My father was the Chief Machinist Mate of the Walker during this action. The Walker arrived in the Pacific just in time for the Maranians turkey shoot. After the war my dad was reassigned to another ship and retired on December 7, 1949. thank you for making this video.
Jesus Christ what a story. If 615’s gunners were on the Bismarck she might’ve survived the war. Even though they were our enemies you have to acknowledge the bravery and heroism, an incredible story of the human experience in extreme circumstances
Really is interesting how ineffective the Bismarck's AA guns were. Seems to be the case for most battleships against air power though, none really had much success as far as I know. Thanks for watching and have a great week :)
@@HiddenHistoryYT Were the AA guns ineffective or was it the sighting system? The main guns of some battleships could be directed to fire fairly close to one moving target from another, yet not always a hit. They were on a 2 dimensional sea, air makes it 3D.
Nah...idts...if it wAsn't 4 these Enemy's. 🇺🇲wE🇺🇸 wouldn't hAd 2 Be in UnForgiven D💀adly BATTLES...WASTE OF PRECiOUS ⏳on 🌎 & LiFE on 🌍..O' sOSorryFAMiLY's...⌛'z🆙️
I worked at Todd Shipyards Galveston, TX in the summers of 1968 and 1969 for college money at University of Houston. Old timers at Todd told me of the ships that made it back from being torpedoed in the Gulf of Mexico and their repair. The same drydocks that held those ships were still in service in my time at Todd.
My father flew out of Norfolk Flying station Virginia on the Catalina n Mariner as a gunner n Spotter chasing Uboats. From late 1942 til the wars end.May ‘45
@MrKen-wy5dk: my father worked as a boilermaker, rivet driver, welder, and steel plate and bulkhead installer at Todd Shipyard in Galveston during the era of 1939-1961. I worked at Todd during the summers of 1957, ‘58, and ’59 to help my college expenses. I was born in 1937, raised, and educated in Galveston. I still remember the blackouts we had during the night because of potential U-boats offshore and the blimp base we had at Hitchcock that housed two blimps used for scouting and hunting for U-boats that could be attacked by planes from planes at Scholes Field and Ellington Field. My dad riveted a lot of the ships that went into WWII and he was drafted into the Army in 1944 at the age of 34 yrs, with 4 kids to support. He repaired and converted a lot of the ships that returned from the war after 1945. I worked in and knew all 3 dry docks at Todds as well as the main plate shop and most of the employees at Todds - especially the boilermakers. Since I was a boilermaker helper, I knew a lot of the senior welders, cutters, & fitters as well as machinists and electricians. I learned to cut and weld at Todd. I heard a lot of the stories and tales of what went on during and after WWII. I can relate to the U-boat presence the Gulf of Mexico.
Sure, all those great people who would have murdered half the world were just so wonderful. Sick, man, really sick to praise these nazi killers. Really, really sick. I'm sure your parents wanted something better for you.
@@angloaust1575 They didn’t and he didn’t however my grand uncle ran the show towards last years, he sank over 8000 tons (metric) and let others limp away. How dare you judge them defending nation from offensive monsters coming to kill civilians, his babies and wife. What if killed yours in 8 million set fire to your family lost all, nation and better life, all knew wealth positions buisness status home language history job, noble landed family. Your magnificent time on earth. They were bringing death to a peaceful nation unfairly. 53 nation on one? Two giants? Go to Russia or serve Israel ya coward. The terror or being in a semi sub coffin. You’d never do it. 36 hours under the sea, they went all seas, under attic all, America South America, NYC harbor. These aren’t real subs, drop depth, torpedos mines, no washing or using toilet noise. No water to get the sink off of engine. They were bravery godmen. I never heard a word of complaints or anger. He killed no non combatants or concentration camp. They were free, and could have freed us. The filth that fought for Allies should be in hell. Fools, they served in WW1. It would eat your mind. You don’t own a bank nor understand the conflict and stakes. Probably part human, of nations. He didn’t sink a thing, even in all that time. You think you’d rise to top or be of school where all came from. Flying, drowning is terrifying. Not breathing, this wasn’t a game, NO CHOICES! Bombers took Stuttgart and Keil too. The Bombed the harbor The ceiling consisted of pre-stressed concrete-layers being in the end 4,8 m thick, the walls then had a strength of 3,3 m. There were two boxes each with a length of 150 m, the berths within stretched over 138 m per side. Therefore "Kilian" was the only base where two boats could be berthed one after the other. They killed maybe 5 and took not a boat. All slipped out and nobody was harmed but tons of Allies. These punks had real weapons but as an ace in yanks or Brit’s gets ten maybe shot down, they had weaker or better technology. With nothing they stopped 300. Some were on both marines and or other services. All Nuremberg were, Goebbels was dead. You’d not take a gyro or sailboat to sea, not a surfboard. Just being a troll, you know they were right!
