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X-class submarine

The X class was a World War II midget submarine class built for the Royal Navy during 1943–44. It was substantially larger than the original Chariot manned torpedo.

Class overview
NameX class
Operators Royal Navy
Preceded byV class
Succeeded byXE class
SubclassesX3, X4, X5-10, X20-25, XT
Completed20
Lost7 (5 scuttled, 1 foundered, 1 collision)
Preserved1
General characteristics (X class)
Typemidget submarine
Displacement
  • 27 tons surfaced
  • 30 tons submerged
Length51.25 ft (15.62 m)
Beam5.75 ft (1.75 m)
Draught5.3 ft (1.60 m)
Propulsion
  • Single shaft; 1 × Gardner 4LK[1] 4-cyl diesel engine, 42 hp (31.3 kW) at 1,800 rpm
  • 1 × Keith Blackman electric motor, 30 hp (22.3 kW) at 1,650 rpm
Speed
  • 6.5 knots (12.0 km/h) surfaced
  • 5.5 knots (10.2 km/h) submerged
Range
  • 500 nmi (926 km) surfaced
  • 82 nmi (151.8 km) @2 knots (2 mph; 4 km/h) submerged
Test depth300 ft (91.5 m)
Complement4
Armament2 × 4,400 lb detachable amatol charges

Known individually as X-Craft, the vessels were designed to be towed to their intended area of operations by a full-size "mother" submarine – usually one of the T class or S class – with a passage crew on board, the operational crew being transferred from the towing submarine to the X-Craft by dinghy when the operational area was reached, and the passage crew returning with the dinghy to the towing submarine. Once the attack was over, the X-Craft would rendezvous with the towing submarine and then be towed home.

Range was limited primarily by the endurance and determination of their crews, but was thought to be up to 14 days in the craft or 1,000 nmi (1,900 km), after suitable training. Actual range of the X-Craft itself was 600 nmi (1,100 km) surfaced and 80 nmi (150 km) at 2 knots (3.7 km/h) submerged.[2]

Specification edit

The craft was about 51 ft (16 m) long, 5.5 ft (1.7 m) maximum diameter and displaced 27 long tons (27 t) surfaced and 30 long tons (30 t) submerged. Propulsion was by a 4-cylinder Gardner 4LK[1] 42 hp diesel engine, converted from a type used in London buses and a 30 hp electric motor, giving a maximum surface speed of 6.5 knots (12.0 km/h; 7.5 mph) and a submerged speed of about one third of that.[2] The crew initially numbered three – commander, pilot and ERA (Engine Room Artificer, i.e. engineer), but soon a specialist diver was added, for whom an airlock, known as a "wet and dry" compartment, was provided. The ERA, usually a Navy Chief Petty Officer, operated and maintained the machinery in the vessel.

The weapons on the "X-Craft" were two side-cargoes – explosive charges held on opposite sides of the hull with two tons of amatol in each. The intention was to drop these on the sea bed underneath the target and then escape. The charges were detonated by a time fuse.[2] The craft were fitted with electromagnets to evade detection by anti-submarine detectors on the sea bed and also with sonar and a periscope.[2]

Service edit

A number of development craft were built before it was felt that a feasible weapon had been produced. The first operational craft was X3 (or HM S/M X.3), launched on the night of 15 March 1942. Training with the craft began in September 1942, with X4 arriving in October. In December 1942 and January 1943, six of the "5-10" class began to arrive, identical externally but with a completely reworked interior.

These operations were part of a longer series of frogman operations; see human torpedo.

The operational base and training establishment was HMS Varbel at the former Kyles Hydro Hotel at Port Bannatyne on the Isle of Bute in the Firth of Clyde, Scotland.

Major operations edit

 
X25 underway

Their first deployment was Operation Source in September, 1943, an attempt to neutralise the heavy German warships based at Kåfjord, Nordkapp in Northern Norway. Six X-Craft were used but only two successfully laid charges (under the German battleship Tirpitz). Two were lost while being towed to Norway; X8 began taking water and was scuttled, and X9 sank with her crew after the towline parted. Only X6 and X7, commanded by Lieutenant Donald Cameron and Lieutenant Godfrey Place respectively, were successful in placing their charges although their crews were captured (there is some evidence that X5 also placed her charges;[3] X10 also penetrated the anchorage but was unable to attack and the crew were picked up by another submarine). Tirpitz was badly damaged, crippled, and out of action until May 1944; it was destroyed on 12 November 1944 by Avro Lancaster bombers during Operation Catechism in Tromsø, Norway.[4]

