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Battle of Drøbak Sound

The Battle of Drøbak Sound took place in Drøbak Sound, the northernmost part of the outer Oslofjord in southern Norway, on 9 April 1940. It marked the end of the "Phoney War" and the beginning of World War II in Western Europe.

Battle of Drøbak Sound
Part of the Norwegian campaign of World War II

Blücher sinking in the Oslofjord
Date9 April 1940
Location
Result

Norwegian victory

Belligerents
 Norway  Germany
Commanders and leaders
Birger Eriksen Oskar Kummetz
Heinrich Woldag
August Thiele
Erwin Engelbrecht
Strength
407
1 fortress
18 coastal guns
11 anti-aircraft guns
2 protection guns
1 torpedo battery[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]
2 heavy cruisers
1 light cruiser
1 torpedo boat
2 minesweepers
Casualties and losses
None[8] 700-850 killed and wounded
1,000 captured
1 heavy cruiser sunk
1 heavy cruiser damaged[9][7]
4 civilians killed
1 cutter sunk
1 cargo ship damaged[1][10][11][12][13]

A German fleet led by the cruiser Blücher was dispatched up the Oslofjord to begin the German invasion of Norway, with the objective of seizing the Norwegian capital of Oslo and capturing King Haakon VII and his government. The fleet was engaged in the fjord by Oscarsborg Fortress, an aging coastal installation near Drøbak, that had been relegated to training coastal artillery servicemen, leading the Germans to disregard its defensive value. However, unbeknownst to German military intelligence, the fortress' most powerful weapon was a torpedo battery, which would be used to great effect against the German invaders.[14]

The fortress' armaments worked flawlessly despite their age, sinking the Blücher in the sound and forcing the German fleet to fall back. The loss of the German flagship, which carried most of the troops and Gestapo agents intended to occupy Oslo, delayed the German occupation long enough for King Haakon VII and his government to escape from the capital.

Before the battle

As the political situation was chaotic, the 64-year-old commander, Oberst (Colonel) Birger Eriksen, had not received any clear orders and had received no notice as to whether the approaching warships were German or Allied. He was well aware that Norway was officially neutral, but that the government was inclined to side with the British in case of direct Norwegian involvement in the war.

Apart from the officers and NCOs, almost all the soldiers manning the fortress were fresh recruits, having only been conscripted seven days before, on 2 April. Because of the influx of 450 fresh recruits, the fortress' naval mines were not deployed on 9 April. Part of the recruits' training was to lay the mine barrier, a process planned for a few days later.

Torpedo battery

The commander of the torpedo battery at Oscarsborg had at the time of the battle been on sick leave since March 1940. Due to this, the retired Kommandørkaptein (Commander Senior Grade) Andreas Anderssen [no], who lived in nearby Drøbak, had been assigned as temporary commander for the battery. As an unidentified flotilla started forcing its way past the outer fortifications in the south of the Oslofjord, late at night on 8 April, Oberst Eriksen called Anderssen in and had him come down to the fortress. Kommandørkaptein Anderssen donned his old uniform and was transported by boat over the fjord to the torpedo battery.[15] Anderssen would show himself worthy of the important task of leading the fortress' most lethal weapon system; having first served at the torpedo battery in 1909, he knew the ageing weapons intimately.[16] When Anderssen had been called back into duty a month previously, he had been a pensioner for 13 years, having originally retired from his post as commander of the torpedo battery in 1927.[17] The battery had three torpedo tunnels which could fire six torpedoes without reloading and a total of nine torpedoes were stored and ready for use.[2]

Battle

Main Battery rounds

 
One of the three 28 cm (11 in) main battery guns at Oscarsborg

While the main combat station for the Main Battery and the commander of Oscarsborg fortress was on the island Håøya north-west of South Kaholmen (Norwegian: Søndre Kaholmen), due to the special circumstances in 1940, Oberst Eriksen took position in the backup station on the eastern flank of the Main Battery at South Kaholmen.[18]

At 04:21 on 9 April, Eriksen gave the Main Battery guns the order to fire at the lead ship of the unknown flotilla forcing its way towards Oslo.[19] Upon giving the command, Eriksen was questioned. He responded with his now famous response; "Either I will be decorated or I will be court martialled. Fire!"[20] Two rounds from the 28 cm (11.0 in) Krupp guns Moses and Aron engaged the German cruiser Blücher at 1,800 m (2,000 yd) range. The two Norwegian guns had been loaded with live, 255 kg (562 lb) high-explosive shells;[21] firing them "in anger" was a violation of the pre-war Norwegian rules of engagement which dictated warning shots be fired first, as had been the case at the Rauøy Fortress and the Bolærne Fortress further down the fjord.[16] Colonel Eriksen later explained his decision by alluding to the fact that the German naval force already had forced their way past the fortresses further South in the Oslo Fjord and had received both warning shots and live rounds from these more outlying coastal fortifications. As the vessels had continued up the fjord toward the capital, Eriksen was of the opinion that he had the right to consider them enemy warships and to engage them as such.

 
Oberst (Colonel) Birger Eriksen, the commander of Oscarsborg, 9 April 1940
 
Map of Oslofjord and the fortress of Oscarsborg

The first 28 cm shell hit Blücher right in front of the aft mast,[19] and set the midship area up to the fore mast on fire.[22] The second 28 cm round hit the base of one of the forward 20.3 cm (8.0 in) gun turrets shortly thereafter, throwing large parts of it into the fjord and igniting further fires on board.[23] There was only time for the Main Battery to fire these two rounds, due to their slow reload time with only 30 untrained recruits manning them at the time.[19] Only one gun crew of actual artillerymen was available, and two guns could only be made operational by splitting the real gunners between the two guns and using non-combatant privates to assist the gunners.[21] The personnel pressed into service on the main guns included cooks woken up to man the Main Battery.[19] There was no time to reload; there was not even time to fire the third gun, Josva, which was loaded but unmanned.

