Born | 27 Sep 1906 | Grimnitz | |
Died | 14 Aug 1984 | (77) |
Ranks
Decorations
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U-boat Commands
U-boat | From | To | |
---|---|---|---|
U-18 | 4 Jan 1936 | 20 Nov 1936 | No war patrols |
U-12 | Dec, 1936 | 1 Oct 1937 | No war patrols |
U-30 | 15 Feb 1938 | 17 Aug 1938 | No war patrols |
U-34 | 15 Feb 1938 | 17 Aug 1938 | No war patrols |
U-34 | 5 Sep 1938 | 28 Oct 1938 | No war patrols |
U-516 | 11 May 1942 | 27 May 1942 | No war patrols |
U-193 | 10 Dec 1942 | 31 Mar 1944 | 2 patrols (185 days) |
Hans Pauckstadt joined the Reichsmarine in 1926. He studied at the Anti-Submarine School from Oct 1935 to Jan 1936 when he took command of the small U-18 on 4 Jan 1935. On 20 Nov 1936 U-18 was sunk in a collision with torpedo boat T 156. Eight died and 12 survived, among them U-18's commander (Busch & Röll, 1999).
Kptlt. Pauckstadt then took command of U-12 from 1 Dec 1936 until 1 Oct 1937, when he joined the 6th Flotilla, staying there until Feb 1938. On 15 Feb 1938 Pauckstadt took command of the larger ocean-going boats U-30 and U-34 until 17 Aug 1938. He then briefly joined U-boat Command staff before again taking command of U-34 on 5 Sept 1938.
Kptlt. Pauckstadt left U-34 on 28 Oct 1938 to take up a long series of staff postions, including two stints on the sailing school ship Gorch Fock in 1938 and 1939. From Aug 1939 to Sept 1941 he worked on FdU staff (U-boat Command). In this capacity he deputised as commander of U-516, relieving the ill Wiebe from 11-27 May 1942 while the boat was undergoing trials and work-up in the Baltic (Busch & Röll, 1999).
Hans Pauckstadt was acting commander of the 5th (Training) Flotilla Sep - Nov 1942, when he began U-boat construction familiarization (Baubelehrung) in preparation for his own command of a new boat. On 10 Dec 1942 he commissioned the large type IXC/40 U-boat U-193 at Bremen (Busch & Röll, 1999). After five months training in the Baltic, KrvKpt. Pauckstadt took the boat out from Kiel on 11 May 1943, for Bergen, Norway. From there he left for his first war patrol on 22 May 1943. The patrol was into the North Atlantic and then to the east coast of North Africa. U-193 arrived at her new base at Bordeaux after 63 days at sea on 23 July 1943 (Busch & Röll, 1997).
On 12 Oct 1943 KrvKpt. Pauckstadt left La Pallice, France for his second patrol, this time to the Gulf of Mexico. On 3 Dec, having reached the Gulf Pauckstadt sank his only ship, the large American tanker Touchet (10,172 tons) (Rohwer, 1998). While returning through the Bay of Biscay on 9 Feb 1944, the boat was severely damaged in an Allied air attack and sought shelter in the neutral Spanish port of El Ferrol. U-193 left or France ten days later, reaching Lorient on 23 Feb. (Busch & Röll, 1997).
The recently promoted Fregattenkapitän Pauckstadt took command of the 8th (Training) Flotilla in May 1944. He led the flotilla until Feb 1945 when he took command of 1st UAA, another training unit, a post he held until the German surrender (Busch & Röll, 1999).
Sources
Busch, R. and Röll, H-J. (1999). German U-boat commanders of World War II.
Busch, R. and Röll, H-J. (1997). Der U-Bootkrieg 1939-1945 (Band 2).
Niestlé, A. (1998). German U-boat losses during World War II.
Rohwer, J. (1998). Axis Submarine Successes of World War Two.
Patrol info for Hans Pauckstadt
U-boat | Departure | Arrival | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | U-193 | 11 May 1943 | Kiel | 17 May 1943 | Bergen | 7 days | ||
2. | U-193 | 22 May 1943 | Bergen | 23 Jul 1943 | Bordeaux | Patrol 1, | 63 days | |
3. | U-193 | 21 Sep 1943 | Bordeaux | 21 Sep 1943 | La Pallice | 1 days | ||
4. | U-193 | 27 Sep 1943 | La Pallice | 28 Sep 1943 | La Pallice | 2 days | ||
5. | U-193 | 12 Oct 1943 | La Pallice | 10 Feb 1944 | El Ferrol | Patrol 2, | 122 days | |
6. | U-193 | 20 Feb 1944 | El Ferrol | 24 Feb 1944 | Lorient | 5 days | ||
2 patrols, 185 days at sea |
Ships hit by Hans Pauckstadt
Date | U-boat | Name of ship | Tons | Nat. | Convoy | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
3 Dec 1943 | U-193 | Touchet | 10,172 | am | ||||
10,172 | ||||||||
1 ship sunk (10,172 tons). |
Media links
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