For this action, Cameron and Place were awarded the Victoria Cross, whilst Robert Aitken, Richard Haddon Kendall, and John Thornton Lorimer received the Distinguished Service Order and Edmund Goddard the Conspicuous Gallantry Medal.[5] The commander of X8, John Elliott Smart, was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE).[6] There was a possibility that X5 had also successfully planted explosive side charges before being destroyed, but this was never conclusively proven; its commander Henty-Creer was not awarded a medal, but was mentioned in dispatches.[7][4]

The lost boats were replaced early in 1944 with X20 to X25 and six training-only craft.

Submarines X20 to X25 were dispatched to Bergen, Norway. On 15 April 1944, in Operation Guidance X24 attacked the Laksevåg floating dock. X22 was intended for the mission, but had been accidentally rammed during training and sunk with all hands. X24 made the approach and escaped successfully, but the charges were placed under Bärenfels, a 7,569-gross register ton (GRT) merchant vessel alongside the dock; the ship was sunk but the dock suffered only minor damage. On 11 September the operation was repeated by X24; this time she succeeded in sinking the dock.[8]

 
A hand-held, hydraulically powered, net cutter of the type used by X boat divers to cut through torpedo nets protecting harbours

X-Craft were involved in the preparatory work for Overlord. Operation Postage Able was planned to take surveys of the landing beaches with X20, commanded by Lt KR Hudspeth, spending four days off the French coast. Periscope reconnaissance of the shoreline and echo-soundings were performed during daytime. Each night, X20 would approach the beach and 2 divers would swim ashore. Soil samples were collected in condoms. The divers went ashore on two nights to survey the beaches at Vierville-sur-Mer, Moulins St Laurent and Colleville-sur-Mer in what became the American Omaha Beach. On the third night, they were due to go ashore off the Orne Estuary (Sword Beach), but by this stage fatigue (the crew and divers had been living on little more than benzedrine tablets) and the worsening weather caused Hudspeth to shorten the operation, returning to Dolphin on 21 January 1944. Hudspeth received a bar to his DSC.

X20 and X23, each with a crew of five, acted as navigational beacons to help the D-Day invasion fleet land on the correct beaches (Operation Gambit), as part of the Combined Operations Pilotage Parties (COPP). The craft were also equipped with a radio beacon and echo sounder to help direct Canadian and British ships to the suitable positions on Sword and Juno beaches. Oxygen bottles on both craft enabled the crews to remain submerged for extended periods during this operation, 64 hours of the 76 total hours at sea.[9][2]

Legacy edit

The only remaining intact example of an X-Craft, X24, was transferred from HMS Dolphin, where she had been on display since 1981, to the Royal Navy Submarine Museum nearby in 1987.[10] Operations continued in the Far East with the revised XE class submarines.

X-craft and crews edit

 
The engine of X24
  • X3 – unofficially named Piker 1, was lost on 4 November 1942 in Loch Striven due to a leaking engine valve. All crew escaped by utilizing their Davis Submerged Escape Apparatus.[11]
  • X5 – unofficially named Platypus,[12] commanded by Lt. Henty-Creer RNVR (also the operation's commander),[13] crew S-Lt. Nelson, Midshipman Malcolm, and ERA Mortiboys; passage crew Lt Terry-Lloyd (commanding), L/S Element, Stoker Garrity.[14] Henty-Creer, Nelson, Malcolm, and Mortiboys were killed in the attack, though X5's exact fate is unknown.[14]
  • X6 – named Piker II,[13] commanded by Lt. Donald Cameron, crew Lt. J. T. Lorimer, S-Lt. R. Kendall, and ERA Goddard; passage crew Lt Wilson (commanding), Leading Seaman McGregor, Stoker Oxley.[13] Cameron earned a VC, Lorimer and Kendall DSOs, Goddard a Conspicuous Gallantry Medal.[13]
  • X7 – unofficially named Pdinichthys,[15] commanded by Lt. Basil C. G. Place, crew S-Lt. R. Aitken, Lt. Whittam, and ERA Whitley; passage crew Lt Philip (commanding), Leading Seaman J. Magennis, Stoker Luck.[13] Vessel was scuttled immediately following the Tirpitz attack, but only Place escaped before she sank. Aitken escaped from the bottom of the fjord, but Whittam and Whitley were unable to escape before their air gave out. Place also earned a VC, Aitken a DSO, while Philip earned an MBE;[16]
  • X8 – unofficially named Expectant, commanded by Lt. McFarlane RAN[13] (Lt. Smart was passage crew commander)
  • X9 – unofficially named Pluto,[17] commanded by Lt. EA Kearon RNVR; AH Harte (Able Seaman) and GH Hollet (Stoker). Foundered on 16 September 1942 while under tow from the Syrtis.
  • X10 – unofficially named Excalibur,[18] commanded by Lt. Hudspeth RANVR[13]

