Around 04:00 on 9 April 1940,
M-1 and
M-9 sighted Egersund. While
M-9 remained off the port the secure the surrounding waters, the more manoeuvrable
M-1, carrying
Rittmeister Eickhorn and 40 troops, entered Egersund harbour. At 04:15 the Germans landed near the moored
Skarv, the guard on board the Norwegian vessel initially believing
M-1 to be
Gyller returning from Kristiansand. The torpedo boat was quickly
boarded and seized by the German troops. After their capture, the crew of
Skarv managed to destroy maps and important documents, as well as making a telephone call to the regional naval headquarters in Kristiansand. Before long, the captured Norwegian naval personnel were locked up in a shed under armed guard. After arriving in Egersund, Captain Dehli had established contact with
Skarv, intending to coordinate his dispositions with the naval vessel. This contact had however not been sufficient to ensure that the spotting of the invasion force by an army observation post shortly before the landing took place was relayed to
Skarv. Following the capture of the harbour area in Egersund,
M-1 replaced
M-9 on her station off the port, allowing the latter to land her landing force. While 12 soldiers guarded the harbour, the rest of the German troops spread out through the town, seizing pre-selected targets. The telephone and post office, the police station and the
railway station were occupied, and the entrance to the harbour put under guard. The formal surrender of
Skarv took place later in the day, with Sub-lieutenant Svae handing over his
sabre to Eickhorn. An hour after the capture of Egersund, the delayed
M-2 and
M-13 arrived at the port. After all the army soldiers and equipment had been unloaded, the four minesweepers of
Gruppe 6 headed off to return to
Kiel in Germany. Some time after departing Egersund, the force was ordered to divert to Kristiansand, in order to support operations there. Although the Allies did not try to intervene directly in the German capture of Egersund, later in the day a
Lockheed Hudson of
No. 224 Squadron RAF overflew the area, counting 18 German aircraft in the airspace above the town. ==Aftermath==