German auxiliary cruiser Pinguin
Pinguin was a German auxiliary cruiser which served as a commerce raider in the Second World War. The Pinguin was known to the Kriegsmarine as Schiff 33, and designated HSK 5. The most successful commerce raider of the war, she was known to the British Royal Navy as Raider F. The name Pinguin means penguin in German.
Background
German commerce raiding
At first the Kriegsmarine had no plans to use commerce raiders, despite their use in the First World War and interwar thought about their use. Armed merchant cruisers of the type used by the British were too big, too hard to disguise and keep supplied with fuel. Ordinary merchant ships were a better prospect, especially those with a long range and were easier to alter to look like neutral and Allied ships to deceive their targets and Allied warships. Planning began soon after the declarations of war and by the end of September a first wave of six ships had been identified.Each ship would need a crew of 284 men, six 150 mm guns, four 20 mm anti-aircraft guns, four torpedo tubes, provision for 400 mines and two seaplanes. The ships needed to be at sea for a year, cruising for. The first raider was to sail in November 1939 but it took until 31 March 1940 before the first raider sailed and July before all of the first wave had departed. By March 1941 the seven raiders in action had sunk or taken 80 ships of .Formerly a freighter named Kandelfels, she was completed by AG Weser in 1937 and was owned and operated by the Hansa Line, Bremen. The ship was of gross register tonnage was long, in the beam with a draught of and a speed of. In the winter of 1939–1940, she was requisitioned by the Kriegsmarine and converted to a warship by DeSchiMAG, Bremen. Her main armament of six 5.9-inch guns was taken from the obsolete battleship and covered by steel shutters fitted with counterweights. The secondary armament consisted of a 75 mm gun, a twin 37 mm anti-aircraft gun and two twin 20 mm anti-aircraft guns. In the holds were 300 mines and two Heinkel He 114 floatplanes.
Prelude
North Sea
Pinguin was one of the first wave of raiders sent out by the Kriegsmarine, sailing from Gotenhafen on 15 June 1940 to operate in the Southern Ocean and the Indian Ocean. Arriving off the Danish Lollard on 17 June and met Sperrbrecher IV, a type with a specially-armoured hull designed to set off mines and two torpedo boat escorts. At the Kattegat Sperrbrecher IV departed and with two minesweepers, the ships entered the North Sea with an escort of a Dornier 18 flying boat and two fighter aircraft. Off Bergen in Norway the torpedo boats departed and Pinguin with the minesweepers put in to Sørgulen Fjord. The crew disguised Pinguin as the Soviet Petschura and then sailed for the North Cape in a severe storm. A British submarine surfaced and demanded that the ship identify itself but Krüder ignored them and sailed on; the submarine fired three torpedoes but they missed and Pinguin escaped.Atlantic Ocean
Krüder headed for Jan Mayen, intending to wait for poor weather in the Denmark Strait before attempting to break out into the Atlantic for a rendezvous with near the Cape Verde islands. The plan was assisted by the British diversion of ships from the Northern Patrol to take part in the evacuation of the British Expeditionary Force from Dunkirk evacuation which left the Denmark Strait unguarded. The ship reached Jan Mayen on 24 June but the expected fog had not formed. When the ship reached Greenland the fog returned and then the ship waited for three days for bad weather.The ship entered the Atlantic on 1 July. After sailing past the Azores, the ship changed disguise to the Greek Kassos. On 17 July the rendezvous with U-A took place off the Saint Peter and Saint Paul Archipelago and eleven torpedoes were transferred to the U-boat. To conserve fuel U-A was taken in tow, towards Africa until close to Freetown but machinery trouble forced U-A to return to Germany, sinking four merchant ships en route with the torpedoes from Pinguin.