1944

JANUARY 1944
Italy - Four months
after the Salerno landings the Allies had only moved a
further 70 miles north and were still well short of Rome.
Both Fifth and Eighth Armies had suffered badly and, in
an attempt to break the deadlock, the decision was made
to go ahead with landings at Anzio to coincide with fresh
attacks on the Gustav Line and Monte Cassino.
|
22nd
January - Anzio Landings, Operation 'Shingle'
|
Landing Areas: |
N and S
of Anzio town |
|
Forces landing: |
US 6th Corps - Gen Lucas 50,000 British & US troops with 115,000 follow-up
|
|
British 1st
Division |
US 3rd
Division |
|
Departure from: |
Naples |
Naval
Assault Forces and Commanders: |
Naval Commander Rear-Adm F J Lowry USN
|
|
Northern Rear-Adm T Troubridge |
Southern Rear-Adm F J Lowry USN |
|
Naval Assault & Follow-up
Forces |
British
& Allied |
U.S.A.
|
| Cruisers
|
3
|
1
|
|
Destroyers |
14
|
10
|
| Other
warships |
30
|
59
|
| LSIs,
landing craft & ships (major only) |
168
|
84
|
|
Totals |
215 |
154 |
|
Grand Total |
369 |
The British and US warships were not strictly
allocated to their own sectors and two Royal Navy
submarines provided the usual navigational
markers. Landings took place early on the 22nd
and were virtually unopposed. By next day the
beachheads were secured, but by the time Sixth
Corps was ready to move out on the 30th,
powerful German reinforcements were ready to stop
it in its tracks. For over a month until early
March the Allies were hard pushed to hold on to
their gains. Supporting warships were heavily
attacked from the air: 23rd - On patrol
off the beaches, destroyer "JANUS"
was
torpedoed and sunk by a He111
bomber. 29th - Six days later, cruiser "SPARTAN"
was hit by a Hs293 glider bomb and
capsized with many casualties.
|
Monthly
Loss Summary
5
British or Allied merchant ships of 31,000 tons
FEBRUARY 1944
Italy - In the Second
Battle of Cassino, the attacking Indian and New
Zealand troops took heavy losses for zero gains.
Throughout the month the Germans launched more attacks at
Anzio to prevent the Allies breaking out of the
beachhead. By early March they had exhausted themselves
and moved over to the defensive. Royal Navy ships
continued to suffer casualties during the Battle for
Anzio:
18th - Returning to Naples, the
seemingly indestructible cruiser "PENELOPE" (HMS 'Pepperpot') was torpedoed
and sunk by "U-410". 25th - A week later
destroyer "INGLEFIELD"
was hit off the beaches by a Hs293 glider
bomb and went down.
24th - In the
Strait of Gibraltar, USN Catalina's equipped with the new
magnetic anomaly detector (MAD) located "U-761" trying to break in to the
Mediterranean. Destroyers "Anthony" and
"Wishart" of the Gibraltar patrol sank her.
Monthly Loss Summary
8
British or Allied merchant ships of 36,000 tons
MARCH 1944
Italy - In the
middle of the month the Third Battle of Cassino was
fought again by the Indians and New Zealanders of Fifth
Army. Once more they lost badly.
10th - In
operations against Allied shipping bound for Italy, three
U-boats were lost together with one Royal Navy destroyer.
On the 10th off Anzio, 'Hunts' "Blankney",
"Blencathra", "Brecon" and
"Exmoor" and US destroyer "Madison",
sank "U-450". The same day south of Sardinia,
anti-submarine trawler "Mull" sank "U-343". The destroyer and third U-boat
were sunk at the end of the month
16th - US Navy
Catalinas used MAD to locate another U-boat in the Strait
of Gibraltar on passage into the Mediterranean. Destroyer
"Vanoc" and frigate "Affleck" were
called up and accounted for "U-392".
30th - In support
of Allied shipping bound for Italy, destroyers
"Laforey", "Tumult" and 'Hunts'
"Blencathra" and "Hambledon" located
a U-boat north of Sicily. As the search proceeded, "LAFOREY"
was
torpedoed and sunk,
but the remaining ships found and finished off "U-223".
