigation Co.
Oropesa 5,300 1895 13 kn Pacific Steam Navigation Co. Taken into French service as Champagne, retained British crew, packet ship from France to Archangelsk in Russia from 2 December 1915, torpedoed, Irish Sea by U-boat, 9 October 1917, 56 men lost[42]
Orotava 6,000 1899 14 kn Pacific Steam Navigation Co.
Orvieto Orient Steam Navigation Co.
SS Otway 12,000 1908 18 kn Pacific Steam Navigation Co. Torpedoed by UC-49 off The Minch, 22 July 1917, ten men killed of 349 crew[43]
HMS Patia 6,100 1913 16 kn Elders & Fyffes Ship torpedoed by UC-49, 13 June 1918, Bristol Channel (10th Cruiser Squadron disbanded, 29 November 1917)[44]
Patnea Elders & Fyffes
SS Patuca 6,100 1913 16 kn Elders & Fyffes
RMS Teutonic 9,984 1899 23 kn White Star Line
RMS Victorian 10,629 1904 19.5 kn Allan Line Steamship Company
HMS Viknor 5,300 1888 17 kn Viking Cruising Ex-RMS Atrato, ex-Viking, mined off Donegal, 13 January 1915, lost with all 295 hands.[45][e]
RMS Virginian 10,700 1904 18 kn Allan Line Steamship Co.

Before the disbandment of the 10th Cruiser Squadron on 29 November 1917, the ships of the Northern Patrol inspected almost 13,000 merchant vessels at sea and only 642 ships managed to elude the blockade.[47] The cruiser Hawke and ten AMCs (including Avenger) were lost. In 1980, A. Cecil Hampshire wrote that the blockade is generally considered to have been one of the main causes of the defeat of Germany in the First World War.[48]

Second World War

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Mobilisation

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Model of the armed merchant cruiser HMS Rawalpindi

In June 1939 the Admiralty began to call up reservists, 12,000 for the Reserve Fleet, as its ships were prepared to return to service; by 9 August the ships had received their complement of crews. The light cruisers were far from new, most being C-class cruisers and Danae-class cruisers of 4,000 and 5,000 long tons (4,100 and 5,100 t), built during the First World War. The ships had five or six 6-inch (152 mm) guns, two 3-inch (76 mm) guns, four 3-pounder (47 mm) guns and eight 21-inch (533 mm) torpedo tubes; the ships had a maximum speed of 29 kn (54 km/h; 33 mph). The ships had been designed for operations in the North Sea but had soon been sent to far rougher waters; six of the vessels had been used as boys' training ships before the war. Two Emerald-class cruisers and the Hawkins class cruiser HMS Effingham, the flagship of the Admiral Commanding, Northern Patrol, Vice-Admiral Max Horton were added.[49]

The Northern Patrol was re-established on 6 September 1939, three days after the start of the Second World War. Its area of operations was more extensive than during the First World War and included the areas north of Scotland and Ireland, between the north of Scotland and Norway, around Shetland, the Faeroe Islands and Iceland and the Denmark Strait between Iceland and Greenland.[50] Armed merchant cruisers soon replaced the light and heavy cruisers.[51] As in the First World War, warships from the Home Fleet or other commands were temporarily attached to the Northern Patrol.[52] The force operated within the command area of the Vice-Admiral or Rear-Admiral Commanding in the Orkneys and Shetlands who administered the islands and commanded the defences of Scapa Flow but was not subordinate to him.[53]

Cruiser squadrons

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Cruiser squadrons[54]
Squadron Dates Notes
7th Cruiser Squadron September–December 1939
12th Cruiser Squadron September – 3 October 1939 Re-named 11th Cruiser Squadron
11th Cruiser Squadron 3 October 1939 – January 1940

