Finnish minelayer Ruotsinsalmi
{{Short description|Minelayer of the Finnish Navy commissioned in 1940}}
{{More citations needed|date=April 2014}}
{{Infobox ship begin}}
{{Infobox ship image |Ship image=File:Miinalaiva Ruotsinsalmi (SA-kuva 89401).jpg |Ship caption=Ruotsinsalmi }} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header= |Ship country=Finland |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|Finland|naval}} |Ship name=Ruotsinsalmi |Ship namesake=Battle of Ruotsinsalmi (1790) |Ship ordered= |Ship builder=Wärtsilä Crichton-Vulcan, Turku |Ship laid down= |Ship launched=October 1940 |Ship acquired= |Ship commissioned=1941 |Ship decommissioned=1975 |Ship in service= |Ship out of service= |Ship struck= |Ship reinstated= |Ship honours= |Ship fate=Decommissioned in 1975, scrapped in the 1990s |Ship notes= }} {{Infobox ship characteristics |Hide header= |Header caption= |Ship class={{sclass|Ruotsinsalmi|minelayer}} |Ship displacement=310 t |Ship length={{convert|50.0|m|ftin|abbr=on}} |Ship beam={{convert|7.9|m|ftin|abbr=on}} |Ship draught={{convert|1.5|m|ftin|abbr=on}} |Ship propulsion=*2 × Rateau diesel ({{convert|835|kW|abbr=on}})
|Ship speed={{convert|15|kn|km/h mph}} |Ship range= |Ship complement= |Ship sensors= |Ship EW= |Ship armament=*[design]
|Ship armour= |Ship aircraft= |Ship notes= }} |
Ruotsinsalmi was a minelayer of the Finnish Navy and the namesake of her class. Ruotsinsalmi was commissioned in 1940 and remained in service until 1975. The vessel was named after the Battle of Ruotsinsalmi, which was fought between Sweden and Russia in 1790.
During the Continuation War
Ruotsinsalmi and Riilahti began mining the Gulf of Finland on 26 June 1941, immediately after the outbreak of the Continuation War. The first minefield, Kipinola, Ruotsinsalmi laid together with Riilahti south-east of Hanko which was intended to block Soviet seaways to Hanko. Same group laid already on 27 June the next minefield, Kuolemajärvi, north-west of Paldiski again to block route to Hanko. Another one, Valkjärvi, was laid on 29–30 June.{{sfn|Kijanen|1968|p=18-19}}
class="wikitable"
|+ Minefields laid by Ruotsinsalmi in 1941{{sfn|Kijanen|1968|p=23}} |
Date
! Mines ! Location ! Laid by |
---|
26 June
| 200 contact mines | SE of Hanko | {{unbulleted list|Riilahti|Ruotsinsalmi}} |
27.6.
| 200 contact mines | NE of Osmussaar | {{unbulleted list|Riilahti|Ruotsinsalmi}} |
30.6.
| 200 contact mines | NE of Juminda | {{unbulleted list|Riilahti|Ruotsinsalmi}} |
21.7.
| {{unbulleted list|85 contact mines|15 anti-sweep obstacles}} | N of Mohni | Ruotsinsalmi |
10.8.
| 201 contact mines | NE of Juminda | {{unbulleted list|Riilahti|Ruotsinsalmi}} |
11.8.
| 195 contact mines | NE of Juminda | {{unbulleted list|Riilahti|Ruotsinsalmi}} |
13.8.
| 200 contact mines | NE of Juminda | {{unbulleted list|Riilahti|Ruotsinsalmi}} |
12.11.
| 139 contact mines | SSE of Helsinki | {{unbulleted list|Riilahti|Ruotsinsalmi}} |
File:Laying mines aboard Finnish minelayer Ruotsinsalmi May 1942 (SA-kuva 88630).jpg
Ruotsinsalmi together with Riilahti participated in ferrying the Finnish gunboats past Hanko in August 1941. After two failed attempts by gunboats to rendezvous with minelayers on the nights of 25-26 and 27–28 August the minelayers penetrated the Soviet minefield and met with the gunboats west of Hanko and then escorted them through to Helsinki on 29 August 1941.{{sfn|Kijanen|1968|p=41-43}}
Ruotsinsalmi again with Riilahti were sent on 21 November to as minesweeping escorts for convoy of German ships consisting of two tugs and a depot ship headed to west through the Soviet minebarrier south of Hanko. However, in the dark the convoy deviated from the swept route and as the sweeping gear became entangled with mines it had stop. Before the convoy managed to resume its journey, tug Föhn slipped outside the swept area and sank after hitting a mine but the rest of the convoy reached its destination. The voyage back through the minebarrier with a convoy of freighters started at midnight of 3 December after the escort group had been strengthened with German minesweepers M 4 and M 7 and it took place without any incidents.{{sfn|Kijanen|1968|p=65-66}}
Ruotsinsalmi was Finland's most active minelayer during the Second World War, laying a total of 3,967 sea mines and 541 sweeping obstacles. She was forced to lay mines against the Germans after the end of the hostilities with the Soviet Union in an attempt to hinder German submarine activity.{{sfn|Kijanen|1968|p=232-233}}
She participated in the sinking of one Soviet submarine Shch-408 on 25 May 1943 (along with VMV 6).
After the war
Ruotsinsalmi had proven to be a sound design and well suited for its task. However, it continued to serve a number of different missions after the war. The ship ended its career as a diving support vessel (1973–1975). She was mothballed in Upinniemi, and there were plans to make her into a museum, but she was scrapped at the beginning of the 1990s, after the owners had failed to gather enough funds.
References
=Citations=
{{reflist}}
=Bibliography=
- {{cite book
| last = Kijanen
| first = Kalervo
| title = Suomen Laivasto 1918–1968, II
|trans-title=Finnish Navy 1918–1968, part II
| year = 1968
| publisher = Meriupseeriyhdistys/Otavan Kirjapaino
| location = Helsinki, Finland
}}
{{WWII Finnish ships}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ruotsinsalmi}}