The reason for the significant effect of the two 28 cm rounds on Blücher was that the first round penetrated the side of the ship and exploded inside a magazine containing cans of oil, smoke dispensers, incendiary bombs, aircraft bombs for the cruiser's Arado Ar 196 reconnaissance floatplanes and depth charges. The bulkheads on that deck were blown out and the burning oil developed into an intense fire. The second 28 cm shell also knocked out the electricity central for the ship's main guns, rendering them unable to return fire.[23]

Kopås and Husvik batteries

While fire raged aboard Blücher, the secondary Norwegian coastal batteries fired at her with guns ranging in calibre from the two small 57 mm (2.24 in) pieces at Husvik, intended to protect the fortress' missing mine barrier, to the three 15 cm (5.9 in) guns of the Kopås Battery on the eastern side of the fjord. The larger guns wrought havoc on board Blücher, while the 57 mm guns concentrated on the cruiser's superstructure and the anti-aircraft weapons,[24] and were partially successful in suppressing the fire from her light artillery as Blücher slowly sailed past the fortress. The Husvik battery had to be abandoned when Blücher passed in front of it and fired her light AA guns directly down into the positions.[24] Although the main building at the battery caught fire, the Norwegians suffered no casualties.[24] In all, thirteen 15 cm rounds and around thirty 57 mm shells hit the German cruiser as it passed the guns of the fortress' secondary batteries. One of the 15 cm rounds from Kopås disabled Blücher's steering gear and forced the cruiser's crew to steer her using the engines to avoid running aground. Blücher's fire-fighting system was also knocked out by shell fragments from the two Norwegian batteries, making attempts to control the fires aboard the ship and rescue the many wounded much more difficult.[24]

Identity of the intruders becomes known

As the now crippled Blücher passed the fortress guns, a sudden outburst of voices from the burning cruiser could be heard above the battle noises; Norwegian sources state that the crew broke into singing Deutschland, Deutschland über alles.[25][26][27] Only at this point did it become clear to the men of the fortress whom they were fighting.[25][26][28][29][30] Later, at 04:35, Oberst Eriksen received a message from the Norwegian minesweeper HNoMS Otra confirming that the intruding ships were German.[27] The message had been sent to the naval base in Horten at 04:10, but the massive communications problems that severely hampered the efforts of the Norwegian military throughout the Norwegian Campaign had prevented it from reaching Oscarsborg in time.[31]

The return fire from Blücher was ineffective, with the light artillery mostly pointing too high and the main batteries, 20.3 cm guns, unable to fire due to the damage caused by the second 28 cm round from Oscarsborg's Main Battery. The shelling lasted only for five to seven minutes. When the guns on both sides silenced, with all the "passengers" still under deck—"there was a dead silence on board the whole ship, no movement whatsoever was identified".[32]

Kommandørkaptein Anderssen launches the torpedoes

After passing the line of fire of the fortress' gun batteries, the cruiser was burning and severely damaged, but her captain still hoped he would be able to save his ship. At this point, however, Blücher entered the sights of Kommandørkaptein Anderssen as she slid past the torpedo battery at a range of only 500 m (550 yd).[33] The torpedoes were 40-year-old Whitehead torpedo weapons of Austro-Hungarian manufacture. These torpedoes had been practice-launched well over 200 times before, but no one was certain if they would function or not.[25] As Kommandørkaptein Anderssen pushed the firing mechanism button for the torpedoes, at approximately 04:30, the weapons turned out to work perfectly; first one and then another torpedo raced out of their underwater exit tunnels at 3 m (9.8 ft) below the surface toward the burning warship. As Anderssen had overestimated the speed of his target slightly, the first torpedo hit near Blücher's forward turret (nicknamed "Anton"), creating only inconsequential damage.[23] The aim was corrected for the second torpedo launch and the torpedo struck Blücher amidships, hitting the same general area as the first 28 cm shell.[23] This caused catastrophic damage to the cruiser and blew open many of her bulkheads, allowing water to flood her decks while she was burning furiously.[9] The third torpedo launcher was left loaded in case more ships were to follow close behind Blücher. After firing, the two other tubes were reloaded and readied for the next target.

End of Blücher

 
Blücher on fire and sinking in Drøbak Sound

With all engines knocked out by the second torpedo hit, the cruiser anchored near the Askholmene islets just north and out of the arc of fire of the fort's guns to try to fight the ferocious fires raging throughout the vessel. Blücher's torpedoes were fired against land to avoid them exploding in the uncontrolled fires aboard.[34] The crew's struggle ended when, at 05:30,[34] fires reached a midship ammunition hold for the 10.5 cm (4.13 in) Flak guns, blowing a large gap in the ship's side.[34][35][36] The magazine blast ruptured the bulkheads between the boiler rooms and tore open the cruiser's fuel bunkers, igniting further fires. By this point, Blücher was doomed.[35]

At 06:22, Blücher sank bow first into the depths of the Oslofjord, first laying over on her port side, then turning upside-down and finally succumbing with her screws the last to disappear below the surface.[9] After the ship had disappeared from the surface, large quantities of oil floated up and covered the close to two thousand sailors and soldiers fighting for their lives in the freezing water. The oil rapidly caught fire, killing hundreds more Germans.[7]

Obergefreiter Günther Morgalla—who survived the sinking—later said that, swimming toward his shivering crew mates onshore, he heard someone defiantly singing the Deutschlandlied followed by "Das kann doch einen Seemann nicht erschüttern." ("That cannot shake a sailor").[37]

 
German survivors, with the sinking Blücher in the background

In all, 650–800 Germans died,[9] and 550 of the approximately 1,400 wet and cold survivors of Blücher were captured by soldiers from Company no. 4 of the Norwegian Royal Guards under the command of Kaptein (Captain) A. J. T. Petersson.[7] In total, some 1,200 of the survivors had made it ashore at Frogn near Drøbak. The guardsmen were supposed to take all the Germans prisoner, but mainly focused on caring for the many wounded and dying.[38] Around 1,000 of the Germans, including Generalmajor Erwin Engelbrecht and Admiral Oskar Kummetz, were eventually moved to a nearby farm and placed under light guard. None of the prisoners were interrogated. By 18:30, the Norwegian soldiers withdrew from the area, abandoning the Germans. Engelbrecht and Kummetz then made their way to Oslo.[39] The leading German officers reached Oslo at 22:00, moving into the Hotel Continental, though without most of the troops intended to occupy the capital.[40][41] Many of the German wounded were initially taken to Åsgården summer hotel in Åsgårdstrand for medical care, where Norwegian wounded had already been brought. The hotel was the temporary improvised location for the Royal Norwegian Navy Hospital, which had been evacuated from Horten at midnight on 8 April.[42]

