Action off Cape Bougaroun | |||||||
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Part of the Battle of the Mediterranean of World War II | |||||||
USS Beatty in January 1943. | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
United States United Kingdom Greece Netherlands | Nazi Germany | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Charles C. Hartman | unknown | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
1 cruiser 10 destroyers 4 destroyer escorts 26 transports | 25 aircraft | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
17 killed ~9 wounded 1 destroyer sunk 2 transports sunk 1 destroyer damaged 2 transports damaged |
~10 killed 6 aircraft destroyed |
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The Action off Cape Bougaroun, or the Attack on Convoy KMF-25A was a Luftwaffe action against an Allied naval convoy off the coast of Algeria during World War II. The convoy of American, British, Greek and Dutch ships was attacked on November 6, 1943 by twenty-five German land based aircraft. Six Allied vessels were sunk or damaged and six German aircraft were destroyed. German forces achieved a tactical victory though the Allied warships involved received credit for defending their convoy and reacting to their losses quickly. The quick response led to the rescue of over 6,000 service men and civilians without further loss of life.
Background[]
Convoy KMF-25A consisted of twenty-six transports escorted by fifteen warships, it sailed from Liverpool to Naples. The twenty-six transports carried roughly 28,000 American, British and Canadian soldiers as well as war supplies and nurses. Most, if not all of the vessels were armed with small naval and anti-aircraft guns, the American and Dutch ships had armed guards aboard who manned the weapons. The convoy was designated Task Group 60.2 and was under the command United States Navy Captain Charles C. Hartman in his flagship USS Mervine. Task Group 60.2 included the British anti-aircraft cruiser HMS Colombo, and ten destroyers, USS Mervine, Davison, Parker, Laub, Beatty, Tillman, McLanahan and HMS Haydon with two other Hunt class vessels. Also, there were four destroyer escorts, two Greek and two American, including USS Frederick C. Davis and USS Herbert C. Jones. On October 27, 1943 convoy KMF-25A left Great Britain for Egypt and ultimately to Italy. After passing Gibraltar the ships received air support from the Royal Air Force but these aircraft squadrons could only help so much as they were constantly being rotated out with another. The rotation left the convoy without support for several minutes at a time while the Royal Air Force sent new planes. It was during one of these periods that a force of nine Luftwaffe torpedo planes and sixteen bombers intercepted the convoy.
Action[]
The convoy sailed in the columns of seven to nine ships each from Mers-El-Kebir to Naples. USS Laub was alone and five miles ahead of the fleet to provide a radar screen. USS Melvine led the warships in a circular course around the three columns, Beatty and Tillman were astern in the rear and the Mervine was 2,000 yards ahead. Just after sunset, at about 5:45 pm on November 6, the convoy was sailing in overcast weather, thirty-five miles away from Philippeville, off Cape Bougaroun when USS Laub detected six enemy aircraft attacking from the north. Laub's commander then radioed Captain Hartman who signaled the destroyers to make smoke and prepare for action. The thousands of soldiers and civilians were also ordered to go below deck and remain there until the threat was over. A moment later, USS Tillman picked up an enemy aircraft and opened fire at a range of 8,000 yards, too far to be accurate but the shots served as a warning to the other nearby escorts.
German forces included Heinkel 111s with F5B torpedos, Dornier 217s with Fritz-X missiles and Junkers Ju 88s armed with Henschel Hs 293 missiles, they were separated into small groups and attacked at a low altitude, around 1,000 feet above the surface of the sea. First the Americans sent out friend or foe signals to the approaching enemy but when one of the aircraft was identified as German, Hartman was informed and he ordered the escorts to open fire. As the German planes came within range both the escorts and the transports opened fire towards the sky with a massive hail of machine gun, anti-aircraft and naval gunfire. Seconds later the Germans began firing their missiles and launching torpedoes. The battle last under thirty minutes but in that time thousands of pounds of ordnance was expended. USS Beatty, under Commander William Outerson, first observed machine gun fire at 6:03 pm and picked up five incoming planes followed by a bomb explosion at 6:04. At 6:05 she opened fire on two more incoming Ju 88 torpedo planes, 16,000 yards away, which were trying to pass themselves off as friendly. Most of the attacking aircraft seemed to be after the Tillman but she avoided being hit due to her captain who expertly steered his ship through the bombing. The first aircraft sighted by the Tillman was a Donier, it dropped a gliding bomb about 1,000 yards off the beam while under heavy fire from the destroyer's main battery. When the projectile was 600 yards from the ship, machine gun fire from the Tillman struck the bomb and it fell into a steep dive, crashing 150 yards off the port side. The bomber was then struck and blown up by Tillman's 5-inch guns while another bomb exploded 500 yards off the starboard beam. Though Tillman escaped being hit, concussion damaged the destroyers fire-control radar and aft plates. At 6:13 pm, one of the German torpedo planes launched at torpedo from 500 yards at the Beatty, thirty seconds later, the missile struck the after engine room near frame 124. The explosion blew a relatively small hole in the Beatty, eleven men were killed in action, one died later of wounds and a third sailor, Radioman 3rd Class Samuel Poland was blown overboard along with a K-gun and a depth charge. The charge did not explode. One officer and six men were wounded and USS Beatty slowly began to sink. Immediately damage control parties were sent out to patch the torpedo hole and extinguish fires while others jettisoned the topside weights, ammunition and even the tow cable among other things. The engine room flooded which put out all electronics aboard. One of the magazines also filled with water which left the Beatty listing twelve degrees to port. The destroyer remained afloat for over four hours before her crew abandoned ship at 7:00 pm and she sank at position 37º10'N, 06º00'E. With her keel damaged, the destroyer broke in half and sank at about 11:00 pm, the wounded were transferred to USS Parker.
