U-BOAT SINKING / H.M.S. SATYR/NORTH SEA

"The only thing that ever really frightened me during the war was the U Boat
peril"
Winston Churchill
JUNE 1940
Battle of the Atlantic -
The Allied loss
of Norway brings German warships and U-boats many hundreds of miles closer
to the Atlantic convoy routes and in time within close range of the Russian
convoys that follow the June 1941 German invasion. Britain's blockade line
from the Orkneys to southern Norway is simply outflanked and a new one has
to be established between the Shetlands and Iceland. The Royal Navy starts
the massive task of laying a mine barrage along this line. Within a matter
of days the first U-boats are sailing from the Norwegian port of Bergen,
while others are sent to patrol as far south as the Canary and Cape Verde
Islands off northwest Africa.


click on small picture to enlarge
A fine Second
World War Òsub-on-subÓ D.S.M. group of seven awarded to Petty Officer Samuel
Patterson, Royal Navy
Distinguished Service Medal, G.VI.R. (A./P.O. S. Patterson, D/JX. 145012);
1939-45 Star; Atlantic Star, clasp, France and Germany; Africa Star, clasp,
North Africa 1942-43; Pacific Star; War Medal 1939-45; Imperial Service Medal,
E.II.R. (Samuel Patterson), together with a SubmarinerÕs badge and a set of
related miniature dress medals (excluding the I.S.M.); and related full-size
group of three to William Patterson, comprising Defence and War Medals, and
Imperial Service Medal, E.II.R., these mounted as worn, the first with an edge
bruise, otherwise generally good very fine and better
D.S.M. London Gazette 15 August 1944. The original recommendation states:
ÔPetty Officer Patterson is the Torpedo GunnerÕs Mate of Satyr but has only been
in the boat for a few months. He has been responsible for the good running of
the torpedoes recently fired in Satyr. He is an efficient and responsible rating
and has carried out his duties to my entire satisfaction.Õ
The Rear-Admiral (Submarines) covering remarks state:
ÔFully concur. The importance of the efficiency of the torpedo department in a
submarine cannot be over-emphasised, and this rating has contributed a great
deal to the successes achieved by the efficiency with which the torpedoes have
been maintained.Õ
Samuel Patterson, a native of Belfast, was decorated for his services in H.M.
Submarine Satyr on the occasion of the destruction of the U-987 off Narvik on 15
June 1944 (SeedieÕs refers). The Satyr, commanded by Lieutenant T. S. Weston,
D.S.C., R.N., had already completed seven operational patrols off Norway prior
to this classic Òsub-on-subÓ encounter, when she fired a full bow salvo of six
torpedoes, two of which found their mark. There were no German survivors - the
U-987Õs captain was 28 year old Hilmar Karl Schreyer, one time an enlisted
Quarter-Master on Gunther KrechÕs highly successful U-558. The following
narrative of the action formed part of the subsequent recommendation process for
Honours and Awards:
ÔH.M. Submarine Satyr was on patrol in an area North of the Faroe Islands on 15
June 1944 when a U-Boat was sighted in poor visibility and an attack started;
but, observing that the range was opening, Lieutenant T. S. Weston, R.N., the
Commanding Officer, decided to surface and endeavour to close. On surfacing the
visibility cleared and it was obviously hopeless to continue the chase without
being observed. Lieutenant Weston rightly appreciated that the U-Boat was on
passage and that others might pass close enough for attack.
At 1907 another U-Boat was sighted at some four miles, being astern of Satyr at
the time of sighting, the latter being on the U-BoatÕs port bow. Whilst Satyr
was turning to attack the U-Boat altered course away, necessitating a further
alteration of course and a burst of speed to decrease the range. Lieutenant
Weston decided to anticipate any further zigs on the part of the enemy by firing
as soon as practicable and eight minutes after the original sighting a salvo of
six torpedoes was fired.
As the fifth torpedo left the tube the enemy was observed to be altering course
and Lieutenant Weston withheld firing his last torpedo for a few seconds. Two
torpedoes exploded prematurely but 25 seconds later two torpedoes were seen to
hit the target, one just abaft the bow and the other below the conning tower,
and the U-Boat appeared to break in half. There was sufficient time before she
sank for several persons to see the bows sticking out of the water, through
SatyrÕs periscope.
This well executed attack carried out in a short period on a zigzagging target
certainly resulted in the destruction of a German U-Boat and is in accordance
with the general efficiency now expected of H.M. Submarine Satyr under the able
command of Lieutenant Weston.Õ
He was duly awarded the D.S.O., his Number One the D.S.C. and four crew members,
including Patterson, the D.S.M. Four other ratings were mentioned in despatches.
