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Umpire 

(N82)
 
U Class
U Grp1
Umpire
Una
Unbeaten
Undaunted
Undine
Union
Unique
Unity
Upholder
Upright
Urchin
Urge
Ursula
Usk
Utmost
U Grp2
Dolfijn
Dzik
P32
P33
P36
P38
P39
P48
Ultimatum
Ultor
Umbra
Unbending
Unbroken
Unison
United
Universal
Unrivalled
Unruffled
Unruly
Unseen
Unshaken
Unsparing
Unswerving
Untamed
Untiring
Uproar
Upstart
Uredd
Usurper
Uther
Vandal
Varangian
Varne
Vox
Laid Down: 01-01-1904

Launched:

30-12-1940 Completed: 10-07-1941
Builder: Vickers (Barrow) Build Group: U Grp1
Fate: Mistaken for a U boat by anti submarine trawler Peter Hendriks off the Wash and rammed on 19 July 1941

Roll Of Honour

V E Baker  Able Seaman
P C Banister  Lieutenant
C Beddie  Acting Leading Telegraphist
J A Duffy  Leading Seaman
C H Foster  Engine Room Artificer
SAG Godden  Sub-Lieutenant
H W Henson  Telegraphist
P J Hoey  Acting Leading Seaman
W J Houston  Stoker 1
V G Phillips  Stoker 1
R Roberts  Able Seaman
F Sumner  Able Seaman
R T Town  Acting Leading Stoker
F Welham  Ordinary Seaman

Ex P31

Events

19-07-1941:HMS Umpire left Chatham on 19th July 1941 bound for the Clyde prior to joining the 3rd Submarine Flotilla at Dunoon. Having stopped over night at Sheerness she joined up with a northbound convoy, although she was not part of the convoy escort.

Umpire developed mechanical problems and began to fall behind the convoy which was kept informed of the submarines progress by radio. At midnight the northbound convoy passed a southbound convoy as expected but Umpire following behind was surprised to see the convoys pass starboard to starboard rather than the normal port to port. Umpire altered her course to port as the first few vessels passed to Umpire's starboard side but the trawler Peter Hendriks remained on a collision course.

As the two vessels came together a gash was torn in Umpire's side sending her to the bottom. 22 of her crew went down with the ship

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Specification

Length overall  190ft 7in
Beam  15ft 9in
Depth  15ft 9in
Displacement   630 tons (surface) / 730 tons (submerged)
Diving Depth  200 feet
Speed  11.5 knots (surface) / 9 knots (submerged)
No. of shafts  2
Armament  (i) 4 21-inch bow tubes (8 torpedoes carried). (ii) 1 3-inch gun, 3 0.303-inch machine-guns
Endurance  Surface: 4050 miles at 10 knots (design) / Submerged: 23 miles at 8 knots or 170 miles at 2.5 knots (design)
Complement   33
Note  (i) The first seven U Class submarines had two additional external bow tubes installed and carried 10 torpedoes. (ii) Undine and Unity, which were not fitted with the 3-inch gun, had 27-man complements.

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U Class
U Grp1
Umpire
Una
Unbeaten
Undaunted
Undine
Union
Unique
Unity
Upholder
Upright
Urchin
Urge
Ursula
Usk
Utmost
U Grp2
Dolfijn
Dzik
P32
P33
P36
P38
P39
P48
Ultimatum
Ultor
Umbra
Unbending
Unbroken
Unison
United
Universal
Unrivalled
Unruffled
Unruly
Unseen
Unshaken
Unsparing
Unswerving
Untamed
Untiring
Uproar
Upstart
Uredd
Usurper
Uther
Vandal
Varangian
Varne
Vox

U Class

1936 - 1958

The first three U Class submarines were ordered in 1936 to serve as unarmed targets for anti-submarine vessels. But in a change of policy (perhaps with a foreboding of war) Undine, Unity and Ursula laid down at Vickers in February 1937, were modified during construction to accommodate six bow tubes (four internal and two external) so that they could undertake short offensive missions. To allow the installation of a small deck gun, the hull forward of the conning tower was reinforced. From their first sea trials, the three U boats demonstrated excellent handling and manoeuvrability, which, combined with ease of production and low cost, made the design particularly successful.

In 1939, a realisation of the inevitability of war and that the small size of the U boats made them particularly suitable for North Sea and Mediterranean operations, prompted the Admiralty to put the class into quantity production. Twelve identical vessels were ordered, but of these only four were eventually fitted with six bow tubes.

Unidine
Unidine entering Walney Channel in October 1938

The two external tubes, and the bulbous bow they formed, were removed from the remaining boats because the notable bow wave the bulge created when running at periscope depth made it difficult to keep the boat trimmed longitudinally.

Under the 1940 and 1941 War Programmes, a further 41 U boats were ordered, but only 34 were completed. This second group of U Class submarines did not differ substantially from the first, but an approximate increase of 5 feet in the stern gave them a more streamlined shape aft and improved the flow of water over the propellers.

In addition to their four 21-inch stern tubes and three 0.303-inch portable machine-guns, the U boats were fitted with a 3-inch gun forward of the conning tower. However, as this was an afterthought to the original design, no separate hatch was fitted for the gun crew or ammunition. This resulted in the conning tower becoming extremely crowded before and after gun action and, if the gun crew were employed, rapid crash-diving was impossible.

The limited offensive potential of individual U boats was compensated for by the considerable number that were commissioned in a short period of time, and these small and nimble vessels became one of the most important operational classes in the Second World War, with a record that can fairly be described as heroic.

The wartime submarine fleet relied almost entirely on the S, T and U Classes. This policy was very different to that of the First World War (when some 12 new classes were developed), and was pursued so as to cause the minimum interference with the shipbuilders' production programme.

The majority of the 49 commissioned U boats (all but two of which were built by Vickers) served with the Second Flotilla based at Malta, and achieved notable successes against warships and merchantmen. Two U boats, stationed in the Sicilian Channel, sank several major Italian merchant ships, which were transporting troops and supplies to Africa. Like other British boats, the U Class were particularly successful against submarines - in the Mediterranean alone, five Barrow-boats (Upholder, Ultimatum, Unbeaten, Unruly and United) sank a total of eight: six Italian and two German.

Unity
The Vickers Built Unity which served her short career in the hostile environment of the North Sea

During the war, 19 boats of the class were lost on active service - 13 in the Mediterranean and six in the Atlantic and North Sea. Another submarine Untamed, sank in May 1943, but was salvaged two months later and returned to service as HMS Vitality. From 1941, numerous boats were ceded to Poland, USSR, Holland, Norway and Free France, and of these several were lost in action.

One U Class submarine that is famous for the part it played during the Second World War is the Vickers-built Upholder, which probably had the finest fighting record of any Allied submarine of the period.

After the war, many of the surviving U Class submarines were put into reserve or lent or sold to other countries. Some boats were later returned by foreign navies to be scrapped and the last of the Royal Navy U boats were broken up in 1950.

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