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Operation Drumbeat

Page 60

by Michael Gannon


  on East Coast (1942), 448

  Japanese auxiliary sampans and, 353

  at Pearl Harbor, 390

  survivors generally not picked up, 72

  vs. Japan, xx, xxi, 200-203, 307, 340-42

  Submarine Tracking Room (Royal Navy), 154-60, 164, 200-203, 307, 340-42

  Submarine wolf packs, 76, 89-90, 388. 472

  Gruppe Raubritter, 433

  Gruppe Schlagetot, 59

  Gruppe Ziethen, 200-201. 225, 252, 296, 442

  Suhren, Reinhard (“Teddy”), 461

  Sulaco (ship), 33

  Sunderland flying boats, 46, 50, 58, 80, 407-8

  Surigao Strait, Battle of, 390, 446

  Survivors

  from sunken German submarines, 381-83

  of torpedoing by German submarines, xx-xxi. 71-72. 286-87, 290-92, 365, 455, 457, 460-61

  Sweden, neutrality of, 51

  Sydney (Nova Scotia), xvi

  Sylph, USS, 176

  Tacoma Star (ship), 272

  Tampa (Florida), 351

  Tang, USS (submarine), xxi

  Task forces (U.S.)

  One, 88

  Four, 88, 190,415,437

  Fifteen, 238

  Twenty-Four, 415, 437

  Tavelle, George, 256-58

  TBF-1 Avengers, 393

  Tennessee, USS, 390, 446

  Tennessee (ship), 271

  Tepuni, William, 380

  Terrell, Ross F., 246

  TETIScode, 341-42,472

  Texas, USS, 85, 448

  Thetis (Coast Guard cutter), 181, 384

  Thirlbi (ship), 272

  Thomas, USS, 417

  Thomaston (Maine), 210, 211

  Thompson, Lawrance R., 173

  TINA (oscillographic operator signature), 149

  Tirpiiz (German battleship), 75, 88, 95, 437-38

  Todt, Fritz, 28

  Tolle, Alwin, 7-8, 12, 106-9, 115-22, 124, 140, 144, 194-98, 200, 208, 232, 278, 282, 284, 286, 287, 292, 295, 300, 311

  Topp, Erich, 91, 225-26, 404, 407 Torelli (Italian submarine), 124

  Torpedoes

  British, 229

  description of, 2-3, 107-8, 196

  G7a, 197.228,469

  G7e, 197,216,469

  German testing command for, 23, 228

  gyro system for, 43

  apáñese, 229

  magnetic exploder for, 228

  magnetic proximity detonator of, 228

  maintenance of, 196-98, 314

  malfunctioning of, 227-29

  nickname for, 2-3, 468

  submarine’s trim and, 421-22

  U.S., 229, 450-51

  “Fido” (Mark 24 Mine), 394

  from wolf packs, 90

  Toilund, HMS, 61

  Tourmaline, USS, 176, 177

  Treverbyn (ship), 59

  Trevisa (ship), 31

  Trim

  maintaining, 421-22

  U-/23′s dives to achieve, 101-6, 312

  Trinidad, 308, 349

  Tripartite Pact (1940), 94, 97, 99 Trippe, USS, 167-68, 237, 190, 238, 448

  TRITON code (“Shark”). 307, 341, 383, 393, 396, 473

  Trondheim (Norway), 95

  Truman, Harry S.,178, 415

  Turing, Alan, ¡51

  Turner, Richmond Kelly “Terrible,” 160-61, 170, 414, 443

  Tuscaloosa, USS, 88

  Tyrer, USS, 337, 364

  U-29, 187

  U-30, 28, 53

  U-3S, 32, 432

  V-46, 32

  U-47, 32. 73, 228

  U-4Ä. 32, 227

  U-53 (World War I), 142, 188

  U-64, 118-20

  U-66, 66, 80, 127, 133, 157, 201-2. 212, 243-48, 253, 269-71, 296, 417, 430, 433

  U-67, 435 U-68, 124, 404

  U-69, 85, 432

  U-75, 157

  U-79, 157

  U-S2. 59 V-84, 200, 442

  U-S5, 380-81 V-86, 200, 252, 442

  U-S7, 200, 201,442

  U-96, 23

  U-99, 32 V-100. 32 V-J01. 30, 127

  U-103, 202, 270, 432

  U-105, 294. 432, 457

  U-106. 91, 192, 202, 270, 273, 432

  U-107, 42, 202, 270, 402-3, 435, 464

  U-10S, 202, 270, 435

  U-109, 80, 127, 133, 157, 201-2, 272, 295, 296,417,430 V-110. 152 V-116, 10

  U-117, 10

  U-117 (World War I), 142

  U-11S. 10

  U-123, xviii-xix

  ASDIC used against, 48

  attempted ramming of, 276-79, 324, 332

  bunks on, 108, 109,281

  Christmas celebrated on, 127-32

  clothes worn by crew of, 29, 108-9, 191-92

  cruises of

  Oct. 1940, 32

  June-Aug. 1941,41-53

  Oct. 1941, 54-61

  Dec. 1941-Jan. 1942, 11-15, 101-33, 135-48, 153, 156-59, 191-225, 229-37, 249-64, 276-95, 299-300

