Unterseeboot 961

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U-961
Type VIIC


Launch Date December 17, 1942
Commission Date February 4, 1943
Construction yard Blohm & Voss, Hamburg
Patrols
Start Date End Date Assigned Unit
March, 1944 March, 1944 5th Flotilla
Commanders
February, 1943 March, 1944 Kptlt. Klaus Fischer
Successes
Type of Ship Sunk Number of Ships Sunk Gross Registered Tonnage
Commercial Vessels None 0
Military Vessels None 0

Unterseeboot 961 (usually abbreviated to U-961) was a German U-boat built during World War II. A type VIIC submarine, U-961 was constructed at Hamburg during 1942 and 1943, completing her working-up cruises in the Baltic Sea in the spring of 1944. Due to extensive modifications and shortages of supplies during her construction and training, U-961 took nearly two years to be ready for active service, an exceptionally long time.

[edit] War Patrol

U-961 departed on her only war patrol on the 23 March 1944, under the command of Kptlt. Klaus Fischer, a veteran submariner. After leaving Marviken at Kristiansand in Norway, U-961 headed directly for the North Atlantic Ocean, the main battleground of the Second Battle of the Atlantic. By 1944 however, the region had become a U-boat graveyard, as drastic improvements in submarine detection and destruction had been made, both by surface shipping and by allied aircraft.

The patrol lasted just seven days, ending suddenly and brutally during an attack on Convoy JW-58 150 miles north of the Faroe Islands on the 29 March. As U-961 approached the convoy, she was discovered underwater by the detection equipment on the convoy escorts HMS Starling and HMS Wildgoose and immediately destroyed with depth charges. The boat never even managed to surface, sinking to the bottom with all 49 sailors on board.

[edit] References

    See Also: List of U-boats