FRENCH SUBMARINES OPERATING OUT OF HARWICH: 1940 Part I of II

By MSW Add a Comment 19 Min Read
FRENCH SUBMARINES OPERATING OUT OF HARWICH 1940 Part I of II

La Sibylle in 1933, just after commissioning. A slightly larger
‘600-ton’ submarine, built some years after the Circé-class, she was 651 tons
on the surface and 807 tons submerged. La Sibylle and her eight sister ships,
including Orphée, Amazone and Antiope, could do a fair 9.5 knots submerged, but
no more than 14 knots on the surface.

Jules Verne. Known as a ravitailleur de sous-marins, literally, a
‘refuelling ship for submarines’, the 4,350-ton vessel was an integral part of
the French submarine forces operating from Britain in 1940.

To ensure a more flexible use of the French ships, First Sea
Lord Churchill and Admiral Pound visited Maintenon [location of French Navy
High Command] in September 1939 to meet with Admiral Darlan. It was agreed that
in addition to help protect the steady stream of British troops transported
across the Channel, the Marine Nationale would participate in the escort of
certain Atlantic and Gibraltar convoys as agreed on a case-by-case basis. In
return, asdic-equipped trawlers would be provided as well as general A/S and
minesweeping competence. The mistrust between the two allies ran deep, though,
and, in spite of the best of intentions, it would take time before any direct
co-operation between the navies started to develop.

There were few targets for the French submarines deployed in
the Atlantic and, after a while, the French Admiralty (l’Amirauté) decided to
offer some of their long-range submarines as convoy escort, partly to free
surface ships for other tasks, partly as it was believed the convoys would
attract those German raiders and U-boats that might be at sea. From November
1939 to April 1940, the 1,500-ton submarines Casabianca, Sfax, Achille and
Pasteur escorted at least eight Allied Halifax convoys as well as several
convoys to Freetown or South Africa. Surcouf was also used for this purpose at
times and the boats were occasionally diverted to purely French convoys to
their own colonies.

In early 1940, after the loss of Seahorse, Starfish and
Undine, it was agreed that French submarines should augment British submarines
in the North Sea, working from British ports. Hence, the 13th and 16th
submarine divisions were transferred from Brest to Harwich. The first three,
the 600-ton boats Antiope, La Sibylle and Amazone, supported by the depot ship
Jules Verne and minelayer Pollux, arrived at Harwich in the evening of 22 March
1940 to make the core of what was to become known as the 10th Submarine
Flotilla by the British and Groupe Jules-Verne by the French. Capitaine de
Vaisseau Felix Raymond de Belot was in overall command of the forces.

The French submarines were to operate under British control,
but as Horton was uncertain of their operational efficiency he deployed them in
the less exposed areas until they had gained more experience and proven their
operational capabilities. By giving them billets in the approaches to the
Heligoland Bight, west of the Westwall and in the northern approaches to the
Strait of Dover, Ruck-Keene’s 3rd Flotilla could be moved further north, off
the Norwegian coast and into the Skagerrak. In mid-April, five more submarines,
Orphée, Doris, Thétis, Circé and Calypso also arrived, as did the 1,500-ton
boats Casabianca, Sfax, Pasteur and Achille. The latter four were transferred
to the 9th Flotilla at Dundee at the end of their first patrols. The final
French submarine to operate from British ports in this period, the minelayer
Rubis, docked in Harwich on 1 May, making the total number of French submarines
in Britain thirteen.

The first of the French submarines to go on patrol from
Harwich was La Sibylle on 31 March. The billet was off Terschelling and the
patrol, which was quite uneventful, lasted for six days. After the patrol, the
British liaison officer, Lieutenant Thomas Catlow, made a confidential report
to Ruck-Keene and Horton of his observations, which makes for interesting
reading:

The Commanding Officer
[Lieutenant de Vaisseau Alphonse Raybaud] is an extremely competent and keen
officer with a firm hold over officers and men. For a southern Frenchman he has
equable temperament and I never saw him panic. [. . .] I had no opportunity to
see him under true action conditions due to an uneventful patrol. His only
weakness to date is his inability to take his boat alongside well, one, I
consider, to his considerations for his `drowned’ fore-‘planes. Takes every
precaution for the safety of his submarine, but [. . .] full of dash. [. . .]

In the French navy,
there is a special rating, a Petty Officer, who does a 3-year course in
Pilotage. He looks after the charts and pilots the submarine under the
supervision of the Captain and officers. [. . .]

