The German Submarine branch of the Kriegsmarine was one of the most fear-inducing branches of the German military apparatus ...
Here’s What You Need to Remember: Today, many of the ships of the High Seas Fleet remain at the bottom of Scapa Flow, where wreck-divers often visit them. Given the enthusiasm with which scrappers ...
THURSO, Scotland, June 23, 1919 (UP) -- Of the German vessels interned in Scapa Flow, the dreadnaught Baden and the cruiser Emden remained afloat today. The Frankfort and the Nuremberg may possibly be ...
Legal protection has been announced to preserve what remains of World War One warships in Scapa Flow off Orkney. The 52-strong German High Seas fleet was scuttled - deliberately sunk - by its crews in ...
In a war where adversaries are hardly at grips, it is hard to grip war’s facts. Most tangible important fact of last week was the statement (upon being landed safely in Great Britain) of Captain F. C.
Shortly after the armistice that ended World War I, the Germans surrendered their fleet to the Allies. The British in particular very strongly believed that Germany should be deprived of her fleet at ...
A sheltered body of water in Scotland's Orkney Islands, Scapa Flow is calm on its surface. But underwater, the seabed is full of historic shipwrecks and war graves where hundreds of sailors were ...
From a small beginning in 1964, this quarterly journal has become internationally recognized as the most authoritative English-language publication in the warship field. Each issue averages 100 pages, ...