German submarine U-1224
{{Short description|German World War II submarine}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2014}}
{{Infobox ship begin}}
{{Infobox ship image |Ship image=RO-51 ceremony.jpg |Ship image size=200px |Ship caption=One of the few known photos of U-1224: Japanese officers on its conning tower at the hand-over ceremony to the Imperial Japanese Navy }} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header= |Ship country=Nazi Germany |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|Nazi Germany|naval}} |Ship name=U-1224 |Ship namesake= |Ship ordered=25 August 1941 |Ship builder=Deutsche Werft, Hamburg |Ship yard number=387 |Ship laid down=30 November 1942 |Ship launched=7 July 1943 |Ship commissioned=20 October 1943 |Ship decommissioned=15 February 1944 |Ship homeport= |Ship motto= |Ship nickname= |Ship fate=Transferred to Japanese service |Ship notes= }} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header=title |Ship country=Empire of Japan |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|Japan|naval}} |Ship name=Ro-501 |Ship acquired=15 February 1944 |Ship commissioned= |Ship in service=15 February 1944 |Ship homeport= |Ship motto= |Ship nickname= |Ship fate=Sunk on 13 May 1944 |Ship notes=Used as a training ship }} {{Infobox ship characteristics |Hide header= |Header caption= |Ship class=Type IXC/40 submarine |Ship displacement=
|Ship length=
|Ship beam=
|Ship height={{convert|9.60|m|ftin|abbr=on}} |Ship draught={{convert|4.67|m|ftin|abbr=on}} |Ship power=
|
1|abbr=on}} (electric)
|Ship propulsion=
|Ship speed=
|Ship range=
|Ship test depth={{convert|230|m|ft|abbr=on}} |Ship complement=4 officers, 44 enlisted |Ship armament=*6 × torpedo tubes (4 bow, 2 stern)
|Ship notes= }} {{Infobox service record |is_ship=yes |label =Service record (Kriegsmarine){{cite web |url=http://uboat.net/boats/u1224.html |title=The Type IXC/40 boat U-1224 |last=Helgason |first=Guðmundur |website=German U-boats of WWII - uboat.net |access-date=16 October 2014 }} |partof=
|codes=M 53 122 |commanders=
|operations=None |victories=None }} {{Infobox service record |is_ship=yes |label =Service record (IJN){{cite web |url=http://ijnsubsite.info/RO-Sub%20Details/RO-501.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170301145542/http://ijnsubsite.info/RO-Sub%20Details/RO-501.htm |url-status=usurped |archive-date=1 March 2017 |title=Ro-501 |website=IJN Submarine Service – Ijnsubsite.info |access-date=3 June 2023 }} |partof=
|commanders=
|operations=Marco Polo II |victories=None }} |
German submarine U-1224 was a Type IXC/40 U-boat of Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine built for service during World War II. She was constructed by Deutsche Werft of Hamburg, and was commissioned on 20 October 1943, with Kapitänleutnant Georg Preuss in command. She was assigned to the 31st U-boat Flotilla, a submarine training unit.
In late 1943 and early 1944, she was used as a training ship for Japanese sailors. In the summer of 1943 a full crew of Japanese submariners arrived in Germany to be trained on the operations of German U-boats, on the initiative of the German naval attaché in Japan, Paul Wenneker, who wanted to share German submarine knowledge and technology with the Japanese. U-1224 was transferred into Japanese service on 15 February 1944, after the Japanese crew spent several months training in the Baltic Sea. While in Kiel, she was commissioned in the Imperial Japanese Navy as Ro-501, and shortly afterwards departed for Japan, along with a cargo of war materials and four Japanese naval engineers who had been studying in Germany.
Ro-501 was sunk on 13 May 1944 on her way to Japan by a U.S. Navy anti-submarine hunter-killer group, about 500 nautical miles off Cape Verde in the Atlantic, after spending two days trying to evade the pursuers.
