Sinking of Prince of Wales and Repulse

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Sinking of Prince of Wales and Repulse
Part of World War II, Pacific War

Prince of Wales (left, front) and Repulse (left, behind) under attack by Japanese aircraft. A destroyer — Electra or Express — is in the foreground.
Date 10 December 1941
Location South China Sea
Result Decisive Japanese Victory
Belligerents
Flag of the United Kingdom
Force Z of the Royal Navy
Flag of Japan
Imperial Japanese Navy
Commanders
Flag of the United Kingdom Sir Tom Phillips
Flag of the United Kingdom John Leach
Flag of the United Kingdom William Tennant
Flag of Japan Niichi Nakanishi
Flag of Japan Shichizo Miyauchi
Strength
1 battleship
1 battlecruiser
4 destroyers
88 aircraft
(34 torpedo aircraft,
51 level bombers,
3 scouting aircraft)
Casualties and losses
1 battleship sunk
1 battlecruiser sunk
840 killed
4 aircraft destroyed
2 scouting aircraft lost
18 killed[1]

The Sinking of Prince of Wales and Repulse was a World War II naval engagement which illustrated the effectiveness of aerial attacks against naval forces that were not protected by air cover and the resulting importance of including an aircraft carrier in any major fleet action.

The action took place east of Malaya, near Kuantan, Pahang where the British battleship HMS Prince of Wales and battlecruiser HMS Repulse were attacked by Imperial Japanese Navy land-based bombers and torpedo bombers.

Contents

[edit] Background

Both ships were sent to Singapore in December 1941, to serve as a deterrent to Japanese aggression, which had been demonstrated in the invasion of French Indochina. First Sea Lord Sir Dudley Pound felt that Singapore could not be adequately defended, unless the Royal Navy sent the majority of its capital ships there, to achieve parity with the estimated nine Japanese battleships. That was unacceptable as the British were at war with Germany and Italy. However, Prime Minister Winston Churchill was optimistic about the improving situation in the North Atlantic and Mediterranean and allocating two ships to the colony's defence was seen as a vital compromise given the British need to protect its various colonial territories in Malaya, Borneo and the Straits Settlements. The governments of Australia and New Zealand, who had sent the bulk of their armed forces to the North African campaign, also stressed the importance of Singapore in deterring Japanese aggression.

While Churchill may be seen as thereby making a futile and costly gesture, the dispatch of capital ships to Singapore had been part of the Admiralty's strategic planning since the Singapore naval base had been established. The scale of this deployment had been reduced during the 1930s, as Germany and Italy presented new threats to British interests and in the Atlantic and Mediterranean. Nevertheless, it was still assumed that a significant force of capital ships would deter Japanese aggression. It must also be noted that Churchill's thinking took into account that the U.S. Navy would agree to send its Pacific Fleet, including eight battleships, to Singapore in the event that hostilities with Japan broke out, or that the British contribution would add to the U.S. fleet's deterrent value, should it stay at Pearl Harbor.[2]

The original British plan had called for a larger fleet which included the new Illustrious-class aircraft carrier HMS Indomitable for air cover, although the plan had to be revised when Indomitable was damaged en route.

[edit] Deployment

Admiral Sir Tom Phillips (right), commander of Force Z, and his deputy, Rear Admiral Arthur Palliser, on the quayside at Singapore naval base, 2 December 1941.
Admiral Sir Tom Phillips (right), commander of Force Z, and his deputy, Rear Admiral Arthur Palliser, on the quayside at Singapore naval base, 2 December 1941.

What was then designated as Force G, consisting of the modern battleship Prince of Wales, the World War I era battlecruiser Repulse, and the four destroyers HMS Electra, HMS Express, HMS Encounter, and HMS Jupiter, arrived at Singapore on 2 December, 1941. They were then re-designated Force Z. The new carrier, Indomitable was allocated to Force G, but whilst working up off Bermuda she had run aground in the entrance to Kingston harbour on November 3, 1941 [3]. Indomitable required 12 days of dry dock repairs in Norfolk, Virginia and was able to take no further part in the action. They spent a few days there with shore leave and refit, while waiting for orders. On 1 December, it was announced that Sir Tom Phillips had been promoted to full Admiral, and appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Eastern Fleet. A few days later, Repulse started on a trip to Australia with the HMS Vampire, and HMS Tenedos, but the force was recalled to Singapore to assemble for possible operations against the Japanese.

