No Survivors: The Horrific Sinking of HMAS Sydney

Video Statistics and Information

Video
Captions Word Cloud
Reddit Comments
Captions
It’s a calm afternoon in the Indian Ocean far  off the coast of West Australia. The pride of   the Australian navy, a powerful  cruiser HMAS Sydney, has spotted   a lone cargo ship which is acting suspiciously.  Sydney draws closer for a look and before long,   the two are sailing side by side at point blank  range. Sydney asks the stranger to hoist the   secret signal of a friendly Allied ship – but  it hesitates. Then – all hell breaks loose.   Just how did one of the Australian navy’s most  modern and deadly warships sink with the loss   of all of its crew? This is the horrifying  true story of the sinking of HMAS Sydney.   September 1939 – war breaks out dramatically in  Europe after nearly a decade of rising tension.   Adolf Hitler’s military pours into Poland  dragging France, Britain and their allies   into a devastating conflict. Before long,  Hitler’s armies have stormed into Holland,   Belgium, France, Denmark and Norway. But while the  heavy fighting is confined to European continent,   the oceans have now become the stage  for an epic struggle for survival.   The world’s glorious peacetime ocean liners are  mothballed or converted into drab troop transports   for the war effort. Menacing battleships and  cruisers prowl the waves – but below them,   Germany’s U-Boats hunt Allied shipping down with  frightening prowess. Hitler knows that Britain   is an island nation – and all island nations  in wartime display the same achilles’ heel;   if enough supply ships cannot get through then  wide scale production issues and food shortages   are sure to follow. Britain and the commonwealth –  including Australia, Canada and New Zealand – rely   on regular supplies from allied nations. Without  them the war effort could grind to a halt.   Allied merchant ships are slow and mostly  defenseless – but they are numerous so most of the   German navy’s efforts are directed at culling that  number and they do so with remarkable efficiency.   U-Boats – German submarines – are adept at this  and they exact a devastating toll. But there’s a   problem – they can only carry so much fuel so they  need to operate nearby friendly submarine bases   or where they can be resupplied at sea. Ships –  thanks to their size – have a much larger nature,   but a warship like a cruiser or a battleship  – will be almost impossible to conceal and,   operating by itself, will be hunted down and  sunk. This happens to the German battleship   Bismarck in May 1941. But the German navy  has another weapon up its sleeve – one which   proved remarkably effective during the  First World War; the commerce raider.   The concept of the commerce raider goes  back to the days of sail, when privateers –   civilian-crewed ships acting under a commission of  war – would often disguise themselves as harmless   civilian ships before dropping the ruse and  attacking an unprepared opponent. The strategy   played within the rules of war – so long as the  disguise was dropped before attacking the enemy   and so long as the disguised ship flew it’s  national ensign just before attacking. The concept   was refined further during the First World War  by both Germany and Britain; the latter famously   deploying Q-Ships which looked like innocent cargo  vessels but carried hidden guns. To the German   navy, the commerce raider was an ideal tool to  rely on to hunt down and destroy allied merchant   ships outside of the range of the U-Boats; and  one of their raiders was named the Kormoran.   Kormoran had started life in 1938 as the cargo  ship Steiermark, built as a passenger-cargo ship   for the Hamburg-America Line. The ship was  meant to operate as far as East Asia from   Europe but before she could enter service the  war had broken out, so the new ship sat idle.   The Kriegsmarine – the German navy, had been  secretly preparing for war. Limitations put   on the German navy after the First World War  meant their number of conventional warships;   destroyers, cruisers, battleships and the  like – was much lower than the Allied powers.   To account for this, the Kriegsmarine had  secretly identified merchant ships they   knew could be easily converted into  deadly commerce raiders – and Steiermark   was one of them. In early 1940 the ship was  overhauled and turned into a fearsome hunter.   By design, Steiemark was 164 meters  long and 8,700 Gross registered tons.   She was powered by four 9-cylinder diesel engines  providing a top speed of 18 knots, or 33km/h.   Originally she featured comfortable passenger  cabins and cavernous cargo holds; but the cabins   were gutted and replaced with bunks for sailors  and gunners, while the cargo holds were converted   to store naval mines and even prisoners, with  separate lock-ups for men and women if required.   Crucially though the hunter was given it’s teeth;  on deck she carried two 15cm naval guns with four   more below the forecastle and poop deck hidden  behind hinged panels; the two guns on deck were   hidden behind fake, collapsible cargo hatch  walls that could be broken down in seconds.   