Diving for the Secrets of the Battle of the Atlantic
Off the coast of North Carolina lie dozens of shipwrecks, remainders of a forgotten theater of World War II
- By Jim Morrison
- Smithsonian.com, January 18, 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Hoyt wants to do more than create models of individual wreck sites; he wants to map where battles took place and understand why they happened there. “We’re looking at the collection of wrecks out there in the landscape and how they tell a story of why this area was significant and why it was seized upon by U-boat commanders as a good place to operate,” he adds.
One battle Hoyt and his team were searching for took place on the afternoon of July 15, 1942. KS-520—a convoy of 19 merchant ships headed from Hampton, Virginia, to Key West, Florida–steamed about 20 miles off the North Carolina coast with war supplies. U-boats, at times hunting in wolf packs, had been viciously attacking the shipping lanes, especially off Cape Hatteras, sending 154 vessels to the sea floor along the East Coast.
Escorting the convoy were five naval vessels, two Kingfisher floatplanes and a blimp. Lying in wait was the U-576, a 220-foot-long German submarine that had been attacked days earlier, suffering damage to its ballast tank. But Hans-Dieter Heinicke, its commander, couldn’t resist attacking, firing four bow torpedoes. Two struck the Chilore, an American merchant ship. One hit the J.A. Nowinckel, a Panamian tanker, and the fourth tore into the Bluefields, a Nicaraguan merchant ship loaded with kapok (a ceiba tree product), burlap and paper. Within minutes, the Bluefields went to the bottom.
Just after firing, the U-576 popped to the surface only a few hundred yards from the Unicoi, an armed merchant vessel that fired upon it. The Kingfisher aircraft dropped depth charges and soon after sailors from the convoy saw the U-boat upend, props spinning out of the water, and spiral to the bottom.
Hoyt thinks it could be the only site off the coast where an Allied vessel and a German U-boat sank so close to each other. “It’s my hope that we have already gotten a ping on one of those, but it’s a matter of getting back, getting detailed imagery or an assessment of the site to be able to identify them,” he adds.
The team extensively filmed the wreck of the U-701 in 100 feet of water. In June 1942, the submarine set 15 mines in the approaches to the Chesapeake Bay, Hampton Roads and the Baltimore Harbor resulting in the damaging or sinking of five ships, including a destroyer, a trawler, and two tankers. On the afternoon of July 7, 1942, the U-701 surfaced to air its interior and was spotted by an A-29 bomber, which dropped three depth charges, tearing open the hull of the diving submarine and sending it to a watery grave.
The NOAA team surveyed the Diamond Shoals site, an area of high currents and shifting sands. “In 2008, the boat was almost completely covered,” Hoyt says. “Now, it’s totally exposed so we’re seeing a lot more of the wreck. We’re also learning because it’s been covered up for so long that it’s much more well preserved than some of the other sites.”
Seventy years later even on the bottom, the relic remains fearsome. The conning tower rises above the rest of the wreck, giving it an ominous profile. “It’s incredible,” Kovacs says. “You’re looking at the old killer of the sea. You can see figuratively and literally how this thing would strike fear.”
“Forgetting about what really happened,” he adds, “is not something we should be allowed to do.”
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Comments (8)
Denying merchant marines veteran's benefits was shameful. Merchant Marines suffered the highest casualties of any branch with nearly 10,000 dead. Thoughts of gratitude and respect to those who served and eternal gratitude to those who died in this noble service.
Posted by Scott Laux on March 3,2012 | 02:53 AM
"Evan Kovacs, director of 3-D photography for Woods Hole, has been photographing wrecks, including the USS Monitor and the HMS Titanic, for more than a decade."
Pretty impressive. Now please show some of the 3-D photos of the non-existent HMS Titanic.
There was a passenger liner and Royal Mail Ship (RMS) named Titanic. However, as far as I know, the Royal Navy never had a ship by that name.
Posted by David Hall on February 19,2012 | 02:53 PM
Thanks for the article and photos. As for the above comment: The location is right off the NC coast, Have At IT!!
Posted by Robert S. West, MD on February 8,2012 | 05:19 PM
Canadian merchant mariners had to fight the same battle for benefits (and finally won. As I recall the anglophobe USN Admiral King refused to listen to RN advice about convoys, escorts, and coastal black outs leading to unnecessary losses in lives and ships. Marine archaeology (of any era) is fascinating. Thank you very much Smithsonian and Jack.
Posted by ErnestPayne on February 8,2012 | 04:39 PM
For those interested, I have below linked to numerous personal images acquired over a decade of diving shipwrecks off of North Carolina. For additional information, I suggest reading Michael Gannon's and Clay Blair's works on U-boat warfare off of our East coast. http://www.n2junkie.com/gallery/flash/north_carolina_flash_pages/north_carolina_052408/index.html http://www.n2junkie.com/gallery/gallery_nc.htm
Posted by jack papes on January 30,2012 | 11:05 PM
Frank, Feel free to contact the NOAA Monitor National Marine Sanctuary directly if you would like more images.
Posted by David Alberg on January 27,2012 | 12:01 PM
It always astounds me that our merchant mariners were denied Veteran's benefits (like the G.I. Bill) since they had higher casualty rates than the other armed services including the Marines. You never see them honored (or even mentioned) during Memorial Day or Veteran's Day observances on The Mall.
As he signed the GI Bill in June 1944 President Roosevelt said:
"I trust Congress will soon provide similar opportunities to members of the merchant marine who have risked their lives time and time again during war for the welfare of their country."
They're still waiting:
The "Belated Thank You to the Merchant Mariners of WW II Act of 2009" got blocked by one senator even though it had widespread bi-partisan support.
http://www.usmm.org/
http://www.usmm.org/urgent.html
Posted by John Eastlund on January 25,2012 | 10:00 PM
WOW... 3 whole photos. Are you sure you can spare them??
Posted by frank hidalgo on January 23,2012 | 12:36 PM