Donald Macintyre (Royal Navy officer)

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Donald George Frederick Wyville Macintyre
Second World War
Awards
Mentioned in Despatches
Legion of Merit
(United States)

Donald George Frederick Wyville Macintyre

Second World War
and a successful convoy escort commander. Following the war, he was an author of numerous books on British naval history.

Biography

Early career 1926–1939

Macintyre joined the Navy in 1926, serving in his first year in a destroyer with the

Home fleet
. In 1935 an accident left him unfit to fly, and he returned to surface vessels.

He was given command of HMS Kingfisher, an anti-submarine patrol vessel, and was attached to HMS Osprey -the anti-submarine school at Portland.

In 1937, he took command of his first destroyer, Defender, and was again stationed in the Far East,[1] seeing action during the Amoy crisis in 1938. In 1939, he returned to Britain to take command of the destroyer HMS Venomous, joining a Channel flotilla as war broke out.

Second World War 1939–1945

Beginnings

In 1939, not long after the declaration of war, Macintyre and Venomous were on escort duty in the English Channel with a destroyer flotilla led by HMS Malcolm (Captain T Halsey), escorting troopships from Britain to France.

In January 1940, he took command of Hearty, which was commissioned and renamed Hesperus, (to avoid confusion with another destroyer, HMS Hardy). Hesperus was very similar to other H-class destroyers, but had been modified with such peculiarities as unfamiliar markings on the gun-sights and no director sight; being one of six vessels originally built for the Brazilian navy.[2] His first operation with her was in conjunction with HMS Havant (Commander Burnell-Nugent) which was to assist in the occupation of the Faroe Islands.

In April 1940, he, with Hesperus, was involved in the

North Atlantic
.

SOE (Senior Officer Escort)

Three U-boat commanders

Macintyre's first action as SOE, was with convoy

Vanoc, while MacIntyre in Walker sank U-99, though her captain and most of her crew were saved. Kretschmer, complete with his binoculars, was among the survivors of his boats' sinking who were picked up by Walker. Macintyre 'liberated' the binoculars and used them throughout the rest of the war. With the loss of U-47 and her skipper Günther Prien earlier that month, the elimination of three leading U-boat aces saw the end of the "Happy Time"
, a period of U-boat ascendancy; for the rest of the year, the escorts would have the upper hand.

Move

As a result of Luftwaffe attention, during which Macintyre's car was "written off", it was decided to move the escort ships from Liverpool to the relative safety of Londonderry in Northern Ireland. On his first voyage up the River Foyle to the port, Macintyre was horrified to find that the pilot that he had embarked for the short trip would not use the conventional methods of navigation, preferring to steer instead for 'Mother Murphy's white cow' or 'Paddy Monaghan's byre'.[5]

Marriage and Iceland

Macintyre and EG 5 continued their escort duty for the rest of the year, serving on the North Atlantic and Gibraltar routes until the winter of 1941, when both Macintyre and the group were exhausted; EG 5 was disbanded. After a refit, which included the installation of radar, Walker was assigned to the Home Fleet at Hvalfjord in Iceland, as an escort to capital ships. It was during this period Macintyre married Monica Strickland, on 11 November 1941 at Brompton Oratory[6] in South Kensington, London.

In February 1942, Macintyre was posted to the US Naval base at

Argentia, near Placentia in Newfoundland, as British liaison officer. It was only after his arrival that he discovered Placentia had been the location for the first Roosevelt/Churchill meeting which had resulted in the Atlantic Charter.[7] He encountered an example of American 'can-do' as far as building the base was concerned. One night, on the return trip to his quarters following a ('dry') mess dinner, he was astonished to find that the road from his accommodation to the mess had disappeared as it had out-lived its usefulness.[8]

Whilst in Iceland, the US Navy repair ship Prairie was badly damaged by a fire which had started on the wooden jetty to which she was moored. Macintyre's chief concern were the two British corvettes which were moored close to the Prairie and their deck armament of depth charges. The fire was extinguished and the Prairie was replaced.[9]

Back to sea

The Hesperus re-visited

In June Macintyre returned to destroyer operations, assuming command of Hesperus once more, and in charge of the

Mid-Ocean Escort Force
(MOEF). For the rest of 1942, the B-2 Group was on North Atlantic escort duty.

