Battles of Narvik explained

The Battles of Narvik were fought from 9 April to 8 June 1940, as a naval battle in Ofotfjord and as a land battle in the mountains surrounding the north Norwegian town of Narvik, as part of the Norwegian Campaign of the Second World War.

The two naval battles in Ofotfjord on 10 April and 13 April were fought between the British Royal Navy and the German Kriegsmarine, while the two-month land campaign was fought by Norwegian, French, British, and Polish troops against German mountain troops, shipwrecked Kriegsmarine sailors, and German paratroopers (Fallschirmjäger) from the 7th Air Division. Although defeated at sea off Narvik, losing control of the town of Narvik and being pushed back towards the Swedish border, the Germans eventually prevailed because of the Allied evacuation from Norway in June 1940 following the Battle of France.

Narvik provided an ice-free harbour in the North Atlantic for iron ore transported by rail from Kiruna in Sweden. Both sides in the war had an interest in securing this iron supply for themselves and denying it to the enemy, thereby setting the stage for one of the biggest battles since the Invasion of Poland.[1]

Prior to the German invasion, British forces had considered Narvik as a possible landing point for an expedition to help Finland in the Winter War. Such an expedition also had the potential of taking control of the Swedish mines and opening up the Baltic for the Allies.[2]

German invasion

Conflict:Naval battle preceding the first naval battle of Narvik
Partof:the Second World War
Date:9 April 1940
Place:Narvik, Norway
Result:German victory
Combatant1: Norway
Combatant2: Germany
Commander2: Friedrich Bonte
Eduard Dietl
Strength1:2 coastal defence ships
Strength2:10 destroyers
Casualties1:2 coastal defence ships sunk
343 dead
Casualties2:One cargo ship scuttled (no fatalities)

On 1 March 1940, Adolf Hitler ordered the invasion of Norway, codenamed Operation Weserübung as a preventive manoeuvre against a planned, and openly discussed, Franco-British occupation of Norway.[3] This operation would involve most of the Kriegsmarine. Participating units were divided into five groups, which were to occupy six of the main Norwegian ports.[4]

Group I departed Bremerhaven on 6 April. It consisted of 10 German destroyers of the 1934A and 1936 classes Georg Thiele, Wolfgang Zenker, Bernd von Arnim, Erich Giese, Erich Koellner, Diether von Roeder, Hans Lüdemann, Hermann Künne, Wilhelm Heidkamp (flagship) and Anton Schmitt, commanded by Kommodore Friedrich Bonte. Each of the warships carried around 200 soldiers (a total of 1,900 mountain troops (Gebirgsjäger) from the 139th Mountain Regiment (Gebirgsjägerregiment) of the 3rd Mountain Division commanded by General Eduard Dietl).[5] The troop-carrying destroyers were escorted most of the way by the battlecruisers and .[4]

In the early morning of 9 April, the destroyers of Group I passed the Vestfjorden and arrived at the Ofotfjorden leading to Narvik, in fog and heavy snow. In Ofotfjord, they captured three Norwegian patrol boats (Senja, Michael Sars and Kelt). Before capture Kelt managed to send a message to the coastal defence ship HNoMS Norge, alerting the local Norwegian naval commander of the incoming vessels.[6] The German ships Wolfgang Zenker, Erich Koellner and Hermann Künne landed their soldiers in Herjangsfjord (a northern branch of Ofotfjorden) in order to capture a Norwegian regimental supply base at Elvegårdsmoen.[7] Hans Ludemann and Hermann Künne also landed their troops in order to engage the nearby Norwegian forts (which turned out to be non-existent). Diether von Roeder remained in Ofotfjord in order to ensure German control of the sea. Erich Giese was delayed by engine trouble and did not join the main force for some time.

The main defence of Narvik were the old coastal defence ships Eidsvold and her sister ship Norge. Having been alerted by Kelt, both Norwegian ships prepared for combat: the guns were loaded and life preservers issued to the crew. Around 04:15, the Germans spotted Eidsvold, and Eidsvold immediately signalled the leading German destroyer with an aldis lamp. When the Germans failed to respond to the signal, a warning shot was fired across their bow.[8]

The Germans had orders to occupy Norway peacefully if at all possible, so the German flagship Wilhelm Heidkamp stopped and signalled that it would send an officer to negotiate. A small launch ferried Korvettenkapitän Gerlach over to Eidsvold. Gerlach was taken to the bridge to speak to Captain Odd Isaachsen Willoch.[9]

Gerlach tried to convince Willoch that the Germans had arrived as friends, but that the Norwegians had to hand over their warships to the German armed forces. Captain Willoch asked for time to consult his commander, Captain Per Askim, the commander of Norge. This request was refused by the Germans, but while Willoch had been talking to the German officer, the radio officer on board Eidsvold had communicated the events to Askim. Askim's response to the German demands and order to Willoch came immediately; Willoch and Eidsvold was to open fire.[10] Willoch responded to Askim; "I am attacking."[8] While this was going on, the German destroyer Wilhelm Heidkamp had positioned herself 700m (2,300feet) off the port side of Eidsvold and trained her torpedo launchers on the Norwegian ship.[8]