Also at Singapore were the light cruisers HMS Durban, HMS Danae, HMS Dragon, and HMS Mauritius, and the destroyers HMS Stronghold, Encounter, and Jupiter. The heavy cruiser HMS Exeter, Dutch light cruiser Java, 2 more British destroyers (Scout and Thanet), and 4 United States destroyers (Whipple, John D. Edwards, Edsall, and Alden) would be there within 3 days.

Though Durban and Stronghold were available, Admiral Philips decided to leave them at Singapore because they were not as fast as the other units. Additionally, Danae, Dragon, Mauritius, Encounter, and Jupiter were also at Singapore, but were under repair and not ready to sail.

[edit] Axis Preparations

Mitsubishi G4M Betty
Mitsubishi G4M Betty

The plans for the British to defend Singapore fell into the hands of the Axis when the S.S. Automedon was boarded by the German Raider Atlantis in the Indian Ocean, on November 11, 1940. The Germans discovered the documents and sent them to the Japanese.[4]

Furthermore, Winston Churchill publicly announced that the Prince Of Wales and Repulse were to be sent to Singapore as a deterrent to the Japanese. Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto sent 36 Betty torpedo bombers to reinforce the existing Kanoya Naval Force and Genzan Air Corps, whose pilots began training vigorously for an attack on the two capital ships.[5]

[edit] Hostilities Commence

Mitsubishi G3M Nell
Mitsubishi G3M Nell

Early in the morning of 8 December (Singapore time), Singapore came under attack by Japanese aircraft. Prince Of Wales and Repulse shot back with anti-aircraft fire; no planes were shot down, and the ships sustained no damage. The Japanese made their landings on Malaya on 8 December 1941 (Singapore time), and the British land forces were hard pressed.

Around that time, news came in that Pearl Harbor had been attacked and that eight U.S. battleships had been sunk or disabled. Pre-war planning had presumed that the U.S. Pacific fleet would have moved to Singapore to reinforce the British ships when war broke out but that could now not be done. Philips had concluded in an earlier discussion with U.S. General Douglas MacArthur and Admiral Thomas C. Hart that his two capital ships were of insufficient strength to confront the Japanese.[1]

However, with the Japanese threatening to overrun Malaya, Philips was pressed to use his ships in an offensive role and he assembled his flotilla to intercept and destroy Japanese invasion convoys in the South China Sea. Churchill and his cabinet had suggested that Force Z be used as "fast fleeting menace" or "rogue elephants", similar to the German battleship Bismarck, but they lacked a preordained battle plan. [2]

Admiral Philips knew the local Royal Air Force unit could not guarantee air cover for his ships as they were equipped with limited numbers of aging fighters and their airfields were threatened by the Japanese land attacks. He elected to proceed anyway because he thought that Japanese forces could not operate so far from land. He also thought that his ships were relatively immune from fatal damage via air attack, since up to that point, no capital ship at sea had ever been sunk by air attack. The largest unit which had been sunk by aircraft alone up to this time was a heavy cruiser.

[edit] Departure

HMS Prince of Wales leaving Singapore on 8 December 1941
HMS Prince of Wales leaving Singapore on 8 December 1941

Force Z, consisting of the Prince of Wales, Repulse, Electra, Express, Vampire, and Tenedos, sailed from Singapore at 1710 on 8 December.

At 0713 on 9 December, Force Z passed the Anamba Islands to the east, and turned to a new course of 330 degrees, later changing to 345 degrees. Force Z was spotted by Japanese submarine I-65 at 1400 on 9 December, which shadowed the British ships for five hours, radioing their positions. The British ships were unaware that they were being shadowed by the submarine. After this report, Vice Admiral Jisaburō Ozawa, in command of the invasion force, ordered most of his warships to escort the empty transports back to Cam Ranh Bay in southern Vietnam.

