Thank You Blackbuck!
And here's the next part. I guess I went bit over the top with text, which most of you will find tl;dr, but I hope it will be well received anyway.
Part 2 - War-time submarines
Sokół (U-class, group II)
By late 1940 Polish submarine force was down to just single boat (
Wilk) - and one in very poor condition - therefore both KMW and Admiralty were interested in improving that situation, as the former had some sailors witout ships for them, while the latter had ships but felt shortage of crews. Initially the transfer of
HMS Thetis/Thunderbolt (which sunk during sea trials with 99 fatalities and was later raised) was considered, then the idea of transferring 3 submarines built originally for Turkey was raised (vehemently opposed by kpt. mar. Bogusław Krawczyk, since the personnel demands for 3 boats would automatically mean decomissioning of
Wilk). Eventually the decision was made to lease to Polish Navy a
U-class (II group) submarine
HMS Urchin (hull number N97, laid down on 9 December 1939 at Vickers-Armstrong shipyard at Barrow-in-Furness, launched on 30 September 1940 and undergoing sea trials at the time when decision of transfer was made).
Polish flag was raised over
ORP Sokół (Falcon) (as the
Urchin was renamed) on 19 January 1941 with kpt. mar. Borys Karnicki as captain and kpt. mar. Bolesław Romanowski as XO. Following the period of trials and training at Gare Loch and Dundee, it was transferred in late March to 5th Submarine Flotilla at Portsmouth for operational service. During next 6 months
Sokół made 5 relatively uneventful patrols to Brest and Bay of Biscay (26 March to 15 April; 7 to 24 May; 5 to 23 June; 7 to 23 July and 12 to 26 August) with few enemy sightings at all. Only on the July patrol she had a chance to fire her torpedoes when shorty after midnight on 15th she encountered German-flagged passenger ship (ex-Belgian
Baudouinville, 13 761 BRT, 165,1 m) escorted by two minor warships near Ile de Yeu, but unfortunately
Sokół was spotted moments after firing her torpedoes, giving Germans the chance to take evasive action and launch a (ineffective) counterattack.
During the summer the KMW and Admiralty agreed that
Sokół might be more successful in the Mediterranean, where it was sent in September. Both legs of the journey to Malta (7 to 15 September from Portsmouth to Gibraltar and 19 September to 1 October from Gibraltar to Lazaretto) led through enemy-controlled waters and were therefore counted as (two separate) war patrols - second of which was also a distant cover for Operation Halberd (with patrol sector near St. Vito cape in the northwestern Sicily), but no enemy sightings were made. During the next 6 months
Sokół made 7 (or 8) patrols on the Central Mediterranean, Tyrrhenian and Ionian Seas with 10th Submarine Flotilla. First action from the new base was a short (4 to 7 September) search-and-rescue operation for the crew of downed RAF bomber in the Gulf of Gabes (in some publications counted as 'full' patrol, in some not), followed (9 to 12 September) by an operation against an Italian convoy from Naples to Tripoli - succesfuly destroyed by aviation before submarines had a chance to join. On the next patrol (23 October - 3 November)
Sokół attacked an Italian convoy of 4 merchant ships, an auxiliary cruiser, 2 destroyers, 3 patrol vessels and 2 aircraft and claiming (incorrectly) a hit on the auxiliary cruiser
Città di Palermo (5413 BRT, 125,5 m, armed with 4 120 mm cannons and some 20 mm and 13,2 mm guns), but had to evade a counterattack by escorts. Few hours later an attack was attempted
Generali-class torpedo boat (635 t) and finally on 3 November, freighter
Balilla (2469 BRT, 92,35 m) was sunk off the Marettimo Island (west of Sicily). Between 13 and 27 November
