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BOOKS!
BOOKS! AND MORE BOOKS!
SHARKHUNTERS is pleased and proud to present these wartime books for your
enjoyment.
"U-BOAT!"
(Volume II)
(BRAND NEW July 2010)
This is an
entirely new book
with many new stories and photos; many never before seen.
Like its predecessor, this book is unlike any other about the history of the U-Bootwaffe because each
chapter was written by a veteran of the War at Sea. These are their
memories; these are their words. No researcher could write anything even
close to "U-BOAT! (Volume II). This is from the men who were
there. There is a stirring Introduction by famous author Captain
EDWARD
L. BEACH (1163-1989) USN (Retired) with words of praise for the abilities and honor of these
men. Beach has published many books, including the famous 'RUN SILENT, RUN
DEEP!' Another by RICHARD HENRICK (2568-1992), who wrote many submarine books
including 'CRIMSON TIDE', about
the merits of this book.
Chapter 1, 'Submarine Technology' - ERICH
TOPP (118-1985), third most
successful submarine Skipper of World War II, tells how technology has changed
from his Type VII-C to the more modern submarines of today.
Chapter 2, 'The Last Boat through Gibraltar' - Oberleutnant zur
See GÜNTHER HEINRICH (1945-1991) was commander of U-960 and he tells of his
experiences in combat then tells how he managed to penetrate the Straits of
Gibraltar on the surface without any interference from the Royal Navy.......and
only one meter of water beneath the keel!
Chapter 3 '500 Pesos for a White Man's Head' - GEORGE ROCEK
(828-1992) rode
USS ANGLER and he tells of the rescue of many from the Philippines
immediately after that island nation fell to the Japanese - and why it was so
critical to get these people safely away.
Chapter 4, 'Submarine Mystery Solved!' - Combat crew chief
John Carlin was sure they had sunk an enemy submarine, but they had no idea
which one. Sharkhunters solved the mystery for them and as it turned out,
the Skipper of the submarine, like John Carlin, was also a Member of
Sharkhunters.
Chapter 5, 'der Seekrieg' - are the sometimes humorous funny
memories of the war as told by Knights Cross
holding U-Boat Skipper SIEGFRIED KOITSCHKA (225-1986)............scared the heck out of a
boatload of French fishermen.
Chapter 6, 'Pig Chase in the Atlantic' -
JÜRGEN WATTENBERG (154-1985) was in the
Germany Navy from the days of the Reichsmarine then of course, into the
Kriegsmarine. As training Skipper, OTTO KRETSCHMER
(122-1985) and Joachem Schepke
were his students and they played many a prank on him. He was Navigation
Officer aboard the pocket battleship GRAF SPEE when that beautiful
ship was destroyed in Montevideo Harbor. Later in the war, he was Skipper
of U-162 and in this chapter, he tells of the time they met 'Douglas'
on the high seas. This puts a human face on an otherwise life and death
struggle.
Chapter 7, 'A Moment in U.S. Navy History'
- JIM VERDOLINI
(480-1988) was a kid of seventeen years when he joined the U.S. Navy
and not once but twice, fate put him into a historical moment. As radioman
aboard USS GUADALCANAL Jim watched the sinking of U-515
and the capture of her Skipper, Werner Henke. He was radioman on that
carrier when they captured U-505 and towed her back towards
Bermuda. He was then transferred to the Pacific where he served aboard
USS RANDOLPH and he describes the fire and carnage of a kamikaze
attach on his ship and others in the fleet.
Chapter 8, 'AVISO GRILLE - Hitler's Yacht?'
- Once the luxury yacht of a king, the Kriegsmarine took this ship as more
or less a showpiece where Adolf Hitler sometimes met with heads of state.
Naturally the press at the time dubbed this ship "Hitler's Yacht"
but was this an accurate statement? What did Hitler eat when aboard?
How did he act? This chapter gives an insight into Hitler when he was
aboard and why duty as a seaman aboard wasn't bad duty at all, as HERBERT
WEISE (348-1987)
learned after being posted to that ship's crew. This is his story, his
memories.
Chapter 9, 'The Italian Submarine FINZI'
- Tenente Mario Rossetto remembers being placed in command of this boat -
then told NOT to engage any enemy units. This was a difficult order for a
young lieutenant to follow as he wanted combat, but on this first mission he was
overloaded with supplies and fuel to meet and resupply another Italian submarine
off the Cape of Good Hope. Believing that he would be late to the
rendezvous point, Rossetto pushed FINZI hard.....so hard in fact,
that his engines quit in mid-ocean! This was the one and only resupply
mission attempted by the Italian submarines. Did he make his meeting with
the submarine DA VINCI? It's in this chapter.