The depot ship for X craft was HMS Bonaventure.[19]

Builders edit

 
The remains of an XT-class craft on the beach at Aberlady Bay, east of Edinburgh, in 2008. The bow is to the left, the stern to the right. From left to right can be seen the wet and dry chamber hatch, the "conning tower" (the periscopes penetrated the hull through the "eye" shape) and the secondary hatch.

The numbering sequence of the X class began with X3 because the designations X1 and X2 had already been used previously – X1 had been a one-off submarine cruiser design from the 1920s while X2 had been assigned to a captured Italian submarine.

  • Prototypes
  • X5-type
    • X5 – built by Vickers Armstrong, Barrow-in-Furness, used in Operation Source, sunk Altenfjord, 22 September 1943
    • X6 – built by Vickers, used in Operation Source, scuttled Altenfjord, 22 September 1943
    • X7 – built by Vickers, used in Operation Source, scuttled Altenfjord, 22 September 1943, salved 1976 for museum restoration
    • X8 – built by Vickers, used in Operation Source, scuttled in North Sea, 17 September 1943
    • X9 – built by Vickers, used in Operation Source, foundered under tow in North Sea, 16 September 1943 with all hands[20]
    • X10 – built by Vickers, used in Operation Source, scuttled in North Sea 3 October 1943
  • X20-type
    • X20 – built by Broadbent, Huddersfield, used in Operation Postage Able (surveying Normandy beaches prior to invasion) and on Operation Gambit
    • X21 – built by Broadbent
    • X22 – built by Markham & Co., Chesterfield, collided with HMS Syrtis and lost with all hands while training, 7 February 1944
    • X23 – built by Markham, used on Operation Gambit, sold 1945
    • X24 – built by Marshall, Gainsborough, used on Operation Guidance (attacking Laksevåg floating dock at Bergen 15 April 1944) when the merchant ship Barenfels alongside the dock was sunk; the dock was attacked and sunk on Operation Heckle on 11 September 1944, again by X24 which was hulked 1945
    • X25 – built by Marshall, sold 1945
  • Training craft
    • XT1 – built by Vickers, scrapped 1945
    • XT2 – built by Vickers, scrapped 1945
    • XT3 – built by Vickers, scrapped 1945
    • XT4 – built by Vickers, scrapped 1945
    • XT5 – built by Vickers, scrapped 1945
    • XT6 – built by Vickers, scrapped 1945

Surviving examples edit

 
The interior of X24
  • X24 – the only one to have seen combat and survive is at the Royal Navy Submarine Museum, Gosport
  • The remains of two XT-class craft are present on the beach at Aberlady Bay in East Lothian, Scotland. They were towed there in 1946 and moored to a large concrete block at the low tide level and were used as targets for aircraft. Much of the structure remains, semisubmerged in the sand, and can be reached at low spring tides.

In the media edit

This type of midget submarine was portrayed in the 1955 war film, Above Us the Waves, featuring John Mills, which was based on both Operation Source and the earlier Chariot attacks on the Tirpitz.

An X-class submarine – marked as "X2" – features in the 1959 film The Giant Behemoth (a.k.a. Behemoth the Sea Monster).

This class of submarine was later featured in the 1968 movie Submarine X-1 starring James Caan as a Canadian Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve officer who after losing his submarine and fifty crew members in a battle with a German ship during World War II, gets a second chance training crews to take part in a raid using midget subs.

