Read The Battle of the St. Lawrence Online
Authors: Nathan M. Greenfield
search for, 88–89
sinking by U-165, 77, 86–87
radar, 83–84
271 Centimetric radar, 10, 111, 143–144,
161
286 radar, 10,
111,
144, 173, 27m.i
accuracy improvement, 219
Canadian capability, 271n.1, 272n.4
countermeasures, 169, 219
effectiveness, 177
Leigh Light airborne radar, 51, 180
Microwave Early Warning, 200
radio beacons, 21, 49, 69
radio directional finding (RDF).
See
radar
Ralston, Col. James L. (Defence Minister), 8, 64
ramming of U-boats, 59, 60
Rasch,
Kapitänleutnant
Hermann.
See
U-106
RCN.
See
Royal Canadian Navy
RCNR.
See
Royal Canadian Naval Reserve
RCNVR.
See
Royal Canadian Naval Volunteer Reserve
RDF (radio directional finding).
See
radar
Read, Edward
(Oakton)
background, 90–91, 99, 100
Oakton
sinking, 83, 84, 86, 90, 103–105, 107–109
requisitioning of yachts, 270n.7
Rimouski,
HMCS (Pickford), 209–210, 213–214, 241
riveting,
118–119
Roberto, Carmello
(Laramie),
80
Roy, Sasseville (Gaspé MP)
challenges to government, 141, 200–201
on intelligence failures, 149–151
on military service in the Gaspé, 203–204
on naval command structure, 3–4
in parliament, 3, 65–66, 67–68
on St. Lawrence defences, 177, 197–198
Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF).
See
Eastern Air Command
Royal Canadian Naval Reserve (RCNR), 10, 11, 163
Royal Canadian Naval Volunteer
Reserve (RCNVR), 8, 10, 11, 163–164
Royal Canadian Navy (RCN).
See also
convoys; training
Anti-Submarine strike forces, 20, 38, 52–53, 200, 218
command structure, 123
communications procedures, 61, 88
compared with British Admiralty, 10-11, 160–161, 272n.4
compared with
Kriegsmarine,
162–164
convoy services, 10-11, 179
coordination with Eastern Air Command, 181, 201, 202–203
culture, 166–167
equipment, 10–11, 200
loss statistics, 267n.1, 272n.9
naval estimates, 7–9, 11–12, 116, 197- 198
resources, 8–9, 10–11, 155, 237–238
wartime expansion, 163–164
Royal Navy (RN).
See
British Admiralty
rumors.
See also
censorship; morale; press coverage
abandonment of woman survivor
(Nicoya),
36
drunken Air Force pilots, 62
German operations in Canada, 2, 3, 40–41, 64–65, 66, 200
German supply caches, 69
privilege abuse, 178, 200–201, 202
saboteurs, 69
sale of war bonds, 2, 50
ship sinkings, 64
under-reporting of losses, 4, 178–179, 198- 200
US destroyer sinkings, 198
Salisbury,
HMS (Crichton)
analysis of attacks, 148–149, 160
assignment to Gulf Escort Force, 142, 143
escorting SQ-36, 144–145, 147–148, 151–154
Saturnus,
SS, 146
Schauenburg,
Kptlt.
Rolf (U-536), 165, 210, 213–214
Second Happy Time, 30, 229
SG-6, convoy, 79–82
SG-6F, convoy, 94–95
Shawinigan,
HMCS (Jones)
inquiry, 232–233, 234
in salvage of
Magog,
226
in search for
Raccoon,
89
search for survivors, 233–234
service record, 229
sinking by U-1228, 230–231
ship-building
British, 271n.1,3
Canadian, 8, 9, 271n.3
corvettes, 118–121
process, 114, 116–118
shipping losses, 217
ship’s articles, 99
significance in wartime, 47
Skinner, Capt. Alfred
(Arrowhead).
See also Arrowhead,
HMCS; QS-33
background, 10, 83, 85, 270n.1
Board of Inquiry findings, 90
concerning torpedo danger, 148–149
in QS-33, 87
Smith, Geoffrey (ASDIC operator,
Arrowhead)
background, 78
in QS-33, 83, 85–86, 102–104
in SQ-36, 147–148, 148–149
Smith, Lt. Cmdr. Norman.
See Raccoon,
HMCS
snorkel, 220, 221, 236
sonar.
See
asdic
sono buoys, 228
spies.
