Found 2 facts for "submarine"

★ 8/10 βš™οΈ Codebreakers & Technology

The German Submarine That Surrendered β€” Twice

U-977, commanded by Captain Heinz SchΓ€ffer, is famous for surrendering to Argentine authorities in 1945, claiming it had been at sea when Germany surrendered. But the more interesting story is U-530, commanded by Otto We...

Argentina Read →
★ 8/10 πŸ” Oddities & Forgotten Stories

The Horse That Became a U-boat Mascot

During World War II, the German submarine U-96 β€” made famous by the novel and film "Das Boot" β€” carried an unusual passenger: a goat named Heidi, adopted by the crew off the coast of occupied France in 1941. Heidi quickl...

Bay of Biscay / La Rochelle, France Read →

📝 Matching Personal Stories

Intelligence
US Navy WAVES Program, Radar Station Operator
WAVES Operator Dorothy M. — Cape Cod, Massachusetts — 1943-1945
They told us at boot camp: 'You're here because we need you, but nobody is going to admit it.' That was 1943. I was a radar operator at a station on Cape Cod β€” 14-hour shifts, seven days a week, watching a green screen for blips. We tracked German U-boats in the shipping lanes off Cape Cod. Yes, U-boats. In American waters. In 1944. Most people don't know that. I saw blips every week. We coordinated with the Coast Guard. On two occasions, the blips disappeared β€” probably because the subs heard our radio chatter and dove deep. We never sank a submarine. But I like to think we deterred them, jus...
Combat
German U-boat Crew, U-230
U-boat Survivor Karl-Heinz M. — Atlantic Ocean / Bordeaux — 1942-1945
I was 19 when I volunteered for the U-boat fleet in 1942. I thought it was my duty. I went through basic training in Bordeaux β€” the U-boat pens there were massive, underground, concrete cathedrals. I made four patrols. On my fourth, in April 1944, a British frigate dropped a pattern of depth charges that shook us so hard that three of our crew urinated involuntarily. We could hear the steel hull screaming. The order came: 'Dive to 280 meters.' Our maximum rated depth was 200. We went to 280. The boat held. We escaped. I later learned that 75% of U-boat crews were killed during the war β€” the hi...