last battle of Bismarck

{{Short description|1941 sinking of a German battleship}}

{{Italic title|string=Bismarck}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2023}}

{{Infobox military conflict

| conflict = Last battle of the Bismarck

| image = Battleship Bismarck burning and sinking 1941.jpg

| image_size = 300px

| caption = Surrounded by shell splashes, Bismarck burns on the horizon

| partof = Operation Rheinübung

| date = 26–27 May 1941

| place = Atlantic Ocean, west of Brest

| result = Allied victory

| combatant1 = {{flagcountry|United Kingdom}}
{{flagdeco|Poland|1928}} Poland

| combatant2 = {{flagcountry|Nazi Germany}}

| commander1 = {{flagdeco|United Kingdom|naval}} John Tovey
{{flagdeco|United Kingdom|naval}} Frederic Wake-Walker
{{flagdeco|United Kingdom|naval}} Frederick Dalrymple-Hamilton

| commander2 = {{flagdeco|Nazi Germany|naval}} Günther Lütjens{{KIA}}
{{flagdeco|Nazi Germany|naval}} Ernst Lindemann{{KIA}}

| strength1 = Aircraft carrier {{HMS|Ark Royal|91|2}}

2 battleships

  • {{HMS|King George V|41|2}}
  • {{HMS|Rodney|29|2}}

2 heavy cruisers

  • {{HMS|Dorsetshire|40|2}}
  • {{HMS|Norfolk|78|2}}

8 destroyers

| strength2 = 1 battleship

  • {{ship|German battleship|Bismarck||2}}

Luftwaffe

  • I/Kampfgeschwader 28

| casualties1 = 49 killed
5 wounded
{{HMS|Mashona||2}} scuttled
Rodney lightly damaged

| casualties2 = 2,200 killed{{Efn|Bismarck{{'}}s complement as Fleet Flagship was 2,220 (2092 + 128 Fleet staff) (Chesneau, p. 224). For Operation Rheinubung she embarked over 100 supernumeraries, including merchant seamen to act as prize crews, cadets in training, and a film unit (Kennedy, p. 33). The number of these supernumeraries, and hence the exact number of casualties, is unknown.
4 floatplanes destroyed}}
110 captured
Bismarck scuttled"Who sank the Bismarck - The British or the Germans? We are convinced the answer is "Both!!" Bismarck unquestionably would have sunk due to progressive flooding hours after the battle ended [...] There is enough evidence to indicate that [CDR Oels] ordered the ship scuttled..." Cameron et al. 2002, p. 50

| campaignbox = {{Campaignbox Atlantic Campaign}}

}}

The last battle of the German battleship Bismarck took place in the Atlantic Ocean approximately {{convert|300|nmi|lk=in}} west of Brest, France, on 26–27 May 1941 between the {{ship|German battleship|Bismarck}} and naval and air elements of the British Royal Navy. Although it was a decisive action between capital ships, it has no generally accepted name. It was the culmination of Operation Rheinübung where the attempt of two German ships to disrupt the Atlantic convoys to the United Kingdom failed with the scuttling of the Bismarck.

The last battle consisted of four main phases. The first phase late on 26 May consisted of air strikes by torpedo bombers from the British aircraft carrier {{HMS|Ark Royal|91|2}}, which disabled Bismarck{{'}}s steering gear, jammed her rudders in a turning position and prevented her escape. The second phase was the shadowing and harassment of Bismarck during the night of 26/27 May by British and Polish destroyers, with no serious damage to any ship. The third phase on the morning of 27 May was an attack by the British battleships {{HMS|King George V|41|2}} and {{HMS|Rodney|29|2}}, supported by the heavy cruisers {{HMS|Norfolk|78|2}} and {{HMS|Dorsetshire|40|2}}. After about 100 minutes of fighting, Bismarck was sunk by the combined effects of shellfire, torpedo hits and deliberate scuttling. On the British side, Rodney was lightly damaged by near-misses and by the blast effects of her own guns.Kennedy, pp. 206, 283. British warships rescued 110 survivors from Bismarck before being obliged to withdraw because of an apparent U-boat sighting, leaving several hundred men to drown. A U-boat and a German weathership rescued five more survivors. In the final phase, the withdrawing British ships were attacked the next day on 28 May by aircraft of the Luftwaffe, resulting in the loss of the destroyer {{HMS|Mashona|F59|6}}.

