Submarine_pen

Submarine pen

Submarine pen

Bunker housing U-boats


A submarine pen (U-Boot-Bunker in German) is a type of submarine base that acts as a bunker to protect submarines from air attack.

Surrendered German U-boats moored outside the Dora I bunker in Trondheim, Norway, May 1945

The term is generally applied to submarine bases constructed during World War II, particularly in Germany and its occupied countries, which were also known as U-boat pens (after the phrase "U-boat" to refer to German submarines).

Background

Among the first forms of protection for submarines were some open-sided shelters with partial wooden foundations that were constructed during World War I. These structures were built at the time when bombs were light enough to be dropped by hand from the cockpit. By the 1940s, the quality of aerial weapons and the means to deliver them had improved markedly.[1]

The mid-1930s saw the Naval Construction Office in Berlin give the problem serious thought. Various factions in the navy were convinced protection for the expanding U-boat arm was required. A Royal Air Force (RAF) raid on the capital in 1940, the occupation of France and Britain's refusal to surrender triggered a massive building programme of submarine pens and air raid shelters.

By the autumn of 1940, construction of the "Elbe II" bunker in Hamburg and "Nordsee III" on the island of Heligoland was under way. Others swiftly followed.

General

It was soon realized that such a massive project was beyond the Kriegsmarine, and the Todt Organisation (OT) was brought in to oversee the administration of labour. The local supply of such items as sand, aggregate, cement, and timber was often a cause for concern. The steel required was mostly imported from Germany. The attitudes of the people in France and Norway were significantly different. In France there was generally no problem with the recruitment of men and the procurement of machinery and raw materials. Local Norwegian populations were far more reluctant to help the Germans. Indeed, most labour had to be brought in.[2] The ground selected for bunker construction was no help either: usually being at the head of a fjord, the foundations and footings had to be hewn out of granite. Several metres of silt also had to be overcome.[3] Many of the workers needed were forced labour, especially the concentration camp inmates supplied by the Schutzstaffel from camps near the pens.

The incessant air raids caused serious disruption to the project, hampering the supply of material, destroying machinery, and harassing the workers. Machinery such as excavators, pile drivers, cranes, floodlighting, and concrete pumps (which were still a relatively new technology in the 1940s) was temperamental, and in the case of steam-driven equipment, very noisy.[4]

Bunkers had to be able to accommodate more than just U-boats; space had to be found for offices, medical facilities, communications, lavatories, generators, ventilators, anti-aircraft guns, accommodation for key personnel such as crewmen, workshops, water purification plants, electrical equipment, and radio testing facilities. Storage space for spares, explosives, ammunition, and oil was also required.

Types of bunker

Four types of bunker were constructed:[citation needed]

  • Covered lock
These were bunkers built over an existing lock to give a U-boat some protection while it was at its most vulnerable – i.e. when the lock was emptying or filling. They were usually constructed with new locks alongside an existing structure.
  • Construction bunker
Used for building new boats
  • Fitting-out bunkers
After launch, many U-boats were fitted-out under their protection
  • Shelter for operational boats and repair bunkers
This was the most numerous type. There were two types that were built either on dry land or over the water. The former meant that U-boats had to be moved on ramps; the latter enabled the boats to come and go at will. Pumping the water out enabled dry dock repairs to be carried out. Some bunkers were large enough to allow the removal of periscopes and aerials.

There is no truth in the rumour of an underground bunker on Fuerteventura in the Canary Islands. This story was gleaned from a similar situation in Le Havre in France when captured U-boat men were interrogated by the British.[5]

Locations

Pens were constructed in the northern coastal ports of the Reich and in many occupied countries.

