German auxiliary cruiser Michel

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Career (Nazi Germany) Merchant Navy Flag of Nazi Germany
Class and type: Merchant vessel
Name: Bielsko
Operator: Gdynia-America-Line
Builder: Danziger Werft, Danzig
Launched: April 1939
Fate: Requistioned by Kriegsmarine, 1939
Career (Nazi Germany) Kriegsmarine Jack
Name: Michel
Operator: Kriegsmarine
Yard number: 9
Commissioned: 7 September 1941
Renamed: Bonn (1939)
Michel (1941)
Reclassified: Hospital Ship (1939)
Auxiliary cruiser (1941)
Nickname: HSK-9
Schiff-28
Raider H
Fate: Sunk on 17 October 1943 by U.S submarine USS Tarpon east of Yokohama
General characteristics
Displacement: 10,900 tons (4,740 GRT)
Length: 132 metres (430 ft)
Beam: 16.8 metres (55 ft)
Draught: 7.4 metres (24 ft)
Propulsion: 2 MAN 8-cyl. Diesel, one shaft, 6,650 shp (4.889 MW)
Speed: 16 knots (30 km/h)
Range: 34,000 nautical miles (63,000 km) at 10 knots (19 km/h)
Complement: 395 (incl. 18 officers), 5 prize-officers
Armament: (1939) 6 × 15cm L/45 C13 (taken from AMC Widder), 1 x 10,5 cm L/45, 2 x 3.7 cm, 4 x 2 cm, 6 x 53.3 cm torpedo tubes (2 twins overwater, 2 mounted singles underwater) + the small Torpedo boat LS 4 Esua
Aircraft carried: 2 Arado Ar 196 A-2

Michel (HSK-9) was an auxiliary cruiser of the German Navy that operated as a merchant raider during World War II. Built by Danziger Werft in Danzig 1938/39 as the freighter Bielsko for the Gdynia-America-Line (GAL), she was requisitioned by the Kriegsmarine at the outbreak of World War II and converted into the hospital ship Bonn and in summer 1941 into auxiliary cruiser Michel, commissioned on 7 September 1941. Known to the KM as Schiff 28, her Royal Navy designation was Raider H.

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[edit] Construction and conversion

After the AMC Widder returned to Germany, her engines were worn out. As replacement for her the hospital ship Bonn was converted as AMC and used the weapons of her predecessor.

[edit] First raiding voyage

Although Michel was scheduled leave at the end of November 1941 she was unable to depart before March 1942 due to reconstruction delays. After moving under heavy escort through the Channel to a port in occupied France, Michel sailed on 20 March 1942 under the command of FK (later KzS) Helmuth von Ruckteschell (who had previously commanded HSK 3, the raider Widder).

Michel grounded at the attempt to run through the Channel and had to return but managed to reach the Atlantic on 20 March after a second try. Thereby on 14/15 March the cruiser and the escorts were repeatedly attacked by British forces, without success. Michel was to operate in the South Atlantic and first sunk the British tanker Patelle (7469 gross register tons (GRT)) on 19 April. On 22nd her small torpedo boat sunk the US tanker Connecticut (8684 GRT) but on 1 May an attack on the faster British freighter Menelaus failed. After its warning the Royal Navy sent out the cruiser HMS Shropshire and two AMCs. But Michel sunk the Norse freighter Kattegat (4245 GRT) on 20 May.

LS 4 Esau discovered the struggling US Liberty ship SS George Clymer (6800 GRT) and scored two torpedo hits but the freighter refused to go down. The nearby British AMC Alcantara dashed forward and rescued the crew but the ship had to be abandoned. The Germans retreated when the British ship came in sight but nevertheless both British and US never saw a ship and thought the George Clymer was attacked by a submarine.

Various other successes followed, as Michel operated in the South Atlantic and Indian oceans. After a successful cruise of eleven and a half months, Michel arrived in Japan in March 1943.

In 346 days she encountered and sank 15 allied ships, totalling 99,000 tons (GRT).

[edit] Second raiding voyage

After refit, Michel sailed from Yokohama on 21 May 1943, this time under the command of KzS Günther Gumprich, who had previously commanded Thor on her second voyage. Cruising the west coast of Australia, and crossing the Pacific Ocean to the coast of South America, Michel encountered and sank 3 ships in a 5 month period, before returning to Japan.

[edit] Fate

On her return to Japan, just 50 miles (80 km) out from port, Michel was spotted by US submarine Tarpon, who attacked in one of the few instances of American submarines attacking a German vessel during WWII, hitting her with three torpedoes. Michel sank, with 290 of her crew, including her captain. The survivors, 116 in total, were able to reach Japan after a three day journey in open boats.

[edit] Raiding career

First cruise:

Second cruise:

[edit] References

  • Erich Gröner. Die deutschen Kriegsschiffe 1815–1945 volume 3. Bonn: Bernard & Graefe Verlag. ISBN 3-7637-4802-4. 
  • Zvonimer Freivogel. Deutsche Hilfskreuzer des Zweiten Weltkriegs. Stuttgart: Motorbuch Verlag. ISBN 3-613-02288-5. 
  • Paul Schmalenbach (1977). German Raiders 1895–1945. ISBN 0 85059 351 4. 
  • August Karl Muggenthaler (1977). German Raiders of World War II. ISBN 0 7091 6683 4. 
  • Stephen Roskill (1954). The War at Sea 1939–1945 Volume I. 
  • Stephen Roskill (1956). The War at Sea 1939–1945 Volume II. 

[edit] External links