HMS Repulse leaving Singapore on 8 December 1941
HMS Repulse leaving Singapore on 8 December 1941

The message of the I-65 confirming the presence of the British battleships reached the 22nd Air Flotilla Headquarters two hours later. At that time their aircraft were in the process of loading bombs for an attack on Singapore Harbour, but they immediately switched to torpedoes. The bombers were not ready until 1800 hours.

About 1730, just a half hour before sunset, the force was spotted by 3 Aichi E13A seaplanes (Jake), which had been catapulted off the Japanese cruisers Yura, Kinu and Kumano escorting the transports. These aircraft continued shadowing until sunset (1809 hrs local time). At about 1830, Tenedos was detached to return to Singapore, because of her limited fuel capacity.

A night attack was attempted by the Japanese bombers because they feared that the British battleships would find their invasion force, but bad weather prevented them from finding the ships and they returned to their airfields at Thu Dau Mot and Saigon about midnight.

[edit] Return to Singapore

That night, one of the Japanese seaplanes dropped a flare over the Japanese heavy cruiser Chokai, having mistaken it for the battleship Prince of Wales. After this, the Japanese force of six cruisers and several destroyers turned away to the northeast. The flare was also seen by the British force, which feared they had been identified and then turned away to the southeast. At this point, the forces were approximately 5 miles apart, but did not sight each other, and the Japanese force was not picked up on the radar of the Prince Of Wales. At 2055, Admiral Philips cancelled the operation, saying that they had lost the element of surprise, and ordered the force to return to Singapore.

On the way back, they were spotted and reported by the Japanese submarine I-58. I-58 reported that it had fired 5 torpedoes and missed, and then lost sight of the force 3 hours later. The British force did not see the torpedoes, and never knew they had been attacked. The report from the I-58 reached the 22nd Air Flotilla Headquarters at 0315, and ten bombers of the Genzan Air Corps were dispatched at 0600 to conduct a sector search for the ships. The Flotilla left their airfields about an hour later, and were ordered to proceed to the best estimated position of the ships.

[edit] The Japanese air attack

Japanese aerial photo of the initial attack on Prince of Wales (top) and Repulse. A short, thick plume of black smoke can be seen emanating from Repulse, which has just been hit by a bomb and surrounded by at least six near misses. Prince of Wales can be seen to be manoeuvring. The white smoke is from the funnels as the ships attempt to increase speed.
Japanese aerial photo of the initial attack on Prince of Wales (top) and Repulse. A short, thick plume of black smoke can be seen emanating from Repulse, which has just been hit by a bomb and surrounded by at least six near misses. Prince of Wales can be seen to be manoeuvring. The white smoke is from the funnels as the ships attempt to increase speed.

The next morning, 10 December, they received a report of Japanese landings at Kuantan, a town on the east coast of Malaya, halfway between Singapore and Kota Bharu. Force Z headed in that general direction. At 0515, objects were spotted on the horizon. Thinking that they were the invasion force, Force Z turned towards them. They turned out to be a trawler towing barges. At 0630, Repulse reported seeing an aircraft shadowing the ships. At 0718, Prince Of Wales catapulted off a Supermarine Walrus reconnaissance aircraft. The aircraft flew to Kuantan, saw nothing, reported back to the Prince of Wales, and flew to Singapore. Express was sent to investigate the area, finding nothing. At 1005, Tenedos reported that she was being attacked by Japanese aircraft, about 140 miles southeast of Force Z. The attack was by nine Mitsubishi G3M 'Nell' twin-engined medium bombers from the Genzan Air Corps from the 22nd Air Flotilla based at Saigon, each armed with one 500 kg (1,102 lb) armor-piercing bomb. They mistook the destroyer for a battleship and wasted their ordnance with all bombs scoring no hits. At 1015, more Japanese aircraft spotted the ships, after Force Z failed to find any Japanese invasion forces and was heading back south.

At 1113 hours, the fleet was attacked by three waves of Japanese planes, the first being the high-level bombers from the Bihoro Air Corps which was made up of 17 Nell bombers with 500 kg (1,102 lb) bombs, as well as eight Nells with two 225 kg (500 lb) bombs. They scored just one hit on the hangar deck area of the Repulse, which started a small fire.