Germany

Pens protecting construction of the Type XXI submarine were located in Hamburg (Blohm & Voss), Bremen (AG Weser), and Danzig (F. Schichau).[6][7][8]

Bremen

Forced workers at the construction site of the Valentin submarine pens in Bremen, 1944

The "Hornisse" bunker was not started until 1944 in Bremen; it was never completed.[9]

"Valentin" was the largest bunker in Germany. Begun in 1943, it was built to be a manufacturing facility, where Type XXI submarines were to be constructed. It, too, was never completed. Post-war, it was briefly used as a test site for British and American bombs (most of the damage done to the bunker was inflicted at this time[10]) before becoming a storage facility for the German Navy. The labour to construct it was supplied by local concentration camps such as Neuengamme in Hamburg.

Valentin: 53°13′00″N 08°30′15″E
Hornisse: 53°07′01.5″N 08°44′04″E

Hamburg

The city was the site of two structures, "Elbe II" and "Fink II". The Finkenwerder bunker was constructed by 1,700 slave labourers over four years. After capture, it was demolished with 32 tonnes of bombs.[11]

Elbe II: 53°31′43″N 09°57′08″E
Fink II: 53.541°N 09.854°E / 53.541; 09.854 (Hamburg - Fink II Submarine Pen)

Helgoland

The "Nordsee III" bunker in Helgoland was one of the oldest submarine pens, being started in 1940. It escaped Allied bombing until near the end of the war when it was attacked by the RAF and completely destroyed. It was also used after the end of the war for testing new weapons. No trace of the pen remains.[12]

54.177199°N 07.893521°E / 54.177199; 07.893521 (Helgoland Submarine Pen)

Kiel

This town was constantly bombed in World War II, the targets often being the "Kilian" and "Konrad" bunkers. They were started in 1941 and 1942 respectively. The latter was used for the construction of Seehund midget submarines.[13]

It was in "Kilian" that U-4708 likely became the only submarine to be lost in a bunker. Misguided bombs from an air raid on the town caused what might today be called a tsunami to cross the Förde and enter the bunker. Oberleutenant zur See Hans-Gerold Hauber, the captain of U-170, had courted ridicule by ordering all hatches on his boat to be closed, despite being in the bunker. "This simple precaution saved U-170 from sinking while lying next to U-4708".[14]

Wilhelmshaven

A U-boat bunker in Wilhelmshaven was planned, but never advanced beyond the preliminary stage.[15]

France

The German occupying forces built many U-boat pens in the Atlantic ports of France in Bordeaux, Brest, La Rochelle/La Pallice, Lorient, and St. Nazaire. Almost 4.4 million cubic metres of concrete were used.[16] These Atlantic bases expanded the u-boat striking range–allowing for voyages to the Mediterranean Sea, the west African coast, the Gulf of Mexico, and the United States' eastern seaboard.[17]

Bordeaux

Bordeaux U-boat pens

An unnamed bunker and bunkered lock were constructed in Bordeaux, the fourth largest French city at the start of the war. Both structures were started in 1941; the bunkered lock was not finished by war's end. The main building was larger than those in other locations; this was to allow supply boats and minelayers to use it. The Royal Italian Navy established the Betasom base at Bordeaux. The port was also the target of a British commando raid – the so-called Cockleshell Heroes.[18]

44°52′11″N 0°33′31″W

Brest

Brest U-boat pens

The Brittany port only had one bunker, but it was the largest; it was also unnamed.[19] Started in 1941, the plans were modified many times before completion a year later.

By February 1942 the RAF had lost interest in the area; most of the town had already been destroyed and they did not possess large enough bombs to seriously threaten the bunker. Between February 1942 and early 1943, apart from a few American aircraft, the place was left alone. The German garrison surrendered to US forces in September 1944. They had had sufficient explosives to cripple the bunker but did not use them due to the proximity of a hospital.[20][clarification needed]

48°22′00″N 04°31′20″W

Brest is still a submarine base, now serving the French Navy, and the bunker is still in use today. [21][22]

La Rochelle/La Pallice

La Rochelle U-Boat pens
Construction of the U-boat base at La Pallice, 1942

Only 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) separate La Rochelle and La Pallice so they are usually considered as one port. An unnamed bunker was built at La Pallice (Base sous-marine de La Rochelle [fr]); it was started in April 1941.[23] Similar building techniques to those used in St. Nazaire were employed. Due to the relative ease of construction, the main structure was ready for its first U-boats six months later. A bunkered lock was begun in June 1942. It was completed in March 1944. Scenes for the 1981 films Das Boot[23] and Raiders of the Lost Ark were shot in La Pallice.[24]

46°09′31″N 01°12′34″W

Lorient

Keroman I and Keroman III, Lorient

The largest U-boat base was the Lorient Submarine Base in Brittany. Three bunkers, "Keroman I", "II" and "III", the "Scorff" bunker and two "Dom" bunkers, east and west, were all begun in 1941. Two more were in the planning stage.