Remaining ships retreat

By the time Blücher sank, the remaining naval force destined for Oslo had long since turned around and retreated back down the fjord. Seeing the geysers of water from underwater explosions on Blücher, and unaware of the torpedo battery, the commander of the heavy cruiser Lützow (the recently renamed pocket battleship Deutschland) assumed the flagship had hit mines and at 04:40 the decision was made for the flotilla to turn back and land the invasion forces out of range of the Oscarsborg batteries. The planned coup against Oslo to force the surrender of the Norwegian government was replaced by a land advance up the Oslofjord.[43]

As the force made good its escape, the fortress managed to damage Lützow, the 15 cm guns of the Kopås battery scoring three hits and knocking out the ship's forward 28 cm turret ("Anton").[24] Kopås kept firing at the retreating ships until they disappeared in the mist at a range of around 3,000 m (3,300 yd).[27] After pulling out of range of the fortress guns, Lützow employed her remaining turret "Bruno" to bombard the defenders from a range of 9–10 km (4.9–5.4 nmi; 5.6–6.2 mi) down the fjord.

During the battle, another burning ship was spotted in the distance from Oscarsborg, leading the Norwegian defenders to believe they had sunk another German warship in addition to Blücher. For some time after the battle, the belief was that Oscarsborg had sunk the artillery training ship Brummer. The reality, however, was that the burning ship was the 107 long tons (109 t) Norwegian cargo cutter Sørland that had stumbled into the battle while on her way from Moss to Oslo with a cargo of paper. As the small ship had mistaken the events as a military exercise, she kept going until fired upon and set ablaze by the German minesweepers R-18 and R-19. Sørland sank with two of her six-man crew near the village of Skiphelle in Drøbak, as the first civilian Norwegian ship lost during the invasion.[1][11][12] Brummer was indeed lost in connection with the invasion, but only when she was on her way back to Germany on 14 April, when she was torpedoed by the Royal Navy submarine HMS Sterlet and sank the next day.[44]

Luftwaffe bombing

 
Oscarsborg's Hovedøya under Luftwaffe attack

The fortress was subjected to heavy Luftwaffe bombing later on the same day, to which the fortress could only reply with two Bofors 40 mm L/60 anti-aircraft (AA) guns and three Colt M/29 7.92 mm (0.312 in) AA machine guns at Seiersten Battery, as well as another four Colt M/29 7.92 mm AA machine guns at Håøya Battery,[45] but again there were no Norwegian casualties. Initially, four machine guns on the roof of the Main Battery also returned fire, but these had to be abandoned early on.[1]

One of the two 40 mm guns became unserviceable after only 22 rounds; the other gun kept firing until 12:00, but to little effect. After a break in the attacks from 12:00 to 13:30, during which time Lützow bombarded Hovedøya,[1] the Luftwaffe bombers returned at 13:30 and soon strafed the remaining Norwegian anti-aircraft guns, forcing the crew to seek shelter in the nearby forest at around 14:00. In all, the fortress was subjected to nearly nine hours of air attack, during which time around five hundred bombs—ranging from 50–200 kg (110–440 lb) in size—were dropped on Oscarsborg.[46] Amongst the bombers that attacked Oscarsborg were twenty-two long-range Junkers Ju 87R "Stuka" dive bombers of Sturzkampfgeschwader 1 under the command of Hauptmann Paul-Werner Hozzel, operating from Kiel-Holtenau airport in northern Germany.[47]

Surrender

Although the German naval attack on Oslo had been thwarted by the actions of Oscarsborg, the city was seized later that day by forces that were airlifted into Fornebu Airport. In light of the fall of the capital, and with news of German landings at the village of Son south of Drøbak,[46] Colonel Eriksen decided that further fighting without adequate infantry support was in vain, and agreed to a ceasefire in the evening of 9 April. The fortress was surrendered intact on the morning of 10 April.[48]

The garrison at the main battery and at Håøya were treated separately by the Germans from those captured from the mainland batteries, and were released a week after the battle. The soldiers and non-commissioned officers captured at the mainland batteries were released three days after the fortress' surrender, while the officers were held as prisoners of war at Fredriksten Fortress. The reserve officers were released on 15 May, while the full-time officers were transferred to Grini prison camp and released in late May 1940.[48]

Aftermath

In one of the more peculiar battles of the war, a hundred year old fortification, manned by raw recruits and pensioners and armed with 40- to 50-year-old weaponry of German and Austro-Hungarian manufacture, had destroyed a ship so new, its crew was still finishing training. Oscarsborg had fulfilled its mission and denied an invader access to the capital. Even though it and the country were ultimately captured and occupied, the effects of delaying the German advance were immediate and considerable. On board Blücher were troops specially designated to capture the King, the Norwegian cabinet, the Storting (Norwegian Parliament) and the national gold reserve; the delay made it possible for all these to escape.[49] On 9 April, the Storting was able to convene at Elverum and give the cabinet a wide authorization to govern until a Storting could again assemble. Thus, the Norwegian government was able to continue the defence of Norway until it had evacuated to exile in the United Kingdom on 7 June, with the Norwegian Army laying down their arms on 10 June.

