German submarine U-19 (1935)
History | |
---|---|
Nazi Germany | |
Name | U-19 |
Ordered | 2 February 1935 |
Builder | Germaniawerft, Kiel |
Yard number | 549 |
Laid down | 20 July 1935 |
Launched | 21 December 1935 |
Commissioned | 16 January 1936 |
Fate | Scuttled on 11 September 1944 off the coast of Turkey in the Black Sea[1] |
General characteristics | |
Type | IIB |
Displacement | list error: <br /> list (help) Surfaced 279 Tons Submerged 329 Tons |
Length | 42.7m (140.2Ft) |
Beam | 4.1m (13.5Ft) |
Speed | list error: <br /> list (help) Surfaced:13 Knots Submerged:7 Knots |
Endurance | list error: <br /> list (help) Surfaced 1,800 Miles at 12 Knots Submerged 43 Miles at 4 Knots |
Crew | 25 |
Armament | Three fore torpedo tubes with 6 x 21 inch Torpedos and 1 x 20mm AA gun on fore-deck |
Service record | |
Part of: |
list error: <br /> list (help) Kriegsmarine: 1st U-boat Flotilla 22nd U-boat Flotilla 24th U-boat Flotilla 30th U-boat Flotilla |
Identification codes: | M 23 036 |
Commanders: |
list error: <br /> list (help) Viktor Schütze Hans Meckel Wilhelm Müller-Arnecke Joachim Schepke Wilfried Prellberg Peter Lohmeyer Wolfgang Kaufmann Rudolf Schendel Gerhard Litterscheid Hans-Ludwig Gaude Willy Ohlenburg Hubert Verpoorten |
Operations: |
list error: <br /> list (help) 20; 1st patrol: 25 August–15 September 1939 2nd patrol: 27 September–1 October 1939 3rd patrol: 14–18 October 1939 4th patrol: 14–20 November 1939 5th patrol:4–12 January 1940 6th patrol: 18–28 January 1940 7th patrol: 14–26 February 1940 8th patrol: 14–23 March 1940 9th patrol: 3–23 April 1940 10th patrol: 21January–19 February 1943 11th patrol: 17–30 March 1943 12th patrol:14 April–4 May 1943 13th patrol: a. 10–11 June 1943 b. 16 June–7 July 1943 c. 8–10 July 1943 14th patrol: a. 25 July–16 August 1943 b. 18–24 August 1943 15th patrol: 11 November–2 December 1943 16th patrol: 22 December 1943–19 January 1944 17th patrol: 10 February–7 March 1944 18th patrol: 10 April–6 May 1944 19th patrol: 6–8 June 1944 20th patrol: a. 25 August–7 September 1944 b. 7–10 September 1944 |
Victories: |
list error: <br /> list (help) 14 ships sunk for a total of 35,430 GRT GRT uses unsupported parameter (help) one warship sunk of 441 tons |
German submarine U-19 was a Type IIB U-boat of the German Kriegsmarine during World War II. Her keel was laid down on 20 July 1935, at the Germaniawerft of Kiel. She was launched on 21 December 1935, and commissioned on 16 January 1936, under the command of Kapitänleutnant Viktor Schütze.
U-19 conducted 20 patrols, sinking 15 ships totalling 35,871 tons. On 1 May 1940, U-19 was withdrawn from combat duty and used for training and as a school boat. She returned to active duty in the 30th U-boat Flotilla on 1 May 1942, after having been transported overland and along the Danube to the Black Sea.
Operational history
1st, 2nd and 3rd patrols
U-19's first three patrols involved voyages between Wilhelmshaven and Kiel via the North Sea. She also carried out a series of short journeys, one of which took her to the English east coast near The Wash.
4th and 5th patrols
The boat sank the Carica Milica with a mine 3.5 mi (5.6 km) off the Shipwash Lightship, (southeast of Aldeburgh) on 18 November 1939.
U-19 departed Wilhelmshaven on 4 January 1940. On the 9th, she sank the Manx north of Kinnaird Head, near Fraserburgh in Scotland. She docked in Kiel on the 12th.
6th-9th patrols
More success came when the submarine sank the Battanglia on 23 January 1940 southeast of Farne Island and the Gudveig 4.5 mi (7.2 km) east of the Longstone Light vessel (north of Newcastle).
A steady stream of sinkings followed, including the Charkow on 19 March 1940 and the Bothal on the 20th.