Sokół patrolled the Ionian Sea and on 19th attempted to infiltrate bay of Navarino (as the 'newest intelligence reports' signalled significant maritime traffic and no antisubmarine nets or mines there). Unfortunately, in the process submarine found itself entangled in the antisubmarine nets connected to mines and with patrol boats circling overhead and had to spend several hours extricating itself from the desperate situation, suffering some damage in the process (including torpedo director and navigation periscope that was bent and filled with water). After waiting 2 days for any ships to appear, Karnicki fired (on 15:40, 21 November) torpedoes through the hole pierced previously in the nets towards the destroyer
Strale (misidentified as one of
Soldati class) seen in the harbour, but the intended target changed the position and torpedoes exploded on the shore (that, combined with 'disappearance' of
Strale prompted Karnicki to claim hit), and had again to evade Italian counter-attack (55 depth charges). During the night
Sokół returned to Navarino where it finally intercepted a convoy leaving harbour (it was believed that it consisted of Spica-class torpedo boat and 3 merchant ships, including tanker
Berbera of 2093 BRT, but more recent research reveal that it was the "sunk" Strale and
2 freighters: Italian
Bolsena of 2384 BRT and German
Tinos of 2826 BRT). Salvo of torpedoes actuall missed all targets but the sound of exploding warheds (likely on the shore) and results of RAF reconnaissance that reported one ship less than it was believed there originally was there, made everyone believe that the attack was successful (though the tanker
Berbera, which was believed to be the victim, actually was at that time in Brindisi and while it eventually met her fate at Navarino, it was under RAF bombs on 28 November), so the heroes welcome given to returning submarine seemed very appropriate.
Next two patrols, both as a part of the blockade line in the Gulf of Taranto (12 to 23 December and 4 to 21 January) brought no successes at all, but the luck was better on the February (from 4 to 20) patrol to Tunisian coast, where on 12th near Djerba
Sokół captured and sunk 3-masted motor schooner
Giuseppina (392 BRT, 39 m), where the boarding party found precious plans of minefields along the North African coasts. This was followed by near-miss of the
Polluce (
Spica-class) torpedo boat two days later. Unfortunately, just two days after return heavy air raids forced
Sokół to move from Lazaretto to Marsamexetto, although it was not a safe place either and on 27 February close explosions of several bombs slightly wounded several crewmembers. From 4 to 17 March
Sokół (temporarily under kpt. mar. Jerzy Koziołkowski, as Karnicki was briefly hospitalized) brought an unsuccessful encounter with a small, but very alert Italian convoy near Pantelleria. Just hours after the return, Malta was subjected to heavy air raid that resulted (for this submarine) with 5 very close hits, 46 battery cells broke and numerous instruments and pipes cracked. Next several weeks were spent on attempts to patch-up the boat (generally without any help from civilian shipyard employees who refused to work in such conditions), frustrated by further air raids (after one she had 250 holes in the hull and 98 battery cells broken), before it was recognized that it's impossible to repair
Sokół on Malta. At that point British were considering simply scrapping the boat, as they believed it simply wouldn't survive the necessary travel to some safer shipyard, but Karnicki obtained permission to attempt sailing home - all the way on the surface - first to Gibraltar (16 to 28 April), where the yard specialists couldn't believe she's still afloat, and then (after provisional refit) to Holy Loch (21 June to 9 July) - both legs of the journey also formally counted as war patrols.