Design
German Type IXC/40 submarines were slightly larger than the original Type IXCs. U-1224 had a displacement of {{convert|1144|t|LT}} when at the surface and {{convert|1257|t|LT}} while submerged.{{sfn|Gröner|1991|p=68}} The U-boat had a total length of {{convert|76.76|m|ftin|abbr=on}}, a pressure hull length of {{convert|58.75|m|ftin|abbr=on}}, a beam of {{convert|6.86|m|ftin|abbr=on}}, a height of {{convert|9.60|m|ftin|abbr=on}}, and a draught of {{convert|4.67|m|ftin|abbr=on}}. The submarine was powered by two MAN M 9 V 40/46 supercharged four-stroke, nine-cylinder diesel engines producing a total of {{convert|4400|PS|kW shp|-1}} for use while surfaced, two Siemens-Schuckert 2 GU 345/34 double-acting electric motors producing a total of {{convert|1000|shp|PS kW|-1}} for use while submerged. She had two shafts and two {{convert|1.92|m|ft|abbr=on|0}} propellers. The boat was capable of operating at depths of up to {{convert|230|m}}.{{sfn|Gröner|1991|p=68}}
The submarine had a maximum surface speed of {{convert|18.3|kn}} and a maximum submerged speed of {{convert|7.3|kn}}.{{sfn|Gröner|1991|p=68}} When submerged, the boat could operate for {{convert|63|nmi}} at {{convert|4|kn}}; when surfaced, she could travel {{convert|13850|nmi}} at {{convert|10|kn}}. U-1224 was fitted with six {{convert|53.3|cm|in|0|abbr=on}} torpedo tubes (four fitted at the bow and two at the stern), 22 torpedoes, one 10.5 cm SK C/32 naval gun, 180 rounds, and a 3.7 cm Flak 18/36/37/43 as well as two twin 2 cm FlaK 30 anti-aircraft guns. The boat had a complement of forty-eight.{{sfn|Gröner|1991|p=68}}
=Flak weaponry=
U-1224/Ro-501 was mounted with a single 3.7 cm Flakzwilling M43U gun on the LM 42U mount. The LM 42U mount was the most common mount used with the 3.7 cm Flak M42U. The 3.7 cm Flak M42U was the marine version of the 3.7 cm Flak used by the Kriegsmarine on Type VII and Type IX U-boats.{{sfn|Gröner|1991|p=68}}
File:3.7cm Flak M42 LM42U.png|A single 3.7 cm Flak M42U gun on the LM 42U mount.
Service history
=''Kriegsmarine''=
The submarine's keel was laid down on 30 November 1942 by Blohm & Voss of Hamburg. She was commissioned on 20 October 1943, with Kapitänleutnant Georg Preuss as its commanding officer. U-1224 was assigned to the 31st U-boat Flotilla for training purposes,{{cite web | last1 = Hackett | first1 = Bob | last2 = Kingsepp | first2 = Sander | url=http://www.combinedfleet.com/RO-501.htm | title = IJN Submarine RO-501 (ex-U-1224): Tabular Record of Movement (Revision 4)| work = combinedfleet.com | date = 2017 | access-date = 2023-06-04 }} and was selected to be used as a training ship for Japanese sailors before she was even commissioned.{{sfn|Preisler|2013|p=80}}
U-1224 became part of the transfer of technology and knowledge missions that existed between Japan and Germany during World War II. A full crew of Japanese personnel was to be trained by the Germans to operate a U-boat, after which the boat would be gifted to Japan. This training mission was arranged by the German naval attaché in Tokyo, Vizeadmiral Paul Wenneker, who wanted to share German submarine technology and tactics with the Japanese. He advocated for giving German submarines to Japan and to train Japanese submariners in Germany.C. Peter Chen (2007). [https://ww2db.com/person_bio.php?person_id=87 Paul Wenneker – World War II Data Base]. Ww2db.com. Retrieved 4 June 2023. In August 1943, Lieutenant Commander Sadatoshi Norita and a 48-man Japanese crew arrived in France aboard submarine I-8, and proceeded to Germany by train, where they began working with a small crew of Kriegsmarine sailors in the Baltic from October 1943 until February 1944 in German submarine handling.
