Again, tons of water poured into a hull, this one built in 1909 by Richardson and Duck Co. in Stockton, England.
Again, the order to abandon ship, this time given by Captain George Mandraka.
Thirty-two men scrambled into lifeboats and rowed for their lives through debris-choked waters. From their lifeboats they watched, a scant ten minutes after the torpedo struck, as the stern of their ship lifted out of the gulf and tons of water flooded in through the hole blasted in her hull.
Hoffmann’s war diary doesn’t mention the five 400-lb. Mark VII depth charges fired by Salisbury or the two that Skinner dropped on a contact Smith picked up at 8:04 a.m.
The signal sent on September 17 by Group Captain M. Costello, senior staff officer of EAC—“convoy patrols have very little chance of sighting and attacking submarines, but are useful in forcing the enemy to submerge and preventing him from carrying out attacks”—was overly defeatist. A day earlier, Pilot Officer R. S. Keetley had attacked Hartwig’s U-517, an attack that showed that EAC had begun to learn its trade. “1503 Aircraft. Crash-Dive. 4 aerial bombs, Grid 1449,” was all of Hartwig’s sparse report on the aerial attack on the sixteenth.
Keetley’s offensive owed more to electronic intelligence than it did to “luck,” the word Keetley used to describe it. Finding even a surfaced U-boat in the great expanse of the St. Lawrence was never easy, but Keetley’s patrol path was anything but chance. After taking off from Chatham, he set his Hudson on a course that would take him close to the U-boat; huff-duff reports had allowed EAC to triangulate Hartwig’s position when he radioed Lorient at 0126 (01:46 GMT). Three and a half hours later, Keetley spotted Hartwig, fully surfaced three miles away, north of Cap-de-la-Madeleine.
Keetley’s cruising altitude was over 800 feet, and his bombing altitude was 40 to 50 feet. He knew U-517 was in his sights, but he quickly realized, even as he pulled up on the plane’s controls and changed the fuel mixture so that his twin engines slowed down, that he could not dive fast enough to successfully bomb Hartwig. Nevertheless, as Keetley flew over the U-boat at 800 feet and then banked, which slowed the Hudson enough so that the second overpass was at the correct attack altitude, his gunners opened fire. “I could see the traces splashing all about the conning tower,” Flying Officer P. G. Hughes told the Halifax Herald. “It was like the 24th of May”—Victoria Day fireworks.
Less than half a minute later, Keetley’s plane was in an even better position. “I knew we couldn’t miss that baby,” recalled Hughes. “He stood out like a white corvette with this camouflage.” As the sixty five-foot Hudson passed over the U-boat, Keetley fired his machine guns and four depth charges, spaced at sixty-foot intervals.
Hartwig escaped, though the presence of a small oil slick indicated that he had received some damage.
Over the next few days, as EAC added nine planes to its patrol force, Hartwig became the hunted. Between the sixteenth and the nineteenth, he was attacked twice more—attacks that did more than simply keep him under. His report to Lorient on September 22 indicates that, while he’d not been mortally wounded, the cumulative attacks were beginning to tell; his starboard inner exhaust flap could not be moved at all, and the port flap could be moved “only with great difficulty.”
On the twenty-fourth, Hartwig was “surprised by [an] aircraft” piloted by Maurice Jean Bélanger. Under bright moonlight, Bélanger’s bombs were dropped from a height of only forty feet and were accompanied by streams of machine-gun fire that raked the conning tower.
Hartwig’s war diary—“2 powerful explosions astern. 3 bombs dropped; 3rd bomb right next to ship’s side so that the stern gets flooded over by impact. Presumably a dud”—is as bloodless as ever. But the scene aboard U-517 must have been more chaotic. Over the next eleven hours, U-517 crash-dived four more times.
Bélanger bombed Hartwig again the same day. Accuracy when bombing a diving submarine was not easy. Shortly after 2 p.m., Bélanger got everything right, coming over Hartwig while his decks were still awash. The pattern of dropping one bomb every forty feet was designed to catch the moving object. One depth charge exploded within five to ten feet of U-517’s pressure hull but did not breach it.8
Five days later (on September 29), at 2:23 p.m., Bélanger again pulled on the controls, causing his Hudson 624 to bank sharply. Seconds later, levelling off at fifty to sixty feet, machine guns firing, he dropped another four bombs on U-517 as it crash-dived. Bélanger’s report—“The depth charges were seen to explode all around the hull slightly ahead of the conning tower. One large explosion occurred around the hull of the U-boat. The U-boat’s bow came up out of the water and all forward motion stopped. It then appeared to settle straight down”—cannot be squared with Hartwig’s, which says only, “crashed dived to evade aircraft. 3 well-placed depth charges.” But the backhanded compliment makes clear the margin by which Hartwig escaped.