Somewhere in amongst those sunken oilers was an interesting story from a deckhand who was sunk twice before being rescued once. He was fairly new to the merchant marine but sharp enough to sleep with his life jacket on. When the ship suddenly heaved, He knew exactly what had happened and got topside in time to be swept over the side. The water was covered in oil, And he swallowed some making him violently ill. Another freighter began picking up surivers and was itself torpedoed, This time Catching Fire. Again, He had to take to the sea, And was horribly burned getting there this time. A third ship coming the other way Was picking up survivors. It too was damaged but not sunk before they could get the man out of the water. It was quite a challenge because the men were oil covered and kept slipping out of the loop, But this man held the loop tight despite it biting through the burn on his back and was hauled up onto the deck. The ship immediately struck out for mobile Is Alabama and was able to outrun the submarine, Who was by then, being harassed by allied armed forces.
Interesting and informative. Excellent photography job. Historians did a very good job presenting actual facts from fiction. Orator presented the documentary very well. Class A research project. Quite a game of hide and seek hunting 615.
A wonderful channel that deserves all respect, appreciation and pride. Accurate and useful information in a sophisticated and beautiful manner. I wish you lasting success. I have the utmost respect and admiration for your great honor for these wonderful works. I hope you success
Many greetings, respect and appreciation for your wonderful channel, which is full of useful and accurate information. Thank you for all the nice words for your amazing efforts. Thanks for the Arabic translation. I wish you success and goodness
I sincerely wish to thank you for this historic event. I am from trinidad. I would enjoy more clips of the caribbean. .their was a battle between Spain and England for trinidad. But that was in the 15th century
And all this at an age at which I merely dared to ride on public transport alone... May all the poor souls who have been betrayed of their lives so very early rest in peace...😢
Watched from Old Harour, Jamaica.Reed about U-615 in G.T.M. Kelshall's book The U-Boat War In The Caribbean, capture 'The Greatest Battle'. I even wrote Mr. Kelshell a letter and he informed me that his book was doing well in the US and Europe but sadly, West Indians are not interested in his book. I do research on US bases in Jamaica and too find not too many people are interested.
@@HiddenHistoryYT I had introduced the book to many other, one suched was a former VP-91 (off the top of my head) pilot who after reeding it pointed out some errows in which I was not took surpriced because I too found afew myself. In his second letter to me Mr. Kelshell informed me that he got so much correspondence from ex-service men that if he were to rewrite the book it would be twice the volume. I even made the suggestion on one of our local radio station in Jamaica that his book should be apart of out local school curriculum but nothing was done.
Having lived in Trinidad for decades and not far away from Cheguramas I relate well with the story with interest. I also visited military museum there.
Seriously intense battle, those sub sailors had balz' o' steel, kids of today couldn't comprehend the manliness of the men that comprised that era and war.. great post, I hit the subscribe button twice!
wish you continuous success . A very beautiful and wonderful work that deserves admiration and all appreciation. Never stop.. It would be great if all your works are translated into Arabic. I wish you well and happiness. Thank you for your exceptional and distinguished effort in presenting this very beautiful work
Played a gig in a dock bar right across from the sub pens in Lorrient , well cool , from the stage , you face two massive windows and in the windows is this massive view of the sub pens , was well impressed 👍 can imagine u boatmen drinking in this bar during the war as they would be really close in an emergency
A thousand greetings, great respect and admiration for your esteemed and wonderful channel, which provided accurate and useful information. I wish you lasting success. A wonderful work and a great effort that deserves pride, appreciation and pride. My utmost respect and appreciation to you
Dad was a radioman on a Martin PBM 5 IN VP-215 late in the war. His area was central Florida to the Carolinas. His description, fly to the last known position of a sub drop bouys to track the sub and fly away as fast a you could. Plane was so heavy from extra fuel tanks they felt a sub could surface and shoot them down before they could get out of range! Not a lot of love for the Martin!
Wow, great info thanks for sharing! And thank you to your dad for his service, he is an American hero! Can't imagine how nerve wracking it must have been! Thanks for watching and have a great week :)
One problem with the German navy command was too much radio traffic. Even if you cannot understand what they are reporting that radio transmission gives away your location. The Germans had the ability to locate radio transmissions so they should have known the Allies could do the same.
Ever heard the term swellhead AKA stubborn pride? These so-called Supermen thought they were invincible. It doesn't take much to drop you a few notches, then you'll start walking on firm ground again.