Chapter 10, 'Caribbean Assistance?' - During the war and for
decades thereafter, rumors flourished that German U-Boats got help in the
Caribbean in the form of food, fresh water and fuel. Did this really
happen? Sharkhunters contacted the son of George Gough for an answer.
Known at the time as "Uncle George", he ran a small fleet of trading
ships (sailing schooners mostly) out of Belize. His son tells of their
experiences during the early war years - and the arrest of his father on 7 July
1942. This is right from the source.
Chapter 11, 'That's Her - The VALLIANT!' - No one can doubt the
bravery of the Italians who rode the 'pigs' - the Maiale as their crews
called them but for two men to ride one of these two-man torpedoes and attack a
Royal Navy battleship - incredible! What was the result? It is all
in this chapter by retired Ammaraglio Luigi Durand de la Penne. These guys
were tough!
Chapter 12, 'The Enemy Below' - This was a great movie starring
Robert Mitchum and Kurt Jürgens but how many know that this storyline was
inspired by an actual event during battle in World War Two? This story is
told from both sides in this chapter - first from the memories of an American
destroyer escort's commanding officer's report then from VINZ NOSCH
(280-1987), a crewman
aboard the U-Boat. VINZ also tells some of the history of his boat's time
in the war including the time they met with a Type X-B boat and a doctor
transferred to their boat to tend to their badly wounded Skipper only to have
U.S. Navy planes jump them. As they reached a safe depth, they could hear
the X-B boat getting hammered; then they heard it sinking past them to its doom
at the bottom of the ocean.
Chapter 13, 'Another Victim of the Rot Teufel Boot' - BERNARD
MAUER (2052-1991)
recalls the time the tanker he served aboard an old tanker and fate put them in
the crosshairs of U-552, the 'Red Devil Boat'
commanded by ERICH TOPP (118-1985), third most successful submarine Skipper of World War
Two and holder of the Knights Cross
with Oak Leaf and
Crossed Swords.
Chapter 14, 'Radiostation Atlantik' -
THILO BODE (304-1987) was I.W.O. aboard U-505 then Skipper of U-858
that he surrendered in the USA. BODE tells of the way the U-Bootfahrer
perceived this propaganda radio station - much like Tokyo Rose and Axis Sally on
the other side. Did the men of the U-Bootwaffe believe the gloom and doom
statistics from this radio station? Other than one U-Boat that surrendered
to an airplane, did any others give up because of this radio station or others
like it? Bode tells it in this chapter.
Chapter 15 'Operation URSULA' - Anyone who thinks that post-WW I
U-Boat combat began on 3 September 1939 with the sinking of the liner
ATHENIA by U-30 under Fritz-Julius Lemp needs to read this
chapter. It was Sharkhunters, thanks to super-spook
PETER HANSEN (251-1987), that
first broke the story of Operation URSULA in which German U-Boats
were in combat AND sinking ships years before September 1939. One Skipper
received the Spanish Cross in
Gold with Diamonds
directly from the hand of Adolf Hitler. You cannot call yourself a true
historian of the U-Bootwaffe if you do not read this critically important story.
Chapter 16, 'The End of SS SAN DEMETRIO' - Kapitänleutnant
OTTO von BÜLOW
(305-1987), Skipper of U-404 and one of only twenty-eight Skippers to
receive the Knights Cross with
Oak Leaf tells of his encounter with this ship and the
cat-and-mouse game they played after this ship spotted the periscope of
U-404. The chase was on and in this chapter von BÜLOW tells how it
all unfolded.
Chapter 17, 'R-Boats from the Caucasus to Gibraltar' - ALFRED
NUESSER (1092-1989) tells of his combat experience aboard these sleek, small craft aboard
which he served in many theaters of World War Two. As the fronts shrank on
all sides, his R-Bootflottille was pushed inexorably further and further to the
west.
Chapter 18, 'Long Overdue - Presumed Lost to Enemy Action' - American
Merchant Marine Captain ARTHUR MOORE (533-1988) digs deeply into the mysterious loss of
three American Flag merchant ships that were lost without a trace in World War
Two............lost without a trace until Captain MOORE began digging.
What did he learn? The answers are here in this chapter.
Chapter 19, 'Takes Wife - Saves Life!' - U.S. Navy submarine officer
Edward Campbell posted aboard an American submarine but was given shore leave to
get married and the boat departed without him - never to return. Campbell
talks about the other boats on which he served before and after the one that
never returned. His submarine experiences cover almost the entire war.
