This week in the War, 10–16 November 1941: Sinking of HMS Ark Royal

Aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal, damaged and listing, 13 November 1941. She sank the following day. [Public domain, wiki]

Aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal, damaged and listing, 13 November 1941. She sank the following day. [Public domain, wiki]

This week in the war, on 13 November 1941, the pride of the Royal Navy, Britain’s aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal, was torpedoed near Gibralter in the Mediterranean by U-81, a U-boat commanded by Kapitanleutnant Friedrich Guggenberger. The following afternoon, a fire broke out in the Ark Royal‘s engine room. The aircraft carrier sank at around 6.00pm.

The sinking was a result of Hitler’s having recently reinforced U-boat strength in the Mediterranean following huge losses experienced by Italian supply convoys destined for North Africa. (Rommel had pleaded for additional U-boats to be sent from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean). When the U-81 delivered its attack, the Ark Royal had been returning from delivering fighter plane reinforcements to the island of Malta. With the Ark Royal gone, the Illustrious and Formidable being repaired in the United States, and the Indomitable having been damaged by running aground, Britain had no modern carriers available for service in the Mediterranean. Without adequate air cover, Malta could no longer be supplied.

The first Ark Royal had been the flagship of the English fleet in Elizabethan times and had fought against the Spanish Armada. The Ark Royal of World War II was a favourite of the British public. The ship had achieved spectacular fame in May 1941 when planes from the Ark Royal had launched the attack against the Bismarck which had led to the German battleship’s eventual sinking.

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