Aconit in 1942 paint |
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Career (France) | |
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Namesake: | Aconitum |
Laid down: | 25 March 1940 |
Launched: | 31 March 1941[1] |
Commissioned: | 19 July 1941 |
Decommissioned: | 30 April 1947 |
Reinstated: | 30 April 1947 |
Identification: | Pennant number: J1095 |
Honours and awards: |
Ordre de la Libération (21 April 1943) |
Fate: | Returned to the Royal Navy 30 April 1947; sold July 1947. |
General characteristics | |
Class and type: | Flower-class corvette |
Displacement: | 950 tonnes |
Length: | 62.7 metres (206 ft) |
Beam: | 10.9 metres (36 ft) |
Draught: | 2.7 metres (8 ft 10 in) |
Propulsion: |
Engine: 4 cylinder triple expansion steam engine |
Speed: | 16 knots (30 km/h; 18 mph) |
Range: |
3,450 nautical miles at 12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph) |
Complement: | 70 |
Sensors and processing systems: |
Type 271 surface radar |
Armament: |
1 BL 4-inch (101.6 mm) Mark IX gun |
Aconit (formerly HMS Aconite) was one of the nine Flower-class corvettes lent by the Royal Navy to the Force Navales Françaises Libres (Free French Naval Forces). During World War II, she escorted 116 convoys, spending 728 days at sea. She was awarded the Croix de la Libération and the Croix de Guerre 1939–1945, and was cited by the British Admiralty.
Contents |
Aconite was built by Ailsa Shipbuilding Company Ltd at Troon in Scotland, and was commissioned on 19 July 1941, under Lieutenant de vaisseau Levasseur. She was attached to the Free French Naval Forces on 23 July 1941, and assigned to the Clyde escort group on 17 August 1941, joining the Newfoundland Forces.
Aconit took a very active part in the Battle of the Atlantic for two years, protecting convoys sailing from Newfoundland to the U.K. via Iceland. She also took part to the operations in Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon between 10 and 27 December 1941.
In 1942 Aconit, with three other FNFL corvettes, was assigned to Escort Group B-3 of the Mid-Ocean Escort Force and served with this group for the rest of the campaign.
On 10 and 11 March 1943, Aconit, one of eight warships escorting a large convoy HX228, destroyed two German submarines, U-444 (Oberleutnant Albert Langfeld) and U-432 (Kapitänleutnant Hermann Eckhardt). [2]
On Tuesday 9 March the convoy was five days out from Newfoundland. At 0800 a plane from a U.S. carrier sighted a U-boat 10 miles (16 km) ahead. At 1500, the carrier was short on fuel and had to turn back. At 1930, an ammunition ship had been hit and on a second ship SS Andrea F. Luckenbach, men were taking to the boats.
HMS Harvester, a Havant-class destroyer, under Commander Andre Tait DSO,RN, hunted U-444 by sweeping through the lumbering convoy. A corvette was detailed to rescue survivors as the underwater search went on. Hours passed as the destroyer remained in the attack area. At midnight, 4 miles (6.4 km) astern of the convoy, silently moving up to regain station, there dead ahead U-444 was surfaced and going at top speed after the convoy. Then the U-boat dived. Harvester raced over the swirl of the U-boat's dive forcing her to surface by depth charge attacks. Circling at speed Harvester searched and spotted the prey 500 yards ahead. Making revs for 27 knots (50 km/h) the destroyer rammed U-444, disabling herself in the process. From astern the Free French corvette Aconit sighted U-444 as Harvester broke free. Aconit raced in to ram U-444.
Harvester, dead in the water, picked up one survivor and Aconit another four. Cdr Tait ordered Aconit to rejoin convoy HX228 and with only the damaged starboard propeller shaft turning. Harvester limped behind at 9 knots (17 km/h). At 0400 on 10 March, 50 survivors of SS William C. Gorgas (a Liberty ship sunk by U-757) were sighted and rescued. During the morning of 11 March, the remaining shaft broke. A signal was made to Aconit "Am stopped. Stand by me".
At 1100 the first torpedo from U-432 struck home. As the officers and crew prepared to abandon ship in the middle of the intensely cold Atlantic, the second torpedo raced towards the stricken ship. Everything disintegrated. The captain, seven officers, 136 ratings and 39 survivors were lost. At this moment, Aconit returned to the scene and swiftly avenged Harvester by forcing U-432 to surface, then sinking her with artillery fire and ramming. During the day, the French corvette picked up 60 survivors from Harvester, including 12 survivors from the William C. Gorgas. Aconit also captured 12 survivors from U-432, including the second officer in addition to the four rescued from U-444.
The senior surviving officer of Harvester, Lt. J. L. Briggs (who had been gunnery control officer) interviewed the oberleutnant second-in command of U-432, who had launched both torpedoes "Why did you need to fire the second torpedo so shallow? What did you want to do, kill as many as you could?" The oberleutnant replied "didn't think you were sinking fast enough."
From 1 to 12 April, Aconit undertook repairs in Glasgow. On 21 April 1943, at Greenock, General Charles de Gaulle came aboard and awarded the corvette and her commander the Croix de la Libération.
Under major repairs from 1 September to 10 October 1943, her commander was replaced by Lieutenant de vaisseau Le Miller. She rejoined the Battle of the Atlantic, attacking a German submarine on 13 December 1943.
Aconit spent the first months of 1944 in Casablanca and Gibraltar, and on 5 June 1944 she escorted the convoy U-3 from Torbay to France, coming under attack from German airplanes. During the Normandy landings, she was attached to the 108th escort group, along with Free French ships Aventure, Escarmouche and Renoncule.
She last fired in anger on 11 April 1945. On 18 April, she undertook minor repairs, and returned to escorting convoys in May, until 5 June 1945, the official date for the end of naval operations in European waters.
Aconit was briefly used by the Naval school, before being given back to the Royal Navy on 30 April 1947, where she served briefly as Terje XI before being renamed Terrier Southern, and then being sold in July.
In honour of this unit, three French warships have since been named Aconit including the modern stealth frigate Aconit.
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