HNoMS Honningsvåg was a naval trawler that served throughout World War II as a patrol
boat in the Royal Norwegian
Navy. She was launched at
the North
Sea
harbour of Wesermünde
in Hanover
, Germany in February 1940 as the fishing trawler Malangen
and was captured by Norwegian militiamen at the North
Norwegian port of Honningsvåg
during her maiden fishing journey to the Barents Sea
. Having taken part in
the defence of Norway in 1940 she spent the rest of the war years
patrolling the ocean off Iceland
.
She was decommissioned in 1946, sold to a
civilian fishing company in 1947 and scrapped in
1973.
German career
Malangen was launched in February 1940 with the
designation PG 550 for the trawler company Norddeutsche
Hochseefischerei AG. At this early point in the war the
Kriegsmarine had not yet begun requisitioning
all new trawlers and
Malangen was used as an ordinary
fishing vessel.
Maiden voyage and capture
On 27 March 1940 the
Malangen departed Wesermünde on her
maiden voyage to the fishing grounds
of the Barents Sea. While she operated off Norway the
German invasion of that country
began.
As
she attempted to make her way back to Germany Malangen
entered the port of Honningsvåg in the Norwegian Finnmark
county on 13
April.
When the German trawler entered the small port she was swiftly
boarded by a locally raised guard unit led by
løytnant (Lieutenant, Junior Grade)
C. A. Carlsen and seized before the crew could set off the two
scuttling charges they had placed in the
engine room. This was the second German trawler the Honningsvåg
riflemen had captured; two days previously they had seized control
of the
München of "Nordsee" Deutsche Hochseefischerei AG.
The German
sailors were later transferred to a prisoner-of-war camp at Vardøhus
Fortress
by the 1,382 ton Norwegian steamer Nova,
arriving on 24 April.
Royal Norwegian Navy service
Norwegian Campaign
On 23 April 1940, ten days after the capture of
Malangen,
the Royal Norwegian Navy
fenrik (Ensign) A. E. T. Plyhn
assumed command of the trawler. Since her capture the ship had been
renamed
Honningsvåg in honour of the port in which she was
captured and had had a 47 mm gun installed.
Her first mission in
Norwegian service was to sail south to the city of Bodø
in Nordland
county for further orders.
Operations in Nordland
After
Honningsvåg arrived at Bodø the naval district commander
there stationed the trawler at Sandnessjøen
for local patrol missions. While stationed
in Sandnessjøen fenrik Plyhn was promoted to løytnant.
Aiding British landings
On 9 May
the British troopship Royal Watch arrived at Bodø carrying a
600 men-strong force of two companies codenamed
Scissorforce to help block the German advance northwards
from Trondheim
. Honningsvåg, two local coastal
steamers and three fishing vessels were assigned to help land the
British forces. By the morning of 10 May all the British soldiers
and their equipment had been brought ashore by the Norwegian
vessels.
Capturing German air crews

Sandnessjøen Hospital where wounded
German prisoners were treated in 1940.
14 May saw
Honningsvåg being despatched to the Vefsnfjord
to deal with a German twin-engined seaplane that
was grounded on the shoreline near Kvalnes at the island of
Alsten
. When
Honningsvåg arrived on the
scene the crew found that since the aircraft had landed a local
militia unit had attacked the Germans, killing one and capturing
the other two crew members, one of whom had been wounded. The
seaplane was found to be loaded with tins of food that were
probably destined for the surrounded
German forces at Narvik.
Honningsvåg loaded the aircraft's machine guns and
ammunition as well as the food cargo and brought the German airmen
with her back to Sandnessjøen. The dead German was handed over to
the hospital while the two
prisoners
were taken into police custody.
HNoMS Honningsvåg proceeded to
Dalsvåg in Dønna
and was
anchored there when five German bombers attacked Sandnessjøen later
in the day.
On 15 May
a German land aircraft made an emergency landing at Alstahaug
where it was approached by a local militia
force. After the German aircrew refused to surrender, the
Norwegians opened fire, wounding one of the crew and forcing the
four airmen to capitulate. The wounded German was brought to the
hospital in Sandnessjøen while the other three were taken by
fishing boat to a prisoner-of-war camp.
