Mediterranean and
HM Queen Elizabeth on board, coming alongside the quay at
Belfast in 1942. Following commissioning
Phoebe joined the
15th Cruiser Squadron of the
Home Fleet, carrying out commerce protection duties in the
North Atlantic. In November 1940, following the breakout of the
German cruiser Admiral Scheer into the Atlantic,
Phoebe, together with sister ships and and the battlecruisers , and to block the approaches to the German-occupied French Atlantic ports. In April 1941 she joined the
Mediterranean Fleet based at
Alexandria, as part of the 7th Cruiser Squadron. On 18 April 1941,
Phoebe left Alexandria with most of the Mediterranean Fleet in an operation which saw
Phoebe and the cruiser rendezvous with a convoy of four merchant ships outbound from
Malta and escort them back to Alexandria (Convoy ME.2), while other units of the fleet bombarded
Tripoli, Libya, and a single supply ship made passage from Alexandria to Malta.
Phoebe joined up with the convoy on 20 April and escorted it back to Egypt. From 24 April 1941,
Phoebe took part in Operation Demon, the evacuation of British and Empire troops from
Greece. On the night of 24/25 April, she took part in embarkations from beaches at
Nafplio and on 26/27 April, took part in embarkations from
Kalamata. On 27 April 1941
Phoebe and the destroyers , , and rescued all the crew and all 2,600 soldiers from the Dutch
troop ship , which had been near-missed by bombs from German
Junkers Ju 88 bombers and was slowly sinking. On the night of 28/29 April,
Phoebe, with the cruiser and several destroyers were sent to Kalamata to continue the evacuations, but fighting in Kalamata harbour caused the evacuation to be abandoned. From 6 May 1941,
Phoebe took part on
Operation Tiger, when in a series of interlocking operations, a convoy (the Tiger convoy) carrying tanks and aircraft was run through the Mediterranean from Gibraltar to Egypt, while two convoys were sent from Egypt to Malta and
Benghazi was bombarded.
Phoebe formed part of the escort for the Egypt to Malta convoys, and when they reached Malta, joined up with the Egypt-bound convoy and escorted in to Alexandria. On 14 May, in anticipation of a German naval attack on
Crete,
Phoebe left Alexandria as part of 'Force A', which was tasked with supporting operations to intercept any forces approaching Crete, but a fault forced the cruiser to return to Alexandria on 15 April. On 20 May, German forces launched an
invasion of Crete by airborne troops, and by 27 May, with the situation on Crete critical, evacuation of the allied forces from Crete was ordered. On the night of 29/30 April,
Phoebe, together with the cruisers
Perth,
Calcutta and , the landing ship and the destroyers , and picked up about 6,000 men from
Sfakia. On the night of 31 May/1 June,
Phoebe, together with the fast minelayer , and the destroyers , and carried out a final evacuation from Sfakia, picking up about 4,000 men. In June 1941,
Phoebe, as part of the 15th Cruiser Squadron, took part in the
Syria–Lebanon campaign, supporting the
7th Australian Division as it advanced along the coast. On 7–8 June,
Phoebe supported landings north of
Tyre, Lebanon. On 3 July 1941,
Phoebe was attacked by the Italian submarine off the coast of North Africa, but the torpedoes missed. On the evening of 27 August 1941,
Phoebe was hit by a torpedo from an Italian
SM.79 Sparviero torpedo bomber while covering a transport run to
besieged Tobruk. The torpedo blew a hole in the ship's bottom, causing serious flooding. Temporary repairs were made at Alexandria and the cruiser then left to New York for permanent repairs and refit, which were made between 21 November 1941 and 21 April 1942, with the ship returning to service in May 1942.
Return to service On 24 June 1942,
Phoebe transported
King George VI and
Queen Elizabeth to
Belfast in
Northern Ireland, where the Royals inspected American troops. From 10 August 1942,
Phoebe took part in
Operation Pedestal, a convoy to deliver vitally needed supplies to Malta from Gibraltar, as part of the covering force. On 12 August, when the covering force was preparing to turn back to Gibraltar, the convoy came under heavy air attack.
Phoebe was acting as close anti-aircraft escort to the carrier , but the attention of the cruiser's gunners was concentrated on a formation of Italian S.79 torpedo bombers which was working its way around the convoy in preparation for an attack, when German
Junkers Ju 87 dive bombers attacked
Indomitable, hitting the carrier three times and wrecking the ship's flight deck. The cover force, including
Phoebe, returned to Gibraltar by 15 August. In September 1942,
Phoebe and sister ship were ordered to patrol to the south of the
Cape of Good Hope in order to intercept enemy
blockade runners, but these efforts proved unsuccessful. On 23 October 1942,
Phoebe was torpedoed by the German submarine off
Pointe Noire,
French Equatorial Africa (now in the
Republic of the Congo). The torpedo struck adjacent to "Q" turret, blowing a hole in the ship's side and causing extensive flooding. 42 crew members were killed. After temporary repairs at Pointe Noir, which continued until December 1942,
Phoebe made passage for the US for repair, via
Takoradi,
Ghana and
Trinidad, After a period in reserve she was sold for scrap in 1956. ==References==