Gerlach tried once again to convince Willoch to surrender, but Willoch refused. As Gerlach left Eidsvold, he fired a red flare, indicating that the Norwegians intended to fight. At this point, Captain Willoch shouted: ("Man the guns. We're going to fight, boys!").[11] Eidsvold turned towards the closest destroyer and accelerated, closing the distance to Wilhelm Heidkamp to 300m (1,000feet) while the battery commander ordered the port battery (three 151NaN1 guns) to open fire.[12]

The Germans, afraid that Eidsvold might ram the destroyer, fired four torpedoes from Wilhelm Heidkamp at the old ship. Two of the torpedoes hit before the port guns could fire. The Norwegian ammunition magazine was ignited and Eidsvold was blown in two. The forward part of the ship sank in seconds, the stern followed in minutes, propellers still turning. At around 04:37, she was gone. 175 Norwegian sailors died in the freezing water, including Captain Willoch, with just eight surviving.[13]

Deeper inside the fjord, the explosions were heard aboard Norge, but nothing could be seen until two German destroyers suddenly appeared out of the darkness and Captain Per Askim of Norge gave orders to open fire at 04:45. Four rounds were fired from the 211NaN1 guns (one from the fore gun and three from the aft) as well as seven or eight rounds from the starboard 151NaN1 guns, against the German destroyer Bernd von Arnim, at a range of about 800m (2,600feet). Due to the difficult weather conditions, the guns' optical sights were ineffective: the first salvo fell short of the target and the next ones overshot it.

The German destroyers waited until they were alongside the pier before returning fire. Bernd von Armin opened fire with her 12.70NaN0 guns as well as with machine guns, but the weather gave the Germans problems as well. The destroyer also fired three salvoes of two torpedoes each. The first two salvoes missed, but the last struck Norge midships and she sank in less than one minute. Ninety of the crew were rescued, but 101 perished in the battle which had lasted less than 20 minutes. The destruction of Norge signalled the end of Norwegian resistance in the port.

Much of the Norwegian garrison at Narvik awoke to the sound of gunfire and were unprepared to face the Germans. Many were surrounded and disarmed as they scrambled to occupy defensive positions. The commander-in-chief of the Narvik area, Colonel Konrad Sundlo, is often cited as the reason for the quick capitulation.[14] Described by Kriegsmarine Admiral Erich Raeder as "an officer with reportedly pro-German feelings", he quickly withdrew from the area following the naval engagement and began negotiations with the Germans. After the initial loss of Narvik, Norwegian general Carl Gustav Fleischer sent out a communiqué, part of which read:

Sundlo was charged with treason for the surrender of Narvik after the war, but these charges were dismissed. Instead he was found guilty of negligence for failing to adequately prepare for Narvik's defence, and on charges of cooperating with the Germans during the occupation.

The morning of the German attack four Norwegian steamers were anchored in Narvik; the Cate B, the Eldrid, the Haalegg and the Saphir. In addition to the Norwegian vessels, four foreign, neutral ships were present; the Dutch steamer Bernisse, and the three Swedish steamships Boden, Oxelösund and Strassa . As well as neutral ships, the warring parties had vessels at Narvik, riding anchor in the same port. The British had five steamers in the harbour; the Blythmoor, the Mersington Court, the North Cornwall, the Riverton, and the Romanby. As the German flotilla seized Narvik, there were 11 German merchant steamers at the port town; the Aachen, the Altona, the Bockenheim, the Hein Hoyer, the Martha Henrich Fisser, the Neuenfels, the Odin, the Lippe, the Frielinghaus, the Planet, and the replenishment oiler/maintenance ship .[7] Jan Wellem, a converted former whale factory ship, awaited the arrival of the German warships, which she was tasked to refuel.[15] [16] [17] Working in the harbour were the Swedish tugs Diana and Styrbjörn . As the German destroyers entered the harbour, the captain of Bockenheim, who assumed that the intruding warships were British, beached and scuttled his vessel.[7] In total, 25 ore ships had been riding at anchor in Narvik at the outset of the fighting, 10 of which were German.[18]

The German destroyers were now short of fuel and had only one fuel tanker in support, the ex-whale factory ship Jan Wellem that had been despatched to Narvik, according to some sources from the secret German naval base Basis Nord at Zapadnaya Litsa in the Soviet Union, where she had been based since 4 February 1940.[16] [19] [20] Another source indicates that she departed Murmansk in the evening of the 6 April[21] and that Basis Nord was never even established.[22] She had arrived off Narvik from the north on 8 April, and had been stopped by the Norwegian patrol boat Kvitøy. Jan Wellem was allowed entry to Narvik by the regional Norwegian naval command, where she was inspected. Her captain claimed that she was carrying 8500ST of fuel oil and 8,098 crates of food provisions and that she was on her way to Germany.[23] A second tanker, the Kattegat which had sailed to Norway from Wilhelmshaven,[21] had been sunk in the Glomfjord in the evening of 9 April. Kattegat had been stopped by the Norwegian fishery protection ship HNoMS Nordkapp, the Norwegian ship first trying to take the tanker as a prize, but due to the large German crew could not control it all the way to Bodø, in the end sinking Kattegat by firing four 472NaN2 rounds into the tanker's water line.[24] [25]