See
espionage
SQ-35, 110–111
SQ-36, convoy
analysis of attacks, 148–149, 158, 160
attacks by U-517, 145–148, 152–153
formation, 151–152
St. Laurent, Louis (Justice Minister), 178, 198
St. Lawrence.
See also
convoys
closure, 112–113, 139–142, 199, 201, 202–203, 272n.1
defence of shipping, 19, 52–53, 79, 202–203, 221–222, 237–238
St. Pierre and Miquelon
blackout regimen, 50
rumors of U-boat bases, 40–41
star shells, 82, 172–173
submarine detection equipment.
See
asdic; H/F D/F; hydrophones; radar; sono buoys; star shells
Summerside,
HMCS, 151–153
supply shortages, 74
Tate, SLt. Ian
(Fort Ramsay),
29–30, 34, 61–62, 77, 166–167
Taverner, Capt. Ben, 183, 186, 191
Thurmann,
Kptlt
Karl.
See
U-553
Toronto,
HMCS, 223, 226
torpedo tubes, flooding, 60
torpedoes
compared with mines, 148–149
countermeasures, 214, 226, 275n.7
detonation process, 181
explosive process, 23–24, 27, 30, 81, 98, 185
firing process, 54–55, 170–171, 230–231
GNAT acoustic, 214, 219–220, 226
guidance systems, 21, 54
launching of, 129
technology, 103
training
Air Force, 20, 63, 76, 100–101, 194, 196, 200
Aircraft Detection Corps observers, 151, 196–197, 200
DEMS gunnery, 47
Royal Canadian Naval Volunteer Reserve, 10, 163–164
Royal Canadian Navy, 10-11, 148, 158–160, 218, 273n.9,10
U-boat commanders, 13, 79, 162–163, 164
Treaty of Versailles
German attitudes to, 165
German submarine restrictions, 11-12, 79, 92, 267n.3
German violation of, 45
Truro,
HMCS, 84, 105, 126, 241
U-69 (Gräf)
attack on
Caribou,
184–185
counterattack by
Grandmère,
188–189
mine planting, 169
sinking of
Carolus,
170–171, 180
U-106 (Rasch), 174–176, 179–180
U-132 (Vogelsang), 65
against QS-15, 54–57, 59–61 against QS-19
(Frederika Lensen),
71–75
construction, 43
damage to, 48, 60, 73–74, 75
destruction, 75
hunt for, 62–64
orders, 48, 75
U-165 (Hoffman), 79
against QS-33, 82–85, 85, 86
against SG-6, 79–81
against SQ-36, 152–154
bombing of, 112
U-190 (Reith), 238
U-262, 204–205
U-517 (Hartwig)
against
Charlottetown,
129–130
against QS-33, 76–77, 79, 97–98, 101–105, 105–107
against SG-6F
(Chatham),
94–95
against SQ-36, 144–148
capture, 92
conditions aboard, 94, 96
damage to, 105–107, 155, 157–158
description, 93
failed attacks, 156–157
hunt for, 100–101, 154–158
sightings, 96–97, 149, 154
U-536 (Schauenburg), 210, 212, 213–216
U-553 (Thurmann)
against
Leto,
30
against
Nicoya,
21–24, 26–27
hunt for, 34–35, 51
leaving St. Lawrence, 41
other sinkings, 169n.10
U-556, against HX-126, 15–18
U-1223 (Kneip), 223, 226, 275n.8
U-1228 (Marienfeld), 229, 230–231, 234, 241
U-boats
attack strategy, 26–27
buoyancy balancing, 129
Canadian base and landings rumors, 40–41, 248
conditions aboard, 12–13, 94, 96, 180
defeats, 181, 217–218, 219, 236
depth charge countermeasures, 125
design, 13
detection.
See
asdic; H/F D/F; hydrophones; radar; sono buoys; star shells
dive procedures, 21–23, 59, 60
equipment problems, 230
Navy plan to capture, 207–208
North Atlantic access, 44
operations, 107
production, 11, 236, 276n.1
ramming attacks, 59, 60
ranges and operating periods, 69
submarine air management, 180, 215, 220
technology advances, 219–221, 236, 275n.3
U-bootwaffe
crew training, 13–14, 79, 162–163, 164
culture, 14, 92, 164–166, 240
expansion, 163, 236
fleet size, 217
formation of, 12
and Kiel Mutiny, 92
morale, 180, 219
objectives, 45, 236–237
Ultra intelligence, 168, 207, 209, 217
United Kingdom, economic aid, 46
United States
air base in Newfoundland, 20, 51
Air Force (USAF), 51
naval production statistics, 46
Navy (USN), 11, 53, 158
Vanier, Brig. Gen. Georges, 64, 70
Vichy France, 179, 194–196
Vison,
HMCS (Nicholson), 176
Vogelsang,
Kptlt
Ernst (U-132), 48–49, 75
volunteer forces.
