- In November 1941, a German U-boat sank
HMS Ark Royal , a Britishaircraft carrier . - Ark Royal had been a thorn in the side of the German navy during the early years of
World War II .
In December, as the British
The ceremony, done a month after the 80th anniversary of Ark Royal's sinking on November 14, 1941, included Dragon's commanding officer, Cmdr. George Storton, casting a wreath into the water to remember the carrier, which is respected as one of the Royal Navy's most legendary ships.
Despite being in service for just over two years, Ark Royal — named for the flagship of the fleet that defeated the Spanish Armada in 1588 — played a pivotal role in some of the most important actions in the early years of the war.
A modern design
Laid down in September 1935, launched in April 1937, and commissioned in December 1938, HMS Ark Royal represented a modern approach to carrier design at the time.
It was Britain's first purpose-built fleet carrier. Apart from HMS Hermes, which had just about half the displacement of Ark Royal, the Royal Navy's previous carriers had all been converted from other vessels.
It was the first carrier in which the hangars and flight deck were an integral part of the ship's hull — rather than added onto the hull after its construction — and the flight deck was equipped with catapults and arresting cables to launch and recover aircraft.
Ark Royal was armed with 16 4.5-inch dual-purpose guns in eight double turrets (four on each side), six eight-barreled "pom-pom" guns, and eight four-barreled .50-caliber machine guns.
The carrier was designed to carry up to 70 aircraft, but during its construction the biplanes in use on carriers began being replaced by larger, heavier aircraft. By the time World War II started, Ark Royal's air wing numbered between 50 and 60 planes.
Early action
Ark Royal's first task during the war was to hunt for German U-boats in the Atlantic as part of "hunter-killer" groups.
On September 14, 1939, the German U-boat U-39 unsuccessfully attacked the carrier and was then pounced on by the destroyers accompanying Ark Royal. It became the first U-boat kill of the war.
After an air attack a few weeks later, the Germans triumphantly claimed to have sunk Ark Royal — the first of many times the Germans would falsely claim to have sunk the carrier.
Ark Royal was also involved in the hunt for the imposing German "pocket battleship" Admiral
In spring 1940, the carrier helped support the Norway campaign, which failed to stop the German invasion there. That summer, Ark Royal deployed to the Mediterranean as part of Force H, and its air wing joined the attack on the French warships at Mers-el-Kébir to prevent their capture by the Axis.
The carrier proved essential protecting supply convoys to Malta. It also participated in the failed attack on Vichy-held Dakar, Senegal, and fought in the inconclusive Battle of Cape Spartivento, where it was attacked by Italian aircraft.
Hunt for Bismarck
Ark Royal's best-known action occurred in the Atlantic in mid-1941, when it helped hunt down and sink the fearsome German battleship Bismarck.
As Bismarck and the cruiser Prinz Eugen set sail for a commerce-raiding mission in May 1941, the Royal Navy battlecruiser Hood and battleship Prince of Wales attempted to intercept them at the Denmark Strait.
The encounter was a disaster for the British, who lost Hood, then the pride of the Royal Navy, and all but three of its 1,418-man crew. Prince of Wales was also heavily damaged.
Shocked and enraged at Hood's loss, Prime Minister Winston Churchill ordered all of the Royal Navy's capital ships in the area to hunt down the Bismarck.
Ark Royal and the other ships of Force H steamed north from Gibraltar and found Bismarck as it was sailing to France on May 26. Ark Royal quickly launched 15 Swordfish torpedo-bombers carrying new torpedoes with magnetic detonators.
After mistaking the British cruiser Sheffield for Bismarck and attacking it — fortunately the magnetic detonators failed — the Swordfish returned and rearmed with torpedoes that had more reliable contact detonators. They took off again and attacked Bismarck just before sunset.
Three torpedoes hit Bismarck. Two struck amidships and caused minor damage while one damaged the rudder, forcing Bismarck into a continuous turn.
With Bismarck unable to get away, British warships arrived the next morning and pummeled the battleship relentlessly. The Germans attempted to scuttle it, and a British heavy cruiser finished it off with torpedoes. Only 115 of Bismarck's 2,221-man crew survived.
Sinking
Ark Royal repeatedly embarrassed the Germans by disproving their claims about sinking the carrier. But in November 1941, its luck finally ran out.
In the afternoon on November 13, as Ark Royal returned to Gibraltar from a convoy mission to Malta, the German submarine U-81 successfully attacked the carrier. A single torpedo struck its starboard side, ripping a 130-foot-by-30-foot hole well below the waterline.
Within 20 minutes, the ship had listed 18 degrees. Mindful of how quickly the carriers Courageous and Glorious had sunk and the heavy losses — 518 and 1,207 men, respectively — Ark Royal's commanding officer, Capt. Loben Maund, ordered the crew to abandon ship.
Most of the crew boarded the destroyers escorting Ark Royal, while damage-control teams made an hours-long effort to save the carrier.
Their work, and an attempt to tow the carrier to Gibraltar, ultimately proved fruitless. Just after 6 a.m. on November 14, the carrier capsized and broke in two before sinking.
Amazingly, only one of Ark Royal's 1,749 crewmen, Able Seaman Edward Mitchell, was killed.
In 2002, nearly 61 years after the ship sank, divers hired by the BBC found the wreck of Ark Royal under 3,500 feet of water some 30 miles east of Gibraltar.