History Daily - Operation Raspberry Takes on the U-Boats
Episode Date: January 1, 2026January 1, 1942. A retired British naval officer is ordered to turn the tide in the Battle of the Atlantic—using little more than chalk, string, and a dose of ingenuity. Support the show! Join Into ...History for ad-free listening and more. History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Salku X,
tapam me again.
Viser number,
five vhietta,
Arvauksia,
Patheria.
Palkintone,
X-Pengue,
Sacko,
Towsin'em-Ombuds,
10-weekquo-a-a-artka-ROTTAX,
Pover.Pist F.
Coutta, A-Lan-JECD.
It's just after 3 a.m.
on August 19th, 1941,
North Atlantic Ocean. In the control room of German submarine U-201, Commander Adelbert
Schnee winces as an officer knocks over an empty mug. Schnais shoots the man a withering glare,
but says nothing. His rebuke can wait for later because right now, even the smallest sound
could give away his U-boat's position. For the last 36 hours, U-2001 has been shadowing an
allied convoy headed for the port of Gibraltar. Schnee's vessel is just one.
of a wolfpack of German submarines
tasked with stalking these merchant ships
and when the time is right, they will strike the fatal blow.
Commander Schnee holds his breath
as U-201 glides closer to his chosen target.
Moving just below the surface of the water,
the submarine inches into firing position,
and then Schnee gives the order.
A torpedo leaves a tube.
Schnee listens, senses sharp,
until the noise of an explosion echoes through the water.
U-201 is so close that the submarine even rocks from the impact.
But Commander Schnee doesn't linger to see the damage he's caused.
He knows that the destroyers escorting the convoy will be hunting for them within seconds,
so he orders U-201 to dive.
Over the next few minutes, the silent submarine disappears into the depths of the Black Atlantic.
The only trace it leaves behind is a scattered convoy and a merchant ship in flames.
Soon after U-201 slips away, the stricken
Allied merchant ship sinks. Among those on board who will lose their lives are 22 members of the
British Women's Royal Naval Service, also known as Wrens. Across Britain, thousands of young women
like them have volunteered to help the war effort. But one very special group of Wrens will soon
get a chance to avenge their dead comrades and change the course of the war in the Atlantic
when Operation Raspberry begins on January 1, 1942. When I first began thinking about a live show,
I knew I wanted it to be a little more special than just a podcast episode on stage.
Something with a bit of theater to it, because after all, I'll be live on stage in a theater.
So I've put together a band to accompany the stories live.
And because I can't resist, I'll be joining in on guitar.
I mean, I wrote the History Daily theme song, you know.
So come out to see me live.
For information on tickets and upcoming dates, go to HistoryDailylive.com.
That's HistoryDailylive.com.
And if you're in the North Texas area, buy your tickets now.
at historydailylive.com.
Taparming
yelighton.
Weiss number,
vihytta,
arvokesia,
pouttellor
Poweria.
Palkintona
XPeng G-K-Sacko
Towsin'em
omics.
10-weekcoa
to track
code in
co-octe
F.
KautaX.
A-Jackuidist.
From Noisor
and Airship,
I'm Lindsay Graham.
And this is
History Daily.
History is made every day.
On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that
shaped our world.
Today is January 1st, 1942.
Operation Raspberry takes on the U-boats.
It's January 1st, 1942 at the Admiralty Buildings in London, England, 16 months after
U-201's attack in the North Atlantic.
42-year-old Gilbert Roberts sits alone in a bustling mess hall, watching the uniformed
officers and sailors of the Royal Navy hurry past. He can't help but feel a pang of envy.
Five years ago, Roberts was one of them, the commander of a destroyer, but then he contracted
tuberculosis and was discharged from the service for medical reasons. And when World War II
broke out in September 1939, Roberts was still on the sidelines, a retired officer deemed
unfit to serve. He eventually found a role training sailors in counter-invasion tactics on the
south coast and threw himself into his work. But a few days ago, he received an unexpected invitation
asking him to report to the Admiralty. So not knowing what to expect, Roberts is a little
surprised when a man slides into the chair opposite him and sets down two steaming cups of tea.
Admiral Cecil Unsbourne once held a senior role in British naval intelligence. Now he's an
aide to Prime Minister Winston Churchill and a vital part of the British war effort. He wastes no time on
small talk. Over the next few minutes, Usborne explains why he's asked Roberts here today.