Honningsvåg became involved in the episode later the same
day when a
Heinkel He 59 D-AKUK, an
ambulance seaplane of the German
Seenotflugkommando 1 (Sea
Emergency Command 1), responded to emergency calls that the downed
German aircrew had made before being captured. At Alstahaug the
German officer in charge of the rescue operation,
Oberstleutnant Branger, was told by the local
population that the crew of the German aircraft had been moved and
that there were German wounded and prisoners in nearby
Sandnessjøen.
After encountering rifle fire from armed guards at the Alstahaug
plane wreck Branger decided to continue on to Sandnessjøen to free
the wounded Germans held there. Landing at Sandnessjøen at 1730hrs,
Branger and an
Unteroffizier armed
themselves and went to the hospital where they demanded the release
of the wounded Germans held there.
Although the chief physician refused to
release the Germans the police
commissioner at nearby Nesna
ordered him
to comply with the Germans' demands. While the Germans
attempted to gain the release of their comrades
Honningsvåg arrived at Sandnessjøen. Løytnant Plyhn
contacted the district commander in Bodø and was ordered to seize
the He 59 and capture the Germans. Oberstleutnant Branger and the
Unteroffizier were the first to be taken prisoner, while the two
Germans remaining with the seaplane refused to budge and stayed on
board until Plyhn approached them alone and after firing a warning
shot took them prisoner. The captured Germans were handed over to
the police. The He 59 proved impossible to remove due to low tide.
After
attempts to pull it free had damaged the pontoons and wings beyond
repair, it was towed out on the Leirfjord
and sunk on 18 May.
The Albion
The next engagement involving
Honningsvåg occurred four
days later, on 19 May.
The SS Albion, a 192 ton fishing
trawler seized by the Germans at Trondheim, had landed 25 German
soldiers at Rørvik
on 18 May
and continued northwards with a cargo of food and other
supplies. Honningsvåg and the 192 ton patrol boat
Heilhorn were ordered by the commander at Bodø to
intercept and sink the German-operated steamship.
By the evening of 19
May the Norwegian warships found Albion riding at anchor
some north of Brønnøysund
. After closing to less than the Norwegians
opened fire and sank
Albion. The German crew jumped
overboard, swam ashore, and were quickly captured by a waiting
militia unit. Of the eight Germans crewing the
Albion one
was killed and one wounded. The prisoners and the dead body were
handed over to
Honningsvåg for transportation to
Sandnessjøen where they arrived in the early hours of 20 May.
Air attacks
As the
Norwegian Campaign continued and
work on the German airfield at Værnes
in Central Norway progressed with the help of
some 2,000 Norwegian collaborationist workers, attacks by the
Luftwaffe increased in number and
intensity.
Honningsvåg was subjected to her first attack on 20 May
when she was
strafed by a single German
aircraft while out on patrol in the
Ranafjorden, suffering no damage. The next day
Sandnessjøen was bombed while
Honningsvåg was nearby. This
time also being attacked with bombs, as well as strafed,
Honningsvåg made evasive manoeuvres and returned fire with
her
AA machine gun. Suffering
minor damage from machine gun hits, she had her first casualty of
the war when one of her gunners was lightly wounded.
The following days saw steadily increasing German air activity and
Honningsvåg was bombed and strafed repeatedly. Skilled
manoeuvring and good gunners enabled the trawler to avoid damage
until she evacuated the area on 24 May.
Being completely out
of machine gun ammunition, and suffering from major leaks after
several near misses from bombs, Honningsvåg sailed to
Harstad
where she was placed on a slipway for repairs.

HNoMS
Honningsvåg sometime
during World War II.
Evacuation to the UK
As the repairs on
Honningsvåg were being completed her
commander, løytnant Plyhn, was amongst the Norwegian naval officers
that received orders on 7 June to sail their vessels to the UK as
the
Allies had decided to
evacuate from Norway in response
to the German
invasion of France.
