The Jervis Bay and convoy HX84

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About the Jervis Bay and HX84

HX84 was a British navy convoy in the second world war. Attacked by the German battleship Admiral Sheer, the convoy's sole armed escort, the converted liner Jervis Bay, moved into the path of the battleship to buy time for the convoy to escape.

The story of the Jervis Bay, the San Demetrio, the Beaverford and the other ships of convoy HX-84 is not just one of courage against incredible odds, but also one of how a small action can have consequences that can change the path of a war.

HX84 and The Jervis Bay

The sole armed escort of HX84

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During the Second World War the North Atlantic convoys were the lifeline that kept Britain from being starved out. Braving the dangers of the u-boat wolfpacks, the Luftwaffe and the sea itself, one of the greatest threats they faced was convoy raiders - German battleships designed to sink the defenceless merchant vessels.

When HX84 sailed from Halifax, Canada in 1940, the members of the convoy could hardly have realised that their voyage would be immortalised. A convoy of thirty-eight cargo vessels and one lightly armed ocean escort, they were bringing vital supplies to the UK from their North American ally Canada, for at the time the US had not yet entered the war.

Once out in the Atlantic HX84 would meet with a fully armed escort ship, but until they joined them, the Jervis Bay was their only line of defense.

The sole armed escort in the convoy, the Jervis Bay weighed 14,000 tons but her size was deceptive. A converted liner, her entire armament consisted of six-inch guns, bolted to the deck and dating from World War One; virtually antique. She was unarmoured, and possibly a match for a U-boat or similarly converted raider. Against a battleship of any kind, she would be helpless, but with the shortage of armed ships she was the only escort available.

The Ambush of HX84

The Jervis Bay and the Convoy Raider

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Atlantic Convoy
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It was the 5th November 1940 at around 5:30 pm and nearing dusk when the encounter that guaranteed HX84 and the Jervis Bay's place in history occurred.

A strange ship was sighted on the horizon, approaching fast. The convoy, expecting to meet with its Atlantic escort, sent signals requesting it identify itself but received no answer. At the same time as the convoy identified it, the ship opened fire.

The Admiral Scheer was a German Pocket Battleship, designed to be able to outgun anything that could catch it, and outrun everything else. Fast, manoeverable and deadly, it carried eleven inch guns with considerable range. German Intelligence had learned the location of convoy HX84 and the Admiral Scheer, commanded by Admiral Krancke, had been ready to intercept. It was a convoy raider, and a ship of the same type had sunk eleven ships from one convoy in less than an hour.

Instantly the order was given to scatter, and the convoy split up, dropping smokefloats to cover their retreat. This strategy was the best defense convoys had, but was often futile. A ship like the Admiral Scheer could simply plow through the smoke and run down the unarmed merchant vessels, as Captain Edward Fegen of the Jervis Bay was well aware.

The Admiral Scheer, at 12,000 tons, was literally a battleship in all but name. With armour over a foot thick, a top speed of 26-28 knots, a main armament consisting of 6 eleven inch guns, eight six-inch guns and a torpedo battery, Pocket Battleships were effectively heavy cruisers, capable of taking on anything up to a Ship of the Line.

The fate of the Jervis Bay

Against the pocket battleship

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The Merchant Cruiser Jervis Bay Fought to the Death
When a British Convoy Was Ambushed
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As the convoy fled, the Jervis Bay swung towards the Admiral Scheer hoping to buy the merchant ships time. If they could delay the raider until darkness fell, the ships would be able to hide in the Atlantic at night and the chances of the Scheer finding them were slim. Opening fire with its antiquated six inch guns, well out of range and unable to penetrate the armour of the battleship even if they were not, the Jervis Bay set course towards the Admiral Scheer.

The Admiral Scheer's first shots fell wide, as Admiral Krancke realised the armoured liner was actually trying to attack. For the same reasons the Jervis Bay sought to delay it, the Scheer needed to get past the liner quickly. The Admiral Scheer's initial volleys were an attempt to disable the escort ship efficiently, allowing them to bypass it and pursue the convoy. The Jervis Bay did not turn aside, and continued ahead at full speed.