Great video. There are tons of little known but very interesting uboat patrols. You should make a video on the sinking of U-604 and U-185. It was very intense and dramatic as well
At least what I've seen it was a pretty difficult job but yeah not the best showing. Can't question their bravery though in continually pressing home their attacks into AA fire. Thanks for watching :)
Apparently the logic in staying on the surface when airplanes attacked is that scoring a direct hit on the submarine was statistically minimal, but underwater there was no need to score a direct hit as the water transmitted the energy of the bomb in a large radius.
Never shown on film, U-Boats with only the top of the conning tower above water, commander outside, often in water up to his waist, commanding through a speaker tube.
U864s trip down under is also worth a video. Good book on it as well. Seems that apart from technical collaboration the nazis and imperial Japan weren't the closest of allies
From a personal account I read, the Japanese in Penang didn't want to service a U-Boot as they didn't want to take orders from a European. It seems the Germans of the time got a taste of their own arrogant attitude!
They were circumstantial allies not natural ones, indeed nazi Germany had been an ally of nationalist China, imperial Japan's main enemy prior to their attack on pearl harbour
Interesting but sad story. So many lives wasted. By July 1943, German officers knew the war was lost, and many knew that Hitler was evil and needed to be eliminated. Kapitsky was clearly an intelligent man. He must have wondered if fighting for Hitler made any sense.
Organizations can't copyright public domain material but they will mar what they can for folks who use their copy, some put phony counters on the bottom.
I am a big fan of the submarine services. This gentle man was a super Nazi, pilot and captain of subs with little experience in subs. I mean that guy was extreamly adept person. The subs are like the pinicle of smart guys in any service. . way smarter than pilots, who are super smart as well, really. This guy in the early part of the war was a big hero, then after May in 43 it was all down hill. loosing 10 to 30 subs in one month.
While it is true that the diseases don't spread easily without sexual contact having one would still be extremely uncomfortable for the crewmember and with no way of treating or even alleviating the disease while at sea the afflicted sailors performance would be severely compromised. If a crewmember can not fully perform his duties he puts the entire boat at risk. The captain was probably exempt just by the virtue of being a high ranking officer who should know better and not have unprotected sex with hookers.
Don't be too sure. I read in Teddy Suhren's memoirs that some sailors were very much suspected of "closer than normal contact". Even Das Boot, the film, hints at it.
@@HiddenHistoryYT - How dare you tell me what kind of weekend to have! National Socialist giving orders again...huh? Oh, yes, certainly, you are most welcome...see what I did there? I was playing an Entitled One.
Good well put together story, whats buyout footage? Dived to soon, stayed down to long sound contrary to me? Geez U-615 put up a good fight to try and live. Nice goin Crew, you Captain woulda bee real proud of you
An archive source. Unfortunately basically all WW2 footage is in possession of archives who put their branding across the videos unless you want to pay $400+ for each 30 second clip. Pretty ridiculous IMO as they weren’t even the one who shot it!
Well done. Just 3 small criticisms. It's not a point-five-O caliber machine gun. It's just fifty caliber. Wagner is pronounced Vaahgner. Just say U six fifteen for description of U-boat. You don't need to use hundred.
What most people don't realise is that the German navy had been the very first country to come up with the idea of putting rubber panels that made that uboat undetectable on sonar but due to the uboat not having known that the British navy had just laid a naw batches of underwater mines iin the area the sub had sunk a couple of ship in row so when the poor bastards came back they hit one because the TV show about it made it known that the it had hit one was it was eventually found in the channel look at Google for the name of the program because it was always either the British or the Germans that were the first country's to come up with the idea of it first we it always was back then like the jetfighter it is a fact the Germans had those during the ww11
@@willlauzon3744 The thumbnail isn't a Type VIIC which was what U-615 was and isn't a Type XXI either. Pretty sure no WWII U-boat had a full width superstructure like that. As the TH-cam owner has said the thumbnail was invented but bears no relevance to the U-boat or 'planes involved in the story.
I'm no good at U-boats, but when I saw the thumbnail I thought "nevermind that it didn't exist yet, wtf is a deHavilland Caribou-ish looking thing doing buzzing a U-boat?"
the term centimetre is never used for gun sizes etc , eg, 88mm , 20 mm , etc etc , to say 2 cm's is just wrong , you would never say for instance the famous 8.8cm anti aircraft gun , please use the correct terminology
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it is interesting how Humans use so much effort and energy to kill itself...
well done....Lest We Forget.
@@thelastaustralian7583 Greatly appreciate it! Have a great week :)
you can just say 615 and leave out the hundred each time...otherwise good eh
@@Prone2Thrill Will be fixed in all future U-Boat videos! Thanks for watching :)
My father was the Chief Machinist Mate of the Walker during this action. The Walker arrived in the Pacific just in time for the Maranians turkey shoot. After the war my dad was reassigned to another ship and retired on December 7, 1949. thank you for making this video.