Kattegat had been delayed from reaching Narvik in time by the British 8 April mining operations off Norway (Operation Wilfred).[26] A third tanker—Skagerrak—had also been despatched to Norway, in support of the German landings at Trondheim, but she was intercepted by the British cruiser, on 14 April, after she had been redirected by German naval command to a waiting position at sea.[27] When the British warship tried to board Skagerrak her crew scuttled her at 68.25°N 2°W. Both Kattegat and Skagerrak, which were sister ships, were inspected at Kopervik by the Norwegian torpedo boat, on 5 and 7 April respectively. The captain of Kattegat told the Norwegians that he was headed to Narvik for further orders, and the captain of Skagerrak claimed Murmansk as their destination, and inspections revealed that both tankers had a full load of fuel oil. Skagerrak also carried 165ST of food provisions, which was claimed as supplies for German merchant ships. The food crates were labelled "Wehrmacht".[28] [29] According to the German plan the destroyers were supposed to have been refuelled by two tankers, Kattegat and Jan Wellem, each receiving some 600ST of fuel oil.[28]

The flotilla was then to be on its way back to Germany by the evening of 9 April. The plan failed because only Jan Wellem made it to Narvik. Refuelling with just one tanker was difficult; only two destroyers could be refuelled simultaneously, taking seven or eight hours. At arrival in Narvik, the destroyers were almost out of fuel.[30] Making the refuelling more challenging was the fact that Jan Wellem had only improvised refuelling arrangements and inferior pumping equipment.[15] [17] While two destroyers were being refuelled at a time, a third was on guard in fjord, the remaining seven being spread around in the nearby area.[31] By 04:00 on 10 April, Jan Wellem had managed to fully refuel three of the German destroyers, and was in the process of refuelling two more.[17]

In the meantime, British forces had tried to engage the Kriegsmarine, but for the most part, unsuccessfully. On 8 April, the British G-class destroyer engaged the heavy cruiser and two destroyers, and was lost, ramming and damaging Hipper in the battle. On the 9 April morning, the British battlecruiser exchanged artillery salvos with the German battleships Scharnhorst and Gneisenau, which were screening the destroyers. During the battle one of the artillery shells from Renown damaged the fire control system on Gneisenau, the British battlecruiser was also hit two times and slightly damaged. After that the German battleships withdrew from the battle at high speed.[32] The destroyers' main mission had been completed, however, as they had succeeded in landing the invasion force.

First naval Battle of Narvik

Conflict:First naval battle of Narvik
Partof:the Second World War
Date:10 April 1940
Place:Narvik, Norway
Result:British victory
Combatant1: United Kingdom
Combatant2: Germany
Strength1:5 destroyers
Strength2:10 destroyers
Casualties1:2 destroyers sunk
1 destroyer heavily damaged
Casualties2:2 destroyers sunk
1 ammunition supply ship sunk
6 cargo ships sunk
4 destroyers damaged
163 casualties

The day after the German invasion, the Royal Navy took an opportunity to defeat the Kriegsmarine. The 2nd Destroyer Flotilla—under Commodore Bernard Warburton-Lee and comprising five H-class destroyers ((flagship),,, and —moved up the fjord in the early morning. The German destroyers Hermann Künne and Hans Lüdemann were anchored alongside the tanker Jan Wellem and refuelling when the British destroyer attack began at 04:30.[7] [17] The German picket ship (Diether von Roeder) had left its post to refuel, and as the British flotilla approached Narvik, they surprised and engaged a German force at the entrance to the harbour and sank the two destroyers Wilhelm Heidkamp (killing Commodore Bonte) and Anton Schmitt, heavily damaged Diether von Roeder and inflicted lesser damage on two others. They also exchanged fire with German invasion troops ashore but did not have a landing force aboard and therefore turned to leave. Before the destroyers left the scene, Hostile fired her torpedoes at the merchant ships in the harbour. In total, eleven merchant ships (six German, one British, two Swedish and two Norwegian) were sunk during the British sortie into the harbour.[7] [31]

The British flotilla was then engaged by three more German destroyers (Wolfgang Zenker, Erich Koellner and Erich Giese) emerging from the Herjangsfjord, led by Commander Erich Bey and then two more (Georg Thiele and Bernd von Arnim) coming from Ballangen Bay, under Commander Fritz Berger. In the ensuing battle, two British destroyers were lost: the flotilla leader HMS Hardy, which was beached in flames and HMS Hunter, which was torpedoed and sunk. A third—HMS Hotspur—was also damaged badly by a torpedo. Hotspur and the remaining British destroyers left the battlefield, damaging Georg Thiele as they did so. The German destroyers—now short of fuel and ammunition—did not pursue and the British ships were able to sink the ammunition supply ship which they encountered on their way out of the fjord. Soon, the German naval forces were blocked in by British reinforcements, including the cruiser . During the night of 11–12 April, while manoeuvring in Narvik harbour, Erich Koellner and Wolfgang Zenker ran aground. Wolfgang Zenker damaged her propellers and was restricted to a speed of 20lk=inNaNlk=in. Erich Koellner was much more badly damaged, so the Germans planned—when she was repaired enough to move—to moor her at Tårstad in the same capacity as Diether von Roeder, as an immobile defence battery.[7]

As the British destroyers left the Vestfjorden outside Narvik, two German submarines— and —fired torpedoes at them but German torpedoes at the time had severe problems with their magnetic detonator systems—possibly due to the high northern latitude: all of them failed and either did not detonate at all or detonated well before reaching their targets.