Initially
the orders specified Shetland
as the first designation for the Royal Norwegian
Navy ships, but after British requests this was changed to Tórshavn
on the Faroe Islands
where the Norwegian commanders were to contact
British
naval authorities there to be given recognition signals to
identify themselves during their further journey to the UK.
The
Norwegian Naval Command in Tromsø
also ordered
the ships to sail as westerly as possible to avoid German air
attacks.
Honningsvåg departed Harstad on 7 June 1940 to begin five
years in exile, leaving the Norwegian coast at
Fugløy and joining the westbound allied convoy
on 10 June. On 12 June she and several other Norwegian naval
vessels arrived at Tórshavn. As the Royal Norwegian Navy assembled
in the UK later in the month its total force was 13 warships and
five seaplanes manned by 80 officers and 520 men.
Repair work in the UK
After arrival in the UK
Honningsvåg had a number of
repairs carried out and was rearmed with a main gun, a
2 pounder pom-pom autocannon, four 12.7 mm
Colt Browning AA machine guns, 50
depth charges as well as an
Asdic Type 123A sonar system.
Iceland Group
She was
declared war ready on 31 August 1940 and joined the Iceland Group
of the RNoN on 6 September 1940 after arriving at Reykjavík
. Honningsvåg remained with the
Iceland Group for the duration of the war, until 16 May 1945. The
Iceland Group, under the overall command of the Admiral Commanding,
Iceland Command, initially consisted of
Honningsvåg,
HNoMS Fridtjof
Nansen and
HNoMS
Nordkapp, later being joined by more Norwegian patrol
vessels.
The unit's mission was to patrol the
Icelandic coastline and the areas of the Arctic Ocean
between the islands of Iceland, Jan Mayen
and Greenland
. Although the Iceland Group had been
operational since August 1940 the official establishment of the
unit only occurred in June 1941 when a formal RNoN administration
was put in place in Reykjavik.
Jan Mayen
In November 1940
Honningsvåg was sent on a rescue mission
to the Norwegian
Arctic island of Jan Mayen
to retrieve the shipwrecked crew of the
Fridtjof Nansen,
the latter ship having hit an uncharted underwater reef off the
island's southern coast and sunk on 8 November. The crew of the
Fridtjof Nansen had managed to abandon ship in lifeboats
and land at the nearby island of Eggøya, from where they were
picked up by the
Honningsvåg on 12 November and brought
back to Iceland. April 1941 saw
Honningsvåg return to Jan
Mayen in order to re-establish the
weather station on the small volcanic
island.
Honningsvåg and the other vessels of the Iceland
Group returned regularly to Jan Mayen with replacement crews and
supplies throughout the war. During the visit the crew of
Honningsvåg spotted the remnants of two German
Heinkel He 115 seaplanes that had been
wrecked during a failed October 1940 attempt at establishing a
floating seaplane base off the island to provide for meteorological
operations.
Anti-submarine patrols
During
patrols and convoy escorting in the Denmark Strait
Honningsvåg and fellow Norwegian patrol
vessels Namsos, Farsund and Svolvær
repeatedly attacked German U-boats.
These attacks led to numerous unconfirmed claims of U-boat
sinkings. On 10 November 1944 the UK - Reykjavik convoy UR-142 was
attacked by U-boats off western Iceland. The British steam tanker
Shirvan and the Icelandic merchant vessel
Godafoss were both torpedoed and sunk by
U-300. In response
Honningsvåg and
a Royal Navy escort vessel counter-attacked with depth charges,
claiming a sinking after hearing a large underwater explosion,
seeing oil slicks on the surface, and losing the Asdic contact.
Following the attack
Honningsvåg picked up 25 survivors
from the
Shirvan and the
Godafoss.
Post-World War II
After returning to Norway in the second half of May 1945
Honningsvåg continued in naval service until she was
decommissioned and transferred to Naval Command
Trøndelag on 23 August 1946.
The next year she was
sold to a civilian trawler company in Kristiansund
and was converted back to her original role as a
fishing trawler. In 1973 she was sold for scrapping in Tjeldsund
.
Notes
Literature