The boat then moved to the Black Sea overland and along the Danube river.
10th patrol
She departed the Rumanian port of Konstanza[2] (where she was to be based for the rest of her career), on 21 January 1943. She was attacked by four unidentified aircraft off Gelendzhik on 13 February; damage was minimal.
11th and 12th patrols
This foray was cut short on 27 March 1943 because of problems with the starboard engine.
A crewman fell sick between Tuapse and Poti. He was transferred to the schnell-boot S-51 off Novorossiysk on 28 April 1943.[3]
13th patrol
This sortie was officially divided into three parts. Having left Konstanza on 10 June 1943, she returned on the 11th due to a defective exhaust valve, having first re-fuelled at Feodosia[disambiguation needed].
Part two was the longest, starting from Konstanza on 16 June and finishing in Feodosia on 7 July.
The third portion was little more than a movement exercise from Feodosia to Konstanza which only lasted two days.
14th patrol
Patrol number fourteen was also divided. The first segment was marred when a second sick crew member was transferred to U-20. U-19 put-in to Feodosia to re-supply.
The second part involved the boat as part of a patrol line, along with U-23 and U-24. This activity was cut short for U-19 because of problems with the periscope.
15th-19th patrols
These sorties covered most of the Black Sea but were relatively uneventful.
20th patrol
U-19 departed Konstanza on 25 August 1944. She sank the Soviet minesweeper BTSC-410 Vzrv (No 25) on 2 September. The communist regime cited this incident as the reason that the Rumanian fleet was seized. The commander was wounded in an accident on the 7th. The First Watch Officer (1WO) took over.
Fate
The boat was scuttled in the Black Sea off the coast of Turkey on 10 September 1944.[4] U-19 suffered no casualties to any of her crew.
On 3 February 2008, The Daily Telegraph newspaper reported that U-20 and U-23 had been discovered by Selçuk Kolay, a Turkish marine engineer. He thinks he is also close to pinpointing U-19, thought to lie more than 1,000 feet (300 m) down, three miles from the Turkish city of Zonguldak.[5]
Summary of raiding history
Date | Name | Nationality | Tonnage (GRT) |
Fate[6] |
---|---|---|---|---|
21 October 1939 | Capitaine Edmond Laborie | France | 3,087 | Sunk (mine) |
21 October 1939 | Deodata | Norway | 3,295 | Sunk (mine) |
24 October 1939 | Konstantinos Hadjiperas | Greece | 5,962 | Sunk (mine) |
18 November 1939 | Carica Milica | Yugoslavia | 6,371 | Sunk (mine) |
9 January 1940 | Manx | Norway | 1,343 | Sunk |
23 January 1940 | Battanglia | United Kingdom | 1,523 | Sunk |
23 January 1940 | Pluto | Denmark | 1,598 | Sunk |
25 January 1940 | Everene | Denmark | 4,434 | Sunk |
25 January 1940 | Gudveig | Denmark | 1,300 | Sunk |
19 March 1940 | Charkow | Denmark | 1,026 | Sunk |
19 March 1940 | Minsk | Denmark | 1,229 | Sunk |
20 March 1940 | Bothal | Denmark | 2,109 | Sunk |
20 March 1940 | Viking | Denmark | 1,153 | Sunk |
27 June 1944 | Barzha | Soviet Union | 1,000 | Sunk |
2 September 1944 | BTSC-410 Vzrv (No 25) | Soviet Union | 441 | Sunk |
References
- ^ Kemp, Paul: U-Boats Destroyed, German Submarine Losses in the World Wars, 1997. p. 217. Arms and Armour. ISBN 1-85409-515-3
- ^ The Times Atlas of the World - Third edition, revised 1995, ISBN 0 7230 0809 4, p. 21
- ^ The Times Atlas of the World, p.21
- ^ Kemp, p. 217.
- ^ Adolf Hitler's "Lost fleet" found in Black Sea, The Telegraph, Retrieved 2010-12-27
- ^ http://uboat.net/boats/successes/u19/html
External links
- "U-19". uboat.net. Retrieved 27 February 2007.
- "U-19". U-Boat Operations. Kriegsmarine and U-Boat history, ubootwaffe.net. Retrieved 27 February 2007.
- "U-19". u-boot-archiv.de. Kriegsmarine and U-Boat history, u-boot-archiv.de. Retrieved 27 February 2007.
See also
41°34′N 31°50′E / 41.567°N 31.833°E