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Career | |
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Laid Down: | 28 August 1936 |
Launched: | 5 October 1937 |
Commissioned: | 9 November 1938 |
Lost: | 18 December 1940 |
Fate: | sunk, either by Italian torpedo boats or mines |
General Characteristics | |
Length: | 274 feet |
Beam: | 26.5 feet |
Draft: | 16.3 feet |
Displacement: | 1095 tons |
Speed: | 15.25 knots surfaced, 9 knots submerged |
Complement: | 59 officers and men |
Armament: | ten 21-inch torpedo tubes (6 bow, 4 external), one 4-inch quick-firing Mk.XII gun |
When the Admiralty was notified that His Majesty's Government would declare war on Germany, five submarines of the Second Flotilla were ordered to patrol on the Obrestad line[?] off Norway on 24 August 1939. Thus, on 3 September all British submarines were in their combat patrol sectors.
At 1955 on 10 September 1939, Triton had surfaced, fixed a position off the Obrestad Light[?], set a slow zigzag patrol, and began charging batteries. Lieutenant Commander Steel, having verified that the area was clear and having posted lookouts, gave the bridge to the Officer of the Watch (OOW) and went below, leaving orders that he was to be called if anything unusual appeared. At 2045, he was called to the bridge when an object in the water could be seen very fine on the port bow.
Steel ordered propulsion shifted to the main motors, the signalman to the bridge, and torpedo tubes 7 and 8 readied for firing. The object was recognised as a submarine low in the water.
Once on the bridge, the signalman sent three challenges over several minutes with the box lamp, none of which were answered. Steel wondered if the boat could be HMS Oxley[?], which should have been patrolling next in line, but some distance away. Steel and his bridge crew studied the silhouette, but could not distinguish what type of submarine it was.
A fourth challenge was sent: three green rifle-grenade flares. After firing, Steel counted slowly to 15 and then decided that they were seeing a German U-boat. He ordered tubes 7 and 8 fired with a three-second interval. Less than a minute later, an explosion was heard.
Triton moved into the area to investigate and heard cries for help. The light from the Aldis lamp revealed three men floundering amid oil and debris.
Lieutenant Guy C. I. St.B. Watkins and Lieutenant Harry A. Stacey entered the water and rescued Lieutenant Commander H.G. Bowerman, Oxley's commanding officer, as well as Able Seaman Gluckes, a lookout. The third person in the water, Lieutenant F.K. Manley, was seen to be swimming strongly when he suddenly sank from view. Neither Manley's body nor any other survivors from Oxley were found.
A Board of Enquiry found that Steel had done all he reasonably could in the circumstances. Oxley was out of position, Triton had acted correctly, and the first Allied submarine casualty of World War II was due to "friendly fire." During the war, the loss of Oxley was attributed to an accidental explosion. After the war, it was explained to have been a collision with Triton. The truth not was revealed until the 1950s.
Triton continued her war patrols, first in Baltic waters. On 10 April 1940, she sank the German steamers Friedenau, Weibert, and patrol vessel Rau in the Kattegat. She shifted patrol areas to the Mediterranean Sea, basing her operations in Alexandria. During her first patrol in the Gulf of Genoa[?], Lieutenant Watkins, now Triton's commanding officer, decided to enter the harbor of Savona[?]. She found a supply ship at anchor in the harbor, at which she fired a single torpedo and claimed an 8000-ton kill, though the sinking could not be confirmed. No other ships were available to torpedo, so Watkins surfaced Triton. The submarine began shelling a large factory and a gas works on the shore, damaging both of them before departing.
On 28 November 1940, Triton left Malta for a patrol in the southern Adriatic Sea. On 6 December, she picke up an distress message from the Italian merchant Olimpia and set course to intercept and finish her off. Neither Olimpia nor Triton was heard from again. Triton was declared lost will all hands on 18 December. The Italians claimed that she was sunk by torpedo boats, probably Confienza, possibly by Clio, but the date they cite was several days after contact was lost. The British claimed that she was sunk by naval mines in the Strait of Otranto[?].
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