He's heard great things about Robert's efforts on the South Coast, in particular, the inventive
way that he uses games to teach his men. Roberts asks his sailors to pretend to be German commanders
and has them launch mock attacks in tabletop battles. Other sailors playing as the British
must work out how to counter them. It's an innovative training technique that forces the
men to think more strategically. But now the threat of imminent and
by the Germans has passed, and Admiral Usborne thinks that Robert's talents would be better
used elsewhere. Since the start of the war, German submarines or U-boats, have proud the Atlantic
Ocean, they don't just target the Royal Navy. They also attack merchant ships carrying precious food,
oil, and other supplies from North America. So far, more than 1,500 British and allied ships have
now been sunk by the U-boats, but the Navy is no closer to finding an effective way of fighting back.
their tea cools, Admiral Usborne leans forward and makes the stakes brutally clear. Without raw material
brought in by sea, Britain cannot keep its factories working at full capacity. And without grain
imports, the country is edging ever closer to starvation. If Britain is to remain in the war,
it needs to find a way to blunt the U-boat threat. Hearing this, Robert wonders if he's about to be
restored to command of a destroyer. But Usborne has something else in mind. He wants Robert's
to use his mastery of war games to turn the tide in the Battle of the Atlantic.
Roberts will be tasked with running simulations that analyze U-boat tactics and identify the best way
to defeat them.
Realizing the opportunity, Roberts doesn't need to be asked twice.
Admiral Osborne offers his hand across the table, and Roberts quickly grasps it.
And just like that, Roberts is back in the Royal Navy.
That same night, the newly reappointed Captain Roberts boards an overnight train from London
to the port of Liverpool.
Thanks to speed restrictions on the line, blackouts, and the constant threat of German air rates,
the 200-mile journey north is a slow one.
And when Roberts arrives the next morning, he's given a tour of his new workplace.
Western approaches command, the headquarters of all Royal Navy operations in the Atlantic.
In one vast room, sailors plot the positions of every Allied ship on a giant map of the Atlantic Ocean.
Several markers are stamped with red crosses, ships that are already loaded.
loss. Small tokens indicate where U-boats might be lurking. But the bus fling map room is not where
Roberts will be based. Instead, he's led to the derelict top floor of the building. Here in a dusty,
forgotten room, Roberts is told to establish his new unit. Roberts asks how many people he'll have,
but his guide just shrugs. As far as he knows right now, Roberts is on his own. But Roberts will
need a team, and when he finds it, it will be just as unusual as the dusty room.
he calls home.
In this unlikely looking space, with his unlikely team,
Captain Gilbert Roberts will soon be waging epic fake battles,
but the hope is that they will help the Allies win a very real war.
Tapami we're again.
Viased number,
five vizement,
arvents,
pouttellu,
poveria.
Palkintona X-G-6
Sacko,
It's a totaled-oomaxe.
10-weekquh to write to code in a code
in aosotees of Power.5-X.
Don't jay-kydista.
It's April 25th, 1942 in Liverpool, England,
four months after Captain Gilbert Roberts was appointed to a new post.
20-year-old Janet Oakle peers through a canvas sheet hanging from the ceiling,
straining for a good view of the chalk and string on the floor before her.
The crude markings form a map of the Atlantic Ocean,
Atlantic Ocean, and the canvas is supposed to mimic the fog of war.
Janet is playing the role of the British in a naval war game, and it's her job to get the
counters representing Allied ships from one side of the floor to the other. But behind another
canvas sheet, on the opposite side of the room, someone else is playing the role of the
Germans, and their job is to stop her. Janet is part of a small team who's working with
Captain Roberts at Western Approaches Command. When he first arrived in Liverpool, Roberts struggled
to get his new tactical unit taken seriously.
Despite Robert's support among some of the top brass in London,
many officers at Western approaches looked down on his unusual approach.
To them, Roberts was playing games
while they were dealing with real life or death battles on the high seas.
So when it came time for Roberts to be assigned a team,
no one was willing to give up their men.
Instead, the only staff made available
were from the Women's Royal Naval Service.
What if Roberts was disappointed with his new recruits,
he soon changed his mind.
He saw that these young Wrens had sharp intellects, discipline, and a desire to learn.
So with the Wrens at his side, Roberts set out to understand the behavior of U-boat captains
by recreating their decisions on a game board.
His goal was to learn how the enemy attacked, so that he could identify the most effective countermeasures.
And over the past few months, Roberts and the Wrens have worked around the clock.
After completing hundreds of simulations, they've made a key tactical breakthrough,
and today it's time to unveil their findings.
Janet scribbles her next move on a slip of paper and passes it to another Wren.
She steps on to the chalk floor to move the Allied counters.
And when she does, Janet peers through the canvas again,
this time toward a man watching them all from a raised platform.
Admiral Sir Percy Noble is the commander-in-chief of Western Approach's command
and the most senior British officer overseeing the Battle of the Atlantic.
He's come to see what Roberts and the Wrens have discussed.
And he watches as the Wren at the map announces that the German U-boats have launched their attack on Janet's ships.
But Janet doesn't flinch.
Over the past few weeks, she's run this exact scenario dozens of times.
Early in their work, she and the other Wrens assumed that the U-boats fired from long range to avoid detection.
But when they replayed real-world engagements based on survivor testimony, they began to suspect something else.
They came to believe the U-boats were actually firing at near point-blank range.
to ensure they hit their targets before immediately diving to escape detection.
Once the Wrens realized this, they could come up with an effective countermeasure.
