Z22 Anton Schmitt was named after Bosun's Mate (
Bootsmannsmaat) Anton Schmitt, who was the last man at the last operating gun of the sinking
light cruiser during the
Battle of Jutland on 31 May 1916 and went down with his ship. The ship was ordered from
AG Weser (
Deschimag) on 6 January 1936. She was
laid down at Deschimag's
Bremen shipyard as
yard number W924 on 3 January 1938,
launched on 20 September, and
commissioned on 24 September 1939. After
working up,
Z22 Anton Schmitt helped to lay a minefield near the
Newcastle area together with , , and on the night of 10/11 January 1940. The destroyers and were also supposed to participate, but the former had problems with her boilers that reduced her maximum speed to and she had to be escorted back to Germany by the latter ship. The minefield only claimed one
fishing trawler of .
Norwegian Campaign Z22 Anton Schmitt was allocated to Group 1 for the Norwegian portion of
Operation Weserübung in April 1940. The group's task was to transport the 139th Mountain Infantry Regiment (
139. Gebirgsjäger Regiment) and the headquarters of the
3rd Mountain Division (
3. Gebirgs-Division) to seize
Narvik. The ships began loading troops on 6 April and set sail the next day. When they arrived off the
Ofotfjord on the morning of 9 April,
Z22 Anton Schmitt and her sister landed their troops at the
Ramnes narrows to search for the
coastal artillery positions that the Germans mistakenly believed to command the mouth of the
fjord. remained offshore to provide support if necessary and to serve as a
picket ship in case the British intended to interfere with the operation. About 11:00 the troops were ordered to reboard their destroyers which proceeded to Narvik.
Z22 Anton Schmitt had picket duty the following night and then sailed into Narvik harbor. Shortly after dawn on 10 April, the five destroyers of the British
2nd Destroyer Flotilla,
Hardy,
Havock,
Hunter,
Hotspur, and
Hostile appeared, totally surprising the Germans.
Hunter hit
Z22 Anton Schmitt with a single shell and with a torpedo in the forward
engine room. And then
Havock hit the
listing ship with another torpedo that broke her in half, killing or wounding over 50 crewmen. The survivors joined the other survivors ashore in an ad-hoc
naval infantry unit. ==Notes==