HNoMS Rauma (1939)


HNoMS Rauma just after launch in Oslo, 26 September 1939. Havnelageret in the background.
Career (Norway)
Name: Rauma
Namesake: The river Rauma
Builder: Nylands Verksted, Oslo
Launched: 26 September 1939
Commissioned: January 1940
Captured: by the German 9 April 1940
Service record
Operations: Opposing the German invasion of Norway
Victories: 1 warship (120 tons) damaged
Career (Nazi Germany)
Name: Kamerun
Namesake: German Kamerun
Acquired: 9 April 1940
Fate: Handed over to the German Mine Sweeping Administration after VE Day
Service record
Operations: Occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany
German Mine Sweeping Administration
Career (Norway)
Name: Rauma
Acquired: May 1945
Commissioned: 1947
Decommissioned: 21 August 1959
Fate: Scrapped 1963
General characteristics as built
Class and type: Otra class minesweeper
Displacement: 355 tons[1]
Length: 51 m (167.32 ft)
Beam: 7 m (22.97 ft)
Draft: 1.8 m (5.91 ft)
Propulsion: Two 900 hp Triple expansion steam engines, two shafts
Speed: 15 knots (27.78 km/h)
Range: 1,400 nautical miles (2,592.80 km) at 9 knots (16.67 km/h)
Complement: 25 men
Armament: 1 × 76 mm gun
2 × anti-aircraft machine guns[2]
General characteristics after German rebuild
Class and type: Vorpostenboot and minelayer
Displacement: 355 tons[1]
Length: 51 m (167.32 ft)
Beam: 7 m (22.97 ft)
Draft: 1.8 m (5.91 ft)
Propulsion: Two 900 hp Triple expansion steam engines, two shafts
Speed: 15 knots (27.78 km/h)
Range: 1,400 nautical miles (2,592.80 km) at 9 knots (16.67 km/h)
Complement: 25 men
Armament: 2 × 76 mm guns
2 × 2 cm AA guns
2 × machine guns
Mines[3]
General characteristics after 1949 Norwegian rebuild
Class and type: Otra class minelayer training ship
Displacement: 355 tons[1]
Length: 51 m (167.32 ft)
Beam: 7 m (22.97 ft)
Draft: 1.8 m (5.91 ft)
Propulsion: Two 900 hp Triple expansion steam engines, two shafts
Speed: 15 knots (27.78 km/h)
Range: 1,400 nautical miles (2,592.80 km) at 9 knots (16.67 km/h)
Complement: 25 men
Armament: 2 × 76 mm guns
2 × 2 cm AA guns
2 × machine guns
Mines[3]

As the threat of war in Europe became ever more clear the decision was made to improve the Royal Norwegian Navy's mine warfare capabilities. At first a number of 2. class gunboats were rebuilt into minelayers and minesweepers, but with war looming it soon became clear that more capable vessels were required.[4] Thus, two new purpose-built minesweepers were constructed at Nylands Verksted in Oslo; the Otra and the Rauma. Both ships were completed and commissioned only a short time before the German invasion of Norway. The Otra class vessels used the Oropesa system of minesweeping.[1]

Contents

The invasion

Prelude

Shortly before the German invasion the UK announced that the Royal Navy had laid out a number of minefields along the coast of Norway to interfere with the German import of Swedish iron ore through the North Norwegian port of Narvik. The British government claimed to have mined three areas; off Stad, Hustadvika, and Landegode north of Bodø. In response to this report, the Norwegian government ordered the minesweepers Otra and Rauma to sail north from their base in Horten and sweep the minefields on 9 April 1940.[4]

The invasion force is spotted

Before the order to go north could be carried out, however, the German invasion of Norway began in the early hours of 9 April. As reports of intruding warships started coming in Otra was sent out to investigate, and at 0410hrs reported that the intruders were German. The invasion flotilla blocked Otra's return to Horten.[5]

Battle in Horten harbour

An important part of the Germans' plan to invade Norway was the seizure of the Royal Norwegian Navy's main naval base at Horten in the Oslofjord. A force consisting of the R-boat[6] R boats R.17 and R.27 and the torpedo boats Albatros and Kondor entered Horten harbour at 0435 hrs, shortly after the invasion was identified by Otra. Defending the naval base was Rauma and the minelayer HNoMS Olav Tryggvason. Rauma charged the enemy vessels with her single 76 mm gun and two machine guns, succeeding in helping the Olav Tryggvason sink the R.17 and force a damaged Albatros to flee the area. However, despite the intense fire from the two Norwegian warships, the R.27 managed to land a small force of infantry in the harbour before running aground after repeated hits. While running the gauntlet between the Norwegian ships the R.27 returned fire and hit Rauma repeatedly, severely damaging the minesweeper and killing her commander, Lieutenant Ingolf Carl Winsnes, and a sailor, as well as wounding six others.[4][7] Only eight crew members remained unwounded.[2] At 0735hrs, after threats of aerial bombardment of the naval base and the city right next to it, as well as a misguided impression of the size of the German landing force, the Norwegian forces at Horten surrendered.

German service as the Kamerun

After the German capture of Horten the surrendered Norwegian vessels were pressed into Kriegsmarine service. Rauma was repaired and recommissioned as the Kamerun on 18 April 1940.[3] Kamerun first served as a Vorpostenboot in the Hafenschutzflotille Oslo, later being converted into a minelayer.[4] Kamerun spent her entire war in Norway and was part of the German Mine Sweeping Administration (GM-SA) after the German surrender in 1945.[1]

Post-war service

After the war Rauma was recommissioned in 1947 and in 1949 was rebuilt as a minelayer training ship. She was decommissioned in Horten 21 August 1959 and laid up until put out of service and sold in April 1963.[1][4]

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c d e f Abelsen 1986: 101
  2. ^ a b Berg 1997: 15
  3. ^ a b c Emmerich, Michael. "Kamerun". German Naval History. http://german-navy.de/kriegsmarine/ships/minelayer/kamerun/index.html. Retrieved 20 February 2009. 
  4. ^ a b c d e "Otra og Rauma" (in Norwegian). Norwegian Armed Forces. http://www.mil.no/sjo/keskdr/minekrig/start/om_mv/mv_historie/#2. Retrieved 20 February 2009. 
  5. ^ Abelsen 1986: 88
  6. ^ Emmerich, Michael. "R-Boat History". German Naval History. http://german-navy.de/kriegsmarine/ships/minehunter/rboat/index.html. Retrieved 20 February 2009. 
  7. ^ Abelsen 1986: 89

Bibliography