Both the German naval commander—Kommodore Friedrich Bonte (on Wilhelm Heidkamp)—and the British commander—Captain Bernard Warburton-Lee (on Hardy)—were killed in the battle. Warburton-Lee was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross, Bonte the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross.[1] [33]

Second naval Battle of Narvik

Conflict:Second naval battle of Narvik
Partof:the Second World War
Date:13 April 1940
Place:Narvik, Norway
Result:British victory
Combatant1: United Kingdom
Combatant2: Germany
Commander1: William Whitworth
Commander2: Erich Bey
Strength1:1 battleship
9 destroyers
1 aircraft carrier
a small number of aircraft
Strength2:8 destroyers
2 U-boats
Casualties1:3 destroyers damaged
2 aircraft shot down
28 killed
55 wounded
Casualties2:8 destroyers sunk or scuttled
1 U-boat sunk
128 killed
67 wounded

The Royal Navy considered it imperative, for morale and strategic purposes, to defeat the Germans in Narvik, so Vice Admiral William Whitworth was sent with the battleship and nine destroyers; four Tribal-class (Punjabi, and) and five others (HMS Kimberley,,, Forester and Foxhound), accompanied by aircraft from the aircraft carrier . These forces arrived in the Ofotfjord on 13 April to find that the eight remaining German destroyers—now under the command of Fregattenkapitän Erich Bey—were virtually stranded due to lack of fuel and were short of ammunition.

Before the battle, Warspite launched its catapult plane (a float-equipped Fairey Swordfish, L 9767), with the crew ordered to search for German ships and to bomb any targets of opportunity. After spotting and reporting several of the German destroyers, the crew spotted the U-boat, anchored just 50 yards off-shore in the Herjangsfjord near Bjerkvik. The Swordfish attacked and dropped two 100 lb anti-submarine bombs: one was a near-miss, but one hit and sank the submarine.[34] Most of the crew survived and were rescued by German mountain troops. This was the first U-boat sunk by an aircraft during the war and the only instance of an aircraft launched from a battleship sinking a U-boat.[35] In the ensuing battle, three of the German destroyers were sunk by Warspite and her escorts and the other five were scuttled by their crews when they ran out of fuel and ammunition. The first lost was Erich Koellner, which tried to ambush the Allied forces but was spotted by Warspites Swordfish and subsequently torpedoed and shelled by the destroyers and battleship. The destroyer's commander, Alfred Schulze-Hinrichs, and the surviving members of his crew, were captured by Norwegian forces. Then Wolfgang Zenker, Bernd von Arnim, Hans Ludemann and Hermann Künne engaged the British forces but only managed to lightly damage HMS Bedouin and Wolfgang Zenker tried to torpedo Warspite.

The British launched a force of ten Swordfish from Furious to attack the German destroyers with 250lb bombs. They scored no hits and two aircraft were shot-down; the crew of one were lost, the crew of the other were picked up by Punjabi after making a forced-landing on the shore.[36]

Finally, when the German destroyers were low on ammunition, they retreated, except for Hermann Künne, which had not received the order. Hermann Künne was fired upon by the pursuing HMS Eskimo, but she took no hits. Out of ammunition but undamaged, Hermann Künne was scuttled by her crew in Trollvika in the Herjangsfjord. After scuttling the ship, the crew placed demolition depth charges on the ship, attempting to sink her in Trollvika's shallow waters. Eskimo, still in hot pursuit, launched a torpedo which hit Hermann Künne, setting her on fire. Whether the German ship's own depth charges or the torpedo from Eskimo was the source of the explosion is unclear.[37] Eskimo was in turn ambushed by Georg Thiele and Hans Ludemann, losing her bow but surviving. Diether von Roeder and Erich Giese, both suffering engine problems, fired upon the British forces while still docked, damaging Punjabi and Cossack but they were both sunk before they could cause further damage. That was the last German counter-attack.

Shore batteries and installations were also very badly damaged by Warspites guns. On the Allied side, the damage to HMS Eskimo kept her in Norway until 31 May 1940. German submarines again suffered torpedo failures, when and fired at the departing Warspite on 14 April.

The remaining German destroyers (Wolfgang Zenker, Georg Thiele, Bernd von Arnim and Hans Lüdemann) retreated into Rombaksfjord and were scuttled soon after. The only German ship which survived within the port area was the submarine U-51.

The Germans lost over 1,000 men, a U-boat, and eight destroyers.[38] With the losses from the previous battle this constituted 50% of the Kriegsmarine's destroyer strength.

It was reported by the Germans that shipwrecked Germans from Erich Giese were fired upon by British artillery and machine guns during the engagement.[39]

About 2,600 survivors were organised into an improvised marine infantry unit, the Gebirgsmarine and fought with the 139. Gebirgsjägerregiment in the subsequent land battle.[40] Although unsuited for combat in the mountainous terrain around Narvik, the shipwrecked sailors manned the two 10.51NaN1 FlaK guns and the 11 light anti-aircraft guns salvaged from the ships sunk during the naval battles and conducted defensive operations.[5] The sailors were armed from the stocks captured at the Norwegian army base Elvegårdsmoen, more than 8,000 Krag-Jørgensen rifles and 315 machine guns intended for the mobilisation of Norwegian army units in the Narvik area.[41]

Later naval operations

After the naval battles of Narvik, the port and its surroundings remained in German hands, as no Allied forces were available to be landed there. Naval operations were limited at this stage to shore bombardment, as Narvik was not a primary Allied objective.