On the twenty-ninth, EAC almost got its kill. Several hours after what Hartwig called a skilful bomb and machine-gun attack, he surfaced to find that a bomb had lodged in his hull forward of the 10.5-cm gun’s ammunition locker. Had U-517 descended much farther during its escape dive, the bomb that Hartwig, his chief engineer and two other crew members pried off their boat’s hull and pitched into the sea would have exploded, destroying the plating and sinking the sub.
Over and over again in the weeks that followed the sinking of Joannis, Hartwig closed in for the kill. Again and again, close work by the RCN and air escorts frustrated his ambitions. At 4 p.m. on September 24, for example, Hartwig had surfaced and was maintaining contact with a fifteen-ship convoy. “Unfortunately on the port side [of the convoy at] bearing 50°,” recorded Hartwig in his war diary, “there is a single steamship moving fast to catch up to the convoy. I am between the steamship and the convoy, can’t get ahead of him or go around the lone vessel.” Two hours and sixteen minutes later, another crash-dive and another depth charge. A day later, and he wrote this in his war diary:
0133 hrs. [Berlin Time] surface. Bright moonlight, clear night. Tried to catch up [with the same convoy] at three-quarters speed.
0352 hrs. Grid BB 146 surprised by aircraft. 2 powerful explosions astern. 3 bombs dropped; 3rd bomb right next to ship’s side so that the stern gets flooded over by impact. Presumably a dud.
0353 hrs. Crash-dive.
0559 hrs. Surfaced, back to pursuit.
1145 hrs. Convoy at bearing 192°, bow right 100 Grid BB 1853. Turned sharply away as too close in half-light.
1205 hrs. Crash-dive to evade 2 aircraft.
1247 hrs. Surfaced.
1316 hrs. Crash-dive to evade one aircraft.
1428 hrs. Surfaced.
1445 hrs. Crash-dive to evade one aircraft.
1559 hrs. Surfaced.
2030–2045 hrs. 3 aircraft in sight. So far have kept contact with aircraft. Should be ahead of convoy by 2100 hrs after coupling. Make for convoy at 300°; at 2203 hrs. in Grid BB 4325 am surprised by a fast land-plane. 3 aerial bombs which are well placed. Until 0139 hrs. travel at periscope depth; nothing seen and nothing heard. Presume convoy has put to sea via BB 46, 49 or 50.
Finally, on October 5 at 8 p.m., one day before he left the gulf, Hartwig was in position to attack a convoy when suddenly an aircraft with a searchlight overflew him. Twenty-three minutes later, he fired, using his day-attack periscope because “nothing [could] be seen through the night-target periscope as it [had] been completely shattered.” The torpedoes missed. Twenty minutes later, at 8:45 p.m., just before he tried again, “the fire-control calculator [broke] down.” The four eels sailed harmlessly into the night.
When he left the St. Lawrence, Hartwig’s damage-control report listed,
Water-distilling plant (reduced from 50 to 10 gallons);
Torpedo angling gear;
Upper-deck torpedo storage compartment;
Torpedoes stored in upper-deck storage compartment;
Two caved-in torpedo tubes;
Night target periscope;
Fire-contro
l calculator.
For destroying 52,000 tons of shipping, Hartwig was awarded an Iron Cross. But during his final twenty-one days in Canada’s home waters, he sank nothing.