Behind sheet metal panels and on hydraulic  mounts were 2cm automatic anti aircraft   cannons and a pair of 3.7cm light anti-tank  guns – devastating weaponry for any light   targets like the unarmoured merchant  ships Steiermark was expected to engage.   On deck sat a pair of torpedo launchers with a  single launcher underwater in the ship’s hull   on either side. Deep in her hold the ship even  carried an LS-3 fast motor boat and a pair of   Arado Ar-196 floatplanes for reconnaissance. High  up above the bridge were disguised rangefinders   that could direct the ship’s gunfire with pinpoint  accuracy; what emerged from the shipyard in   September 1940 was a dangerous predator of  a ship; disguised as a friendly cargo ship,   the Steiermark could drop it’s ruse and have its  guns begin belching death in less than 10 seconds.   She was a veritable floating swiss army knife of  a ship and she needed an able, adept commander   to maximise her effectiveness. For this task the  Kriegsmarine chose 37 year old Theodore Detmers,   a destroyer captain. It was often said that  destroyer captains were often a little bit mad;   indeed, Detmers determination and skill  as a hunter would see him play the role   of Steiemark’s captain with devastating expertise.  But first he elected to give his ship a new name;   the cormorant is a type of bird used by fisherman  to catch and retrieve fish from rivers; the Allied   merchant ships would be the fish, and Detmer’s new  raider would be the bird; he named her Kormoran.   Provisioned for a year-long voyage, Kormoran’s  first job was to run the Allied blockade   and escape into the open ocean; through  December she slipped by prowling British   warships unnoticed in storms and heavy seas way  up over Iceland and through the Denmark strait.   It was a cautious move to take the long way around  but Detmers was calculating and cool and he knew   his ship would see action before long. In a fight  with an Allied merchant ship or freighter – even   one protected by a deck gun – Kormoran’s  heavy firepower would see her win every time.   But an engagement with any warship bigger  than a destroyer could see Kormoran destroyed.   She had to rely on disguise and  measured risk-taking to survive.   Detmers began to hunt for merchant ships traveling  alone – without escort or in convoy. In January   1941 Kormoran claimed her first prize, sinking  the Greek freighter Antonis. Later that month   Detmers engaged a British tanker, the British  Union, which actually fired back when threatened;   Kormoran’s guns disabled the ship and  her torpedoes sent it to the bottom of   the ocean. For the next few months Kormoran  hunted ships like this in the Atlantic ocean,   sinking 8 for a total of 56,000 tons of Allied  shipping. Kormoran was directed to hunt in the   Indian Ocean, so Detmers had his ship disguised  as the Japanese freighter Kinka Maru. By November   1941 Kormoran had been at sea for 11 months – but  pickings in the Indian Ocean were slim, and she’d   sunk only 3 merchant ships since June. Detmers  now had Kormoran disguised as a Dutch freighter,   the Straat Malakka – and his ship had been  frequently repaired and resupplied at sea,   but he must have been frustrated by his  lack of success in the Indian ocean.   To change tack he turned his ship for Western  Australia to lay mines and catch any unassuming   Australian merchant ships by surprise closer to  home. Late in the afternoon of November 19, 1941,   Kormoran was steaming about 280km  off the coast of West Australia   when a call came from his lookouts that a tall  sailing ship had been spotted ahead – but a few   minutes later the tangle of masts and rigging on  the horizon revealed themselves to actually belong   to an Allied warship – a warship which had spotted  Kormoran and was approaching to investigate.   Detmer’s worst fears had been realised and  Kormoran would have to pull off a masterful   disguise or be drawn into a gun battle  that she was never designed for. Detmers   grit his teeth and decided what to do. Aboard the bridge of HMAS Sydney, captain   Joseph Burnett peered through his binoculars at  the mysterious ship in the distance. He was 41   years old – and Sydney was his first command. For  his first, Burnett could have done a lot worse.   Sydney was one of the finest, most modern warships  in the Australian fleet. Australia still held   close ties with Britain and there was something of  a co-dependency; Britain would supply and arm the   commonwealth but expect Commonwealth assistance  during wartime. Because of this, Australia’s   wartime fleet largely comprised second-hand  Royal Navy warships. But Sydney was different;   she had been purchased before completion by  the Australian government; originally she was   to have been named HMS Phaeton, but she and 2 of  her sisters were sold to Australia and renamed.   Phaeton became the Sydney. The ship was launched in 1934 as   a Leander class light cruiser; she had long,  lean lines and powerful turbines which gave   her a top speed of 32.5 knots. Bow to stern she  was 171 meters long and displaced 7, 200 tons.   