Sold with original Buckingham Palace forwarding letter for the D.S.M., in the
name of ÔPetty Officer S. Patterson, D.S.M.Õ
H.M.S. SATYR
| |
P 214 |
| Built by: |
Scotts Shipbuilding &
Engineering Co. (Greenock, Scotland) |
| Ordered: |
|
| Laid down: |
8 Jun, 1940 |
| Launched: |
28 Sep, 1942 |
| Commissioned: |
8 Feb, 1943 |
| End service: |
|
| |
| History: |
During 1944-1945 HMS
Satyr was disarmed, streamlined and given more powerful batteries to
serve as a high speed target submarine.
Loaned to the French
Navy and served as Saphir from February 1952 until returned in August
1961. Sold to be broken up for scrap on 4 April 1962. Scrapped in June
1962 |
| |
640 / 927 BRT |
| Length |
202.5 feet |
| Complement |
4 officers + 29 men
men |
| Armament |
1 3" gun
1 MG AA
6 21" torpedo tubes
12 torpedoes |
| Max speed |
13.75 / 10 knots
(surfaced/submerged) |
| Engines |
Diesel / electric, 2
shafts |
| Power |
1550 / 1300 HP
(surfaced/submerged) |
| Notes on class |
The S class was a
medium sized patrol submarine, designed with the proposed international
restriction of 600 tons displacement in mind. Intended for use in north
European or Mediterranean waters, they were highly manoeuvrable and fast
diving with a heavy armament of torpedoes. This allowed large salvoes to
be fired from long range in an effort to counter the improved A/S
techniques.
This proved to be a very
successful design that was put back into production during the war, 62
boats of this class being built. Some boats were partially welded and
the later ones fully welded construction, improving the strength of the
pressure hull and consequently increasing their diving depth.
The specifications as
given above is for the first group.
Further specifications
on the later groups; 2nd Group;
Same as the first group except;
Displacement: 670 / 960 BRT
Complement: 4 officers + 35 men.
Lenght: 208.75 feet
Sunfish had more powerful diesel engines 1900 HP instead of 1550 HP.
Therefore her surface speed was 15 knots.
3th Group;
Same as the first group except;
Displacement: 715 / 990 BRT
Complement: 6 officers + 42 men.
Lenght: 217 feet
Armament:
1 3\" gun
3 MG AA
7 21\" torpedo tubes (6 bow, 1 external stern)
13 torpedoes
Speed: 14.75 / 9 knots
Power: 1900 / 1300 HP
4th Group;
Same as the first group except;
Displacement: 715 / 990 BRT
Complement: 6 officers + 42 men.
Lenght: 217 feet
Armament:
1 3\" gun
3 MG AA
6 21\" torpedo tubes (6 bow)
12 torpedoes
Speed: 14.75 / 9 knots
Power: 1900 / 1300 HP
The fouth group was actually the same as the third group but without the
external stern torpedo tube. Although some early units of this group
were fitted with the external stern tube.
Some ships in the third
or fourth group carried a 4\" gun istead of a 3\" gun. |
Numerous wartime documents
reveal that the British, and especially Rodger Winn, discouraged the Americans
from overtly using special intelligence to coordinate hunter-killer attacks
against U-tankers and U-boats, such as in the capture of U-505. Like many
of his superiors at the Admiralty, Winn worried that the Germans might realize
that their codes and ciphers were compromised.
Throughout World War II,
German naval leaders used radio communications extensively to maintain constant
contact with the forces at sea. As a result, Allied radio intercept stations had
almost constant access to the flow of signals being transmitted between U-boats
and shore-based headquarters. At far left, a signalsman monitors the "Afrika II"
Communication Circuit in the main radio transmitting and receiving center in the
Commander of U-Boats headquarters near Lorient in occupied France.
Photo of H.M.S. Satyr shows here a typical
war time deck gun arrangement for class. In the Mediterranean and later in the
Far East many targets were too small to use torpedoes on. This is where the 3Ó
gun came into it own, Carricks, schooners, junks and other small coasters could
be dealt with efficiently. The 20mm Oerlikon was for the ever increasing menace
of surprise attack by aircraft. The device on the casing aft of the conning
tower is a D F aerial
Captain:
Hilmar-Karl Schreyer
Born on 28 Aug, 1914 in
Manebach, ThŸringen.
Oberleutnant zur See (1 Apr, 1943)
Died on 15 Jun, 1944, Norwegian Sea.