Unsuccessful attacks were carried out on two U-boats in October 1942 while escorting convoy ONS 138. The boats were part of a pack of at least four. U-620 was the first to be depth-charged, but without result. The other, U-301, evaded the escort group's attack by diving deep. The ships of the group spent two days keeping the U-boats under (where they were less effective), allowing the convoy to escape.[10]

The Canadians

Macintyre was often frustrated by the inexperience and lack of training in the Royal Canadian Navy (RCN) early in the war. The gargantuan expansion of that service might explain the situation. On one occasion while still commanding Walker, an accompanying Canadian warship was unable to communicate when the battery on her signal lamp gave out and no spare was available. On another, a Canadian ship due to meet Macintyre in Argentia arrived with 'We Want Leave' painted on her superstructure. More seriously, depth charges were found to be rusted into their housings, primed and armed.[11] However, McIntyre's own gaffes later in the war with his own well trained ship's company were quite as remarkable.

Tragedy and triumph

The autumn of 1942 saw near continuous gales around Iceland. It was in such weather that a crew member was swept overboard. The conditions were too bad to lower a boat, but an officer went over the side. Despite getting the man halfway up the ship's hull, his strength gave out and the sailor slipped from his grasp, never to be seen again.[12]

Among a stream of official signals sent while the escort group was still at sea, Macintyre received a personal message informing him that he had become a father on Guy Fawkes Day (5 November). He beat his first-lieutenant by "a short head".[13]

U-357

On the next homeward-bound convoy in late December, Macintyre had sanctioned the loading of a large number of Christmas turkeys in the bow section of Hesperus, a decision he was to regret.

On 26 December, while escorting convoy HX 219, Hesperus and Vanessa engaged U-357. The encounter ran throughout the day with both ships firing patterns of depth charges without success. At one point Macintyre saw a periscope just 50 yards from his ship. Contact was nevertheless lost and then found again. With the onset of darkness, Hesperus received a message from Vanessa that the U-boat had surfaced and that she intended to ram it. But, following some frantic manoeuvring by both vessels, Vanessa could only manage a glancing blow on the German.

Hesperus stepped in. Both the destroyer and the U-boat employed every trick in the book in an attempt to out-wit the other. Hesperus kept her two signal searchlights on the U-boat's conning tower which probably distracted the German skipper into making a fatal error, i.e. crossing the British destroyers' bow. Hesperus rammed the U-boat, cutting it almost in half, leaving only a spreading pool of oil and a handful of survivors.

The celebrations were somewhat tempered when it was discovered that Hesperus had sustained significant damage to her bows and her extra cargo had been reduced to a sodden mess. Repairs in dry-dock in Liverpool, lasting three months, were required.[14]

U-191

Hesperus returned to sea in April 1943 with a new weapon, (Hedgehog) and new officers, so a period of training was required. However, very little time was available. The northerly sailing convoy, ONS 4, needed an escort; that task fell to the B2 Group which now consisted of two destroyers, Hesperus and Whitehall and five corvettes.

On 23 April Hesperus detected a U-boat on the surface less than 10 miles away. On closing the German (which had crash-dived), it was decided to use Hedgehog. The order to fire was followed by an embarrassing silence as the safety-pins had not been removed; this was soon realised and a pattern of depth charges were fired instead, including one that weighed considerably more (one ton), than the standard weapon. Unfamiliar sounds were then heard via the

U-191 was sunk with all hands.[15]

Perilous journey, but the war goes on

Ice

Over 29 April, on the way to Newfoundland, the convoy found itself negotiating icebergs with the help of Hesperus' radar and searchlights. Miraculously, the ships did not suffer any casualties.[16]

Routine in harbour

Hesperus adopted two ports as her home base: Argentia and Liverpool. St Johns was also used occasionally. Macintyre always appreciated the opportunity of a hot bath and being able to sleep in a bunk that remained stationary once harbour was safely reached.

