
Year 1940!
From the diary of a young engineer officer: At the beginning of April we left the port of Kiel, in whose shipyards we have been since the beginning of the war and awaiting the completion of our trials. We headed east until suddenly we received a radio order to go to Swinemünde to embark infantrymen there, probably for an exercise.
In the late afternoon we entered Swinemünde as ordered and embarked the infantry the following night. In addition to us, there are other Kriegsmarine units in port that are also loading troops on board. I am on duty in boiler room 3 in the shift from 24: 00-04: 00 hours. After my replacement in the morning, I see the ship's cranes carrying the last boxes of ammunition on board. The entire deck is now filled with boxes, sacks, equipment, and supplies. The soldiers have made themselves comfortable below deck and are trying to get some sleep.
At dawn we left the port heading west. We arrived in Kiel and moored to a buoy in the outer harbor. The infantrymen cannot be displayed on the upper deck in their gray uniform, so they appear in the most impossible fantasy uniforms that they borrowed from our sailors. From all the security measures taken, it appears that the exercise undertaken is likely to be of a serious nature.
Everything is brand new for infantrymen. Most of them had never seen a warship, much less had been on board. However, they soon become friends with our sailors and learn a little to appreciate their work, although they do not know what to do with most service devices. The next day, very early in the morning, our little unit, consisting of a pocket battleship (panzerschiff), a heavy and a light cruiser, several torpedo boats, and a flotilla of minesweepers, finally sets sail north.
The heavy cruiser "Blücher" left the Kiel roadstead on April 8, 1940 at the head of the Kriegsschiffsgruppe 5, first along the German coast and then north. As is already known, the Kriegsschiffsgruppe 5 consisted of the following units:
- Heavy cruiser "Blücher" (flagship)
- Heavy cruiser "Lützow" (former pocket battleship - Panzerschiff "Deutschland")
- Light cruiser "Emden"
- torpedo boats "Albatros", "Möwe" and "Kondor" (Raubvogelklasse - bird of prey)
- the 1. Räumbootflottille (R.17 to R.24)
- War cutter (KFK) Rau-7 and Rau-8
As the naval grouping sailed north past Langeland through the Great Belt, the German Wehrmacht was about to occupy Denmark. Danish broadcaster Kalundborg reported that strong units of the German navy were to pass off the Danish coast. But the British did not pay much attention to this message, as they were busy preparing their own landing in Norway. On the high seas, the commander announces the purpose and task of the grouping to the crew who have taken the upper deck:
“Enter the Oslofjord. Occupy Oslo with all its fortresses in the fjord, which is more than 150 kilometers long. No resistance expected. Resistance will be broken by force of arms. "
Source: http://members.aol.com/rkolmorgen/index.html (ofline)
Schwerer Kreuzer Blücher. Stapellauf, Kriegstagebuch, Werft, Operationsplan, Oslo-Fjord, Festung Oscarsborg, Unruhen in Oslo, Donald-Duck-Methode.
Cheers. Raúl M