Wow, thank you for sharing this and most of all thank you to him for his service! Appreciate you watching and have a great week :)
Jesus Christ what a story. If 615’s gunners were on the Bismarck she might’ve survived the war. Even though they were our enemies you have to acknowledge the bravery and heroism, an incredible story of the human experience in extreme circumstances
Really is interesting how ineffective the Bismarck's AA guns were. Seems to be the case for most battleships against air power though, none really had much success as far as I know. Thanks for watching and have a great week :)
@@HiddenHistoryYT qq no
@@HiddenHistoryYT Were the AA guns ineffective or was it the sighting system?
The main guns of some battleships could be directed to fire fairly close to one moving target from another, yet not always a hit.
They were on a 2 dimensional sea, air makes it 3D.
@@20chocsaday I believe on Bismarck they weren’t designed for airplanes as slow as the Swordfish that were attacking
Nah...idts...if it wAsn't 4 these Enemy's. 🇺🇲wE🇺🇸 wouldn't hAd 2 Be in UnForgiven D💀adly BATTLES...WASTE OF PRECiOUS ⏳on 🌎 & LiFE on 🌍..O' sOSorryFAMiLY's...⌛'z🆙️
Fantastic vid. Excellent narration. Excellent detail. Added bonus ... no stupid background music.
Greatly appreciate it! Thanks for watching and have a great week :)
What a truly gripping and detailed account of action and bravery! I thoroughly enjoyed every minute of it!
Greatly appreciate! Thanks for watching and have a great week :)
I worked at Todd Shipyards Galveston, TX in the summers of 1968 and 1969 for college money at University of Houston. Old timers at Todd told me of the ships that made it back from being torpedoed in the Gulf of Mexico and their repair. The same drydocks that held those ships were still in service in my time at Todd.
Wow, that is awesome! Imagine you got to hear some incredible stories. Thanks for watching :)
My father flew out of Norfolk Flying station Virginia on the Catalina n Mariner as a gunner n Spotter chasing Uboats. From late 1942 til the wars end.May ‘45
Your video history is excellent.
@@walterbsprinks Thank you to him for his service, a true hero! Appreciate you watching and have a great weekend :)
@MrKen-wy5dk: my father worked as a boilermaker, rivet driver, welder, and steel plate and bulkhead installer at Todd Shipyard in Galveston during the era of 1939-1961. I worked at Todd during the summers of 1957, ‘58, and ’59 to help my college expenses. I was born in 1937, raised, and educated in Galveston. I still remember the blackouts we had during the night because of potential U-boats offshore and the blimp base we had at Hitchcock that housed two blimps used for scouting and hunting for U-boats that could be attacked by planes from planes at Scholes Field and Ellington Field. My dad riveted a lot of the ships that went into WWII and he was drafted into the Army in 1944 at the age of 34 yrs, with 4 kids to support. He repaired and converted a lot of the ships that returned from the war after 1945. I worked in and knew all 3 dry docks at Todds as well as the main plate shop and most of the employees at Todds - especially the boilermakers. Since I was a boilermaker helper, I knew a lot of the senior welders, cutters, & fitters as well as machinists and electricians. I learned to cut and weld at Todd. I heard a lot of the stories and tales of what went on during and after WWII. I can relate to the U-boat presence the Gulf of Mexico.
thank you for telling the story of a great commander, Ralph Kapitsky , thank you .
Thanks for watching :)
Sinking defenceless ships
Unrestricted submarine warfare as the Americans later
Employed some were full of pows!
Sure, all those great people who would have murdered half the world were just so wonderful. Sick, man, really sick to praise these nazi killers.
Really, really sick. I'm sure your parents wanted something better for you.
