French submarine Curie (P67)

For other ships of the same name, see French submarine Curie and HMS Vox.
Curie starts out from Holy Loch on her first big patrol, 20 August 1943.
History
Name: Vox / Sous-Marin Curie
Builder: Vickers Armstrong, Barrow-in-Furness
Laid down: 29 April 1942
Launched: 23 January 1943
Commissioned: 2 May 1943
Out of service: 2 May 1943 transferred to FNFL
Reinstated: July 1946 returned to Royal Navy
Fate: Scrapped, May 1949 at Milford Haven
Badge:
General characteristics
Displacement:
  • Surfaced - 540 tons standard, 630 tons full load
  • Submerged - 740 tons
Length: 196 ft 9 in (59.97 m)
Beam: 16 ft 1 in (4.90 m)
Draught: 15 ft 2 in (4.62 m)
Propulsion:
  • 2 shaft diesel-electric
  • 2 Paxman-Ricardo diesel generators + electric motors
  • 615 / 825 hp
Speed:
  • 11.25 knots (20.84 km/h; 12.95 mph) max surfaced
  • 9 knots (17 km/h; 10 mph) max submerged
Complement: 4 officers, 33 men (in French service)
Armament:
  • 4 bow internal, 2 bow external 21-inch (533 mm) torpedo tubes: 8 - 10 torpedoes
  • 1 × 3 in (76 mm) gun
  • 3 × AA machine guns

The French submarine Curie was a British-built U class submarine, a member of the third group of that class to be built. Laid down as HMS Vox for the Royal Navy she was transferred to the Free French Naval Forces on the day she was commissioned, where she served as Sous-Marin Curie from 1943–46, but retaining her pennant number of P67.[1] During her absence a later long hull U class submarine Pennant number 73 took the name Vox, serving in the Far East during 1945 and being scrapped on 1 May 1946. When P67 returned to the Royal Navy in July 1946 she re-assumed the name Vox,[2] thus replacing her replacement.

Service

Curie was handed over to the Free French Naval Forces on 2 May 1943, at a ceremony at Vickers' works in Barrow, north west England. General de Gaulle was present at the occasion, when RN sailors and Vickers workers saluted the raising of the Cross of Lorraine.[3] She was named after the earlier French submarine Curie, which saw action in World War I.

After a working up period (during which her screws were damaged on 21 May 1943), her first patrol was to the Norwegian coast in June–July 1943. Up to 3 August 1943, when Free French Naval Forces amalgamated with those from French North Africa, she had been on patrol for 60 days and spent 192 hours submerged.[4]

On the night of 21 June 1944 she bombarded construction sites for shore batteries at Cap Gros on the Mediterranean coast, and observed several hits. Several weeks later she was working with a British flotilla in the Dodecanese, sinking a cargo ship on 3 August. On 2 October in the same area she sank the merchant ships Zar Ferdinand and Brunhild (the former French wine-tanker Bacchus).[5]

In 1945 Curie relocated from Plymouth to Brest in France, subsequently moving for a refit to Lorient where she stayed until March 1946. She was then on detached duty to a detection school at Casablanca and returned to the Royal Navy in July 1946 where she regained the name HMS Vox.

Insignia

The badge of HMS Vox is a horn or cornucopia surmounted by a trident. That of Curie was of similar pattern as Royal Navy badges. The badge shows a stag's head and the inscription "Pola 1914", recalling the World War I exploit when the first Curie was lost.[6] The ship's mascot was a terrier named Radium.

References

  1. Submariners' Association website: HMS Vox page
  2. British Submarines of WWII website
  3. Truffert, A. Aux Postes de Combat. Paris: Editions G.P. (1945). Chapter 7.
  4. Historique des Forces Navales Françaises Libres, Vol 1, 2nd edition. Service historique de la marine (1990)
  5. H. Le Masson, Les Sous-Marins français des origines à nos jours. Brest: Éditions de la Cité (1980).
  6. www.chez.com

External links


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