U-1224 was to become the second submarine to be transferred to Japan by the Germans, after Adolf Hitler made the decision in February 1943 to send two Kriegsmarine U-boats to Japan as part of a campaign against Allied sea lines of communication in the Indian Ocean. The head of the navy, Großadmiral Karl Dönitz, was against giving German submarines to the Japanese as he believed that Germany needed all of its U-boats in the Atlantic, and thought that Japanese and German crews would not get along well, but he was overruled by Hitler.{{sfn|Preisler|2013|p=80}} The first, U-511, was code-named "Marco Polo I" and departed Germany in May 1943, carrying along with its German crew several passengers that included engineering officers, the Japanese naval attaché Naokuni Nomura, and the diplomat Ernst Woermann, who was going to take up his post as German ambassador to the pro-Japanese collaborationist Wang Jingwei regime in China. She also had some supplies for the Indian Ocean-based German Monsun Gruppe. U-511 successfully arrived in Penang, Japanese-occupied Malaysia, in July 1943, where the supplies were offloaded, and then arrived in Kure, Japan, in August 1943. She was then commissioned into the Imperial Japanese Navy as Ro-500.{{cite web | last1 = Hackett | first1 = Bob | last2 = Kingsepp | first2 = Sander | url=http://www.combinedfleet.com/RO-500.htm | title = IJN Submarine RO-500 (ex-U-511): Tabular Record of Movement (Revision 4)| work = combinedfleet.com | date = 2017 | access-date = 2023-06-04 }} Therefore U-1224 was code-named "Marco Polo II" by the Germans.
=Imperial Japanese Navy=
After the crew underwent three months of training, U-1224 was recommissioned into the Imperial Japanese Navy as Ro-501, on 15 February 1944. Lieutenant Commander Sadatoshi Norita was formally appointed her commanding officer, and Ro-501 was nicknamed "Satsuki No. 2" by its new Japanese crew, who then spent several weeks from late February to late March 1944 doing further training at the U-boat anti-aircraft school in Swinemunde. Ro-501 was to be assigned to the 8th Submarine Squadron, which was based in Malaysia.
==Marco Polo II==
Germany and Japan were separated by great distance, and by 1944 they were increasingly cut off from each other. While neither power was able to send meaningful reinforcements or armaments through territory controlled by the Allied powers, they were able to use submarines to share some intelligence and weapons blueprints. Submarines offered security and their stealth allowed for a fair chance of success. At the end of March 1944, several Japanese naval engineering officers that had been studying in Germany, led by Captain Tetsuhiro Emi, arrived in Kiel, where they boarded Ro-501 and departed for Japan along with some war materials. They also took with them mercury, lead, steel, uncut optical glass and aluminum, along with the blueprints to construct a Type IX submarine and a Messerschmitt Me 163 "Komet" jet fighter.
U-1224 arrived in Norway on 30 March 1944 to refuel, and continued on its journey in early April, initially along with the German submarine U-859, which was also carrying a cargo of war material bound for Japan.
==Sinking==
The intended route to Penang was to take Ro-501 through the middle of the Atlantic Ocean west of the Azores and the Cape Verde Islands, then around the Cape of Good Hope. She was to rendezvous with I-8 in the Indian Ocean to refuel before proceeding to her destination. However, at {{coord|30|0|0|N|37|0|0|W|display=inline}}, Ro-501 ran into a U.S. Navy hunter-killer group comprising escort carrier {{USS|Bogue|CVE-9|6}} and five destroyer escorts, including {{USS|Francis M. Robinson|DE-220|6}}. The group's presence forced Ro-501 underwater for two days, during which her batteries were depleted and her captain, Lt. Cmdr. Norita, radioed a coded signal that he was being pursued. This transmission was detected by the American ships with their high-frequency direction finding ("Huff-Duff") equipment, enabling them to pinpoint the submarine's location.