Monthly Loss Summary
5
British or Allied merchant ships of 41,000 tons
APRIL 1944
Monthly Loss Summary
5
British or Allied merchant ships of 34,000 tons
MAY 1944
Italy - The Allies
at last pierced the Gustav Line. British, Indian and
Polish troops of Eighth Army went in around the Cassino
area, followed up by the Canadians. Nearer the sea, both
US and French divisions of US Fifth Army attacked. It was
the French in the centre who made the first
decisive push, but it fell to the Poles to finally take
the heights of Monte Cassino on the 18th. US Sixth Corps
started its breakout from the Anzio bridgehead on the
23rd and met up with the advancing Fifth Army two days
later. The Germans first retreated to a line south of
Rome, then fell back to the north of Italy's capital.
4th -
"U-371" attacked North Africa/US convoy GUS38
off Algeria on the 3rd and was detected, but damaged one
of the escorting US destroyers. Throughout the night she
was hunted by a mixed group of British, US and French
warships including the 'Hunt' "Blankney", and
this time managed to torpedo a French destroyer. Later on
the 4th "U-371" was sunk northeast of Bougie.
15th - "U-731" on passage through the Strait of
Gibraltar was detected by USN Catalinas and lost to
attacks by patrol sloop "Kilmarnock" and
trawler "Blackfly" of the Gibraltar patrol. No
more U-boats made the attempt to get into the
Mediterranean.
21st - U-boats
gained their last success of the war in the
Mediterranean. East of Sicily "U-453" attacked Taranto/Augusta convoy
HA43 and its Italian escort and sank one merchant ship.
Destroyers "Termagant", "Tenacious"
and the 'Hunt' "Liddlesdale" were brought up
and sent her to the bottom on the 21st.
Merchant Shipping War
- U-boats had only managed to sink 10 merchantmen in the
Mediterranean in the first five months of 1944. In return
15 had been lost, including three breaking through the
Strait of Gibraltar and four in USAAF raids on Toulon and
Pola.
Monthly Loss Summary
2
British or Allied merchant ships of 10,000 tons
JUNE 1944
6th - Normandy Invasion: Operation
'Overlord'
Italy - Units of
Gen Mark Clark's US Fifth Army entered Rome. The Germans
now withdrew to the Gothic Line running north of Florence
and across the Apennine mountains to the Adriatic. On 17
June, Royal Navy and US warships landed French troops on
the island of Elba.
Early/Mid June -
Submarine "SICKLE" on patrol in the Aegean failed to return to
Malta when recalled on the 14th, and was presumed lost on
mines.
18th - Destroyer "QUAIL", damaged by a mine in the southern
Adriatic seven months earlier in November 1943, foundered
off south-eastern Italy on tow from Bari around to
Taranto.
Monthly Loss Summary
1
British or Allied merchant ship of 2,000 tons
JULY 1944
Monthly Loss Summary
No
Allied merchant ships were lost.
AUGUST 1944
|
15th -
South of France Landings: Operation 'Dragoon'
Originally
code-named 'Anvil', the South of France invasion
was planned to coincide with the Normandy
landings. Since that decision was made, Britain
pushed for the Allies to concentrate on the
Italian campaign, but under US pressure agreed to
go ahead with the now re-named Operation
'Dragoon' using forces withdrawn from US Fifth
Army in Italy. No major British units were
involved and for the first time in the
Mediterranean the Royal Navy was in the minority
in both ships and commanders. However, Adm Sir
John Cunningham remained Naval C-in-C.
|
Landing Areas: |
Three
Attack Forces landing on the southern French
mainland between Toulon and Cannes. A fourth
Force on the offshore islands |
|
Forces landing: |
US Seventh Army - Gen Patch US Sixth Corps followed-up by French Second
Corps |
|
Departure from: |
Italy, Algeria |
|
Naval Attack Force
Commanders: |
Naval Control force
Commander Vice-Adm H K Hewitt USN US Rear-Adms Davidson, Lewis, Lowry, Rodgers
|
|
Naval Control, Attack &
Convoy Escort Forces |
British
& Allied |
French |
U.S.A.