The coxswain of the
submarine, the Patron [. . .], has complete hold on the crew and never at any
time did I hear bickering or complaints. The crew of the submarine were keen
and hardworking and of a pleasant disposition generally. Their discipline is
very good and they show very marked respect towards their officers and Petty
Officers [but] if a rating has an idea of his own, he immediately said so to
the officer or Petty Officer, the matter was discussed and the best idea
carried out.

Overall, Lieutenant Catlow compared La Sibylle with a British
S-class submarine. She had some external fuel tanks, though, requiring pumps to
access. These pumps had limited volumes and, frequently breaking down, could
make fuel a concern, even on shorter patrols. Also, she had above-water exhaust
outlets and could not be trimmed down when on the surface. To obtain fully
charged batteries, La Sibylle needed five to six hours on the surface.

Submerged, depth-keeping was immaculate. Diving time was
well over a minute, though Catlow believed they could do it significantly
faster, once they had experienced a real emergency. Should the boat take up an
angle during the dive, however, Lieutenant Catlow feared stability might become
a challenge as she has a large and wide casing outside the pressure hull. For
some reason, the French submariners coped poorly with the deterioration of air
quality inside the boat after being submerged for some time. In spite of
purifiers and oxygen being fed into the submarine’s atmosphere, they were
troubled by the lack of fresh air, while Catlow was barely affected.

The patrols that Lieutenant de Vaisseau Raybaud and his men
made while stationed at Harwich during April and May 1940 were largely
uneventful. Disaster was near, though, when Lieutenant Marcel Balastre of
Antiope mistook La Sybille for a U-boat and fired three torpedoes at her, west
of Terschelling on 20 May. Fortunately the torpedoes missed. On her last patrol
before returning to France, numerous technical problems started to appear and a
spell in the yards was obviously becoming necessary.

Orphée under Lieutenant de Vaisseau Robert Meynier made only
one short patrol out of Harwich, but this was quite eventful. In the afternoon
of 21 April, two days into the patrol, while about midway between Ringkobing
and Dundee, two torpedoes were fired on what turned out to be U51 under
Kapitänleutnant Dietrich Knorr. Two U-boats had been sighted about fifteen
minutes earlier and Meynier chased one of them at full speed to ascertain
whether it was alien. When close enough, he and the British liaison officer,
Sub-Lieutenant Peter Banister, agreed it was `definitely not British’ and
decided to attack. On a parallel course to the German, on her starboard bow,
the centre and stern torpedo turrets of Orphée were turned at a firing angle of
50 degrees. Time was of the essence, lest the U-boat should dive, and there was
no time to set any gyro angles, just fire as soon as the tubes had been trained
in the right direction. Only two torpedoes were fired, but Meynier ascertained
they were running correctly through the periscope. Just before he went down, he
could also see that the German started his diesels and made a small change of
course, but believed this to be just routine. In fact, U51 had problems with
her port diesel engine and made several attempts to restart it at the time of
the attack. Orphée was not sighted at all, just the torpedo tracks. Once these
were reported, Knorr sounded the alarm and made an emergency dive while turning
to port, away from the tracks. For some reason, both torpedoes exploded close
to the U-boat, making it `jump’ several metres. There was no damage, though,
and as nothing further was heard from the enemy submarine, U51 fell back on her
general course and continued homewards. Twenty-four hours later, she was safely
moored in Kiel at the Tirpitzmole, having passed through the Kaiser Wilhelm
Kanal during the afternoon of 22 April.

On board Orphée, two explosions were heard at about the
expected time at short intervals, and it was believed erroneously that the
torpedoes had hit. Concern about the second U-boat that had been sighted and a
low battery made Meynier take Orphée away from the area after a brief look for
wreckage through the periscope. Two days later, Orphée was back in Harwich. At
the time, it was believed that a U-boat had really been sunk and Lieutenant
Meynier and his crew received some attention, including in the French press, as
the boat was awarded a Croix de Guerre for the assumed achievement. Orphée
returned to Cherbourg on 3 June.

Doris in 1938

Another of the French boats operating out of Harwich in the
spring of 1940 was Doris, a 600-ton, Circé-class coastal submarine. She had
been commissioned in January 1930 after a lengthy building and work-up process
and appears to have been continuously plagued by technical problems originating
from being fitted with German Schneider diesels, which were unreliable and had
a chronic lack of spares. Nevertheless, she was considered suitable for
operating from bases in Britain as part of the 10th Flotilla.