They worked out that if Allied destroyers dropped depth charges around a merchant ship as soon as it was attacked,
they had a far better chance of hitting the fleeing submarines.
Of course, the Wrens, playing as U-boat commanders, then changed their tactics, too.
They began launching their torpedoes from a greater distance.
They were far less effective from there and missed their targets more often,
than they hit. So behind her curtain, Janet writes her next move, passes it forward,
and the Wren at the map announces that she scored a direct hit on a German submarine.
A normal, quiet atmosphere of the simulation room is broken by Admiral Noble, applauding.
It might only be a mock battle, but Noble doesn't get many chances to celebrate the sinking of a U-boat.
So when the demonstration is over, Noble congratulates Commander Roberts, Janet, and all the other Wrens.
He then asks what they've named their new tactical maneuver.
Janet steps forward, her cheeks reddening, and admits that they've called it Operation Raspberry,
their way of blowing a raspberry at Adolf Hitler and his U-boats.
Admiral Noble laughs because he likes that.
Impressed with what he's seen, he immediately sends out new orders.
It's time for the tactic to be tested in the real world, and only then will Captain Gilbert Roberts and the Wrens discover
whether their long hours hunched over a chalk-covered floor will win.
really make a difference in the Battle of the Atlantic.
Taparme yetle.
Five number,
five vizietta,
arvokesia,
Patherly
Poweria.
Palkintona X-Peng G-K-Sacko,
Towsin-Omacksy.
Komenon-Wi-ofer.
POSOITT F-C.
Don't jay-kidist.
It's the early hours of May 6th,
in the North Atlantic off Newfoundland, a year after Operation Raspberry came up with a new way
of fighting U-boats.
On board the frigate HMS TAY, 36-year-old lieutenant commander Robert Sherwood, swings his binoculars
around as a torpedo detonates close by.
A plume of water shoots up into the air a few hundred yards away.
Explosion was close to a merchant ship, but thankfully it missed its target.
HMS TAY is escorting a convoy of over 40 merchant ship.
A wolf pack of German U-boats has been tracking them for days, and just last night they sank
10 of the Allied ships in a devastating attack.
Now that darkness has fallen again, the submarines are back for more.
But this time, Commander Sherwood knows exactly how to respond.
Following the protocol of Operation Raspberry, he steers directly toward the merchant ship
the torpedo was meant to hit.
Then Sherwood orders his men to fire starshells.
These special flares light up the night, and commanding,
Mander Sherwood's breath catches.
In the sudden brightness, he can see the silhouette of not just one U-boat lurking below the surface, but seven.
Sensing a rare opportunity to destroy an entire wolf pack, Sherwood calls out orders to drop death charges.
As the explosion shaked the water beneath them, the German subs scattered.
But the battle's not over yet.
All through the night, the U-boats come back again and again, trying to slip in close for a point-blank shot,
exactly as Captain Gilbert Roberts and his Wrens predicted they would.
But each time, the convoy's escorts countered and pushed the German submarines back.
By dawn, the British sailors are tired but exhilarated.
Not a single Allied ship has been hit,
but the oil slicks floating on the water suggests it was the Germans that have taken damage instead.
Later that day, the merchant ships break off and head for their final destinations in North America.
Their safe arrival is a triumph for Commander Sherwood.
But the real geniuses behind this victory are hundreds of miles away on land in a chalk-covered office in Liverpool.
The work of Captain Roberts and Wrens like Janet O'Kle has saved hundreds of lives in this one convoy alone.
And by the end of 1943, more than 5,000 officers will be trained in new tactics that will help turn the tide in the Battle of the Atlantic.
The once-permissible U-boat threat will collapse, and the all-important supplies of personnel, machinery, ammunition, and food will flow across the island.
Atlantic almost unimpeded. After the war, Gilbert Roberts will be presented with the order of the
British Empire. The Wrens who work beside him will receive no official recognition, no wartime honors,
nor medals. But without their tactical breakthrough, Britain might have starved and been forced to
surrender to Nazi Germany. Instead, victory in the Battle of the Atlantic began with Operation
Raspberry on January 1st, 1942. Next on History Daily, January 2nd,
1492.
Spanish monarchs Ferdinand and Isabella
Katcher Granana, the last Muslim
stronghold on the Iberian Peninsula.
From Noisor and Airship,
this is History Daily.
Boasted, edited, and executive produced by me,
Lindsay Graham. Audio editing by
Mohamed Shazi, sound designed by
Molly Bond, music by throne.
This episode is written in research
by Owen Paul Nichols. Edited
by Scott Reeves. Managing
producer Emily Byrd. Executive
producers are William Simpson for Airship.
and Pascal Hughes for Noisor.
We're back.
We're back.
Weiss number,
five vizietta,
arvokesia,
pouttellee,
Poveria.
Palkintona X-Peng G-K-Sacko,
Towsin-Outsin-Omacksy.
10-weekquo-a-art-ROTTAres
Pover.com,
Kautta X.
Don't jay-kidist.
