Quantcast
Channel: submarines – laststandonzombieisland
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 416

Down Courageous

$
0
0

A stirring depiction of the Royal Navy aircraft carrier, HMS Courageous (50), after being torpedoed by German submarine KMS U-29 under Kptlt. Otto Schuhart, on 17 September 1939, some 84 years ago today. Schuhart had stalked the carrier for hours before gaining the right range and angle to launch his fish.

Artwork by Adolf Bock, published by Verlag Erich Klinghammer, Berlin, Germany, 1949. LOC LC-DIG-PPMSCA-18356

Launched on 4th February 1916 Courageous was completed in January 1917 as a 22,500-ton battlecruiser with BL 15-inch guns and served in the Great War, only converting to a flattop in 1924 as a result of the London Naval Treaty. She was the first major Royal Navy warship lost in WWII.

Some 518 lives were lost including many Reservists and Pensioners. Some survivors were rescued by HM Destroyer Echo.

As a consequence of this loss and an unsuccessful U-boat torpedo attack on HM Aircraft Carrier Ark Royal on 14th September, the policy of using aircraft carriers for ASW search and destroy patrols was abandoned by the Royal Navy until new American-made escort carriers became available after late 1942.

Meanwhile, in Germany, the Courageous was the first high-value sinking credited to the U-boat arm, and the whole crew of U-29 received the EK II (Iron Cross) while as commander, Schuhart received both the EK I and the EK II then, in May 1940 after growing his record, the Ritterkreuz.

As for U-29, the Type VIIA U-boat became a training submarine in 1941 and was scuttled in May 1945 at Kupfermuhle Bay, near the Danish-German border.

Her skipper, the lucky Kptlt. Schuhart, would leave U-29 after 7 patrols in January 1941 and with some 90,000 tons of shipping on his tally sheet to ride a desk for the rest of the war as an instructor in the 1st ULD (Unterseeboots-Lehr-Division) then later as commander of the 21st Training Flotilla. He joined the reformed West German Bundesmarine in 1955, retiring in 1967 with the rank of Kapitän zur See. He passed in 1990, aged 80.


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 416

Trending Articles



<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>