Media adaption

The battle is depicted in the 2016 feature film The King's Choice.[50]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Fjeld 1999: 190
  2. ^ a b Stangeland&Valebrokk 2001: 260
  3. ^ Fjeld 1999: 160
  4. ^ Fjeld: 231
  5. ^ Fjeld: 266
  6. ^ Fjeld: 335
  7. ^ a b c d Hauge 1995: 42
  8. ^ Ribsskog 1998: 55
  9. ^ a b c d Ribsskog 1998: 53
  10. ^ Fjeld 1999: 189
  11. ^ a b Lawson, Siri Holm. "M/K Sørland". Warsailors.com. Retrieved 16 January 2017.
  12. ^ a b Skovheim Shipwreck website: Sørland 20 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine (in Norwegian and English)
  13. ^ Lawson, Siri Holm. "D/S Halden 1". Warsailors.com. Retrieved 16 January 2017.
  14. ^ Hansvoll, Jan W. (15 September 2006). . Kongsberg Defence Association (in Norwegian). Archived from the original on 16 October 2007. Retrieved 17 January 2017.
  15. ^ Hansen 2005: 49
  16. ^ a b Bjørnsen, Bjørn (30 March 2004). . Aftenposten (in Norwegian). Archived from the original on 21 December 2007. Retrieved 16 January 2017.
  17. ^ Hansen 2005: 48
  18. ^ "1001 Hovedbatteriet" (in Norwegian). Nasjonale Festningsverk. Retrieved 7 November 2008.
  19. ^ a b c d Ribsskog 1998: 50
  20. ^ . Lofoten Krigsminnemuseum (in Norwegian). Archived from the original on 16 October 2008. Retrieved 31 January 2009.
  21. ^ a b Hauge 1995: 35
  22. ^ Ribsskog 1998: 50–51
  23. ^ a b c d Ribsskog 1998: 51
  24. ^ a b c d e Fjeld2 1999:36
  25. ^ a b c Hauge 1995: 36
  26. ^ a b Tamelander&Zetterling 2001: 87
  27. ^ a b c Berg 1997: 13
  28. ^ Berg 1997: 12–13
  29. ^ Ribsskog 1998:45–50
  30. ^ Grimnes 1990: 7–8
  31. ^ Berg 1997: 10
  32. ^ Binder 2001: 77
  33. ^ Hauge 1995: 37
  34. ^ a b c Hauge 1995: 38
  35. ^ a b Williamson 2003: 33–34
  36. ^ Tamelander&Zetterling 2001: 88
  37. ^ Binder 2001: 89
  38. ^ Hansen 2005: 71
  39. ^ Arneberg 1989: 62, 65
  40. ^ Arneberg 1989: 65
  41. ^ Hansen 2005: 72
  42. ^ Sivertsen 2001: 78
  43. ^ Grimnes 1990: 14
  44. ^ German-navy.de: Brummer (in English)
  45. ^ Grimnes 1990: 15
  46. ^ a b Fjeld 1999: 191
  47. ^ Weal 1997: 34–35
  48. ^ a b Fjeld 1999: 192
  49. ^ Grimnes, Ole Kristian (1995). "Blücher". In Dahl; Hjeltnes; Nøkleby; Ringdal; Sørensen (eds.). Norsk krigsleksikon 1940-45 (in Norwegian). Oslo: Cappelen. pp. 46–47. ISBN 82-02-14138-9.
  50. ^ "Kongens nei". Norwegian Defence Estates Agency (in Norwegian). 24 August 2016. Retrieved 16 January 2017.[permanent dead link]

Bibliography

  • Arneberg, Sven T.; Kristian Hosar (1989). Vi dro mot nord : felttoget i Norge i april 1940, skildret av tyske soldater og offiserer: (Oslo, Østfold, Akershus, Hedmark, Oppland, Møre og Romsdal) (in Norwegian). Oslo: Aventura.
  • Berg, Ole F. (1997). I skjærgården og på havet – Marinens krig 8. april 1940 – 8. mai 1945 (in Norwegian). Oslo: Marinens krigsveteranforening. ISBN 82-993545-2-8.
  • Binder, Frank & Schlünz Hans Hermann: Schwerer Kreuzer Blücher, Koehlers Verlagsgesellschaft mbH, Hamburg 2001 ISBN 3-7822-0784-X (in German)
  • Engdahl, Odd G. (ed.): Norsk Marinehistorisk Atlas 900–2005, Vigmostad & Bjørke, Bergen 2006 (in Norwegian)
  • Fjeld, Odd T. (1999). Klar til strid – Kystartilleriet gjennom århundrene (in Norwegian). Oslo: Kystartilleriets Offisersforening. ISBN 82-995208-0-0.
  • Fjeld, Odd T. (ed.): Kystartilleriet 100 år, Sjømilitære Samfund ved Norsk Tidsskrift for Sjøvesen, Hundvåg 1999 ISBN 82-994738-6-1 (in Norwegian)
    (to be quoted as Fjeld2 1999)
  • Grimnes, Ole Kristian: Oscarsborg festning – 9. april 1940, Forsvarets Krigshistoriske Avdeling, 1990 (in Norwegian)
  • Hansen, Ola Bøe (ed.): Sjøkrigens skjebner – deres egne beretninger, Sjømilitære Samfund ved Forlaget Norsk Tidsskrift for Sjøvesen, Gjøvik 2005 ISBN 82-92217-22-3 (in Norwegian)
  • Hauge, Andreas (1995). Kampene i Norge 1940 (in Norwegian). Vol. 1. Sandefjord: Krigshistorisk Forlag. ISBN 82-993369-0-2.
  • Ribsskog, Asbjørn: Kystartilleriet under den annen verdenskrig 1939–1945, Atheneum Forlag as, Vinterbro 1998 (in Norwegian)
  • Sivertsen, Svein Carl (ed.): Sjøforsvaret dag for dag 1814–2000, Sjømilitære Samfund ved Norsk Tidsskrift for Sjøvesen, Hundvåg 2001 ISBN 82-92217-03-7 (in Norwegian)
  • Stangeland, Gro & Valebrokk, Eva: Norges bedste Værn og Fæste – Nasjonale festningsverk, Wigestrand Forlag AS, Stavanger 2001 ISBN 82-91370-35-4 (in Norwegian)
  • Tamelander, Michael & Zetterling, Niklas: 9. april Nazitysklands invasjon av Norge, Spartacus Forlag AS, Oslo 2001 (in Norwegian)
  • Weal, John (1997). Junkers Ju 87 Stukageschwader 1937–41. Osprey Combat Aircraft. Vol. 1 (First ed.). Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84176-439-9.
  • Williamson, Gordon: German Heavy Cruisers 1939–45, Osprey Publishing Ltd., Oxford 2003 ISBN 1-84176-502-3

