WWII Decisions Online · HMS Courageous — Makeig-Jones after the Torpedoes
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17 September 1939, 7.45 p.m.
Western Approaches, south-west of Ireland
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HMS Courageous — Makeig-Jones after the Torpedoes

Captain William Tofield Makeig-Jones, commanding HMS Courageous

HMS Courageous is a light aircraft carrier of the Royal Navy of 22,500 tons, built in 1916 as a battlecruiser (Courageous class) and converted to a carrier in 1924-1928. 48 aircraft embarked (Fairey Swordfish and Sea Gladiators), 1,260 crew. At the outbreak of war she is one of the 8 operational British carriers.

In the first weeks of September 1939, the British Admiralty adopts an offensive anti-submarine doctrine: send the carriers to hunt the U-boats off the coasts. A controversial idea — a carrier is not designed for ASW hunting, and her destroyer screen is insufficient. , First Lord of the Admiralty since 3 September, backs the idea.

On 5 September, HMS Ark Royal narrowly escapes a U-boat (U-39). The warning is not heeded. On 17 September 1939, HMS Courageous patrols in the Western Approaches south-west of Ireland, escorted by 4 destroyers (HMS Inglefield, Ivanhoe, Impulsive, Intrepid). At 5 p.m. 2 destroyers are detached to escort a merchant ship in distress — the screen is reduced to 2 units.

At 7.45 p.m. the U-29 of Kapitänleutnant , on patrol in the area, spots Courageous at 11 kilometres. The carrier executes a classic aircraft-recovery turn, exposing her starboard side. Schuhart fires 3 torpedoes. 2 find their mark.

Atlantic, 17 September 1939, torpedoed aboard the carrier Courageous you command: how to react?

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