Name HMS Dundee Launched 1932 Draft 2.51 m | Beam 35 ft (11 m) Length 86 m | |
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Displacement 1,105 long tons (1,123 t) |
HMS Dundee was a Royal Navy sloop of World War II. The ship saw service primarily as a convoy escort in the Atlantic. She was sunk by a German submarine while escorting one of these convoys in September 1940.
Some sources place Dundee in Falmouth class, others that she was part of the Shoreham class, which was derived from the Bridgewater class. Others make the ship to be part of Bridgewater class. She was built in Kent and launched in 1932.
Service history
Dundee served as an escort for convoys during the Battle of the Atlantic. She was sunk at 00.25 hours on 15 September 1940 by the most successful German submarine of the war, U-48, commanded at that time by Kapitänleutnant Heinrich Bleichrodt.
U-48 attacked a convoy, SC-3, of which Dundee was the only escort. U-48 missed the British merchant ship Empire Soldier, but later torpedoed and sank Dundee, commanded by Capt. O.M.F. Stokes, RN, in position 56º45'N, 14º14'W, off Northern Ireland.
The Imperial War Museum has a recording from its sound archives of W J H Mills, a Canadian serving with the Royal Navy on Dundee, describing the sinking. In the recording he recounts "The blast was so severe that it tore the lockers away from the bulkhead mess – we knew we’d been hit – there was no mistaking it."