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Thursday, June 01, 2023


Just Finished Reading: Pursuit – The Sinking of the Bismarck by Ludovic Kennedy (FP: 1974) [228pp] 

May, 1941. It was the Admiralties worse nightmare, the pride of the German Navy the battleship Bismarck had left port and was attempting to break out into the North Atlantic. If she managed to do that the whole of the Atlantic convoy system would be under threat and Britain would run the risk of starvation. Known to be accompanied by the heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen, the two ships were seen off the coast of Norway and the Admiralty decided to cover all the bases. As the pair were highly unlikely to try a Channel dash, the northern approaches to the Atlantic were covered by available warships. The Denmark Straight, between Iceland and Greenland was covered by the cruisers HMS Suffolk and HMS Norfolk. On sighting the enemy units, they shadowed them using radar to keep contact and called for assistance. The navy’s two largest ships nearest to the pair were vectored into contact – HMS Prince of Wales (a new Battleship still experiencing teething troubles) and the venerable battlecruiser HMS Hood. The eventual encounter did not go well with Hood sunk (with only 3 of a crew of 1,433 surviving) and Prince of Wales forced to withdraw seriously damaged. It looked like the nightmare scenario was being played out in real-time.  

With the cruisers maintaining contact and with aircraft from Coastal Command also keeping close tabs on her location Bismarck was targeted for destruction, no matter the risk or consequences. Ships of all types were stripped from supporting convoys, left port half provisioned or ordered to change direction and steam at best possible speed to Bismarck's last known location. The only question remained was the Bismarck’s intentions. With so much focus now on her would she return to her base in Germany (doubtful), head for a base on the coast of France (possible) or try to head into the Atlantic (also still possible). As the hours ticked by it became increasingly clear that Bismarck was heading to the French coast. Unless, that is, the Royal Navy could catch her first and force a battle on her terms. It was going to be quite a stressful night for all concerned. 

To be honest, most of my knowledge of the events surrounding the pursuit of the Bismarck is based on the 1960 movie ‘Sink the Bismarck’ starring Kenneth Moore (based on the 1959 book by C S Forester). With some additional reading over the years, I thought I had a pretty good handle on the affair and so it was. But what this excellent small volume provided was some very interesting details. The fact that Bismarck’s captain failed (as was the British policy at the time) to top of her oil tanks when he had the opportunity in Norway which would have given him a much wider field of action when needed, the fact that four Royal Navy destroyers harassed Bismarck for hours during her last night including HMS Cossack which I built a model of as a boy, the fact that many of the Swordfish torpedo plane pilots who initially attacked Bismarck had never landed on an aircraft carrier before being sent on the mission, and the fact that several of the British ship commanders were almost court-martialled for their apparent lack of aggression during the encounter! 

As you can probably tell, I enjoyed this book very much indeed. Told with passion and understanding (the author was on HMS Tartar which witnessed the final destruction of Bismarck) this was an exciting read that didn’t shy away from the horrors of conflict on the unforgiving seas. Definitely worth the effort of sourcing a copy if you can and highly recommended for anyone interesting in the pursuit of Bismarck or the early years of naval conflict in WW2.  

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4 comments:

Stephen said...

The context of this one confuses me. Britain had a home fleet -- why was one surface vessel perceived as such a threat?

CyberKitten said...

Essentially because of several factors:

First, Bismarck was one of the best warships in the world at the time. It could probably run from anything that might kill it and fight/destroy anything else. It was a very capable platform.

The Royal Navy was spread VERY thinly across the entire world. so, theoretically, Bismarck could pick off naval units a few at a time. It took a serious concentration of firepower and a decent dose of luck to sink Bismarck when they managed it.

If Bismarck (and the heavy cruiser she was with) managed to get amongst the Atlantic convoys she would have caused some very serious damage. The convoy system would need to be suspended completely and Bismarck hunted down. That could take weeks or even months. Given that Britain was, at least in the early years of the war, surviving on a knife edge the fact of no food convoys for a few months could've pushed Britain out of the war.

It was really only the fact that Bismarck couldn't steer properly that she presented a decent target. Saying that, it took attacks by 2 aircraft carriers, several cruisers, a squadron of destroyers and at least 3-4 battleships to finish her off.

Bismarck on the loose was considered (rightly in my mind) a potential existential threat to the British war effort. This also explains why SO much effort was taken to kill her sister ship Tirpitz.

Stephen said...

Thanks for that detailed explanation! Makes sense now. I didn't realize how formidable she was! There's a mission in Commandos 1 or 2 in which the player is tasked with destroying the Bismarck in port -- or a fictional equivalent. I don't remember succeeding.

CyberKitten said...

Here's something I didn't know from Wiki. Its amazing how much damage Bismarck took before sinking:

By 10:00, Tovey's two battleships had fired over 700 main battery shells, many at very close range. HMS Rodney closed to 2,700 m (3,000 yd), point-blank range for guns of that size, and continued to fire. Bismarck had been reduced to a shambles, aflame from stem to stern. She was slowly settling by the stern from uncontrolled flooding with a 20 degree list to port. Tovey would not cease fire until the Germans struck their ensigns or it became clear they were abandoning ship. Overall the four British ships fired more than 2,800 shells at Bismarck, and scored more than 400 hits, but were unable to sink Bismarck by gunfire. The heavy gunfire at virtually point-blank range devastated the superstructure and the sections of the hull that were above the waterline, causing very heavy casualties, but it contributed little to the eventual sinking of the ship