At about 1140 hours, the first of the torpedo bombers made up of 16 Nells from the Genzan Air Corps arrived and attacked, sending at least six torpedoes into the Prince of Wales. The first wave of attackers delivered one catastrophic torpedo hit on her outer port propeller shaft; this shaft, turning at maximum revolutions, twisted and breached several compartments as well as rupturing the glands that prevented sea water entering the ship via the broad shaft tunnel. Testimony from Lt Wildish[6], in command of B engine room, indicated that the shaft was stopped successfully, but upon restarting the shaft, water rushed in through the damaged shaft passage, flooding 'B' engine room. Also flooded from this hit, and the subsequent shaft passage flooding, was 'Y' boiler room, the central auxiliary machinery room, 'Y' action machinery room, the port diesel dynamo room and a number of compartments aft.

The crew of the sinking Prince of Wales abandoning ship to the destroyer Express. Moments later the list on Prince of Wales suddenly increased and Express had to withdraw. Observe the barrels of the 5.25 in guns, which were unable to depress low enough to engage attackers due to the list.
The crew of the sinking Prince of Wales abandoning ship to the destroyer Express. Moments later the list on Prince of Wales suddenly increased and Express had to withdraw. Observe the barrels of the 5.25 in guns, which were unable to depress low enough to engage attackers due to the list.

This single torpedo hit had three crippling effects. Firstly, it caused a 10 degree list to port, jamming some 5.25-inch turrets and meaning those on the starboard side were unable to depress low enough to engage the attackers. Furthermore power to some of Prince of Wales' 5.25 inch dual-purpose turrets was cut leaving Prince of Wales unable to effectively counter further attacks. Power loss to her pumps meant an inability to pump flood water faster than it was entering the breached hull. Secondly, it denied Prince of Wales much of her auxiliary electrical power that was vital for internal communications, ventilation, the steering gear and pumps and that the 5.25-inch and 2-pounder gun mountings relied on to train and elevate. All but S1 and S2 5.25 inch turrets were almost unmanageable, a factor compounded by the list, their crews unable even to drag them round manually using chains. The crews also had difficulty bringing the heavy 2-pounder mountings into manual operation. Thirdly, the extensive internal flooding and shaft damage left the ship under power of only the starboard engines and able to make only 15 knots at best, and with her electric steering unresponsive the ship was virtually unmanoeuvrable. She was still able to fire at a high level bombing attack with S1 and S2 turrets at 1241 hours, the bombs straddling her but not penetrating the deck armour. One bomb fell amongst the wounded gathered in Prince of Wales' hangar causing extensive casualties. HMS Express came alongside to take off wounded and non-fighting crew. The order to abandon ship was then given and the Prince of Wales capsized to port and sank at 1318.

Another high altitude attack by bombers aimed at the Repulse passed without damage. Then a second attack by eight torpedo bombers from the Mihoro Air Corps attacked the Repulse from two directions, but she avoided all the torpedoes and continued to steam. The third and final attack by 26 Mitsubishi G4M 'Betty' torpedo bombers from the Kanoya Air Corps, a detachment from the 21st Air Flotilla also based near Saigon, struck from several directions. Repulse, who had been masterfully handled by Captain William "Bill" Tennant in previous attacks, was caught between two skillfully delivered Japanese torpedo attacks and hit by four more torpedoes, the first jamming the rudder. Repulse had managed to dodge 19 torpedoes. However, the Repulse did not have the anti-torpedo blisters, that her sister ship HMS Renown had received, and did not benefit from the more modern battleship's internal waterproof compartmentalisation and subdivision. As it was when she was struck, she was hit heavily and suddenly and so sank soon afterwards with heavy casualties. Captain Tennant ordered the crew overboard; the Repulse listed heavily to port over a period of about six minutes and finally rolled over and sank at 1223.

