Enrico Baroni

Enrico Baroni (24 November 1892 – 28 June 1940) was an Italian naval officer during World War II.

Biography
Born in Florence in 1892, Enrico Baroni enrolled in the Italian Naval Academy in Livorno on 10 November 1911, and graduated in 1914 with the rank of ensign. During World War I he served first on the battleships Roma and Conte di Cavour, then on the armored cruiser Pisa and finally, as the first fire control officer, on the battleship Dante Alighieri. At the end of the war, he was assigned to the Technical Office of Naval Weapons in Venice and stationed on the repair ship Quarnaro.

He was then given command of the torpedo boat Cortellazzo and, after promotion to lieutenant commander, of the destroyer ITALIAN DESTROYER Aquilone. In 1932 he was promoted to commander and appointed executive officer of the heavy cruiser Fiume, and afterwards he held the post of Superior Commander in the Far East, with insignia on the minelayer Lepanto. After repatriation, he was promoted to captain and appointed commander of the Cagliari Naval Command for a period, before being given command of the light cruiser Luigi Cadorna.

In 1940 he was given command of 2nd Destroyer Squadron, with flag on ITALIAN DESTROYER Espero. On 27 June 1940 the Espero, along with sisterships ITALIAN DESTROYER Ostro and ITALIAN DESTROYER Zeffiro, sailed from Taranto for Tobruk in a fast transport mission of some batteries of anti-tank guns; on the following day, however, the three destroyers, sighted by British reconnaissance planes, were intercepted by five British light cruisers under Vice Admiral John Tovey. Baroni decided to hold back the British cruisers with his ship for as long as possible, so as to give Ostro and Zeffiro the time needed to escape; Espero ' s sacrifice in fact allowed the two sister ships to escape and reach Benghazi and then Tobruk. Espero, after a solitary two-hour battle against Tovey's ships, was finally hit by the cruiser's fire, left dead in the water, and finished off by HMAS Sydney. After giving orders for the scuttling and the abandonment of the ship, Baroni returned to the bridge and went down with his ship. He was posthumously awarded the Gold Medal of Military Valor.