A 1976 Douglas Reeman novel, Surface with Daring, features a fictionalized account of X-class midget submarines, especially XE-16 and its crew, performing several highly secret operations in occupied Europe.[21]

A 2006 Alexander Fullerton novel, The Gatecrashers, features a fictionalized account of X-class midget submarines, including X-12 piloted by one of the protagonists, that lays explosive charges to damage the Tirpitz.[22]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Engine Forum" (PDF). gardnerengineforum.co.uk. Retrieved 10 September 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e "How the Royal Navy's X-Class Midget Subs Helped Make D-Day Possible". 6 June 2015.
  3. ^ Walker, Frank; Mellor, Pamela (1988). The Mystery of X5: Lieutenant H.Henty-Creer's Attack on the Tirpitz. W. Kimber. ISBN 978-0718306281.
  4. ^ a b "Lost heroes of the 'Tirpitz'". BBC History. BBC. 17 February 2011. Retrieved 21 August 2018.
  5. ^ "No. 36390". The London Gazette (Supplement). 10 September 1943. pp. 901–902.
  6. ^ "No. 36295". The London Gazette (Supplement). 17 December 1943. pp. 5539–5540.
  7. ^ O'Neill, Richard (2015). Suicide Squads: The Men and Machines of World War II Special Operations. Pavilion Books. ISBN 978-1840650822.
  8. ^ "How the Royal Navy's X-Class Midget Subs Helped Make D-Day Possible". 6 June 2015.
  9. ^ Winter, Paul (31 July 2014). D-Day Documents. Bloomsbury. pp. 70, 72. ISBN 978-1408194003.
  10. ^ "X24 – Certificate no 1843". National Historic Ships. 11 March 2018. Retrieved 21 August 2018.
  11. ^ . U.S. Naval Submarine School. 1966. Archived from the original on 11 September 2009. Retrieved 8 September 2009. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  12. ^ Grove, Eric. Sea Battles in Close-up: World War 2, Volume 2 (Shepperton, Surrey: Ian Allan Publishing, 1993), pp.124 & 128.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Grove, p.127.
  14. ^ a b Grove, p.124.
  15. ^ Grove, pp.127 & 128.
  16. ^ Magennis earned a VC in the midget submarine attack on Takao. Grove, p.127.
  17. ^ [1] Supplement to THE London Gazette, p.996 of the article or p.4 of the PDF file
  18. ^ Grove, p.128.
  19. ^ . naval-history.net. Archived from the original on 6 March 2008.
  20. ^ [2] Supplement to The London Gazette, p. 996 of article or p. 4 of PDF file
  21. ^ Reeman, Douglas (24 September 2015). Surface with Daring. Random House. ISBN 9781448106110.
  22. ^ Fullerton, Alexander (2008). The Gatecrashers. Canelo. ISBN 978-1911591580. Retrieved 21 August 2018.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