Original German Submarine
Badge |

Oblt. Hilmar-Karl
Schreyer |
Type |
VIIC |
|
| Laid
down |
2 Oct,
1942 |
Blohm &
Voss, Hamburg |
| Commissioned |
8 Jul, 1943 |
Oblt. Hilmar-Karl
Schreyer |
| Commanders |
| 8 Jul, 1943 - 15 Jun, 1944 |
Oblt. Hilmar-Karl Schreyer |
|
| Career |
1
patrol |
8 Jul,
1943 - 29 Feb, 1944 5,
Flottile (training)
1 Mar, 1944 - 31 May, 1944 1,
Flottile
(front boat)
1 Jun, 1944 - 15 Jun, 1944 11,
Flottile (front boat)
|
| Successes |
No ships sunk or
damaged |
| Fate |
Sunk 15 June, 1944 in
the North Sea west of Narvik, in position 68.01N, 05.08W by
torpedoes from the British submarine H.M.S. SATYR. 53 dead
(all hands lost). |

Enigma and
Ultra- the Cypher War
It would not be until
some thirty years after the end of World War II and the Battle of the
Atlantic that details of the vital role played by Allied code-breakers began
to be revealed.
Whilst many German military and naval communications were transmitted by
normal media such as wireless and telephone, many of the messages of most
vital importance were exchanged in code by means of the so-called "Enigma"
machines.
The German "Enigma" machine was initially developed after World War I as a
commercial encrypting device, but the military were quick to recognise its
value, and developed it for their own uses. In basic terms, the "Enigma"
resembled a typewriter, which scrambled the text typed into it by means of
notched wheels or rotors. The messages could be unscrambled by a similar
machine with its rotors adjusted to the same settings as the sender. German
cypher experts refined the basic machine by adding plugs with variable
electronic circuits, whose settings operators changed approximately every 24
hours, according to code books, listing the daily variations, with which
they were issued.
With millions of possible code variations, the German High Command remained
convinced until the end of the war that "Enigma" was unbreakable, and
indeed, with the limited technology then available to Allied code-breakers,
this confidence might have have been well-placed, had it not been for a
series of mistakes committed by the Germans themselves.
The first "leak" came in 1931, when a German Defence Ministry official, Hans
Thilo Schmidt, sold some manuals to French Intelligence. Neither Britain nor
France recognised the significance of the material which Schmidt continued
to sell them, and such progress as there was in the inter-war years in
breaking "Enigma" was largely the work of the Polish Intelligence services,
which had obtained an "Enigma" machine in 1929. They developed a type of
primitive computer, known as a "Bomby", which had some limited success in
deciphering "Enigma", although German refinements, such as the addition of
extra rotors, prevented any major breakthrough.
In July 1939, as war approached, the Poles revealed their successes to
British and French intelligence, and gave them replica Enigma machines.
Britain and France largely worked independently in attempting to pierce the
secret of Enigma, and with France's defeat, the main burden fell on Britain.
The Battle of the Cyphers
During World War I Britain's code-breakers had known as ID 25 or more
popularly, "Room 40". In 1920 they became part of the Secret Intelligence
Service, and a few days before the outbreak of World War II changed their
title from the Code and Cypher School to Government Communications Head
Quarters. They were based at a large country house, Bletchley Park, whose
extensive grounds provided space for the vast collection of huts erected to
house a workforce which would eventually number several thousand.
A concerted drive was made to enlist the services of leading mathematicians
from British universities, and, thanks largely to the pre-war work of the
Poles, the Enigma codes used by the Luftwaffe were fairly quickly and
comprehensively broken, as were some of those employed by the Wehrmacht.
Those used by the Kriegsmarine, however, proved a much tougher proposition.
Thanks to the refined "bombes" developed by the brilliant mathematician Alan
Turing, the first complete "Enigma" message was deciphered in January 1940,
and by April some messages were being read within 24 hours of despatch. The
intelligence data provided by these and other means were given the codename
"Ultra". The first significant breakthrough in reading the Naval Enigma came
in February 1940, when, after U-33 was sunk off the Scottish coast, three
rotor wheels found in the possession of survivors gave Bletchley a partial
insight into the Naval Code. More captured enemy material was needed to
progress any further, and this was provided in April 1940, when some
"Enigma" documents were found on board the German armed trawler, "Polaris",
taken off Norway. This enabled Bletchley to make its first, brief, reading
of the Naval code, and provided Turing with material to work towards a more
comprehensive breakthrough. Unfortunately, by the time that he made any real
progress, new codes had been introduced, rendering messages once more
unreadable.