Background

File:Map Rheinuebung.svg and Royal Navy operations against the battleship Bismarck|left]]

Under the command of the Fleet Commander Günther Lütjens, the German battleship Bismarck and the heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen tried to break out into the Atlantic in order to attack convoys. The ships were intercepted by a British force from the Home Fleet. In the resulting Battle of the Denmark Strait on 24 May, Bismarck{{'}}s fuel tanks were damaged and several machinery compartments, including a boiler room, were flooded. Her captain's intention was to reach the port of Brest for repair.Cameron, pp. 6–10.

Determined to avenge the sinking of the "Pride of the Navy" {{HMS|Hood|51|6}} in the Battle of the Denmark Strait, the British committed every possible unit to hunting down Bismarck.

  • The old {{sclass|Revenge|battleship|2}} {{HMS|Ramillies|07|6}} was detached from convoy duty southeast of Greenland and ordered to set a course to intercept Bismarck if she should attempt to raid the sea lanes off North America.{{Sfn|Rohwer|2005|p=74}}
  • The damaged Prince of Wales and the cruisers Norfolk and Suffolk were still in contact with the German ships after the Battle of the Denmark Strait.
  • The remainder of the Home Fleet, consisting of the battleship King George V, the battlecruiser {{HMS|Repulse|1916|2}}, the aircraft carrier {{HMS|Victorious|R38|2}}, four light cruisers and their escorts, had already set sail from Scapa Flow before the loss of the Hood.
  • The battleship Rodney was detached from escort duties West of Ireland and set an intercept course for the Bismarck.{{Sfn|Stephen|1988|p=83}}
  • Force H had already left Gibraltar with the aircraft carrier Ark Royal, the battlecruiser {{HMS|Renown|1916|2}} and the light cruiser {{HMS|Sheffield|C24|2}} on 23 May to take over escort duties from other ships, but once it came clear the Bismarck was heading for France, the force set course to intercept Bismarck.{{Sfn|Busch|1980|pp=80–81}}
  • The heavy cruiser {{HMS|London|69|2}} was escorting a convoy from Gibraltar to the United Kingdom and was also ordered to intercept.{{sfn|Müllenheim-Rechberg|1980|p=102}}
  • The light cruiser {{HMS|Edinburgh|16|2}}, which was searching for blockade runners in the area West of Cape Finisterre, was also ordered to join the hunt.{{Sfn|Rohwer|2005|p=74}}

File:Swordfish on HMS Victorious before strike on Bismarck.jpg

In the early evening of 24 May, Bismarck briefly turned on her pursuers ({{HMS|Prince of Wales|53|2}} and the heavy cruisers Norfolk and {{HMS|Suffolk|55|2}}) to cover the escape of her companion, the heavy cruiser {{Ship|German cruiser|Prinz Eugen||2}} to continue further into the Atlantic. During the late evening of 24 May, an attack was made by a small group of Swordfish biplane torpedo bombers of 825 Naval Air Squadron under the command of Eugene Esmonde from Victorious. One hit was scored, but caused only superficial damage to Bismarck{{'}}s armoured belt. Early on 25 May the British forces lost contact with Bismarck, which headed E-S-E towards France while the British searched N-E, presuming Bismarck was returning to Norway. Later on 25 May the commander of the German force, Admiral Günther Lütjens, apparently unaware that he had lost his pursuers, broke radio silence to send a coded message to Germany. This faux-pas would prove critical, as the British overheard the communique, and subsequently were able to triangulate the approximate position of Bismarck, logic leading them to deduce that the German battleship had set a course for France, for re-armament and repairs. Fuel was becoming a major concern to both sides: due to battle damage, the subsequent loss of fuel, and because Bismarck had failed to refuel in Norway, nor by fuel-tanker whilst underway in the North Atlantic. All things considered, Lütjens chose to maintain an economical speed of 21 knots, to conserve fuel, with the hope of reaching France before the Allied flotilla could detect and intercept them.

