HMS Graph (P715)

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HMS Graph in 1943
Career (Nazi Germany) Kriegsmarine Jack
Name: Unterseeboot 570
Builder: Blohm & Voss at Hamburg
Laid down: 21 May 1940
Commissioned: 15 May 1941
Captured: by the Royal Navy, 27 August 1941
Career (United Kingdom) Royal Navy Ensign
Name: HMS Graph
Acquired: 27 August 1941
Commissioned: 19 September 1941
Decommissioned: February 1944
Fate: Ran aground 20 March 1944
General characteristics
Class and type: Type VII C
Displacement:

769 tons surfaced

871 tons submerged
Length: 67.1 m
Beam: 6.2 m
Draught: 4.74 m
Speed:

17.7 knot surfaced

7.6 knots submerged
Range: 15,170 km
Test depth: 230 m
Armament:

C35 88 mm/L45 deck gun with 220 rounds

5 torpedo tubes

Unterseeboot 570 was a Type VIIC submarine of the Kriegsmarine that was captured and commissioned into the Royal Navy as HMS Graph (P715). She was the only German submarine to be taken into Allied service and to fight for both sides in World War II.

[edit] History

She was laid down by Blohm & Voss at Hamburg on 21 May 1940 and commissioned on 15 May 1941. She completed one training voyage between the 15 May 1941 and 1 August 1941. On August 23, 1941 she departed from Trondheim, Norway under the command of Kapitänleutnant Hans-Joachim Rahmlow. On 27 August 1941 in the North Atlantic south of Iceland, in position 62°15′N, 18°35′W, she was attacked and damaged by a depth charge from a Lockheed Hudson bomber of British Coastal Command. Unable to submerge, the crew of U-570 displayed a white sheet on the deck of the boat. The Hudson circled the crippled U-boat until assistance arrived, first in the form of a Consolidated Catalina flying boat followed by the trawler Northern Chief, later assisted by the destroyers HMS Burwell and HMCS Niagara.

The submarine was towed to Þorlákshöfn, Iceland, and beached there for essential repairs, then towed to Barrow-in-Furness where she was fully repaired. By the time the Royal Navy had taken possession of U-570 the German submariners had destroyed all their code books and coding equipment. As a consequence of this, there was no need to keep her capture secret (unlike in the case of U-110, which had sunk whilst under tow, but not before its codebooks and Enigma machine had been retrieved).

U-570 was commissioned into the Royal Navy as HMS Graph on 19 September 1941, and assigned the Royal Navy pennant number N46. She was given a name beginning with a 'G' to signify German, i.e., denoting that Graph was a captured vessel. She saw active service in 1942 and 1943.

On 21 October 1942, in the Bay Of Biscay, about 50 nautical miles (90 km) north-north-east of Cape Ortegal (44°31′N, 7°25′W,), she encountered the U-333. Four torpedoes were fired but all missed. In December 1942, HMS Graph sighted the German cruiser Admiral Hipper on her return to Altenfjord following the Battle of the Barents Sea, but Hipper was travelling too fast to be attacked. Three hours later Graph sighted one German destroyer towing a second, and attacked. However, her torpedoes missed.

Defects, exacerbated by a shortage of spare parts, led to her being placed in reserve, and she was decommissioned from active service in February 1944. She was being towed by HMS Allegiance to the Clyde for scrapping when she ran aground on the west coast of Islay, Scotland, on 20 March 1944. She was partially salvaged and scrapped in 1947. Some remains of HMS Graph remained visible at low tide on the rocks near Saligo beach on the West coast of Islay at least into the 1970s, with the pressure casing of the conning tower and periscope tube clearly visible (the cladding and railings etc all washed off in the Atlantic storms many years before.)

One of the Kriegsmarine flags of the U-570 was presented to the Hudson bomber pilot, Sqn Ldr Thompson, and is now part of the collection of the RAF Museum.

[edit] See also

  • HM Submarine X2 - Italian Submarine captured and taken into service by the Royal Navy.
  • HMS Seal (N37) - Royal Navy submarine, captured and taken into service by the Germans.

[edit] External links