The newest of the cruisers had been built in 1921 and the rough seas of the North Atlantic imposed great wear on their hulls, engines and equipment. Aerials were brought down by ice, ships' boats smashed, paravanes were swept into the sea, torpedo tubes and gun mountings broken and steering gear damaged. The ships had been intended for North Sea operations and had to fuel more frequently than newer ships. Emerald coped best, being faster, built with a knuckled trawler bow and greater fuel capacity. The cruisers should have patrolled in parallel, east–west or north-east–south-west about 50 nmi (93 km; 58 mi) apart in fine weather, closer during stormy periods, Three of the cruisers were always in harbour, refuelling and refitting, usually leaving only two ships in the 200 nmi (370 km; 230 mi) between the Shetlands and the Faroes and three for the 250 nmi (460 km; 290 mi) between the Faroes and Iceland. Soon after the war began, the Denmark Strait (200 nmi (370 km; 230 mi) was added to the responsibilities of the Northern Patrol but by then the first of the AMCs were entering service, replacing the older cruisers first which were sent to less turbulent seas.[55]

Cruisers, 1939–1940

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Cruisers 1939–1940, data from Hampshire (1980) and Haarr (2013)[56]
Ship Cruiser Sqn Notes
HMS Caledon Caledon-class (light) 7th Transferred to 11th Cruiser Squadron October 1939, Mediterranean December 1939[f]
HMS Calypso Caledon-class (light) 7th Refitted November 1939, transferred to Mediterranean
HMS Diomede Danae-class (light) 7th Transferred January 1940 to West Indies
HMS Dragon Danae-class (light) 7th Transferred December 1939; to Polish Navy as ORP Dragon in 1943
HMS Cardiff Ceres-class (light) 11th Transferred December 1939 to Home Fleet
HMS Ceres Ceres-class (light) 11th Transferred February 1940 to China Station
HMS Colombo Carlisle-class (light) 11th Transferred February 1940 to Mediterranean
HMS Delhi Danae-class (light) 11th Transferred February 1940 to Gibraltar
HMS Dunedin Danae-class (light) 11th Transferred January 1940 to West Indies
HMS Effingham Hawkins-class (heavy) 12th Transferred October 1939, Atlantic convoys
HMS Emerald Emerald-class (light) 12th Transferred October 1939 to South American Division
HMS Enterprise Emerald-class (light) 12th Transferred October 1939 to West Indies

Commanders

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Data from Roskill (1957) and Hampshire (1980)[57]
Rank Flag Name Term
1 Vice-Admiral Sir Max Horton 18 September 1939 – 20 December 1940
2 Vice-Admiral Robert Raikes 20 December – 16 July 1940
3 Rear-Admiral Ernest Spooner 16 July – 21 December 1940

Northern Patrol, 1939–1941

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By October 1939 the Admiralty had requisitioned 51 ships for use as armed merchant cruisers.[58] The first group of twenty AMCs were to fitted with Emergency Equipment in British ports with six more being converted overseas. The Emergency scale consisted of ancient 6-inch guns and mountings, a light director control, wooden magazines and shell-rooms and no divided storage for anti-aircraft ammunition. Only easily removed woodwork was to be removed such as furniture and bulkheads. The crew would be placed in the existing accommodation rather than broadside messes. Defensive shielding would be limited to protecting the bridge with sandbags and steel plates and more plates for the steering gear and machinery. It was hoped to have the ships operational in two and a half to three weeks. Complete Equipment was to follow, comprising full director systems, watertight magazines and shell rooms made of steel, broadside mess decks with hammocks, four paravanes per ship, the removal of more woodwork and thirteen 6-inch gun sets taken from C- and D-class cruisers once they were re-armed as anti-aircraft cruisers.[59]

Asturias, requisitioned in August 1939

Due to equipment shortages, the ships were fitted with six to nine 6-inch guns (some with 5.5-inch), two to four 3-inch or 4-inch anti-aircraft guns, several smaller guns and roll-off racks for a small number of depth charges. The guns and mountings were old and their ammunition had to be carried by hand; at 20° elevation they reached their maximum range of only 14,000 yd (13,000 m), the guns had director control but very little shielding. The armament of the C- and D-class cruisers had been intended for the AMCs but the decision to keep the cruisers in service precluded this. Royal Navy captains or commanders were put in command of the vessels, mostly dug-outs from retirement, accompanied by Navy first lieutenants, navigation and gunnery officers, some of whom were also Navy personnel and the rest of the officers were drawn from the RNR, some being the civilian officers of the ships, RNVR and those under T.124 agreements (voluntary enlistment and subject to RN discipline whilst retaining civilian rates of pay and conditions).[60]

