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Operation Grog
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Operation Grog
Part of the Battle of the Mediterranean of World War II

Armour-piercing shell fired by HMS Malaya, in the nave of Genoa Cathedral
DateFebruary 9, 1941
Location44°24′40″N 8°55′58″E / 44.41111°N 8.93278°E / 44.41111; 8.93278
Result British victory
Belligerents
United Kingdom  Italy
Commanders and leaders
United Kingdom James Somerville Fascist Italy Ferdinando Casardi
Strength

Force H

Anti-aircraft and coastal artillery
Casualties and losses
1 Swordfish aircraft 5 cargo ships sunk
18 damaged (British sources)
1 training ship sunk
2 ships damaged (Italian sources)
14 lighters sunk[1]
144 killed and 242 wounded
Severe damage to port[2]
Map

Operation Grog was the code name for the British naval and air bombardment of Genoa and La Spezia on 9 February 1941, by Force H of the Royal Navy, consisting of the battleship HMS Malaya, the aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal, the battlecruiser HMS Renown and the light cruiser HMS Sheffield screened by ten fleet destroyers including HMS Fearless, Foxhound, Foresight, Fury, Firedrake and Jersey.[3][4]

Events

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The operation was originally scheduled to start on 31 January 1941, but the ships did not leave Gibraltar until 6 February. Four destroyers carried out an anti-submarine sweep while the heavy ships carried out a feint to deceive Axis observers into thinking they were supporting a convoy.[5]

Genoa harbour was bombarded on 9 February 1941, with the force sinking four cargo ships and damaging 18 more.[5] A majority of Italian sources only reported heavy damage to the merchant ships Salpi and Garibaldi and the sinking of the old civilian training ship Garaventa.[6][7] The historian Ermingo Bagnasco also reports the loss of 14 lighters and the motorsailer Antonietta Madre.[1] According to the official files of the Italian Navy (Marina Militare), the Antonietta Madre was sunk during the Allied aerial bombing of Genoa on 23 October 1942.[8]

A salvo from Malaya landed between 50 and 200 yd (46 and 183 m) short of the Italian battleship Duilio, undergoing repairs in dry dock north of Molo Giano (Giano Pier); no damage was reported on Duilio.[2] A targeting error by a gunnery officer on board Malaya some 13 nmi (24 km; 15 mi) offshore caused an armour-piercing round to hit Genoa Cathedral; the shell failed to explode and remains on display there.[9] There were 144 civilian dead and 272 wounded at Genoa as result of the shelling.[2]

Ark Royal's aircraft attacked Livorno and mined La Spezia. An attempt by the Italian fleet to intercept the British force failed, and all ships returned to Gibraltar on 11 February 1941.[5]

References

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