Unterseeboot 559

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Unterseeboot 559 (U-559) was a Type VIIC U-boat of the Kriegsmarine. The British were able to seize cryptographic material from U-559 which facilitated the reading of the U-boat Enigma cipher.

On the night of 30 October 1942 the British destroyer HMS Petard forced U-559 to the surface off the Mediterranean coast of Egypt.

Able Seaman Colin Grazier, Lieutenant Antony Fasson, and NAAFI canteen assistant Tommy Brown swam naked to the abandoned submarine which was in the course of sinking after being scuttled by its crew. They successfully recovered code books that produced invaluable information for the codebreakers at Bletchley Park working on the cracking of the Enigma machine. Grazier and Fasson failed to leave the submarine in time, and were drowned when the ship sank. Both were awarded the George Cross posthumously, and Brown was awarded the George Medal. The Victoria Cross was considered but not awarded with ostensible reason that their bravery was not "in the face of the enemy", although another consideration may have been that a Victoria Cross would have drawn unwanted attention to the U-boat capture by German Intelligence.

The recovery was one of several such events that inspired the fictional account of the submarine capture in the movive U-571.

See Also: List of U-boats