  Mar-May 1942, 311-27, 330-37. 358-77, 398-404

  May 1942 (Lorient-Kiel), 407-8

  decommissioning of, 418

  description of, 9-11,42-43, 101-2, 107-18

  dieseis of, 194-95

  escutcheon of, 10-11

  food and water on, 4-5, 116

  in French Navy, 417

  Hardegen becomes commander of, 40-41

  head in, 11, 107,423-24

  hydrophone on, 117-18

  lookouts on, 204-5

  at Lorient, 1-11, 311-12

  loading and refitting, 1-5, 67

  return from the west, 299-301, 403-4

  sponsoring battalion (Patenbattalion), 7, 120, 128, 129, 301

  number of men on, 4

  officers’ quarters on, 116-17

  prepares for scuttling after depth charges, 367-72

  prisoner of war on, 57-63

  records of, xi-xii

  war diary altered, 52-53

  Schroeter as commander of, 408, 417

  sea burial from, 326

  sinkings by, 43-44, 50-51. 55-58, 205-9. 216-23. 233-34, 250-52, 254-65. 317-22, 325-26, 335-37, 360-66, 375-77, 398-401,408

  speed and range of, 8-9

  test emergency dives by, 125-27, 140, 144, 283

  torpedoes on, 2-3, 107-8, 196-98

  trimming dives by, 101-6, 312

  U.S.A.A.F. claims sinking of, 249

  wireless telegraph on, 118

  U-124 (Edelweissboot), 23-33, 120, 124, 432, 441

  U-125, 2, 79, 80, 133, 144, 157, 201-2, 212, 269, 271-72, 296, 417

  U-126. 439

  U-127, 133

  U-128. 77, 202, 270, 347, 358, 435

  U-129, 124

  U-130, 66, 79, 80, 127, 133, 157, 201-2, 226-27, 270-72, 296, 417, 430

  U-131, 133

  U-132, 430

  U-134. 157

  U-135. 200, 442

  U-147, 34-39

  U-151 (World War I), 142

  U-152 (World War I), 142

  U-153, 384

  U-156. 308

  U-157, 384

  U-15S, 384

  U-159, 405

  U-160, 457

  U-16Ó, 462

  U-171.462

  U-1S1.465

  U-202, 336, 379, 433, 458

  U-203, 85, 200, 433, 442

  U-233, 417

  U-333. 157, 200, 294, 295, 442, 455

  U-352, 382, 434

  U-404. 344

  U-434, 133

  U-451, 133,440

  U-458, 388

  U-459, 348

  U-503, 380

  U-504, 358

  U-505, xiii, 440

  U-507, 348

  U-532, 336. 458

  U-552, 91, 200, 225-26, 404, 442

  U-553, 200, 442

  U-557, 200

  U-55S, 462

  U-567, 133,440

  U-568, 91

  U-J7/, 345

  U-572, 52

  U-J74, 133

  U-575. 292-94

  U-576, 384

  U-57Ä. 310

  U-58
2. 133,200,442

  U-Ó52. 87, 89

  U-653, 76, 133, 158,211,442

  U-Ó54, 200, 442

  U-656, 442

  U-701, 144, 157, 200, 201, 384, 442

  U-75;. 229

  U-754, 200, 388, 442, 457

  U-Ä52. xx UA. 123-24

  U-boat Flotillas

  First, 67

  Second, 1, 28, 29, 67, 417, 430

  Third, 68

  Sixth, 67

  Seventh,67

  Ninth, 67

  Tenth, 430

  Twelfth, 68

  Twenty-second, 417

  “U-Boat Situation” (daily noontime signal), 298, 444

  U-boat tankers (Milchkühe), 348

  U-Boote westwärts (movie), 11, 23

  U-cruisers (World War I), 142, 441

  U-Deutschland (World War I), 141

  Ultra messages, 156, 445

  Umpqua, USS, 383

  Umtata (ship), 345

  Unicoi (ship), 384

  United States

  Army and Navy Joint Control and Information Center, 172-74, 182

  East Coast of

  air raids feared, 186

  brownouts or blackouts, 185-87, 340, 343-45. 366

  false sightings of submarines, 167

  first submarine sinkings, 380-84

  German saboteurs landed, 379-80

  1942 shipping catastrophe, 378-79

  1943 German submarine offensive, 388, 395-96

  poor naval defenses, 70-71, 265-68, 298, 308-10

  submarine-sowed mines in, 388

  tanker traffic halted, 366

  total loss of life from submarines, 389

  total ships sunk by submarines, 388-89

  World War I German submarines off, 141-42, 188, 243

  World War II German submarines off, 308-77. See also Operation Drumbeat

  1899-1900 German plans for invasion of, 69-70

  false reports of air raids on, 167

  German declaration of war on, 98-100

  isolationism in, 93-94

  neutrality of, 51. 64, 82-86 1941

  war plan of, 93-94

  planned Luftwaffe offensive vs., 70

  replacement of lost ships by, 395

  undeclared war between Germany and, 87-94

  United States Army

  Air Corps Regional Filter Center, 173

  Aircraft Warning System, 180

  Air Force planes bomb U.S. destrover, 167-68

  Antisubmarine Command, 356

  Civil Air Patrol and, 355-57

  Eastern Defense Command, 186

  First Air Force, 171

  First Air Support Command, 184, 356

  First Bomber Command. 182-83, 222-23, 349, 356

  Japanese codes broken by, 163

  Northeast Defense Command, 171

  number of submarines supposedly sunk by, 378 106th Observation Squadron, 364

  submarines sunk by planes of, 380, 384

  United States Coast Guard

  Auxiliary, 352

  available ESF vessels of (Dec. 1941). 176-77

  on brownouts and blackouts, 185-86

  in neutrality period, 83

  U-boats sunk by, 181, 382-84, 462

  United States Merchant Marine

  Armed Guards on, 343, 364, 365, 384

  combatant status of, xx fears for future of, 342-43

  supposedly disloyal radio operators in, 168

  United States Navy. See also Atlantic Fleet; Submarines—U.S.

