The Black Hole
Heroes Remember
Transcript
We had to go through what they call a black hole.
That was an area in the Atlantic Ocean in the middle that
there was no aircraft that could protect that certain area
and that’s where the U-boats would wait for us. And the
lone wolf submarine would just plow the Atlantic in the middle,
the black hole. They would note down the convoys, send them,
send the information to Admiral Dönitz, head of the submarines
of Germany and send it back to the wolf pack and they line up
just waiting for the convoy to come through.
So much on each side, say twelve submarines on one side
and twelve submarines on the other side and then we had to run
the gauntlet. Moonlight nights was the worst.
Your whole convoy of maybe 50 ships silhouetted against
the moon and make perfect targets. And sometimes
I couldn’t understand why they would, a convoy was spaced
in such a way that every hole in the middle of the ships, there
was another ship blocking that hole. So it wasn't a very easy
target for a submarine to hit a ship in the middle of a convoy.
And they can pick the, they had the silhouettes of the different
ships and destroyers and that and they would check and see who
was what and what kind of,
was it an oil tanker, was it a cargo ship.
When I used to go on deck and see a ship get torpedoed and I
witnessed men in the water in their life jackets with one
little light on them. Ad the U-boats used to go underneath
them to protect themselves, and the first part of the war,
the escorts wouldn’t go inside the convoy, but when they found
that the Germans were going underneath the convoy for
protection and then when they went to hear the propellers of the
destroyer take off, they go and come up again and blow a few more
ships out of the water. It was quite a strategy, that was
Description
Mr. Tanner describes the Black Hole, an area of the North Atlantic where U-boats launched their most devastating attacks. He also describes German strategies for attacking, and hiding from, Allied shipping.
Allen Tanner
Allen Tanner was born on December 1, 1925 in Halifax, Nova Scotia. After finishing Grade Nine, he went to work for a Norwegian shipping firm on the Halifax dockyard. As a member of the Navy League, he served in an Honour Guard for the Queen when she visited Halifax in 1939. Too young to join the Canadian Merchant Navy, he joined a Norwegian ship, whose crew shortage made him a welcome addition. Mr. Tanner worked on board a freighter, but was lured to work on tankers due to the higher pay they offered.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 2:34
- Person Interviewed:
- Allen Tanner
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Atlantic Ocean
- Battle/Campaign:
- Battle of the Atlantic
- Branch:
- Merchant Navy
- Units/Ship:
- D/S Sirehei
- Occupation:
- Steward
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