From their first triumph in March of 1941 these units utilized Explosive Motor Boats, Torpedo Boats, Miniature submarines and the infamous Human Torpedos (Maiale). By the end of the war, these units would sink, or severely disable, 86,000 tons of Allied warships and 131,527 tons of merchant shipping.
The 10th Light Flotilla was responsbile for 28 ships sunk or damaged in World War Two. These ships include the battleships HMS Queen Elizabeth, HMS Valiant, cruiser HMS York and 111, 527 tons of merchant shipping.
A partial listing of ships sunk or crippled by the 10th Light Flotilla is noted below.
Durham 10,900 tons Gibraltar Sep, 1941
Queen Elizabeth 32,000 tons Alexandria Dec, 1941
Valiant 31,000 tons Alexandria Dec, 1941
Jervis 1,700 tons Alexandria Dec, 1941
Baron Douglas 3,900 tons Gibraltar July, 1942
Raven's Point 1,900 tons Gibraltar July, 1942
Meta 1,600 tons Gibraltar July, 1942
Harmattan 4,600 tons Algiers Dec, 1942
Empire Centaur 7,000 tons Algiers Dec, 1942
Camerata 4,900 tons Gibraltar May, 1943
Mahsud 7,500 tons Gibraltar May, 1943
Kaituna 10,000 tons Mersin July, 1943
Fernplant 7,000 tons Iskenderun Aug, 1943
Stanridge 6,000 tons Gibraltar Aug, 1943
1942 Italian frogmen were not only deadly, but also very ingenious in their methods of attack. Known as the "Floating Trojan Horse of Gibraltar", Italian frogmen used an imaginative method of destroying enemy ships.
Gibraltar was very tempting to the Italians for their safe shelter of British warships and allied merchant shipping. The Italian frogmen originally used a Spanish villa that was locateed 2 miles from Gibraltar. It was owned by an Italian officer married to a Spanish woman named Conchita Ramognino. This villa held the frogmen who would sneak out into the harbor and attack unsuspecting British warships. But this proved very difficult and costly. The harbor was very well protected by netting, patrol boats and search lights. Because of this difficulty, the Italians decided to use a battered Italian merchant ship docked across the bay of Gibraltar. It was the 4,995 ton Olterra. Italian frogmen secretly replaced the crew with divers and technicians and built a workshop to house, build and maintain human torpedos. A door was then cut 6 feet below the surface to allow these 2-man human torpedos to come and go undetected. Replacement torpedos were shipped from Italy disguised as boiler tubes. When the Italian frogmen commenced their attacks on British warships from this location, it proved just as costly. Five out of six frogmen never returned. But when the Italians decided to attack the merchant shipping, which was less protected, they were rewarded with easy prey. Italian frogmen sank or damaged a total of 42,000 tons of Allied shipping. The British never did find out where these frogmen came from or where they gone.
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Despite early disappointments the Italians persevered, and scored major successes in Gibraltar Harbour in September 1941 and more significantly, in Alexandria Harbour in December. It was this attack that personified the strength of the submarine/swimmer delivery vehicle combination - bold in concept; brilliant in execution; highly effective in result - when six Italian frogmen, led by Cdr Count Luigi de la Penne, on three chariots landed from the Italian submarine Sirce penetrated into Alexandria Harbour and placed explosives on the British battleships Valiant and the Queen Elizabeth, and a nearby tanker. All six charioteers were captured, but they put a significant element of the British Mediterranean Fleet on the bottom. Fortunately for the British the bottom was not far away, and the upperworks of both ships remained well clear of the surface. To fool Italian reconnaissance aircraft into thinking that the raid had failed, apparently normal operations were conducted on a day to day basis. Smoke came out of funnels, guns were trained, and all the routine ceremonial rituals performed as if nothing had happened. In fact below the waterline frantic repair efforts were being made which lasted several weeks. Had the Axis realised the truth then Admiral Cunningham, with only a few operational ships at his disposal, could have been driven out of the Mediterranean, with potentially disastrous consequences for the Allies.