"Keroman I" was unique in that it required its U-boats to be "hauled out of the water, placed on a many-wheeled buggy and then transported into the bunker on a sliding bridge system." This arrangement might have been more vulnerable to air raids, but damage was minimal and it had the advantage of the U-boat not needing a dry dock. "Keroman II", being landlocked, was served by the same system.

Keroman I: 47°43′45″N 03°22′12″W
Keroman II: 47°43′52″N 03°22′18″W

"Keroman III" was more conventional, as was the "Scorff" bunker. The two "Dom" bunkers (so-called because of their resemblance to the religious building, Dom means 'cathedral' in German) were located around a massive turntable which fed U-boats into the covered repair bays.

Keroman III: 47°43′38″N 03°22′02″W
Scorff: 47°45′02″N 03°20′53″W
Dom (East): 47°43′56″N 03°22′02″W
Dom (West): 47°43′55″N 03°22′07″W

Karl Dönitz, head of the U-boat arm and later the chief of the Kriegsmarine, had his headquarters at nearby Kernevel.

St-Nazaire

Roof of the U-boat base in Saint Nazaire.

The construction of the Saint-Nazaire submarine base was commenced in 1941, including a bunkered lock.[25] (Elsewhere in the reference, it states that "the excavations" for the bunkered lock were begun in October 1942).[26]

47°16′33″N 02°12′09″W

The pens were not affected by the British commando raid in March 1942, whose main objective were the Normandie dock gates.

Norway

Submarine pen construction was often hampered by snow and ice, and the prioritization of French submarine pen construction. With the liberation of France in 1944, Norway regained its importance, but for late in the war and past the prime of the U-boat's capabilities.

The Norwegian bunkers in Bergen and Trondheim were originally designed to have two floors, the lower one for U-boats, the upper one for accommodation, workshops and offices. However, with the project running six months late, plans for the second story were abandoned.[27]

Bergen

Control of the Bergen project came under the German Naval Dockyard. Construction of "Bruno" commenced in 1941, with a Munich-based firm taking the lead. A shortage of labour, along with the acquisition of raw materials in sufficient quantities and poor weather, caused persistent problems. Specialized machinery and materials that could withstand harsh Norwegian winters had to be imported.

Granite blocks were added to reinforce the bunker's strength. However, a cement shortage led to these one cubic meter-sized blocks being placed insecurely, minimizing their protective effect. [28]

Trondheim

"Dora I" was started in 1941, shortly after Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union. It was constructed by Soviet prisoners of war. Despite any number of precautions being taken when putting in the foundations, "Dora I" developed a noticeable sag of 15 cm (5.9 in), but it is believed to have little effect on submarine operations. Work on "Dora II" started in 1942, but was not completed by the end of the war.[29]

The Allied bombing offensive

Destruction to a U-boat pen caused by the Grand Slam bomb, a larger version of the Tallboy (1944)

U-boat facilities first became a bombing priority in March 1941, [30] and again during the Combined Bomber Offensive. The bunkers did not suffer as much as their surroundings until August 1944 when a new type of bomb was used against them, the "Tallboy" bomb.[31]

U-boat yards and pens were the primary objectives for the US Eighth Air Force from late 1942 to early 1943.[32][33] In the course of the war, the Allies used various tactics and weaponry against German U-boat pens. For example, The United States Army Air Forces, as part of Operation Aphrodite, used US designed and operated radio-controlled aircraft, "Bat" guided bombs. Whereas the RAF Bomber Command, used the Royal Navy designed "Disney" rocket-assisted bombs, and the Barnes Wallis-devised Tallboy and Grand Slam deep penetration bombs.