Sydney and her two sisters were different to the  five other British Leander Class ships; they had   two separated and self-contained boiler and engine  room groups, a practice which was adopted from the   US Navy. This meant that if one boiler and engine  room was knocked out, Sydney could still operate   with reduced speed. This changed her profile  and gave her a second functioning funnel.   Sydney was armed with eight, 6 inch guns  housed twinned in armoured turrets with   a maximum range out to over 22.5  km. The guns were quick firing,   and although a small caliber, could lob  shells down range at a rate of once ever 7   or 8 seconds. The forward turrets were called  ‘A’ and ‘B’ and the rear turrets ‘X’ and ‘Y’.   Amidships Sydney carried four 4” deck guns which  could be used against aircraft or surface targets,   while dotted around the ship were quad-mounted  13mm Vickers anti aircraft guns. On either side of   the ship was mounted a quadruple torpedo launcher  – Sydney certainly did not want for armament.   For reconnaissance duties she carried a  Supermarine Walrus seaplane on a catapult and   was fitted with a massive crane so she could pluck  the Walrus back out of the water after it was   done with its mission. Sydney was nimble, quick  and deadly; designed to engage from a distance,   kiting away incoming enemy fire but  nipping back with her quick-firing guns.   Sailing from Britain, Sydney first  arrived in Australia in July 1935   where she became an object of  curiosity to the general public.   In a peacetime navy through the rest of the 1930s,  Sydney became a familiar sight in Melbourne,   Sydney, Brisbane and other Australian ports  as she made regular voyages for exercises and   training. To the Australian public, Sydney and her  sisters Perth and Hobart were a source of pride –   the nation was young and struggling to define its  national identity separate from Britain. Sydney   and her sisters were up to standard as some of the  world’s finest fighting ships and their crews were   keen to show they were up to standard as well. The outbreak of war saw Sydney patrolling  Australian territorial waters and the Indian  ocean, but everything changed in May 1940 when   she was ordered to join British warships in the  Mediterranean. The ship was personally chosen   by British Admiral Andrew Cunningham to join  the 7th Cruiser Squadron, who was impressed by   the ship and decided to keep it for himself. With  the declaration of war by Italy on June 10, 1940,   Sydney was on-station in an active warzone and  her crew were anxious to do their nation proud.   On June 21 Sydney fired her guns  in anger for the first time,   bombarding the Italian-controlled port of Bardia.  7 days later she engaged her first enemy ship,   firing on the disabled Italian destroyer Espero  and sinking her. Over the coming weeks, Sydney   served with distinction; first at the Battle of  Calabria and then the Battle of Cape Spada. This   was her most glorious moment, the opportunity  to earn the nations pride that her eager crew   had been looking for. On July 19 a small  force of British destroyers chanced upon   a pair of Italian cruisers and retreated  at speed with the Italians in pursuit;   the Italian captains were then horrified to see  the Sydney appear, guns blazing, on the horizon;   the Italian ships turned to run but Sydney’s  quick-firing 6 inch guns got to work, damaging   the first and then disabling the second Italian  cruiser, the Bartoleomo Colleoni. Sydney’s crew   were elated, never mind that the ship had copped  an Italian shell through the forward funnel.   John Collins, her commander, was appointed a  Companion of the Order of the Bath while the   ship’s other officers and crew received a mix of  2 distinguished service orders, two distinguished   service crosses, 5 distinguished service medals  and 12 mentions in despatches. Back home,   Sydney was lauded as a hero; and the entire nation  of Australia collectively beamed with pride.   Sydney served in the Mediterranean until the end  of 1940 when she received urgent news from home;   German commerce raiders were prowling  unhindered in the waters around Australia   and the island nation needed a guardian. Sydney  was the perfect choice for such a task; by nature,   thanks to her speed and rapid firepower, she was  a hunter and normally a commerce raider wouldn’t   stand a chance against her in a gun battle.  Sydney arrived at her namesake port finally   in February 1941 to a heroes’ welcome;  school children were given a holiday to   join the thousands and thousands of people who  turned out to cheer the ship and her crew on.   Over the next few months, Sydney  patrolled the waters off Australia,   escorting convoys comprised of merchant ships and  even massive ocean liners like the Queen Mary,   Queen Elizabeth and Aquitania. In November 1941  Sydney had been escorting the troopship Zeelandia   off West Australia but she was relieved and turned  for home. Then, late in the afternoon of November   19th, smoke was spotted on the horizon. It was a  lone merchant ship; Burnett, Sydney’s new captain,   couldn’t help but investigate.  He turned his ship to pursue.   