1939–1942: commissioning, prize capture, mining and repairs Belfast departed for
Portsmouth on 3 August 1939 and was commissioned on 5 August 1939, less than a month before the outbreak of the
Second World War. Her first captain was
Captain G A Scott with a crew of 761 and her first assignment was to the
Home Fleet's
2nd Cruiser Squadron. On 14 August,
Belfast took part in her first exercise, Operation
Hipper, in which she played the role of a German
commerce raider attempting to escape into the Atlantic. By navigating the hazardous
Pentland Firth,
Belfast successfully evaded the Home Fleet. On 31 August 1939
Belfast was transferred to the
18th Cruiser Squadron. Based at
Scapa Flow in the
Orkney islands, 18th Cruiser Squadron was part of the British effort to impose a naval
blockade on Germany. Germany
invaded Poland the following day and Britain and France declared war on 3 September. At 11:40 that morning,
Belfast received the message ‘Commence hostilities at once against Germany’. On 8 September
Belfast put to sea from Scapa Flow with the
battlecruisers , , her sister ship
Edinburgh and four
destroyers, on a patrol intended to intercept German ships returning from Norway. In particular, they were to search for the
Norddeutscher Lloyd liner , which had left New York (without passengers) on 30 August 1939. The Royal Navy was unaware that the liner had already docked safely in Murmansk on 6 September. No enemy vessels were found. On 25 September,
Belfast took part in a fleet operation to recover the submarine , during which the ship was attacked by German aircraft, but suffered no damage. On 1 October 1939
Belfast left Scapa Flow for a patrol in the North Sea. On 5 October
Belfast intercepted and boarded a neutral Norwegian factory ship that was sailing in company with six whaling ships. On 8 October the ship sighted the Swedish merchant ship
C. P. Lilljevach but, in poor weather, did not intercept or board her. The following day she boarded
Tai Yin, a Norwegian ship.
Tai Yin had been listed by the Admiralty as suspicious, so a
prize crew from
Belfast sailed her to
Kirkwall for investigation. On 9 October
Belfast intercepted a German liner, the 13,615-ton
Cap Norte, north-west of the
Faroe Islands. Disguised as a neutral Swedish vessel, SS
Ancona,
Cap Norte was attempting to return to Germany from Brazil; her passengers included German reservists. Under the Admiralty's
prize rules,
Belfasts crew later received prize money. On 12 October
Belfast boarded the Swedish ship
Uddeholm, which was also sailed to Kirkwall by a prize crew. Returning to harbour, on the night of 13–14 October,
Belfast was among the few ships anchored in Scapa Flow, following intelligence reports of an expected air raid. That night, the
battleship was torpedoed by German submarine , which had infiltrated the anchorage. On the morning following the sinking,
Belfast left for
Loch Ewe. On 10 November
Belfast was taken off the northern patrol and reassigned to the 2nd Cruiser Squadron. This squadron was to form an independent striking force based at
Rosyth. On 21 November,
Belfast was to take part in the force's first sortie, a gunnery exercise. At 10:58 am she detonated a magnetic
mine while leaving the
Firth of Forth. The mine broke
Belfasts keel and wrecked one of her engine and boiler rooms. Twenty officers and men required hospital treatment for injuries caused by the explosion and a further 26 suffered minor injuries. One man, Painter 2nd Class Henry Stanton, was hospitalised but later died of a head injury, having been thrown against the deckhead by the blast. The
tugboat Krooman, towing gunnery targets for the exercise, released her targets and instead towed
Belfast to Rosyth for initial repairs. Initial assessments of
Belfasts damage showed that, while the mine had done little direct damage to the outer hull, causing only a small hole directly below one of the boiler rooms, the shock of the explosion had caused severe warping, breaking machinery, deforming the decks and causing the keel to
hog (bend upwards) by three inches. On 4 January 1940
Belfast was decommissioned to care and maintenance status, becoming the responsibility of
Rosyth Dockyard, and her crew dispersed to other vessels. By 28 June she had been repaired sufficiently to sail to
Devonport, arriving on 30 June under the command of Lt Cdr H W Parkinson. During her repairs, work was carried out to straighten, reconstruct and strengthen her hull. Her armour belt was also extended and thickened. Her armament was updated with newer 2-pounder pom-pom mountings and her anti-aircraft armament improved with eighteen
20 mm Oerlikon guns in five twin and eight single mountings, replacing two quadruple 0.5-inch Vickers guns.
Belfast also received new fire control
radars for her main, secondary and anti-aircraft guns. Her November 1942 radar fit included one
Type 284 set and four
Type 283 sets to direct the main armament, three
Type 285 sets for the secondary guns and two
Type 282 sets for the 2-pounder anti-aircraft guns. She also received a
Type 273 general surface warning radar, Type 251 and 252 sets for
identification friend or foe (IFF) purposes and a
Type 281 and Type 242 for air warning. Her 1942 electronics suite also included a Type 270
echosounder. Due to her increased topweight, a bulge was introduced into her hull amidships to improve stability and provide extra longitudinal strength. Her beam had increased to and her draught to forward and aft.
1942–1943: recommissioning, Arctic convoys and Battle of North Cape Belfast was recommissioned at Devonport on 3 November 1942, under the command of Captain
Frederick Parham. On her return to the Home Fleet
Belfast was made
flagship of the
10th Cruiser Squadron, flying the flag of
Rear-Admiral Robert Burnett, who had previously commanded the Home Fleet's destroyer flotillas. The squadron was responsible for the hazardous task of escorting
Arctic convoys to the
Soviet Union, operating from Scapa Flow and bases in
Iceland. Her radar suite reduced
Belfast need for aerial surveillance and her aircraft were disembarked in June 1943.