Badly needed repair works on
Sokół lasted until late September, and afterwards the submarine was attached to 3rd Submarine Flotilla in Dundee, now (since late July) under kpt. mar. Jerzy Koziołkowski. During the winter she made two patrols towards Altafiord (13 December 1942 to 4 January 1943 and 22 January to 10 February), reporting on the second a distant sighting of 2 large warships escorted by 2 destroyers. In February it was decided to send
Sokół (together with Dzik) again to the Mediterranean - both legs of the journey (23 March - 7 April to Gibraltar and 15 April to 21 May to Malta with stop in Algiers) were again counted as war patrols. Next three patrols (from 31 May to 12 June between Cape Spartivento and Taormina, from 1 to 26 July to Tyrrhenian Sea and from 11 to 25 August to southern Adriatic, opposite Bari) were very eventful, but not very successful. On 8 June
Sokół attacked barquentine
Papà Michele (186 BRT) at Gulf of Squillace but was attacked by a passing aircraft. On 6 July made a failed chase after a tanker near Stromboli and narrowly missed an Italian submarine on 10 July, only to spend next 3 days evading constant harrasment by aircraft and shubmarine chasers. Finally, on 15 August she sighted convoy of 2 large transports (troopship
Città di Spezia - 2474 BRT, freighter
Goggiam - 1994 BRT) and 7 minor escorts (including auxiliary escort
Lubiana of 936 t and torpedo boat
Generali of 635 t) approaching Bari, but was spotted when taking position to attack. That greatly helped
Dzik which was operated nearby and managed to score a kill, while the escorts (thinking there's only one Allied submarine around) tried to exact their revenge on
Sokół. In the next days
Sokół made repeated attempts to attack enemy ships (against
Generali again on 18 August, against merchant ship of 5000 BRT leaving Bari on 20/21 August and against 3-masted schooner near Valona on 22 August) but interventions by enemy air and surface patrols frustrated all of them. In September (from 6 to 16)
Sokół was sent to patrol approaches to Brindisi, and after Italian armistice, on 9 September was ordered to control movements of Italian ships and to direct them to Allied ports, followed by making contact with port authorities in Brindisi itself (first by dinghy on 11/12 and then entering port as first Allied vessel on 13 September) - at Brindisi she also achieved a dubious success of colliding with and sinking harbor patrol craft
Meattini (36 t). Somewhat better outcomes were achieved on the next patrol (26 September - 11 October) - on 4 October
Sokół attacked freighter
Gigliola (734 BRT),but although both torpedoes missed the ship, one of them hit
something (probably a loose mine), causing enormous explosion that led Koziołkowski to claiming a hit. Just hours later freighter
Sebenico (864 BRT) was unsuccessfully attacked and on 7 October scored a confirmed sinking of the troopship
Eridania (7094 BRT, 125,3 BRT) emerging from Pola harbour. Later on the same day she fired her last torpedo against transport ship Sansego (492 BRT, missed) and shelled small transport ship Ugliano (Italian, but under German flag, 160 BRT) before German aviation and coastal artillery intervened.
By October 1943 there were no more targets for Allied submarines in the central Mediterranean, so both
Sokół (between 15 and 21 October) and
Dzik were transferred to 1st Submarine Flotilla in Beirut, to operate against German shipping in the Greek waters. Four patrols there (from 4 to 22 November, from 6 to 24 December, from 9 to 28 January 1944 and from 12 to 25 February) brought numerous sinkings, but all of it was a small catch (size-wise) - mostly (but not exclusively) small Greek cutters impressed to German service, often with partially local crews (hired on "or else..." basis). During the November patrol it started with ex-Italian schooner-turned-patrol boat
Argentino (64 BRT, 10,1 m, built in 1883 as 2-mast coastal freighter - shelled, boarded and sunk with explosives) and cutter
Taxiarchis Sy-370 (8 BRT) on 18 November before proceeding ot northeastern shores of Crete. On 19 November off Mochlos (in the Mirabello Bay)
Sokół shelled 2-masted schooner
Agios Antonio Kal-192 (145 BRT) which beached itself under cover from coastal batteries, and was 'finished off' with a torpedo, followed by torpedo attack on the schooner
Konstantinos Sa-38 (140 BRT) - although both 'fish' missed, their explosions against the shore beached 2 minor cutters (of some 10 BRT each), which were claimed as destroyed (although it seems they suffered only minor damage at most). That forced Koziołkowski to repeat the attack, this time also against patrol vessel
