The first purpose built
British aircraft carrier, HMS Hermes, lies on the continental shelf off
Batticaloa. It was sunk by Japanese air attack during the World War II.
The ship was sailing defenselessly,
having left all her aeroplanes ashore at Trincomalee when she met with the
tragedy. The ten-minute attack, which sealed her fate, was spearheaded by
Japanese dive-bombers flying under the command of Admiral Nagumo of the
Japanese Imperial Navy. The attack ended HMS Hermes’ nearly twenty year service
in the British Navy on 09th April 1942.
The incidents that led
to the ship’s sinking were regarded by then Prime Minister of Great Britain
Winston Churchill as the most dangerous moment of the Second World War.
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God Hermes |
HMS Hermes was the ninth
Royal Navy ship to be named after the Greek messenger of the gods, Hermes. The
ship was laid down at Elswick and built by Armstrong-Whitworth.
Hermes had a displacement
of 10,950 tons with standard load and 12,900 tons with full load. Her overall
length was 598 feet. It had a beam of 70 feet at water level and 90 feet over
the flight deck. Her draught was 18 feet 9 inches.
The ship was powered by
Parsons geared turbines giving it a speed of 25 knots. It was built to carry 15
to 20 aircraft. The transporter cranes were fitted aft and the hangar was on
the flight deck with electronic lift fitted fore and aft.
The ship’s armament consisted
of six 5.5 inch guns on the main deck, four inch anti-aircraft guns and nine 2
pounder anti-aircraft guns. She was also fitted with anti-torpedo protection
bulges to the hull.
The ship’s complement
was to be 551 to 664.
Commissioned in 1924,
Hermes served with the Atlantic Fleet as well as the Mediterranean Fleet and
the China Station. She returned home in 1937 and became a training ship in
1938.
With the break of the
World War II, the ship was assigned to the Home Fleet in 1939 to conduct
anti-submarine patrols in the Western Approaches. She was transferred to Dakar
in October to hunt down German commerce raiders and blockade runners. She also
conducted patrols for Axis shipping in the South Atlantic and the Indian Ocean.
In February 1941, the
ship supported Commonwealth forces in Italian Somaliland during the East
African Campaign and in the Persian Gulf during the Anglo-Iraqi War. Hermes
spent the rest of the year patrolling the Indian Ocean. After refit in South
Africa between November 1941 and February 1942, she joined the Eastern Fleet in
Ceylon.
With the fall of
Singapore, Ceylon became a front-line British base. The Royal Navy's East
Indies Station was moved to Colombo and then to Trincomalee. Admiral Sir
Geoffrey Layton was appointed Commander-in-Chief in Ceylon with Admiral Sir
James Somerville as Commander of the British Eastern Fleet.
During March 1942
Japanese Admiral Nugumo’s Fleet prepared for a concerted attack on British
shipping in the area. If Ceylon, a key British Naval Base, were to fall the
Indian continent would be open to the Japanese.
In response the British
made rapid plans to defend Colombo and Trincomalee, their major bases in Ceylon.
Having realized the lack of equivalent power to resist, Admiral Somerville kept
most of the fleet away from the Colombo and Trincomalee bases. Instead he
operated from a secret base at Addu Atoll in the Maldives 600 miles from
Ceylon.
The Japanese Fleet commanded
by Vice Admiral Chuichi Nagumo consisted of the carriers Akagi, Hiryu,
Soryu, Shokaku, and Zuikaku, the battleships Kongo, Haruna, Kirishima,
and Hiei, the heavy cruisers Chikuma and Tone, a light
cruiser, and eight destroyers. It was a well-trained and powerful force, with
more than 300 modern combat aircraft embarked, including considerable numbers
of the superb Mitsubishi A6M Zero fighter.
The British Eastern
Fleet consisted of the modern fleet carriers Indomitable and Formidable,
the small carrier Hermes, the battleships Warspite, Resolution,
Ramillies, Royal Sovereign, and Revenge, the heavy cruisers Dorsetshire
and Cornwall, five light cruisers, and 14 destroyers.
Acting on the
intelligence received Admiral Somerville ordered his fleet to the south of
Ceylon to attack the Japanese fleet when it appeared. Since there was no sign
of them he decided to refuel the fleet at Addu Atoll and to send Dorestshire
to Colombo for a refit and Cornwall to escort an Australian troop
convoy. Hermes was dispatched to Trincomalee to form part of the planned
assault on Madagascar.
Prior to Easter Sunday
attack on Ceylon, Hermes was sent out from Trincomalee for safety. At 8
a.m. on Easter Day, 5th April 1942, the raid took place on Colombo. Admiral
Nagumo’s aircraft sank Dorestbire and Cornwall which were attempting
to reach Admiral Somerville. For the next two days Admiral Nagumo searched for
Somerville’s force which moved from south-west to north-east and evaded his
patrols.
Once again Trincomalee
was cleared of shipping with Hermes, the Australian destroyer Vampire
and several merchantmen and auxiliary vessels moving southwards down the
coast of Ceylon.
A reconnaissance plane
from Haruna sighted Hermes and Vampire. This report was intercepted at Colombo Hermes
was instructed to reverse course and steam for Trincomalee where she could
expect air cover. Hermes had one unusable aircraft aboard and very
little anti-aircraft armament at the time of attack.
Admiral Nagumo
dispatched a force of 85 bombers and nine fighters. They reached Hermes and
Vampire as they were off Batticaloa beacon and, fortuitously, were about
to meet the hospital ship Vita, coincidentally steaming south.
The Japanese
concentrated their attention on Hermes first and dive-bombers secured
forty direct hits in the space of ten minutes and the carrier sank to the
bottom. Then they attacked Vampire and a direct hit broke the ship in
two, sinking both parts separately.
The wreak of HMS Hermes
now lies 3.9 nautical miles off Batticaloa at a depth ranging from 45 to 58 meters.
The ship rests on her port side to the ground in an approximate South-North
direction. Half of the deck is in the ground pointing the prominent starboard
bilge keel upward.
The iconic Hermes, the
star attraction of the dive sites in Sri Lankan waters, is one of the only two
aircraft carrier wrecks in the world available for recreational diving by professionals
as well as amateur divers under proper technical guidance. The ship, sprawling
majestically on the sea floor off Batticaloa, is waiting in anticipation to be
explored for her wealth of war history and fascinating marine life that
inhabits within.