Battle of the Campobasso Convoy

Battle of the Campobasso Convoy
Part of the Battle of the Mediterranean of World War II

Petard photographed from the aircraft carrier HMS Formidable, December 1943
Date3/4 May 1943
LocationMediterranean off Cape Bon
Result British victory
Belligerents
 United Kingdom  Italy
Commanders and leaders
Commander Deric Holland-Martin Lieutenant commander Saverio Marotta 
Strength
3 destroyers 1 fleet torpedo boat
1 merchant ship
Casualties and losses
Light 1 merchant ship sunk
1 torpedo boat sunk
206 killed[1]

The Battle of the Campobasso Convoy was a naval engagement between three British Royal Navy destroyers and an Italian Regia Marina torpedo boat which took place off Cape Bon in the Mediterranean sea on the night of 3/4 May 1943. The Italians were escorting the 3,566 Long tons transport ship Compobasso to Tunisia.[2]

Background

As the North Africa campaign neared its conclusion, HMS Petard, HMS Paladin and HMS Nubian were patrolling the waters off Cape Bon. On the night of 29/30 April, they made a sweep along the south coast of Sicily and sank a 2,000 ton merchant ship escorted by German E-boats, without damage or casualties to themselves.[3]

A few days later Nubian Petard and Paladin from intelligence signals waited for an Italian convoy to cross their path. The Italian 3,566 ton merchant Campobasso had left Pantelleria island loaded with bombs, land-mines, motor transport and other vital supplies to the beleaguered Axis force in Tunisia; it was one of the last four convoys sent from Italy to Tunisia. The merchant was then escorted by the Italian torpedo boat Perseo soon after departure.[4][5]

Action

On the night of 3/4 May radar on the British destroyers picked up contacts heading towards the Tunisian coast.[4] The Italian torpedo boat Perseo using the German Metox radar picked up the emissions from the British destroyers and warned Italian high command that the convoy had been found.[3]

All three British destroyers at once attacked targeting the Italian merchantman Campobasso. Hits were scored by 4-inch gun and "pom-pom" fire. Campobasso was hit numerous times, set alight and within half an hour tremendous and continuous explosions took place as the ammunition and bombs were ignited. The merchant sank quickly with the loss of 73 of the 103 men aboard, but Perseo responded and launched torpedoes but to little effect; the British destroyers found the range and bombarded Perseo.[5] She was soon set on fire and exploded; sinking within sight of the last Axis stronghold with the loss of 133 of the 216 men aboard, including naval personnel on passage and her commanding officer Lt. Cdr. Saverio Marotta.[4] Next day the Italian hospital ship Principessa Giovanna picked up 4 survivors from Campobasso (20 more men from the steamer reached the coast in a lifeboat) and 67 from Perseo. On 6 May the hospital ship was bombed and damaged by Allied aircraft, with 54 killed and 52 wounded.[3][6]

At dusk on 8 May, as part of Operation Retribution Paladin, with Jervis and Nubian bombarded Kelibia, the most easterly point of the Cape Bon peninsula. This bombardment was repeated at dawn the next day until all Axis forces surrendered in Tunisia.[6]

Notes

  1. Alberto Santoni, Il vero traditore, Mursia
  2. Whitley pg 183
  3. 1 2 3 Connell pg 147-148
  4. 1 2 3 O'Hara pg 210-211
  5. 1 2 Ufficio storico della Marina Militare: La Marina italiana nella seconda guerra mondiale, Volume 8. Stato maggiore della Marina Militare, 1958, pp. 245-6 (Italian)
  6. 1 2 Harper, p. 111.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/24/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.