SS
Barøy was a 424 ton steel-hulled steamship
delivered from the Trondhjems
mekaniske Værksted
shipyard in Trondheim
in 1929. She had been ordered by
the Norwegian shipping company Ofotens
Dampskibsselskab for the local route from the port city of
Narvik
to the smaller towns of Lødingen
and Svolvær
.
After the company suffered ship losses in the
1940 Norwegian Campaign
Barøy was put into Hurtigruten
service on the Trondheim–Narvik route and sunk with heavy loss of
life in a British air attack in the early hours of 13 September
1941.
Building and commissioning
Barøy was delivered by
Trondhjems mekaniske
Værksted to
Ofotens Dampskibsselskab on 19 August
1929. She was a typical North-Norwegian local transport, with an
open
weather deck and configured with
two cargo holds, a First Class passenger section in the aft and a
Third Class area in the bow. The First Class accommodation included
45 bunks, and the ship was certified to carry a total of 200
passengers.
Pre-war years
Most of
Barøy's pre-war service was on the
Narvik–Lødingen–Svolvær route for which she had been built,
although she also acted as a reserve vessel for the
Narvik–Trondheim express route. ==World War II== The outbreak of
[[World War II]] led to Norwegian government restrictions on the
Hurtigruten from 1 October 1939 onwards, with a reduction in both
sailing speed and the number of departures from [[Bergen]], which
was cut from seven to five a week. The restrictions followed a
massive increase in shipping along the Norwegian coast in the
autumn of 1939 as supplies were transported to ports all along the
Norwegian coast in preparation for war. After massive protests from
the coastal population daily departures were reintroduced on 5
December 1939.Bakka 1993: 65 In April 1940 many Hurtigruten ships
were being refurbished before the summer season and reserve vessels
were sailing the route. One of the reserve ships on the Hurtigruten
service was ''Barøy'', standing in for the 873 ton [[SS Nordnorge
(1924)|SS ''Nordnorge'']], which was undergoing maintenance work at
''Trondhjems mekaniske Værksted''. ''Barøy'' had departed Bergen on
2 April, arrived at Trondheim on 4 April and was docked at
[[Hammerfest]] in the northern county of [[Finnmark]] on 9 April
1940. ===German occupation=== After surviving the 9 April
[[Operation Weserübung|German invasion]] and the 62 day long
[[Norwegian Campaign]] that followed it, ''Barøy'' continued
serving in ''Nordnorge'''s place during the
German occupation of
Norway,
Nordnorge having been sunk by
Royal Navy warships during the Norwegian Campaign
after she had been pressed into service as a covert troopship by
the invading German forces.
Barøy was considered too small
a vessel for the longer distances, such as the Hurtigruten route
between Bergen and Narvik, and her prolonged service on the route
was an emergency measure.
Last voyage
A year and a half after the German invasion
Barøy was
still sailing the Hurtigruten route as the fifth weekly northbound
departure from Trondheim to Narvik.
In the early hours of 13 September 1941
she was on her way northwards, and had recently called at Skutvik
on her way
to Tranøy on Hamarøy
. On
board the ship was a crew of 26, as well as 105 passengers, 37 of
whom were German soldiers. The Germans troops on board were members
of the
197th Infantry
Division.
Sinking
At 0350hrs on 13 September
Barøy was struck by a torpedo
some west Tranøy Lighthouse, sinking within minutes. The torpedo
ripped open the ship's hull, quickly flooding her with water, and
immediately knocking out the electrical power on board. Due to the
ship sinking so rapidly there was no time to lower the lifeboats,
and the people on board had to jump into the water in order to
survive. At the time of the sinking the water temperature was 7–8
°C.
The torpedo that sank Barøy had been
dropped by an 817 Squadron Fairey Albacore, one of seven that attacked
shipping in the Vestfjord
area that morning. The Albacore crews also
claimed to have sunk another vessel, of around 2,000 tons, in the
same attack.
The Fleet Air
Arm aircraft came from the fleet carrier HMS Victorious, which was part
of Force M which had escorted the old carrier HMS Argus, carrying 24 Hawker Hurricane fighters to the Soviet Union
. On their way back to the UK the Albacores
on board
Victorious were assigned anti-shipping and
bombing missions on the Norwegian coast and 12 aircraft took off at
0300hrs and flew east, navigating by moonlight. Seven of the
Albacores belonged to 817 Squadron and carried torpedoes, the
remaining five were
832
Squadron aircraft with bombs.
While the 817 Squadron aircraft sank
Barøy, the 832 Squadron bombed the hydroelectric power station in
Glomfjord
, the aluminium plant Nordag in Haugvik and the radio station at Røst
. Two Norwegian civilians died at Glomfjord
and one at Røst. No British aircraft were lost during the
operation. At the time of the attack
Barøy had been
sailing with full lighting due to work being carried out on the
deck cargo. The wreck of the ship rests at depth of around .
The first ship to discover the sinking of
Barøy was the
762 ton Norwegian cargo ship
SS
Skjerstad, which passed the scene of the sinking on
her way southwards and rescued 19 survivors, as well as recovering
15 bodies. The survivors of the sinking were set ashore at Svolvær.
Seventy-seven Norwegians died in the attack, including seven
children and 21 women. Fifty-nine of the 68 Norwegian passengers
were lost, while 18 of the 26 crew members died. Of the 37 German
soldiers only two survived.
Reactions to the attack
One of the
consequences of the sinking of Barøy, together with the
sinking of fellow Hurtigruten ship SS Richard With off Rolvsøy
in Finnmark later the same day, was that the
Hurtigruten ships would no longer sail further north than Tromsø
. Between Tromsø and Hammerfest the route was
taken over by smaller replacement ships.
The Nazi regime in Norway used the attack on
Barøy,
together with other attacks on civilian Norwegian shipping, in
propaganda against the Allies. On 20 May 1944 the Nazi-controlled
Norwegian Postal Service issued a
series of
postage stamps commemorating
three of the most infamous cases of Norwegian ships sunk by Allied
attacks.
Barøy was the subject of the 10
øre stamp, while
SS
Sanct Svithun and
SS
Irma were depicted on the 15 øre and 20 øre stamps
respectively. The shipwreck stamps were designed by German-born
Norwegian Nazi propaganda artist and war reporter
Harald Damsleth.
References
Literature