Sunday, February 6, 2011

A World War I submarine is found


We tend to forget that during World War I, Ireland wasn't an independent state, but was part of the British Empire. As such, it was subject to attack by Germany, including submarines targeting ships off its coast and laying mines to blockade its harbors. That's why the news that the wreckage of a German submarine, sunk off the Irish port of Cork in 1917, has been rediscovered, is arousing such interest.

During the First World War the menace provided by German U-Boats would prove deadly to the Allies and were responsible for sinking millions of tons of shipping; indeed German U-Boats almost changed the course of the war. Most allied ships sunk by U-boats were sunk by either torpedo, deck gunfire or explosives placed aboard the ship by U-boat crew. A smaller number of ships were also sunk by mine laying U-boats; one of these being UC42. On the 10th of September of 1917 UC42 was laying her deadly cargo of mines at the entrance to Cork harbour when a terrific explosion occurred which resulted in a grim death for all 27 German Submariners aboard.

As the submarine sank to the seabed the German submariners were trapped inside UC42, which would soon become their metal tomb.



Two German Type UC II U-boats (the same class as UC-42)
alongside a depot ship in 1916 (image courtesy of Wikipedia)



On November 2nd of that year, hardhat divers from the Haulbowline dockyard dived the area and positively identified the U-boat as UC42, noting the stern damage to the submarine and the presence of the bodies of some of the German submariners. During 1918 the submarine was dived by Haulbowline and American divers in an effort to disarm all the mines and torpedoes still aboard, with USS Melville taking three of the mines. It was widely believed that in July 1919 divers using explosives from HMS Vernon torpedo school had destroyed the submarine with the remains being dispersed on the seabed by wire sweeps.

With the advent of scuba diving many divers have since searched for the scattered remains of UC42 around Cork harbour with no luck until a recent dive by two local divers Ian Kelleher and Niall O Regan descended a shot line to see the menacing sight of the hull of a German U-boat emerge from the shadows. Both divers were very surprised and ecstatic to find a fully intact World War I U-Boat in 27 meters of water just outside Cork harbour in good condition with little obvious explosive damage from the British naval dive team.

. . .

Over the past few weeks the divers have carefully and methodically videoed and photographed the Submarine and taken various measurements to record the wrecks' condition. Over a number of dives the dive team carefully cleaned the growth from the propeller and after some methodical cleaning found the U-Boats number UC42 stamped into it; positively identifying the submarine.




As the submarine is a war grave and contains the remains of so many young German submariners the dive team also laid a plaque of remembrance, which was erected near the submarines propellers; to act as a memorial to the German submariners forever entombed in UC42.


There's more at the link. Here's a video report about the wreck of the UC-42.







Another, somewhat better video report may be found here. Unfortunately, there's no way for me to embed it in this post, so you'll have to go to its (Irish) Web site to view it.

UC-42 sank a total of 14 Allied ships during her brief career. May the souls of all who died aboard UC-42, and aboard her victims, rest in peace.

Peter

3 comments:

Arthur B. Burnett said...

Greetings from Texasm
This is am amazing story. Thanks for posting it.

Kansas Scout said...

You can tour a captured WW1 German Sub at Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry.

Arthur B. Burnett said...

Greetings from Texas,
"You can tour a captured WW1 German Sub at Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry."

Please don't take this wrong, but if your talking about U-505, she was captured in World War Two. She's a fascinating look at another world, and I'm sure there are things she has in common with her World War One counterparts.

I toured the USS SEAWOLF (I believe the name is) on Galveston, an American World War Two era sub. All I can say is hats off to anyone who goes to war in a submarine. The very thought of diving in one of these scares the daylights out of me!