SS Karlsruhe
SS Mannheim (sister ship of the SS Karlsruhe
History
NameKarlsruhe
Owner
Port of registryHamburg
RouteHamburg America Line's North Atlantic route
BuilderSchichau Seebeckwerft
Yard number228
Launched1905
FateSunk 13 April 1945
General characteristics
Tonnage897 GRT
Length66.3 m (217.5 ft)
Beam10.1 m (33.1 ft)
Depth3.7 m (12.1 ft)
Installed power2 x 3 cylinder triple expansion steam engines, dual shaft
PropulsionTwin screw
Speed8 kn (15 km/h; 9 mph)

The SS Karlsruhe was a German cargo ship from 1905 of the Hamburg America Line, which was sunk on 13 April 1945 with great loss of life by Soviet aircraft, during Operation Hannibal.

History

The ship was built in 1905 at Schichau Seebeckwerft in Bremerhaven for the Hamburg America Line. In 1918 Thomas Kier, formerly captain of the SS Imperator, became captain of the Karlsruhe. In 1935 the ship was acquired by Ernst Russ Reederei.

Last voyage

On 11 April 1945, the Karlsruhe took 1,083 refugees on board in Pillau and left the port at around 20:00 for the Hel Peninsula, where the ship arrived on 12 April 1945 in the morning. There, a convoy was formed with the steamers SS Santander, SS Karlsruhe and three minesweepers, which departed at around 09:00 for Copenhagen.

The overloaded Karlsruhe was not able to keep up with the required speed of the convoy of 9 knots, and could only run a good 7 knots, and fell behind. On 13 April 1945, she was attacked by Soviet planes north of Stolpmünde and hit with a torpedo. The ship broke in two and sank within three to four minutes. The minesweepers of the 25th minesweeping flotilla, M 294 (Kapitänleutnant Volberts) and M 341 (Oberleutnant zur See Henry Peter Rickmers) were able to save only 150 of the approximately 1083 refugees (M294: 63 - M341: 87). The other 933 passengers perished.

Discovery of the wreck and speculations

The well-preserved wreck was found and inspected by Polish divers in July 2020. Speculation persists some crates inside may contain art/ornaments looted from the Catherine Palace's Amber Room in 1941, taken to Königsberg and lost in 1945.[1][2] Divers subsequently discovered that the crates on the ship contained military equipment and personal belongings. [3]

References

  1. "Nazi shipwreck found off Poland may solve Amber Room mystery". The Guardian. Reuters. 1 October 2020. Retrieved 28 February 2021.
  2. Metcalfe, Tom (14 October 2020). "Nazi wreck may hold looted treasures from Russian palace's 'Amber Room'". Live Science. Future plc. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  3. https://www.9news.com.au/world/amber-room-mystery-looted-by-nazis-continues-after-wreck-dive-eighth-wonder-of-the-world/68da8803-af97-474c-b6c1-b0089818b21b

Sources

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