HMS Hecla (1940)

HMS Hecla (F20) was a destroyer tender of the Royal Navy in World War II. In addition to ample space for stores to resupply shorter-ranged destroyers at sea, Hecla boasted 20,000 sq ft (1,900 m2) of workshop space and three cranes, one rated at 10-tons and the other two at 4-tons apiece.

History
United Kingdom
Name: HMS Hecla
Builder: John Brown & Co Ltd, Clydebank
Laid down: 23 January 1939
Launched: 14 March 1940
Commissioned: 6 January 1941
Fate: Sunk by U-515 on 12 November 1942
Notes: Lost at position 35° 43'N, 9° 54'W
General characteristics
Class and type: Hecla-class destroyer tender
Displacement: 10,850 long tons (11,024 t) full
Length: 600 ft (180 m)
Beam: 66 ft (20 m)
Draft: 16 ft (4.9 m)
Propulsion: 2 Parsons geared turbines, 7,500 shp (5,593 kW), twin screws
Speed: 17 knots (31 km/h; 20 mph)
Complement: 847 officers and enlisted

Service history

Following commissioning and work-up, Hecla sailed for the North Atlantic to support anti-submarine operations in the ongoing Battle of the Atlantic under the command of Captain Cyril George Bucknill Coltart. Based first at Hvalfjord, Iceland, it was there that she tended to the captured German submarine U-570 before the vessel was towed to the United Kingdom, where she was renamed HMS Graph and entered service with the Royal Navy.

Reassigned, Hecla left Iceland bound for the Far East, but her journey was interrupted by an encounter with a German mine. On 15 May 1942 she struck one of 80 mines laid a month prior by the auxiliary minelayer Doggerbank amidships, killing 24 and wounding another 112 men. The worst of the damage was to her workshops and storerooms, scattering and destroying dozens of mines, torpedoes, and depth charges. Fortunately, none of these detonated. With her steering gear out of commission, the cruiser HMS Gambia towed Hecla to Simonstown, a suburb of Cape Town, South Africa for repairs. The remainder of May and June were spent in drydock, repairing extensive underwater damage. In July she conducted trials and then returned to drydock for additional work, finally returning to operational status in September. From South Africa the ship steamed north in support of Operation Torch, the Allied invasion of North Africa.

Loss

In the early hours of the morning on 12 November 1942, Hecla was torpedoed by U-515. The submarine fired a spread of four torpedoes at its target, though only one hit. That hit, in the engine room, was not immediately fatal to the ship. The submarine followed its first four shots with three additional torpedoes, sinking the ship approximately 180 mi (290 km) west of Gibraltar. The sinking resulted in 281 casualties. Though one of Hecla's two escorts, HMS Marne was badly damaged at the same time the other, HMS Venomous, rescued 568 survivors and landed them at Casablanca.

The wreck lies at an approximate depth of 14,100 ft (4,300 m), in position 35° 43'N, 9° 54'W.

References

  • "HMS Hecla (F-20)". Wrecksite.eu. Retrieved November 10, 2020.
  • "HMS Hecla (i) (F-20)". Uboat.net. Retrieved November 10, 2020.
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