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HMS Unbroken

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Name
  
HMS Unbroken

Commissioned
  
29 January 1942

Name
  
V-2

Launched
  
4 November 1941

Draft
  
4.62 m

Laid down
  
30 December 1940

Fate
  
Scrapped May 1950

Construction started
  
30 December 1940

Length
  
58 m

Builder
  
Vickers-Armstrongs

HMS Unbroken httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons77

Out of service
  
transferred to Soviet Navy 26 June 1944

HMS Unbroken (P42) was a Royal Navy U-class submarine built by Vickers-Armstrong at Barrow-in-Furness, and it was part of the third group of that class and has been the only vessel of the Royal Navy to bear the name.

Career

After work up trials in Holy Loch, Unbroken went out to join the 10th Flotilla at Malta, with a work-up patrol from Gibraltar. She would spend most of her wartime career in the Mediterranean. She landed saboteurs under the command of Captain Peter Churchill at Antibes in the south of France. She then proceeded to Malta to reform the 10th Flotilla in June 1942. She was the only submarine operating from Malta until United, Unruffled and Unrivalled joined. In July 1942, Unbroken attacked the main west coast railway line on the Italian mainland, and succeeded in blocking the line for 24 hours. However, she was counter-attacked and sustained a hit on the battery, forcing her to return to Malta. She took part in Operations Harpoon and Vigorous, in June 1942. She was badly damaged in October 1942, by a counter-attack after hitting a tanker, and was again repaired at Malta.

During her time in the Mediterranean, she sank the Italian merchants Edda and Bologna (the former French Monaco), the Italian pilot vessel F 20 / Enrica, and the Italian auxiliary minesweeper No. 17/Milano. She also damaged the Italian sailing vessel Vale Formoso II, the German (former Norwegian) tanker Regina, and most significantly, the Italian heavy cruiser Bolzano and the Italian light cruiser Muzio Attendolo during Operation Pedestal. Bolzano was hit in her oil tank and ran aground; the Attendolo lost sixty feet of bow. Both were out of action for the rest of the war.

Unbroken also attacked the Italian merchant Algerino, but missed her with her torpedoes. She later damaged the Italian merchant Titania, north-west of Tripoli, Libya. Titania was taken in tow by the Italian destroyer Ascari. Titania was sunk early the next day by HMS Safari. Unbroken returned to the UK in December 1943.

Unbroken was transferred on loan to the Soviet Union on 26 June 1944, where she was renamed V-2. Sailing under Soviet flag she sunk the German submarine chaser UJ-1220 on 12 October 1944. She spent four years in Soviet service before being returned to the Royal Navy in 1949. She was scrapped at Gateshead from 9 May 1950.

References

HMS Unbroken Wikipedia