Meanwhile, from the pursuing Home Fleet: Prince of Wales, Repulse, Victorious and the four cruisers had to break off, and Suffolk as well. Only King George V and Norfolk were able to continue: since the destroyer screen of King George V was (like the Bismarck) also running short on fuel, the Fourth Destroyer Flotilla consisting of the destroyers {{HMS|Cossack|F03|6}}, {{HMS|Sikh|F82|2}}, {{HMS|Maori|F24|2}} and {{HMS|Zulu|F18|2}}, and the Polish destroyer {{ORP|Piorun|G65|6}}, under command of Captain Philip Vian, was ordered to detach from convoy WS-8B and to screen King George V.{{Sfn|Busch|1980|pp=94–95}}

At 10:30 on 26 May Bismarck was detected by a Coastal Command Catalina reconnaissance aircraft from 209 Squadron RAF that had flown over the Atlantic from its base on Lough Erne in Northern Ireland across the Donegal Corridor.[http://www.bbc.co.uk/ww2peopleswar/stories/09/a2059409.shtml BBC – WW2 People's War – World War Memories of an Ulster Childhood] It was piloted by the British Flying Officer Dennis Briggs{{Cite web|url=https://britainatwar.keypublishing.com/2018/07/25/we-shadowed-the-bismarck-in-flg-off-dennis-briggs-words/|title="We Shadowed the Bismarck" – In Flg Off. Dennis Briggs' Words {{!}} Britain at War|language=en-US|access-date=2019-01-30}} and co-piloted by the US Navy observer Ensign Leonard B. Smith, USNR.4 November 2009, [http://www.history.navy.mil/faqs/faq118-1.htm Bismarck: British/American Cooperation and the Destruction of the German Battleship] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101206202449/http://www.history.navy.mil/faqs/faq118-1.htm |date=6 December 2010 }}, Naval History and Heritage Command Smith was at the controls when he spotted Bismarck[https://www.defensemedianetwork.com/stories/the-american-who-helped-sink-the-bismarck/ The American Who Helped Sink the Bismarck] Defense Media Network 23 November 2021 (via a trailing oil slick from the ship's damaged fuel tank) and reported her position to the Admiralty. Shortly before at 09:00 Ark Royal had launched scouting planes and half an hour after the Catalina, two Swordfish found Bismarck as well.{{Sfn|Stephen|1988|p=88}} From then on, the German ship's position was known to the British, although the enemy would have to be slowed significantly if heavy units hoped to engage outside the range of German land-based aircraft. On receiving the message from the Catalina, Capt. Vian decided not to join the pursuing British battleships, but to steer directly for Bismarck.{{Sfn|Busch|1980|pp=99–100}} All British hopes were now pinned on Force H and these destroyers.

The battle

= First phase: the ''Ark Royal'' disables the ''Bismarck'' =

File:H.M.S. Renown and Ark Royal.jpg

At 14:50 on 26 May in bad weather conditions, Ark Royal launched 15 Swordfish for an attack on the Bismarck. The aircraft had not been warned that the Sheffield had been sent forward to shadow the Bismarck, instead they had been told no other ships were in the vicinity. The Swordfish attacked, in poor visibility, the shadowing cruiser Sheffield, but some of their torpedoes had defective magnetic pistols which caused them to explode on impact with the sea, and the remaining torpedoes could be evaded. At 19:10 the same aircraft were relaunched for a second sortie with contact pistol torpedoes.{{Sfn|Stephen|1988|pp=88–92}} At 19:50 Force H ran into {{GS|U-556||2}}, which obtained a perfect shooting position to hit both the Ark Royal and Renown, but the U-boat had expended all her torpedoes on previous operations and could not attack.{{sfn|Müllenheim-Rechberg|1980|pp=148–149}}

The aircraft made first contact with the Sheffield at 20:00 which vectored them to the Bismarck. Despite this helping hand and their ASV II radars, they could not find the German ship. Half an hour later they had to recontact the Sheffield which could finally send them to the Bismarck. The attack started at 20:47 and lasted half an hour.{{Sfn|Stephen|1988|pp=88–92}} Three aircraft had to recontact the Sheffield for a third time.{{Sfn|Busch|1980|pp=106–109}} A first hit midships had little effect, but a second hit astern jammed Bismarck{{'}}s rudder and steering gear 12° to port.{{cite web|url=http://www.navweaps.com/index_inro/INRO_Bismarck_p2.htm|title=Bismarck's· Final· Battle· -· Part· 2|work=navweaps.com|access-date=26 July 2016|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160717125302/http://www.navweaps.com/index_inro/INRO_Bismarck_p2.htm|archive-date=17 July 2016}} This resulted in her being, initially, able to steam only in a large circle.

