Joachim Schepke

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Joachim Schepke
8 March 1912(1912-03-08)17 March 1941 (aged 29)

Place of birth Flensburg
Place of death KIA Atlantic Ocean
61° N 12° W
Allegiance Germany
Service/branch Naval flag of Nazi Germany Kriegsmarine
Years of service 1930–1941
Rank Kapitänleutnant
Awards Ritterkreuz des Eisernes Kreuz mit Eichenlaub


Joachim Schepke (8 March 191217 March 1941) was a German U-boat commander during World War II.

[edit] Career

Schepke was the son of a Navy officer, and he joined the Kriegsmarine in 1930. In 1934 he was assigned to the U-boat arm, and in 1938 he commanded U3. At the outbreak of World War II he took U3 to war against Allied shipping. After a short stint commanding U19 and serving in a staff position Schepke received the command of U100, a Type VIIb boat. After 5 patrols in U100 she was heavily damaged on March 17, 1941 by depth charges from HMS Walker and HMS Vanoc while executing an attack on Convoy HX-112. U100 was forced to surface and was detected on radar and consequently rammed by Vanoc. Schepke and 37 crew members perished in the ocean; six crew members were rescued. Schepke was last reported on the bridge of U100. When Vanoc rammed his boat, he was crushed into his own periscope standards, and he went down with his boat.[1]

Joachim Schepke had sunk 37 ships for a total of 155,882 GRT, and damaged 4 more. He was awarded the Knight's cross with Oak Leaves. Schepke, Günther Prien and Otto Kretschmer were friendly rivals in the U-boat service, and were the most famous U-boat commanders in the early years of the war. Schepke was the favourite of these three, because in contrast to Kretschmer he was a convinced Nazi. In February 1941 he made a speech in the Berlin Sportpalast for thousands of Berlin schoolchildren about the U-boat war. After his death the German propaganda ministry held him as an example for the German youth to follow.[citation needed]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Macintyre, Donald U-boat Killer, (Avon Publications, 1956)
  • Most of the info in this article was translated from the German article on Joachim Schepke

[edit] Further reading

http://www.canonesa.co.uk/