HMS Tiptoe Visitors Book PDF

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At a glance
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Some of the key takeaways are that HMS Tiptoe was a T-class submarine named by Winston Churchill that served in World War 2 and had various missions and activities afterwards until being decommissioned in 1969.

During World War 2, HMS Tiptoe conducted patrols in areas like the Flores Sea and Sunda Strait where she sank several Japanese ships and vessels. She underwent various repairs and overhauls between patrols.

Some of the notable commanding officers of HMS Tiptoe included Lt. Duncan Cameron, VC, Lt. David Riley Johnston, DSC, and Lt.-Cdr. David Geoffrey Townsend Lane.

HMS TIPTOE

­
12 NOV 1947 - 12 MAY 1952
­
DONALD CAMERON VC

Commanding Officers
1944 Lt. Peter Robert Helfrich Harrison DSO, DSC*
1945 Acting Lt. Richard Lionel Jay DSC
26 June 1946 Lt. Ronald Alexander Alane Campbell Ward, DSC
5 May 1947 Lt. Duncan Cameron, VC [signed this book 3 times]
24 Jan 1948 Lt. David Riley Johnston, DSC [signed this book]
21 Feb 1949 Lt. Ronald Thomas Smith [signed this book]
12 Dec 1949 Lt. Laurence Hugh Oliphant, DSC [signed this book]
16 Mar 1951 Lt.-Cdr. David Geoffrey Townsend Lane [signed this book]
13 Sept 1954 Lt.-Cdr. Robert Francis Park
10 Jan 1957 Lt.-Cdr. Geoffrey Bourne
10 Jan 1958 Lt.-Cdr. John David Elliot Fieldhouse
1964 Lt.-Cdr. David Brazier
1965 Lt.-Cdr. Charles Henry Pope
1967 Lt.-Cdr. Robert Courtenay Whiteside
HMS Tiptoe was a group three T-class submarine. She was named by Winston Churchill, with the intention to imply that it could approach the enemy silently as if on tiptoe, although the Royal Navy naming committee was against the
name, stating that "it was derogatory to one of His Majesty's ships", but the Prime Minister had his way. The only other Royal Navy vessel to be named by Churchill was HMS Varangian. She was part of the second batch of the third
group to be ordered, in 1941. She was one of a number of boats which had an all-welded hull which increased diving depth to 350 feet (107 m), an increase of 50 feet (15 m). The torpedo armament was the same as the earlier group two,
although by the time group three was coming into service it was realised that external torpedo tubes had major problems and affected the streamlining of the boats; the external tubes were abandoned in the following Amphion-class
submarines. Because of expected use in tropical climates, boats of group three were equipped with freon blowers in order to deal with the increased temperatures. She was built by Vickers Armstrong and was laid down at their shipyard
at Barrow-in-Furness on 10 November 1942 whilst still known as P332. Following her launch on 25 February 1944, she departed the builders yard on 10 June 1944, arriving at Holy Loch on the following day, where she was
commissioned on 12 June.
Second World War
After completing training on 10 September, she returned to Barrow in order to correct some defects. Between 5 October and 12 January 1945, she was equipped with new radar equipment and other equipment to prepare her for
deployment in the Far East. She arrived in Trincomalee, Sri Lanka on 1 March 1945 prior to her first war patrol. En route from Britain, she had stopped at Gibraltar, Malta, Port Said and Ismailia in Egypt and Aden, Yemen. Her first
patrol centred around the west coast of Burma and the Andaman Islands before heading onto Fremantle, Australia, and was uneventful. She departed Australia for her second patrol on 6 May with orders to patrol the Flores Sea. On 15
May, she sank a Japanese coaster of around 100 tons with gunfire near Dompo Bay, Sumbawa. The following day she sank another Japanese coaster with gunfire, this time around 200 tons, in Sepeh harbour. On 1 June, she approached
and sank the Japanese merchant cargo ship Tobi Maru near Matasiri, one of the Laut Kecil Islands. Tiptoe was damaged during the attack as the cargo ship was about to rendezvous with an escort. The escort launched thirteen depth
charges, putting all of Tiptoe's torpedo tubes out of action and flooded her sonar equipment. She returned to Fremantle on 17 June, and remained there undergoing repairs until 16 July when she left on her third patrol in the Sunda
Strait along with her sister HMS Trump. On 31 July she attacked two small Japanese vessels, but broke off the attack when an aircraft was sighted. On 2 August, Tiptoe and Trump together destroyed two small vessels totalling 600 tons
with gunfire. On 3 August, she carried out a torpedo attack against the Japanese army cargo vessel Tencho Maru whilst it was in a convoy defended by a patrol boat. The final action of Tiptoe's last war patrol was on 9 August, when
together with Trump, they destroyed an 800-ton coastal tanker in the northern part of the Sunda Strait. She returned to Fremantle on 21 August 1945.
Post war
During the royal inspection of the Home Fleet in 1947 by George VI, Tiptoe demonstrated diving and surfacing, along with the firing of her deck gun. In November of the same year, she was part of a group of seven submarines with
destroyer HMS Opportune to take part in anti–submarine training over the course of two weeks. Tiptoe was one of several all-welded T-class submarines rebuilt for greater underwater performance. Extra batteries were installed below
the control room and additional electric motors were accommodated by cutting through the pressure hull and adding in a new 20 ft (6 m) hull section inserted aft of the control room. The diesel engines were modified and supercharged
with output increased by 300 bhp (224 kW). The gun armaments and external torpedo tubes were removed, and the bow reshaped. The submarine was used in filming the 1950 film, Morning Departure, a naval film directed by Roy
Ward Baker. During the course of filming, the submarine depot ship HMS Maidstone was used as a mother ship for Tiptoe. In 1952 a further cinematic link was made when ballet dancer Moira Shearer presented a pair of size 3.5 satin
ballet shoes to Tiptoe that she had worn in the 1948 film The Red Shoes. These are now at the Royal Navy Submarine Museum. Whilst in Tromsø harbour on 18 July 1955 Tiptoe was damaged when a coastal steamer collided with her.
The steamer, a 2,162-tonne vessel called Nordlys, was entering the harbour when she collided with the British destroyer HMS Chevron. The steamer bounced off the destroyer and collided with Tiptoe, snapping her moorings as she was
pushed halfway under a wooden quay.