External links

  • Oscarsborg Fortress Museum official website (in Norwegian)
  • Oscarsborg Fortress website(in English)
  • Website on the fortress (in Norwegian)
  • Oscarsborg Fortress, map[permanent dead link] Norwegian Defence Estates Agency (in English)
  • (in Norwegian and English)
  • (in English)
  • (in Norwegian)

Coordinates: 59°42′03″N 10°35′34″E / 59.7009°N 10.5927°E / 59.7009; 10.5927

battle, drøbak, sound, took, place, drøbak, sound, northernmost, part, outer, oslofjord, southern, norway, april, 1940, marked, phoney, beginning, world, western, europe, part, norwegian, campaign, world, iiblücher, sinking, oslofjorddate9, april, 1940location. The Battle of Drobak Sound took place in Drobak Sound the northernmost part of the outer Oslofjord in southern Norway on 9 April 1940 It marked the end of the Phoney War and the beginning of World War II in Western Europe Battle of Drobak SoundPart of the Norwegian campaign of World War IIBlucher sinking in the OslofjordDate9 April 1940LocationDrobak Sound Oslofjord NorwayResultNorwegian victory German invasion force delayed Evacuation of the Norwegian Parliament Royal Family and gold reserveBelligerents Norway GermanyCommanders and leadersBirger EriksenOskar Kummetz Heinrich Woldag August Thiele Erwin EngelbrechtStrength407 1 fortress 18 coastal guns 11 anti aircraft guns 2 protection guns 1 torpedo battery 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 2 heavy cruisers 1 light cruiser 1 torpedo boat 2 minesweepersCasualties and lossesNone 8 700 850 killed and wounded 1 000 captured 1 heavy cruiser sunk 1 heavy cruiser damaged 9 7 4 civilians killed 1 cutter sunk 1 cargo ship damaged 1 10 11 12 13 A German fleet led by the cruiser Blucher was dispatched up the Oslofjord to begin the German invasion of Norway with the objective of seizing the Norwegian capital of Oslo and capturing King Haakon VII and his government The fleet was engaged in the fjord by Oscarsborg Fortress an aging coastal installation near Drobak that had been relegated to training coastal artillery servicemen leading the Germans to disregard its defensive value However unbeknownst to German military intelligence the fortress most powerful weapon was a torpedo battery which would be used to great effect against the German invaders 14 The fortress armaments worked flawlessly despite their age sinking the Blucher in the sound and forcing the German fleet to fall back The loss of the German flagship which carried most of the troops and Gestapo agents intended to occupy Oslo delayed the German occupation long enough for King Haakon VII and his government to escape from the capital Contents 1 Before the battle 1 1 Torpedo battery 2 Battle 2 1 Main Battery rounds 2 2 Kopas and Husvik batteries 2 3 Identity of the intruders becomes known 2 4 Kommandorkaptein Anderssen launches the torpedoes 2 5 End of Blucher 3 Remaining ships retreat 4 Luftwaffe bombing 5 Surrender 6 Aftermath 7 Media adaption 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksBefore the battle EditAs the political situation was chaotic the 64 year old commander Oberst Colonel Birger Eriksen had not received any clear orders and had received no notice as to whether the approaching warships were German or Allied He was well aware that Norway was officially neutral but that the government was inclined to side with the British in case of direct Norwegian involvement in the war Apart from the officers and NCOs almost all the soldiers manning the fortress were fresh recruits having only been conscripted seven days before on 2 April Because of the influx of 450 fresh recruits the fortress naval mines were not deployed on 9 April Part of the recruits training was to lay the mine barrier a process planned for a few days later Torpedo battery Edit The commander of the torpedo battery at Oscarsborg had at the time of the battle been on sick leave since March 1940 Due to this the retired Kommandorkaptein Commander Senior Grade Andreas Anderssen no who lived in nearby Drobak had been assigned as temporary commander for the battery As an unidentified flotilla started forcing its way past the outer fortifications in the south of the Oslofjord late at night on 8 April Oberst Eriksen called Anderssen in and had him come down to the fortress Kommandorkaptein Anderssen donned his old uniform and was transported by boat over the fjord to the torpedo battery 15 Anderssen would show himself worthy of the important task of leading the fortress most lethal weapon system having first served at the torpedo battery in 1909 he knew the ageing weapons intimately 16 When Anderssen had been called back into duty a month previously he had been a pensioner for 13 years having originally retired from his post as commander of the torpedo battery in 1927 17 The battery had three torpedo tunnels which could fire six torpedoes without reloading and a total of nine torpedoes were stored and ready for use 2 Battle EditMain Battery rounds Edit One of the three 28 cm 11 in main battery guns at Oscarsborg While the main combat station for the Main Battery and the commander of Oscarsborg fortress was on the island Haoya north west of South Kaholmen Norwegian Sondre Kaholmen due to the special circumstances in 1940 Oberst Eriksen took position in the backup station on the eastern flank of the Main Battery at South Kaholmen 18 At 04 21 on 9 April Eriksen gave the Main Battery guns the order to fire at the lead ship of the unknown flotilla forcing its way towards Oslo 19 Upon giving the command Eriksen was questioned He responded with his now famous response Either I will be decorated or I will be court martialled Fire 20 Two rounds from the 28 cm 11 0 in Krupp guns Moses and Aron engaged the German cruiser Blucher at 1 800 m 2 000 yd range The two Norwegian guns had been loaded with live 255 kg 562 lb high explosive shells 21 firing them in anger was a violation of the pre war Norwegian rules of engagement which dictated warning shots be fired first as had been the case at the Rauoy Fortress and the Bolaerne Fortress further down the fjord 16 Colonel Eriksen later explained his decision by alluding to the fact that the German naval force already had forced their way past the fortresses further South in the Oslo Fjord and had received both warning shots and live rounds from these more outlying coastal fortifications