USAT Monterey, under Captain Elis R. Johanson, was an ocean liner with the convoy, she was used for transporting troops and armed with 20-milimeter anti aircraft guns. One torpedo bomber came in for an attack on the Monterey but her gunners downed the plane before a torpedo could be dropped. The aircraft began to lose altitude and as it passed over the Montery, it struck and tore off some radio equipment. Captain Johanson later received the Merchant Marine Distinguished Service Medal. USAT Santa Elena was another liner under William C. Renaul, she was also hit twice by German bombs and sank hours later at position 37°13′N 6°21′E / 37.217°N 6.35°E while being towed into Philippeville harbor. Santa Elena was carrying 1,848 Canadian troops and 101 nurses. Four crewmen were killed and the American armed guard on board freed several men who were trapped below. Two armed Dutch transports were struck, the SS Marnix van St. Aldegonde, with 2,900 troops on board, was heavily damaged but suffered no deaths. Aldegonde initially survived long enough to make it to shore where she grounded and sank within Philippeville's outer harbor as her commander was trying to beach her. Thousands of soldiers, merchant sailors, and navy sailors became stranded in the water. The other damaged Dutch ship was the steamer SS Ruys, one man was killed but the ship made it to port. Both of the sunken transports were not heavily damaged but sustained enough to cause a sinking. The Germans dropped dozens of missiles and torpedoes but most of them failed to hit further targets. At least four hits were made on the Allied fleet which destroyed six aircraft in return, an estimated ten German aviators were killed. British and Greek forces sustained no damage or casualties, HMS Colombo steamed ahead of the center column of ships and provided accurate anti-aircraft fire, she shot down at least one enemy aircraft. USS Davison destroyed one German plane as well. By 6:20 pm, all of the torpedo planes and bombers were out of the convoy's sight and returning to base. Seventeen Americans and Dutchmen were killed and at least nine others were wounded. Captain Hartman reported that the German planes focused on the escorts so they could attack the transports unopposed but because the Allies returned fire accurately, the Germans suffered heavy losses and ultimately only six vessels of forty-one were damaged.
Aftermath[]
Operations to rescue adrift survivors began while bombs were still falling. American destroyers came alongside the damaged transports and helped evacuate the crews while British policy dictated that no survivors were to be rescued until after the fighting had ceased[citation needed]. This protocol proved deadly a few weeks later off Algeria when the same German squadron attacked and sank the SS Rohna. Because the British escorts failed to rescue survivors immediately, 1,016 American soldiers drowned with 122 crewmen.[note 1] USS Beatty's crew was rescued at about 8:00 pm by the Laub and the Parker. Meanwhile, four more United States Navy destroyers and tugs from Philippeville and Algiers were sent to help. Minesweeper USS Pioneer rescued men from the Santa Elena and USS Boyle rescued Radioman Samuel Poland the following morning. Other survivors were saved by the SS Ruyz and the Aldegonde before she grounded. While the Monterey was picking up survivors, a nurse fell from the netting she was climbing on, a Chinese cook jumped overboard and saved her. In all 6,228 people were rescued without further loss of life. During the battle off Cape Bougaroun, one unknown sailor aboard the Beatty dropped over the side a message in a bottle. The message read "Our ship is sinking. SOS didn't do any good. Think it's the end. Maybe this message will get to the U.S. some day." In 1944 the bottle was found on the beaches of Maine, meaning it had floated hundreds of miles across both the Mediterranean and the North Atlantic before reaching the United States.
See also[]
Notes[]
- ↑ Contemporary accounts by British and U.S. officers state that a substantial number of the casualties, half has been suggested, were a direct result of the bomb strike and others resulted from the unauthorised release of lifeboats by U.S. soldiers who were untrained in the launch procedure.
References[]
This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.
- Olver F., Edward, "Cruise Travel Magazine: History of the Great Liners" (1983) pg.# 49-50
- Lubeski, Ray, "Linebackers of the Sea", Author House Publishing Bloomingfield, Indiana (2010), pg.# 83-85 ISBN 978-1-4520-0422-8
- Morison Eliot, Samuel, "History of United States Naval operations in World War II: The Atlantic Battle Won", Little, Brown and Company Inc. (1984), pg.# 261-264 ISBN 0-252-07061-5
- Roscoe, Theodore, "United States destroyer operations in World War II", United States Naval Institute (1953) pg.# 341 ISBN 0-87021-726-7
Coordinates: 37°10′N 6°0′E / 37.167°N 6°E
The original article can be found at Action off Cape Bougaroun and the edit history here.