On December 17, 1942, Prime Minister Churchill wrote to his Canadian counterpart, “I appreciate the grand contribution of the Royal Canadian Navy to the Battle of the Atlantic, but the expansion of the RCN has created a training problem which must take some time to solve.” Five days earlier, in Analysis of Attacks by U-Boat on Convoy SQ 36 on 15th and 16th Sept. 1942, the UK’s director of anti-submarine warfare called attention to “a very grave lack of efficiency on the part of the Canadian escort force.” Although he does not name Rear-Admiral Jones, the director clearly lays the blame on the manning policy Jones authored: “Much of this [the inefficiency of the RCN] is undoubtedly due to the difficulties that have prevented Canadians from forming permanent groups, that can be trained to act together as teams.” Even during the height of the Atlantic war, one-third of RN ships were routinely detached from escort duty to train with a live submarine at Tobermory, Scotland; by contrast, 90 per cent of the RCN’s ships were at sea. Murray’s plans for Canadian training with a live submarine were derailed when, after Pearl Harbor, the bulk of the US Atlantic Fleet sailed for the Pacific and the RCN took over responsibility for escorting convoys across the North Atlantic.
Called “piratical” by Rear-Admiral Murray in Halifax, Jones’s manning policy was designed to spread the talent around the rapidly expanding Canadian fleet. Jones feared that had Canada followed normal practice and kept crews together on a ship and ships together in groups that could be trained as a unit, the ships would have been largely unmanned.9 The fleet had expanded exponentially—from 13 ships and 3,600 officers and ratings in 1939, to more than 43,000 officers and ratings and more than 200 warships in 1942. (In 1945 the numbers would be 93,000 officers and men, 373 warships, including 2 aircraft carriers, and 563 other types of ships.) The only way to crew the hundreds of new ships—and thereby provide escorts to the convoys—was, Jones believed, to take what few trained men the RCN had and put them on the ships as they came down the slipways. These men then formed the nucleus around which the untrained crew was formed. Training often occurred on station at sea.10
However defensible from a manning point of view, Jones’s policy damaged the RCN’s convoy-escort role because it militated against the concerted training of groups of ships to work together in convoy protection. In a report that examined the effectiveness of the largely Canadian escort force of SC-52—which, on November 1, 1941, became the only convoy driven back to port—the Admiralty wrote, “RCN corvettes … have been given so little chance to become efficient that they are almost more of a liability than an asset to the escort group.” According to historian Marc Milner, Murray protested vigorously against Jones’s policy: “One of the more damnable effects of this policy,” Murray wrote in a memo to NSHQ, “was that it worked the few good people who were available to near exhaustion.” Lieutenant Brigg’s Orillia, for example, had recently been ravaged by Halifax manning personnel, and Murray warned that she “may be unfit for further duty at sea for some considerable time period” following the completion of its later passage. Briggs was now the only qualified watch keeper aboard Orillia, and the corvette had spent twenty-eight days at sea during the month of October.
Almost a year before the attack on SQ-36, Murray had called for a manning policy that assigned new crews to new ships—and then kept them together for training. In December 1941, Naval Service Headquarters in Ottawa turned down the plan. According to Milner, “The RCN was quite prepared to accept a ‘temporary’ reduction in efficiency for long-term benefits of producing a larger cadre of experienced personnel” and the ability to man the navy’s existing ships. The lives of the merchant sailors, their ships and their cargoes were the coin that paid the price of both Jones’s manning policy and the years of neglecting the RCN’s staff list prior to the war.
In his December 21 memo, the director of the Trade Division was even more blunt: “Should they [U-boats] return” to the area between New York and 49° W (the mid-Atlantic)—the area of Canadian responsibility—“the result may well be disastrous unless some way can be found of improving the standard of training of the Western Local groups.” On the same page, though dated a few days later (December 24), he continues, “It was understood that training facilities would be made available at St. John’s and Argentia but complaints have been made that in the case of Canadian ships this training was much interfered with by the continual changing of crews.” Interestingly, given the criticisms the report makes of Salisbury itself, it goes on to say, “This should not affect British manned vessels, such as the SALISBURY and the remainder of the ships in the support groups”—per-haps, as Smith suggests, another example of the Admiralty’s desire to put the best gloss on things directly under its control.
The final part of the director’s analysis is also important. First, it illuminates an important difference between the RN and the RCN—indeed, between the Canadian and British armed forces in general. Before rehearsing the usual criticisms about the changing of crews and the reluctance of the Canadians to form attack groups, the director of anti-submarine warfare notes that “the individuality of the officers … makes them reluctant to accept instructions in official publications and to obey them, or to accept the lessons learnt by others.” No doubt part of what the Admiralty was getting at here was the exuberance of youth. Because of the huge expansion of the RCN, its officers were on the whole much younger than the RN’s. But another part of what the Admiralty was saying no doubt stems from the social differences between the RN and the RCN. The RN was England’s senior service, its officers products of long-established naval colleges and of a navy stretching back hundreds of years.