A mock U-boat pen concrete target had been built at Ashley Walk bombing range in the New Forest, Hampshire, to assist in preparation for these raids. It consisted of a concrete roof covering three shallow "pens". After the war it was buried in an earth mound, although its edges are once again visible in places due to weathering.

More information Base, Bombardment (tonnes) ...
More information Target, Date ...

Post war

Yugoslavia

The Yugoslav People's Army used submarine pens as well, including ones on the islands of Vis and Brač or in Kotor Bay, carved inside natural hills. The ones in Montenegro fulfilled their purpose, housing and protecting the submarines and missile boats from NATO aerial attacks during Operation Allied Force in 1999. They are now abandoned and freely accessible from sea or by foot.

See also


Notes

  1. "HITLER'S U-boat Bases" Jak P Mallmann Showell 2002 Sutton Publishing ISBN 0-7509-2606-6 p. 1
  2. Showell pp.11–12
  3. Showell pp.12 and 58
  4. Showell p.12
  5. Showell p.21
  6. Bradham, Randolph (2003). Hitler's U-boat Fortresses. Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 49–51. ISBN 978-0-275-98133-4. Retrieved 9 July 2008.
  7. "Roosevelt and Churchill begin Casablance Conference". This Day in History. history.com. Archived from the original on 5 March 2009. Retrieved 9 July 2008.
  8. "World War II Timeline: January 14, 1943 – January 21, 1943". Russian Army Repels Hitler's Forces: August 1942 – January 1943. Legacy Publishers. 11 September 2007. Retrieved 9 July 2008.
  9. Showell pp. 77–81 190
  10. Showell pp. 81–82 190
  11. Bauer, Eddy (original text) (1966) [1972]. Illustrated World War II Encyclopedia. H. S. Stuttman Inc. p. 2884 (Vol 21). ISBN 0-87475-520-4.
  12. Showell pp.82, 83, and 85
  13. Showell p.190
  14. Showell p.17
  15. Showell p. 77
  16. Showell p. 3
  17. Wilkinson, Hugo, ed. (2019). World War II: Map by Map. New York, United States: DorlingKindersley. pp. 64–5. ISBN 978-1-4654-8179-5.
  18. Showell pp. 122–126
  19. Showell p. 81
  20. Showell pp. 85–94
  21. "Arsenal de Brest". Naval Technology. Retrieved 11 May 2024.
  22. Lepage, Jean-Denis G.G. (2016). "Organisation Todt". Hitler's Armed Forces Auxiliaries: An Illustrated History of the Wehrmachtsgefolge, 1933–1945. McFarland. p. 46. ISBN 978-1476620886.
  23. Long, Christian (6 December 2016). "'Raiders Of The Lost Ark': 6 Filming Locations You Have To Visit". Uproxx. Retrieved 5 October 2017.
  24. Showell p. 190
  25. Showell p. 112
  26. Showell p. 58
  27. Showell p. 63
  28. Showell pp. 56 and 58
  29. "Diary 1941". RAF History – Bomber Command 60th Anniversary. Raf.mod.uk. 6 April 2005. Retrieved 19 May 2012.
  30. Showell pp. 131 and 138
  31. Gurney
  32. Gurney, Gene (Major, USAF) (1962), The War in the Air: a pictorial history of World War II Air Forces in combat, New York: Bonanza Books, p. 84{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  33. Lopez, Jean; Aubin, Nicolas; Bernard, Vincent; Guillerat, Nicolas (2018). World War II Infographics (2nd ed.). London, UK: Thames&Hudson. p. 101. ISBN 978-0-500-02292-4.
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Bibliography

  • Marcin Stąporek (2004). "Stocznia Cesarska" [Kaiser's Shipyard]. Wydział Morski (in Polish). Akademia Rzygaczy. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 15 September 2014.

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