The AMC Queen of Bermuda in 1942

A retired officer was embarked to help find neutral and belligerents' trawlers, often known to the trawler skippers and on good terms, which helped when bartering for part of the trawlers' catch. Ratings were drawn from the RN, RFR, RNR, RNVR, "hostilities only" and former Merchant Navy ratings on T.124 agreements.[60] The accommodations of AMCs were greatly superior to those on RN ships, even when wooden fittings were removed. Lounges became wardrooms and junior ranks had a gunroom (junior officers' mess). Some cabins were used by chief and petty officers but most were demolished to make way for broadside messes to avoid delays when called to action stations. Holds and other spaces were filled with barrels or 40 imp gal (180 L; 48 US gal) oil drums as buoyancy ballast ('ping-pong balls'). The ships did not reach their peacetime GRTs and carried ballast to maintain stability.[61] Horton boarded each ship with his technical officers to help their familiarisation with Navy methods. On 17 October 1939, the first seven AMCs arrived at Scapa Flow and by the end of November eleven AMCs were on patrol; Rawalpindi had already been sunk.[61]

AMCs 1939–1941

[edit]
Data from Hampshire (1980), Jordan (2006) and Haarr (2013)[62]
Ship GRT Year Speed Owner Notes
RMS Andania 13,950 1922 15 kn Cunard Line Torpedoed by U-Boat UA, 15 June 1940, sank 16 June[63]
HMS Artifex 13,985 1924 15.5 kn Cunard ex-RMS Aurania, converted to a floating workshop as HMS Artifex
RMS Asturias 22,048 1925 17+ kn Royal Mail Lines Re-engined and bow extended 10 ft (3.0 m) in 1938
RMS Aurania* 13,984 1924 15 kn Northern Patrol then workshop as HMS Artifex
SS California 16,792 1923 16 kn Anchor Line Northern Patrol then South America Division
SS Canton 15,700 1938 Northern Patrol
RMS Carinthia 20,277 1925 17.5 kn Cunard Torpedoed 6 June 1940 off Bloody Foreland, sank 7 June
HMS Cheshire 10,552 1927 Bibby Line Torpedoed by U-137 14 October 1940, beached Belfast Lough
SS Chitral 15,346 1925 P & O Company Northern Patrol
SS Cilicia 11,136 1938 Anchor Northern Patrol
SS Circassia 11,136 1937 Anchor First Anchor line motor ship
RMS Corfu 14,170 1931 P & O Northern Patrol
SS Derbyshire 11,660 1935 Bibby Pride of the Bibby Line, sailed on the Britain–Burma run, boasted a swimming pool
HMS Forfar 16,402 1922 17 kn Canadian Pacific
Steamship Company
Ex-Montrose, torpedoed and sunk near midnight 1 December 1940
HMS Jervis Bay 14,164 1922 Sunk in action with Admiral Scheer, 5 November 1940
RMS Laconia 19,695 1922 Northern Patrol and Halifax Escort Force
SS Laurentic 18,724 1927 16.5 kn White Star Line Torpedoed and sunk 3 November 1940 by U-99
SS Letitia 13,595 1927 15.5 kn Anchor Northern Patrol and Halifax Escort Force
RMS Maloja 20,914 1923 17+ kn P & O Northern Patrol and East Indies
HMS Montclare 16,314 1922 17 kn CPSC Northern Patrol
SS Patroclus 11,314 1923 15.5 kn Alfred Holt Collier, torpedoed and sunk 3–4 November 1940 by U-99
SS Queen of Bermuda 22,575 1933 20 kn Furness, Withy & Co. Northern Patrol and South American Division
HMS Rawalpindi 16,679 1925 P & O Sunk by battle-cruisers Scharnhorst and Gneisenau, 23 November 1939
SS Salopian 10,549 1926 15.5 kn Bibby Ex-Shropshire renamed to avoid confusion with HMS Shropshire
HMS Scotstoun 17,046 1925 16.5 kn Anchor Ex-RMS Caledonia renamed to avoid confusion, torpedoed and sunk 13 June 1940 by U-25
RMS Transylvania 16,923 1925 16.5 kn Anchor Three funnels, two of them dummies; torpedoed by U-boat 9 August 1940, sank next day
HMS Wolfe 16,418 1921 16.5 kn CPSC Ex-Montcalm, re-named to avoid confusion
HMS Worcestershire 11,402 1931 16 kn Bibby Northern Patrol