On the Kormoran, Detmers took only seconds to  decide on what to do. He immediately ordered   his ship be turned into the sun; that would make  it harder for the enemy warship to see him and   figure out his true identity. The Dutch ensign was  run up the foremast and Detmers called his crew   to action stations. He knew that a gun battle at  range would see his ship shot out from under him;   he had to get the enemy close enough to exact a  terrible, devastating blow but to do this he would   need all his cunning and creativity. On his side  was the element of surprise; the enemy warship   was clearly interested in them but turning to run  away into the sun had only piqued that suspicion   further. Kormoran was disguised as Straat Malakka,  the Dutch freighter, so Detmers would use this   false identity to lure the warship in as close as  possible. He observed the distant warship through   a sighting telescope of a gunnery control station;  it was an Australian light cruiser making full   speed for his ship; the chase had begun. Kormoran struggled along at 14 knots,   hampered by a malfunctioning engine and  months of marine growth on the hull;   but the Australian ship was getting closer  and closer, nearly doubling Kormoran’s speed.   Then came a challenge; the Australian ship flashed  a morse signal; ‘NNJ’, but nobody on Kormoran knew   what this meant so they didn’t answer. Then came  another morse signal; ‘What ship?’ For this,   Detmers had an answer – and a plan. To buy himself  time, and lure the Australian ship closer within   the range of his guns and torpedoes, Detmers  ordered his signalman to reply to the question,   not with morse lamp, but slowly with signal  flags one at a time. This would give the   appearance of an inexperienced, possibly scared  civilian crew and help sell Kormoran’s disguise.   After a few minutes Kormoran had signalled she was  Straat Malakka and Sydney was only 15,000 meters   away. Whenever Sydney asked a question, Kormoran’s  signalman would bumble, send up the wrong flag   seemingly on accident and take his time; Sydney  was getting impatient and began repeating its   questions. At 4.30 pm Sydney was only 8,000  meters away and had quizzed Kormoran on where   she was bound and what cargo she was carrying.  The mood on board must have been incredibly   tense; but so far, the ruse was working. On Sydney, Captain Burnett was playing a risky   game. He had been briefed in-depth on the presence  of enemy commerce raiders operating in the Indian   Ocean and his standing orders advised against  approaching mystery vessels at close range.   Sydney’s huge firepower advantage was most  useful at long distance; even though she   was a warship she was only a light cruiser –  lightly armoured and intended for harassing and   providing supporting fire at range. Burnett was  clearly suspicious about this mystery freighter   called the Straat Malakka – so he inched Sydney  closer to get a better look. Why he did this has   been debated for decades; it’s been thought that  he suspected this ship of actually being a German   supply vessel in the area waiting to resupply one  of the commerce raiders. Capturing it intact would   be a major coup for the commander; so closing  the range and boarding her before her crew had a   chance to plant explosive charges and deliberately  sink their ship seemed like a sound plan.   As Sydney drew closer, Detmers noticed  that all four of her main gun turrets   were trained menacingly on his ship. He began  to think like a civilian merchant ship captain;   what would an inexperienced commander  do in a situation like this?   Well – probably panic. He ordered his radio  operator to send a distress signal; ‘QQQQ’,   the royal navy distress call for a ship suspecting  it was under attack from a commerce raider.   He gave his ship’s name as Straat Malakka and  his position and he hoped that the signal, which   he repeated, would cause serious confusion aboard  the Australian ship. By now Sydney was just 3,000   meters away. The Supermarine Walrus on Sydney was  run out with its engine on, but it didn’t launch   and just sat on the catapult. Detmers called into  a speaking phone to his gunnery control crew;   “Our camouflage is excellent. He has no suspicion;  maybe they will say good voyage and let us go!”   By quarter past 5 Sydney had drawn perfectly  alongside Kormoran at point blank range – just   900 meters away. Her guns were trained on the  ship – but her crew clearly weren’t too concerned,   because through their looking glasses the Germans  could see Australian sailor and crewmen smoking   and chatting idly on deck. Detmers  and hi crew held their breath;   the might of the Royal Australian Navy had beared  down on them and now there could be no escape.   Then came a message that Detmers had no answer  to; “Show your secret signal” Sydney demanded.   Detmers turned to his senior wireless officer; “Do  we know the secret call for the Straat Malakka?”   he asked. In response his senior  wirelessman just shook his head;   Detmers realised that the time had come.  He gave his orders; the disguise would be   dropped. Up the masthead shot the battle ensign  of Nazi Germany; and then all hell broke loose.   