Möwe (110 t) that arrived on scene in the meantime, sinking them both (and forcing another minor cutter on the beach - also claimed destroyed, and also doubtful). During the December patrol
Sokół attacked and claimed sunk large merchant ship (
Anthippi (5609 BRT) (incorrectly, as it turned out - German aircraft appeared, forcing
Sokół to crash dive - explosion of dropped bomb was apparently taken for a successful torpedo hit) on 11 December, and a day later encountered a convoy of German-commandeered cutters, sinking 4 of them (out of 5) in just 80 minutes (
Agios Nikolaos Pi-790 of 35 BRT,
Agios Nikolaos Sy-436 of 100 BRT,
Agios Nikolaos Sy-262 of 114 BRT and
Agios Eleimon Sy-274 of 130 BRT). Because of the stormy weather, only on 15 December another catch was spotted: cutter
Panagia Chi-139 (80 BRT) which was intercepted, damaged with gunfire, then boarded, used to transfer Greek and German survivors (also from the encounter on 12 December) to the island of Tenedos and finally scuttled. Lastly, on 17 December an attack (claimed sinking) was made against Bulgarian transport
Balkan (3838 BRT), but here also enemy aircraft appeared and situation was identical as with
Anthippi. January patrol brought last success on 12 January, with sinking of schooner
Agia Paraskevi Ch-53 (22 BRT) and 2 days later
Sokół attempted to sink minelayer
Drache (ex-Yugoslav seaplane carrier
Zmaj) but was chased away by her escorts. February patrol was completely uneventful and on 18 February
Sokół received orders to sail to Malta, and from there (from 6 to 12 March) sailed to Gibraltar and later (19 to 30 March) to Plymouth and Devonport (Malta-Gibraltar leg was counted as war patrol, Gibraltar-Plymouth was not).
After the return to Great Britain
Sokół underwent a deep refit lasting until September and for the rest of the war it served primarily for the training duties, with only one more - uneventful due to poor weather conditions and high German ASW activity - combat patrol (from 18 November to 2 December) to Norwegian waters. From January 1945
Sokół's last captain was kpt. mar. Tadeusz Bernas, who saw the Polish flag lowered over the boat for the last time on 27 July 1946, before it was formally returned ot RN custody on 3 August. Again as
HMS Urchin she remained in reserve for 3 more years until it was scrapped in September 1946.
During its service in the Polish Navy
ORP Sokół took part in 31 (32) war patrols totalling 630 days at sea and made 15 torpedo and 11 artillery attacks. Originally her official tally claimed that she sunk 25 ships (22 merchant and 3 warships) totalling some 55 000 BRT, but post-war research unfortunately cut this tally to just 15 ships (14 merchant and 1 warship) of 10 829 BRT and 110 t. Although a significant difference, it does not reflect negatively on the courage and skill of her crew, and the nickname "Terrible Twins" shared by
Sokół and
Dzik was a well-deserved one.
Poland, Sokół, 1941
Poland, Sokół, 1943
Length: 58,6 meters - ( 5860 / 15,24 = 384,51 or 385 pixels)
Sources:
Bartelski Andrzej S.,
Dywizjon i Grupa Okrętów Podwodnych 1932-1945, "Morze, Statki i Okręty" 2012, nr 5,
Bartelski Andrzej S.,
"Terrible Twins" czyli polskie okręty podwodne na Morzu Śródziemnym, "Okręty Wojenne" 2001, nr 2,
Bartelski Andrzej S.,
Tajemnice polskich Jolly Roger, "Morze, Statki i Okręty" 2009, nr 4,
Bartelski Andrzej S., Kaczmarek Rafał Mariusz,
Polskiej wojny podwodnej ciąg dalszy, "Morze, Statki i Okręty" 2008, nr 4,
Borowiak Mariusz,
ORP Sokół - debiut bojowy i pierwsza kampania śródziemnomorska, "Morze" 2017, nr 6,
Borowiak Mariusz,
ORP Sokół - druga kampania śródziemnomorska, "Morze" 2017, nr 8,
Borowiak Mariusz,
Polskie okręty wojenne w Wielkiej Brytanii 1939-1945. Okręt podwodny ORP Sokół, Oświęcim 2017,
Borowiak Mariusz,
Stalowe drapieżniki. Polskie okręty podwodne 1926-1947, Warszawa 2019,
Kaczmarek Rafał Mariusz,
Polska wojna podwodna. Sukcesy i niepowodzenia bojowe polskich okrętów podwodnych podczas II wojny światowej, "Morze, Statki i Okręty" 2004, nr 4, 6,
Kasperski Tadeusz,
Jolly Roger ORP Sokół - wyjaśnienie tajemnic pirackiej flagi, "Okręty" 2012, nr 5,
Koszela Witold,
Okręty floty polskiej, Oświęcim 2017,
McCartney Innes, Bryan Tony,
British Submarines 1939-1945, "Osprey New Vanguard", no. 283, Oxford 2006,
Pertek Jerzy,
Wielkie dni małej floty, Poznań 1987,
Rudzki Czesław,
Polskie okręty podwodne 1926-1969, Warszawa 1985.