Rawalpindi

[edit]
Location of the Faroe Islands

SS Rawalpindi was requisitioned for the Northern Patrol by the Admiralty on 26 August 1939 and converted into an armed merchant cruiser. Eight elderly 6 in (150 mm) guns and two 3 in (76 mm) guns were added and the ship named HMS Rawalpindi. On 19 October in the Denmark Strait, Rawalpindi intercepted the German tanker Gonzenheim (4,574 GRT), which had left Buenos Aires on 14 September. The tanker was scuttled by her crew before a boarding party could get on board. The ships sent a wireless message but this was not received by the Germans.[64]

On 26 September 1939, restrictions on the operation of the two German battleships Scharnhorst and Gneisenau in the Atlantic were terminated and after several short voyages, Grand Admiral Erich Raeder concluded that they were not vulnerable to the three Home Fleet battlecruisers in British home waters. On 12 November the Seekriegsleitung (SKL, Naval Warfare Command) of the Oberkommando der Marine (OKM, high command of the navy) decided to send the ships past the British ships watching the Faroes–Iceland gap or those between Shetland and Norway, to threaten the British sea lanes in the North Atlantic. The operation was intended to be a feint, to divert British ships from the hunt for Graf Spee in the South Atlantic. The battleships sailed on 21 November and on 13 November reached the Faroes–Iceland gap. At 4:07 p.m. Scharnhorst sighted a ship, opened fire from 5:04 – 5:16 p.m. then both ships began to rescue survivors.[65]

Whilst patrolling north of the Faroes on 23 November 1939, Rawalpindi investigated a sighting, only to find that she had encountered the battleships Scharnhorst and Gneisenau; Rawalpindi managed to get off a sighting report to the Admiralty. Despite being hopelessly outgunned, 60-year-old Captain Edward Kennedy RN of Rawalpindi, refused a German demand to surrender. He was heard to say, "We'll fight them both, they'll sink us, and that will be that. Good-bye". Rawalpindi sank in forty minutes but managed one hit on Scharnhorst, causing minor splinter damage. Thirty-seven men were rescued by the Germans and eleven men were picked up by the AMC HMS Chitral but 238 men were killed.[66][g] At 7:40 p.m. the German ships were informed that Rawalpindi had got off a sighting report that the German ships were sailing south-east. As British ships could cut off their return, they sailed north-east into the Arctic Ocean and waited for a weather front before running the blockade on 26 November, safely returning to port.[68] The crews of Scharnhorst and Gneisenau were eligible for the Das Flottenkriegsabzeichen (High Seas Fleet Badge) for participating in the sinking of Rawalpindi.[69]

1939 – January 1940

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On 25 August 1939 German wireless sent Telegram QWA7 to the 2,466 ships of the Deutsche Handelsflotte [de], to warn that war was imminent. Ships' masters were to open their Special Instructions for Merchant Ships, which included Secret Code H. Ships were to sail from their normal routes and keep 30–100 nmi (56–185 km; 35–115 mi) from shipping lanes. QWA8 ordered masters to disguise their ships and head for Germany, avoiding the English Channel. On 27 August, QWA9 directed ships to reach their home port, friendly or neutral ports in the next four days. In QWA10 OKM instructed as many ships as possible to return before the end of September. On 3 September, QWA11 and QWA12 reported that Britain and France had declared war and that the Royal Navy would have commenced searches for German merchant ships. The British had sent ships to patrol the great trade routes of the oceans and the destroyer HMS Somali was 350 nmi (650 km; 400 mi) south of Iceland, spotted a ship, with a German ensign and sailors apparently painting over its name. The ship was Hannah Böge (2,377 GRT), a Johann M. K. Blumenthal line ship that plied between Nova Scotia and Germany and was loaded with wood pulp, estimated at £1,000,000 by the boarding party. The ship was sailed by the party to the Pentland Firth and docked at Kirkwall on 5 September and renamed Crown Arun.[70]