Among others, the Polish destroyers Grom, Burza and Błyskawica took part in these operations, during which Grom was sunk by German aircraft on 4 May 1940, with the loss of 59 sailors.

Land battle

Conflict:Battle of Narvik
Partof:the Second World War
Date:9 April–8 June 1940
Place:Nordland and Troms, Norway
Result:Allied victory and subsequent withdrawal
Combatant1: Norway

United Kingdom
Poland
Combatant2: Germany
Commander2: Eduard Dietl
Strength1: Norwegian 6th Division
Three battalions of Chasseurs Alpins
Two battalions of 13th Demi-Brigade of the Foreign Legion
342e CACC (15 Hotchkiss H35 tanks)
Four British battalions
Four battalions of the Polish Independent Highland Brigade
Total: 24,500 men
Strength2: 2,000 Gebirgsjäger (mostly from Austria[42])
2,600 sailors
1,000 FallschirmjägersTotal: 5,600 men

During the Norwegian Campaign, Narvik and its surrounding area saw significant fighting, initially from 9 April between German and Norwegian forces, subsequently between Allied and German forces, conducted by the Norwegian 6th Division of the Norwegian Army as well as by an Allied expeditionary corps until 9 June 1940. Unlike the campaign in southern Norway, the Allied troops in Narvik would eventually outnumber the Norwegian troops. Five nations participated in the fighting. From 5–10 May, the fighting in the Narvik area was the only active theatre of land war in the Second World War.

At the outset, the position of the German commander—Dietl—was not good: his 2,000 troops were outnumbered. After the German destroyers had been sunk, however, about 2,600 German sailors joined in the land battle. Another 290 German specialists travelled via Sweden posing as health care workers. During the last three to four weeks, the Germans were also reinforced by about 1,000 men air dropped over Bjørnfjell, thus bringing the total number of Germans to around 5,600. Their position and outlook changed from good to dire several times. On occasions, the entire operation was controlled directly from the German High Command in Berlin; Hitler's mood was reportedly swinging heavily and he repeatedly contemplated withdrawal. Intelligence agents captured later in the war also stated that Dietl himself had been considering crossing the Swedish frontier with his troops to be interned, until the German agent Marina Lee infiltrated Auchinleck's headquarters at Tromsø and obtained the British battle plan;[43] however, the accuracy of this allegation has been questioned.[44] The Norwegian force—under General Carl Gustav Fleischer—eventually reached 8,000–10,000 men after a few weeks. The total number of Allied troops in the campaign—in and around Narvik—reached 24,500 men.[45]

The early phase of the invasion was marked by the German advantage of surprise. Norwegian troops in northern Norway had been called out on a three-month neutrality watch during the winter of 1939/1940, and so they had trained together. From 9–25 April, the Norwegian forces suffered three catastrophes. First, the forces protecting Narvik were unable to resist the Germans due to the commanding officer—the later NS Hird commander Colonel Konrad Sundlo—refusing to fight the invaders; second, around 200 soldiers from the Narvik garrison who had escaped capture and were blocking the railway to Sweden were caught by surprise while resting at Bjørnfjell, most of the men being captured; third, I/IR12 (1st battalion of Infantry Regiment 12) sent to hold Gratangsbotn was attacked by surprise while in camp, suffering casualties that ruined its spirit and effectively knocked it out of the remainder of the campaign.

From Denmark, a battalion-sized detachment of the Luftwaffe's Regiment General Göring, commanded by Hauptmann Kluge was sent by sea to Oslo, in April, being engaged alongside the Army first in the advance to Trondheim, then north up into the Arctic Circle to take the port of Bodø and relieve the pressure on the beleaguered élite Gebirgsjäger further north at Narvik.[46]

Due to mounting Norwegian pressure and difficulties with bringing up supplies to the forward lying troops, the Germans abandoned Gratangsbotn and withdrew from the hill Lapphaugen and the valley Gratangsdalen, following the Battle of Gratangen. In the beginning of May, the Norwegians started an advance southwards towards Narvik. Once it became clear that the Allies would mount the main invasion of Narvik itself in mid-May, the Norwegian direction altered towards Bjørnfjell. The British arrived first and set up headquarters in Harstad on 14 April. In the following days, three battalions were deployed mainly at Sjøvegan in Skånland Municipality (where a naval base was established) and at Bogen. Later, they were deployed south of the Ofotfjord, at Ballangen and Håkvik.The initial British detachment was reinforced on 28 April by a French expeditionary force (Corps expéditionnaire français en Scandinavie, CEFS), led by General Antoine Béthouart and composed of mountain troops. Three battalions of Alpine troops and two battalions of 13th Demi-Brigade of the Foreign Legion[47] [48] were deployed both north and south of the Ofotfjord, but later, the north would be the main French area of operation. Four Polish battalions arrived on 9 May. They were first deployed north of the Ofotfjord, but later redeployed to the area south of the fjord. In early June they were formed into the Polish Podhale Independent Highland Brigade under General Zygmunt Bohusz-Szyszko and part of CEFS.In addition, the Allies had difficulty in deciding how best to retake Narvik and the iron ore railway. There was no unified command for the troops facing the Germans at Narvik: the Norwegians and the Allies retained separate commanders and cooperation between them was not always smooth. Even within the British forces, the Army and Navy commanders—Major-General Pierse J. Mackesy and Admiral of the Fleet William Boyle, Lord Cork—had difficulty cooperating: Cork advocated a swift and direct attack from the sea while Mackesy advocated a cautious approach from both sides of the Ofotfjord. Consequent to this, on 21 April, Lord Cork was given supreme command of all Allied forces.[49]