The introduction by Donitz, from late 1940 onwards, of "wolf-pack" tactics,
gave the "Enigma" codes still greater importance. In order to rendezvous
U-boats had to signal their positions to Donitz's operations room. If these
messages could be deciphered, it would be possible to divert convoys away
from known ambushes. But it was becoming clear that little progress could be
made without further captures of enemy material, itself a hazardous
procedure, for if the Germans became aware that "Enigma" material had fallen
into enemy hands, their whole cypher system might be changed.
On March 4th 1941, during a Commando raid on the Lofoten Islands off Norway,
the Royal Navy captured the German trawler "Krebs", along with two "Enigma"
machines and the current settings for use in home waters. This allowed
another partial breakthrough, allowing some messages to be read. Donitz,
whilst concerned by increased British naval successes, was assured by his
cypher experts that "Enigma" was unbreakable, and tended to suspect that the
problem was due to increasingly effective tracking by means of HF/DF
signals.
It was in the spring of 1941 that Britain made an important breakthrough in
the battle for "Enigma". Harry Hinsley, one of the Bletchley code
breakers,
realised that the network of German weather and supply ships currently
operating in the Atlantic, would carry code information. The problem lay in
capturing some of these without betraying to the enemy exactly what was
going on. On May 7th, in a highly secret operation, Royal Navy ships
intercepted and captured the weather ship "Munchen", seizing the code books
to be used in June. Two days later, in one of the most dramatic episodes of
the war at sea, depth charges fired by British destroyers forced to the
surface U-110, whose commander, Lemp, had sunk the liner "Athenia" on the
opening day of the war. Believing his vessel to be sinking, Lemp failed to
destroy either his "Enigma" machine or its codes. Whilst sailors opened up
on the U-boat crew with rifles and machine guns to panic them, and prevent
any returning below deck, HMS "Bulldog" closed in and boarded U-110. Both
machine and codes were seized. Lemp was not among the survivors of the
U-boat crew, and once again the extent of their success remained a carefully
guarded British secret.
The capture of U-110 was not in fact as decisive as sometimes claimed, but
it provided useful additional information which would eventually be of
considerable help in the breaking of "Enigma". More significant, in fact,
was the capture next month of the German weather ship "Lauenberg", with the
keys for June and July. This would enable Bletchley to break the German Home
Waters code virtually until the end of the war, normally within 50 hours of
transmission.
Once again the problem lay in how to make use of the information provided by
the code breakers without arousing enemy suspicion. This almost happened
during the comprehensive elimination of the German surface supply and
weather ship network, which was intended to be a gradual process, but went
rather too quickly when the Royal Navy stumbled across two enemy vessels by
accident.
From the second half of 1941 onwards, information from "Enigma" was one of
the key factors enabling the Royal Navy to divert convoys away from waiting
wolf packs. Decoded messages went initially to the Royal Navy section at
Bletchley Park, then, if relevant, were passed on to Submarine Tracking Room
in the Admiralty and later to the HQ Western Approaches, in Liverpool. The
German practice of changing their rotor settings every day or two meant that
messages were often at least several days old when deciphered. Before
sending them on, analysts would add notes on any significant content, such
as the identities of persons mentioned. The gist of the information
contained in the signals, carefully edited to conceal its source, was passed
on to operational commanders, only a very few of the most senior of whom
were let even partially into the secret of "Enigma".
The "Enigma" material, known as "Ultra", was, of course, combined with
intelligence from a wide variety of other sources, including HF/DF and
wireless intercepts and reconnaissance reports, into a body of information
known collectively as "SIGINT".
The effect of the improved flow of intelligence information was apparent
during the second half of 1941. Increasing numbers of convoys were being
diverted away from waiting U-boats. In July, for example, not a single
convoy was sighted by the Germans over a period of three weeks, and during
July and August monthly sinkings went below 100,000 tons, the lowest for
over a year.
Not all of this improvement could be put down to Ultra and SIGINT. Among
other factors involved were the diversion of U-boats to the Mediterranean
and Arctic, and increasingly effective Allied air patrols. It was also
fortunate in the long term, if the Germans were to remain ignorant of Allied
success in breaking "Enigma", that inability fully to understand a newly
introduced code meant that not all merchant shipping could avoid U-boat
ambush.
