词条 | ORP Gryf (1936) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
HistoryBuilt from 1934 at French shipyard Chantiers et Ateliers A. Normand in Le Havre, she was launched in 1936. Built after a genuine French project to Polish specifications, she was intended as a large minelayer with an armament close to that of a destroyer. Powered by two Sulzer 8SD48 engines of {{convert|6000|hp}} each, she was capable of 20 knots (37 km/h/23 mph), fast for its size. It also had quite a long range of roughly {{convert|9500|nmi|km}} at 14 knots (26 km/h). As the Polish Navy was small and no other state expressed a need for such a vessel, she remained the only ship of that class. Prior to the outbreak of World War II she also served as a school ship and could take on board up to 60 additional students and NCOs. CombatOn 1 September 1939, with six minesweepers, Gryf left the naval base at Gdynia for the Operation Rurka, a failed attempt to lay a minefield at the entrances to the Gdańsk Bay.[1] After taking aboard naval mines from a floating depot, the flotilla headed for Hel Peninsula, assisted by ORP Wicher and two gunboats. En route she was attacked by a squadron of 33 German Ju 87B dive bombers and damaged with several close misses. Although the damages were minor, the ship lost 22 sailors, including its captain Lt Cmdr Stefan Kwiatkowski[1] in what became known as the Battle of the Gdańsk Bay. His deputy, Capt. Wiktor Łomidze decided to throw all defused naval mines in the waters for fear of explosion and headed for Hel naval base. There it was decided to use the ship as a floating anti-air artillery battery guarding the harbour. In the morning of 3 September 1939, ORP Gryf and ORP Wicher, moored in the harbour, were attacked by two German destroyers, Z1 Leberecht Maass (with Rear Admiral Günther Lütjens) and Z9 Wolfgang Zenker. Polish warships and a shore battery repulsed the attack,[1] with Gryf scoring at least one hit on Leberecht Maas (4 killed). Gryf herself was slightly damaged with one shot. Later the same day, after three attacks of German bombers, Gryf was heavily damaged, and partially sank in the harbour.[1] By 5 September the fire was extinguished and two stern 120 mm artillery mountings (single and twin one) were dismounted and placed ashore as a shore battery No. 34, part of the defensive system of the Hel Peninsula.[1] They reached readiness only on 30 September, just before a capitulation. In November 1939, after the end of the invasion hostilities, the Germans raised the wreck and hauled it to a beach near Jastarnia, where it was used as an artillery practice target. After World War II the wreck was used as a target by the Polish Air Force. In 1957 it was decided that the wreck be raised. By 1960 the work was completed and most of the salvaged parts were scrapped. {{commons category|120 mm wz. 36/38 Bofors gun}}References1. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 {{cite book | last = Peszke | first = Michael Alfred | authorlink = Michael Alfred Peszke | title = Poland's Navy, 1918–1945 | location = New York | publisher = Hippocrene Books | date = February 1999 | isbn = 0-7818-0672-0 | oclc = 42140002 | page = 37 }} {{WWIIPolishShips}}{{September 1939 shipwrecks}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Gryf}} 8 : Minelayers of the Polish Navy|Minelayers of France|Ships built in France|1936 ships|World War II minelayers of Poland|World War II shipwrecks in the Baltic Sea|Maritime incidents in September 1939|Ships sunk by German aircraft |
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