The U-boats' 15-knot surface speed was almost twice that of an average convoy and equal to that of most anti-submarine escorts. A German band welcomes a Type VIIC U-boat, the mainstay of the ...
From as early as the end of 1939, the German High Command had plans to ... under the sloping roof were easily recognizable as ...
The Type XXI was the first genuine submarine that ... in the North Sea and Skagerrak straits, including nine German U-boats and three British submarines, as reported by Smithsonian Magazine.
Sailboats rely on wind for their power while man-powered boats include personal watercraft like kayaks, rafts, and canoes. Motorboats, AKA speedboats, cover every type of boat with either an outboard ...
Newry, Mourne and Down District Council's (NMDDC) economy, regeneration and tourism committee as a stakeholder, has approved ...
Explorers say they’ve found the wreckage of a British warship that was sunk by a German U-boat during World War I. Some 524 people, including the ship’s captain, perished when the HMS Hawke ...
Shipwreck hunters in Scotland have located the wreck of a British warship that was sunk by a German U-boat in the North Sea nearly 110 years ago. They said the wreckage is that of HMS Hawke ...
A team of divers found what they believed was HMS Hawke about 70 miles east of Fraserburgh in "remarkable" condition.
Captured during World War II, the German U-Boat came to the museum to serve as a war memorial. After five decades outdoors, the museum brought the submarine inside and opened a 35,000-square-foot ...
Elbert Hubbard joked before sailing that if the Germans sank the Lusitania, going down with the ship would secure his fame.
The rectangular layout affords room for couches and lounges and just plain room to move around, that other boat types cannot offer at the same length. Most pontoon boats boast outboard power, with ...
Explorers say they’ve found a British warship sunk by a German U-boat in WWI Explorers say they’ve found the wreckage of a British warship that was sunk by a German U-boat during World War I.