Even as it was, Donitz had recurring suspicions about the security of
"Enigma", as, for example, when the U-570 was captured, and it seemed likely
that some codes might have been taken. However German naval analysts
eventually decided that only one codebook had been captured, providing
insufficient material with which to penetrate "Enigma". His cypher experts
assured Donitz that the Naval Enigma was "one of the most secure systems for
enciphering messages in the world." Even so, the Royal Navy faced the
constant dilemma of how much advantage to take of their knowledge without
the risk of revealing their source to the enemy. Though every effort was
made both to limit the circulation of information, and to disguise its
origins, there were times that the breaking of "Enigma" came dangerously
close to discovery.
Throughout the war there would be occasional breaks in the flow of
information, when the Germans changed some of the cyphers, but these were
usually solved either by the increasingly sophisticated "bombes", by the
growing experience of the cryptologists, or by further captures of enemy
material. Even so, such breaks could cause serious problems; one such
temporary inability to decipher enemy signals played an important part in
the heavy losses suffered by Arctic convoy PQ17.
A major crisis began on February 1st 1942, when a new rotor was added to the
machines used on the Atlantic U-boat network. Known to the Germans as
"Triton", and to the Allies, with sinister aptness, as "Shark", this
additional refinement allowed 26 times as many different code combinations.
The introduction of the new rotor coincided with greatly increased shipping
losses due to the German "Happy Time" following the entry into the war of
the United States. Though dire in other respects, the slaughter which the
U-boats were making along the eastern seaboard of the USA at least prevented
German Naval Command from linking their increased success to the refinement
of "Enigma".
The British Admiralty had always been reluctant to share "Enigma" derived
information with the USA, mainly, it appears, because of fears of security
breaches. But in the current crisis, it was recognized that potentially much
greater US resources, in for example, the construction of "bombes", would be
invaluable. However no US "bombes" would be online before May 1943, and in
the meantime the level of sinkings threatened to become unbearable.
Once again the situation was saved by captures from the enemy. In October
1942, the British destroyer HMS "Petard" commanded by the slightly crazy
Commander Mark Thornton, depth-charged to the surface U-559, and, although
two British seamen were lost when the U-boat sank, captured the latest code
books. These provided invaluable aid in penetrating "Shark", aided as on
previous occasions, by German carelessness and lapses in security.
A further break in deciphering occurred in the spring of 1943, but in March,
again in the nick of time, more captured codes enabled "Shark" to be broken
again. The crisis of the Battle of the Atlantic came in May. By then,
although reading "Enigma" messages remained important, the greatly increased
numbers of sea and air convoy escorts, with better detection equipment, were
playing an increasingly predominant role in the defeat of the U-boats.
Though there would be other short breaks in the ability to decipher the
Naval "Enigma", by now the worst of the U-boat threat was over. None of the
interruptions lasted for long. One such difficulty was resolved on June 4th,
1944, when the USS "Pittsburg" captured and boarded the U-505, taking her
code books. Unlike some previous occasions, the U-boat crew were aware of
the failure to destroy "Enigma" material, and as a result they were denied
access to the International Red cross, or any contact with their families.
Kept in isolation in the US, they were not released until 1947. Ironically
the commander of the Us naval task group involved was almost court-martialled
by Admiral Ernest King, who feared, groundlessly as it proved, that the
failure to sink the U-505 might have alerted the Germans to the breaking of
"Enigma" on the eve of D-Day.
By the time of the D-Day landings, the Naval "Enigma" was being broken
almost instantly by the improved knowledge of the codes and the greater
number of "bombes" available in the UK and USA. Only in the very last days
of the war did the Germans introduce another code variation which threatened
Allied supremacy in this field, and by then it no longer mattered.
Britain had 54
serviceable submarines at the outbreak of WWII, including 12 H and L class boats
which were of 1914-1918 vintage and of riveted construction. The H class boats
were used operationally in 1940 but were withdrawn soon afterwards, following
two early losses in the Bay of Biscay. An emergency submarine building programme
was instigated and 164 boats were contructed in UK yards during the war.
British Royal Navy submarines were responsible for sinking 15 U Boats, 3
Japanese submarines and 17 Italian submarines. Six battleships were sunk,
sixteen destroyers and 119 smaller vessels. In addition, 493 merchantmen were
destroyed of about 1,800,400 gross registered tonnage. Total tonnage of all
ships accounted for by H. M. Submarines was probably in the region of 16,000,000
grt.
Britain's war at sea and use of the submarine was substantially different in
strategy from the U Boat offensive. The Royal Navy sought to protect the trade
and raw material import routes and to clear the seas of hostile warships. This
strategy was eventually successful and led to freedom of the seas in the run up
to the Operation Overlord.
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