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Engelbert Endrass
German navy officer and world war II U-boat commander

Engelbert Endrass

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German navy officer and world war II U-boat commander
A.K.A.
Engelbert Endraß Endrass Engelbert Endraß
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Gender
Male
Place of birth
Bamberg, Germany
Place of death
Atlantic Ocean
Age
30 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Engelbert Endrass (German: Engelbert Endraß) (2 March 1911 – 21 December 1941) was a German U-boat commander in World War II. He commanded the U-46 and the U-567, being credited with sinking 22 ships on ten patrols, for a total of 118,528 gross register tons (GRT) of Allied shipping, to purportedly become the 23rd highest claiming U-boat commander of World War II.

He was a recipient of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves of Nazi Germany. It was Germany's highest military decoration at the time of its presentation to Endrass.

Early life and career

Endrass began his naval career in April 1935. After some months on the cruiser Deutschland and service on escort ships, he was assigned in October 1937 to the U-boat force. He joined U-47 in December 1938 as Leutnant zur See.

World War II

Engelbert Endrass was Watch Officer when his commanding officer, Günther Prien penetrated the defences at Scapa Flow attack and sank the battleship HMS Royal Oak in October 1939. The snorting bull emblem on U-47's conning tower was painted by Endrass before they returned. Endrass painted this symbol on all subsequent boats on which he served. The reason, given by Endrass for this, was the sight of Prien's demeanour as U-47 entered Scapa Flow, "his frowning face and hunched shoulders reminded him of a bull in a ring." Endrass remained on U-47 until May 1940, when he left and took over command of U-46 fromthe relatively unsuccessful Herbert Sohler, who had only sunk two ships in five patrols. Endrass had immediate success. He sank the British auxiliary cruiser HMS Carinthia on his first patrol. The patrol yielded over 4,000 tons.

Snorting bull emblem on the conning tower painted by Endrass

Endrass' success continued on his second patrol with U-46, sinking five more ships, including another British auxiliary cruiser, HMS Dunvegan Castle although the main periscope was damaged. The ship carried 23,225 steel drums and 2,700 wooden barrels and 440 tons of timber. Endrass was forced to use three torpedoes, for the drums fitted to British ships in this period was done so deliberately to provide extra ballast. It made sinking them more difficult and more expensive in munitions expenditure. Her loss prompted Commander-in-Chief, Western Approaches, Martin Dunbar-Nasmith to order all Liverpool–bound ships to remain in convoy until past the Mull of Kintyre. 277 survivors were rescued by HMS Harvester and HMS Primrose.

Endrass and six other U-boats intercepted Convoy SC 7 and sank many ships. U-46 sank three during the three-day battle. The commander followed this up with an attack on Convoy HX 79, sinking two ships.

Five patrols later he received the Oak Leaves to his Knight's Cross. The presentation was made on 30 June 1941 by Adolf Hitler at the Führer Headquarter Wolfsschanze (Wolf's Lair) in Rastenburg (now Kętrzyn in Poland).

In September 1941 Endrass left U-46, which would become a training vessel, and a month later took over U-567. On his second patrol, he was killed on 21 December 1941 while operating against Convoy HG 76, when U-567 was sunk with all hands by depth charges from the British sloop HMS Deptford and corvette HMS Samphire, northeast of the Azores.

Summary of career

Ships attacked

Chronicle of ships attacked
DateShipNationalityTonnageFateDeath toll
6 June 1940HMS Carinthia United Kingdom20,277sunk at 53° 13'N, 10° 40'W4
9 June 1940Margareta Finland2,155sunk at 45° 00'N, 14° 30'W5
11 June 1940Athelprince United Kingdom8,782damaged at 43° 42'N, 13° 20'W0
12 June 1940Barbara Marie United Kingdom7,223sunk at 44° 16'N, 13° 54' W32
12 June 1940Willowbank United Kingdom5,041sunk at 44° 16'N, 13° 54'W0
17 June 1940Elpis Greece3,651sunk 43° 46'N, 14° 06'W0
16 August 1940Alcinous Netherlands6,189damaged 57° 16'N, 17° 02'Wunknown
20 August 1940Leonidas M. Valmas Greece2,080total loss 55° 13'N, 10° 38'W16
27 August 1940HMS Dunvegan Castle United Kingdom15,007sunk 55° 05'N, 11° 00'W27
31 August 1940Ville de Hasselt Belgium7,461sunk at 56° 30'N, 13° 00'W0
2 September 1940Thornlea 4,261 United Kingdom4,261sunk at 55° 41'N, 14° 20'W3
4 September 1940Luimneach Ireland1,074sunk at 47° 50'N, 9° 12'W0
26 September 1940Coast Wings United Kingdom862sunk at 49° 27'N, 15° 05'W16 – no survivors
26 September 1940Siljan Sweden3,058sunk at 50° 21'N, 18° 45'W9
18 October 1940Beatus United Kingdom4,885sunk at 57° 31'N, 13° 10'W0
18 October 1940Convallaria Sweden1,996sunk at 57° 22'N, 11° 11'W0
18 October 1940Gunborg Sweden1,572sunk at 57° 14'N, 11° 00'W0
19 October 1940Ruperra United Kingdom4,548sunk at 57° 16°W31
20 October 1940Janus Sweden9,965sunk at 56° 36'N, 15° 03'W4
29 March 1941Liguria Sweden1,751sunk at 59° 27'N, 24° 36'W16
31 March 1941Castor Sweden8,714sunk at 57° 58'N, 30° 31'W16
2 April 1941British Reliance United Kingdom7,000sunk 58° 21'N, 28° 30'W0
3 April 1941Alderpool United Kingdom4,313damaged at 58° 21'N, 27° 59'W0 — perhaps shared with U-73
8 June 1941Ensis United Kingdom6,207damaged at 48° 25'N, 26° 12'Wunknown — conning tower damaged in collision with Ensis
9 June 1941Phidias United Kingdom5,623sunk at 48° 25'N, 26° 12'W8
21 December 1941Annavore Norway3,324sunk at 43° 55'N, 19° 50'W34

Awards

  • Wehrmacht Long Service Award 4th Class (5 April 1939)
  • Spanish Cross (6 June 1939)
  • Iron Cross (1939)
    • 2nd Class (25 September 1939)
    • 1st Class (17 October 1939)
  • U-boat War Badge (1939) (19 December 1939); with Diamonds (18 July 1941)
  • Italian Croce di Guerra with Swords (1 November 1941)
  • Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves
    • Knight's Cross on 5 September 1940 as Oberleutnant zur See and commander of U-46
    • 14th Oak Leaves on 10 June 1941 as Kapitänleutnant and commander of U-46

Promotions

1 July 1935:Fähnrich zur See (Officer Cadet)
1 January 1937:Oberfähnrich zur See (Senior Ensign)
1 April 1937:Leutnant zur See (Second Lieutenant)
20 April 1939:Oberleutnant zur See (First Lieutenant)
2 July 1941:Kapitänleutnant (Captain Lieutenant), effective as of 1 Mayy 1942 with a rank age dated on 1 May 1941
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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