@@angloaust1575 u clearly don’t understand y he said that… smh 🤦♂️
@@angloaust1575 They didn’t and he didn’t however my grand uncle ran the show towards last years, he sank over 8000 tons (metric) and let others limp away. How dare you judge them defending nation from offensive monsters coming to kill civilians, his babies and wife. What if killed yours in 8 million set fire to your family lost all, nation and better life, all knew wealth positions buisness status home language history job, noble landed family. Your magnificent time on earth. They were bringing death to a peaceful nation unfairly. 53 nation on one? Two giants? Go to Russia or serve Israel ya coward. The terror or being in a semi sub coffin. You’d never do it. 36 hours under the sea, they went all seas, under attic all, America South America, NYC harbor. These aren’t real subs, drop depth, torpedos mines, no washing or using toilet noise. No water to get the sink off of engine. They were bravery godmen. I never heard a word of complaints or anger. He killed no non combatants or concentration camp. They were free, and could have freed us. The filth that fought for Allies should be in hell. Fools, they served in WW1. It would eat your mind. You don’t own a bank nor understand the conflict and stakes. Probably part human, of nations. He didn’t sink a thing, even in all that time. You think you’d rise to top or be of school where all came from. Flying, drowning is terrifying. Not breathing, this wasn’t a game, NO CHOICES! Bombers took Stuttgart and Keil too. The Bombed the harbor
The ceiling consisted of pre-stressed concrete-layers being in the end 4,8 m thick, the walls then had a strength of 3,3 m. There were two boxes each with a length of 150 m, the berths within stretched over 138 m per side. Therefore "Kilian" was the only base where two boats could be berthed one after the other. They killed maybe 5 and took not a boat. All slipped out and nobody was harmed but tons of Allies. These punks had real weapons but as an ace in yanks or Brit’s gets ten maybe shot down, they had weaker or better technology. With nothing they stopped 300. Some were on both marines and or other services. All Nuremberg were, Goebbels was dead. You’d not take a gyro or sailboat to sea, not a surfboard. Just being a troll, you know they were right!
Somewhere in amongst those sunken oilers was an interesting story from a deckhand who was sunk twice before being rescued once. He was fairly new to the merchant marine but sharp enough to sleep with his life jacket on. When the ship suddenly heaved, He knew exactly what had happened and got topside in time to be swept over the side.
The water was covered in oil, And he swallowed some making him violently ill. Another freighter began picking up surivers and was itself torpedoed, This time Catching Fire. Again, He had to take to the sea, And was horribly burned getting there this time. A third ship coming the other way Was picking up survivors. It too was damaged but not sunk before they could get the man out of the water. It was quite a challenge because the men were oil covered and kept slipping out of the loop, But this man held the loop tight despite it biting through the burn on his back and was hauled up onto the deck. The ship immediately struck out for mobile Is Alabama and was able to outrun the submarine, Who was by then, being harassed by allied armed forces.
Wow, thanks for sharing! Appreciate you watching and have a great weekend :)
Do you happen to knwon what the subs number was or who steered it?
What a fight! The last victim gave me a chuckle. Great story telling.
Greatly appreciate it! Thanks for watching and have a fantastic week :)
Wow..what a story of U615...thumbs up
Appreciate it, thanks for watching and have a great week :)
More U boat stories, please, kind sir
Will do! Thanks for watching and have a great week :)
HIDDEN HISTORY IS SOOOO BACK
❤️
Great story . great shooting. Thanks for sharing this story
Greatly appreciate it! Thanks for watching and have a great week :)
the great shooting was on the Allied side, evil wicked shooting o the evil rotten german side
@@dave8599 Well on this boat it was unfortunately.
What an excellent video ! Thanks for that.
Greatly appreciate it! Thanks for watching and have a fantastic rest of your week :)
Interesting and informative. Excellent photography job. Historians did a very good job presenting actual facts from fiction. Orator presented the documentary very well. Class A research project. Quite a game of hide and seek hunting 615.
Greatly appreciate it! Thanks for watching and have a great weekend :)
A wonderful channel that deserves all respect, appreciation and pride. Accurate and useful information in a sophisticated and beautiful manner. I wish you lasting success. I have the utmost respect and admiration for your great honor for these wonderful works. I hope you success
You’re really doing a great job for us who love WW2
Greatly appreciate it! Thanks for watching and have a fantastic weekend :)
These men of U615 where young men fighting a war for a mad man
Thanks for watching and have a great week :)
Many greetings, respect and appreciation for your wonderful channel, which is full of useful and accurate information. Thank you for all the nice words for your amazing efforts. Thanks for the Arabic translation. I wish you success and goodness
Greatly appreciate it! Have a great weekend :)
I sincerely wish to thank you for this historic event. I am from trinidad. I would enjoy more clips of the caribbean. .their was a battle between Spain and England for trinidad. But that was in the 15th century
I will check those out! Appreciate you watching and have a great weekend :)
And all this at an age at which I merely dared to ride on public transport alone...
May all the poor souls who have been betrayed of their lives so very early rest in peace...😢
Thanks for watching :)
@@HiddenHistoryYT😅😅😅
Outstanding video!!!
Greatly appreciate it! Thanks for watching and have a great week :)
Watched from Old Harour, Jamaica.Reed about U-615 in G.T.M. Kelshall's book The U-Boat War In The Caribbean, capture 'The Greatest Battle'. I even wrote Mr. Kelshell a letter and he informed me that his book was doing well in the US and Europe but sadly, West Indians are not interested in his book. I do research on US bases in Jamaica and too find not too many people are interested.