File:The Royal Navy during the Second World War A4092.jpg

Bismarck fired her main and secondary armament against the attacking aircraft, trying to hit the low flying torpedo aircraft with the shell splashes. Once the attack was over, Bismarck fired her main battery at the shadowing Sheffield. The first salvo went a mile astray, but the second salvo straddled the cruiser. Shell splinters fell on Sheffield killing three men and wounding two others. Four more salvoes were fired but no hits were scored. Sheffield quickly retreated under cover of a smoke screen. Sheffield lost contact with the Bismarck in the low visibility but shortly before 22:00 she met Capt. Vian's group of five destroyers and was able to vector them to the Bismarck.{{Sfn|Busch|1980|p=|pp=107-108}}{{Sfn|Stephen|1988|p=|pp=89-92}} The King George V and Rodney had joined around 18:00 and were approaching from the northwest. Since Vian's destroyers would keep in touch with the Bismarck and harry her all night, he decided to steer south, even southwest and making a circle in order to be able to engage the Bismarck in the morning silhouetted against the east. The heavy cruiser Norfolk and the light cruiser Edinburgh were also approaching separately from the northwest. Edinburgh had to abandon the chase due to fuel shortage but Norfolk took up a position to the north of Bismarck. Another heavy cruiser, Dorsetshire, was approaching from the west and would make contact the next morning. After collecting her airplanes Ark Royal and Force H first kept north of Bismarck, but during the night sailed south and remained in the vicinity.{{Sfn|Stephen|1988|p=92}}

File:British Warships of the Second World War FL1657.jpg

Repair efforts by the crew to free the rudder failed.Garzke & Dulin, p. 235 Bismarck attempted to steer by alternating the power of her three propeller shafts, which, in the prevailing force 8 wind and sea state, resulted in the ship being forced to sail towards King George V and Rodney, two British battleships that had been pursuing Bismarck from the west.Garzke & Dulin, pp. 235–236 At 23:40 on 26 May, Admiral Lütjens delivered to Group West, the German command base, the signal "Ship unmanoeuvrable. We will fight to the last shell. Long live the Führer."Jackson 2002, p. 91.

= Second phase: Vian's destroyers harass the ''Bismarck'' at night =

One hour after the Swordfish attack, Maori and Piorun made contact with Bismarck at 22:38. Piorun attacked at once, signalling her identity as a Polish ship, but was not able to launch torpedoes. She approached close enough to engage Bismarck with her guns, but then lost contact and played no more role in the battle. Deteriorating weather made a concentrated attack impossible. Throughout that night, Bismarck was the target of intermittent torpedo attacks by Vian's destroyers. In ten approaches between 22:38 and 06:56 Cossack, Maori, Zulu and Sikh fired sixteen torpedoes but none hit. One of Bismarck{{'}}s shells sheared off Cossack{{'}}s antenna and three other shells straddled Zulu, wounding three men. Between 02:30 and 03:00 the destroyers fired starshell at Tovey's request in order to make her position visible for the battleships. The constant harrying tactics of the destroyers helped wear down the morale of the Germans and deepened the fatigue of an already exhausted crew.{{Sfn|Stephen|1988|pp=92–94}}{{sfn|Müllenheim-Rechberg|1980|pp=139–142}}

Between 05:00 and 06:00, Lütjens ordered an Arado 196 float plane launched to the French coast, to secure the ship's war diary, footage of the engagement with Hood, and other important documents. It was discovered that the float plane catapult had been rendered inoperative due to damage received on the 24th by the Prince of Wales. The fully fuelled aircraft was then pushed overboard to reduce the risk of fire in the upcoming battle.Garzke & Dulin 1985, pp. 237–238 Lütjens then radioed at 07:10 for a U-boat to rendezvous with Bismarck to fetch these documents. U-556 was assigned at once to this task, but the U-boat missed the signalled order because it was submerged. At any rate, it was subsequently revealed that U-556 had been too low on fuel to have been able to carry out the order. The task was then passed on to {{GS|U-74|1940|2}} but by then Bismarck had already sunk.{{Sfn|Busch|1980|p=125}}{{sfn|Müllenheim-Rechberg|1980|pp=148–150}}