Northern Patrol operations

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Operations of the Northern Patrol[71]
Period Sightings Eastbound Examined Voluntary
examinations
Axis
7–28 September 108 62 28 1
29 September –12 October 64 26 20 1
13–26 October 112 56 53 6
27 October – 9 November 79 26 20
10–23 November 93 57 50 9
24 November – 7 December 56 34 23 40
22 December 1939 – 4 January 1940 95 43 35 21

Western Patrol

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Western Approaches

After the débâcle in France during May and June 1940, trawlers with the Northern Patrol were amongst those sent to the south-east of England took keep watch on home waters. The Admiralty had also floated a suggestion to Admiral Charles Forbes the commander-in-chief Home Fleet to move the Northern Patrol southwards to a line running north-west from the North Channel to watch for a German invasion of Ireland. Forbes threw cold water on the idea since an invasion force would sail west of the patrol line and that the AMCs would be vulnerable to U-boats which passed through the area en route to the Western Approaches. The Admiralty decided to mine the waters between Scotland and Iceland; the minefield was extended into the Denmark Strait to constrict the gap between the arctic ice off Greenland and the coast of Iceland with magnetic mines. Ships were directed to the Pentland Firth and between Orkney and the Faroes. The Germans took the change to mean that the AMCs were being replaced by aircraft and cruisers but the AMCs remained.[72]

Raikes was replaced by Rear-Admiral Ernest Spooner on 16 July and for the rest of the month more patrols were sailed since the German invasion of Norway and four ships were sent for examination. The weather had at last improved and due to the war, shipping bound for the east coast ports had to take the route northabout Scotland. The admiralty decided on 21 July to extend the blockade to the French, Spanish and Portuguese Atlantic coasts and to French North Africa, naming it the Western Patrol. The ships were to be poached from the Northern Patrol but the new patrol was to remain under the existing command. Cilicia and Cheshire sailed on 19 July, to be joined by the trawlers Kingston Jacinth, Kingston Sapphire, Kingston Topaz and Kingston Turquoise. The number of ships on patrol in the area of the Northern Patrol had declined due to the detachments and because one AMC had been paid off and three transferred to the Atlantic and West Indies Command. Forbes ordered the Northern Patrol to watch the seas north of the Faroes. When Spooner asked for ten more trawlers or corvettes he was told that none was available. Despite the success of the B-Dienst, part of German Naval Intelligence Service, the Marinenachrichtendienst, in reading British naval codes, the change went unnoticed.[73]

On 9 August, Transylvania, having departed the Clyde and passed near Ailsa Craig, was torpedoed just after midnight and began to sink by the stern. A distress call got an aircraft on the scene by 03:15 then three destroyers; only Transylvania's ping-pong balls had stopped it from sinking faster. No casualties had been suffered in the torpedo explosion but one boat was launched with only five men on board and disappeared. The rest of the crew who should have boarded, crowded onto another boat which capsized and another overcrowded boat capsized next to a destroyer. The confusion of the evacuation in the dark and in bad weather caused the worst loss to the Northern Patrol since the sinking of Rawalpindi. On the following day, California received a distress signal from SS Llanfair and Captain Pope had to decide whether to obey standing orders to avoid a danger area or attempt a rescue. A British aircraft was overhead of Llanfair, the sea state made another attack by a U-boat difficult and Pope decided to risk it. California dropped depth-charges as it arrived and picked up swiftly the thirty survivors, receiving orders not to attempt a rescue thirty minutes afterwards.[74]

Interceptions, 1940

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Interceptions January–April 1940, data from Roskill (1957)[75]
Period Sightings Eastbound Examined Voluntary
examinations
Axis
5–18 January 127 48 30 19
19–31 January 123 56 28 7
1–14 February 92 49 21 21
15–29 February 92 61 24 13 1
1–14 March 98 52 12 13 4
15–31 March 138 69 13 17
1–9 April 54 26 12 8 Beginning of Norwegian campaign (8 April – 10 June 1940)

Northern Patrol disbanded

[edit]
Map showing the Denmark Strait.