Jastrząb (S-class)
Of all Polish submarines,
Jastrząb's career was shortest and one of most tragic. It was allocated to the Polish Navy by the Royal Navy from the pool of the US lend-lease boats, in order to make up the loss of
Orzeł and permanent inserviceability of Wilk[/i]. It was not a new submarine, though - S-class
USS S-25 / SS-130 was laid down on 26 October 1918 at Fore River Shipyard, launched on 29 May 1922 and commissioned as on 9 July 1923. Polish crew, headed by kpt. mar. Bronisław Romanowski arrived for training and transfer of the in New London, Connecticut in September 1941 and after much shortened training course (3 weeks instead of 2 months), on 4 November 1941 the boat was formally transferred from US to Polish custody and christened
ORP Jastrząb (Hawk) (and concurrently as British HMS P551, although only the "Polish" part of the ceremony was public, while the "British" happened only "in the books"). After necessary preparation,
Jastrząb left New London on 14 November and after a long and arduous journey in extreme weather conditions arrived to Holy Loch on 2 December 1941.
Initially
Jastrząb was attached to 3rd Submarine Flotilla, where it was assigned duties of a training boat, but Romanowski succesfuly lobbied superiors to allow operational use and in late April it was decided to employ the boat in relation to passage of PQ-15 convoy to Russia.
Jastrząb left for its first - and only - patrol on 22 April 1942 (operationally attached to 4th Submarine Flotilla), arriving 2 days later to the forward base at Lerwick and on 25 April sailed for the Norwegian Sea, suffering all the way from very bad weather conditions that resulted in number of malfunctions, including its forward diving plane and occasional breakdowns of both diesels. Despite this, aggressive officers, wanting to prove themselves unfortunately decided to continue the patrol. Initially
Jastrząb was assigned a southernmost patrol sector of all submarines taking part in the operation, but eventually was ordered to the northernmost - unfortunately weather condition prevented any attempts at celestial navigation and position had to be calculated by dead reckogning, which eventually led the boat outside her assigned zone. At the same time, due to ice danger, the convoy had to change its course to the more southerly - a fact that was not communicated to the Polish submarine. On the afternoon of the 2 May
Jastrząb encountered Norwegian destroyer
St. Albans and RN trawler
HMT Seagull, which mistook it for an U-boot and - despite identification signals (of which crews of both surface vessels were not properly informed) - attacked her with depth charges, and (after the damage sustained forced her to surface) with gunfire, which killed 5 crewmen (including 2 British signalmen) and heavily wounded 6 more (including Romanowski, who tried to wave Polish flag from the sail). Eventually the mistake was noticed and both warships sent the lifeboats to the rescue, but by then
Jastrząb was practically a wreck and had to be scuttled at 72* 14' N, 14* 34' E (some 75 Nm West of Bear Island - sometimes other positions are given, ranging from 71*30' N and 12*32' E to 73*30' N and 17*35' E). Wounded crew was then transported to Murmansk and Arkhangelsk and by 8 July they all returned to Great Britain on board
ORP Garland (which participated in escort of PQ-16 convoy). Some months later majority of surviving crewmembers was transferred to a new boat - the
ORP Dzik of the British U-class.