class, submarine, class, world, midget, submarine, class, built, royal, navy, during, 1943, substantially, larger, than, original, chariot, manned, torpedo, display, royal, navy, submarine, museum, gosport, hampshireclass, overviewnamex, classoperators, royal,. The X class was a World War II midget submarine class built for the Royal Navy during 1943 44 It was substantially larger than the original Chariot manned torpedo X24 on display at the Royal Navy Submarine Museum Gosport HampshireClass overviewNameX classOperators Royal NavyPreceded byV classSucceeded byXE classSubclassesX3 X4 X5 10 X20 25 XTCompleted20Lost7 5 scuttled 1 foundered 1 collision Preserved1General characteristics X class Typemidget submarineDisplacement27 tons surfaced 30 tons submergedLength51 25 ft 15 62 m Beam5 75 ft 1 75 m Draught5 3 ft 1 60 m PropulsionSingle shaft 1 Gardner 4LK 1 4 cyl diesel engine 42 hp 31 3 kW at 1 800 rpm 1 Keith Blackman electric motor 30 hp 22 3 kW at 1 650 rpmSpeed6 5 knots 12 0 km h surfaced 5 5 knots 10 2 km h submergedRange500 nmi 926 km surfaced 82 nmi 151 8 km 2 knots 2 mph 4 km h submergedTest depth300 ft 91 5 m Complement4Armament2 4 400 lb detachable amatol chargesKnown individually as X Craft the vessels were designed to be towed to their intended area of operations by a full size mother submarine usually one of the T class or S class with a passage crew on board the operational crew being transferred from the towing submarine to the X Craft by dinghy when the operational area was reached and the passage crew returning with the dinghy to the towing submarine Once the attack was over the X Craft would rendezvous with the towing submarine and then be towed home Range was limited primarily by the endurance and determination of their crews but was thought to be up to 14 days in the craft or 1 000 nmi 1 900 km after suitable training Actual range of the X Craft itself was 600 nmi 1 100 km surfaced and 80 nmi 150 km at 2 knots 3 7 km h submerged 2 Contents 1 Specification 2 Service 2 1 Major operations 2 2 Legacy 3 X craft and crews 4 Builders 5 Surviving examples 6 In the media 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksSpecification editThe craft was about 51 ft 16 m long 5 5 ft 1 7 m maximum diameter and displaced 27 long tons 27 t surfaced and 30 long tons 30 t submerged Propulsion was by a 4 cylinder Gardner 4LK 1 42 hp diesel engine converted from a type used in London buses and a 30 hp electric motor giving a maximum surface speed of 6 5 knots 12 0 km h 7 5 mph and a submerged speed of about one third of that 2 The crew initially numbered three commander pilot and ERA Engine Room Artificer i e engineer but soon a specialist diver was added for whom an airlock known as a wet and dry compartment was provided The ERA usually a Navy Chief Petty Officer operated and maintained the machinery in the vessel The weapons on the X Craft were two side cargoes explosive charges held on opposite sides of the hull with two tons of amatol in each The intention was to drop these on the sea bed underneath the target and then escape The charges were detonated by a time fuse 2 The craft were fitted with electromagnets to evade detection by anti submarine detectors on the sea bed and also with sonar and a periscope 2 Service editA number of development craft were built before it was felt that a feasible weapon had been produced The first operational craft was X3 or HM S M X 3 launched on the night of 15 March 1942 Training with the craft began in September 1942 with X4 arriving in October In December 1942 and January 1943 six of the 5 10 class began to arrive identical externally but with a completely reworked interior These operations were part of a longer series of frogman operations see human torpedo The operational base and training establishment was HMS Varbel at the former Kyles Hydro Hotel at Port Bannatyne on the Isle of Bute in the Firth of Clyde Scotland Major operations edit nbsp X25 underwayTheir first deployment was Operation Source in September 1943 an attempt to neutralise the heavy German warships based at Kafjord Nordkapp in Northern Norway Six X Craft were used but only two successfully laid charges under the German battleship Tirpitz Two were lost while being towed to Norway X8 began taking water and was scuttled and X9 sank with her crew after the towline parted Only X6 and X7 commanded by Lieutenant Donald Cameron and Lieutenant Godfrey Place respectively were successful in placing their charges although their crews were captured there is some evidence that X5 also placed her charges 3 X10 also penetrated the anchorage but was unable to attack and the crew were picked up by another submarine Tirpitz was badly damaged crippled and out of action until May 1944 it was destroyed on 12 November 1944 by Avro Lancaster bombers during Operation Catechism in Tromso Norway 4 For this action Cameron and Place were awarded the Victoria Cross whilst Robert Aitken Richard Haddon Kendall and John Thornton Lorimer received the Distinguished Service Order and Edmund Goddard the Conspicuous Gallantry Medal 5 The commander of X8 John Elliott Smart was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire MBE 6 There was a possibility that X5 had also successfully planted explosive side charges before being destroyed but this was never