Knowing they were losing time, the Scheer changed tactics. The pocket battleship found their range and began to pound the approaching escort with full barrages. No longer trying to conserve ammunition, intending to sink the vessel that was all that stood between it and the convoy, the Admiral Scheer opened fire with salvo after salvo of six hundred pound shells. They tore through the converted liner like paper.

The Jervis Bay's bridge was struck, and Captain Fegen's left arm torn off. The engine was destroyed, but by that time the ship had built up momentum and continued to close on the Admiral Scheer, her six inch guns still firing futily and still falling short. With the next salvo an exploding shell hit the bridge, killing the Captain, and one of the forward guns was destroyed. Her remaining gun still firing, still falling painfully short, the Jervis Bay continued from sheer momentum.

Finally, inevitably, the Scheer's salvos hit something vital within the Jervis Bay. The ship shuddered and turned over, sinking. It was still out of range for its guns. One hundred and ninety men were lost.

Some sources say the Jervis Bay survived twenty-four minutes, others nearly an hour. Twenty four minutes sounds so little time when bought with the lives of the crew of the Jervis Bay. But however long the battle lasted, all agree, it was time enough for darkness to fall and the convoy to scatter.

The Admiral Scheer pursued the fleeing convoy, but it was a far cry from the triumph they had expected when they sighted HX84. Instead of sinking eleven ships in an hour, they spent the night and next day in pursuit, expending fuel and ammunition. Thirty-one of the thirty-eight convoy vessels got through, and Captain Fegen received a posthumous VC.

If the Gods Are Good: The Epic Sacrifice of HMS Jervis Bay

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The Beaverford

Taking up the chase

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The story of HX84 does not end with the sinking of the Jervis Bay. The Jervis Bay was gone, but its gallant sacrifice had bought time for darkness to fall. The convoy had had time to scatter, making it impossible for the Admiral Scheer to locate them all, but they were not out of danger. The raider set out in pursuit of the remaining ships, hunting the convoy ships using starshells.

Faster than the merchantmen, the Admiral Scheer overhauled part of the fleeing convoy and set the fuel tanker San Demetrio on fire. Then it went after the merchant freighter Beaverford.

An unarmoured merchant vessel equipped with a single four-inch gun, the Beaverford was no match for the convoy raider. Captain E. Pettigrew, knowing that his ship was lost, embarked on a dangerous game of cat and mouse, trying to further delay the raider. Because the Admiral Scheer was faster than any of the cargo vessels it hunted and could simply run them down, any further time that could be bought would improve the convoy's chances.

Undercover of darkness, the Beaverford managed to occupy the Admiral Scheer for a further five hours. The Admiral Scheer, unsure of what was facing it, was reluctant to close in the gloom and eventually torpedoed the freighter. It was sunk with all hands.

The San Demetrio

Set ablaze, abandoned and then reboarded

Hit by the Admiral Sheer, the fuel tanker San Demetrio was set ablaze, but failed to sink. She was carrying highly explosive aviation fuel and, afraid of an explosion, the Captain ordered all hands to abandon ship.

As the crew climbed into lifeboats, the pocket battleship continued to fire on the burning ship before it moved on to other prey, certain that the San Demetrio was beyond recovery.

Two lifeboats were launched, one containing sixteen of the crew, one with twenty-six, but they drifted apart in the Atlantic. The twenty six crew were eventually picked up and taken to Newfoundland.

Floating overnight in the cold the smaller group of crewmen were delighted the next morning to see a ship on the horizon. Their delight turned to confusion when it revealed itself as the San Demetrio, still ablaze and still afloat. The next night the ship was still in view, and rather than spend a third night at sea, the decision was taken to reboard her. The crew managed to get the fires under control. Without steering or navigational equipment, they jury-rigged a rudder and managed to work out their course from the path of the sun. The skeleton crew sailed the damaged San Demetrio over one thousand miles back to Britain, where she arrived on 16th November with her precious cargo almost intact.