= Third phase: ''Bismarck'' is lost =

File:Rodney firing on Bismarck.png

As the British units converged on Bismarck{{'}}s location, Tovey gave his instructions for the final battle. First, he ordered Renown, which had closed to within 17 miles of Bismarck, not to participate in the battle. Renown was similarly armoured as Hood and Tovey did not want to risk a repeat.{{Sfn|Stephen|1988|p=94}} He instructed the captain of Rodney to close to within {{cvt|15000|yd}} as quickly as possible, and that while he should, in general, conform to King George V{{'}}s movements, he was free to manoeuvre independently.Garzke & Dulin 1980, p. 210 The morning of Tuesday 27 May brought a heavy grey sky, a rising sea and a tearing wind from the northwest. Because of this northwesterly gale, Tovey postponed the final attack from sunrise until clear daylight{{sfn|Müllenheim-Rechberg|1980|p=158}} and concluded an attack on Bismarck from windward was undesirable. He decided to approach on a northwesterly bearing before deploying.Barnett, p. 311

Norfolk was the first ship to sight Bismarck on the morning of 27 May. In poor visibility the cruiser stumbled upon an unidentified ship, flashing recognition signals before realising it was the German battleship. Norfolk quickly turned away and made contact with the British battleships before joining the final battle.{{sfn|Müllenheim-Rechberg|1980|p=158}} At 08:43, lookouts on King George V spotted Bismarck, some {{cvt|23000|m|yd|order=flip}} away; Rodney opened fire first at 08:47, followed quickly by King George V. Bismarck was unable to steer due to the torpedo damage to the rudders, and the consequent unpredictable motions made the ship an unstable gun platform and created a difficult gunnery problem. This was further complicated by the gale-force storm.{{Cite web |last=Garzke, Jr. |first=William H. |last2=Dulin, Jr. |first2=Robert O. |last3=Webb |first3=Thomas G. |date=1994 |title=Bismarck's Final Battle |url=http://www.navweaps.com/index_inro/INRO_Bismarck.php |website=International Naval Research Organization}} However, Bismarck returned fire at 08:50 with her forward guns, and with her second salvo, she straddled Rodney. This was the closest she came to scoring a hit on any British warship in the final engagement,Bercuson & Herwig, pp. 288–289 because at 09:02, a {{convert|16|in|mm|adj=on|0}} salvo from Rodney struck the forward superstructure, damaging the bridge and main fire control director and killing most of the senior officers. The salvo also damaged the forward main battery turrets. The aft fire control station took over direction of the aft turrets, but after receiving three salvos was also neutralised. With both fire control stations out of action, Bismarck{{'}}s shooting became increasingly erratic, allowing the British to close range. Norfolk and Dorsetshire closed and began firing with their {{convert|8|in|0|abbr=on}} guns.Bercuson & Herwig, pp. 290–291Garzke & Dulin 1985, p. 239 Around 09:10, Norfolk fired four and Rodney fired six torpedoes from a distance of more than 10 km, but no hits were observed.{{Sfn|Stephen|1988|p=97}}

File:HMSRodneyLoadingTorpedo1940.jpg, the heaviest torpedo in the Royal Navy inventory. One torpedo is being loaded into a tube, whilst another is being lowered into its cradle. Rodney fired a total of 10 torpedoes at Bismarck.]]