|
|
Battleships |
1
|
1 |
3
|
|
Cruisers |
7
|
5 |
8
|
|
Destroyers & escorts |
27
|
19 |
52
|
|
Other warships |
69
|
6 |
157
|
|
Attack transports & LSIs |
9
|
- |
23
|
|
Landing craft & ships (major
only) |
141
|
- |
369
|
|
Totals |
254 |
31
|
612 |
|
Grand Total |
897 |
The warships were allocated across the four
attack forces and, in addition, over 1,300 mainly
assault landing craft took part in the landings.
Air cover and support was provided by Rear-Adm
Troubridge with seven British and two US escort
carriers. After intensive air and sea
bombardments, the landings took place against
light resistance accompanied by US airborne drops
inland. Both the US and French Corps soon spread
out and headed north after the retreating
Germans. Before the month was out, Cannes, Toulon
and Marseilles had fallen into Allied hands. |
Italy
- On the eastern, Adriatic side of Italy, the Allies
launched the first part of an offensive against the
Gothic Line on the 25th, with Eighth Army attacking
towards Rimini.
Monthly Loss Summary
1
small merchant ship was lost
SEPTEMBER 1944
Italy - To the east,
Eighth Army crossed the Gothic Line. To the west,
Fifth Army was across the River Arno and had broken
through its end of the Gothic Line.
Greece - As the
Russians attacked through Rumania and Bulgaria towards
Yugoslavia, German troops started to evacuate Crete,
southern Greece and the islands of the Aegean. However
right up until May, garrisons held out on Rhodes, western
Crete and some of the Greek Islands.
End of the
Mediterranean U-boats - The last U-boats in the
Mediterranean were lost to sea and air attack. On the 19th
schnorkel-equipped "U-407"
was sunk north of Crete by destroyers
"Terpischore", "Troubridge" and the
Polish "Garland" of Adm Troubridge's escort
carrier and cruiser force. Five days later in raids on
Salamis near Athens, USAAF aircraft sank "U-596" and the damaged "U-565". Since June 1944 the other eight
surviving U-boats had all been lost at Toulon, either by
USAAF raids or through scuttling. In three years the
comparatively few German U-boats in the Mediterranean had
inflicted heavy losses on the Royal Navy including: 1 battleship, 2
aircraft carriers, 4 cruisers and a cruiser-minelayer, 12
destroyers. In return 68 German U-boats had been lost from all causes.
Royal Navy Submarine
Operations - These too drew to a close. With so few
German targets left, the famous 10th Submarine Flotilla
was disbanded although some of the boats continued to
work out of Malta in the Aegean. The last British
submarine sunk was "Sickle" three months
earlier in June, the 45th Royal Navy loss in the
Mediterranean. From June 1940 to the end of 1944 the
flotillas had accounted for: one million tons of Axis shipping
in the Mediterranean theatre, three cruisers, over 30
destroyers, torpedo boats and German and Italian
submarines. To these
could be added the uncompleted light cruiser "Ulpio
Traiano" sunk at
Palermo in January 1943 by submarine-launched Chariot
human torpedoes.
Monthly Loss Summary
1
merchant ship of 1,400 tons
OCTOBER 1944
Italy - Fifth
Army's attack in the centre towards Bologna ground
to a halt in the wintry mountains, but over the next
three months Eighth Army to the east continued to
push its way to the southern edge of Lake Comacchio.
Although fighting carried on, the Allies would not start
their final offensive until the better weather in April. 12th
- Returning from bombarding shore targets on the
northeast coast of Italy, destroyer "LOYAL"
was mined in the Adriatic and not
repaired.
Greece - The
Germans were now coming to the end of the evacuation of
the Aegean area and northern Greece as British, Greek and
Allied troops landed in the south and on many of the
islands. Adm Troubridge's force continued to sweep the
Aegean for German evacuation shipping as Royal Navy
submarines also took a toll. 7th - Destroyers
"Termagant" and "Tuscan" sank torpedo
boat "TA-37" in the Gulf of Salonika. 19th
- Further south it was the turn of "TA-18", lost to the same two British
destroyers. Both were ex-Italian vessels.
