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The FReeper Foxhole Remembers The Polish Submarine ORP Orzel (1939 - 1940) - Nov 17th, 2004
www.thehistorynet.com ^ | Wilfred P. Deac

Posted on 11/16/2004 10:55:06 PM PST by SAMWolf



Lord,

Keep our Troops forever in Your care

Give them victory over the enemy...

Grant them a safe and swift return...

Bless those who mourn the lost.
.

FReepers from the Foxhole join in prayer
for all those serving their country at this time.


...................................................................................... ...........................................

U.S. Military History, Current Events and Veterans Issues

Where Duty, Honor and Country
are acknowledged, affirmed and commemorated.

Our Mission:

The FReeper Foxhole is dedicated to Veterans of our Nation's military forces and to others who are affected in their relationships with Veterans.

In the FReeper Foxhole, Veterans or their family members should feel free to address their specific circumstances or whatever issues concern them in an atmosphere of peace, understanding, brotherhood and support.

The FReeper Foxhole hopes to share with it's readers an open forum where we can learn about and discuss military history, military news and other topics of concern or interest to our readers be they Veteran's, Current Duty or anyone interested in what we have to offer.

If the Foxhole makes someone appreciate, even a little, what others have sacrificed for us, then it has accomplished one of it's missions.

We hope the Foxhole in some small way helps us to remember and honor those who came before us.

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ORP Orzel


The Polish submarine Orzel escaped from internment and went on to fight the Germans against long odds.

It was close to 3 a.m. when two shadowy figures overpowered the guard atop the conning tower of the moored submarine. In the control room below, a second guard found himself staring into the muzzle of a revolver. Soon both were bound and gagged.



An ax-wielding seaman meanwhile severed the electrical cable of the nearest searchlight and the telephone wires. Next came the mooring cables, which already had been surreptitiously sawed half through. Her dual electric motors humming, the submarine moved away from the dock. The high-bowed, nearly 1,500-ton vessel slipped stealthily toward the outer harbor -- and ran aground on a mudbank.

Lieutenant Commander Jan Grudzinski ordered one set of air tanks flooded and another blown, then requested full motor power. Grudzinski had no sooner called for power to be switched to the twin-shaft Sulzer diesels than sirens screamed, searchlights stabbed through the darkness and gunfire erupted.



The dramatic escape of the Polish submarine Orzel (Eagle) came 17 days after Adolf Hitler triggered World War II by invading Poland on September 1, 1939, and barely 20 months after her own launching. Built by public subscription, Orzel was one of two submersibles ordered from Dutch shipyards by Poland as part of an effort to create a navy strong enough to defend the nation's 90-mile northern coastline.

On September 8, Orzel left the Gulf of Danzig for the open Baltic. So far, the submarine's luck had held. Bombs and depth charges had been evaded. Orzel had narrowly escaped a German trap by running through a minefield without hitting anything more dangerous than two mine mooring cables. Now a blanket of bad luck seemed to enshroud the boat. The captain, Commander Kloczkowski, fell seriously ill; typhus was suspected. Grudzinski, his executive officer, took over. Four days later, on the 12th, the Nazi advance forced the evacuation of Gdynia, on the Gulf of Danzig, and its naval base. Next, mechanical problems befell the submarine. Finally, repair needs and the captain's worsening condition forced Orzel to seek a neutral port. Her prow turned northeastward toward the Gulf of Finland.



The castle-and-tower-dominated medieval skyline of Tallinn, capital of Estonia, hove into view on September 15. Overtly friendly, the Estonians escorted Orzel into the port's naval facilities. Kloczkowski was taken away in an ambulance. Repairs on the submarine began.

More influenced by pressure from the then-allied Nazis and Soviets than by international law, the Estonians informed Grudzinski that his command was to be interned. While the Polish officers objected and argued, soldiers boarded the submarine to disarm her.

The appearance of the British Embassy's naval attaché boosted morale. Although guards prevented him from boarding Orzel, the official managed to slip his calling card to a Polish sailor. On the reverse side was written "Good luck, God bless you." Another arrival was more ominous -- a truckload of workers sent to extract the torpedoes. Some accounts say 15 or 16 torpedoes already had been disarmed and transferred to the truck when Grudzinski engineered a breakdown of the hoisting machinery. Other reports, probably more accurate, indicate that, with 14 torpedoes removed, six remained in the stern tubes on September 17.



