- HMS Opportune (G80)
HMS "Opportune" (G80) was an O-class
destroyer of theRoyal Navy . She was ordered fromJohn I. Thornycroft & Company , Woolston on3 September 1939 for the 1st Emergency Flotilla. She was commissioned on14 August 1942 . She was the second Royal Navy ship borne "Opportune".She served throughout the Second World War, mainly as an escort ship for convoys, and remained with the Royal Navy until the mid
1950s .econd World War
Convoy Duty 1942
Enemy action affected "Opportune" before she was even completed, as German bombing in 1940 severely damaged the shipyard and enemy action delayed the delivery of components. It was for these reasons that her completion was delayed until 1942.
When she was eventually launched, she was with the 17th Destroyer Flotilla with the
Home Fleet . During trials, she assisted in escorting convoy PW-202 toBristol .Her fist real duty was escorting the Arctic convoy PQ-18 to the Russian port at Murmansk. On
20 September , she was required to assist HMS "Somali" which had been torpedoed by the GermanU-boat "U-703". Although the stricken ship was already being assisted by HMS "Ashanti", and although destroyers HMS "Eskimo", HMS "Intrepid" and thenaval trawler HMS "Lord Middleton" were also on hand to assist the ship, the gales and rough seas proved too much for her and she sank on24 September . "Opportune" helped carry some of "Somali"'s survivors toScapa Flow .Operation Torch
In October 1942, she escorted Fleet Admiral Sir Andrew Cunningham on board HM Cruiser "Scylla" to
Gibraltar in preparation forOperation Torch , the invasion ofNorth Africa . In preparation for the landings, she carried out three days of anti-submarine patrols in theMediterranean Sea . On the day of the invasion itself, she was deployed as the escort for part ofForce H and supported their rôle in the operation.After ten days, she returned to Home Waters, escorting HMS "Duke of York" and HMS "Victorious" to Scapa Flow. "En route", Fairey Swordfish and Albacore aircraft from the carrier "Victorious" attacked the U-boat "U-517". It was damaged and forced to surface, upon which its crew were taken prisoner by HMS "Opportune". The U-boat later sank, while 52 survivors of the 53-strong crew were taken to
Greenock for transport to aprisoner-of-war camp .Convoy Duty 1943
She resumed her Arctic convoy escort rôle after arriving at Scapa Flow and continued in this capacity from December 1942 through to March 1943. During this period, she escorted convoy JW-53 through extremely tough weather and earned salvage money when she rescued the stricken merchantman "John H. B. Latrobe" from a German minefield.
In March, she was assigned to the 5th Support Group for Atlantic convoy defence. Just over a month after being reassigned, on
25 April , she helped sink the U-boat "U-203" with HMS "Pathfinder" and aircraft from HMS "Biter". On12 May , she once again attacked a U-boat, this time "U-456" which was never seen again and is presumed to have been sunk. She continued in the Atlantic convoy defence duties as well as fleet duties in the Northwest Approaches for some months. OnSeptember 14 , this included escorting the Prime Minister toCanada for the Québec Conference of 1943.In October 1943, "Opportune" was part of Operation Leader, escorting several Royal Navy ships and USS "Ranger" in attacks on German positions in
Bodø ,Norway .inking the "Scharnhorst"
In December, she was once again escorting convoys to the Soviet Union through the long Arctic nights. When, on
25 December , the Germanbattlecruiser "Scharnhorst" was reported to be hunting convoy JW-55B, "Opportune" was deployed to join the battle. She was present at theBattle of North Cape , when "Scharnhorst" came under repeated fire from numerous Royal Navy warships. The German ship proved a tough opponent, and although she was out-numbered, out-gunned and blinded by a direct hit to her radar, she managed to elude her pursuers for many hours. Most of the Britishcapital ship s had fired all of their torpedoes so the destroyers HMS "Opportune", "Musketeer", "Virago" and "Matchless" closed in and fired a total of nineteen torpedoes at "Scharnhorst", scoring six hits. The ship finally keeled over and sank. The relentlessness of "Scharnhorst"'s fight was noted and respected by the victorious British commanding officers.Normandy Landings
In the new year, she was once again in Arctic convoy escort duty until March, when she was deployed in counter E-boat operations in preparation for the
Normandy Landings , which would take place a few months later. She still escorted Arctic convoys, but she was being prepared for the invasion. And in April, when she was recalled for a boiler clean and minor re-fit, she was permanently assigned to Task Force 27 in theEnglish Channel .During a disastrous full scale rehearsal of the Utah Beach landing on
April 28 , "Opportune" engaged German E-boats which had sighted and engaged eight American landing craft on their way to the Slapton Sands. The E-boats escaped after deploying a smokescreen, but over 638 US servicemen were killed in their attack. Many casualties were US Army personnel who were not properly trained and had difficulties with the life-jackets and other equipment, and drowned whilst awaiting rescue. The disaster nearly caused the D-day itself to be cancelled, as it was thought some ten soldiers with full knowledge of the operation could have been captured by the Germans, it was only the subsequent discovery of their bodies which saved the operation.The actual landings on
5 June were much less eventful. "Opportune" patrolled in the eastern stretches of the English Channel, guarding against a German naval attack. She didn't encounter a single hostile boat, although she did engage E-boats in July and August, while supporting operations inFrance .Convoy Duty 1944 & 45
After the successful invasion of Normandy, "Opportune" was once again deployed to convoy defence in the Arctic and minelaying rôles. She was occasionally deployed with Force 3 in operations off Norway. These duties continued into 1945 and through to the end of the war.
Post-war career
HMS "Opportune" remained in service after VJ Day and deployed at Portsmouth for submarine training and Local Flotilla duties until 1950. She then refitted and joined the Nore Local Flotilla. The ship was placed in Reserve at
Chatham Dockyard in November 1952. Transferred to Portsmouth in July 1953 she went on the Disposal List the next year. After sale to BISCO in November 1955 she arrived in tow atMilford Haven on25 November to be broken-up by TW Ward.References
* [http://www.naval-history.net/xGM-Chrono-10DD-47O-Opportune.htm HMS Opportune, destroyer]
* [http://www.uboat.net/allies/warships/ship/4199.html uboat.net]
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