The Japanese had achieved 11 hits out of 49 torpedoes launched, and only three Japanese aircraft were shot down during the attack: one Nell torpedo bomber from the Genzan Air Group, and two Betty torpedo bombers from the Kanoya Air Group. The air cover assigned to Force Z, Brewster Buffaloes of the Australian No. 453 Squadron, arrived over the force just as the Prince of Wales sank. The ten aircraft caught a Japanese bomber which stayed behind to observe results, but it managed to escape as they gave chase.[7]

When our squadron arrived I could see Repulse had been hit on the port side. I went in to attack and Repulse was firing intensively whilst turning to starboard. At the same time as we approached one of our [air] fleets was attacking from the port side so we caught the ship in a pincer movement. I released my torpedo [and] pulled out. I turned to see it hit the ship. At a height of about 3 kilometres I looked down and seen Repulse beginning to sink whilst Prince of Wales was moving southeast at about 5 or 6 knots. After successfully returning to base I found out my plane had been penetrated by 17 bullets from Repulse's anti-aircraft fire.[8] - Japanese navy Lieutenant Haruki Iki, 3rd Squadron Leader, Kanoya Air Corps

.

An artistic impression of HMS Prince of Wales sinking.
An artistic impression of HMS Prince of Wales sinking.

[edit] After the action

The destroyers Electra and Vampire moved in to rescue survivors of Repulse, while Express rescued survivors of the Prince Of Wales. 840 sailors were lost, 513 on Repulse and 327 on Prince Of Wales. Even after they were rescued, some survivors of the Repulse manned Action Stations on Electra, to free the Electra sailors to rescue more survivors. In particular, Repulse gunners manned the 'X' and 'Y' 4.7-inch (120 mm) mounts, and the ship's dentist of the Repulse even assisted the Electra's medical teams with the wounded. In total, nearly 1,000 survivors of the Repulse were rescued, of which Electra saved 571. Vampire rescued 9 officers, 213 ratings, and 1 civilian war correspondent from Repulse, and 2 sailors from Prince Of Wales. Admiral Phillips and Captain John Leach, commanding officer of the Prince Of Wales, were among the lost as they chose to go down with the ship. Captain William G. Tennant of the Repulse was rescued by Vampire. The senior survivor of Prince Of Wales was Lt Cdr A. G. Skipwith, the ship's First Lieutenant, who was rescued by Express. Three Japanese planes were shot down, and 1 more was so damaged that it crashed on landing.

The next day, Lt. Haruki Iki flew to the site of the battle again. He dropped two wreaths of flowers into the sea. One was for the fellow members of his 'Kanoya' Air Corps who had perished at the hands of British gunfire and the other for all British sailors who had died in the battle. This was because their display of bravery in defence of the ships had gained them the utmost admiration from all pilots in his squadron.

On the way back to Singapore with the survivors, Express passed the Stronghold and the 4 American destroyers heading north. Express signalled that the action was over, but the ships continued on and searched the area where the 2 large ships sank, looking for more survivors. None were found. While returning to Singapore from this search, Edsall boarded the fishing trawler that was towing boats that was sighted by Force Z that morning. The trawler was identified as the Shofu Fu Maru, and was taken to Singapore where the crew was interned.

It was obvious that the three destroyers were going to take hours to pick up those hundreds of men clinging to bits of wreckage and swimming around in the filthy, oily water. Above all this, the threat of another bombing and machine-gun attack was imminent. Every one of those men must have realised that. Yet as I flew around, every man waved and put up his thumb as I flew over him. After an hour, lack of petrol forced me to leave, but during that hour I had seen many men in dire danger waving, cheering and joking, as if they were holiday-makers at Brighton waving at a low-flying aircraft. It shook me, for here was something above human nature. - Flight Lieutenant Tim Vigors, DFC, RAAF[9]

[edit] Effects of the sinking

The next morning after the battle, Prime Minister Churchill received a phonecall at his bedside from Sir Dudley Pound, the First Sea Lord.