On 18 November 1940, after the sinking of Laurentic and Patroclus the Admiralty decided to abolish the Northern Patrol except for the patrol of the Denmark Strait, the Faroes–Iceland gap to be left to trawlers and the minefields. Surplus ships were to be diverted to the Western Patrol. The average number of ships on the Northern Patrol was cut to five out of the eleven ships left, with three on the Western Patrol. The Northern Patrol checked fifteen ships and the Western Patrol 155, three from the latter being sent under guard for inspection. Klaus Schoke (5,800 GRT) of the Hansa Line departed on 1 December for Ponta Delgada in the Azores for Vigo in Spain but was stopped by the AMC California. The crew tried to scuttle the ship and despite an attempt to save the ship it sank on 5 December.[76]

The Armed Merchant Cruiser HMS California.

On the Northern Patrol, Forfar had refitted at Liverpool, sailed on 30 November escorted by a destroyer, which was ordered back near midnight on 1 December. Forfar was ordered to divert south around a U-boat said to be in the area of 54°23'N and 20°11'W. Course was changed and before joining the Western Patrol, was diverted to escort the eastbound Convoy SC 14. Forfar sailed near Convoy HX 90 by coincidence, which was being shadowed by four U-boats; at 03:30 the lookouts spotted something but the captain of Forfar decided to maintain the zig-zag and at 04:40 Forfar was struck by a torpedo, then four more within an hour.[76]

Many of the lifeboats were caught in the explosions making an organised evacuation impossible, many men going into water slicked with oil. SS Dunsley, a straggler from Convoy HX 90, which had fought off a surface attack by U-99, arrived on the scene and rescued some survivors, a Sunderland flying boat managed to miss others but destroyers rescued the remaining survivors during the next afternoon. Members of the crew had been killed in the torpedo explosions, others died of wounds and another 178 were killed after abandoning ship; it was the worst disaster to the Northern Patrol since the sinking of Rawalpindi.[76]

On 21 December 1940, the Admiralty ordered that the surviving ships be transferred to the command of the Third Battle Squadron at Halifax, Nova Scotia to escort HX convoys and cover the Denmark Strait. After escorting a convoy an AMC would patrol the strait, put in at Hvalfjörður in Iceland to replenish, repeat the patrol of the strait and return to Halifax, usually a thirty-day voyage with 22 days at sea. The Halifax Escort Force received another seven AMCs allowing the Denmark Strait permanently to be patrolled until June when the ships were withdrawn. In January 1941 the last two AMCs on the Western Patrol returned to port. Some ex-Northern Patrol AMCs were sent to other trade routes and four more were lost, three to U-boats and one to fire.[77]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ A Force 10 gales have 48–55 kn (89–102 km/h; 55–63 mph) winds and 29–41 ft (8.8–12.5 m) waves with long overhanging crests. Foam in great patches is blown in dense white streaks by the wind; the surface of the sea takes on a white appearance; rolling of the sea becomes heavy and visibility is affected.
  2. ^ U-27 attacked HMS Ambrose with torpedoes, was driven off by return fire and erroneously claimed sunk.[32]
  3. ^ Believed by the crew and many others in the 10th Cruiser Squadron to be unstable and vulnerable to capsizing in stormy weather.[36]
  4. ^ First loss of an Entente passenger ship of the war, in commission as an AMC for a month.[41]
  5. ^ Two days previous, Viknor had intercepted SS Bergensfjord near the Faroes and arrested "Rosato Spero" (Botho von Wedel) a German spy and seven German stowaways. De Chair hurried to meet the ship in Alsatian with Teutonic and Orotava in company. When Viknor sank, Wedel's knowledge of German spy networks was lost with him.[46]
  6. ^ Built as Caroline class (six ships), Calliope class (two), Cambrian class (four), Centaur class (two), Caledon class (four) Ceres class (five) and Carlisle class (five).
  7. ^ Kennedy, the father of naval officer, broadcaster and author Ludovic Kennedy, was posthumously Mentioned in Dispatches.[67]

