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THEIR OWN GAME.

DARING BRITISH RUSE. SIX DESTROYERS SUNKBRILLIANT SUBMARINE BLUFF. How a British submarine, disabled and forced to come to the surface in Prussian waters in the North Sea, captured an enemy mine-layer and sank six. Prussian destroyers wa.s iold in graphic language recently by an oflicer of a British vessel that arrived at an American port. According to the narrative, says the "New York Herald," the officer commanding the submersible forced the mine-layer to tow him out fo sea. and then, repairs being completed, sowed the sea with mines and in German code sent out a call by wireless that brought six Prussian destroyers down on them. Four of the destroyers struck mines and the remaining two were sunk by the submarine, which then made her way home in safety. "We were cruising off the mouth of the Weser at night," the officer told a "Herald" reporter, "when something went wrong with our machinery and we came to a stop. We felt sure that our time bad come when we found that it was a broken connecting rod that had caused the damage. Before the motors could be stopped the broken rod had thrashed about anil created damage that would take several hours to repair. Setting the Trap. "We had passed close by to several Prussian vessels earlier In the evening, but had not touched them, for ours was a mission of observation. So we considered that we would fall in with one very soon. Sure enough, in an hour's time we caught sight of a dark shape coming down and which would apparently run afoul of us if she kept on. Through the night glasses our lieutenant made her out to be a trawler. At once he decided on a desperate expedient. He sent off the bo'sun and six men, all the available men we had, in our collapsible boat, and as the trawler bore down on us he hailed her in German and reported himself as U-29, with machinery disabled and unanle to communicate by wireless. The trawler, apparently unsuspicious, slowed down and came alongside, her wheelman handling her as easy as you would swing a stick.

"It wasn't till she was right on top of us that they smelled a rat. Someone shouted out an alarm as her overhang grazed us. And as the cry. went up our collapsible, which had pulled around, boarded her from the other side. The lieutenant and I went over the trawler's side and shot two of them before they rushed us, for our boat's crew had kept the remainder of the watch on deck busy. The lieutenant slammed shut the fo'c'sle hatch, penning in the remainder of the crew, and then we took the other Huns from behind and in a jiffy we had cleared them out. Once in possession of the deck it was easy io do for the engine-room force of three and the boat was ours. We made sure that there was no communication from the fo'c'sle except by the locked hatch. Then the lieutenant passed a line to our own submarine and with her engine-room crew working like mad the rest of us on the trawler got under way. It was almost dawn before the engineer on the submarine hailed us and announced that he had cleared away (lie broken stuff and replaced the rods.

"The lieutenant then cast loose from our submarine and the trawler made a wide semi-circle, dropping overside all the surface mines she had on board—2o of them. Then we sent a radio in German—the lieutenant had found the Hun's secret code hook in the wheel-house—call-ing for help and announcing that the trawler had fallen in with a llolilla of fast British cruisers, evidently bent on a raiding expedition. With that we wrecked the wireless, abandoned the trawler with her crew still locked on the fo'c'sle and submerged behind our barrier of mines. Destroying the Destroyers. "We didn't have long to wait. The dawn was just breaking when up from the east came four destroyers in column. We had hardly sighted them when they saw the trawler and spread out fan-wise. As they shot into the minefield the leading destroyer went leaping out of the water with her bow torn oil'. The others sheered and the second and third thus running up the mine trad, both struck, each one being fairly torn to pieces. The fourth destroyer, her engines reversing at top speed and hauling her back on her haunches, look a pot shot at the trawler for luck, realising that they had run into a trap. As she was firing we crept slowly up and let her have a torpedo amidships. "The roar of the explosion had hardly died away when another detonation shook us and we found that two more destroyers had come up from [ho soulhwaid and had fallen afoul of the mines. The leading one was untouched, bid the second had struck another mine. As the one remaining destroyer turned to rim we made for her at an angle and got her. She went up wish an appalling roar. "We had no chance to breathe, however, for something dropped into the sea close by and exploded. Swinging our periscope upward we found three Taubes circling above us. We turned and cut for home .villi the trio hanging over us for more than half an hour, dropping bombs all around us. Hut, as luck would have it, they missed, and riflcr running with the fear of death in our hearts for more than an hour we got within our cruising area and the Taubes were driven away by a couple of our own seaplanes. "The lieutenant got the Victoria Cross for his work, and we all gol the Military dross."

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SUNCH19170627.2.59

Bibliographic details

Sun (Christchurch), Volume IV, Issue 1053, 27 June 1917, Page 8

Word Count
962

THEIR OWN GAME. Sun (Christchurch), Volume IV, Issue 1053, 27 June 1917, Page 8

THEIR OWN GAME. Sun (Christchurch), Volume IV, Issue 1053, 27 June 1917, Page 8