Belfast spent 1943 engaged on convoy escort and blockade patrol duties, and on 5–6 October of the same year, formed part of the covering force during
Operation Leader, an airstrike against German shipping in the waters of northern
Norway near
Bodø by the
aircraft carrier . On 26 December 1943,
Belfast participated in the
Battle of North Cape. This battle, which occurred during the
Arctic night, involved two strong Royal Navy formations; the first, Force One, comprised the cruisers (with 8-inch guns), and
Belfast (the 10th Cruiser Squadron) with three destroyers; the second, Force Two, comprised the battleship and the cruiser with four destroyers. Bruce Fraser, C-in-C Home Fleet, expected and hoped that the German battleship would sortie from its Norwegian base and attempt to attack Convoy JW 55B sailing from Scotland to Murmansk in the USSR. And indeed, on 25 December 1943, Christmas Day,
Scharnhorst left port in northern Norway to attack Convoy JW 55B. The next day Force One, which had left Murmansk on the 23rd, encountered
Scharnhorst, prevented her from attacking the convoy and forced her to retreat after being damaged by the British cruisers. As
Scharnhorst attacked again at noon she was intercepted by Force Two and sunk by the combined formations.
Belfast played an important role in the battle; as flagship of the 10th Cruiser Squadron, she was among the first to encounter
Scharnhorst and coordinated the squadron's defence of the convoy. After
Scharnhorst turned away from the convoy, Admiral Burnett in
Belfast shadowed her by radar from outside visual range, enabling her interception by
Duke of York.
1944: Tirpitz and D-Day After North Cape,
Belfast refuelled at
Kola Inlet before sailing for the United Kingdom, arriving at Scapa to replenish her fuel, ammunition and stores on New Year's Day 1944.
Belfast sailed to Rosyth on 10 January, where her crew received a period of leave. February 1944 saw
Belfast resume her Arctic convoy duties, and on 30 March 1944
Belfast sailed with the covering force of
Operation Tungsten, a large carrier-launched Fleet Air Arm airstrike against the German battleship . Moored in
Altafjord in northern Norway,
Tirpitz was the German navy's last surviving
capital ship.
Belfast underwent minor repairs at Rosyth from 23 April to 8 May, while her crew received a period of leave. On 8 May
Belfast returned to Scapa Flow and carried
the King during his pre-invasion visit to the Home Fleet. For the
invasion of Normandy Belfast, flying the flag of Rear-Admiral
Frederick Dalrymple-Hamilton, was made headquarters ship of Bombardment Force E and was to support landings by British and Canadian forces in the
Gold and
Juno Beach sectors. On 2 June
Belfast left the River Clyde for her bombardment areas. That morning Prime Minister
Winston Churchill had announced his intention to go to sea with the fleet and witness the invasion from HMS
Belfast. This was opposed by the Supreme Allied Commander, General
Dwight D. Eisenhower, and the
First Sea Lord, Sir
Andrew Cunningham. An intervention by the King eventually prevented Churchill from going. The invasion was to begin on 5 June but bad weather forced a 24-hour delay. At 5:30 am on 6 June,
Belfast opened fire on a German artillery battery at
Ver-sur-Mer, suppressing the guns until the site was overrun by British infantry of 7th Battalion,
Green Howards. On 12 June
Belfast supported Canadian troops moving inland from Juno Beach and returned to Portsmouth on 16 June to replenish her ammunition. She returned two days later for further bombardments. On the night of 6 July
Belfast was threatened at anchor by German
motor torpedo boats ("
E-boats"). She evaded them by
weighing anchor and moving to the concealment of a
smoke screen.
Belfast fired her last round
in anger in European waters on 8 July, in company with the
monitor and the battleship , as part of
Operation Charnwood. On 10 July she sailed for Scapa, the fighting in France having moved inland beyond the range of her guns. During her five weeks off Normandy,
Belfast had fired 1,996 rounds from her six-inch guns.
1945: service in the Far East On 29 July 1944, Captain Parham handed over command of HMS
Belfast to Captain R M Dick, and until April 1945
Belfast underwent a refit to prepare for service against Japan in the Far East which improved her accommodation for tropical conditions and updated her anti-aircraft armament and fire control in order to counter expected
kamikaze attacks by Japanese aircraft. By May 1945,
Belfast mounted thirty-six 2-pounder guns in two eight-gun mounts, four quadruple mounts and four single mounts. She also mounted fourteen 20 mm Oerlikons. Her two aftmost 4-inch mountings were removed and the remainder fitted with
Remote Power Control. Her empty hangars were converted to crew accommodation and her aircraft catapult was removed. , August 1945.Her radar fit now included a
Type 277 radar set to replace her Type 273 for surface warning. Her Type 281 air warning set was replaced by a single-antenna Type 281B set, while a
Type 293Q was fitted for close-range height-finding and surface warning. A
Type 274 set was fitted for main armament fire direction. On 17 June 1945, with the war in Europe at an end,
Belfast sailed for the Far East via Gibraltar, Malta, Alexandria, Port Said, Aden, Colombo and Sydney. By the time she arrived in Sydney on 7 August
Belfast had been made flagship of the 2nd Cruiser Squadron of the
British Pacific Fleet. While in Sydney
Belfast underwent another short refit, supplementing her close-range armament with five
40 mm Bofors guns.
Belfast had been expected to join in
Operation Downfall, but this was forestalled by the
Japanese surrender on 15 August 1945. ==Post-war service 19451950==