On 5 September 1942, , under the command of Rolf Ruggeberg, attacked and
sank the merchant vessels SS Lord Strathcona and SS Saganaga. A total of twenty-nine men, who were all on
Saganaga, died. On 10 September attacked
Convoy ON 127 along with a number of other submarines and chased them across the Atlantic all the way to the gulf. The submarine sustained minor damage from the warships but managed to sink the destroyer with two torpedoes. On 14 October, the
Newfoundland Railway passenger ferry was torpedoed by , in the
Cabot Strait, between Sydney, Nova Scotia, and
Port aux Basques, Newfoundland, with many women and children among the 137 dead in her sinking.
U-69 escaped a counterattack by the
Bangor-class minesweeper . On 21 October moved into the entrance of the river and encountered widespread RCN patrols. The submarine's captain, Hans-Joachim Schwantke, attempted to attack
convoy SQ 43 off Gaspé, but was spotted and repulsed by the convoy's escorts. It was stated that six depth charges from the
Bangor-class minesweeper knocked out the U-boat's lights, blew the battery circuit breaker and activated a torpedo in one of the sub's stern tubes. Captain Schwantke pushed his sub down to to avoid what he thought was a coordinated attack. The submarine was damaged but escaped the river. On 2 November,
sank two iron ore freighters and damaged another at
Bell Island in
Conception Bay, Newfoundland, to a patrol off the
Gaspé Peninsula where, despite an attack by an RCAF patrol aircraft, it successfully landed a spy,
Werner von Janowski, at
New Carlisle, Quebec; he was captured at the
New Carlisle railway station shortly after landing on the beach. In November, was ordered in but turned away because of oppressive Canadian patrols that prevented entry. U-boat losses experienced by the during 1942 following the entry of the
United States Navy into the
Battle of the Atlantic, coupled with declining German shipbuilding capability to replace battle losses, saw the U-boat fleet redeployed to the primary Atlantic convoy routes to disrupt the Allied war resupply effort; this effectively saw enemy submarines withdrawn from the St. Lawrence River and Gulf of St. Lawrence by the end of 1942. ==1943==