Military Wiki
Advertisement
German submarine U-564
Career (Nazi Germany) War Ensign of Germany 1938-1945
Name: U-564
Ordered: 24 October 1939
Builder: Blohm + Voss, Hamburg
Laid down: 30 March 1940
Launched: 7 February 1941
Commissioned: 3 April 1941
Fate: Sunk on 14 June 1943[1]
General characteristics
Class & type: Type VIIC U-boat
Displacement: 769 tonnes (757 long tons) surfaced
871 t (857 long tons) submerged
Length: Overall 67.1 m (220 ft 2 in)
pressure hull 50.5 m (165 ft 8 in)
Beam: Overall 6.2 m (20 ft 4 in)
pressure hull 4.7 m (15 ft 5 in)
Draught: 4.74 m (15 ft 7 in)
Propulsion: Surfaced: two supercharged MAN, 6 cylinder, 4-stroke M6V 40/46 diesels totalling 2,800 - 3,200bhp(2,400 kW). Max rpm: 470-490.
Speed: Surfaced 17.7 knots (20.4 mph; 32.8 km/h)
submerged 7.6 knots (8.7 mph; 14.1 km/h)
Range: Surfaced: 8,190 nmi (15,170 km; 9,420 mi)
Submerged: 81 nmi (150 km; 93 mi)
Test depth: 230 m (754 ft). Calculated crush depth: 250-295 m (820-967 ft)
Complement: 44 to 52 officers and ratings
Armament:
  • 5 x 53.3 cm (21 in) Torpedo tubes: four bow, one stern (14 torpedoes or 26 TMA or 39 TMB mines)
  • 1 x C35 88 mm gun/L45 deck gun with 220 rounds
  • C30 20 mm flak guns

German submarine U-564 was a Type VIIC U-boat built for the Nazi German Kriegsmarine for service during the Second World War. The RAF sank her in the Bay of Biscay on 14 June 1943.

Construction and commissioning[]

She was ordered on 24 October 1939 and was laid down on 30 March 1940 at Blohm + Voss, Hamburg, as 'werk 540'. She was launched on 7 February 1941 and commissioned under her first commander Oberleutnant Reinhard Suhren on 3 April of that year. Suhren commanded her for her work-up with the 1st U-boat Flotilla between 3 April and 1 June 1941. She then became a front (operational) boat of the 1st U-boat Flotilla, and set out on her first patrols.[2]

Operational career[]

Early patrols[]

Her first patrol took U-564 from Kiel to Brest in occupied France, spending a total of 41 days at sea. The patrol brought a number of successes; on 27 June Suhren came across convoy HX-133. He damaged the Norwegian tanker MV Kongsgaard and sank the Dutch SS Maasdam and the British MV Malaya II that day. He had one further success on that patrol, sinking the Icelandic merchantman SS Hekla on 29 June. U-564 put in to Brest on 27 July, having sunk three merchant ships for 18,678 gross register tons (GRT), and damaged another for 9,467 tons.[2]

She sailed again from Brest on 16 August, heading into the Atlantic. She came across convoy OG-71 and sank the Irish SS Conlara and the British tug Empire Oak on 22 August. She sank an escort the following day, the HMS Zinnia. U-564 returned to Brest on 27 August after 12 days at sea, having sunk three ships for 2,587 GRT. She sailed again on 16 September, this time encountering convoy HG-75 on 24 October. She sank three British merchantmen that day, the SS Alhama, SS Ariosto and the SS Carsbreck.[2] U-564 was attacked later in the evening, by a bomb from an aircraft and later by an escort with depth charges. She escaped damage however, and returned to port at Lorient on 1 November having spent 47 days at sea and sunk three ships for 2,587 tons.[2]

U-564 relocated to La Pallice in early 1942, and sailed from there on 18 January. She sank the Canadian tanker MV Victolite 260 mi (420 km) northwest of Bermuda on 11 February and damaged the British tanker MV Opalia, although not severely, (her deck gun firing 83 rounds, but only scoring three hits), on 16 February, before returning to Brest on 6 March after 48 days on patrol with 11,410 GRT sunk and 619 GRT damaged.[2]

Off the American coast[]

