HMS Fidelity (D 57)

| Name | HMS Fidelity (D 57) | ||
| Type: | Special service vessel (SSV) | ||
| Tonnage | 2,456 tons | ||
| Completed | 1920 - H. & C. Grayson Ltd, Garston, Liverpool | ||
| Owner | The Admiralty | ||
| Homeport | |||
| Date of attack | 30 Dec 1942 | Nationality: | |
| Fate | Sunk by U-435 (Siegfried Strelow) | ||
| Position | 43.23N, 27.07W - Grid CE 3178 - See location on a map - | ||
| Complement | 379 (369 dead and 10 survivors). | ||
| Convoy | ONS-154 (straggler) | ||
| Route | UK - Capetown - Colombo, India | ||
| Cargo | Commandos and two landing craft | ||
| History | Completed in August 1920 as French steam merchant Le Rhin for Compagnie de Navigation Paquet, Marseilles. In June 1940 taken over by Britain, converted to the special service vessel (SSV) HMS Fidelity (D 57) and commissioned on 24 Sep, 1940. The ship was armed with four 4in guns and four torpedo tubes and equipped with two seaplanes, a motor torpedo boat (MTB), HF/DF and torpedo nets. | ||
| Notes on loss | On 28 Dec, 1942, HMS Fidelity (D 57) (Lt C.A.M. Costa) fell behind the convoy ONS-154 due to engine troubles and streamed its torpedo nets, which brought down her speed to 2-3 knots. The next day, the commander decided to head for the Azores and launched the MTB and a Kingfisher seaplane for anti-submarine patrol. The aircraft spotted the lifeboats of Empire Shackleton which were towed by the two landing craft to HMS Fidelity (D 57). The 44 survivors were picked up and the aircraft and the landing craft were lifted aboard again. At 21.38 hours on 29 December, U-225 (Leimkühler) fired the stern torpedo at HMS Fidelity (D 57), but missed. U-615 (Kapitzky) observed the suspicous vessel during the day and attacked her with five single torpedoes between 22.00 and 23.00 hours, but they either missed or were caught by the torpedo nets. At 16.38 hours on 30 December, the vessel was finally hit by two torpedoes from U-435 and sank immediately after heavy detonations. The U-boat reported a surprising high number of survivors on overcrowded rafts and swimming in the water, none of them were rescued and all drowned in the worsening weather. 274 crew members, 51 Royal Marines and the 44 survivors were lost. The landing crafts HMS LCV-752 and HMS LCV-754 on board were lost with the ship. The engine of the MTB broke down and the crew of eight men was later rescued by HMCS Woodstock (K 238) (T/A/Cdr G.H. Griffiths, RCN). They were the only survivors apart from two men that had been picked up by HMCS St Laurent (H 83) (A/Cdr G.S. Windeyer, RCN) after a Kingfisher seaplane from the vessel crashed on take off on 28 December. | ||
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