In the second week of May, the Norwegian advances against the Germans east of Gratangseidet were the most significant movements on the Narvik front. In addition, on the Norwegians' right flank French alpine troops advanced up the Laberg valley, supported by a company of Norwegian ski troops. In the south, the Allies did not have much success, and in the north of the Ofotfjord, they were not making any progress. The Norwegians continued their successful mountain campaign, and in mid-May the Allies took the initiative and achieved significant victories. Both Paris and London had been growing impatient with the slow progress in Narvik, and the French commander—Béthouart—had pressed for more action.

The cautious approach on land was abandoned and an amphibious attack was launched at around midnight on 12 May. This was directed at Bjerkvik and was preceded by a naval bombardment from British warships in Herjangsfjord. Then landing craft put ashore French Foreign Legionnaires, supported by five French Hotchkiss H39 light tanks of the 342e CACC (Compagnie Autonome de Chars de Combat/ Independent Tank Company), which successfully attacked Bjerkvik, the Elvegårdsmoen army camp and advanced northeast to where the Germans were withdrawing and south along the east side of Herjangsfjord. The plan also required Polish troops to advance toward Bjerkvik from land on the west side of the fjord, but heavy terrain delayed them and they did not arrive before Bjerkvik was taken. It had also been part of the plan for French and Norwegian troops to advance from the north in order to box the Germans in, but cooperation problems between the Norwegian and French commanders left a gap through which the Germans escaped. Despite this, the Allies had a clear path north of Narvik and planned to attack over Rombaksfjord.

It had been anticipated in London that as the buildup of troops in Narvik slowly continued, a corps headquarters would be needed to exercise effective control.[50] On 11 May, Lieutenant-General Claude Auchinleck arrived in Narvik, and on 13 May assumed leadership of the Allied land and air forces (under Lord Cork's overall command), which at this time was designated the North-Western Expeditionary Force.[51] It was clear to the Allies that once Narvik was captured, its long-term retention would depend on permanently holding the town of Bodø to the south in Nordland which was on the route of the German advance from Trondheim. Consequently, Auchinleck redeployed all British troops to concentrate on this southern enterprise, and appointed French Brigadier-General Béthouart—an expert in both mountain and winter warfare—to command the French and Polish troops, which would be responsible for operations in the Narvik area in conjunction with Norwegian forces.[52]

Again, the attack was stalled while the Allies waited for air support to be fully established from Bardufoss. At 23:40 on 27 May, a naval bombardment commenced from the north. Two French and one Norwegian battalions would be transported across the Rombaksfjord and advance on Narvik from the north. In the south, the Polish battalions would advance toward Ankenes and inner Beisfjord. The maximum capacity of the landing barges was 290 men, and these troops could not be reinforced for 45 minutes. These first troops were able to get a foothold on Ornes by the time the rest of the French and the Norwegians were landed. The French moved west toward the city and east along the railway. The Norwegians moved toward Taraldsvik mountain, circled around and moved down toward the city. The German commander decided to evacuate before 07:00 and retired along Beisfjord. This was the first major Allied victory on land.[53]

Operation Alphabet

See main article: Operation Alphabet.

It seemed now that it was only a matter of time before the Germans would have to surrender. They were pushed from the north by the Norwegians, from the west by the French and from the southwest by the Poles. It appeared that Bjørnfjell would be the Germans' last stand, but events elsewhere in Europe came to their rescue. London had already secretly decided to evacuate on 24 May and that became apparent in the following days. On the night of 24/25 May, Lord Cork received orders to retreat, but under cover so the Germans would be prevented from interfering. The Allied commanders agreed that an attack on Narvik would disguise the retreat and allow the destruction of the iron ore harbour.

The Norwegian government and commanders were first told in early June and the news was met with disbelief and bitterness. The Norwegians still hoped to defeat the Germans alone and, as late as 5 June, one of the two Norwegian brigades was ordered to attack. The Norwegian government also explored the possibility of creating a neutral, but free Northern Norway. This plan proved futile, and on 7 June the King and government were evacuated to Britain. All Allied troops were evacuated from Narvik between 4 and 8 June.

Three Polish passenger ships, MS Sobieski, Batory and Chrobry, took part in the evacuation operation. Chrobry was sunk on 14–15 May by German bombers. On 8 June, General Dietl retook Narvik, and on 10 June the last Norwegian forces in Norway surrendered.

Operation Juno

See main article: Operation Juno.

