:HMS Stratagem

{{Short description|S-class submarine of the Royal Navy}}

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{{EngvarB|date=August 2014}}

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|Ship image=HMS Stratagem.jpg

|Ship caption=Stratagem under way on the River Mersey

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{{Infobox ship career

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|Ship country=United Kingdom

|Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United Kingdom|naval}}

|Ship name=Stratagem

|Ship ordered=3 August 1941

|Ship identification=Pennant number: P234

|Ship awarded=

|Ship builder=Cammell Laird, Birkenhead

|Ship laid down=15 April 1942

|Ship launched=21 June 1943

|Ship christened=

|Ship commissioned=9 October 1943

|Ship fate=Sunk, 22 November 1944

|Ship badge=File:STRATAGEM badge-1-.jpg

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{{Infobox ship characteristics

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|Header caption=

|Ship class=S-class submarine

|Ship displacement=* {{cvt|865|LT|t}} (surfaced)

  • {{convert|990|LT|t}} (submerged)

|Ship length={{cvt|217|ft|m|1}}

|Ship beam={{cvt|23|ft|9|in|m|1}}

|Ship draught={{cvt|14|ft|8|in|1}}

|Ship power=* {{cvt|1900|bhp|kW|lk=in|abbr=on}} (diesel)

  • {{convert|1300|hp|kW|abbr=on}} (electric)

|Ship propulsion=* 2 × diesel engines

|Ship speed=* {{cvt|15|kn|lk=in}} (surfaced)

  • {{convert|10|kn|abbr=on}} (submerged)

|Ship range={{cvt|6000|nmi|lk=in}} at {{convert|10|kn}} (surfaced); {{cvt|120|nmi}} at {{convert|3|kn}}

|Ship test depth={{cvt|300|ft|1}} (submerged)

|Ship complement=48

|Ship sensors=* Type 129AR or 138 ASDIC

|Ship armament=* 7 × British 21-inch torpedo torpedo tubes (6 × bow, 1 × stern)

|Ship notes=

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HMS Stratagem was a third-batch S-class submarine built for the Royal Navy during World War II. Completed in 1943, she made her first war patrol off Norway before she was sent to the Far East, where she conducted three war patrols. On her second, she shelled installations on a Japanese-held island. Her only success came on her last patrol, when she torpedoed and sank a Japanese oil tanker. Soon after, she was spotted by aircraft and depth charged by a destroyer. She was forced to surface, and was scuttled to prevent her capture. Ten crew members escaped the sinking submarine and were taken prisoner, of whom only three survived the war.

Design and description

File:British S-class submarine schematic drawing.jpg

The S-class submarines were designed to patrol the restricted waters of the North Sea and the Mediterranean Sea. The third batch was slightly enlarged and improved over the preceding second batch of the S class. The submarines had a length of {{convert|217|ft|m|1}} overall, a beam of {{convert|23|ft|9|in|m|1}} and a draught of {{convert|14|ft|8|in|m|1}}. They displaced {{convert|865|LT|t}} on the surface and {{convert|990|LT|t}} submerged.Akermann, p. 341 The S-class submarines had a crew of 48 officers and ratings. They had a diving depth of {{convert|300|ft|0}}.McCartney, p. 7

For surface running, the boats were powered by two {{convert|950|bhp|lk=in|0|adj=on}} diesel engines, each driving one propeller shaft. When submerged each propeller was driven by a {{convert|650|hp|0|adj=on}} electric motor. They could reach {{convert|15|kn|lk=in}} on the surface and {{convert|10|kn}} underwater.Bagnasco, p. 110 On the surface, the third batch boats had a range of {{convert|6000|nmi|lk=in}} at {{convert|10|kn}} and {{convert|120|nmi|abbr=on}} at {{convert|3|kn}} submerged.

The boats were armed with seven 21-inch (533 mm) torpedo tubes. A half-dozen of these were in the bow, and one external tube was mounted in the stern. They carried six reload torpedoes for the bow tubes for a grand total of thirteen torpedoes. Twelve mines could be carried in lieu of the internally stowed torpedoes. They were also armed with a 3-inch (76 mm) deck gun.Chesneau, pp. 51–52 It is uncertain if Stratagem was completed with a Oerlikon 20 mm cannon light AA gun or had one added later. The third-batch S-class boats were fitted with either a Type 129AR or 138 ASDIC system and a Type 291 or 291W early-warning radar.Akermann, pp. 341, 345

Construction and career

HMS Stratagem was a third-group S-class submarine and was ordered as part of the 1941 Naval Programme on 3 August 1941. She was laid down in the Cammell Laird shipyard in Birkenhead on 15 April 1942 and launched on 21 June 1943.Akermann, p. 340 On 24 September 1943, Stratagem sailed to Holy Loch, where she was commissioned into the Royal Navy on 9 October.{{cite web |url=https://uboat.net/allies/warships/ship/3451.html |title=HMS Stratagem (P 234) |work=Uboat.net |access-date=25 February 2019}} Stratagem has so far been the only Royal Navy ship with this name.Akermann, p. 348

After training in several port areas, the boat departed Lerwick for a work-up patrol off Norway on 3 January 1944. She returned less than two weeks later without having sighted any enemy ships.

