German submarine U-382

German submarine U-382 was a Type VIIC U-boat of the Nazi German Kriegsmarine during World War II.

She carried out seven patrols before being sunk by British bombs in Wilhelmshaven in January 1945.

She was a member of eight wolfpacks.

She damaged one ship.

Service history
The submarine was laid down on 30 July 1941 at the Howaldtswerke yard at Kiel as 'werk' 13, launched on 21 March 1942 and commissioned on 25 April under the command of Kapitänleutnant Herbert Juli.

1st patrol
The boat's first patrol commenced with her departure from Kiel on 10 September 1942. Passing through the 'gap' between Iceland and the Faroe Islands, she was depth charged by an unknown aircraft in mid-Atlantic on 12 October. The damage sustained was serious enough to cut the patrol short. The submarine docked in St. Nazaire in occupied France on the 31st.

2nd and 3rd patrols
Another depth charge attack by the escorts of Convoy UC 1 south of the Azores forced the boat to withdraw to Lorient on 8 March 1943.

During her third foray, she was depth charged for 16 hours by the escorts of Convoy HX 233 west of the Bay of Biscay before arriving at St. Nazaire on 24 April 1943.

4th, 5th and 6th patrols
This sortie (number four), took the boat to Liberia and the Ivory Coast on the west African coast and at 81 days, it was her longest.

During her fifth patrol, U-382 was attacked and severely damaged northeast of the Azores on 11 January 1944. Two days later, she was also attacked by destroyers of the Block Island hunter/killer group.

With the Allied landings at Normandy on 6 June 1944, the boat left St. Nazaire and docked further south at La Pallice on the 15th.

7th patrol
It was decided to move U-382 from France to Norway. She left La Pallice on 10 September 1944, negotiated the Iceland/Faroes 'gap' in the other direction and arrived in Bergen on 19 October.

Fate
Having sailed to Flensburg in November 1944, U-382 was sunk by the RAF in a raid on Wilhelmshaven in January 1945. She was raised on 20 March but scuttled on 8 May.