Poland, Jastrząb, 1942
Length: 66,8 meters - ( 6680 / 15,24 = 438,32 or 438 pixels - actually is 439)
Sources:
Bartelski Andrzej S.,
Dywizjon i Grupa Okrętów Podwodnych 1932-1945, "Morze, Statki i Okręty" 2012, nr 5,
Borowiak Mariusz,
Polskie okręty wojenne w Wielkiej Brytanii 1939-1945. Okręt podwodny ORP Jastrząb, Oświęcim 2017,
Borowiak Mariusz,
Stalowe drapieżniki. Polskie okręty podwodne 1926-1947, Warszawa 2019,
Christley Jim, Bull Peter,
US Submarines 1900-1935, "Osprey New Vanguard", no. 175, Oxford 2011,
Friedman Norman,
U.S. Submarines Through 1945. An illustrated design history, Annapolis 1995,
Jarski Adam,
ORP Jastrząb, "Morze, Statki i Okręty" 2018, nr 7-8, 9-10, 11-12,
Koszela Witold,
Okręty floty polskiej, Oświęcim 2017,
Kaperski Tadeusz,
Służba wojenna i tragiczny patrol ORP Jastrząb, "Morza i Okręty" 2016, nr 3 specjalny,
Pertek Jerzy,
Wielkie dni małej floty, Poznań 1987,
Rudzki Czesław,
Polskie okręty podwodne 1926-1969, Warszawa 1985,
http://www.navsource.org/
https://pigboats.com/
Dzik (U-class, group III)
After the loss of
Jastrząb Polish submarine force was down to a single operational boat again and to remedy this situation, Royal Navy agreed to transfer of another U-class submarine (III group, HMS P52, laid down on 30 December 1941 at Vickers-Armstrong shipyard at Barrow-in-Furness) that was just being built and close to completion. Chosen boat was launched on 11 October 1942 and formally handed over to the Polish navy on 12 December 1942 and named
ORP Dzik (Wild Boar), with kpt. mar. Bolesław Romanowski in command. After the trials and training period, she made a single patrol to Norwegian waters (Sognefjord, from 30 January to 16 February 1943), where horrible weather prevented any sightings. Shortly afterwards it was decided to send
Dzik (together with Sokół - for her 2nd term there) to the Mediterranean - all three legs of the journey (23 March - 7 April to Gibraltar, 6 April to 21 April to Algiers and from 28 April to 5 May to Malta) were counted as war patrols - without any worthwile encounters with the enemy, although on 2 May she was mis-identified and briefly shelled by HMS Tartar.
First of Malta patrols (from 16 to 28 May) led
Dzik to Crotone in southern Italy, where on 24 May she encountered tanker
Carnaro (8257 BRT, 152 m) escorted by torpedo boats
Groppo (
Ciclone-class) and
Clio (
Spica-class) and 2-3 aircraft. One of torpedoes hit the tanker and while (despite Romanowski's claim of sinking) it didn't technically sunk, damage was so extensive that in was never repaired, while
Dzik had to endure a long ordeal under the depth charges of Italian escorts. During the June (8 to 22) patrol to the waters north of Sicily
Dzik had a particularly bad luck of encountering ships she was
not allowed to attack - a hospital ship on 15 June and then two ships flying Swiss flags (
Akka and
Mongabarra, both of 3085 BRT) and another hospital ship on 17 June. And when - also on 17 June - she had some "legal" targets, her torpedoes missed, as was the case with minelayer Vieste (560 t, ex-German M119) - or the explosion heard turned out to be of something else - after the attack on unidentified passenger and cargo ship of some 4000 BRT, escorted by
Orione-class torpedo boat. Next patrol (from 2 to 19 July) a blockade of the Gulf of Taranto in relation to Operation Husky (invasion of Sicily) that was about to start, but just a hospital ship and single minesweeper were spotted (but enemy aircraft were plentiful) and no attacks were made. Only the August patrol to the southern Adriatic (opposite Bari) brought a significant success - somewhat to the detriment of
Sokół, which on August 15 sighted convoy of 2 large transports (troopship
Città di Spezia - 2474 BRT, freighter
Goggiam - 1994 BRT) and 7 minor escorts (including auxiliary escort
Lubiana of 936 t and torpedo boat
Generali of 635 t) but also brought upon herself the wrath of convoy escorts when
Dzik successfully torpedoed
Goggiam.