Two shots from Kormoran’s 15cm guns missed; and  Sydney answered with a full salvo; but the ships   were so close together that Sydney’s guns  were not depressed low enough and the shells   passed close overhead. But if Kormoran’s  15cm guns had proved ineffective so far,   the 20mm anti aircraft guns and the 3.7cm  anti tank guns were doing devastating work.   The Australian crew who had been idle  on deck now found themselves cut down   by heavy anti aircraft gun fire – the two  ships were so close that the 3.7cm guns   easily penetrated Sydney’s thin superstructure.  Their first target was the bridge;   Captain Burnett’ surprise and horror must have  been total; but it couldn’t have lasted long.   Kormoran’s gunfire raked the bridge where  Burnett stood and turned it to bloody ruin.   Then Kormoran’s 15cm guns found their range and  hammered Sydney with heavy shelling, finishing off   in the bridge what the anti aircraft and anti  tank guns had started. The damage was severe;   Sydney had been caught completely by surprise;  it had only been 20 seconds since Kormoran’s   first shot, but Sydney’s commander and most of  her senior officers were already likely dead.   Kormoran’s 15cm guns were remarkable effective  and they silenced Sydney’s forward A and B   turrets which only ever got to fire that first  high salvo. The Supermarine Walrus seaplane,   still waiting with its engine turning on the  catapult, received a direct hit and exploded,   spilling aviation fuel all over the  decks and starting a raging fire.   Kormoran’s 20mm anti aircraft guns blasted away,  keeping Sydney’s men from reaching the exposed   torpedo mounts and 4 inch guns. Sydney had been  silent since the first salvo and was now burning;   but then X and Y turret burst into life again and  lobbed shells at Kormoran. Sydney’s fire control   station had been knocked out, so the crew in X and  Y turrets had to judge the range and firing angle   for themselves; incredibly, X Turret found their  mark and a shell tore through Kormoran’s funnel.   More shells tore through Kormoran’s  hull, the engine room, gun stations   and then the electrical plant cutting off  supply for the ship’s main generators.   Incredibly these two modern warships were now  sailing side by side at point blank range,   exchanging gun shots like a pair of 17th century  galleons. Sydney’s ‘Y’ turret also fired by its   shells fell wide; these two gun turrets fired  on, the only defense Sydney now had against this   surprise enemy. But then there was an enormous  explosion and Sydney trembled in the water.   Detmers had fired a spread of torpedoes at  the warship early in the engagement. One   had now hit on the warship’s bow, a devastating  blow, that almost submerged the bow of the ship   through its sheer force. Just 2 minutes into the  engagement and Sydney was now mortally wounded;   her bow down in the water, the heroic cruiser  now peeled pathetically off to port but whether   this was a deliberate attempt to ram Kormoran  or just an uncontrolled turn remains unclear.   The turn opened Sydney’s starboard side up to  Kormoran’s guns and they raked her from stem to   stern as she passed by; Sydney’s A and B turrets  exploded as they were hit by multiple 15cm shells.   Sydney was now just limping at 5 knots, with X  and Y turrets pointing in the wrong direction,   they had no answer to Kormoran’s fire.  Detmers wanted to close the range again,   which had now increased to 4,000 meters – so he  could finish the cruiser off but Kormoran’s engine   revolutions were falling and he attempted to raise  the engine room via telephone from the bridge.   He got no response; because the engineers  had most likely all been killed.   For most ships, a hit to the funnel would  be purely cosmetic and no cause for concern;   but Kormoran employed a complex system  of piping within the funnel which carried   fuel oil up to be heated before being  pumped back down into the boilers.   This was more efficient for her engines; but  it also meant Sydney’s hit on the funnel sent   a cascading fountain of burning fuel oil back  down into the raider’s boiler and engine rooms,   incinerating the men on watch and rendering the  engine rooms useless. Kormoran began to vibrate   as her engine revolutions raced out of control but  her gun crews continued to hammer Sydney at range.   Finally, at 6.25 – 55 minutes  since battle had broken out,   Kormoran cased fire at a range of 10,400 meters. Detemers knew the battle had been one, but  now he had to tend to his wounded ship. Sydney’s bow lay low in the water and  she was burning fiercely from the bridge   to the after funnel. Through the night,  Sydney drifted and burned over the horizon   lighting the night sky with a glow that  Kormoran’s crew could see in the darkness.   Some time after midnight Sydney’s damaged bow  detached from the hull and the ship sank. The pride of Australia’s navy and people slipped  beneath the waves. There were no survivors.
Info
Channel: Oceanliner Designs
Views: 1,603,964
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: great ocean liners, maritime history, ocean liners, famous oceanliners, ships documentary, history of ships
Id: Ycq0DOPy0Ds
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 30min 11sec (1811 seconds)
Published: Mon Sep 12 2022
Related Videos
Note
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.