See
Aircraft Detection Corps; Royal Canadian Naval Volunteer Reserve
war against trade
(guerre de course),
12, 26–27, 44, 45, 53
Washington Disarmament Conference, 7
Waterton,
SS, 174–176
weather station “Kurt”, 248, 252–253
Weyburn,
HMCS, 71, 74, 96–98, 110
Whyte, Marilyn, 122
Wohlfarth,
Kptlt
Herbert (U-556), 16
Women’s Royal Canadian Naval Service (Wrens), 168, 240
Woodruff, AB Roy (Q-074), 71–72, 73–74, 75
W
hen I undertook this project over two years ago, my knowledge of naval warfare consisted of hazy memories of having watched
Victory at Sea
with my father thirty years earlier. The crash course I undertook before and while writing
The Battle of the St. Lawrence
was taught by a small squadron of unpaid teachers. The first was Dr. Roger Sarty, then the director of the Canadian War Museum, who generously gave of his time and his unpublished research and who graciously offered to read the unpublished text. I owe much to Dr. Michael Hadley, who, while I was still getting my sea legs, e-mailed me permission to come up to the bridge. Dr. Marc Milner has also been an invaluable resource, and a fine stylistic critic of this text. Mr. André Kirouac, director of the Quebec Naval Museum, not only opened his files to me but has been there to help me find the smallest detail;
merci aussi, André, pour l’invitation pour la colloque sur le bataille de St. Laurent.
Drs. Michael Whitby and Serge Bernier, and Charles Rhéaume of the Canadian Defence Department’s Directorate of History also gave of their time both in answering my questions and in catching errors in the book’s first draft.
I owe a special debt to Ted Read of Alexandria, Ontario, whose story of surviving the torpedoing of SS
Oakton
convinced me and Michael Benedict at
Maclean’s
magazine—and subsequently my agent, David Johnston—that the Battle of the St. Lawrence was a gripping story. Protecting me from error—especially the landlubber’s faux pas of writing “men on a ship” instead of “men in a ship”—has been Ian Tate of Port Hope, Ontario, who has also graciously allowed me to reprint many of the pictures he took at HMCS Fort Ramsay three score years ago. Geoffrey Smith of Oakville,
Ontario, has also been an invaluable resource. Joe Connolly, who during the war was an EAC pilot, taught me much about the intricacies of antisubmarine air patrols. I must not forget Max Reid of Ottawa, who explained to me much about life aboard ship and how naval guns were fired. Ron McGuire gave generously of his time and of his research on SS
Caribou.
Terry Manuel told me the horrifying story that ends this book.
My understanding of U-boat operations owes much to five men who served on U-boats. Werner Hirschmann, now of Toronto, was chief engineer on U-
612
and U-190; ironically, the latter U-boat torpedoed Terry Manuel’s HMCS
Esquimalt
off Halifax in the closing days of the war. Dr. Günther Spohn of Düsseldorf and Mr. Egon Martens of Beverstedt served aboard U-1228 and recall the torpedoing of HMCS
Shawinigan.
Before being captured in 1942 and sent to a POW camp in Bowmanville, Ontario, Volkmar Koenig served aboard U-99 under U-boat ace Otto Kretschmer. One former U-boat officer whom I interviewed has asked that I not record his name.
The men and women whose answers to my and other people’s questions on the forums at uboat.net are too numerous to mention. Several, however, must be singled out: Rodney Martin, Roger (rogerhollywood), Douglas Struthers, hubertusw, Rainer Bruns and Rainer Kolbicz.
Both John MacSween of Glasgow, Scotland (another uboat.net connection), and Francis MacLaughlin of Kingston, Ontario, were more than graceful in explaining to me the physics of how a ship sinks. Both will recognize their labours, I trust, in my description of the death of SS
Nicoya.
Both International Marine Research, a volunteer organization in Norfolk, England, and Tim Hughes, my researcher in England, worked miracles. So did Janice Summerby of the Canadian Department of Veterans Affairs. Claire Roy of Algonquin College’s interlibrary loan service could find the proverbial needle in the haystack.
Richard Martin, my colleague in Algonquin’s English department, performed yeoman’s work proofreading this manuscript. And thank you to Mairi McKissock for preparing an excellent index.