Pound: Prime Minister, I have to report to you that the Prince of Wales and the Repulse have both been sunk by the Japanese - we think by aircraft. Tom Phillips is drowned.
Churchill: Are you sure it's true?
Pound: There is no doubt at all.
Churchill hangs up
In all the war, I never received a more direct shock... As I turned over and twisted in bed the full horror of the news sank in upon me. There were no British or American ships in the Indian Ocean or the Pacific except the American survivors of Pearl Harbor, who were hastening back to California. Over all this vast expanse of waters Japan was supreme, and we everywhere were weak and naked.
[10]

Singapore had essentially been reduced to a land base after both capital ships were lost, and that was also the Royal Navy's greatest matériel lost in a single engagement. Combined with the earlier attack on Pearl Harbor, this left the Allies with only three operational capital ships in the Pacific Theatre [11].

The two ships were the first capital ships actively defending themselves to be sunk solely by airpower while steaming on the open sea. This incident demonstrated the vulnerability of even the most modern surface ships to the potency of air attack and drove home the necessity of air cover to protect against such an incident. The Genzan Air Corps would attempt a torpedo attack on USS Lexington in early 1942, but they lost seventeen aircraft to the carrier's combat air patrol and anti-aircraft guns.

[edit] The ships today

The bell raised from HMS Prince of Wales
The bell raised from HMS Prince of Wales

The wrecks of the two ships were found after the war, Repulse in 183 feet (56 m) of water, and Prince of Wales in 223 feet (68 m). Both are in a nearly upside-down position. Buoys were attached to the propeller shafts, and flags of the Royal Navy are attached to the lines and are regularly changed by divers. The Royal Navy considers the wrecks to be Crown property. The Prince of Wales' bell was removed from the wreck in 2002 by an authorised team of Royal Navy and British civilian divers in response to fears that it would be stolen by unauthorised divers. The bell is now on display at the Merseyside Maritime Museum in Liverpool.

[edit] References

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ 3 aircraft were shot down in the attack, 1 crash-landed later, and 2 scout aircraft failed to return from their missions.
  2. ^ Alan Matthews, 2006, "The sinking of HMS Prince of Wales and HMS Repulse" (Force Z Survivors Association). Access date: October 13, 2007.
  3. ^ Martin Middlebrook & Patrick Mahoney, Battleship; The Loss of the Prince of Wales and the Repulse, Penguin History, 1979, ISBN 0-14-02-3469-1
  4. ^ SS Automedon - The ship that doomed a colony
  5. ^ The sinking of HMS Prince of Wales and HMS Repulse - page 1
  6. ^ Middlebrook, Battleship, p201
  7. ^ Pilots eye view
  8. ^ Alan Matthews. The Sinking of Prince of Wales and Repulse, part two
  9. ^ Frank Owen, The Fall of Singapore, Penguin Books, 2001, ISBN 0-14-139133-2
  10. ^ Ibid.
  11. ^ The Sinking of Prince of Wales and Repulse - page 2

[edit] Books

  • Burton, John (2006). Fortnight of Infamy: The Collapse of Allied Airpower West of Pearl Harbor. US Naval Institute Press. ISBN 159114096X. 
  • Richard Hough, The Hunting of Force Z: the brief, controversial life of the modern battleship and its tragic close with the destruction of the "Prince of Wales" and "Repulse".
  • Martin Middlebrook and Patrick Mahoney, Battleship: The Sinking of the Prince of Wales and the Repulse, (Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, 1979). Contains details of the attack and damage sustained, and tables of survivors and losses.
  • Samuel Eliot Morison, History of United States Naval Operations in World War II, Volume III, "The Rising Sun in the Pacific".
  • Horodyski, Joseph M. “British Gamble In Asian Waters.” Military Heritage. December 2001. Volume 3, No. 3: 68-77 (sinking of the British battleship Prince of Wales and battlecruiser Repulse by Japanese on 10 December 1941 upon U.S. entry into World War Two).
  • Jack Greene, War at Sea, Pearl Harbor to Midway, 1988. (The Malayan Campaign). Combined Books. ISBN 0-8317-1257-0.
  • V. E. Tarrant, King George V class Battleships, Arms and Armour Press, 1991, ISBN 1-85409-524-2
  • Alan Matthews, Sailors' Tales: Life Onboard HMS Repulse During World War Two ISBN 0-9531217-0-4

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