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Thanks for pointing out the 3/4 length, Smithy. I didn't realize they were that long. Your photographs have answered a lot of my questions.
Thanks, Smithy. These are great photos. Easy to pick out the Skipper from the group of sailors; he has The Look.
If these leather U Boat peacoats weren't issued, or made available for official purchase, then there must have been a regulation with specs for private purchase as they all appear to be the same.
^ Off topic: looks to me like every one of the lower ranking officers could put a beat down on the commander of that group -- definitely not a Darwinian hierarchy there.
I was wondering where these coats fit in the U-Boat jacket history.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------I thought that I might post these in this thread for those looking for references for actual issued Kriegsmarine/U-boat service leather jackets. I hope they might be of help to those interested in these jackets and give some visual evidence of what these jackets looked like.
A great photo of both deck and engine personnel jackets:
Skipper in his deck jacket (possibly a black example with rank epaulettes) with his crew sporting the engine personnel single breasted example.
A "large size" deck jacket in the grey shade worn by an Oberleutnant zur See rank skipper:
Being a bit of a claustrophobe, I can think of few worse things than the way they went.
Looking at these photos really makes me sad thinking of all those poor young guys, many, if not most, of whom died in the service. Being a bit of a claustrophobe, I can think of few worse things than the way they went.
I think the survival rate for the submarine crews was about 25%. So, 75% of them ended up on the bottom of the sea. A claustrophobic's worst nightmare.
My father was in the RN in the war and served at times on escort duties for Atlantic and Arctic convoys. The Arctic convoys were much more dangerous because the water was so cold that men could not be usually be saved when they went in and death occurred after only a few minutes. They knew that if they were sunk they were dead. He told me of the times they pulled men out of a sea of burning fuel oil in the Atlantic with skin peeled completely off, and of the times they couldn’t stop to rescue crews because the chances of being torpedoed themselves were so high that they had to leave them to die.
Unsurprisingly the U boat crews were hated by the RN and the Merchant Marine, and incidentally the British Merchant Marine lost far more seamen in the Atlantic the the RN did and yet was almost forgotten after the war. It took forty years to even get a proper memorial with the names of the dead. Back then they saw the U boats as fighting a coward’s war, and right up to the turning point of the Battle of the Atlantic the U boats had the upper hand and had very few losses for the amount of allied tonnage sunk. Particularly in their so called 'happy time' when they could sink allied shipping almost without risk.
But the final breaking of the German Navy Enigma code after the capture of an Enigma machine from a sinking U boat by the RN, and more effective anti U boat tactics and weapons like forward firing death charges, and most of all the closing of the mid Atlantic gap by long range Liberator bombers and the deployment of radar equipped Sunderlands hunting them down on the surface and bombing them before they could crash dive turned the tide. By May 1943 the U boat losses that month was 25% of their total strength, and after that they withdrew from the Atlantic and looked for easier pickings elsewhere.
My granddad was RN as well and his ship was sunk by a U-boat (although in WWI at Jutland), luckily he survived (well otherwise I wouldn't be here!). He apparently told my Dad that anyone who goes under the water had to be either brave or mad because it's bad enough on top!
[QUOTE="hpalapdog, post: 2030220, member: 1831]
Are you saying the short waisted black leather submariner jackets are all private purchase ?
I had an uncle who was at Jutland as a boy of fourteen. The difference between that sort of action and merchant ships is that the latter were sitting ducks at the start of the war. Even when the convoy system was reinstated they steamed at the speed of the slowest ship - no more than 8 knots, sometimes less. So every day and night they were waiting for the explosion that told them they had been hit while the enemy could operate with impunity and no risk.
That is why they did not see them as brave or gallant because their chances of being sunk themselves were very low at that time. Later the U boats got their comeuppance and then it was their turn to know fear every day and night. But the merchant ships and their RN escorts knew it all the time in the first years while at the time the U boats had nothing to fear at all. It was like shooting fish in a barrel for them. I think it took more guts to be a sailer on an old slow merchant ship knowing that your chances of getting to the end of the trip were probably 50/50 at best and your chances of survival if you were hit not much better, and thinking that every morning if it would be your last, than to serve underwater. Later in the war it was much more dangerous for the U boats, and by then it did take guts to keep going knowing that their chances of getting home were about the same as they had been for the merchant seamen a few years earlier.
That’s probably what those who had experience as escorts on Atlantic and Arctic convoys identified with the merchant seaman who took most of the casualties rather than U boat crews who frankly they just wanted to kill. Not all naval personnel did serve with the convoys of course.
Its difficult to reconcile the Mindset of the German U-Boat Commanders....
while the crewmembers were just young kids under 21 for the most part and at that age and being a male living under the Hitler, Gastapo, Storm Trooper mentality....you served like it or not.
The well educated Officer Corp OTOH seemingly took great pride in acquiring massive Sunken Tonnage of Civilian, non-armored, non-combat Shipping....to satisfy Hitler, Dornitz, Gorring, Himmler, and the others.
Something not right about Glorifing those U-Boat guys, were they Psycopathic types on the loose...???
Thankfully our USN & RN Brave, Dedicated Naval personnel were able to extinguish these Monsters in time to avert catastrophic endings...
I wonder why we don't Glamorize the Jackets and Coats they wore...
Granted there is a Morbid Fascination about it all...
The Submariners certainly didn't get them from the Luftwaffe whose issue short leather jackets were single breasted. Can be found in brown, black and interestingly grey..