The crew's heroism did not go unrewarded. By maritime law, it was decided they were entitled to the salvage rights for the vessel, worth between one and two thousand pounds each. The San Demetrio itself however, was sunk by a U-boat in 1942.

~


San Demetrio Ealing StudiosThe story of the San Demetrio was made into a film, sadly now only available from Amazon.co.uk in UK and European format.

There is also a model of the ship in the Imperial War Museum, shown in the photograph above. It represents the San Demetrio as she came into port, damaged and jury-rigged. The words "SOS Help" are written across the bridge, and can also been seen across the back. 
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The Stureholm

An act of rescue

The survivors of the Jervis Bay had no chance to survive in the icy waters of the Atlantic at night. The Admiral Scheer did not attempt to pick them up, as it was chasing the convoy members. None would have survived except for an act of exceptional courage.

One of the convoy ships took a huge risk for the survivors of the ship that had saved the convoy. Captain Sven Oleander of the Swedish vessel Stureholm turned back despite the presence of the Admiral Scheer, which was still hunting the fleeing vessels and firing star shells which illuminated the area. Using the cover of night he managed to pick up 65 of the survivors. The Stureholm returned to Halifax and arrived safely on the 12th November 1940.

Sadly despite this act of courage, the Stureholm was to meet its own fate in December of the same year. It was part of convoy HX-92, when it was attacked by U-boats in the North Atlantic and sunk with all hands. Some of the Jervis Bay survivors had signed on as crew, and were aboard.

The aftermath of the battle

The final fate of HX84

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The Admiral Scheer sank five vessels from the convoy, as well as their armed escort:

"Jervis Bay"
"Beaverford"
"Maiden"
"Trewellard"
"Kenbame Head"
"Fresno City"

The Stureholm turned back for Halifax with the Jervis Bay survivors. The San Demetrio was set ablaze and considered lost, until it was reboarded and sailed home. The remaining vessels made it successfully to British ports.

In their own words - the Survivors of HX84

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Survivors of the ships of HX84 give their accounts in this MP3

Consequences of the battle

A change in the course of the war?

The Jervis Bay succeeded in delaying the Admiral Scheer for twenty-four minutes, but those twenty four minutes may have changed the course of the war.

Over 300 shells were expended sinking the Jervis Bay, and some accounts say as much as one third of the Scheer's ammunition was used against the unarmoured liner. This hampered the Scheer's own activities in the Atlantic, and had a lasting effect. The political effects were more far reaching.

An internal struggle was raging in German headquarters. The navy wanted more battleships, but the pressure was on the build U-Boats as they were cheaper. The performance of the Admiral Scheer, a valuable pocket battleship, was being closely monitored. She sunk 17 ships in her first year of operation, while the Uboats sunk ten times that. This may have contributed to Hitler pulling the German Navy back into the Norweigan fjords and out of the Atlantic.

At the same time the British changed policy to always have large convoys guarded by battleships. While this resulted in fewer, larger convoys, with the withdrawal of convoy raiders it gave them a better chance to get through.

The Battle of the Atlantic

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A good re-telling of the Battle of the Atlantic from 1939 to 1945. The fight to maintain the supply lines from America to Britain, it was a battle the Allies won - just.

The Mopan

The tragedy of the Mopan.

Shortly before encountering HX84, the Admiral Scheer had spotted a merchant vessel, the Mopan. To prevent them warning the convoy, the Scheer sent a signal to them to stay where they were and not attempt to use the radio. Under the guns of the battleship, the merchant seaman did as they were told. The Admiral Scheer picked up the crew (in stark contrast to the fate of the Jervis Bay survivors) and then sunk the vessel.

As POWs, the Mopan's crew spent 5 months in the hold of the Nordmark, another raider. Eventually they were shipped back to Germany, where they were placed in a concentration camp and several died of malnutrition.

