The Liberation of Norway:
HMS Wolfhound
and HMS Wolsey at Stavanger
Operation Conan
May1945
Operation Conan was the Royal Navy's contribution to Operation Apostle, the liberation of Norway after the formal surrender of German forces at Oslo on the 9 May:
"On the 13 May, the Royal Navy
initiated Operation Conan,
sending two destroyers to each of the intended ports of entry, Oslo,
Kristiansand, Stavanger, Bergen, Trondheim and Tromso and numbers of
MTBs from Lerwick to smaller towns along the coast. The destroyers
carried with them the naval officers in command (NOIC) of the various
ports, naval disarmament parties and small elements of air and military
staffs from Britain". British
Policy and Strategy towards Norway; Christopher Mann (Palgrave
Macmillan, 2012), page 209.
The
entry ports and their NOIC were: Oslo (Capt C.R.V. Pugh RN), Stavanger (Capt R.St.V.
Sherbrooke RN), Kristiansand (Capt Lord Teynham RN), Bergen (Capt B D
Nicholson RNVR) and Trondheim (Capt J H Ruck-Keene RN). On the 12 May the Flag Officer Norway, Rear Admiral J.S.McL. Ritchie RN,
left for Oslo with the cruiser HMS Devonshire,
the minelaying cruisers Apollo
(with Crown Prince Olav on board) and Ariadne,
and four destroyers (Iroquis, Savage,
Scourge and Arundel).
On the 13 May eight destroyers in the Rosyth Escort Force were sent to Kristiansand South (HMS Valorous and HMS Venomous with three Norwegian minesweepers), Stavanger (HMS Wolsey and HMS Wolfhound), Bergen (HMS Woolston, HMS Vivacious and the corvette, HMS Acanthus) and Trondheim (HMS Mackay and HMS Viceroy). Local surrender ceremonies were held aboard these destroyers of the Rosyth Escort Force in the harbours on Norway's west coast.
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Fred Gillhead's photographs and documents
HMS Wolfhound and HMS Wolsey berthed at Stavanger on the 15 May 1945 and were greeted by crowds of enthusiastic Norwegians. The photographs may have been taken by journalists on local papers but were found amongst the papers of Fred Gilleard after his death on New Year's Day 2016 and sent to me by his step-daughter, Sue Parsons. Fred Gilleard was an AB on HMS Wolfhound from October 1944 to June 1945.

"HMS Wolsey, Stavanger, 15 May 1945" written on reverse
Courtesy of Susan Parsons


Two views of V & W Class destroyer, probably HMS Wolfhound, berthing at Stavanger
Courtesy of Susan Parsons

HMS Wolfhound, pennant number L56, berthed at Stavanger
Courtesy of Susan Parson
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Harry
Kain died at a Rest Home for the elderly in Bodmin, Cornwall, without
leaving any known family. His few possessions included a briefcase
containing an album of photographs taken aboard HMS Wolsey
at Stavanger and a framed portrait of a young naval rating which is
thought to be of Harry. They would have been thrown out but Sgt C J
Manning of RAF St Mawgan, the husband of the the Activities
Co-ordinator at the care home where Harry spent his last years, emailed
me digital copies of the photographs. At present nothing further is
known about Harry but I am hoping that somebody will get in touch who
knew him and can tell me more about him so that his story can be told
here.