Tense with anticipation, the sailors made preparations for their breakout. Midnight, the time selected, came. But so did an Estonian officer on an unexpected visit. Any suspicions he may have harbored were allayed. Nearly three hours late, Grudzinski gave the nod to overpower the two onboard guards, and Orzel fled. She lay on the seabed throughout the 18th, and that evening Grudzinski decided it was safe to set a southwesterly course for the Swedish island of Gotland. There the overpowered guards could be released before the boat went on toward the Polish coast.

Orzel returned to a war that had worsened for Poland. The Soviet Union had followed Germany's invasion with one of its own. Grudzinski, relying on improvised navigational aids, pursued a lonely mission in the northern sea even after Poland's last major army units collapsed on October 3. Influenced by a radio report that the Polish submarine Wilk had been welcomed by the British, and determined to avoid internment, the crewmen all agreed to go on fighting Germany at Britain's side.



Once back in fighting trim, Orzel was assigned to the Royal Navy's 2nd Submarine Flotilla in time to contest Germany's invasion of Norway. On April 3, 1940, the first ships of Weserübung ("Weser Exercise," the invasion of Denmark and Norway) left their German ports.

Weserübung called for unescorted merchant ships disguised as normal shipping to sail ahead of the faster warships so as to be in position when the invasion of Norwegian harbors came early on the 9th. One of those merchantmen was the tall-funneled, black-hulled Rio de Janeiro, originally a liner carrying passengers traveling between Europe and Latin America.



On the morning of April 8, the paths of Orzel and Rio de Janeiro converged in the Skagerrak just off Norway's southern town of Lillesand. Grudzinski ordered the submarine, which had been cruising at periscope depth, to the surface to challenge the merchant ship. Instead of heaving to as the Polish captain instructed, the German transport increased speed and turned shoreward in a futile attempt to reach neutral water. Grudzinski was watching the suspiciously slow approach of a boat lowered by the now-stopped ship when he learned that the merchantman was sending out messages. But when a demand flashed from Orzel to abandon ship, no visible reaction came from Rio de Janeiro.

Five minutes after noon, Grudzinski ordered a torpedo fired. It missed. With the second, Orzel became the first Polish warship to make a successful torpedo attack in the war. The transport's decks came alive with Wehrmacht soldiers as steam and smoke rose to form a shroud above the vessel. The submarine submerged to circle the listing Rio de Janeiro. When the steamer showed no sign of sinking, Grudzinski let loose a third torpedo. It exploded against the transport's side, broke her back and sent her to the bottom.



German high command fears that Weserübung had been compromised were needless. News of the incident had to be bucked up Norway's bureaucratic ladder to officials in the capital of Oslo before it was taken seriously, too late to do much more than trigger a last-minute limited alert.

When Hitler's forces invaded the Low Countries and France on May 10, 1940, all Allied undersea craft in Norwegian waters, except Orzel, one French and two British boats, were shifted southward in case the Germans decided to support their latest ground offensive with naval units. Sometime during the first week of June, the Polish submarine simply disappeared. Although the cause never was determined, it is believed that Commander Grudzinski and his five officers and 49 crewmen fell victim to a mine in the Skagerrak.

Orzel and her crew were among the first during the conflict to show -- in a most graphic way and against overwhelming odds -- that while the Nazis could conquer a country, they could not conquer the spirit and determination of its people.



TOPICS: VetsCoR
KEYWORDS: freeperfoxhole; jangrudzinski; oprorzel; poland; polishnavy; submarines; veterans; wwii
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To: SAMWolf

Hiya Sam


41 posted on 11/17/2004 9:53:51 AM PST by Professional Engineer (God is Love, allah is satan.)
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To: snippy_about_it; SAMWolf; smaagee; All
Hi folks, a new message from our pal in the sand.

Check this out. We got one last suprise yesterday while we were getting ready to leave. James Gandolfini, and Tony Sirico of the Sopranos stopped by to visit. They were very cool. They hung out and joked around with us for several hours before moving on to the next camp.


