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Narwhal 

(N45)
 
Porpoise Class
Porpoise 1
Cachalot
Grampus
Narwhal
P411
P412
P413
Porpoise
Rorqual
Seal
Porpoise 2
Cachalot
Finwhale
Grampus
Narwhal
Porpoise
Rorqual
Sealion
Walrus
Laid Down: 29-05-1934

Launched:

29-08-1935 Completed: 28-02-1936
Builder: Vickers (Barrow) Build Group: Porpoise 1
Fate: 23 July 1940 - Bombed and sunk, probably as a result of German decoding of wireless transmissions.

Roll Of Honour

J Ackery  Lieutenant (E) DSC
J Ackroyd  Telegraphist
T Andrews  Engine Room Artificer 2
E Austin  Petty Officer
A Baillie  Telegraphist
C Blyth  Stoker 1
K Brooks  Able Seaman
A Brown  Able Seaman
R Buckland  Able Seaman
R Burch  Lieutenant Commander DSO
J Burton  Able Seaman
L Cordery  Leading Seaman
J Cringle  Lieutenant RNR
H Davis  Stoker 1
W Daw  Signalman
W Denner  Chief Petty Officer
H Duckham  Chief Petty Officer Telegraphist
A Earwaker  Able Seaman
H Elvin  Leading Stoker
W Frost  Stoker 1
E Geeling  Engine Room Artificer 4
H Golding  Engine Room Artificer 4
F Govier  Able Seaman
G Grant  Leading Seaman
C Green  Lieutenant DSO
J Grey  Engine Room Artificer 2
A Hearn  Petty Officer Steward
G Henderson  Engine Room Artificer 3
W Hendy  Leading Stoker
A Horstead  Leading Seaman
G Huelin  Leading Seaman MID
A Jarvis  Petty Officer
W Johns  Engine Room Artificer 4
H Kitching  Stoker 1
G Lawson  Stoker 1
W Marchant  Leading Telegraphist MID
H Marsden  Stoker 1
R Mitchell  Engine Room Artificer 2
J Moor  Able Seaman
F Newell  Able Seaman
J Parish  Leading Stoker MID
T Prior  Stoker 1
C Quin  Leading Seaman MID
T Richlieu  Telegraphist
N Robinson  Petty Officer
A Ross  Stoker Petty Officer
S Simnett  Leading Stoker
F Simpson  Stoker 1
J Smith  Stoker 1
G Stearn  Able Seaman
C Stone  Stoker 1
W Stubbington  Leading Stoker
H Twynam  Lieutenant
G Vincer  Stoker 1
G Wells  Stoker 1
F Whalebone  Chief Petty Officer
S White  Lieutenant Commander
A Wilson  Chief Engine Room Artificer
A Wood  Petty Officer Cook
T Wood  Stoker 1
R Yates  Leading Stoker

Events

04-04-1940:HMS Narwhal lays minefield FD 1 (50 mines) in the North Sea.
13-04-1940:HMS Narwhal lays minefield FD 5 (50 mines) in the Kattegat.
01-05-1940:HMS Narwhal torpedoes and sinks the German troop transport Buenos Aires and torpedoes and damages the German troop transport Bahia Castillo in the Kattegat about 20 nautical miles north of Anholt, Denmark.
01-05-1940:HMS Narwhal lays minefield FD 6 (50 mines) in the Kattegat.
11-05-1940:HMS Narwhal lays minefield FD 12 (50 mines) off Bud, Norway.
03-06-1940:
HMS Narwhal lays minefield FD 16 (50 mines) off Jaederens Point, Norway.
12-06-1940:HMS Narwhal lays minefield FD 19 (50 mines) off Haugesund, Norway.
04-07-1940:HMS Narwhal lays minefield FD 21 (50 mines) north of Kristiansund, Norway.
22-07-1940:HMS Narwhal left the Humber on 22 July for a minelaying mission off Norway, she fails to return

On the afternoon of 23rd July she should have passed through (German) grid square 4856, where an aircraft reported attacking a submarine. This was believed to be Porpoise by the Germans but as Narwhal did not report again, it was assumed this attack sank her.

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Specification

Length overall  289ft
Beam  29ft 10ft¼in
Depth  16ft 9in
Displacement   1768 tons (surface) / 2053 tons (submerged)
Diving Depth  300ft
Speed  Surface 15 knots (design) 16 knots (service) / Submerged 8.75 knots (design) 8.9 knots (service)
No. of shafts  2
Armament  6 21-inch bow tubes (12 torpedoes carried). 1 4-inch gun. 50 Mk XVI mines
Endurance  Surface: 12800 miles maximum (design) 3860 miles at full power or 11500 miles at 8 knots (service) / Submerged: 64 miles at 4 knots (design) 8 miles at 9 knots or 66 miles at 6 knots (service)
Complement   59

Narwhal

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Porpoise Class
Porpoise 1
Cachalot
Grampus
Narwhal
P411
P412
P413
Porpoise
Rorqual
Seal
Porpoise 2
Cachalot
Finwhale
Grampus
Narwhal
Porpoise
Rorqual
Sealion
Walrus

Porpoise Class

1930 - 1946

Minelaying Submarines

The history of Royal Navy minelayers began when six of the E Class submarines ordered in 1914 were built to carry 20 mines in mine tubes in the saddle tanks. E24, the first Royal Navy minelayer, was completed on 9th January 1916 and later that year it was ordered that six submarines of the L Class be fitted with mine tubes in the external tanks. In July 1920, the Naval Staff investigated the need and requirements for submarine minelayers - the main bone of contention being whether the mines should be carried internally or externally. As an experiment, M3 was converted in 1927 to carry mines externally.