As the vessels had continued up the fjord toward the capital Eriksen was of the opinion that he had the right to consider them enemy warships and to engage them as such Oberst Colonel Birger Eriksen the commander of Oscarsborg 9 April 1940 Map of Oslofjord and the fortress of Oscarsborg The first 28 cm shell hit Blucher right in front of the aft mast 19 and set the midship area up to the fore mast on fire 22 The second 28 cm round hit the base of one of the forward 20 3 cm 8 0 in gun turrets shortly thereafter throwing large parts of it into the fjord and igniting further fires on board 23 There was only time for the Main Battery to fire these two rounds due to their slow reload time with only 30 untrained recruits manning them at the time 19 Only one gun crew of actual artillerymen was available and two guns could only be made operational by splitting the real gunners between the two guns and using non combatant privates to assist the gunners 21 The personnel pressed into service on the main guns included cooks woken up to man the Main Battery 19 There was no time to reload there was not even time to fire the third gun Josva which was loaded but unmanned The reason for the significant effect of the two 28 cm rounds on Blucher was that the first round penetrated the side of the ship and exploded inside a magazine containing cans of oil smoke dispensers incendiary bombs aircraft bombs for the cruiser s Arado Ar 196 reconnaissance floatplanes and depth charges The bulkheads on that deck were blown out and the burning oil developed into an intense fire The second 28 cm shell also knocked out the electricity central for the ship s main guns rendering them unable to return fire 23 Kopas and Husvik batteries Edit While fire raged aboard Blucher the secondary Norwegian coastal batteries fired at her with guns ranging in calibre from the two small 57 mm 2 24 in pieces at Husvik intended to protect the fortress missing mine barrier to the three 15 cm 5 9 in guns of the Kopas Battery on the eastern side of the fjord The larger guns wrought havoc on board Blucher while the 57 mm guns concentrated on the cruiser s superstructure and the anti aircraft weapons 24 and were partially successful in suppressing the fire from her light artillery as Blucher slowly sailed past the fortress The Husvik battery had to be abandoned when Blucher passed in front of it and fired her light AA guns directly down into the positions 24 Although the main building at the battery caught fire the Norwegians suffered no casualties 24 In all thirteen 15 cm rounds and around thirty 57 mm shells hit the German cruiser as it passed the guns of the fortress secondary batteries One of the 15 cm rounds from Kopas disabled Blucher s steering gear and forced the cruiser s crew to steer her using the engines to avoid running aground Blucher s fire fighting system was also knocked out by shell fragments from the two Norwegian batteries making attempts to control the fires aboard the ship and rescue the many wounded much more difficult 24 Identity of the intruders becomes known Edit As the now crippled Blucher passed the fortress guns a sudden outburst of voices from the burning cruiser could be heard above the battle noises Norwegian sources state that the crew broke into singing Deutschland Deutschland uber alles 25 26 27 Only at this point did it become clear to the men of the fortress whom they were fighting 25 26 28 29 30 Later at 04 35 Oberst Eriksen received a message from the Norwegian minesweeper HNoMS Otra confirming that the intruding ships were German 27 The message had been sent to the naval base in Horten at 04 10 but the massive communications problems that severely hampered the efforts of the Norwegian military throughout the Norwegian Campaign had prevented it from reaching Oscarsborg in time 31 The return fire from Blucher was ineffective with the light artillery mostly pointing too high and the main batteries 20 3 cm guns unable to fire due to the damage caused by the second 28 cm round from Oscarsborg s Main Battery The shelling lasted only for five to seven minutes When the guns on both sides silenced with all the passengers still under deck there was a dead silence on board the whole ship no movement whatsoever was identified 32 Kommandorkaptein Anderssen launches the torpedoes Edit After passing the line of fire of the fortress gun batteries the cruiser was burning and severely damaged but her captain still hoped he would be able to save his ship At this point however Blucher entered the sights of Kommandorkaptein Anderssen as she slid past the torpedo battery at a range of only 500 m 550 yd 33 The torpedoes were 40 year old Whitehead torpedo weapons of Austro Hungarian manufacture These torpedoes had been practice launched well over 200 times before but no one was certain if they would function or not 25 As Kommandorkaptein Anderssen pushed the firing mechanism button for the torpedoes at approximately 04 30 the weapons turned out to work perfectly first one and then another torpedo raced out of their underwater exit tunnels at 3 m 9 8 ft below the surface toward the burning warship As Anderssen had overestimated the speed of his target slightly the first torpedo hit near Blucher s forward turret nicknamed Anton creating only inconsequential damage 23 The aim was corrected for the second torpedo launch and the torpedo struck Blucher amidships hitting the same general area as the first 28 cm shell 23 This caused catastrophic damage to the cruiser and blew open many of her bulkheads allowing water to flood her decks while she was burning furiously 9 The third torpedo launcher was left loaded in case more ships were to follow close behind Blucher After firing the two other tubes were reloaded and readied for the next target End of Blucher Edit Blucher on fire and sinking in Drobak Sound With all engines knocked out by the second torpedo hit the cruiser anchored near the Askholmene islets just north and out of the arc of fire of the fort s guns to try to fight the ferocious fires raging throughout the vessel Blucher s torpedoes were fired against land to avoid them exploding in the uncontrolled fires aboard 34 The crew s struggle ended when at 05 30 34 fires reached a midship ammunition hold for the 10 5 cm 4 13 in Flak guns blowing a large gap in the ship s side 34 35 36 The magazine blast