42 posted on 11/17/2004 9:56:29 AM PST by Professional Engineer (God is Love, allah is satan.)
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To: bentfeather

Hi miss Feather


43 posted on 11/17/2004 9:57:00 AM PST by Professional Engineer (God is Love, allah is satan.)
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To: SAMWolf

Yippie, now back to work!


44 posted on 11/17/2004 9:57:08 AM PST by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: Valin
1938 Gordon Lightfoot Ontario Canada, folksinger (Sundown)

What, no mention of this?


45 posted on 11/17/2004 10:09:57 AM PST by Professional Engineer (What happens when you get an Electrical Engineer wet?)
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To: SAMWolf
I really like his "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald"

Lots more pictures and such here.

46 posted on 11/17/2004 10:13:19 AM PST by Professional Engineer (What happens when you get an Electrical Engineer wet?)
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To: SAMWolf
The first "Official" Foxhole post from the Wild Bird Center of Oregon City (Otherwise known as the Sam And Snippy Store) :-)

What took so long? Have you been procrastinating again? LOL

47 posted on 11/17/2004 10:14:35 AM PST by Professional Engineer (What happens when you get an Electrical Engineer wet?)
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To: SAMWolf

Hi Sam.


48 posted on 11/17/2004 11:06:42 AM PST by Aeronaut (This is no ordinary time. And George W. Bush is no ordinary leader." --George Pataki)
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To: SAMWolf

Great story - BTTT!


49 posted on 11/17/2004 11:19:22 AM PST by society-by-contract
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To: Professional Engineer
Dick Cheney looks like a very proud grampa. He should be - they're two little angels.

Been reading a lot of cr#p the last couple of days about how mean Cheney was to poor little Colley Powell, hurting his feelings. Man, that's tough.

50 posted on 11/17/2004 11:57:23 AM PST by colorado tanker (The People Have Spoken)
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To: snippy_about_it; SAMWolf
I sure have enjoyed the threads on Poland and the Eastern Front. Subjects you don't hear so much about in America.

We were nice to the French and crappy to the Poles in WWII but look who our friends are today. Strange world we live in.

Sounds like the store'e really coming around. Congrats!

51 posted on 11/17/2004 12:02:11 PM PST by colorado tanker (The People Have Spoken)
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To: SAMWolf

What will you sell there ? Animals ?


52 posted on 11/17/2004 12:47:25 PM PST by Grzegorz 246
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To: Darksheare

Afternoon Darksheare.


53 posted on 11/17/2004 1:41:54 PM PST by SAMWolf (I always wanted to be a procrastinator, I just never got around to it.)
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To: stand watie

Afternoon stand watie

Free Dixie!


54 posted on 11/17/2004 1:42:15 PM PST by SAMWolf (I always wanted to be a procrastinator, I just never got around to it.)
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To: Professional Engineer

Cool. We should send the Sopranos to "talk" to the terrorists. Remember, It's not smart to so "no" to a man named Vito. :-)n


55 posted on 11/17/2004 1:43:43 PM PST by SAMWolf (I always wanted to be a procrastinator, I just never got around to it.)
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To: snippy_about_it

Slave driver. I got us online didn't I???


56 posted on 11/17/2004 1:44:19 PM PST by SAMWolf (I always wanted to be a procrastinator, I just never got around to it.)
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To: Professional Engineer

I remember seeing those ore ships on Lake Michigan all the time.


57 posted on 11/17/2004 1:45:30 PM PST by SAMWolf (I always wanted to be a procrastinator, I just never got around to it.)
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To: Professional Engineer

My mind wanders, I was gonna get it done yester .... OOOOOOO donuts!!


58 posted on 11/17/2004 1:46:50 PM PST by SAMWolf (I always wanted to be a procrastinator, I just never got around to it.)
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To: SAMWolf

Afternoon.
Was googling images of the Edmund Fitzgerald.
Apparently she broke in two at some point, the stern laying upside down.


59 posted on 11/17/2004 1:47:39 PM PST by Darksheare (X)The belled one (X)
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To: colorado tanker

Afternoon CT.

Thanks, if there's enough interest maybe we can do a few Eastern Front" threads.


60 posted on 11/17/2004 1:48:38 PM PST by SAMWolf (I always wanted to be a procrastinator, I just never got around to it.)
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