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THE
RCN ON D-DAY
Page
4: Clearing the Lanes
Originally
published in the "Crowsnest Magazine" Vol. 16 No. 5 May
1964
By Lt. Peter Ward, RCNR
TO
COUNTER a possible German submarine threat 11 Canadian frigates,
nine destroyers, and five corvettes joined a force of British escorts
to throw a huge asdic screen across the western approaches to the
Channel. They moved to their stations a week before the landings
were scheduled and carried out sweep after sweep In some of the
worlds toughest sub-hunting waters. More about them later.
To
make the invasion possible, tremendous numbers of ships had to be
concentrated in the Channel ports. Corvettes of the RCN began to
play their part in the great Overlord plan as these concentrations
built up. Transports, blockships for artificial harbours, and sections
of floating pier, all had to be convoyed to their marshalling points,
then safely shepherded across the Channel to the beaches. There
were 19 Canadian corvettes in the armada of small ships assigned
to convoy duty. Some of them had to bring their charges safely from
northern Scotland. Stolid merchantmen had sorely tried the patience
of skippers in Atlantic convoys but frustrations increased a hundredfold
when concrete bargesfloating piers and hulks making their
last voyage had to be escorted through those dangerous waters.
The
job was not spectacular, compared with the glories of the fighting
Tribals, shell-battered landing craft, and speedy MTBs but without
the lumbering assortment of floating hybrids, herded to the beaches
by Canadian corvettes, Overlord could have failed through lack of
a harbour to land supplies.
PERHAPS
the most ticklish job Canadian sailors were called upon to perform
was the task assigned to our minesweepers. The 31st Flotilla was
composed of 14 sweepers, all Canadian. Attached to British
sweeper flotillas were six other Canadian ships. British and
Canadian sweepers were charged with ploughing a clear path
through the Channel, speckled with random-sown German mines. Then
they had to clear 10 shipping lanes through a dense German minefield
that stretched right across Baie de Seine. That minefield was eight
miles deep, the inner edge about 30 miles from the invasion beaches.
Water
between that minefield and the beaches was sown again with random
mines. Any ship that attempted to cross the minefield took her life
in her hands.
The
sweepers headed towards their deadly job June 4. Shortly after
they went to sea, Overlord was postponed from June 5 to June 6,
and they were recalled.
June
5 dawned through clearing skies with seas abating. The 31st Flotilla
arrived again at their assembly area off the Isle of Wight at 5.35
p.m. They took up sweeping formation immediately and steamed the
40 miles to the edge of the German minefield sweeping random mines
as they went.
The
31st entered the German minefield at 7 p.m. They were assigned to
sweep one of 10 lanes through which the invasion shipping would
pass. In late afternoon the Bangors, which had spent so many tedious
years on coastal convoy work, began the operation on which the dreams
and hopes of the free world were centred. British shallowdraught
launches went ahead of the lead sweepers in each formation,
clearing a narrow belt of mines for the first wedge of the sweep.
The over-lapping sweeps cut loose mine after mine, and British danlayers
followed the sweeping formations to mark the swept channel with
dan buoys.
Shore
defences would hear the explosions if swept mines were detonated
with rifle fire in the convenonal manner, so it had been decided
to let the mines drift free, counting on wind and current to carry
them away.
Once
through the minefield, the sweepers were ordered to clear
lanes through coastal water to the anchorage the huge invasion fleet
would use. Next they were charged with making the anchorage itself
free of mines. The final tasks was to sweep lanes for assault boats
right to the limit of deep water. This would take them to within
a mile and a half of shore.
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