Very cool! I will have to check that out, thanks for the suggestion. Appreciate you watching and have a great rest of your week :)
@@HiddenHistoryYT I had introduced the book to many other, one suched was a former VP-91 (off the top of my head) pilot who after reeding it pointed out some errows in which I was not took surpriced because I too found afew myself. In his second letter to me Mr. Kelshell informed me that he got so much correspondence from ex-service men that if he were to rewrite the book it would be twice the volume. I even made the suggestion on one of our local radio station in Jamaica that his book should be apart of out local school curriculum but nothing was done.
@@kennedysingh3916 Wow! I agree with you on that, very underrated events in the region!
Having lived in Trinidad for decades and not far away from Cheguramas I relate well with the story with interest. I also visited military museum there.
That is awesome! Thanks for watching and have a great weekend :)
Seriously intense battle, those sub sailors had balz' o' steel, kids of today couldn't comprehend the manliness of the men that comprised that era and war.. great post, I hit the subscribe button twice!
Appreciate you watching and have a great week :)
wish you continuous success . A very beautiful and wonderful work that deserves admiration and all appreciation. Never stop.. It would be great if all your works are translated into Arabic. I wish you well and happiness. Thank you for your exceptional and distinguished effort in presenting this very beautiful work
great story .. well researched u got me now
Greatly appreciate it Pete! Have a great week :)
Excellent story, well done!
Greatly appreciate it! Thanks for watching and have a fantastic rest of your week :)
Great Story , thank you 👍.
Appreciate it Jim, thanks for watching! Have a great week :)
Awesome, thankyou!
Thanks for watching :)
That was an incredible u boat to be able to stay floating as long as it did.
Thanks for watching :)
Excellent film!
Appreciate it, thanks for watching and have a great week :)
Played a gig in a dock bar right across from the sub pens in Lorrient , well cool , from the stage , you face two massive windows and in the windows is this massive view of the sub pens , was well impressed 👍 can imagine u boatmen drinking in this bar during the war as they would be really close in an emergency
Very cool!! Thanks for watching and have a great week :)
U615's wild run would make a great movie!
I agree! Thanks for watching and have a great week :)
What a story of nerve and fortitude=same for the pilot and crews of the aircraft
Thanks for watching and have a great weekend :)
A thousand greetings, great respect and admiration for your esteemed and wonderful channel, which provided accurate and useful information. I wish you lasting success. A wonderful work and a great effort that deserves pride, appreciation and pride. My utmost respect and appreciation to you
Dad was a radioman on a Martin PBM 5 IN VP-215 late in the war. His area was central Florida to the Carolinas. His description, fly to the last known position of a sub drop bouys to track the sub and fly away as fast a you could. Plane was so heavy from extra fuel tanks they felt a sub could surface and shoot them down before they could get out of range! Not a lot of love for the Martin!
Wow, great info thanks for sharing! And thank you to your dad for his service, he is an American hero! Can't imagine how nerve wracking it must have been! Thanks for watching and have a great week :)
At some point the Captain surfaces and shouts "Ach, c'mon!!! You can only kill us once!" at the assault ship.
😂
Excellent, new subscriber.
Greatly appreciate it! Have a great weekend :)
One problem with the German navy command was too much radio traffic. Even if you cannot understand what they are reporting that radio transmission gives away your location. The Germans had the ability to locate radio transmissions so they should have known the Allies could do the same.
Very true! Thanks for watching and have a great weekend :)
Ever heard the term swellhead AKA stubborn pride?
These so-called Supermen thought they were invincible.
It doesn't take much to drop you a few notches, then you'll start walking on firm ground again.
Great video. There are tons of little known but very interesting uboat patrols. You should make a video on the sinking of U-604 and U-185. It was very intense and dramatic as well
excellent production...
Greatly appreciate it! Thanks for watching and have a great week :)
I recommend a video on Peter-Erich Cremer.
I will add that to my list for videos this month, appreciate the suggestion! As always thanks for watching John and have a great week :)
My dad was also a RM on 60 ft Cabincruser taken over by the Navy to track Submarines operating in the Gulf. Tracking subs reporting and bearings.
Thank you to him for his service!
3:44 ❤
Badasses on both sides of the conflict: We stand on the shoulders of giants.
Thanks for watching and have a great weekend :)
Kudos to the U-615 crew for their defence, but man those Allied attackers were shoddy in their work...
At least what I've seen it was a pretty difficult job but yeah not the best showing. Can't question their bravery though in continually pressing home their attacks into AA fire. Thanks for watching :)
To hell with the evil murderous nazi. No honor to any of those murderous scum.
The heroism of the allied aircrew of the various aircraft is noteworthy.
