Wolfpack Seewolf Explained

Seewolf was the name of three separate wolfpacks of German U-boats that operated during the Battle of the Atlantic in World War II.

1941

Unit Name:Wolfpack Seewolf 1
Dates:2–15 September 1941
Branch:Kriegsmarine
Size:17 submarines

The first U-boat group code-named Seewolf operated in the North Atlantic, to intercept Allied convoys to and from Gibraltar, and to and from Sierra Leone in west Africa. The group comprised 17 U-boats, from the dissolved groups Bosemuller and Kurfurst, that had operated in the same area. Due to bad weather, and evasive routing by the British, it had no success against the target convoys, though five independently routed ships were found and sunk; on 6 September U-95 sank Trinidad, a neutral vessel en route from Dublin to Lisbon, and on 15 September U-94 sank three ships that had dispersed from ON 14 the previous day. On 14 September U-95 and U-561 were bombed by aircraft from Coastal Command and forced to return to base.[1]

Seewolf was formed on 2 September, and dissolved two weeks later, on 15 September 1941.[2] It comprised the following boats:-

U-boatCommanderDate JoinedDate LeftComments
Wilhelm Zahn4 September 194115 September 1941
Walter Flachsenberg2 September 19413 September 1941
Heinrich Schonder2 September 19417 September 1941
Hans-Werner Kraus2 September 19417 September 1941
Otto Ites5 September 194115 September 1941Empire Eland
Newbury
Pegasus
Gerd Schreiber2 September 194114 September 1941Trinidad
Heinrich Lehmann-Willenbrock2 September 194110 September 1941
Robert Gysae3 September 194115 September 1941
Herbert Opitz2 September 19417 September 1941
Karl Thurmann2 September 194113 September 1941
Ottokar Arnold Paulssen2 September 194115 September 1941
Günther Krech2 September 194112 September 1941
Robert Bartels2 September 194115 September 1941
Klaus Bargsten2 September 19417 September 1941
Theodor Fahr2 September 19419 September 1941Fort Richepanse
Joachim Preuss2 September 19418 September 1941
Gerhard Bigalk2 September 19415 September 1941

Five merchant ships were sunk for a total of .

1943

Unit Name:Wolfpack Seewolf 2
Dates:21–30 March 1943
Branch:Kriegsmarine
Size:19 submarines

The second Seewolf group operated in the North Atlantic in March 1943 against convoys to and from North America. It comprised 19 U-boats, mostly from groups Sturmer and Dranger, which had attacked convoys HX 229 and SC 122. The group was positioned to intercept the fast HX and slow SC convoys from North America, and was co-incident with group Seeteufel, 16 U-boats positioned to attack outbound ON and ONS convoys. Convoys SC 123 and ONS 1 evaded both groups; several Seewolf boats found HX 230, but all attacks failed in foul weather. With no success to report, the group was dissolved and most boats returned to base, though four remained as a cadre for group Adler.[3]

This Seewolf was formed on 21 March, and dissolved a week later on 30 March.[4] It comprised the following boats:-

U-boatCommanderDate JoinedDate LeftComments
Horst Uphoff24 March 194330 March 1943
Walter Schug21 March 194330 March 1943
Heinz Rahe25 March 194330 March 1943
Rudolf Bahr21 March 194330 March 1943
Werner Schwaff21 March 194330 March 1943
Hans Hunger21 March 194330 March 1943
Paul-Karl Loeser21 March 194328 March 1943
Hans Geissler21 March 194329 March 1943
Klaus Hartmann21 March 194328 March 1943
Herbert Uhlig21 March 194330 March 1943
Kurt Lange21 March 194330 March 1943
Heinrich Müller-Edzards21 March 194330 March 1943
Hans-Jürgen Zetzsche21 March 194330 March 1943
Ralph Kapitzky21 March 194330 March 1943
Kurt Baberg21 March 194330 March 1943
Jürgen Krüger21 March 194330 March 1943
Horst Rendtel21 March 194330 March 1943
Herbert Brünning21 March 194330 March 1943
Herbert Engel21 March 194330 March 1943
No ships were sunk or damaged

1945

Unit Name:Wolfpack Seewolf 3
Dates:12–23 April 1945
Branch:Kriegsmarine
Size:7 submarines
Battles:Operation Teardrop
Actions of 5/6 May 1945

Seewolf was formed in March 1945[5] in an effort to re-establish the U-boat offensive in American waters; it was the last wolfpack of the Atlantic campaign. Seven of the nine boats that sailed to the Americas were in Seewolf; a further two sailed independently.

Coincidentally, Allied Intelligence formed the view that the Germans were planning to mount a missile attack on the United States, using V-1 or V-2 missiles adapted for launch at sea by submarines.This led to a vigorous response by the United States Navy, code-named Operation Teardrop, to find and destroy the Seewolf boats.This was successful; Of the five boats in American waters by April (two boats had returned to base for repairs, and were still in transit at the end of April) four boats were sunk during the month.

Seewolf boats had one success; U-546 sank, shortly before she herself was sunk.

The fifth boat was detected and destroyed on 6 May 1945, the last boat in American waters to be destroyed.The two boats in transit when Germany surrendered were given up to the USN on 8 May 1945.

U-boat[6] CommanderDate JoinedDate LeftComments
Hans-Werner Offermann14 April 194522 April 1945
Paul Just14 April 194524 April 1945 sunk 24 Apr 1945
Richard Bernardelli14 April 19451 May 1945
Thilo Bode14 April 19451 May 1945
Gerhard Schtözau14 April 194516 April 1945
Franz Barsch14 April 194515 April 1945

One US warship was sunk by this wolfpack.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Blair (1996) p.389
  2. Web site: Wolf Pack Seewolf 1941 . Helgason . Guðmundur . German U-boats of WWII - uboat.net. 21 June 2014.
  3. Blair (1998) p.268-270
  4. Web site: Wolf Pack Seewolf 1943 . Helgason . Guðmundur . German U-boats of WWII - uboat.net . 21 June 2014.
  5. Blair p686-688
  6. Web site: Wolfpack Seewolf 1945 . Helgason . Guðmundur . German U-boats of WWII - uboat.net . 21 June 2014.