  ASW schools, 384

  Atlantic Section, Intelligence Center (F-21, “Secret Room”), 342

  big-ship lobby and, 178-79

  Caribbean Sea Frontier, 174, 308, 349-51, 387 388

  CINCUS acronym changed to COMINCH, 170

  commander of. See King, Ernest J.—as

  COMINCH-CNO Communications Intelligence (COMINT), 161-62

  Eastern Sea Frontier (ESF), 171-74, 308, 384

  brownouts and blackouts controlled by, 344

  convoys, 387-88

  1941-1942 sea strength, 176-77, 346-47, 352-53, 387

  1942 air strength, 181-83, 349-50

  Operation Drumbeat and, 221-22

  U-boats expected bv, 187-89

  USS Atik and, 327-29

  Escort Carrier Group (CVE), 392-93

  first World War II loss of, 91-92

  first World War II shots fired by, 85

  Gulf Sea Frontier (GSF), 347-52, 384. 387, 388

  in-fighting among bureaucrats of, 160-61, 165

  Naval Academy, 186

  naval districts

  First, 175

  Third, 174, 177, 186, 344, 413

  Fourth, 177

  Fifth, 177, 334.380-81, 387

  Sixth, 177

  Seventh, 177, 347

  in neutrality period, 83-95 1941-1942

  confusion at, 166-67

  North Atlantic Naval Coastal Frontier, 171

  number of submarines “presumably” sunk by, 378

  Office of Naval Intelligence (ONI), 160-61, 170-71, 340

  Panama Sea Frontier, 347, 389

  pleasure craft requisitioned by, 176, 179, 180, 391

  Roosevelt’s criticism of, 179, 388

  Royal Navy compared to, 394

  secrecy policy on submarines by, 267-68, 275

  submarines sunk by destroyers of, 380-82, 384

  submarines sunk by planes of, 380, 384

  Tenth Fleet, 392

  War Plan 46, 93-94, 96

  wartime construction of ships for, 395

  Upshur, USS, 190, 448

  Urquart, Lehman, 256-57

  Varanger (ship), 271

  Venore (ship), 270-71

  Verbonic, Stephen, 247

  Videlte, HMS, 272, 417

  Vogelsang, Ernst, 430

  Vonderscnen, Johannes (“Hannes”), 4-5

  on Dec. 1941-Jan. 1942 cruise, 116, 129, 200, 224, 286, 287

  on Mar-May 1942 cruise, 312, 314-15

  Vornosoff, Boris A., 245

  Wainwright. USS, 190, 238, 448

  Wake (U.S. gunboat), 166

  Wake Island, 222

  Wälder (radioman), 117

  Wanderer, HMS, 39

  Washington, D.C., 1941-1942

  chaos in, 166-67

  Washington, USS, 269

  Wasp, USS, 448

  Wave (ship). See: Eagle, USS Weather ships, 329-30

  Weeks, Robert H., 443

  Wellington bomber, 394

  West, Rebecca, 416

  West Ivis (ship), 271

  West Virginia, USS, 390, 446

  Westover Field (Massachusetts), 183

  Wetjen, Eberhard, 34, 36-39

  Wheeler, Burton K., 93

  Whitehorn, Ivan Walter, 56-57, 59, 61

  Whitman, Walt, 465

  Wichita. USS, 88

  Wilkinson. Theodore S (“Ping”), 161, 170, 443

  Wilson, Woodrow, 386

  Winn, Rodger. 154-60, 172, 200-203, 211, 241, 298, 307, 340-42, 348-49, 393.416

  Wireless telegraph. See also Ciphers

  British interception of German, 149-50

  British triangulation by means of, 149-50

  German submarines’ convoy reports by, 46,49, 51, 58, 68,89

  oscillographic operator signature in, 149

  Witte, Helmut, 405

  Wohlstetter, Roberta, 411

  Wolf, Robert, 384

  Wolf packs. See Submarine wolf packs Women’s Roval Naval Service (WRNS), 149-50, 152-53, 156

  Y Service, 149, 164, 211

  YPs (Coast Guard patrol craft; “Yippies”), 349, 364

  “Z” messages, 153, 156, 159

  Z Plan, 75

  Zapp, Richard, 66-67, 199, 201, 212, 243-48, 253, 269-71, 296,417.433

  Zeigler. Miles (“Zig”), 363-64

  Acknowledgments

  I am indebted to many people for assistance in uncovering the documents, maps, decrypted wireless signals, and other research materials that made this book possib