A few days into her first patrol out of Harwich in late
April, the port engine compressor broke down. This was serious as it meant the
engine could not be used and Doris would only have the starboard engine
available for running as well as charging. The patrol was terminated and Doris
returned to Harwich on 25 April. There were no spare parts available on board
Jules Verne and they had to be ordered from Toulon. This took time – all the
more so, as the first crates with spares to arrive did not contain the actual
parts needed.

Even so, Capitaine de Corvette Jean Favreul was asked to
prepare for a sortie in early May to a billet north of the Frisian Islands, off
the Dutch coast. Something was brewing and, fearing that a German invasion of
the Low Countries was being prepared, VA(S) considered it necessary to have as
many boats as possible guarding the area south of the Westwall.

Discussing with his flotilla commander, Favreul agreed that
it would be possible to take air from the working starboard compressor and run
the port engine at half power. With only one and a half engines, the submarine
would be a sitting duck should they actually run into the Germans they were
looking for, but the men of Doris were willing to take the risk. A series of
letters left behind by the crew for their families show that they recognised
their vulnerability and left Harwich with few illusions.

In the evening of the 7th and early morning of 8 May, around
a dozen Allied submarines, including Doris, departed for the coast off Holland.
To avoid errors with so many different Allied submarines in the area, each
commanding officer was given orders not to attack any other submarine, unless
it could be identified with absolute certainty as being German. Intelligence
received at the Admiralty indicated that the Germans could read the British
cypher-codes and thus had knowledge of the disposition of the Allied boats.
This has been difficult to verify with certainty in this specific case, and
there are no indications in the war diary of U9 that she was on anything but a
normal patrol. It is true, though, that German intelligence to a large degree
could read British naval signals at the time and could plot the position of
vessels using their radios. In any case, new recyphering tables had been issued
to most boats and the two that had not received new tables, Antiope and Thétis,
were held back, patrolling the entries to Harwich.

Doris reached her billet off the Dutch coast between
Ijmuiden and Den Helder by nightfall. She was not alone.

The 26-year-old Oberleutnant Wolfgang Lüth had taken his
nimble type II U-boat through the Westwall, following the safe route Weg I the
night before, towards a billet off the Dutch coast. By chance, this area
overlapped partly with the southern part of the billet assigned to Doris. Due
to numerous fishing boats, U9 had stayed submerged all day and only surfaced
after dark at 22:27. It was starlit, with a new moon and moderate to good
visibility. The fishing boats had largely returned to port, but the lights from
ten or twenty of them could still be seen to the east, towards land, as U9
moved slowly southwards. About an hour and a half later the port lookout
reported that what appeared to be the silhouette of a blacked-out submarine
moved in front of some of the lights from the fishing boats, steering a
northerly course, 3,000-4,000 metres (3,300-4,400 yards) away. Lüth turned
towards the submarine (which was Doris), very carefully as he had the brighter
western horizon behind him. Doris was apparently not zigzagging, but from U9 it
looked as if she turned from a north-westerly course almost 180 degrees towards
the south and then, a few minutes later, back again towards the north-west.
Still, it does not appear Capitaine Favreul or anybody else on board ever
realised that they were being stalked.

Finally, at about a quarter past midnight on the 9th, German
time, Lüth had U9 in the position he wanted relative to his target and, turning
towards it, fired two torpedoes: one electrical G7e running at 2 metres (6.5
feet) depth and one conventional G7a running at 3 metres (9.8 feet). The range
was only about 750 metres (820 yards) and after less than a minute, there was a
huge fireball. According to U9’s war diary, the G7e torpedo passed in front of
its target while the G7a torpedo hit Doris just aft of the conning tower. This
apparently set off a secondary explosion of one or more of the warheads in the
French boat’s own dual mid-ship torpedo turret. Taking U9 over to the site of
the explosion, there was nothing to be found of the other submarine except a
large patch of oil.

Doris went to the bottom with forty-five men on board. There
were no survivors and it is not known if anybody on board Doris saw the
torpedoes approaching. The British liaison officer Lieutenant Richard
Westmacot, Yeoman of Signals Harry Wilson and Telegraphist Charles Sales were
lost with Doris.

By MSW
Forschungsmitarbeiter Mitch Williamson is a technical writer with an interest in military and naval affairs. He has published articles in Cross & Cockade International and Wartime magazines. He was research associate for the Bio-history Cross in the Sky, a book about Charles ‘Moth’ Eaton’s career, in collaboration with the flier’s son, Dr Charles S. Eaton. He also assisted in picture research for John Burton’s Fortnight of Infamy. Mitch is now publishing on the WWW various specialist websites combined with custom website design work. He enjoys working and supporting his local C3 Church. “Curate and Compile“
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Exit mobile version