She took part in escape trials in 1962, which were a series of trials conducted off Malta into escape from a submarine at extreme depths. Tests were conducted with men escaping from Tiptoe at depth of up to 233 feet (71 m) with ascent
rates of up to 6.6 ft/s (2 m/s). The trials included the use of buoyant ascent suits which involved a suit pulled over the sailor's head which fed them air as they ascended to the surface. For their work in the escape trials, Chief Petty Officer
Christopher Crossman was awarded a commendation, and Lieutenant-Commander L. Hamlyn was awarded an OBE. Following a refit in Portsmouth, Tiptoe went to the Firth of Clyde for working up, arriving on 10 January 1964, when
she was ordered not to enter Gareloch due to dense fog. The boat was duly turned around and ran aground on a muddy bank. As the fog cleared it was realised the boat had run aground only 40 yards (37 m) opposite that of the house of
the Royal Navy's Captain in Charge for the Clyde area, Captain G. D. Pound. Divers were sent out to assess damage, and after finding none, Tiptoe was refloated on the evening tide and pulled off the shore by two tugboats. The
commanding officer at the time was Lieutenant-Commander David Brazier, who was in his first command. He was later ordered to be severely reprimanded for negligence at a court-martial where he pleaded guilty to the charge. His
defence statement read, "The ship was not worked up and it was a very green company. Unfortunately, he ran into fog. He took all the precautions he considered necessary. Although he had all the theoretical knowledge, he was short of
that tangible instinct of which we are all aware." Tiptoe was also damaged in a collision with HMS Yarmouth on 13 July 1965. Tiptoe was at periscope depth 10 miles (16 km) southeast of Portland Bill. Following the collision, the
commanding officer, Lieutenant-Commander Charles Henry Pope was ordered to be severely reprimanded after being found guilty of four out of five counts of negligence. When she left for her final commission on 24 February 1967,
six ballet dancers from the Royal Ballet attended the departure ceremony. At the time she was the oldest submarine in service with the Royal Navy. She attended Portsmouth Navy Days later in 1967. By the time she was decommissioned
in 1969, Tiptoe was the last active T-class submarine in the Royal Navy. As she arrived at Spithead for decommissioning on 29 August 1969, a 13-year-old ballet dancer named Judy Wright danced on her upper deck. She was sold in
1971 and scrapped at Portsmouth in 1975. Her anchor was saved, and was mounted on stone in 1979 in Blyth, Northumberland. The town was used as a training base for submarines during both World Wars. Her oak nameplate, used
in port and on ceremonial occasions, was recovered by John Storm (who served as her Leading Telegraphist 1944-45) and is now in the possession of his eldest daughter.
Apart from Eve Cameron's signature, this page was probably signed between 1954 and 1955 as a tribute to her husband, Donald Cameron.
Shooting of the film Above Us the Waves started on 20 Sep 1954. The film was released on 29 Mar 1955. This page has been signed by Sir John
Mills, who played Cdr Fraser. Cdr Donald Cameron VC, who commanded X-6 as a lieutenant during Operation Source, was an adviser to the
film. The screenplay was based on the book Above Us the Waves by C. E. T. Warren and James Benson, which was published in 1953.

VC

1947

VC

VC
1948

1948

1948

Important SOE
signature
1948

Torbay Express and South Devon Echo -


Saturday 17 Sep 1949

H.M. submarine Tiptoe arrived at


Brixham yesterday on an unofficial visit
and moored in the harbour during the
afternoon. She will remain over the
week-end and will be open to the public
to-day and to-morrow from 1.30 p.m. to
5 p.m. Her commander, Lieut. H. Smith,
and his officers were received at the
Brixham Town Hall by Mr. W. W.
Stokes, chairman of Brixham Urban
Council. This evening members of the
council and their wives will be the
guests of the officers.
One of 75 crew lost
in HMS Affray
16 Apr 1951
The Scotsman - Friday 23 June 1950

H.M SHIPS AT LERWICK. —H.M.S. Maidstone and the submarines Alliance, Aurochs and Tiptoe
arrived at Lerwick yesterday, and later courtesy visits were exchanged between officers and Provost R. A.
Anderson. Dances are being arranged for the officers and men, and the ships will remain till Sunday.
1950

VC

VC

VC

1951

July

1951

1951

VC

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