Stratagem then had her battery changed at Sheerness on 23 January. The boat conducted additional training exercises until 3 March, when she was sent south to Gibraltar, and arrived on 14 April. The submarine was now commanded by Lt. C. R. Pelly.{{refn|Full name: Clifford Raymond Pelly}} Along with {{HMS|Sickle}} and {{HMS|Spirit}}, Stratagem sailed to Malta in convoy USG 38 and then continued independently to Port Said before transiting the Suez Canal with a stop at Aden and finally arriving at Trincomalee, Ceylon, on 27 May.

=Far East=

Stratagem{{'}}s first war patrol in the Far East started on 27 June 1944, when she departed Trincomalee to operate off the Andaman Islands. On 1 July, she fired four torpedoes at a Japanese merchant ship off Port Blair, but missed. On 2 July, she again unsuccessfully attacked another Japanese ship, as none of her six torpedoes hit their target. Two days later, the boat attacked the same merchant with her two remaining torpedoes and claimed a hit, but Japanese records do not mention a loss on this date. Having expended all her torpedoes, the submarine returned to port on 7 July.

On 31 July, Stratagem departed Trincomalee for another patrol west of Siam. She returned to port on 22 August without having sighted any potential targets. From 16 September to 5 October, the boat conducted another patrol in the same area but only shelled warehouses and buildings on Great Coco Island and did not attack enemy ships.

=Loss=

Stratagem departed Trincomalee for the last time on 10 November 1944, with orders to patrol in the Strait of Malacca. Nine days later, she torpedoed and sank the Japanese tanker Nichinan Maru in the Strait, the only victory in her career. On 22 November 1944, the submarine was detected by aircraft and attacked with depth charges by the Japanese submarine chaser CH 35. The first depth charge caused Stratagem{{'}}s bow to hit the sea bottom and caused flooding. The forward watertight bulkhead could not be closed, and she was forced to surface. The submarine was scuttled, and ten of her crew were taken prisoner, of whom only three survived the war.Akermann, p. 245

Summary of raiding history

During her service with the Royal Navy, Stratagem sank one Japanese ship of {{GRT|1,945}}.

class="wikitable" style="margin: 1em auto 1em auto;"
Date||Name of ship||Tonnage||Nationality||Fate and location
align="right"|19 November 1944

|align="left" |Nichinan Maru

|align="right"|1,945

|align="left" |{{flag|Empire of Japan}}

|align="left" |Torpedoed and sunk at {{Coord|01|36|N|102|53|E|type:event|name=Nichinan Maru}}

Notes

{{Reflist|30em}}

References

  • {{cite book|last=Akermann|first=Paul|title=Encyclopaedia of British Submarines 1901–1955|edition=reprint of the 1989|year=2002|publisher=Periscope Publishing|location=Penzance, Cornwall|isbn=978-1-904381-05-1}}
  • {{cite book|last=Bagnasco |first=Erminio |title=Submarines of World War Two |year=1977 |publisher=Naval Institute Press |location=Annapolis, Maryland |isbn=978-0-87021-962-7}}
  • {{cite book|title=Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1922–1946|editor1-last=Chesneau|editor1-first=Roger|publisher=Conway Maritime Press|location=Greenwich, UK|year=1980|isbn=978-0-85177-146-5}}
  • {{Cite Colledge2006}}
  • {{cite book |title=Sunken Ships, World War II: U.S. Naval Chronology Including Submarine Losses of the United States, England, Germany, Japan, Italy|first=Karl Eric|last=Heden|publisher=Branden Books |location=History Reference Center|year=2006|isbn=0828321183}}

{{British S class submarine}}

{{November 1944 shipwrecks}}

{{coord|1|36|N|102|53|E|display=title|type:landmark_source:dewiki}}

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Category:British S-class submarines (1931)

Category:1943 ships

Category:World War II submarines of the United Kingdom

Category:Lost submarines of the United Kingdom

Category:Maritime incidents in November 1944

Category:World War II shipwrecks in the Strait of Malacca

Category:Ships built on the River Mersey

Category:Submarines sunk by Japanese warships

Category:Royal Navy ship names