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17. Products of Collaboration - Part 2: Geleitboot 1941
By late 1940, Germany controlled the continental European coast all the way from Biarritz to Narvik. Between dozens of ports and hundreds of garrisons, all kinds of local, intermediate and long range naval traffic was necessary to maintain Germany's presence in strength. Hundreds of merchant ships were captured, in addition to Germany's own merchant fleet. To protect this vital traffic against the whole might of the Royal Navy, the Kriegsmarine fielded exactly ten seagoing escort vessels named F1 through F10 - which incidentally were stricken with probably the worst propulsion plants on the planet and nearly continually under repair. The capture of three dozen French avisos, corvettes and aviation tenders in various stages of completion was only a small remedy; only fourteen of these ships were actually commissioned as German escorts. Early in 1942, an emergency escort design was prepared for series production on Dutch, Belgian, Danish and French yards. At 1.370 ts standard and with diesel engines for 21 knots, these vessels resembled British frigates, but without their most prominent feature: ease of construction. Mostly because of their elaborate hull design and their armament of 4 - 105mm DP guns with a fully DP capable fire control system and a full ASW suite, they were described as being almost as complicated as a fleet torpedo boat, which made the design unsuitable for the planned mass production programme calling for an initial batch of 80 within 18 months. Armament was revised to only two 105mm guns, augmented by a powerful battery of 8 automatic 37mm cannon and 8 20mm machineguns. Four DC projectors, two 380mm ASW rocket launchers and fittings either for laying eighty mines or deploying minesweeping gear were provided. The engine was swapped to a triple expansion steam plant and the hull shape was simplified too, cutting speed to 19 knots and range by 35 percent. By late 1941, the design had been sufficiently simplified to order at least the first 24: Four at Stülcken's in Hamburg, where mass production methods were trialled, and another four each at Bolnes, Gusto and Smit in the Netherlands, AC d'Atlantique in France, and Burmeister&Wain in Denmark. Stülcken quickly delivered their four boats, numbered G1 through G4, in mid- to late 1943, averaging building times of 15 months, and the Kriegsmarine enthusiastically ordered another 48 units at the same yards. Unfortunately, the other contractors were not quite as enthusiastic. One Dutch-built ship (G9) was delivered in 1943 and six more (G5, 6, 7, 10, 13 and 14) in 1944; the others were either bombed on stocks ore broken up after mid-1944. None of the French built ships proceeded anywhere near launch readiness due to intentional stalling and sabotage. Burmeister&Wain made better progress: once the torpedo boats they were building had been cancelled, the completed the whole order (G20 through 24) between February and July 1944. Of the second batch, Stülcken completed two more (G26 and G27) in late 1944 before the yard was bombed into the ground; none of the foreign-built ones were completed. In service, these boats typically looked like this:
Counted against the Kriegsmarine's immense requirement for escorts, the 17 completed ships were little more than a placebo. Half of them (G1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 13, 20 and 27) survived for less than a year; four of them perished while escorting ore convoys from Narvik to Germany. G1 was torpedoed by HM submarine Spiteful, the next four and G20 were sunk by aircraft and G13 by the destroyers HMS Relentless and Rotherham. The others retreated into the Baltic early in 1945, where they were a welcome sight for refugee transports. Three more were lost, one (G21) to a Soviet MTB and one each to British (G10) and Soviet (G24) airplanes. G2 and G23 were sunk by British strategic bombing in port. The five survivors (G7, 9, 14, 22 and 26) were confiscated by the Allies upon Germany's surrender and scrapped; poor production quality and (in part intentionally) shabby finish made their continued employment unattractive.
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