References

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  1. ^ a b Hampshire 1980, p. 17.
  2. ^ Marder 1975, p. 367.
  3. ^ Marder 1975, pp. 367–369.
  4. ^ Marder 1975, pp. 370–371.
  5. ^ Marder 1975, pp. 371–372.
  6. ^ a b c Marder 2013, pp. 3–4.
  7. ^ Marder 2013, p. 373.
  8. ^ Corbett 2009, p. 74.
  9. ^ Corbett 2009, pp. 166–167.
  10. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 69–70.
  11. ^ Dunn 2016, p. 71.
  12. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 70–71.
  13. ^ Dunn 2016, p. 72.
  14. ^ Hampshire 1980, p. 22.
  15. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 72–73.
  16. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 73–74; Hampshire 1980, p. 28.
  17. ^ Dunn 2016, p. 74.
  18. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 73–75.
  19. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 75–76.
  20. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 72, 71, 74, 73, 75, 185.
  21. ^ Hampshire 1980, pp. 28–29.
  22. ^ Hampshire 1980, p. 34.
  23. ^ Hampshire 1980, pp. 38–39.
  24. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 113–116.
  25. ^ Hampshire 1980, pp. 86–87.
  26. ^ Hurd 1924, Ch V.
  27. ^ Hampshire 1980, pp. 36–37; Dunn 2016, pp. 195–196.
  28. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 63–65, 195.
  29. ^ a b c Dunn 2016, p. 195.
  30. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 113–114.
  31. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 195, 114–115.
  32. ^ a b Dunn 2016, pp. 195, 107–108.
  33. ^ Dunn 2016, p. 195; Hampshire 1980, p. 37.
  34. ^ Hampshire 1980, p. 84.
  35. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 195, 106.
  36. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 106–107.
  37. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 195, 115.
  38. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 196, 109.
  39. ^ Dunn 2016, p. 196.
  40. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 196, 77–78.
  41. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 77–78.
  42. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 196, 110.
  43. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 196, 115.
  44. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 196, 115–116.
  45. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 105, 196.
  46. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 105–106.
  47. ^ Dunn 2016, pp. 115–116.
  48. ^ Hampshire 1980, pp. 87–88.
  49. ^ Hampshire 1980, pp. 89–90.
  50. ^ Hampshire 1980, p. 93.
  51. ^ Hampshire 1980, pp. 88–89.
  52. ^ Hampshire 1980, p. 107.
  53. ^ Watson 2015c.
  54. ^ Roskill 1957, pp. 149, 264–265, 271.
  55. ^ Brice1981, p. 51.
  56. ^ Hampshire 1980, p. 90; Haarr 2013, p. 483.
  57. ^ Roskill 1957, p. 68; Hampshire 1980, pp. 94, 193.
  58. ^ Behrens 1955, p. 51.
  59. ^ Poolman 1985, pp. 97–97.
  60. ^ a b Hampshire 1980, pp. 112–113.
  61. ^ a b Hampshire 1980, pp. 113–114.
  62. ^ Hampshire 1980, pp. 110–112; Jordan 2006, p. 136; Haarr 2013, pp. 480–482.
  63. ^ Hampshire 1980, pp. 185–189.
  64. ^ Hampshire 1980, p. 119.
  65. ^ Stegemann 2015, pp. 161–162.
  66. ^ Hampshire 1980, pp. 114, 118–119.
  67. ^ "No. 34893". The London Gazette (Supplement). 9 July 1940. p. 4261.
  68. ^ Stegemann 2015, p. 162.
  69. ^ GMaD 1944, p. 45.
  70. ^ Brice 1981, pp. 33–35; Jordan 2006, pp. 51, 470.
  71. ^ Roskill 1957, p. 67.
  72. ^ Hampshire 1980, pp. 192–193.
  73. ^ Hampshire 1980, pp. 194–195.
  74. ^ Hampshire 1980, pp. 195–196.
  75. ^ Roskill 1957, p. 149.
  76. ^ a b c Hampshire 1980, pp. 206–210.
  77. ^ Hampshire 1980, pp. 210–212.