By around 09:31 all of Bismarck{{'}}s four main battery turrets were out of action. With the ship no longer able to fight back, First Officer Hans Oels, the senior surviving officer, then issued the order to scuttle the ship – for all damage control measures to cease, for all the watertight doors to be opened, for the engine-room personnel to prepare scuttling charges, and for the crew to abandon ship. Oels moved through the ship, repeating these orders to all he met, until around 10:00 when a shell from King George V penetrated the upper citadel belt and exploded in the ship's aft canteen, killing Oels and about a hundred others.Bercuson & Herwig, pp. 292–294 Gerhard Junack, the senior surviving engineering officer, ordered his men to set the demolition charges with a 9-minute fuse. The engine-room intercom system had broken down, so Junack sent a messenger to find Oels and confirm the order to detonate the charges. The messenger never returned, so Junack primed the charges and ordered the engineering crew to abandon ship.Gaack & Carr, pp. 80–81

Once all four of Bismarck{{'}}s main battery turrets were out of action (around 09:31), Rodney closed to around {{cvt|2700|m|yd|order=flip}} with impunity to fire her guns at what is effectively point-blank range into Bismarck{{'}}s superstructure. King George V remained at a greater distance to increase the possibility that her plunging shells would strike Bismarck{{'}}s decks vertically and penetrate into the ships's interior. At 10:05 Rodney launched four torpedoes at Bismarck, claiming one hit.{{Sfn|Stephen|1988|p=97}}

By 10:20, the British battleships were running low on fuel. Bismarck was settling by the stern due to progressive uncontrolled flooding and had taken on a 20 degree list to port. Tovey ordered Dorsetshire to close and torpedo the crippled Bismarck while King George V and Rodney disengaged. By the time these torpedo attacks took place, Bismarck was already listing so badly that the deck was partly awash. Dorsetshire fired a pair of torpedoes at Bismarck{{'}}s starboard side, one of which hit. Dorsetshire then moved around to her port side and fired another torpedo, which also hit. Based on subsequent examination of the wreck, the last torpedo appears to have detonated against Bismarck{{'}}s port side superstructure, which was by then already underwater.Jurens et al.Zetterling & Tamelander, p. 281 Bismarck began capsizing at about 10:35, and by 10:40 had slipped beneath the waves, stern first.Garzke & Dulin 1985, p. 246 During the engagement the two British battleships fired some 700 large-caliber shells at Bismarck,Bercuson & Herwig, pp. 291–294 and all told, King George V, Rodney, Dorsetshire, and Norfolk collectively fired some 2,800 shells, scoring around 400 hits.

= Fourth phase: the ''Luftwaffe'' retaliates =

The Luftwaffe had not been able to intervene on 26 May due to bad weather. Only some reconnaissance flights were made by some Focke-Wulf Fw 200 Condor of I/Kampfgeschwader 28 (Bomber Wing 28) which could locate Rodney. On 27 and 28 May some attempts were made to attack the British ships. In the morning of 27 May one Heinkel He 111 missed Ark Royal with a few bombs and only four bombers found the British battleships but failed to score a hit.

On 28 May the destroyers {{HMS|Mashona|F59|2}} and {{HMS|Tartar|F43|2}} were heading for Northern Ireland at economical speed due to their low fuel stocks and were attacked on 28 May in the morning by bombers. At 09:00 Mashona received a hit from a Heinkel He 111, and was abandoned with the loss of 46 crew members. A first attempt to scuttle her with a torpedo from Tartar failed but then she was sunk by gunfire from other destroyers arriving at the scene.{{Sfn|Rohwer|2005|p=74}}{{Sfn|Busch|1980|pp=150–152}} The destroyer Maori was also damaged by bombers.{{Sfn|Rohwer|2005|p=74}}

Survivors

File:War memorial (Neuhofen im Innkreis) image 03 Bismarck.JPG also commemorating Franz Kienast, who died aged 23 in the sinking of the Bismarck]]

