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Under crushing fire from Admiral Hipper's guns, HMS Glowworm made a smokescreen to try and get close enough to fire torpedoes. |
On the morning of April 8, 1940. the HMS
Glowworm was on her way to rejoin the HMS
Renown when she encountered the German destroyers
Z11 Bernd von Arnim and
Z18 Hans Lüdemann in the heavy fog before 8:00 a.m. The destroyers were part of a German naval detachment, led by the heavy cruiser
Admiral Hipper, on its way to land troops at Trondheim as part of
Unternehmen Weserübung.
Glowworm opened fire and the German destroyers attempted to disengage, signalling for help. The request was soon answered by
Admiral Hipper which spotted
Glowworm at 09:50. Hipper initially had difficulty in distinguishing
Glowworm from
von Arnim, but opened fire eight minutes later at a range of 9,200 yards with her 8.0 inch main guns.
Glowworm was hit by
Hipper’s fourth salvo and she started making smoke. She turned into her own smoke in an attempt to break visual contact with
Hipper, but the cruiser’s radar-directed guns were not affected by the smoke. When the destroyer emerged from her smoke the range was now short enough that the cruiser’s 4.1 inch guns could fire.
Glowworm’s radio room, bridge, and forward 4.7-inch gun were all destroyed, and she received additional hits in the engine room, the captain’s day cabin, and finally the mast. As this crashed down, it caused a short circuit of the wiring, causing the ship’s siren to start a banshee wail.
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HMS Glowworm on fire. |
At 10:10, Lieutenant Commander Gerard Broadmead Roope fired five torpedoes from one mounting at a range of 870 yards, but all missed because Captain Hellmuth Heye had kept Hipper’s bow pointed at Glowworm throughout the battle to minimize his risk from torpedoes. The destroyer fell back through her smoke screen to buy time to get her second torpedo mount working, but Heye followed Glowworm through the smoke to finish her off before she could fire the rest of her torpedoes. The two ships were very close when Hipper emerged from the smoke and Roope ordered a hard turn to starboard to reduce the range and possibly ram the cruiser. Hipper was slow to answer her helm and Glowworm struck the cruiser just abaft the anchor. The collision broke off Glowworm’s bow and the rest of the ship scraped along Hipper’s side, gouging open several holes in the latter’s hull and destroying her forward starboard torpedo mounting. One German sailor was knocked overboard by the collision.
Hipper took on some 500 tonnes of water before the leaks could be isolated, but was not seriously damaged.
Glowworm was on fire when she drifted clear and her boilers exploded at 10:24, taking 109 of her crew with her.
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