le, principal among them Reinhard Hardegen, whose sharp and thorough recollections of events brought U-123 to life during extensive interviews conducted at his home in Bremen, Germany, in May 1985 and December 1986. No historian is insensible of the good fortune that comes to one who can relive a major historical event through one of its principal protagonists. To him and to Frau Hardegen I express my sincere gratitude for their hospitality and numerous courtesies. Special thanks is owed as well to those other surviving members of the U-123 complement of officers and crew who recounted their experiences in interviews conducted at a reunion in Bad König/Odenwald, Germany in November 1985: Richard Amstein, Heinz Barth, Karl Fröbel, Max Hufnagl, Walter Kaeding, Karl Latislaus, Rudolf Meisinger, Fritz Rafalski, Horst von Schroeter, and Hans Seigel. Their recollections add a different perspective and human interest to the present narrative. I was privileged to conduct a more extended interview with radio operator Fritz Rafalski at his home in Bonn, Germany, in December 1986. Also valuable, particularly for Reinhard Hardegen’s expressed feelings in the year of Paukenschlag, is a propaganda document that, on the orders of superiors, he dictated to stenographers at the conclusion of his two American patrols. Published in the following year as ”Auf Gefechtssta- tionen!” {Battle Stations!) for morale and recruiting purposes, this account is useful for life data, personal thoughts, housekeeping details, and verbatim language.1 It is not reliable for operational data, as Hardegen himself cautions, since he was required to disguise U-boat identifications, nautical positions, and most target names; to describe certain events out of sequence; and to keep attack details to a minimum. The document must be checked against the more exact and thorough record of events maintained in Hardegen’s contemporaneous VS-123 war diaries, for copies of which I am indebted to Archivdirektor Hansjoseph Maierhöfer, of the Bundesarchiv/Militärchiv (Federal/Military Archive) in Freiburg, Germany, who not only provided access to the original diaries but also made available to me map tracings from Hardegen’s navigator. The war diary (Kriegstagebuch) for each of Hardegen’s patrols is abbreviated in the present text as KTB.

  The staff of the Militärgeschichtliches Forschungsamt (Military History Research Office), also in Freiburg, was helpful in searching out maps used by the Kriegsmarine and Luftwaffe (Air Force). Research in the Freiburg holdings was greatly facilitated by the writer’s friend Hugo Ott, o.Professor der Wirtschafts- und Sozialgeschichte (Professor [Ordinarius] of Economic and Social History) at the University of Freiburg in Breisgau. At the Bibliothek für Zeitgeschichte (Library of Contemporary History) in Stuttgart the distinguished naval historian Jürgen Rohwer provided me with numerous important documents, including the Schussmeldungen (shooting reports) for the torpedo or gun actions of U-/23 and the other Paukenschlag boats. A rich deposit of U-boat materials is preserved at the Traditionsarchiv Unterseeboote at Westerland on the North Sea island of Sylt, where founder and director Horst Bredow generously made available many of the photographs that accompany this book. Especially helpful, and over a long period of time, have been Timothy P. Mulligan, of the Modern Military Headquarters Branch, Military Archives Division, of the National Archives and Records Service, Washington, D.C., and Michael Walker, of the Operational Archives Branch, Naval Historical Center, Washington Navy Yard. Without their archival resources and personal assistance this history could not have been written.

 

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