U-564 sailed from Brest on 4 April 1942, to cross the Atlantic and prey on shipping off the North American coast, including Florida. She was in position in early May and on the 3rd secured her first success, sinking the British SS Ocean Venus. On the 4th she damaged the British SS Eclipse, and on 5 May she damaged the American SS Delisle. On the 8th she sank the American merchantman SS Ohian, the following day she sank the Panamanian tanker MV Lubrafol. Her final success in American waters was to sink the Mexican tanker SS Potrero del Llano. U-564 arrived back in Brest on 6 June, having spent 64 days at sea and sunk four ships for 24,390 GRT and damaged two ships for 13,245 GRT.[2]

U-564 repeated the exercise on her next patrol, departing Brest on 6 July to operate off the coast of South America. Whilst outward-bound across the Atlantic, Suhren came across convoy OS-34 and on 19 July sank the British merchant ships SS Empire Hawksbill and MV Lavington Court. Operating off the northern South America coast, he sank the SS British Consul and the SS Empire Cloud west of Grenada on 19 August and on the 30th, she sank the Norwegian tanker Vardaas north of Scarborough. U-564 arrived back in Brest on 18 September after 72 days on patrol, having sunk five ships for 32,181 GRT.[2]

Fiedler takes charge[]

This was Suhren's last patrol as commander of U-564. He left on 1 October to become an instructor, Oberleutnant Hans Fiedler took command.[2] He took the boat on two war patrols in 1943 but failed to hit any enemy ships. On one of these sorties events took a dramatic turn when the U-boat lost a crewman, Fähnrich zur See (Ensign) Heinrich Fuerhake. U-564 was transferred to operate out of Bordeaux in April 1943. She left the French port city for the final time on 9 June with four other outbound U-boats, U-185, U-358, U-634 and U-653.[2] A Royal Air Force Short Sunderland spotted the boats and attacked them off Cape Finisterre at 18.59 hours on 13 June. The aircraft targeted U-564 and dropped its bombs, but was shot down by anti-aircraft fire, killing all 11 of the crew. U-564 had sustained heavy damage and turned back, escorted by U-185.[2]

Sinking[]

An Armstrong Whitworth Whitley sighted the two U-boats in the Bay of Biscay the following day and shadowed them. U-564 was unable to dive due to the damage already sustained. By 16.45 hours the Whitley was running low on fuel and attacked U-564. The two U-boats damaged their attacker with anti-aircraft fire but the aircraft's depth charges fatally damaged U-564 and she sank at 17:30 hours. The damaged Whitley was forced to ditch, where a French trawler rescued the crew. There were 18 survivors from U-564 including the commander. U-185 picked them up and transferred them to the German destroyer Z24 two hours later.[2]

Raiding history[]

Date Name Nationality Tonnage
(GRT)
Fate
24 June 1941 Kongsgaard Flag of Norway Norway 9,467 Damaged
27 June 1941 Maasdam Flag of the Netherlands Netherlands 8,812 Sunk
27 June 1941 Malaya II Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom 8,651 Sunk
29 June 1941 Hekla Flag of Iceland Iceland 1,215 Sunk
22 August 1941 Clonlara Flag of Ireland Ireland 1,203 Sunk
22 August 1941 Empire Oak Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom 484 Sunk
22 August 1941 HMS Zinnia Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom 900 Sunk
24 October 1941 Alhama Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom 1,352 Sunk
24 October 1941 Ariosto Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom 2,176 Sunk
24 October 1941 Carsbreck Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom 3,670 Sunk
11 February 1942 Victolite Flag of Canada Canada 11,410 Sunk
16 February 1942 Opalia Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom 6,195 Damaged
3 May 1942 Ocean Venus Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom 7,174 Sunk
4 May 1942 Eclipse Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom 9,767 Damaged
5 May 1942 Delisle Flag of the United States USA 3,478 Damaged
8 May 1942 Ohioan Flag of the United States USA 6,078 Sunk
9 May 1942 Lubrafol Flag of Panama Panama 7,138 Sunk
14 May 1942 Potero del Llano Flag of Mexico Mexico 4,000 Sunk
19 July 1942 Empire Hawksbill Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom 5,724 Sunk
19 July 1942 Lavington Court Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom 5,372 Sunk
19 August 1942 British Consul Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom 6,940 Sunk
19 August 1942 Empire Cloud Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom 5,969 Sunk
30 August 1942 Vardaas Flag of Norway Norway 8,176 Sunk

References[]

  1. Kemp, Paul: U-Boats Destroyed - German Submarine Losses in the World Wars, 1997, Arms & Armour, ISBN 1-85409-515-3, p. 125.
  2. 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 Career
All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at German submarine U-564 and the edit history here.
Advertisement