conclusively proven its commander Henty Creer was not awarded a medal but was mentioned in dispatches 7 4 The lost boats were replaced early in 1944 with X20 to X25 and six training only craft Submarines X20 to X25 were dispatched to Bergen Norway On 15 April 1944 in Operation Guidance X24 attacked the Laksevag floating dock X22 was intended for the mission but had been accidentally rammed during training and sunk with all hands X24 made the approach and escaped successfully but the charges were placed under Barenfels a 7 569 gross register ton GRT merchant vessel alongside the dock the ship was sunk but the dock suffered only minor damage On 11 September the operation was repeated by X24 this time she succeeded in sinking the dock 8 nbsp A hand held hydraulically powered net cutter of the type used by X boat divers to cut through torpedo nets protecting harboursX Craft were involved in the preparatory work for Overlord Operation Postage Able was planned to take surveys of the landing beaches with X20 commanded by Lt KR Hudspeth spending four days off the French coast Periscope reconnaissance of the shoreline and echo soundings were performed during daytime Each night X20 would approach the beach and 2 divers would swim ashore Soil samples were collected in condoms The divers went ashore on two nights to survey the beaches at Vierville sur Mer Moulins St Laurent and Colleville sur Mer in what became the American Omaha Beach On the third night they were due to go ashore off the Orne Estuary Sword Beach but by this stage fatigue the crew and divers had been living on little more than benzedrine tablets and the worsening weather caused Hudspeth to shorten the operation returning to Dolphin on 21 January 1944 Hudspeth received a bar to his DSC X20 and X23 each with a crew of five acted as navigational beacons to help the D Day invasion fleet land on the correct beaches Operation Gambit as part of the Combined Operations Pilotage Parties COPP The craft were also equipped with a radio beacon and echo sounder to help direct Canadian and British ships to the suitable positions on Sword and Juno beaches Oxygen bottles on both craft enabled the crews to remain submerged for extended periods during this operation 64 hours of the 76 total hours at sea 9 2 Legacy edit The only remaining intact example of an X Craft X24 was transferred from HMS Dolphin where she had been on display since 1981 to the Royal Navy Submarine Museum nearby in 1987 10 Operations continued in the Far East with the revised XE class submarines X craft and crews edit nbsp The engine of X24X3 unofficially named Piker 1 was lost on 4 November 1942 in Loch Striven due to a leaking engine valve All crew escaped by utilizing their Davis Submerged Escape Apparatus 11 X5 unofficially named Platypus 12 commanded by Lt Henty Creer RNVR also the operation s commander 13 crew S Lt Nelson Midshipman Malcolm and ERA Mortiboys passage crew Lt Terry Lloyd commanding L S Element Stoker Garrity 14 Henty Creer Nelson Malcolm and Mortiboys were killed in the attack though X5 s exact fate is unknown 14 X6 named Piker II 13 commanded by Lt Donald Cameron crew Lt J T Lorimer S Lt R Kendall and ERA Goddard passage crew Lt Wilson commanding Leading Seaman McGregor Stoker Oxley 13 Cameron earned a VC Lorimer and Kendall DSOs Goddard a Conspicuous Gallantry Medal 13 X7 unofficially named Pdinichthys 15 commanded by Lt Basil C G Place crew S Lt R Aitken Lt Whittam and ERA Whitley passage crew Lt Philip commanding Leading Seaman J Magennis Stoker Luck 13 Vessel was scuttled immediately following the Tirpitz attack but only Place escaped before she sank Aitken escaped from the bottom of the fjord but Whittam and Whitley were unable to escape before their air gave out Place also earned a VC Aitken a DSO while Philip earned an MBE 16 X8 unofficially named Expectant commanded by Lt McFarlane RAN 13 Lt Smart was passage crew commander X9 unofficially named Pluto 17 commanded by Lt EA Kearon RNVR AH Harte Able Seaman and GH Hollet Stoker Foundered on 16 September 1942 while under tow from the Syrtis X10 unofficially named Excalibur 18 commanded by Lt Hudspeth RANVR 13 The depot ship for X craft was HMS Bonaventure 19 Builders edit nbsp The remains of an XT class craft on the beach at Aberlady Bay east of Edinburgh in 2008 The bow is to the left the stern to the right From left to right can be seen the wet and dry chamber hatch the conning tower the periscopes penetrated the hull through the eye shape and the secondary hatch The numbering sequence of the X class began with X3 because the designations X1 and X2 had already been used previously X1 had been a one off submarine cruiser design from the 1920s while X2 had been assigned to a captured Italian submarine Prototypes X3 built by Varley Marine Hamble scrapped 1945 X4 built by Portsmouth Dockyard scrapped 1945 X5 type X5 built by Vickers Armstrong Barrow in Furness used in Operation Source sunk Altenfjord 22 September 1943 X6 built by Vickers used in Operation Source scuttled Altenfjord 22 September 1943 X7 built by Vickers used in Operation Source scuttled Altenfjord 22 September 1943 salved 1976 for museum restoration X8 built by Vickers used in Operation Source scuttled in North Sea 17 September 1943 X9 built by Vickers used in Operation Source foundered under tow