One of the survivors of the Mopan tells his story:

1955 newspaper article: The Mopan

The Lonely Sea by Alastair Maclean

A retelling of the war stories

As well as his fiction, Alastair Maclean retold a number of the famous incidents of the War in his short story collection "The Lonely Sea" such as the tale of the Rawalpindi, another merchant escort, and the fate of the Arandora Star.

The book closes with the story of HX84 and the Jervis Bay, an unforgettable homage by an excellent author.

The Lonely Sea: Collected Short Stories

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About the Battle for the Atlantic

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Further resources about HX84

More abut convoy HX-84

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A lot has been written about HX84, although a few resources stand out.
HMS "Jervis Bay":Convoy HX.84. 5th November 1940:Research by David Bews:Highland Archives
Caithness Archives - HMS "Jervis Bay" Armed Merchant Cruiser. Convoy HX.84. 5th November 1940
On 28th Oct 1940 the convoy HX.84 (84th convoy from Halifax to the UK) left Halifax, Nova Scotia with 38 merchant ships and the HMS Jervis Bay an Armed Merchant Cruiser (AMC), wh
Jervis Bay and convoy HX84
In November 1940 she was the sole escort for Convoy HX84 of thirty-seven freighters moving from Halifax to Britain
The Story of Beaverford
The Story of the Beaverford

An Epitaph

"Sheer senseless destruction to send a cockle-shell like the Jervis Bay up against the might of a pocket battleship. One feels, however, it would be unwise to voice such thoughts in the presence of the men from convoy HX-84...

The Jervis Bay moved out into the path of the Admiral Scheer and died so they might live."

Alastair Maclean,"The Lonely Sea"

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There is a lot to say about the Jervis Bay and convoy HX84, so this lens is simply an introduction.

If you have any comments, memories or further resources that you think should be included , please share them here.

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  • Reply
    Richard3331 Feb 12, 2012 @ 12:33 pm | delete
    Good Navy Lens Thank you
  • Reply
    Peter Graves Dec 22, 2011 @ 12:57 am | delete
    Thanks for your excellent article. "If the Gods be Good" is another excellent account of the battle and the survivors' accounts much later.

    My mother emigrated from Ireland in 1930 aboard the civilian liner SS Jervis Bay and always remembered the later actions of Captain Fegan.

    Appropriately, in 1928-29, Captain Fegan had been the Commandant of Australia's Naval College at Jervis Bay, New South Wales. My father had finished his naval service there in 1922.

    Australia has just now taken delivery of HMAS Choules, which was formerly the RN's RFA Largs Bay. In the 1920s, the "SS Largs Bay" was one of the 5 "Bay" class liners bringing migrants to Australia.

    One of the others was the SS Jervis Bay.

    Good to see that one of the "Bay" vessels has returned to Australia.

    Peter Graves, Canberra.
  • Reply
    Iain84 Nov 11, 2011 @ 4:29 am | delete
    A* lens! Lots and lots of information and pictures. Well done
  • Reply
    Leslie Cavanagh Apr 13, 2011 @ 6:38 pm | delete
    My Uncle,was Petty Officer on 'The Jervis Bay'his name is William Margetts he alas died when his ship was confronted by the mighty pocket battle ship 'Admiral Scheer'.It was such a blow for my parents who thought the world of him.I went to see the memorial to the 'Jervis Bay' and the sailors who served on her, last year on 5thNovember 2010 at Chatham in Kent.It was the 70th anniversary of it's sinking.I never knew my uncle personally as i was born 5years after his death but i was so pleased to have seen the memorial and i think my parents would have approved.God bless all who sailed in her.
  • Reply
    ChrisDay Dec 6, 2010 @ 4:01 am | delete
    Great tale of heroism and comradeship. Pity we rarely show these qualities outside war . . . Lensrolled to my 'Unsung Heroes' lens.
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I've had this lens in mind since I joined Squidoo, but kept putting it off because I didn't think I could do it justice. I still don't, but after deleting my attempts repeatedly, it seemed more important to get the story told and make the lens perfect later.
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