German submarine U-238
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates
Template:Infobox ship imageTemplate:Infobox ship careerTemplate:Infobox ship characteristicsTemplate:Infobox service recordGerman submarine U-238 was a Type VIIC U-boat of Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine built for service in the Second World War. She was laid down on 21 April 1942, by Germaniawerft of Kiel as yard number 668, launched on 7 January 1943 and commissioned on 20 February, with Oberleutnant zur See Horst Hepp in command. Hepp commanded her for her entire career, receiving promotion to Kapitänleutnant in the process.
Design
[edit]German Type VIIC submarines were preceded by the shorter Type VIIB submarines. U-238 had a displacement of Template:Convert when at the surface and Template:Convert while submerged.Template:Sfn She had a total length of Template:Convert, a pressure hull length of Template:Convert, a beam of Template:Convert, a height of Template:Convert, and a draught of Template:Convert. The submarine was powered by two Germaniawerft F46 four-stroke, six-cylinder supercharged diesel engines producing a total of Template:Convert for use while surfaced, two AEG GU 460/8–27 double-acting electric motors producing a total of Template:Convert for use while submerged. She had two shafts and two Template:Convert propellers. The boat was capable of operating at depths of up to Template:Convert.Template:Sfn
The submarine had a maximum surface speed of Template:Convert and a maximum submerged speed of Template:Convert.Template:Sfn When submerged, the boat could operate for Template:Convert at Template:Convert; when surfaced, she could travel Template:Convert at Template:Convert. U-238 was fitted with five Template:Convert torpedo tubes (four fitted at the bow and one at the stern), fourteen torpedoes, one [[8.8 cm SK C/35 naval gun|Template:Convert SK C/35 naval gun]], 220 rounds, and two twin [[2 cm FlaK 30|Template:Convert C/30]] anti-aircraft guns. The boat had a complement of between forty-four and sixty.Template:Sfn
Service history
[edit]U-238 was a member of four wolfpacks; she was a successful, if short lived boat, sinking four freighters and damaging another during her operations against Allied convoys in the Battle of the Atlantic. She had the misfortune, however, of serving at the turning point of the war, when Allied countermeasures were taking a heavy toll on the U-boat force. She conducted three war patrols, beginning in September 1943, following her warm-up trials in the Baltic Sea.
War Patrols
[edit]U-238Template:'s first patrol was conducted from Trondheim in Norway as part of the 1st U-boat Flotilla, and entailed the submarine exiting the North Sea via the Denmark Strait and operating against Allied shipping in the so-called "air cover gap" in the Central Atlantic, where Allied aircraft had insufficient range, on account of fuel limitations, to effectively operate against German U-boats. This first patrol was by far the most successful, as on 20 September 1943, the boat attacked a large convoy, sinking one 7,176 GRT cargo ship and damaging another. This was followed by three more victims on 23 September, when two Norwegian ships and a British freighter were sunk from the same convoy.
U-238Template:'s second patrol was less successful. Two weeks after leaving Brest, on the French Atlantic coast, she was attacked by a Grumman TBF Avenger torpedo bomber from the escort carrier Template:USS, whose rockets killed two crew members and wounded five more, prompting the submarine to return to Brest with severe damage, which put her out of service for a month. It was during this patrol that the submarine captured two British Royal Air Force personnel whose Vickers Wellington bomber had been shot down by Template:GS.
U-238Template:'s third and last patrol began in January 1944, and lasted a fruitless month, until on 9 February, she was caught by convoy escorts of SL-147 and MKS-38 Template:Convert off Cape Clear. She counter-attacked, unsuccessfully, and was sunk by the sloops Template:HMS, Template:HMS and Template:HMS. There were no survivors.Template:Sfn
Wolfpacks
[edit]U-238 took part in four wolfpacks, namely:
- Leuthen (15 – 24 September 1943)
- Schill 2 (17 – 22 November 1943)
- Weddigen (22 November – 1 December 1943)
- Igel 2 (4 – 9 February 1944)
Summary of raiding history
[edit]Date | Ship Name | Nationality | Tonnage (GRT) |
Fate<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> |
---|---|---|---|---|
20 September 1943 | Frederick Douglass | Template:Flag | 7,176 | Damaged |
20 September 1943 | Theodore Dwight Weld | Template:Flag | 7,176 | Sunk |
23 September 1943 | Fort Jemseg | Template:Flag | 7,134 | Sunk |
23 September 1943 | Oregon Express | Template:Flag | 3,642 | Sunk |
23 September 1943 | Skjelbred | Template:Flag | 5,096 | Sunk |
References
[edit]Bibliography
[edit]- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
External links
[edit]Template:German Type VII submarines Template:February 1944 shipwrecks
- 1943 ships
- German Type VIIC submarines
- Maritime incidents in February 1944
- Ships built in Kiel
- Submarines lost with all hands
- U-boats commissioned in 1943
- U-boats sunk by British warships
- U-boats sunk by depth charges
- U-boats sunk in 1944
- World War II shipwrecks in the Atlantic Ocean
- World War II submarines of Germany