The ships departed from Kiel on 4 June and steamed undetected at high speed through the
Skagerrak, along the Norwegian coast and into the Arctic. During the night of 6 June two destroyers refuelled from the battleships and on 7 June
Admiral Hipper and the two other destroyers refuelled from the replenishment oiler
Dithmarschen near
Jan Mayen island. In the evening of 7 June Marschall held a conference aboard
Gneisenau to organize the attack on Harstad. Air reconnaissance had reported convoys and two carriers steaming westwards but no information about Harstad was available. Marschall suspected the Allies were evacuating Norway and he decided to abandon the attack on Harstad and destroy the convoys. At 05:00 on 8 June, the German ships formed line abreast in search of the convoys. At 06:45
Admiral Hipper sighted a tanker and an escorting trawler.
Hipper sank the escort with her
secondary armament and rescued a survivor. Marschall, aboard
Gneisenau, closed in on the scene and
Gneisenau shelled the tanker
Oil Pioneer () at 67°44′N, 03°52′E that caught fire and was finished off with a torpedo from
Hermann Schoemann, the destroyer rescued eleven survivors but twenty crew were killed. After this engagement, the German ships resumed their position in the patrol line, searching for the convoy. At 08:45
Admiral Hipper and
Scharnhorst launched their
Arado Ar 196 reconnaissance floatplanes, that found two ships but no convoy. The first ship was the empty troop transport
Orama () which was sunk by
Admiral Hipper and
Hans Lody at 12:10, nineteen members of the crew were killed and 280 men were taken prisoner. The second ship was the hospital ship
Atlantis which refrained from reporting the attack and the Germans respected its immunity. Marschall decided to abandon the search for the convoy and ordered
Admiral Hipper and the destroyers to Trondheim to comply with the second part of his operational orders, to support the German troops at Trondheim. The battleships remained in the Arctic and steamed northwards to refuel from
Dithmarschen. Marschall wanted to operate with the two battleships against ships reported by the
B-Dienst section aboard his ship, that had intercepted signals from the carriers , and the
Town-class light cruiser . The weather was excellent with unlimited visibility and at 16:45 a lookout on
Scharnhorst reported a faint cloud; upon investigation with the optic rangefinder the top of a mast was noticed at a distance of . The German battleships gave chase and at 17:13 they identified a carrier, first thought to be
Ark Royal and two escorting destroyers, and .
Sinking of HMS Glorious On the night of 7/8 June, the aircraft carrier
Glorious (Captain
Guy D'Oyly-Hughes), took on board ten
Gladiator fighters of
263 Squadron Royal Air Force (RAF) and eight
Hurricane fighters of
46 Squadron, the first landing of modern aircraft without
arrester hooks on an aircraft carrier. The fighters had flown from land bases to avoid being destroyed in the evacuation.
Glorious was part of a troop
convoy headed for
Scapa Flow, also including the carrier
Ark Royal but in the early hours of 8 June, D'Oyly-Hughes requested permission to proceed independently with
Acasta and
Ardent.
Glorious was in a low state of readiness. The crow's nest lookout was not manned, leaving the observation task to the destroyers with much lower observation angles. Only twelve out of 18 boilers were in use, so she could not develop quickly full speed [from to ].
Glorious carried the seven Hurricanes and ten Gladiators of the RAF along with six Swordfish of
823 Naval Air Squadron and the Sea Gladiators of
802 Naval Air Squadron. A Swordfish and three Sea Gladiators were at ten minutes' notice below deck but the previous commander always had some aircraft in the air. D'Oyly-Hughes failed to launch aircraft for a
Combat Air Patrol around the carrier group, reportedly to give the aircrews a rest. While sailing through the
Norwegian Sea on 8 June, the carrier,
Acasta and
Ardent were intercepted by the German battleships
Scharnhorst and
Gneisenau off Norway at about 69°N, 00° E.
Scharnhorst turned towards
Glorious immediately upon her sighting, without waiting for an order from Marschall aboard
Gneisenau.
Scharnhorst was well ahead of
Gneisenau and opened fire first at 17:32 with a salvo from her forward turrets at a distance of After 52 seconds the salvo fell short and then
Scharnhorst fired three ranging salvoes with one turret each. Having found the range with the second salvo, hits were gained with the fourth salvo.
Scharnhorst obtained its first hit at 17:38 at the extreme range of , before
Glorious could launch her torpedo-bombers. At 17:46
Gneisenau opened fire with her main battery. The destroyers had begun to make smoke to protect
Glorious which was effective at first but receded around 18:20, exposing
Glorious again.
Ardent and
Acasta made continual attempts to launch torpedoes at the German ships. At about 18:39,
Scharnhorst was hit by one of four torpedoes launched by
Acasta; fifty sailors were killed, of water flooded into her and her aft turret was put out of action.
Ardent was sunk at around 18:20, having made seven attacks with torpedoes. The approximate sinking position based on last transmission from
Glorious is . Marschall, aboard
Gneisenau, ordered
Scharnhorst to cease wasting ammunition on
Glorious.
Gneisenau was closer to
Glorious than
Scharnhorst. ==Aftermath==