The Francis M. Robinson reported a submerged contact at 19:00 on 13 May 1944. The destroyer escort engaged the contact with a full salvo from its forward-throwing Hedgehog mount, followed by five salvos of magnetic proximity fuzed depth charges. Four underwater explosions were detected. In early July 1944, the German naval attaché in Japan, Paul Wenneker, sent a message to Berlin asking about the status of Ro-501, to which he received the answer that U-boat Command had not heard from the submarine since 11 May. On 26 August 1944, she was presumed to be lost by the German Navy with all 56 hands aboard – 52 Japanese crew (including a German radar operator and a German pilot) plus four Japanese officer passengers. She was struck from the navy list on 10 October 1944. Her commanding officer, Norita, received a posthumous promotion to the rank of commander from the Imperial Japanese Navy, as did one of the passengers, Tetsuhiro Emi, to rear admiral.{{cite web |url=http://ijnsubsite.info/Commander%20Details%20k-o/norita_sadotoshi.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170301102128/http://ijnsubsite.info/Commander%20Details%20k-o/norita_sadotoshi.htm |url-status=usurped |archive-date=1 March 2017 |title=Norita Sadatoshi |website=IJN Submarine Service – Ijnsubsite.info |access-date=4 June 2023}}
The final resting place of U-1224/Ro-501 is {{convert|500|nmi}} west-northwest of the Cape Verde islands at {{coord|18|7|59|N|33|12|59|W|display=inline}} in {{convert|2900|ft|m}} of water. This is a few miles from where {{USS|Buckley|DE-51|6}} sank {{GS|U-66|1940|2}}.{{cite web|url=http://www.desausa.org/sinking_of_ro_501.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040117235715/http://desausa.org/sinking_of_ro_501.htm |url-status=usurped |archive-date=17 January 2004 |title=Sinking of RO 501 |publisher=Desausa.org |date=1944-05-13 |access-date=2014-06-21}}{{cite web|url=http://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?57983 |title=RO-501 SUBMARINE 1943-1944 - WRECK WRAK EPAVE WRACK PECIO |publisher=Wrecksite.eu |access-date=2014-06-21}}
References
{{Reflist}}
Bibliography
{{Refbegin}}
- {{cite book | last1 = Busch | first1 = Rainer | last2 = Röll | first2 = Hans-Joachim | translator-last = Brooks | translator-first = Geoffrey | title = German U-boat commanders of World War II : a biographical dictionary | publisher = Greenhill Books, Naval Institute Press | location = London, Annapolis, Md | year = 1999 | isbn = 1-55750-186-6 }}
- {{cite book
|last1=Busch
|first1=Rainer
|last2=Röll
|first2=Hans-Joachim
|title=Deutsche U-Boot-Verluste von September 1939 bis Mai 1945
|trans-title=German U-boat losses from September 1939 to May 1945
|series=Der U-Boot-Krieg
|volume=IV
|publisher=Mittler
|location=Hamburg, Berlin, Bonn
|year=1999
|isbn=3-8132-0514-2
|language=de
}}
- {{cite book
|last1=Gröner
|first1=Erich
|last2=Jung
|first2=Dieter
|last3=Maass
|first3=Martin
|translator-last1=Thomas
|translator-first1=Keith
|translator-last2=Magowan
|translator-first2=Rachel
|year=1991
|title=German Warships 1815–1945, U-boats and Mine Warfare Vessels
|volume=2
|location=London
|publisher=Conway Maritime Press
|isbn=0-85177-593-4
|ref=CITEREFGröner1991
}}
- {{cite book
|last1=Preisler
|first1=Jerome
|last2=Sewell
|first2=Kenneth
|year=2013
|title=Code Name Caesar: The Secret Hunt for U-Boat 864 During World War II
|publisher=Penguin Publishing Group
|isbn=978-0425253625
|ref=CITEREFPreisler2013
}}
{{Refend}}
External links
- [http://www.wikimapia.org/16312629/Wreck-of-HIJMS-RO-501-U-1224 Wreck information for the RO-501]
- [http://www.history.navy.mil/library/online/sublosses/sublosses_german.htm German Sub Losses] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110105214923/http://www.history.navy.mil/library/online/sublosses/sublosses_german.htm |date=5 January 2011 }}
- {{Cite web
|url=http://uboat.net/boats/u1224.htm
|title=The Type IXC/40 boat U-1224
|last=Helgason
|first=Guðmundur
|website=German U-boats of WWII - uboat.net
|access-date=7 December 2014}}
- [https://www.history.navy.mil/research/library/online-reading-room/title-list-alphabetically/b/blockade-running-between-europe-and-the-far-east-by-submarines-1942-44.html Blockade Running Information, WW2]
{{German Type IXC/40 submarines}}
{{May 1944 shipwrecks}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U1224}}
Category:German Type IX submarines
Category:U-boats commissioned in 1944
Category:World War II submarines of Germany
Category:World War II submarines of Japan
Category:Ships built in Hamburg
Category:U-boats sunk by US warships
Category:U-boats sunk by depth charges
Category:Foreign submarines of the Imperial Japanese Navy
Category:Japanese submarines lost during World War II
Category:Warships lost in combat with all hands
Category:Submarines lost with all hands