On 7 June, the British aircraft carrier had taken on board 10 Gloster Gladiators and eight Hawker Hurricanes from 46 Squadron and 263 Squadron Royal Air Force (RAF). These were flown off from land bases to keep them from being destroyed in the evacuation. Glorious left a larger convoy to proceed independently. The next day, while sailing through the Norwegian Sea to return to Scapa Flow, the carrier and her escorts—the destroyers and —were intercepted by the German battlecruisers and . The carrier and her escorts were sunk with the loss of more than 1,500 men. Scharnhorst was badly damaged by a torpedo from Acasta and both German vessels were hit by a number of medium shells. The damage to the German ships was sufficient to cause the Germans to retire to Trondheim, which allowed the safe passage of the evacuation convoy through the area later that day.

Aftermath

The British had drafted plans to land in Narvik before the German invasion; troops and supplies had been loaded onto ships when they executed their mining operation on 8 April. These had been hastily unloaded when German ships were spotted northbound because the British thought that the German ships were trying to break into the Atlantic to avoid being trapped in German ports and wanted all their ships available to intercept the German fleet. The confusion dogged the troops for weeks, men and equipment were shipped to Norway separately without clear landing sites and orders were changed while en route. It became apparent that the Allies were confused by the many small and large fjords and bays and could not decide where it would be best to start; British, French and Polish units rapidly relieved each other which added to the lack of local knowledge.

The cold and snow was a common enemy for all troops at Narvik but most of the Allies were poorly prepared for it. The Norwegians were the only ones fully equipped with skis and able to use them. The British tried skis but their troops were largely untrained and supply was scarce. German sailors faced the same problems, even within the Gebirgsjäger (mountain troops) and French mountain specialists, only a few units were equipped with skis and the Polish mountain brigade had no mountain training.

Most troops were untested in battle. The Gebirgsjäger had participated in the invasion of Poland and some of the troops that had been air dropped over Bjørnfjell had fought in the Netherlands. Some of the French Foreign Legionnaires came directly from fighting in North Africa and most of the Polish officers and many of the soldiers had participated in the defence of Poland, some even in the Spanish Civil War and were highly motivated.[54]

The Allies had sea and air superiority until the very last stage of the operation, but did not take full advantage. The Germans lost the naval battle, but achieved the main goal of their operation: the successful Operation Weserübung and occupation of Norway. Around Narvik, German naval losses were high: they lost 10 destroyers (50 percent of their entire destroyer force), one submarine, and several support ships. In exchange, they sank one aircraft carrier, four Allied destroyers and damaged several others. The reason for their defeat lay in the German plans, which made it impossible for their destroyers to retire quickly, even if they had had adequate supplies. This was compounded by the design of German destroyers: despite their relatively large size and armament, they had inadequate fuel and ammunition storage. The British forces achieved an indisputable local naval victory but were unprepared to follow it up with any land operation. This allowed the Germans to consolidate their foothold in Norway and made the subsequent Allied counter-invasion more difficult.

Post-war

In 1964, a war museum opened in Narvik; since 2016, the collections have been displayed in the Narvik War Museum—located inside the Narvik War and Peace Centre.[55] [56]

Parts of the bow of the German destroyer Georg Thiele remain visible above the water in Rombaksbotn to this day. The wrecks at Narvik remain popular diving spots, although some are off-limits because they still contain undetonated ammunition.[57] Three of the German destroyers were raised in 1964 and moved to Framnesodden, near Eidsvoid, to clear the shipping lane. The destroyers Anton Schmitt, Diether von Roeder, and Wilhelm Heidkamp rest in 12m (39feet) of water there and were opened for diving. A number of other wrecks are also accessible, but most have been preserved as historic sites and it is forbidden to dive to them.[58]

Medals

At least 1,200 French, British, and Polish participants in the battle were awarded the Norwegian War Cross for their contribution to the battle. Among the Norwegians who took part in the battle, only the top two military leaders were awarded the medal. Norwegian media has complained about this limited award.[59]

All German forces (8,577 military personnel) who partook in the battles of Narvik were awarded with the Narvik Shield.

