Very nice items and display. Certainly rarer than W-SS uniforms...less made during the period and lower % survived...for sure with U-Boat material...
While collectors may not be fighting so hard over KM (right now) as W-SS, I do very much appreciate the rarity and the historical merit of those items!
- Sunk 11 Mar 1944 in the Mediterranean near Toulon by US Bombs, 1 Dead.
U651
- Type VIIC
- Commissioned 12-Febc-41
Flotillas:
- 12 Feb 1941 - 29 Jun 1941from 1. Flotille
- 1 Patrol, 2 ships sunk (total 11,639 GRT)
- Sunk 29 Jun 1941 South of Iceland by Depth Charges from Destroyers HMS Malcolm and HMS Scimitar, corvettes HMS Arabis and HMS Violet and minesweeper HMS Speedwell. All 45 Crew survived.
Excellent Display! Darrell that is some good info as well. I just finished watching Das Boot again and that is what made me check out this thread. There is just something about a U-Boat.
Eric
I once flew in a B-17, B-24, & a B-25. Next, I want to fire an 88 round.
Excellent Display! Darrell that is some good info as well. I just finished watching Das Boot again and that is what made me check out this thread. There is just something about a U-Boat.
Eric
Thanks all for your visits and comments to this thread.
For about a month ago I publisched a photo of three diffrent men from three diffrent submarines. Today over 1000 visitors have been on the thread mostly
just reading it but some have comments to. That makes me happy for such interesst
Therfore I have decide to make a little deeper presentation of these mens.
I will start with U259 and Maximillian Reichermeyer.
U 259 was a typical submarine for world War II.
We are most used to read about boats with 1000 tons of sinking and brave men waiting for waterbombs at 200 meters deep. Such boats exist but several hundreds was lost on their first or second mission.
Reason for that is in common that the enamy had been better and better in hunting submarines. They can now use aeroplanes, day and nights and everywhere, use radar, listen to radio traffic and so on.
Warships protect convoys with military ships such as carrier and destroyer.
They have also built up more and more experiance in how to finding submarines and then how kill them.
No glory and a short life was what many Germans have to expect from his duty
U259 was ordered st 23.12.1939 and built at Vegesack Werft in Bremen
The type was VIIC the most common type. Fieldpostnumber 40438
Captain was Klaus Köpke. Born 05.01.1915
Submarine education 6 month
Watchofficer at U569
First command 18.02.1942
U259 back from first mission. Probably La Pallice 5.10.1942
Second Patrol 5.11.1942-15.11.1942 From La Pallice-througt Gibraltar-into Mediterranien- Cost of North Algerie.
Hit by several bombs from a Hudson S. Pilot flight officer Mick A Ensor.
All man lost (48) inclusive Maximillian Reichermeyer
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