Misplaced Pages

Wolfpack Weddigen

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
German submarine warfare unit

Weddigen was a wolfpack of German U-boats that operated during the battle of the Atlantic in World War II.

Service history

Weddigen was formed in November 1943 off the coast of Portugal, to intercept convoys sailing to and from Gibraltar, Mediterranean and South Atlantic. It was composed of U-boats from the disbanded patrol group Schill, with reinforcements from the North Atlantic and from bases in occupied France.

Weddigen originally numbered seventeen U-boats, though two had been destroyed in recent actions, and two others had to withdraw with damage. On 22 November the thirteen U-boats remaining formed a patrol line west of Portugal to await warning of an Allied convoy.

On 23 November one of the Weddigen boats, U-648, fell in with the frigate HMS Blackwood, of 4th Escort Group accompanying KMS 30 and was destroyed. On 25 November U-600 also fell in with KMS 30, and was attacked by Blackwood and Bazely, and destroyed.

On 27 November the Weddigen boats intercepted Convoy SL 140/MKS 31, and attacked it over the next five days, though without success. On 29 November U-86 was destroyed by aircraft from the carrier USS Bogue, while on 28th U-238 and U-764 had been attacked and damaged, also by aircraft from Bogue.

On 7 December Weddigen was disbanded, a number of U-boats returning to base, while others formed a cadre of a new patrol group, code-named Borkum.

U-boats involved

Wolfpack Weddigen
Name Flag Commander Class Notes
U-86  Kriegsmarine Walter Schug Type VIIC submarine Sunk 29 November 1943
U-107  Kriegsmarine Volker Simmermacher Type IXB submarine
U-228  Kriegsmarine Herbert Engel Type VIIC submarine
U-238  Kriegsmarine Horst Hepp Type VIIC submarine
U-262  Kriegsmarine Heinz Franke Type VIIC submarine
U-358  Kriegsmarine Rolf Manke Type VIIC submarine
U-391  Kriegsmarine Gert Dültgen Type VIIC submarine
U-424  Kriegsmarine Günter Lüders Type VIIC submarine
U-542  Kriegsmarine Christian-Brandt Coester Type IXC submarine sunk 28 November 1943
U-586  Kriegsmarine Hans Götze Type VIIC submarine
U-600  Kriegsmarine Bernhard Zurmühlen Type VIIC submarine sunk 25 November 1943
U-618  Kriegsmarine Erich Faust Type VIIC submarine
U-648  Kriegsmarine Peter-Arthur Stahl Type VIIC submarine sunk 23 November 1943
U-714  Kriegsmarine Hans-Joachim Schwebcke Type VIIC submarine
U-764  Kriegsmarine Hanskurt von Bremen Type VIIC submarine
U-843  Kriegsmarine Oskar Herwartz Type IXC/40 submarine
U-969  Kriegsmarine Max Dobbert Type VIIC submarine

The name

Weddigen was named for Otto Weddigen, German World War I U-boat ace.

Notes

  1. Kemp 1997 p.159
  2. Kemp 1997 p. 160

References

  • Kemp, Paul (1997). U-Boats Destroyed, German submarine losses in the World Wars. Arms and Armour. ISBN 1-85409-515-3.
  • Showell, Jak P. M. (2002). U-Boat Warfare: The Evolution of the Wolf-Pack. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-7110-2887-7.

External links

Helgason, Guðmundur. "Weddigen". German U-boats of WWII - uboat.net.

Categories: