German night fighter direction vessel Togo
Template:Naval ship NJL Togo was a German night fighter direction vessel (Nacht Jagd Leitschiff) during WW2.
The NJL Togo was the second and the last of the German WW2 radar ships. The first one had been the NJL Kreta (ex-French Ile de Beauté) which had been taken over by the Kriegsmarine in January 1943, rebuilt and taken in use as a night fighter guide ship in August 1943. NJL Kreta was lost on September 21, 1943 near Capeira, after having being torpedoed by the British submarine HMS Unseen.
The NJL Togo was equipped with a FuMG A1 Freya radar for early warning. It had a range of some 40-75 km. She had also a Würzburg-Riese gun laying radar with a similar range plus night fighter communications equipment.
She was heavily armed with three 105 mm anti-aircraft guns, four twin barreled 37 mm aa-guns, four (later five) quad-barreled and three (later two) single barreled 20 mm guns
History
The Togo was launched in August 1938. She had been built for the Woermann Line and carried the name M/S Togo. After the outbreak of World War II and the following internment of German ships in Allied ports, she broke through the Allied blockade and returned to Hamburg where she was taken over by the Kriegsmarine in autumn 1939.
She was rebuilt late in 1940 into a minelayer. Late 1942 the Togo was converted into an auxilary cruiser and renamed Coronel (Schiff 14). The Coronel made only one patrol to Dunkirk in early 1943 but failed to break out through the English Channel. Later the same year, she was converted into a night fighter guide ship. Before she assumed her role she was temporarily used as a minesweeper (Sperrbrecher) and heavy auxiliary cruiser (schwerer Hilfskreuzer) and in the role of merchant harassment cruiser (Handels-Stör-Kreuzer) as the HSK 10 Coronel.
From October 1943 the NJL Togo cruised the Baltic Sea operating under the control of the Luftwaffe. In March 1944 she arrived to the Gulf of Finland to provide night fighter cover for Tallinn and Helsinki.
She survived the war and was transferred to Britain, but ended finally up in Norway after a brief trip to the US.