Chapter 20, 'The Death of AWA MARU' - Radioman CHARLES LEVINE
(2969-1993) rode
USS QUEENFISH when that submarine intercepted and sank the mercy ship
(not hospital ship) more or less against orders. Why did the Skipper,
Charles Laughlin, attack and sink this ship that was supposed to have safe
passage through his area? What happened to Laughlin when he returned to
base? And what was AWA MARU really carrying? All that
and more is in this chapter.
Chapter 21, 'SURCOUF! French Giant' - The very name tingles
with excitement and mystery. What really did happen to this largest of all
submarines of her day? All that is known - and some previously unknown -
will be found in this chapter from her inception through building, through her
escape to England where she planned to join the British but instead was
violently seized by Royal Navy personnel with the loss of two British officers.
We follow SURCOUF through all her many machinery problems,
breakdowns and repairs in British then American shipyards and ultimately to the
place where she was lost off the entrance to the Panama Canal...........or was
she really lost there?
Chapter 22, 'Type IX Long-Range U-Boat' - An American 'spook'
who served with ONI (Office of Naval Intelligence) during the war and later on
with the NSA (so secret it is known as No Such Agency). Captain ROBERT
THEW (333-1987) takes a long and critical look at Germany's main long-range U-Boat with the
eye of an Intelligence Agent. BOB is very thorough in his analysis.
His findings and assessments of this type of submarine are all in this chapter
along with the many variants, their modifications, weapons upgrades, their
operations, their strong points and their weaknesses. There are photos
never before seen on some of the Type IX variants.
Chapter 23, 'Former Enemies' - R-Boat veteran ALFRED NUESSER
(1092-1989) was
transferring to a new post aboard an old ship when it was torpedoed by a Royal
Navy submarine. Many of the men aboard the old ship perished and AL was
close to death himself when rescued by UJ-2102. After the
war he tracked down a couple men of the Royal Navy submarine crew. What
was the result? It's in this chapter.
Chapter 24, 'U.S. Navy 'Armed Guard'' - With the entry of the United
States into World War Two, it became necessary to arm the merchant ship with
deck guns and anti-aircraft guns. It was therefore necessary to station
U.S. Navy crews aboard to man the weapons and Otis Moorehead goes into detail on
this almost unknown branch of the United States Navy. Otis covers the
Murmansk Run, ships lost there and more action in the North Atlantic with photos
of stricken ships and their crews.
Chapter 25, 'U-DEUTSCHLAND' - In World War One, the Royal Navy had
the German Navy and her merchant fleet blockaded in their ports but Germany
needed raw materials for her war efforts - and Germany needed a victory of some
kind, of ANY kind, to boost the spirits of citizens in Germany. A large
cargo carrying submarine was built and commissioned, and she was meant to thumb
the German nose at the mighty Royal Navy blockade. This boat was strictly
and totally unarmed - the Captain did not even have so much as a pistol.
She thumbed her nose at the Royal Navy blockade not once but twice, and that is
in this chapter. There is also a very interesting connection between the
Skipper of this boat, Kapitän Paul König of World War One and the Drumbeater,
Korvettenkapitän REINHARD HARDEGEN (102-1985) of World War Two. It is in this
chapter.
Chapter 26, 'German and Royal Navies' - Perhaps a better title for
this chapter would be 'How to Catch a Submarine with Fishing Line'
because that is what happened. U.S. Navy submarine veteran and researcher
KEN HENRY (1468-1990) tells us of the war patrols of the German UB-14 and the
Royal Navy E-7. Each boat had its share of wartime
adventures and each had a turn being caught in an anti-submarine net.
Their paths crossed more than once, but at the last time, one was caught in a
net while the Skipper of the other attacked - in a rowboat - and dropped
grenades on the trapped submarine below. This chapter tells the results of
this last meeting between the two Skippers.
Chapter 27, 'Pirates in Uncle Sam's Navy' - Early in 1942, the
U-Boats were running unchecked across the American throat off the US east coast
and there was virtually nothing with which to stop them. This critical
situation gave rise to 'Project LQ' and the American "Q" ship efforts began.
How many ships were involved in this project? What happened to each in
combat? What role did REINHARD HARDEGEN (102-1985) play in the "Q" ship actions?
This chapter tells of this history, much of it previously unknown.
Chapter 28, 'SS JEAN NICOLET' - This Liberty Ship was sunk by
submarine and what took place with the survivors/prisoners heralded the most
brutal, inhuman acts of atrocity in World War Two or in any other war.
What happened to the submarine's commander and hew crew after the war ended?
What was their punishment for this terrible butchery? The answer will
surprise and probably outrage you.
_____________________________________________________________________
"U-BOAT!" (volume II) is softbound, contains
230 pages and 109 photos
Order 'U-BOAT!' (Volume II)
Only $25 (Special
to Members; ONLY $20)
(plus $5 shipping)
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