Appreciate you watching and have a great week :)
Apparently the logic in staying on the surface when airplanes attacked is that scoring a direct hit on the submarine was statistically minimal, but underwater there was no need to score a direct hit as the water transmitted the energy of the bomb in a large radius.
Great information! Thanks for watching and have a fantastic weekend :)
Incredible story thanks for sharing with us. A video of the Jervis Bay´s combat with the KMS Admiral Scheer would be highly appreciated.
Thanks for watching :)
That last words of the commander just before he died was; " Hatten Sie jemals einen dieser Tage?
😂 Thanks for watching and have a great weekend :)
wow, one hell of a fight!
The Germans definitely knew how to build boats.
Thanks for watching :)
They usually build the best of what it is they are making.
death camps, gas chambers, evil medical experiments, torture, and murder, that is what the germans excelled in. zero honor for them.
According to the book "Steel Boats, IronHearts"; the French dock workers sabotaged them frequently causing returns to port several times.
@@fazole that was mentioned as a big problem in Donitz' book too.
U- 615 Warriors to the end. What a waste of courage though no matter what colour uniform or badges worn. Great story telling thank you very much.
Greatly appreciate you watching and have a fantastic week :)
Never shown on film, U-Boats with only the top of the conning tower above water, commander outside, often in water up to his waist, commanding through a speaker tube.
That’s incredible and excellent info! Thanks for watching and have a great week!
U864s trip down under is also worth a video. Good book on it as well. Seems that apart from technical collaboration the nazis and imperial Japan weren't the closest of allies
I will look into that, thanks for the suggestion! Appreciate you watching and have a great week :)
@HiddenHistoryYT, Yes, H.H. Please do persue that sub...
@@paulsilva3346 Will do!
From a personal account I read, the Japanese in Penang didn't want to service a U-Boot as they didn't want to take orders from a European. It seems the Germans of the time got a taste of their own arrogant attitude!
They were circumstantial allies not natural ones, indeed nazi Germany had been an ally of nationalist China, imperial Japan's main enemy prior to their attack on pearl harbour
🙋🏻♂️🌅; What a Great Story ❤; Thanks 😮
Appreciate you watching and have a great weekend :)
Great Video !!! Whats that background Music please ?
Appreciate it! th-cam.com/video/9iV6kX5Y2nw/w-d-xo.html
THANK YOU FOR VIDEO
Thanks for watching :)
Interesting but sad story. So many lives wasted. By July 1943, German officers knew the war was lost, and many knew that Hitler was evil and needed to be eliminated. Kapitsky was clearly an intelligent man. He must have wondered if fighting for Hitler made any sense.
Indeed! Appreciate you watching & have a great week :)
this man was a true undersea warrior
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Omg he shot more planes than a mesersmit!
Truy insane! Thanks for watching :)
U-615 is referred to as 'Six-Fifteen' NOT 'Six Hundred Fifteen' ;)
Very good.Sir.
Thanks for watching :)
This was like a movie. It was so good, it was as if I was there trying to shoot down the ASW planes. It was gripping
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The U boats were doomed, enigma had them done for and they had no clue, very brave men
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Some of the heroic U-Boat crew members who didn't make back to port are still on patrol.
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Very interesting!
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German subs never had XOs, they only had 1WO ( 1. Wachoffizier, First Officer of the Watch).
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I'm not gonna lie I get why they sent these pilots to the Caribbean instead of Europe or the Pacific
Greatly appreciate it! Thanks for watching and have a great week :)
0:23 It look like a PBM, but what is that thing on top / behind the cockpit?
It’s a air to sea radar
excellent
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This caption learned to grow balls 😂 almost to late good defense against enemy planes 😳
Thanks for watching Gene :)
@@HiddenHistoryYT thanks I like u boat stories im half german
@@genesauter4755 Very cool! My relative that came over to America was from Prussia
Organizations can't copyright public domain material but they will mar what they can for folks who use their copy, some put phony counters on the bottom.
Ya it’s quite annoying how these people who didn’t even film it act like they own the footage. God Bless the US National Archives at least
I am a big fan of the submarine services. This gentle man was a super Nazi, pilot and captain of subs with little experience in subs. I mean that guy was extreamly adept person. The subs are like the pinicle of smart guys in any service. . way smarter than pilots, who are super smart as well, really. This guy in the early part of the war was a big hero, then after May in 43 it was all down hill. loosing 10 to 30 subs in one month.
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All the nazi were evil men that fought for evil hitler, zero respect for these murderers.
Incredible story! Thank you!
Thanks for watching :)
Fantastic heroism.
Thanks for watching :)
5:55 Why did they specifically check for venerial diseases? It's not like the could communicate them to anyone. And why was the captain exempt?