Dorsetshire and Maori picked up 85 and 25 survivors respectively. At 11:40 a lookout on the Dorsetshire thought he spotted a periscope and the rescue effort was abandoned whilst hundreds of Bismarck{{'}}s survivors were still in the water. While the British cruiser Dorsetshire was busy rescuing survivors from the water, Midshipman Joe Brooks{{Efn|According to Busch, the British man to jump overboard to help the German survivors was the torpedo officer, Lt II Curver.{{sfn|Busch|1980|p=148}}}} jumped over the side to help wounded Germans scramble up his ship's side.{{cite book |last1=Ballantyne |first1=Iain |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UrGdDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT96 |title=Bismarck: 24 Hours to Doom |date=23 May 2016 |publisher=Ipso Books |isbn=978-1-5040-5915-2 |language=en |access-date=5 September 2021}} One German sailor had lost both arms and was hanging onto a rope with his teeth; Brooks tried to save him but failed.{{cite book |last1=McKee |first1=Alexander |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tk0SAAAAYAAJ&q=brooks |title=Against the Odds: Battles at Sea, 1591–1949 |date=1991 |publisher=Naval Institute Press |isbn=978-1-55750-025-0 |language=en |access-date=5 September 2021}} Brooks was nearly left behind when the U-boat alarm was given and the Dorsetshire began to pull away while he was still in the water, but he was thrown a line by his shipmates and was pulled aboard.{{cite news |date=11 August 1941 |title=The Bismarck's End |language=en |page=35 |work=LIFE Magazine |publisher=Time Inc |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YE0EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA35 |access-date=5 September 2021}} After the battle, the British warships returned to the United Kingdom with 109 Bismarck survivors, as one survivor (Gerhard Lüttich) had died of his wounds the day after his rescue and was buried at sea on 28 May 1941 with full military honours by the crew of HMS Dorsetshire. That evening at 19:30, {{Ship|German submarine|U-74|1940|2}} picked up three survivors from a dinghy (Herzog, Höntzsch, and Manthey) and the following day at 22:45 the German weather ship {{ship||Sachsenwald|1939|2}} picked up two survivors from a raft (Lorenzen and Maus). The neutral Spanish heavy cruiser {{Ship|Spanish cruiser|Canarias||2}} also arrived at the sinking scene but did not find survivors. Out of a crew of over 2,200 men, only 114 survived.{{sfn|Müllenheim-Rechberg1980|pp=185–190}}{{Sfn|Busch|1980|pp=145–148}}

Aftermath

After the sinking, Admiral John Tovey said, "The Bismarck had put up a most gallant fight against impossible odds worthy of the old days of the Imperial German Navy, and she went down with her colours flying."

The Board of the Admiralty issued a message of thanks to those involved:

{{Blockquote|Their Lordships congratulate C.-in-C., Home Fleet, and all concerned in the unrelenting pursuit and successful destruction of the enemy's most powerful warship. The loss of H.M.S. Hood and her company, which is so deeply regretted, has thus been avenged and the Atlantic made more secure for our trade and that of our allies.

From the information at present available to Their Lordships there can be no doubt that had it not been for the gallantry, skill, and devotion to duty of the Fleet Air Arm in both Victorious and Ark Royal, our object might not have been achieved.{{cite news |url=http://infotrac.galegroup.com/itw/infomark/598/957/124934442w16/purl=rc1_TTDA_0_CS68237501&dyn=13!xrn_22_0_CS68237501 |issue=48938 |page=4 |date=29 May 1941 |newspaper=The Times |title=Congratulations to the Fleet |access-date=19 October 2010}}}}

Unaware of the fate of the ship, Group West, the German command base, continued to issue signals to Bismarck for some hours, until Reuters reported news from Britain that the ship had been sunk. In Britain, the House of Commons was informed of the sinking early that afternoon.{{cite web|url=https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/commons/1941/may/27/war-situation|work=Parliamentary Debates (Hansard)|date=27 May 1941|title=WAR SITUATION.}}

The sinking of the Bismarck, especially the loss of her crew, dealt a massive blow to German morale. To Hitler the sinking was shattering, and validated his fear of open-sea warfare against the British navy. In addition Hitler's confidence in German sea power and Admiral Raeder began to wane. When the British interrogated the survivors of the Bismarck, it was clear that morale aboard the vessel before it sank was very low because Lutjens was driving them to despair in regards to preparing to die.{{sfn|Rose|2007|p=240}}

Order of battle

= Axis =

  • German battleship Bismarck

= Allied =

== In the final battle ==

  • The battleships King George V and Rodney.
  • The heavy cruisers Norfolk and Dorsetshire.

== Made contact before final battle ==

  • 15 Swordfish of the aircraft carrier Ark Royal
  • The light cruiser Sheffield.
  • The destroyers Cossack, Sikh, Zulu, Maori
  • The Polish destroyer Piorun

== Supporting role ==

  • The aircraft carrier Ark Royal
  • The battlecruiser Renown
  • The destroyers Mashona, Tartar

See also

Notes

{{notelist|30em}}

References

{{Reflist}}

Bibliography

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