Porpoise
Porpoise , who gave her name to a class of six such submarines designed for minelaying

The satisfactory performance of M3 led to the design of a new submarine minelayer, the famous Porpoise Class. Specifically designed for the task of minelaying, six of the class were ordered in the 1930 Programme - the first-of-class Porpoise , Narwhal and Rorqual from Vickers, Grampus and Seal from Chatham and Cachalot from Scotts. Slightly slimmer than the Overseas Patrol Submarine, but with greater displacement, the new class had a capacity to carry 50 standard Mk XVI mines in a full-length deck outside the pressure hull.

During the trials of M3 it was found that whilst the minelaying gear and compensating arrangements to maintain trim were satisfactory, the jigger-type mine-launching equipment required excessive upkeep to ensure its efficiency. Therefore, this equipment was changed in the Porpoise Class to a chain and rack system fitted outside the hull in the superstructure casing. The mines and minelaying gear weighed approximately 54 tons. The conversion of M3 also had an adverse affect on its diving qualities - the time taken to flood the mine casing meant that it took about 5 minutes to dive in calm weather and 13 minutes or more in rough weather. Only by careful design arrangements was this reduced in Porpoise - she could dive, with mines on board, to periscope depth from full buoyancy in 1 minute 32 seconds and, using 0 tank, in 1 minute 14 seconds.

Rorqual
Rorqual , the only Porpoise Class submarine to survive World War II, She was taken out of service in 1946.

The hull form of Porpoise was very similar to that of the Overseas Patrol Submarine, Parthian, but the effect of carrying 50 mines meant that the stern torpedo tubes were deleted and the main engine horsepower was reduced by 25 per cent - resulting in a loss in surface speed. The design diving depth was also reduced, to 300 feet.

Although the external tanks were of 'non-leaking' welded construction, as in the Thames Class, it was thought that if exposed to depth charge attacks leaks would occur and give away the submarine's position. Therefore, the hull form for the Chatham-built Grampus was radically changed (saddle tanks were extended, the pressure hull was altered, etc.) so that oil fuel, which was carried externally in Porpoise , could be carried in internal tanks. This change also increased the main ballast water carried by Grampus by about 100 tons, and at the same time improved the stability and reserve buoyancy of the boat.

Porpoise
Stern view of Porpoise , showing rear minelaying doors

All vessels of the class had balloon tanks, i.e. pressure-tight tanks, in the forward superstructure to balance the buoyancy of the mines aft and prevent the submarine diving stern first.

Built between 1930 and 1938, the six boats of the Porpoise Class were fitted with two Admiralty-designed vertical four-stroke blast-injection six-cylinder diesels that together generated 3300 bhp, giving a surface speed, in service, of 16 knots. Tandem sets of motors on each shaft developed a total of 1630 bhp, giving a submerged service speed of 8.9 knots. Carrying 336 cells in three battery tanks weighing a total of 139 tons, the class had a submerged endurance of 66 miles at 4 knots.

In addition to the 50 mines, the armament of the class consisted of six 21-inch bow torpedo tubes (with 12 torpedoes carried) and a 4-inch gun (a 4.7-inch gun was originally fitted in Porpoise ) with 120 rounds of ammunition - this being chosen as the standard gun to be fitted in Royal Navy submarines. When the gun of Porpoise was changed to the standard calibre a weight saving of about seven tons was achieved.

When the Royal Navy produced a mine which could be laid from a 21-inch torpedo tube, the need for specialised submarine minelayers disappeared. Surprisingly, the introduction of this newly-designed mine did not lead to the redundancy of existing minelayers, and these purpose-built vessels proved extremely successful in the Second World War when used as supply submarines, running precious cargoes to Malta in 1941 and 1942. Their spacious mine-decks were filled with such diverse items as machine-gun ammunition, glycol coolant for Spitfires, and food.

Narwhal
Another Barrow-built Porpoise Class - the Narwhal .

Five of the six submarine minelayers were lost during the war, and the history of the class produces an unhappy diary of events:

  • 5th May, 1940: Seal, the last of the class to be constructed, was captured as a wreck in the Kattegat and recommissioned as a German U-boat. She was finally scrapped in 1941.
     
  • 24th June, 1940: Grampus was lost on active service in the Mediterranean -cause unknown.
     
  • 1st August, 1940: Narwhal was lost on active service off Norway - cause unknown.
     
  • October 1941: Cachalot was lost on active service - further details unknown.
     
  • 19th January, 1945 (approximately) the first of class Porpoise was lost on active service in the Malacca Strait, probably sunk by aircraft.

The era of the large minelaying submarine came to an end when the only surviving member of the Porpoise Class, the Barrow-built Rorqual, was taken out of service in April 1946.

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