Unterseeboot 26 (1936)

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U-26

U-25, the other Type IA U-boat.
Country Nazi Germany
Branch Kriegsmarine
Type IA
Fieldpost number M 07 314
Shipyard AG Weser, Bremen
Yard number 904
Ordered December 17, 1934
Laid down August 1, 1935
Launched March 14, 1936
Commissioned May 6, 1936
Career
Patrols 6
Flotillas 2. Unterseebootsflottille
Commanders Werner Hartmann
Oskar Schomburg
Klaus Ewerth
Heinz Scheringer
Heinz Fischer
Successes
11 ships sunk for a total of 48.645 GRT
1 ship damaged for a total of 4.871 GRT
1 warship damaged for a total of 530 tons
Fate
Scuttled July 1, 1940 southwest of Ireland. 48 survivors.

Unterseeboot 26 (also known as U-26) was one of the two Type IA ocean going U-boats produced by the German Kriegsmarine. Constructed by AG Weser in Bremen, U-26 was commissioned on May 6, 1936. It experienced a short, but successful combat career, sinking eleven enemy ships.

Until 1940, U-26 was primarily used as training vessel and for propaganda purposes by the Nazi government. During its trials it was found that the Type IA submarine was difficult to handle due to its poor stability and slow dive rate.

In early 1940, the boat was called into combat duty due to the shortage of available submarines. U-26 participated in eight war cruises, sinking eleven enemy ships and badly damaging two. On its first war cruise laying mines, U-26 sunk three merchant ships and damaged one British warship. On its second war cruise it became the first U-boat during World War II to enter the Mediterranean Sea. U-26 participated in three other successful war patrols, sinking four additional merchant ships.

[edit] Fate

On its eighth war cruise the boat sunk three merchant ships and damaged another ship the following day. The attack on this ship led to severe depth-charging by the British warship, HMS Gladiolus. Unable to dive, U-26 was forced to surface where it was bombed by a Sunderland flying boat. On July 1, 1940 the crew scuttled the submarine off the western coast of Ireland in position 48°03′N, 11°30′W. All members of the crew were able to escape and were rescued by the Allied warship, HMS Rochester and taken prisoner.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

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German Type I submarines (Unterseeboot)
U-25 | U-26

List of submarines of Germany
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