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The epic battle between the German Bismarck and the British HMS Hood during
WW2 |
Part 7 May 22, 1941 The weather was perfect for a breakout by the Bismarck and Prince Eugen into the North Atlantic. It was cloudy with a thick fog that enveloped both ships, making them difficult to spot by British forces or Allied spies. The Prince Eugen turned on her searchlight to maintain visual contact with the Bismarck. Admiral Lutzens must have felt luck was with him but it was not to last. At 7:22 that evening the heavycruiser HMS Suffolk spots the Bismarck coming out of the fog with her advanced radar system. The German ships spot the Suffolk as well as she is dangerously close to the German force at only seven miles. The Bismarck does not fire as the Suffolk slips back into the fog and continues to follow. One hour later the Norfolk is spotted by the Bismarck and this time open fires with five salvos which all miss their mark. The Norfolk throws up a smoke screen and heads into the fog for cover. Both British ships trail the Bismarck from a safe distance using radar and wait for more powerful ships to arrive. On the Bismarck the radar has been disabled due to the powerful blast of its forward guns and switches postions with the Prince Eugen. This would cause much confusion for the British the next day. Lutzens continues towards the Atlantic trying to shake off the British cruisers throughtout the night. He tries turning around to chase them but they would turn around and run off. Baron Mullenheim-Rechberg was a officer on the deck of the Bismarck and remembers it well, "They must have sensed what we were doing on their radar and when we turned toward them, because they were faster then us, they would turn and runaway. It was a futile excercise! ". The Suffolk and Norfolk continue to send out reports of the Bismarcks position throughout the night. Meanwhile three hundred miles to the east, the Hood and the Prince of Wales were racing to intercept. The pride and flagship of the British navy and the super weapon of the Kreisg-marine were about to have a showdown. These two war ships, that were known around the world, were about to engage in a heavyweight bout that would surprise both sides with its ending. Midnight May 23, 1941 On the Hood, Captain Lancelot Holland alerts the crew over the loudspeakers to assume battle stations as action was definitely expected. Ted Briggs, on officer on the Hood recalls, "This was the first time realized that something was going to happen. This was no false alarm". Holland decided on a full steam, head-on attack but during the night the Suffolk and Norfolk lost contact with the Bismarck and he was forced to wait untill contact was reestablished. The Hood was now forced to make a slow and dangerous approach from the side. Only its forward guns could engage the enemy while all of their guns could be aimed toward the British. The Bismarck would "cross the T" on the Hood as it is known in Navy parlance. The crew of the Hood had been at their stations for hours. They were getting anxious and they were getting scared. Ted Briggs, " I think the fear was the fear of showing fear. I wasn't afraid of being killed. I thought if you get killed, its outright. But I was desperately afraid of being injured or wounded and suffering in agony and screaming. I was very frightened of that". Meanwhile with their radar out of commission, the Bismarck had no idea that the Hood was on its way. Finally at 5:30 am on May 23rd the two ships caught sight of each other. Baron Mullenheim-Rechberg recalls, "At first we didn't know who it was. Was it a cruiser? And then it got bigger and bigger coming over the horizon. The gunnery sargent with his powerful binoculars shouts, "Its the Hood. Its the Hood!". The terror of of war games. What an excitement it was for us". The battle alarm sounded. Johannes Zimmerman was stationed in the boiler room when he heard that they were going to have a battle with the Hood. He thought to himself, "Are they crazy? We are going to have a war game now?". Abroad the Hood Ted Briggs was on the compass platform with the captain. "The bridge of the platform was pretty unreal", he recalls, "It was so desperately quiet and everything seem to be happening in slow motion". Holland was now moving at full speed toward the Bismarck. At close range the Bismarcks shells would have a low trajactory and hopefully hit the Hoods strong sides instead of her weak deck armour. They were within thirteen miles when Holland ordered, "Open fire!". The Hood aimed at the lead ship thinking it was the Bismarck but quickly turned her guns and fired her fifteen inch shells. Josef Statz on the Bismarck remembers the sound of approaching projectiles, "When the shells flew overhead, they literally ripped a scream from your body. It was in indescribable. It was from the air pressure, the fear and uncertainty of where they would land. But it was mostly the fear". Admiral Lutjens resisted firing back, remembering his orders not to engage enemy war ships but Captain Linderman finally stepped in and remarked, "I will not have my ship shot out from under my ass!". The Bismarck opened fired. The Bismarcks first salvo fell long and its second salvo fell short. The third salvo was a direct hit. The Bismarck had found the range. The Hood shook violently and knocked the crew off of their feet. Fires broke out on the forward decks and the magazines for the secondary guns. The forth salvo ripped through the observation tower above the compass platform. Ted Briggs shipmate went out to inspect the damage. Ted recalls, "He went out on the port side and said there were bodies falling down from the observation tower. One was a Lieutenant. He knew every officer aboard but he couldn't recognize him. He had no face or hands". Holland ordered the Hood to port to allow her rear guns to join the fight. It was then that Bismarcks fifth salvo struck. Ted Briggs,"All I saw was a gigantic sheet of flame that shot all around the compass platform. At the same time we were all thrown off of our feet. It seem to me like it was a vortex, spinning around. And then she started to list to port. She had gone maybe thirty or forty degrees when we realized she just wasn't coming back. There was no order to abandon ship, it just wasn't necessary". On the Bismarck Mullenheim-Reichberg was watching the story unfold in his viewfinder, "I seen two ends of the Hood sticking up and ready to sink. We hadn't expected the Hood to sink so quickly, nobody had". A shell had penetrated the Hoods weak deck armour and exploded in her ammunition magazines. The resulting blast had split this huge ship in two. Ted Briggs, "By that time I was under water and I tried to get away as fast as I could. I was ready to give up when I felt myself being shot to the surface". It is believed a boiler exploded under water and the resultant air bubble shot Ted to the surface saving him from a watery grave. "I came up and the Hood was about fifty yards away. She was vertical with the water and "B" turret was just going under. I panicked and swamed away as fast as I could". Covered in oil Ted, managed to grasp a tiny raft floating in the water. When he looked back the Hood was gone. All he saw were two other shipmates floating nearby. In less than ten minutes of battle the Bismarck had destroyed the "Mighty Hood" and 1,415 of her crew. Only three survived, Ted Briggs, Robert Tillburn and William Dundas. Back on the Bismarck news of the Hoods demise raced through the ship. Hans Zimmmerman recalls, "The Hood sunk!?. It was such a shock. At first there were smiling faces but that didn't last as there was a strange feeling that tomorrow it would be us". (to be continued, all comments most welcome) email "macthemechanicca2001@yahoo.ca" |