Bombardment of Curaçao explained

Conflict:Bombardment of Curaçao
Partof:the Battle of the Caribbean in ww2
Date:19 April 1942
Place:near Willemstad, Curaçao, Dutch Antilles, Caribbean Sea, Atlantic Ocean
Result:Dutch victory
  • No casualties
  • U-boat driven off
Combatant1: Netherlands
Commander1: Unknown
Commander2: Ernst Kals
Strength1:10 soldiers
2 naval guns
1 shore battery
Strength2:1 U-boat
Casualties1:none
Casualties2:none

The Bombardment of Curaçao refers to a 1942 German naval bombardment of a Bullen Baai Company petroleum storage facility on the Dutch Caribbean island of Curaçao during World War II. The raids purpose was to ignite and destroy the petroleum held on Curaçao. This attempt failed and the German U-boat responsible was unsuccessfully engaged by a Dutch shore battery

Background

On 16 February 1942, the Kriegsmarine Kapitänleutnant Werner Hartenstein devised a coordinated submarine attack against Caribbean targets including the Dutch island of Aruba. The Attack on Aruba turned out to be somewhat successful, the Germans sank or damaged several oil tankers but did not set ablaze the large oil tank on Aruba. Hoping to further disrupt a major Allied oil supply, Hartenstein ordered his U-boats to continue operating against the Aruba and Curaçao refineries.

Bombardment

, a German Type IXC submarine under Kapitän zur See Ernst Kals, approached western Curaçao on 19 April 1942. Its objective was to bombard and damage the Bullen Baai tank farm, located several miles west of Willemstad. At about 02:15, Kals ordered his gunners to take up U-130s 10.52NaN2 deck gun and then he ordered them to fire. In the short engagement, the Germans fired at least five 10.52NaN2 shells at the petroleum tanks. None hit their target but the sound of the explosions woke up the sleeping Dutch coastal artillery detachment on the island. They rushed to their two 1201NaN1 naval gun battery that protected the tanks and opened fire. The Dutch let loose only one shot at the German boat which alarmed them but missed. Captain Kals decided to abort the operation and ordered his crew to submerge the U-boat, they then escaped. There was no damage to the petroleum farm along with no casualties sustained by either side that morning.

Aftermath

Though only a small skirmish the German bombardment of Curaçao is remembered as a key event in the Battle of the Caribbean. In August 1942, the Germans returned to Curaçao, attacked a tanker, and then received fire from a Dutch shore battery before slipping away.

See also

References

https://www.bevrijdingintercultureel.nl/bi/eng/antillen.html http://www.historiadiaruba.aw/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=12&Itemid=26

Bibliography