in North Sea 16 September 1943 with all hands 20 X10 built by Vickers used in Operation Source scuttled in North Sea 3 October 1943 X20 type X20 built by Broadbent Huddersfield used in Operation Postage Able surveying Normandy beaches prior to invasion and on Operation Gambit X21 built by Broadbent X22 built by Markham amp Co Chesterfield collided with HMS Syrtis and lost with all hands while training 7 February 1944 X23 built by Markham used on Operation Gambit sold 1945 X24 built by Marshall Gainsborough used on Operation Guidance attacking Laksevag floating dock at Bergen 15 April 1944 when the merchant ship Barenfels alongside the dock was sunk the dock was attacked and sunk on Operation Heckle on 11 September 1944 again by X24 which was hulked 1945 X25 built by Marshall sold 1945 Training craft XT1 built by Vickers scrapped 1945 XT2 built by Vickers scrapped 1945 XT3 built by Vickers scrapped 1945 XT4 built by Vickers scrapped 1945 XT5 built by Vickers scrapped 1945 XT6 built by Vickers scrapped 1945Surviving examples edit nbsp The interior of X24X24 the only one to have seen combat and survive is at the Royal Navy Submarine Museum Gosport The remains of two XT class craft are present on the beach at Aberlady Bay in East Lothian Scotland They were towed there in 1946 and moored to a large concrete block at the low tide level and were used as targets for aircraft Much of the structure remains semisubmerged in the sand and can be reached at low spring tides In the media editThis type of midget submarine was portrayed in the 1955 war film Above Us the Waves featuring John Mills which was based on both Operation Source and the earlier Chariot attacks on the Tirpitz An X class submarine marked as X2 features in the 1959 film The Giant Behemoth a k a Behemoth the Sea Monster This class of submarine was later featured in the 1968 movie Submarine X 1 starring James Caan as a Canadian Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve officer who after losing his submarine and fifty crew members in a battle with a German ship during World War II gets a second chance training crews to take part in a raid using midget subs A 1976 Douglas Reeman novel Surface with Daring features a fictionalized account of X class midget submarines especially XE 16 and its crew performing several highly secret operations in occupied Europe 21 A 2006 Alexander Fullerton novel The Gatecrashers features a fictionalized account of X class midget submarines including X 12 piloted by one of the protagonists that lays explosive charges to damage the Tirpitz 22 See also editHM Submarine X1 World War 1 submarine HM Submarine X2 Name given to the Italian Submarine Galileo Galilei after she was captured and taken into service by the Royal Navy XE class submarine Improved X Class submarine Stickleback class submarine Improved XE class submarine in service in the 1950s References edit a b Engine Forum PDF gardnerengineforum co uk Retrieved 10 September 2023 a b c d e How the Royal Navy s X Class Midget Subs Helped Make D Day Possible 6 June 2015 Walker Frank Mellor Pamela 1988 The Mystery of X5 Lieutenant H Henty Creer s Attack on the Tirpitz W Kimber ISBN 978 0718306281 a b Lost heroes of the Tirpitz BBC History BBC 17 February 2011 Retrieved 21 August 2018 No 36390 The London Gazette Supplement 10 September 1943 pp 901 902 No 36295 The London Gazette Supplement 17 December 1943 pp 5539 5540 O Neill Richard 2015 Suicide Squads The Men and Machines of World War II Special Operations Pavilion Books ISBN 978 1840650822 How the Royal Navy s X Class Midget Subs Helped Make D Day Possible 6 June 2015 Winter Paul 31 July 2014 D Day Documents Bloomsbury pp 70 72 ISBN 978 1408194003 X24 Certificate no 1843 National Historic Ships 11 March 2018 Retrieved 21 August 2018 Submarine Casualties Booklet U S Naval Submarine School 1966 Archived from the original on 11 September 2009 Retrieved 8 September 2009 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help CS1 maint unfit URL link Grove Eric Sea Battles in Close up World War 2 Volume 2 Shepperton Surrey Ian Allan Publishing 1993 pp 124 amp 128 a b c d e f g Grove p 127 a b Grove p 124 Grove pp 127 amp 128 Magennis earned a VC in the midget submarine attack on Takao Grove p 127 1 Supplement to THE London Gazette p 996 of the article or p 4 of the PDF file Grove p 128 HMS Bonaventure British Depot Ship WW2 naval history net Archived from the original on 6 March 2008 2 Supplement to The London Gazette p 996 of article or p 4 of PDF file Reeman Douglas 24 September 2015 Surface with Daring Random House ISBN 9781448106110 Fullerton Alexander 2008 The Gatecrashers Canelo ISBN 978 1911591580 Retrieved 21 August 2018 Bibliography editAbove Us The Waves by C E T Warren and James Benson George G Harrap amp Co LTD 1953 ISBN 1 84415 440 8 Submarines in Colour by Bill Gunston Blandford Colour Series Blandford 1976 ISBN 0 7137 0780 1 Submarines The History and Evolution of Underwater Fighting Vessels by Antony Preston Octopus Books 1974 ISBN 0 7064 0429 7External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to British X class submarine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title X class submarine amp oldid 1202426501, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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