ruptured the bulkheads between the boiler rooms and tore open the cruiser s fuel bunkers igniting further fires By this point Blucher was doomed 35 At 06 22 Blucher sank bow first into the depths of the Oslofjord first laying over on her port side then turning upside down and finally succumbing with her screws the last to disappear below the surface 9 After the ship had disappeared from the surface large quantities of oil floated up and covered the close to two thousand sailors and soldiers fighting for their lives in the freezing water The oil rapidly caught fire killing hundreds more Germans 7 Obergefreiter Gunther Morgalla who survived the sinking later said that swimming toward his shivering crew mates onshore he heard someone defiantly singing the Deutschlandlied followed by Das kann doch einen Seemann nicht erschuttern That cannot shake a sailor 37 German survivors with the sinking Blucher in the background In all 650 800 Germans died 9 and 550 of the approximately 1 400 wet and cold survivors of Blucher were captured by soldiers from Company no 4 of the Norwegian Royal Guards under the command of Kaptein Captain A J T Petersson 7 In total some 1 200 of the survivors had made it ashore at Frogn near Drobak The guardsmen were supposed to take all the Germans prisoner but mainly focused on caring for the many wounded and dying 38 Around 1 000 of the Germans including Generalmajor Erwin Engelbrecht and Admiral Oskar Kummetz were eventually moved to a nearby farm and placed under light guard None of the prisoners were interrogated By 18 30 the Norwegian soldiers withdrew from the area abandoning the Germans Engelbrecht and Kummetz then made their way to Oslo 39 The leading German officers reached Oslo at 22 00 moving into the Hotel Continental though without most of the troops intended to occupy the capital 40 41 Many of the German wounded were initially taken to Asgarden summer hotel in Asgardstrand for medical care where Norwegian wounded had already been brought The hotel was the temporary improvised location for the Royal Norwegian Navy Hospital which had been evacuated from Horten at midnight on 8 April 42 Remaining ships retreat EditBy the time Blucher sank the remaining naval force destined for Oslo had long since turned around and retreated back down the fjord Seeing the geysers of water from underwater explosions on Blucher and unaware of the torpedo battery the commander of the heavy cruiser Lutzow the recently renamed pocket battleship Deutschland assumed the flagship had hit mines and at 04 40 the decision was made for the flotilla to turn back and land the invasion forces out of range of the Oscarsborg batteries The planned coup against Oslo to force the surrender of the Norwegian government was replaced by a land advance up the Oslofjord 43 As the force made good its escape the fortress managed to damage Lutzow the 15 cm guns of the Kopas battery scoring three hits and knocking out the ship s forward 28 cm turret Anton 24 Kopas kept firing at the retreating ships until they disappeared in the mist at a range of around 3 000 m 3 300 yd 27 After pulling out of range of the fortress guns Lutzow employed her remaining turret Bruno to bombard the defenders from a range of 9 10 km 4 9 5 4 nmi 5 6 6 2 mi down the fjord During the battle another burning ship was spotted in the distance from Oscarsborg leading the Norwegian defenders to believe they had sunk another German warship in addition to Blucher For some time after the battle the belief was that Oscarsborg had sunk the artillery training ship Brummer The reality however was that the burning ship was the 107 long tons 109 t Norwegian cargo cutter Sorland that had stumbled into the battle while on her way from Moss to Oslo with a cargo of paper As the small ship had mistaken the events as a military exercise she kept going until fired upon and set ablaze by the German minesweepers R 18 and R 19 Sorland sank with two of her six man crew near the village of Skiphelle in Drobak as the first civilian Norwegian ship lost during the invasion 1 11 12 Brummer was indeed lost in connection with the invasion but only when she was on her way back to Germany on 14 April when she was torpedoed by the Royal Navy submarine HMS Sterlet and sank the next day 44 Luftwaffe bombing Edit Oscarsborg s Hovedoya under Luftwaffe attack The fortress was subjected to heavy Luftwaffe bombing later on the same day to which the fortress could only reply with two Bofors 40 mm L 60 anti aircraft AA guns and three Colt M 29 7 92 mm 0 312 in AA machine guns at Seiersten Battery as well as another four Colt M 29 7 92 mm AA machine guns at Haoya Battery 45 but again there were no Norwegian casualties Initially four machine guns on the roof of the Main Battery also returned fire but these had to be abandoned early on 1 One of the two 40 mm guns became unserviceable after only 22 rounds the other gun kept firing until 12 00 but to little effect After a break in the attacks from 12 00 to 13 30 during which time Lutzow bombarded Hovedoya 1 the Luftwaffe bombers returned at 13 30 and soon strafed the remaining Norwegian anti aircraft guns forcing the crew to seek shelter in the nearby forest at around 14 00 In all the fortress was subjected to nearly nine hours of air attack during which time around five hundred bombs ranging from 50 200 kg 110 440 lb in size were dropped on Oscarsborg 46 Amongst the bombers that attacked Oscarsborg were twenty two long range Junkers Ju 87R Stuka dive bombers of Sturzkampfgeschwader 1 under the command of Hauptmann Paul Werner Hozzel operating from Kiel Holtenau airport in northern Germany 47 Surrender EditAlthough the German naval attack on Oslo had been thwarted by the actions of Oscarsborg the city was seized later that day by forces that were airlifted into Fornebu Airport In light of the fall of the capital and with news of German landings at the village of Son south of Drobak 46 Colonel Eriksen decided that further fighting without adequate infantry support was in vain and agreed to a ceasefire in the evening of 9 April The fortress was surrendered intact on the morning of 10 April 48 The garrison at the main battery and at Haoya were treated separately by the Germans from those captured from the mainland batteries and were released a week after the battle The soldiers and non commissioned officers captured