The boat was built in
Flensburg in 1942 and 1943,
U-365 was a
Type VIIC U-boat, with five torpedo tubes and a deck gun for smaller targets. She was captained by
Kptlt. Haimar Wedemeyer, an efficient if slightly cautious officer, who worked his boat and crew up before being dispatched to the 9th Flotilla based at
Bergen, Norway, from which she conducted her first three patrols.
War patrols U-365s early operations were in support of clandestine operations in the
North Sea and
Arctic Ocean, in the course of which she saw no action against Allied shipping or positions. Not until her fifth patrol, following a shift in patrol zones to the frozen seas around
Novaya Zemlya and transfer to the
13th U-boat Flotilla, that
U-365 experienced success. In this region, on the 12 August, the boat spotted a small Soviet convoy and in rapid order sank a 7,540 GRT freighter and the two 625 tons
minesweepers intended to protect it. However, due to the remoteness of the
U-365s patrol zones, the cautiousness of her commander and the efficiency of Allied submarine defences by the autumn of 1944, Wedemeyer was unable to score another victory for his boat in the next two patrols, and was eventually replaced by
Oblt.z.S. Diether Todenhagen, who had previously served on the enormously successful , and had a reputation as an aggressive submariner. This seemed deserved as on his first patrol, on the 6 December, he sank the tiny Soviet patrol ship
BO-230 in the Barents Sea. This was followed five days later with a determined attack on an Allied convoy in which the British
destroyer was seriously damaged. However, in orchestrating the attack the U-boat's position was revealed, and just two days later two
Fairey Swordfish aircraft from
813 Squadron flying from the
escort carrier spotted the submarine and sank her near the
Lofoten Islands with bombs. All 50 of the U-boat's crew perished in the wreck.
Wolfpacks U-365 took part in six
wolfpacks, namely: • Trutz (28 June – 10 July 1944) • Greif (5 – 18 August 1944) • Zorn (29 September – 1 October 1944) • Grimm (1 – 2 October 1944) • Panther (18 October – 8 November 1944) • Stier (25 November – 13 December 1944) ==Summary of raiding history==