Argentia was an all-male base; American officers would visit from their 'dry' ships. They would often be entertained by the Hesperus officers singing (in the original German), 'Zumba Za'. On one occasion in Liverpool, civilians in reserved occupations, who were visiting for their duty-free gin, were told quite seriously by the navigating officer that a passage had been arranged for them on the next convoy trip. The offer was not taken up.

Macintyre could usually get away to his wife and child when his ship was in Liverpool between convoys.[17]

SC 129

B2 Group left Argentia with the slow convoy SC 129 on 5 May 1943. Six days later, two ships in the convoy were torpedoed in daylight by U-402, the first sinkings (in nine months) in a convoy that Macintyre was involved with. He was understandably very unhappy (see para three of 'Successes' below), but revenge had to wait until that night when Hesperus damaged U-223 which only just managed to return to St Nazaire.[18]

U-186

Mcintyre left U-223 thinking she was sinking, to another ship; on his way back to the convoy, the ASDIC on Hesperus picked up another contact which turned out to be U-186. After a number of depth-charge attacks, the concussion of an underwater explosion was felt, oil and debris was seen reaching the surface.[19]

No more U-boats were confirmed sunk while Group B-2 were escorting SC 129, although there were several sightings, radar and ASDIC contacts. Macintyre in Hesperus was faced with a dilemma; his own ship was very short of depth charges, the other destroyer in the escort group, Whitehall, was low on fuel. Other ships in the group (the corvettes), could not catch a U-boat on the surface, but by 16 May, the convoy had moved out of the danger area.[20]

A new group

In April 1944, Macintyre left Hesperus (very reluctantly), to assume command of Bickerton, an American-built ship. He would also take charge of the 5th Escort Group, then forming in Belfast. After a working-up period, the group began operations on 21 April, supporting the escort of convoy ONS 233. Having found themselves under-used, the group was re-deployed, carrying out an abortive sweep for a single U-boat before joining the escort aircraft carrier Vindex and the 9th Escort Group on the 26th.[21]

U-765

In the early morning of 5 May, following a lengthy hunt, the half-group (the other half were kept with Vindex), were sent to an area known to contain a U-boat which was on weather-reporting duty. With the use of direction-finding equipment and aircraft from Vindex, the search area was reduced. Having found his target, Macintyre then decided to use the 'creeping' attack method pioneered by Captain 'Johnnie' Walker. This involved the use of a second ship, (in this case the frigate HMS Bligh), to do the actual attacking while the first ship (Bickerton), controlled things such as the ASDIC tracking.

A series of depth charge explosions were rewarded with the sight of a badly damaged U-boat breaking the surface. Bickerton moved in to administer the coup-de-grace, but she was beaten to it by a Swordfish from Videx which dropped two more depth charges on the hapless German vessel. A handful of survivors were taken prisoner.[22]

Upon questioning the prisoners, it was realised that U-765 was to have been relieved, (by, it was later discovered, U-736). It was decided to repeat the attack, but it was unsuccessful.[23]

D-Day

Before and after D-Day (6 June 1944), Macintyre, Bickerton and the 5th Escort Group were part of the RN's contribution to the invasion of France by patrolling in the relatively shallow waters of the Western Approaches. On the 15th, the group were investigating the sighting of a U-boat using its snorkel. HMS Mourne, a ship well known to Mcintyre, was the victim of an acoustic torpedo. After several hours of searching, there was no sign of the U-boat.[24] The subject of the hunt could well have escaped retribution amongst the plethora of wrecks which litter the floor of the English Channel.[25]