Dzik's final patrol in the central Mediterranean was to Corsican waters, where on 21 September, on Bastia's roadstead she attacked German (ex-French) steamer
San Pedro surrounded by 4 barges of 100 BRT, freighter
Nicolaus (6486 BRT, 125,47 m) and small steamer
Kraft (514 BRT), before being attacked by German submarine chasers, led by
Uj1109, which dropped nearly 200 depth charges (not particularly accurately, though) and kept the submarine below water for a significant period, during which a series of large explosions convinced Romanowski that he scored a brilliant series of kills, but in fact only
Nicolaus was actualy sunk. Next day
Dzik encountered a group of 11 landing craft from 10. Landungs-Flotille (6 of the
Marinefährprahm and 5 of
Siebelfähr-40 type) in 2 columns, escorted by 3
R-boote and 4 aircraft and fired her remaining torpedoes (set for surface run) against 4 of them and sinking one (F420C, 155t, carrying a tank, 2 StuG and 1 PaK cannon) before being forced underwater by counterattack. Although results were smaller than believed (Romanowski thought he sank 3 MFP's), the attack proved that torpedoes set for surface run can be effective against shallow-draught MFP's, and all British submarines in the area were ordered to follow that tactics with very good results.
In October, like
Sokół,
Dzik was transferred to 1st Submarine Flotilla in Beirut for operations in Greek waters. Transit cruise took place between 11 and 26 October through Aegean and counted as another war patrol, but no enemy shipping was spotted (though air activity was heavy). First patrol from Beirut (from 6 to 24 November) was under kpt. mar. Andrzej Kłopotowski, as Romanowski just broke his arm - during the first week several small sailing vessels were sighted but captain decided not to attack, believing them to be purely civilian boats (even though standing orders from British Admiralty ordered to attack anyway) and only on 17 November an armed schooner
Agios Andreas Pi-2119 (40 BRT) was finally sunk. Several hours later another sighting was made: schooner
Agios Nikolaos (40 BRT), but since it was unarmed and packed with civilian passengers, including women and children, it was set free after inspection.
Dzik's last sinkings were made during the patrol that lasted from 23 December 1943 to 13 January 1944, again under Romanowski. For the first two weeks only aircraft and minor fishing boats were seen, until on 7 January a passenger-cargo ship was spotted to the east of Lemnos and attacked with torpedoes. Explosions were heard (and sinking claimed), but they were only results of torpedoes hitting shore or self-destructing - very conveniently, as the ship was actually a neutral Turkish Tirhan (3085 BRT). On the other hand, during the reload of torpedoes
Dzik narrowly avoided becoming a victim of her own torpedo, when engine of one of them spontaneously started and it had to be quickly fired (for some time it circled dangerously close to the boat), and one of the doors in the tube was damaged, limiting the ability to dive. Next day two more Turkish ships were seen, but also properly identified, and shortly before midinght cutter
Eleni My-200 (90 BRT) was intercepted near Babakale, shelled, boarded and scuttled. Day later same fate met cutter
Agia Markella Chi-436 (40 BRT), before
Dzik headed home.
