ORP Burza
ORP Burza was a Template:Sclass of the Polish Navy which saw action in World War II.
BuildingEdit
ORP Burza (squall or storm) was ordered on 2 April 1926 from the French shipyard Chantiers Navals Français together with her sister ship Template:ORP. She entered service in 1932 (about four years after the intended delivery date), and her first commander was kmdr Bolesław Sokołowski.
Service historyEdit
On 30 August 1939 the Polish destroyers ORP Burza, Template:ORP and Template:ORP were ordered to execute the Peking Plan, and the warships headed for Great Britain. On 1 September 1939 Polish destroyers met the Royal Navy destroyers Template:HMS and Template:HMS. The British ships led the Polish ships to Leith, and at night the Polish destroyers arrived at Rosyth.
In 1940 Burza supported British forces off Norway in April and in the English Channel in May.<ref>Rohwer & Hummelchen 1992 pp. 15, 17</ref> On 4 May Burza came alongside the battleship Template:HMS and took aboard Polish survivors who had survived the sinking of ORP Grom earlier that day.
On 24 May 1940<ref name=":0">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Burza was ordered to join the Royal Navy destroyers Template:HMS and Template:HMS and shell German positions that were besieging Calais, providing support for British troops ashore. At 16.20 the Allied vessels opened fire on enemy armoured column at Sangatte Hill west of Calais. 10 minutes later they were attacked by 27 German aircraft which hit and sank Wessex. Vimiera managed to escape.
Then the entire enemy air group concentrated on the Polish destroyer. Shrapnel hits jammed her two 40 mm anti-aircraft guns. Three bombs exploded in the water, damaging her boilers and reducing her speed. Then two bombs exploded in the water near or in her bows, forcing Burza to return to Dover stern first.<ref name=":0"/><ref name=":1">Personal recollections of Commander Konstanty Okołów-Zubkowski, December 1999</ref> Midshipman Konstanti Okolow-Zubkowski serving on Burza recalled<ref name=":1"/> that when back at Dover, an admiral came aboard complaining that debris was being thrown over the side of the ship. The admiral, when shown the forepeak, apologised, not having realised how badly damaged Burza was.
After major repairs in Portsmouth, Burza escorted convoy HX 217 as part of Escort Group B6.<ref>Rohwer & Hummelchen 1992 p. 180</ref> While attached to Escort Group B-3, Burza escorted convoys ONS 167, HX 228, and SL 147/MKS 38.<ref>Rohwer & Hummelchen 1992 pp. 196, 198, 259</ref> Burza was detached from ONS 167 to defend Convoy ON 166.<ref>Morison 1975 pp. 337–340</ref><ref name="Rohwer & Hummelchen 1992 p.194">Rohwer & Hummelchen 1992 p. 194</ref> While attached to Support Group 8, Burza escorted convoy SC 145 and the October 1943 convoy to establish British air bases in the Azores.<ref name="Rohwer & Hummelchen 1992 p.194"/>
In 1944 Burza became a training ship. In 1945 she became a submarine tender for Polish submarines. The Polish crew left Burza in 1946, when she was transferred to the Royal Navy.
In 1951 the ship was returned to the Polish Navy and towed to Gdynia in July. Burza was overhauled and entered service in 1955. In 1960 she became a museum ship. After Błyskawica replaced her in that role she was scrapped in 1977.
ArmamentEdit
1932–1940:
- Four 130 mm Schneider-Creusot guns (4x1)
- Two 40 mm Vickers-Armstrongs AA cannons (2x1)
- Four 13,2 mm Hotchkiss AA machine guns (2x2), from 1935
- Six torpedo tubes 550/533 mm (2x3)
- Two depth charge launchers
- One Thornycroft depth charge thrower
- 30 mines
1940–1942:
- Four 130 mm Schneider-Creusot guns (4x1)
- One 76 mm Mk Vna gun
- Two 40 mm Vickers-Armstrongs AA cannons (2x1)
- Four 13,2 mm Hotchkiss AA machine guns (2x2)
- Eight 12,7 Vickers AA machine guns (2x4)
- Three torpedo tubes 550/533 mm (1x3)
- Two depth charge launchers
- Two Thornycroft depth charge throwers
1942–1946:
- Two 130 mm Schneider-Creusot guns (2x1)
- One 76 mm Mk Vna gun
- Four 40 mm AA Mk VIII cannons (1x4)
- Four 20 mm AA Oerlikon cannons
- Three torpedo tubes 550/533 mm (1x3)
- One hedgehog
- Two depth charge launchers
- Four Thornycroft depth charge throwers
From 1955:
- Four 100 mm guns (4x1)
- Eight 37 mm AA cannons (4x2)
- One depth charge launcher
- Four depth charge throwers
See alsoEdit
ReferencesEdit
SourcesEdit
Template:Wicher class destroyerTemplate:Museum ships in PolandTemplate:Authority control