at the mainland batteries were released three days after the fortress surrender while the officers were held as prisoners of war at Fredriksten Fortress The reserve officers were released on 15 May while the full time officers were transferred to Grini prison camp and released in late May 1940 48 Aftermath EditIn one of the more peculiar battles of the war a hundred year old fortification manned by raw recruits and pensioners and armed with 40 to 50 year old weaponry of German and Austro Hungarian manufacture had destroyed a ship so new its crew was still finishing training Oscarsborg had fulfilled its mission and denied an invader access to the capital Even though it and the country were ultimately captured and occupied the effects of delaying the German advance were immediate and considerable On board Blucher were troops specially designated to capture the King the Norwegian cabinet the Storting Norwegian Parliament and the national gold reserve the delay made it possible for all these to escape 49 On 9 April the Storting was able to convene at Elverum and give the cabinet a wide authorization to govern until a Storting could again assemble Thus the Norwegian government was able to continue the defence of Norway until it had evacuated to exile in the United Kingdom on 7 June with the Norwegian Army laying down their arms on 10 June Media adaption EditThe battle is depicted in the 2016 feature film The King s Choice 50 See also EditList of Norwegian military equipment of World War II List of German military equipment of World War IIReferences Edit a b c d e Fjeld 1999 190 a b Stangeland amp Valebrokk 2001 260 Fjeld 1999 160 Fjeld 231 Fjeld 266 Fjeld 335 a b c d Hauge 1995 42 Ribsskog 1998 55 a b c d Ribsskog 1998 53 Fjeld 1999 189 a b Lawson Siri Holm M K Sorland Warsailors com Retrieved 16 January 2017 a b Skovheim Shipwreck website Sorland Archived 20 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine in Norwegian and English Lawson Siri Holm D S Halden 1 Warsailors com Retrieved 16 January 2017 Hansvoll Jan W 15 September 2006 Besoket pa Oscarsborg festning lordag 2 september Kongsberg Defence Association in Norwegian Archived from the original on 16 October 2007 Retrieved 17 January 2017 Hansen 2005 49 a b Bjornsen Bjorn 30 March 2004 Fra time til time Aftenposten in Norwegian Archived from the original on 21 December 2007 Retrieved 16 January 2017 Hansen 2005 48 1001 Hovedbatteriet in Norwegian Nasjonale Festningsverk Retrieved 7 November 2008 a b c d Ribsskog 1998 50 9 april 3 Lofoten Krigsminnemuseum in Norwegian Archived from the original on 16 October 2008 Retrieved 31 January 2009 a b Hauge 1995 35 Ribsskog 1998 50 51 a b c d Ribsskog 1998 51 a b c d e Fjeld2 1999 36 a b c Hauge 1995 36 a b Tamelander amp Zetterling 2001 87 a b c Berg 1997 13 Berg 1997 12 13 Ribsskog 1998 45 50 Grimnes 1990 7 8 Berg 1997 10 Binder 2001 77 Hauge 1995 37 a b c Hauge 1995 38 a b Williamson 2003 33 34 Tamelander amp Zetterling 2001 88 Binder 2001 89 Hansen 2005 71 Arneberg 1989 62 65 Arneberg 1989 65 Hansen 2005 72 Sivertsen 2001 78 Grimnes 1990 14 German navy de Brummer in English Grimnes 1990 15 a b Fjeld 1999 191 Weal 1997 34 35 a b Fjeld 1999 192 Grimnes Ole Kristian 1995 Blucher In Dahl Hjeltnes Nokleby Ringdal Sorensen eds Norsk krigsleksikon 1940 45 in Norwegian Oslo Cappelen pp 46 47 ISBN 82 02 14138 9 Kongens nei Norwegian Defence Estates Agency in Norwegian 24 August 2016 Retrieved 16 January 2017 permanent dead link Bibliography EditArneberg Sven T Kristian Hosar 1989 Vi dro mot nord felttoget i Norge i april 1940 skildret av tyske soldater og offiserer Oslo Ostfold Akershus Hedmark Oppland More og Romsdal in Norwegian Oslo Aventura Berg Ole F 1997 I skjaergarden og pa havet Marinens krig 8 april 1940 8 mai 1945 in Norwegian Oslo Marinens krigsveteranforening ISBN 82 993545 2 8 Binder Frank amp Schlunz Hans Hermann Schwerer Kreuzer Blucher Koehlers Verlagsgesellschaft mbH Hamburg 2001 ISBN 3 7822 0784 X in German Engdahl Odd G ed Norsk Marinehistorisk Atlas 900 2005 Vigmostad amp Bjorke Bergen 2006 in Norwegian Fjeld Odd T 1999 Klar til strid Kystartilleriet gjennom arhundrene in Norwegian Oslo Kystartilleriets Offisersforening ISBN 82 995208 0 0 Fjeld Odd T ed Kystartilleriet 100 ar Sjomilitaere Samfund ved Norsk Tidsskrift for Sjovesen Hundvag 1999 ISBN 82 994738 6 1 in Norwegian to be quoted as Fjeld2 1999 Grimnes Ole Kristian Oscarsborg festning 9 april 1940 Forsvarets Krigshistoriske Avdeling 1990 in Norwegian Hansen Ola Boe ed Sjokrigens skjebner deres egne beretninger Sjomilitaere Samfund ved Forlaget Norsk Tidsskrift for Sjovesen Gjovik 2005 ISBN 82 92217 22 3 in Norwegian Hauge Andreas 1995 Kampene i Norge 1940 in Norwegian Vol 1 Sandefjord Krigshistorisk Forlag ISBN 82 993369 0 2 Ribsskog Asbjorn Kystartilleriet under den annen verdenskrig 1939 1945 Atheneum Forlag as Vinterbro 1998 in Norwegian Sivertsen Svein Carl ed Sjoforsvaret dag for dag 1814 2000 Sjomilitaere Samfund ved Norsk Tidsskrift for Sjovesen Hundvag 2001 ISBN 82 92217 03 7 in Norwegian Stangeland Gro amp Valebrokk Eva Norges bedste Vaern og Faeste Nasjonale festningsverk Wigestrand Forlag AS Stavanger 2001 ISBN 82 91370 35 4 in Norwegian Tamelander Michael amp Zetterling Niklas 9 april Nazitysklands invasjon av Norge Spartacus Forlag AS Oslo 2001 in Norwegian Weal John 1997 Junkers Ju 87 Stukageschwader 1937 41 Osprey Combat Aircraft Vol 1 First ed Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84176 439 9 Williamson Gordon German Heavy Cruisers 1939 45 Osprey Publishing Ltd Oxford 2003 ISBN 1 84176 502 3External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Sinking of Blucher 1940 Oscarsborg Fortress Museum official website in Norwegian Oscarsborg Fortress website in English Website on the fortress in Norwegian Oscarsborg Fortress map permanent dead link Norwegian Defence Estates Agency in English Oscarsborg Museum history of the fortress in Norwegian and English Norwegian Armed Forces website page about the fortress in English 50 year anniversary Aftenposten newspaper article on the invasion of Norway in Norwegian Coordinates 59 42 03 N 10 35 34 E 59 7009 N 10 5927 E 59 7009 10 5927 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Drobak Sound amp oldid 1120978491, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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