Bibliography

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  • Behrens, C. B. A. (1955). Hancock, K. (ed.). Merchant Shipping and the Demands of War. History of the Second World War United Kingdom Civil Series. London: HMSO. OCLC 498039 – via Archive Foundation.
  • Brice, Martin (1981). Axis Blockade Runners of World War II. London: B. T. Batsford. ISBN 0-7134-2686-1.
  • Corbett, J. S. (2009) [1938]. Naval Operations: To the Battle of the Falklands December 1914. History of the Great War based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence. Vol. I (2nd facs. repr. Imperial War Museum and Naval & Military Press, Uckfield ed.). London: Longmans. ISBN 978-1-84342-489-5 – via 1920 edition at The Internet Archive.
  • Dunn, Steve (2016). Blockade: Cruiser Warfare and the Starvation of Germany in World War One. Barnsley: Seaforth (Pen & Sword Books). ISBN 978-1-84832-340-7.
  • German Medals and Decorations. London: Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force Evaluation and Dissemination Section (G-2 Counter-Intelligence Sub-Division). 1944. OCLC 464602585.
  • Haarr, Geirr (2013). The Gathering Storm: The Naval War in Northern Europe September 1939 – April 1940. Barnsley: Seaforth (Pen & Sword). ISBN 978-1-84832-140-3.
  • Hampshire, A. Cecil (1980). The Blockaders. London: William Kimber. ISBN 0-7183-0227-3.
  • Hurd, Archibald (1924). "V: Merchant Seamen and the Blockade". The Merchant Navy. History of the Great War based on Official Documents by direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence. Vol. II (online scan ed.). London: John Murray. pp. 100–156. OCLC 669068495 – via Archive Foundation.
  • Jordan, Roger W. (2006) [1999]. The World's Merchant Fleets 1939: The Particulars and Wartime Fates of 6,000 Ships (2nd ed.). London: Chatham/Lionel Leventhal. ISBN 978-1-86176-293-1.
  • Maier, K. A.; Rohde, H.; Stegemann, B.; Umbreit, H. (2015) [1991]. Falla, P. S. (ed.). Germany's Initial Conquests in Europe. Germany and the Second World War. Vol. II. Translated by McMurry, D.; Osers, E. (Eng. Pbk. trans. Clarendon Press, Oxford ed.). Freiburg im Breisgau: Militärgeschichtliches Forchungsamt (Research Institute for Military History). ISBN 978-0-19-873834-3.
    • Stegemann, B. "IV the First Phase of the War at Sea up to the Spring of 1940 I. The War in the North Sea and the Arctic in 1939". In Maier et al. (2015).
  • Marder, Arthur J. (1975) [1961]. From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow, The Royal Navy in the Fisher Era, 1904–1919: The Royal Navy in the Fisher Era, 1904–1909: The Road to War, 1904–1914. Vol. I (4th ed.). London: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-215122-3.
  • Marder, Arthur J. (2013) [1965]. From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow, The Royal Navy in the Fisher Era, 1904–1919: The War Years to the eve of Jutland: 1914–1916. Vol. II (repr. Seaforth Publishing [Pen & Sword Books] Barnsley ed.). London: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-1-84832-163-2.
  • Poolman, E. (1985). Armed Merchant Cruisers: Their Epic Story. London: Leo Cooper–Secker & Warburg. ISBN 0-436-37706-3.
  • Roskill, S. W. (1957) [1954]. Butler, J. R. M. (ed.). The War at Sea 1939–1945: The Defensive. History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series. Vol. I (4th impr. ed.). London: HMSO. OCLC 881709135.
  • Watson, Graham (19 September 2015c). "Major Wartime Shore Commands". Organisation of the Royal Navy 1939–1945. naval-history.net. Retrieved 3 July 2022.

Further reading

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Books

Theses

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