By that time Allies had control over most of the Mediterranean and number of targets provided by Germans for the submarines was rapidly dwindling, therefore it was decided to move most of the submarines to other theatres. That applied also to Polish "Terrible Twins". Between 7 February and 3 March 1944
Dzik made her last - rather uneventful - patrol into the Aegean while on the way to Malta and then back to Great Britain (from 11 to 17 March from Malta to Gibraltar and from 28 March to 8 April from Gibraltar to Plymouth - both counted as war patrols). Remaining months of war
Dzik spent mostly as training boat, first in Plymouth, than in Londonderry and finally in Dundee, until December 1944 under Romanowski, then for a month under por. mar. adeusz Noworól and finally under kpt. mar. Andrzej Kłopotowski. Polish flag was lowered on the
ORP Dzik for the last time on 25 July 1946 and on 1 August the boat returned to the Royal Navy. Soon afterwards it was leased to the Royal Danish Navy as U-1. She arrived in her new homeland in October 1946, in 1950 was renamed
Springeren and served until October 1957 when it was returned to Great Britain and scrapped in April 1958.
During its service in the Polish Navy
ORP Dzik took part in 15 patrols (though number 12 and 16 are also commonly mentioned, but I could count only 15) and her official tally claimed sinking of 18 ships (14 merchant and 4 warships) totalling some 45 000 BRT. Like with
Sokół, post-war research unfortunately reduced it to just 6 ships (5 merchant and 1 warship) of 8650 BRT and 155 t and 1 more (
Carnaro of 8257 BRT) effectively eliminated without actually sinking.
Poland, Dzik, 1942
Poland, Dzik, 1943
Length: 60,0 meters - ( 6000 / 15,24 = 393,70 or 394 pixels)
Sources:
van Amstel W. H. E.,
De schepen van de Koninklike Marine vanaf 1945, De Alk bv 1991.Bartelski Andrzej S.,
Dywizjon i Grupa Okrętów Podwodnych 1932-1945, "Morze, Statki i Okręty" 2012, nr 5,
Bartelski Andrzej S.,
"Terrible Twins" czyli polskie okręty podwodne na Morzu Śródziemnym, "Okręty Wojenne" 2001, nr 2,
Bartelski Andrzej S.,
Tajemnice polskich Jolly Roger, "Morze, Statki i Okręty" 2009, nr 4,
Bartelski Andrzej S., Kaczmarek Rafał Mariusz,
Polskiej wojny podwodnej ciąg dalszy, "Morze, Statki i Okręty" 2008, nr 4,
Borowiak Mariusz,
Polskie okręty wojenne w Wielkiej Brytanii 1939-1945. Okręt podwodny ORP Dzik, Oświęcim 2018,
Borowiak Mariusz,
Stalowe drapieżniki. Polskie okręty podwodne 1926-1947, Warszawa 2019,
Fleks Adam,
"Dzik" w duńskiej flocie, "Okręty Wojenne" 1995, nr 1,
Kaczmarek Rafał Mariusz,
Polska wojna podwodna. Sukcesy i niepowodzenia bojowe polskich okrętów podwodnych podczas II wojny światowej, "Morze, Statki i Okręty" 2004, nr 4, 6,
Kasperski Tadeusz,
Patrole bojowe ORP Dzik. Akcje z Malty i Bejrutu, "Morza i Okręty" 2016, nr 6 specjalny,
Koszela Witold,
Okręty floty polskiej, Oświęcim 2017,
McCartney Innes, Bryan Tony,
British Submarines 1939-1945, "Osprey New Vanguard", no. 283, Oxford 2006,
Morozov M. Ye., Kulagin K.L.,
'Ursula' i drugije. Podwodnyje łodki britanskoj postrojki w sostawie Siewiernogo Fłota, "Morskaya Kollektsiya" 2014, nr 12,
Pertek Jerzy,
Wielkie dni małej floty, Poznań 1987,
Rudzki Czesław,
Polskie okręty podwodne 1926-1969, Warszawa 1985,
van Willigenburg Henk,
Dutch warships of World War II, Lanasta 2010,