SUBSIM Radio Room Forums



SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997

Go Back   SUBSIM Radio Room Forums > Silent Hunter 3 - 4 - 5 > Silent Hunter 4: Wolves of the Pacific
Forget password? Reset here

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 05-19-07, 01:45 PM   #1
Convoystalker
Swabbie
 
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Sydney Australia
Posts: 12
Downloads: 0
Uploads: 0
Food, showers, medical care aboard subs.

Greetings everyone.
I'm curious about everyday creature comforts & routines aboard WW2 submarines especially food, the availability of showers and medical care.
..... thankyou.


Question 1.
Were there dedicated food preparation facilities aboard subs enabling baking of bread, cooking hot meals, refrigerators.
Were there food freezers where meat & vegies could be stored ?
Were there dedicated cooks for the entire ship or each watch ? how did it work 24 hours a day ?
Could crew raid the fridge for snacks ? Was there a pot of coffee on the brew at all times ?
What sort of meals could be expected each day & how many times did crew eat daily ?
Did the menu vary ?
Was there alcohol aboard ?.
Did the crew have access to coca cola or similar soft drinks ?
Was there a dedicated eating area ? Did crew eat off trays ? I imagine china would be something of a liability on subs
Did subs ever stop off at islands to trade for food with natives ?


Question 2.
Showers .... were there showers aboard and if so how often were these facilities available to each crewman. I imagine with 70 people aboard a relatively small vessel it would require a lot of water

Question 3.
Medical care.
What happens if someone caught a cold or flu ?. I imagine this was easily possible for the watch crew in rough weather.
What about life threatening emergencies such as appendix ?
What happened if there were serious concussions, broken bones, gunshot or shrapnel wounds after DC or air attacks.
Convoystalker is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-19-07, 02:07 PM   #2
mookiemookie
Navy Seal
 
mookiemookie's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Houston, TX
Posts: 9,404
Downloads: 105
Uploads: 1
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Convoystalker
Were there dedicated food preparation facilities aboard subs enabling baking of bread, cooking hot meals, refrigerators.
Were there food freezers where meat & vegies could be stored ?
Yes. Here's a picture I took of the galley of the Cavalla (she's in rough shape, but you get the idea):

http://public.fotki.com/mookiemookie.../p1010022.html

Quote:
Could crew raid the fridge for snacks ? Was there a pot of coffee on the brew at all times ?
From what I've read, sandwiches and coffee were available all the time.

Quote:
Was there alcohol aboard ?
Regulations forbid alcohol on board, but that didn't stop many boats from carrying liquor rations as "depth charge medicine"

Quote:
Was there a dedicated eating area ? Did crew eat off trays ? I imagine china would be something of a liability on subs
Yes, here's a picture of the crew's mess. It doubled as a lounge for off duty sailors:

http://public.fotki.com/mookiemookie.../p1010021.html

Not sure about sailors, but officers did indeed dine off of real plates.


Quote:
Showers .... were there showers aboard and if so how often were these facilities available to each crewman. I imagine with 70 people aboard a relatively small vessel it would require a lot of water
Imagine squeezing yourself into this shower:

http://public.fotki.com/mookiemookie.../p1010018.html

Showers were not unheard of, but they were curtailed in order to conserve fresh water. My dad served on the Skate in the late 60's and said that if you were smart, you became friends with the machinist's mates because they could get you buckets of condensation from off of the equipment.

Quote:
What about life threatening emergencies such as appendix ?
At least twice during the war there were emergency appendectomies performed on the boat. In one case, the skipper took the boat below to give a relatively steady operating environment, the galley was disinfected with torpedo fuel alcohol, and the pharmacist's mate performed a successful surgery using a navy issue scalpel and bent spoons for spreaders. Of course this sort of thing was not encouraged by COMSUBPAC!

There was a proposal at one point during the war that all submarine sailors have their appendex removed to avoid this sort of thing, but it never went anywhere.