While it is true that the diseases don't spread easily without sexual contact having one would still be extremely uncomfortable for the crewmember and with no way of treating or even alleviating the disease while at sea the afflicted sailors performance would be severely compromised. If a crewmember can not fully perform his duties he puts the entire boat at risk. The captain was probably exempt just by the virtue of being a high ranking officer who should know better and not have unprotected sex with hookers.
Don't be too sure. I read in Teddy Suhren's memoirs that some sailors were very much suspected of "closer than normal contact". Even Das Boot, the film, hints at it.
Kapitski (?) turns to the crew..."I am beginning to take this personally!".
Thanks for watching and have a great weekend :)
@@HiddenHistoryYT - How dare you tell me what kind of weekend to have! National Socialist giving orders again...huh? Oh, yes, certainly, you are most welcome...see what I did there? I was playing an Entitled One.
Love u boat stuff. It’s fascinating shit
Same here!
My great uncle in-law, Karl Helmut Fischer was a crewmember.
Wow, absolutely remarkable! Did he have any stories about it?
@@HiddenHistoryYT Only that he was executed by the US right after the war at Fort Leavenworth.
Good well put together story, whats buyout footage? Dived to soon, stayed down to long sound contrary to me? Geez U-615 put up a good fight to try and live. Nice goin Crew, you Captain woulda bee real proud of you
An archive source. Unfortunately basically all WW2 footage is in possession of archives who put their branding across the videos unless you want to pay $400+ for each 30 second clip. Pretty ridiculous IMO as they weren’t even the one who shot it!
@@HiddenHistoryYT Unfortunatly there are people around like that. Thanks, keep up the good work.
@@gregbolitho9775 Greatly appreciate it! Thanks for watching and have a great weekend :)
Unknowingly they saved 3 other u-boats in the areas with their Fight. 💪💪💪
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Germans really knew how to build a U-boat, and for the men in them "suicide mission!" Better U than me! 🚀💥🇺🇸
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Well done. Just 3 small criticisms. It's not a point-five-O caliber machine gun. It's just fifty caliber. Wagner is pronounced Vaahgner. Just say U six fifteen for description of U-boat. You don't need to use hundred.
Will correct in future videos! Thanks for watching and have a great week :)
16:40 Yessssss….
I want to hit the like button, but its already at 615 likes
😂
Very interesting of accounts of submarine warfare and destruction of the subs.
Thanks for watching and have a great week :)
What is the aircraft in the thumbnail?
It’s AI generated so no specific one :)
🎉🎉okay
What most people don't realise is that the German navy had been the very first country to come up with the idea of putting rubber panels that made that uboat undetectable on sonar but due to the uboat not having known that the British navy had just laid a naw batches of underwater mines iin the area the sub had sunk a couple of ship in row so when the poor bastards came back they hit one because the TV show about it made it known that the it had hit one was it was eventually found in the channel look at Google for the name of the program because it was always either the British or the Germans that were the first country's to come up with the idea of it first we it always was back then like the jetfighter it is a fact the Germans had those during the ww11
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Not sure what the aircraft is in the thumbnail it isn't a Mariner or a Ventura and the submarine looks nothing like VIIC U-Boat.
My secret is that the thumbnail is AI generated haha, which is why it's not any particular models. Great eye to spot that! Thanks for watching :)
Was also wondering. Not sure but the thumbnail is a type XXI? Still watching so not going back to check right now
@@willlauzon3744 The thumbnail isn't a Type VIIC which was what U-615 was and isn't a Type XXI either. Pretty sure no WWII U-boat had a full width superstructure like that.
As the TH-cam owner has said the thumbnail was invented but bears no relevance to the U-boat or 'planes involved in the story.
I'm no good at U-boats, but when I saw the thumbnail I thought "nevermind that it didn't exist yet, wtf is a deHavilland Caribou-ish looking thing doing buzzing a U-boat?"
the narrators pronunciation is a bit unusual.......Dönitz has become Doughnuts
Robot 🤖
The painting is explicit😮
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The four U boat supply U boats were sunk because of Enigma.
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Thumbnail picture looks nothing like a U boat nor any submarine I've heard of.
Who’s admiral doughnut’s?
Kriegsmarine Großadmiral Donuts…
the term centimetre is never used for gun sizes etc , eg, 88mm , 20 mm , etc etc , to say 2 cm's is just wrong , you would never say for instance the famous 8.8cm anti aircraft gun , please use the correct terminology
True warriors
German high command, " If we lose this war, the world will move into a very dark period." All proven. Hopefully, peace be unto you.
if the germans had won, then evil would have won. these evil submarine crews fought for hitler. To hell with them
Thanks for watching :)