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HMS Royal Oak was designed as a battleship of the Royal Sovereign class and was laid down in Devonport in 1914 and completed in 1916. Royal Oak participated during first world war in the naval battle at Jutland, and did service with blocking for German ships entering the Atlantic ocean. Royal Oak returned to Scapa Flow when the war ended on 11. November 1918. In the following years Royal Oak was refitted several times, and in 1935 there was a major rebuilding and the battleship received better guns and her hull was increased with better armor platings. Royal Oak had the dubious honour of becoming the first larger war ship to be sunk in the second world war on the night of 14. October 1939. The German submarine U47 led by Günther Prien managed to sneak past the block ships at Kirk Sound and thereafter launch two torpedo. The last torpedo attack finished of Royal Oak which sank to the bottom of the sea within fifteen minutes. Of the crew of 1200 men 833 perished. The wreck of Royal Oak rests today on a depth of eight to thirty meters on her port side, near Scapa bay. Royal Oak is considered a war grave and no diving is allowed on the wreck...
Scapa Flow at the outbreak of World War II was still very lightly defended. In particular many of the blockships sunk in World War I to block the eastern approaches had been shifted by the tide, or had disintegrated due to the effects of sea and wind. There were large gaps between the blockships in Kirk Sound, through at least one of which a submarine could pass. More blockships had been procured and there were plans for further coastal defences, but by early October 1939 these had still not been put in place. The Germans noticed this by photo-reconnaissance and Commodore Donitz, in charge of the U-boat command, decided to attempt an attack on Scapa Flow. Lt. Gunther Prien and his U47 were selected to undertake the mission and left Wilhelmshaven on 8 October. Meanwhile, the German Navy despatched Gneisenau, Köln and nine destroyers to the North Sea to lure out the British Navy. They succeeded in drawing out several battleships, cruisers and destroyers from Rosyth and Scapa on 8th October. No contact was made and all units returned to port. However, the British battleships all went to Loch Ewe rather than Scapa. Thus the daring submarine mission was sabotaged by its own Navy before Prien even reached Scapa Flow. The mission was carefully timed to coincide with a new moon, when high water at Kirk Sound was about 23:30. The plan was to enter at slack water, before the ebb (west-going) tide had built up. The lighthouses at Roseness and Pentland Skerries were turned on at 22:00 on the 12th, no doubt due to shipping movements, but also allowing Prien to have an accurate position. The next night at about midnight, U47 crept into Kirk Sound, passed the most northerly blockship on the surface, snagged a cable, came free and was soon in Scapa Flow, unobserved despite the lights of a turning car and the noise of her diesel engines. On the night of 13 October 1939 it seems that there were in fact very few warships in Scapa Flow, apart from a few supply ships, auxiliaries and so on, but no modern capital ships or aircraft carriers. The old HMS Iron Duke was lying at Lyness and being used as headquarters. Most of these ships were moored at the western side of the Flow, near Lyness, except for the old battleship HMS Royal Oak and the old sea-plane carrier, Pegasus, which were moored near Scapa Bay, below Gaitnip. HMS Royal Oak, with her considerable anti-aircraft firepower was there as local air defence for Netherbutton radar station, shore-based AA not yet having being installed in quantity. Although there was no moon, the night was clear, starlight thus allowing Prien to see the two ships to the north. At about 01:00 and from about 3,000m he fired three shots, and one hit the HMS Royal Oak at the bow inflicting little apparent damage, but causing both anchor chains to run out. In fact the crew thought it was an internal explosion in a paint store. After re-loading, three more torpedoes were fired and a few minutes later the ship was rocked by three explosions. The HMS Royal Oak sank within 15 minutes with the loss of 833 crew out of a total of about 1,200 officers and men. That so many were saved was due partly to the prompt action of the crew of the drifter Daisy II, which was moored alongside, as well as the quick response of Pegasus in getting its boats off to aid in the rescue work. The calmness of the weather that night also helped greatly. The vast majority were rescued by the Daisy and Skipper Gatt was awarded the DSC for his part. Meanwhile U47 slipped away on the surface, this time taking the south side of Kirk Sound and within a short time she had stemmed the strongly running ebb tide and made good her escape. The next day an old steamer, the Lake Neuchatel was sunk in Kirk Sound, too late to save Royal Oak. Prien and his crew were given a tremendous welcome in Germany, Prien being invested personally by Hitler with the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross, which became the traditional decoration for exceptional U-boat commanders. Meanwhile Donitz was made a Rear Admiral. A few days later the Luftwaffe carried out bombing raids and it was not until March 1940 that the Home Fleet returned to Scapa Flow, by now heavily defended by anti-aircraft and coastal batteries, as well as improved minefields, indicator loops and more blockships. Churchill himself had the magnanimity to admit that Prien and his crew had carried out "a magnificent feat of arms". Although the loss of HMS Royal Oak was tragic for those lost, it was a salutary lesson for the British Navy and was to result in Scapa Flow being made into a safe base for the Home Fleet. Much controversy raged at the time about the sinking of the HMS Royal Oak. This was finally resolved when local divers Eric Kemp and Davie Gorn, diving near the wreck, found the remains of the propellers and gearboxes of two torpedoes of the type used by German U-boats in 1939. One of these may be seen in Stromness Museum. However the remains of the other torpedoes fired have never turned up. |
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Edited 29.06.2007 |