See also

References

68.4206°N 17.56°W

Notes and References

  1. https://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/ww2/A1148483 Narvik Naval Battle
  2. Brown 2000: 3
  3. Web site: HyperWar: The Campaign in Norway [Chapter II|website=www.ibiblio.org].
  4. Web site: HyperWar: The Campaign in Norway [Chapter III]]. www.ibiblio.org.
  5. Jaklin 2006: 31
  6. Kristiansen 2006: 35
  7. Web site: Naval Events, April 1940, Part 2 of 4 . Don Kindell . 17 September 2008 . Naval-History.Net . 14 January 2010.
  8. Hauge 1995: 184
  9. Book: Brennecke, Jochen. The Hunters and the Hunted. 27 January 2003. Naval Institute Press. Google Books. 48. 9781591140917 .
  10. Bjørnsen 1977: 95
  11. Web site: Falne og omkomne under siste krig . 2008-11-07 . Rune Bang . Lurøy lokalhistorie og fotoarkiv . no . 24 July 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110724175429/http://www.luroy.folkebibl.no/artikkel_76_lokalhist.htm . dead .
  12. Hauge 1995: 184, 186
  13. O'Hara 2004: 30
  14. Lunde, Henrik O. (2009). Hitler's Pre-Emptive War 175, 181–182
  15. Book: Williamson 2003: 34. 21 November 2003. Bloomsbury USA . 9781841765044.
  16. Book: Weinberg, Gerhard L.. A World at Arms: A Global History of World War II. 28 March 2005. Cambridge University Press. Google Books. 114–115. 9780521618267 .
  17. Book: O'Hara, Vincent P.. The German Fleet at War, 1939–1945. 27 January 2004. Naval Institute Press. Google Books. 32. 9781591146513 .
  18. Waage 1963: 56
  19. Book: Philbin, Tobias R.. The Lure of Neptune: German-Soviet Naval Collaboration and Ambitions, 1919–1941. 27 January 1994. Univ of South Carolina Press. Google Books. 102, 110, 113–114. 9780872499928 .
  20. Kovalev . Sergey . The Basis Nord Mystery . Oil of Russia International Quarterly Edition . 2 . 2004 . 5 February 2009 . 29 January 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230129224528/https://oilru.com/or/16/204/ . dead .
  21. Web site: Naval Events, April 1940, Part 1 of 4 . Don Kindell . 17 September 2008 . Naval-History.Net . 10 January 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110724044508/http://www.royalnavy-history.net/xDKWW2-4004-13APR01.htm . 24 July 2011 .
  22. Book: Duffy, James P.. Hitler's Secret Pirate Fleet: The Deadliest Ships of World War II. 1 May 2005. U of Nebraska Press. Google Books. 128. 0803266529 .
  23. Berg 1997: 35
  24. Book: O'Hara, Vincent P.. The German Fleet at War, 1939-1945. 27 January 2004. Naval Institute Press. Google Books. 32. 9781591146513 .
  25. Book: Dildy 2007: 47 . 9781846031175 . Dildy . Doug . 24 April 2007 . Bloomsbury USA .
  26. Sivertsen 2000: 23
  27. Brown 2000: 44
  28. Berg 1997: 49
  29. Sivertsen 2000: 23–24
  30. Hauge 1995: 189
  31. Williamson 2003: 35
  32. Dania i Norwegia 1940, Osprey Publishing p. 34
  33. Web site: First Battle of Narvik. German Naval History.com. 25 January 2011.
  34. Dickens 1974: 119-123
  35. Web site: The Type IXB U-boat U-64 – German U-boats of WWII – uboat.net. uboat.net.
  36. Dickens 1974: 131–134
  37. Dickens 1997: 138
  38. Web site: Order of Battle, Second Battle of Narvik, 13 April 1940 . Dan. Muir. NavWeaps.com. 25 January 2005. https://web.archive.org/web/20041228102802/http://www.navweaps.com/index_oob/OOB_WWII_Atlantic/OOB_WWII_Narvik_Second.htm. 28 December 2004 . live. – British and German Order of Battle.
  39. Web site: Tötung von Schiffbrüchigen. www.wlb-stuttgart.de.
  40. Web site: Second Battle of Narvik. German Naval History.com. 25 January 2011.
  41. Waage 1963: 110
  42. vgl. Manfred Scheuch: Österreich im 20. Jahrhundert. Christian Brandstätter, Wien-München 2000. (Abschnitt „1938–1945 Österreich unter der Hitlerherrschaft“, S. 120)
  43. News: The Russian ballerina Nazi spy who aided British defeat in Norway. Alan Travis. The Guardian. 26 August 2010. London.
  44. News: Nazis and Beautiful Spies: How Tittle-Tattle becomes history. https://web.archive.org/web/20100829084755/http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/guywalters/100051670/nazis-and-beautiful-spies-how-tittle-tattle-becomes-history/. dead. 29 August 2010. Guy Walters. The Daily Telegraph. London. 26 August 2010.
  45. Jaklin 2006: 33
  46. Book: Williamson, Gordon. The Hermann Göring Division. 2003. Osprey Publishing. Stephen Andrew. 1-84176-406-X. Oxford. 6. 59364241.
  47. Book: Windrow. Martin. Uniforms of the French Foreign Legion, 1831-1981. Chappell. Michael. 1981. Blandford Press. 0-7137-1010-1. Poole. 112. 7825707.
  48. Book: Windrow, Martin. French Foreign Legion, 1914–1945. 1999. Osprey Publishing. Mike Chappell. 1-85532-761-9. Oxford. 22. 40882248.
  49. Derry 2004: 154.
  50. Derry 2004: 169.
  51. Derry 2004: 200-201.
  52. Derry 2004: 201.
  53. http://kristiansten-festning.no/narvik_landkrigen.htm The land battle (Norwegian)
  54. Dec 1981: 26–29
  55. Christine Baglo, Nytt krigsmuseum i Narvik Dagsavisen, 11 April 2016
  56. Web site: The Narvik War and Peace Centre. Narvik Krigsmuseum.
  57. http://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?31946 George Thiele (Z-2) (+1940)
  58. http://www.xray-mag.com/pdfs/xray05/xray05_part4.pdf Wrecks of Narvik – wreck diving in the Narvik area
  59. Sveinung Berg Bentzrød, Over 1200 glemte helter fra 2. verdenskrig ble lansert – ingen blir dekorert Aftenposten, 6 January 2017