Quote:
What happened if there were serious concussions, broken bones, gunshot or shrapnel wounds after DC or air attacks.
The pharmacist's mate could give basic first aid and stabilize the patient, but in the case of serious wounds, a sailor might have to be returned to base. If the sub was not on it's return trip, it might radio in and COMSUBPAC would arrange for another boat to meet the sub and the patient could be offloaded and returned to medical facilities.
__________________
They don’t think it be like it is, but it do.

Want more U-boat Kaleun portraits for your SH3 Commander Profiles? Download the SH3 Commander Portrait Pack here.

Last edited by mookiemookie; 05-19-07 at 08:20 PM.
mookiemookie is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-19-07, 02:24 PM   #3
AntEater
Grey Wolf
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Germany
Posts: 936
Downloads: 0
Uploads: 0
Default

Question 1.
Were there dedicated food preparation facilities aboard subs enabling baking of bread, cooking hot meals, refrigerators.

There was a galley, and compared to german U-boats it was quite roomy

Were there food freezers where meat & vegies could be stored ?
There was a cold storage area below the control room, abaft of the pump room.

Were there dedicated cooks for the entire ship or each watch ? how did it work 24 hours a day ?
Cooks did not go watches like the rest of the crew, but had to prepare the usual meals plus any extras ordered by the captain. During combat, cooks double as medics or additional damage control personell

Could crew raid the fridge for snacks ? Was there a pot of coffee on the brew at all times ?
You can't raid fridges on any warship, but maybe crewmembers could store snacks they bought ashore there, if they were pals of the cook. Access to the fridge would be limited to the cooks, inspecting officers and sailors who had their cleaning station there.
According to the "fleet boat manual", there was a huge coffee pot (20 liters) with a tap running 24/7 in the crew's mess. The wardroom did not have that, they had to order coffee from their pantry.

What sort of meals could be expected each day & how many times did crew eat daily ?
Usual meals are breakfast, dinner, supper, plus a midnight meal for the 0-4 watch ("pig's watch" in the german navy, how is its name in the USN?)

Did the menu vary ?
Not very much, I suppose. But then again, the Burger was not yet invented, so the menus might even have been more varied than today

Was there alcohol aboard ?.
The US Navy was officially "dry" and still is today. All other (non muslim) navies in the world allow alcohol in limited quantities. In the german navy, it is two beers per man and day. For special occasions, there is a rum call

Did the crew have access to coca cola or similar soft drinks ?
Would have taken too much storage space. I am not sure wether the notorious "bug juice"; non sparkling soft drink made from artificially smelling syrup in serveral "flavors" (colours actually) was allready around in WW2. If not, it was coffee or water. In the german navy, this drink is rumoured to contain "Hängolin", something of an anti-viagra

Was there a dedicated eating area ? Did crew eat off trays ? I imagine china would be something of a liability on subs
US subs had a crew mess (in contary to U-Boats), but it was definitely too small for the whole crew to eat there at once. If that was to happen (special occasion or so), benches in the torpedo rooms and quarters were to be used. The crew mess was for every enlisted rank group, the wardroom was for officers.
Usually, aboard a warship (in the US as well as the german navy), the officers eat from China (carefully stored) while the enlisted men eat from tin trays not unsimilar to those in hospitals. The food is the same for both, and usually it is fresher in the crew's mess as the galley is closer.

Did subs ever stop off at islands to trade for food with natives ?
No. Even in the 1940s western stomachs would have been unable to cope with that without any undesirable side effects

Question 2.
Showers .... were there showers aboard and if so how often were these facilities available to each crewman. I imagine with 70 people aboard a relatively small vessel it would require a lot of water

Fresh water was obtained by distilling seawater. The US system was quite capable even then. In U-Boats the freshwater was exclusive for batteries and cooking. In US fleet boats, the distillers produced enough to permit crew showers in regular intervals. I suppose there may have been "shower times" with long lines, and of course you could not exactly shower like Janet Leigh in "Psycho". If there was trouble with the distillers, batteries came first, so no more showers...