Monthly Loss Summary
1
merchant ship of 3,000 tons
NOVEMBER 1944
1st - Off Zara in
the northern Adriatic, escort destroyers "Avon
Vale" and "Wheatland" sank German torpedo
boat "TA-20" and two corvettes - all
ex-Italian.
Greece & Albania
- By mid-month Greece was free of those Germans that
could escape and British troops had landed in the north.
In Albania the Germans were pulling out and on the 21st
the capital of Tirana was occupied by Albanian partisans.
Merchant Shipping War
in Conclusion - Only one small Allied merchant ship was
lost in the Mediterranean through to the end of the war.
DECEMBER 1944
14th - 'Hunt'
escort destroyer "ALDENHAM"
was the 67th and last Royal Navy
destroyer lost in the Mediterranean. Returning from
bombarding a German-held island off Fiume in the northern
Adriatic, she was mined and sank northwest of Zara.
Greece -
Disagreements with the Greek communist movement EAM/ELAS
over the future government of the country led to fighting
and the declaration of martial law. British troops,
supported by Royal Navy ships, had the unenviable task of
fighting their previous allies. By month's end the
fighting started to die down - for the present.
|
Strategic Situation -
Mediterranean - All the Mediterranean except the
Ligurian Sea to the north of Corsica, the
northern part of the Adriatic and some of the
Greek islands were now under Allied maritime
control |
1945
JANUARY 1945
Italy - Eighth Army
continued to push slowly forward on the east near
Lake Comacchio in preparation for the Spring offensive.
FEBRUARY 1945
12th - Attacks by
German explosive motorboats were made on shipping in
Split harbour, Yugoslavia, hitting a flak landing craft
and damaging cruiser "Delhi" laying alongside.
17th - Italian
battleship "CONTE DI CAVOUR", sunk in the 1940 Fleet Air Arm
attack on Taranto and salvaged but not recommissioned,
was finally destroyed in RAF raids on Trieste.
MARCH 1945
18th - Two
ex-Italian torpedo boats and a destroyer minelaying off
the Gulf of Genoa were engaged by destroyers
"Meteor" and "Lookout". In the last
Royal Navy destroyer action of the Mediterranean, torpedo
boats "TA-24" and "TA-29"
were sunk.
APRIL 1945
Italy - The last
and decisive Allied offensive aimed at clearing the
Germans from Italy got underway with commando assaults
near Lake Comacchio on the 1st. In these operations the
Royal Marines won their only VC of the war. + Cpl Thomas
Hunter, 43 Commando, was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross for gallantry in action against
German forces on the 2nd. Eighth Army started towards the
Argenta gap on the 9th, and by the 18th was through. By
the end of the month, Spezia, Genoa and Venice had been
liberated. Since February, senior German officers had
secretly negotiated with the Allies to end the war in
Italy. On the 29th April and without reference to Berlin,
a document of unconditional surrender was signed to take
effect from 2nd May.
13th - Torpedo boat
"TA-45"
was sunk by coastal forces off Fiume in
the northern Adriatic, the last major enemy warship to
fall to the Royal Navy in the Mediterranean.
MAY 1945
Italy-Conclusion - As
agreed, the cease-fire took place on the 2nd just as the
Allies reached Trieste near the Yugoslavian border.
Mediterranean - Final
Victory - The entire Mediterranean basin, the Middle
East, and North and East Africa were now completely free
from threat of German and Italian military domination. In
five short years the RN had moved from having to fight
hard to maintain a presence in the Mediterranean, to
where it had been largely responsible for landing large
Allied armies on enemy shores and supplying and
supporting them. The cost had been high - over 40 percent
of total major warship losses of the Royal Navy
world-wide: one battleship, two fleet carriers, 20
cruisers and cruiser-minelayers, 67 destroyers and escort
destroyers, 45 submarines, escorts, minesweepers, landing
craft, coastal forces, and
thousands of officers and men.