Lieutenant Desmond Piers, commander of the destroyed HMCS Restigouche, had passed through these schools. So had Lieutenant R. J. Pickford, commander of the corvette HMCS Rimouski, who had been trained first at HMS King Alfred and then at HMS Auspry and who held an RN watch keeper’s certificate. But few other Canadians had such qualifications.
Bonner was a merchant seaman—from the Admiralty point of view, a notoriously individualistic lot. Skinner was a rum-runner, Lade a yachtsman.
The report’s penultimate paragraph stung especially hard: “It has been estimated that 80% of all ships torpedoed in transatlantic convoys during the last 2 months were hit while being escorted by Canadian groups.” Though correct, Milner has shown that the raw numbers conceal almost as much as they reveal. The vast majority of convoys Canadians escorted were slow convoys, and slow convoys were much easier targets both because they spent as much as 30 per cent more time at sea and because their lack of speed made them less able to respond to tactical situations.
From a Canadian point of view, the Admiralty’s remarks are incomplete. The first gap is the failure of ADC on September 15 to warn of the U-boat’s presence. The second is the failure of Salisbury‘s 271 radar to pick up the presence of U-517 within the convoy. Both contributed mightily to the tactical disaster of SQ-36.
CHAPTER SIX
OCTOBER WAS THE
CRUELLEST MONTH
OCTOBER 9, 11 AND 14, 1942
SS Carolus, Waterton and Caribou
Unnumbered ghosts that haunt the wave Where you have murdered, cry you down;
And seamen whom you would not save, Weave now in weed-grown depths a crown Of shame for your imperious head,—A dark memorial of the dead,—Women and children whom you left to drown.
—HENRY VAN DYKE, 1917
The age-old tradition of sailors picking up survivors of ships that their munitions destroyed—what Grossadmiral Karl Dönitz called a “fine Freemasonry”—and the emotion-charged meetings of veterans who, generations after they fought each other, meet and reminisce about their all-too-human battle against steel, shell and the ever-present sea should not elide the differences between His Majesty’s Royal Canadian Navy and the Kriegsmarine. Still
less should the passage of time obscure the marked differences in training and in beliefs between the men who manned the U-boats that invaded Canada and the officers and ratings who served on the armed yachts, corvettes, Fairmiles and Bangor minesweepers that defended Canada.
The U-Bootwaffe had risen from a secret Weimar program to the most professional of Hitler’s armed forces. Like the crews of the RCN, the RN and the USN, its crews were volunteers. U-boat commanders were products of a three-year training program that began with three months of basic infantry training on Dänholm, what U-553’s captain, Karl Thurmann, called a “godforsaken island” in the Baltic. Then three months on a square rigger; next, a year as a midshipman aboard a cruiser. A nine-month course in navigation, tactics, naval architecture, marine engineering, oceanography and English (to study Nelson and Drake in the original) followed. Commissioning came after still another cruise—with an experienced commander. The expansion of the U-boat Arm from 40 submarines in 1939 to 265 in the beginning of 1943 (and the need to replace crews lost in action) meant that as the war continued, training was speeded up. Still, an engineering officer cadet of 1940 underwent over two years of training. As late as 1944, U-boat crews trained for up to nine months before undertaking operational cruises.
Men like Lieutenant Desmond “Debbie” Piers, RCN, captain of the destroyer HMCS Restigouche, spent years earning their command qualifications, most of it with the British navy and staff colleges. But the initials RCNR (Royal Canadian Naval Reserve) after the names of the men who commanded most of the small ships—captains Skinner, Bonner, Lade and Cuthbert—and RCNVR (Royal Canadian Navy Volunteer Reserve) after those of captains Denny (Fairmile 074), Simpson (Fairmile 063) and Strange (Fairmile 084), as well as of most of the ratings who served in the St. Lawrence, indicate that the vast majority of the men who matched wits with Dönitz’s marksmen belonged to the maritime equivalent of the militia.1
The Battle of the St. Lawrence Page 19