Question 3.
allready answered.
__________________
AntEater is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-19-07, 06:29 PM   #4
perisher
Frogman
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: England
Posts: 300
Downloads: 15
Uploads: 0
Default

American fleet boats had ice cream machines, an unheard of luxury in all other navies.
__________________
"Pitt was the greatest fool who ever lived to encourage a mode of war which they who commanded the seas did not want, and which, if successful, would deprive them of it." Earl St.Vincent (allegedly)
perisher is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-19-07, 06:55 PM   #5
Snowman999
Officer
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Upper Midwest USA
Posts: 236
Downloads: 1
Uploads: 0
Default

Quote:
What sort of meals could be expected each day & how many times did crew eat daily ?
Usual meals are breakfast, dinner, supper, plus a midnight meal for the 0-4 watch ("pig's watch" in the german navy, how is its name in the USN?)
Mid-watch. Meal was mid-rats (from "ration"), served to on-going and off-coming watches from about 2300 to 0030. Often the left-overs from dinner and supper, plus soup.

Quote:
Would have taken too much storage space. I am not sure wether the notorious "bug juice"; non sparkling soft drink made from artificially smelling syrup in serveral "flavors" (colours actually) was allready around in WW2.
Bug juice is a powder, not a syrup. Comes in brown paper envelopes about four inches square, with military specs stenciled on the wrapper. Mix with water, hide the tank-taste. I think it was invented in WWII, but not sure. Heavy on citric acid and Vitamin C for anti-scurvy. The flavors are real; orange tastes WAY different than red or green. Bug juice is a good drink, but a better cleaning product. The acid eats verdigris off bronze (tube doors) and stainless steel exposed to seawater (bowls in the head.)
Snowman999 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-19-07, 07:24 PM   #6
AirborneTD
Engineer
 
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Pennsylvania, USA
Posts: 204
Downloads: 23
Uploads: 0
Default

Reading Gene Fluckey's book, "Thunder Below" about the Barb. He got 20+ cases of beer on board and whenever they were about to engage the enemy, he would have 4 cases put in the cooler for the expected celebrations.

The cooks would also bake cakes whenever they had sinkings to celebrate. Complete with pictures (icing, etc) of the events.
__________________
"You know, you might get surrounded." "We're paratroopers, Lieutenant. We're supposed to be surrounded." --Band of Brothers
AirborneTD is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-19-07, 07:37 PM   #7
AntEater
Grey Wolf
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Germany
Posts: 936
Downloads: 0
Uploads: 0
Default

Well, the german variant of bug juice does come as syrup, but apart from that, the two are perfectly similar (NATO standard??).

Apart from that, generally speaking for all navies:
There is one person you should try to be friends with aboard, its the cook. On the other side, getting on the bad side of lets say the XO is just half as bad as getting on the bad side of the cook....
__________________
AntEater is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-19-07, 09:27 PM   #8
Convoystalker
Swabbie
 
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Sydney Australia
Posts: 12
Downloads: 0
Uploads: 0
Default

Thanks for the information friends

The image links from mookiemookie are very interesting.
Seems the facilities are similar to a caravan or trailer home but serve almost 70 people .... the cooks must have been flat out preparing & cleaning.

From memories of the early 1950s it was possible to buy a variety of tinned food so I wonder if similar was available for military purposes during the war or were these luxuries ?

Examples.
Tinned Spam, Corned Beef.
Tinned peas, beans, carrots, potato, tomato, beetroot, sauerkraut.
Tinned fruit like peaches, pears, apricots, strawberries.

I wonder if it was a case of the supply officer obtaining whatever he could in port and the cook concocting whatever was possible on a daily basis. From a mass production standpoint it's simpler to make soup or stew rather than prepare individual portions of meat & vegetables for each person.

Just doing some rough math of the requirments for a patrol. 70 persons X 3 meals a day for 30-40 days then 70 showers at how many gallons of water allocated to each person ..... with extra for Janet Leigh off course

Interesting to hear of ice cream machines !!! doesn't sound like Das Boot.
Also interesting to hear of salt water distillers .... must have solved a lot of problems.

Another issue ... smoking. Was it permitted ?
Convoystalker is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:21 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 1995- 2025 Subsim®
"Subsim" is a registered trademark, all rights reserved.