U-269

On the night of 25 June, after investigating a contact which turned out to be another wreck, Bickerton was hurrying to catch up with the rest of the group when she detected an echo, subsequently identified as U-269. Mcintyre had been asleep in his cabin beneath the bridge and initially took some convincing that the target was genuine. All doubt was swept aside when, after a look at the plotting table, it became apparent that the target had moved some distance. Bickerton moved into the attack and fired a pattern of depth charges. The U-boat was forced to the surface where it was immediately engaged by Bickertons guns. The crew abandoned ship – the U-boat sank. It was all over within 10 minutes.[26]

The sinking of Bickerton

Bickerton was sent north to

Aylmer.[27]

Return to naval aviation

Macintyre was taken off sea duty. With hindsight he acknowledged that he was "ready for this".[28] The change in the nature of anti-submarine warfare, with U-boats switching to lone-wolf attacks in coastal areas, required different tactics and was "best left to fresher men". Macintyre sensed it was "time to go"[29] and returned to aviation, ending the war as commander of a naval air station.

Later life 1945–1981

Macintyre left the Navy after the war, forging a successful career as a historian and author. He published an autobiography, U-Boat Killer, in 1956, and followed it with 15 books on various aspects of naval history.

In 1955, Macintyre returned Otto Kretschmer's binoculars, which he had kept in 1941. At the time, Kretschmer was president of the Deutscher Marinebund, a member club of the International Maritime Confederation.[30]

Assessment

Macintyre was a highly successful U-boat killer, a soubriquet he took as the title of his autobiography. He was responsible for the destruction of six U-boats during the Second World War, making him one of the highest scoring ASW commanders.

He was also an equally successful escort commander, taking seriously the "fateful instructions that" 'the safe and timely arrival of the convoy' "was our main objective".[31]

Over a two-year period with B-2, Macintyre commanded the escorts for 28 convoys, a total of 1100 ships, with the loss of just two. The vast majority (99.8%), arrived safely, a record of which Macintyre was justifiably proud, although he was "in a fury"[32] at the loss of the two ships when escorting SC 129.

Awards

Macintyre was also highly decorated for his service, winning the Distinguished Service Order with two bars and the Distinguished Service Cross.[33]

Books by Captain Macintyre

Notes

  1. ^ Macintyre (1976) pp. 23–24
  2. ^ Macintyre (1976) p. 27
  3. ^ Macintyre (1976) pp.28–30
  4. ^ Macintyre (1976) pp.57–58
  5. ^ Macintyre (1976) p. 62
  6. ^ Macintyre (1976) p. 70
  7. ^ Macintyre (1976) pp. 70–71
  8. ^ Macintyre (1976) p. 74
  9. ^ Macintyre (1976) pp. 81–85
  10. ^ Macintyre (1976) pp. 86–89
  11. ^ Macintyre (1976) p. 90
  12. ^ Macintyre (1976) p. 91
  13. ^ Macintyre (1976) pp. 92–96
  14. ^ Macintyre (1976) pp. 112–113
  15. ^ Macintyre (1976) p. 116
  16. ^ Macintyre (1976) pp. 117–124
  17. ^ Macintyre (1976) pp. 125–132
  18. ^ Macintyre (1976) pp. 132–133
  19. ^ Macintyre (1976) pp. 133–138
  20. ^ Macintyre (1976) pp. 139–142
  21. ^ Macintyre (1976) pp. 143–147
  22. ^ Macintyre (1976) pp. 149–151
  23. ^ Macintyre (1976) pp. 154–156
  24. ^ Macintyre (1976) pp. 154–158
  25. ^ Macintyre (1976) pp. 159–160
  26. ^ Macintyre (1976) pp. 163–168
  27. ^ MacIntyre p171
  28. ^ MacIntyre p171
  29. ^ Der Spiegel Volume 46/1955.
  30. ^ Macintyre (1976) p. 137
  31. ^ Macintyre (1976) p, 126
  32. ^ Houterman, Hans and Koppes Jeroen. "Royal Navy Officers 1939–1945". WWII Unit Histories and Officers. Retrieved 2 May 2009.

References

External links