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Fyodor Litke (1909 icebreaker)

The icebreaker Fyodor Litke (SKR-18, Russian: Фёдор Литке, СКР-18) was active in the Soviet era in the Arctic, until the late 1950s. It was built in 1909 in England for the Saint Lawrence River service and initially named CGC Earl Grey after Albert Grey, Governor General of Canada.[2] After four years in Canada it was sold to the Russian government and eventually renamed Fyodor Litke in honour of the Arctic explorer Fyodor Petrovich Litke.

Postcard version of photograph of Earl Grey while on builder's trials in 1909[1]
History
Soviet Union
NameФёдор Литке / Fyodor Litke
Owner
  • Government of Canada (1910–1914)
  • Russian Empire (1914–1917)
  • Northern Sea Route (1932–1958)
BuilderVickers, Barrow-in-Furness
Launched18 June 1909
Out of serviceAugust 1958
FateScrapped 1960
General characteristics
TypeIcebreaking freighter
Displacement4,850 tonnes
Installed power7,000 hp (5,200 kW)
Speed17 knots (31 km/h)

Litke[nb 1] became famous for its Arctic operations in 1932–1935, survived World War II and was retired in 1958 after nearly 50 years of service. Unlike conventional icebreakers that crush ice with their own weight from above, Litke belonged to an older generation of vessels, relying on ramming and cutting ice without any downward movement.[3] For this reason, Litke was uniquely classified as an ice-cutter (Russian: ледорез) or icebreaking steamship (Russian: ледокольный пароход), rather than a true icebreaker.

History edit

CGS Earl Grey edit

Albert Grey, the ninth Governor General of Canada, paid his first visit to the Hudson Bay area in 1910, returning home in a luxuriously-appointed suite on board an icebreaker bearing his name, CGS Earl Grey. Grey was interested in the construction of a coastal railroad, establishing new seaports (including Port Nelson) and charting the waters of Hudson Bay.

CGS Earl Grey was built in 1909 in Barrow-in-Furness for the Saint Lawrence River winter service as an "icebreaking freight and passenger steamer".[4] Its engine was just 30% less powerful than the engine of Yermak, the largest true icebreaker of the period, although Yermak was slower due to a bulky ice-crushing layout. Earl Grey was equipped with a clipper style Stanley bow, giving it a yacht-like appearance and its owners claimed it to be the "First Canadian ice fighting machine".[4] Later Russian crew members praised its living quarter luxuries but scorned the substandard shower room. The ship also rolled excessively, even on relatively calm seas.[5]

Canada and the Russian Civil War edit

Earl Grey continued service between Charlottetown and Pictou until the outbreak of World War I. In 1914 she was sold to the Imperial Russian government and renamed Canada, operating in the Arkhangelsk area from 9 October 1914.[6] Canada and another Canadian icebreaker, Lintrose (Sadko in Russian service) were key in extending the navigation season around Murmansk in 1914 to the end of January 1915, escorting a total of 146 British transports with military supplies.[7]

In 1918–1920, during the Russian Civil War, when General Evgenii Miller controlled Arkhangelsk, Canada remained in port, loyal to Miller's government. However, on 19 February 1920, when a defeated Miller was evacuating the city, Canada and Ivan Susanin refused to cooperate with the white forces and stayed in Solombala harbor.[8]

Canada, now in the hands of local commissars who were leaning towards the Bolsheviks, was armed and sailed out to sea, becoming trapped in ice after chasing and intercepting a convoy on the morning of 21 February.[9] An artillery duel between Canada and Miller's icebreaker Kozma Minin was probably the only sea battle ever to take place between icebreakers and ended in favor of Miller. Canada retreated due to hull damage and the Bolsheviks blamed the failure on commissars Petrov and Nikolayev, who could have negotiated with the fugitives.[10]

Fyodor Litke edit

The new Bolshevik owners changed the name of Canada to III International and eventually to Fyodor Litke – after Fyodor Petrovich Litke, the notable Arctic explorer, geographer, and tutor of Grand Duke Konstantin Nikolayevich of Russia.

1929 expedition edit

In 1926, a team of Soviet explorers equipped with three years of supplies landed on Wrangel Island. The clear waters which had facilitated the 1926 landing were followed by years of continuous heavy ice. Attempts to reach Wrangel Island by sea failed and it was feared that the team would not survive their fourth winter.

In 1929 Litke, as one of the most capable Soviet icebreakers, was chosen for a rescue operation. The vessel sailed from Sevastopol with captain Konstantin Dublitsky in command, reaching Vladivostok on 4 July 1929. In Vladivostok, all the Black Sea sailors were relieved and replaced with local crew. Ten days later Litke sailed to the North, passed through the Bering Strait safely and attempted to pass Long Strait in order to approach the island from the south. On 8 August a scout plane reported seeing impassable ice in the strait, and Litke turned north, heading to Herald Island. It failed to escape the mounting ice and on 12 August the captain shut down the engines in order to save coal and had to wait two weeks until ice pressure eased up. Making only a few hundred meters a day, Litke reached the settlement on 28 August. On 5 September, Litke went to sea once more, bringing all the 'islanders' to safety. This operation earned Litke the order of the Red Banner of Labour (20 January 1930), as well as memorial badges for the crew.

1932: First Dalstroy campaign edit

From 1932 until 1933 Litke was employed by Dalstroy, which was an NKVD organization in charge of Far Eastern gold mining. The gold mines were separated from Magadan Harbor by virtually impassable mountains; however, the mines could be reached from the Arctic coast of Chukchi Sea by river – if the ships managed to break through from Bering Strait to Kolyma River inlet. On 23 January 1932, the government assigned Litke and a smaller icebreaker, Davydov, to guide Arctic convoys with over 13,000 tonnes of supplies, over 1,000 passengers and numerous small river craft, to the Kolyma settlements. The plan also considered the possibility that the ships would be trapped in the ice for the winter of 1932–1933, and they were supplied sufficiently to survive 14 months.[11][12] Formation of the first convoy was delayed owing to the lack of Arctic-ready transport ships that had to be assembled from the Black Sea and Baltic Sea fleets, or built at the Dalzavod yards in Vladivostok.[13]

Ships of the first large convoy – Litke, six transport ships and a motor schooner, towing 26 smaller craft[12] and carrying 867 passengers, most of them convicts,[14] – sailed from Vladivostok individually between 27 June and 5 July 1932. Litke, under the command of captain Nikolay Nikolayev, sailed on 2 July.[12] Due to delays in Vladivostok, the convoy missed the optimal, calm period (June) and faced heavy storms in the Sea of Okhotsk. Two 500-tonne welded barges towed by Litke suffered hull cracks as early in the voyage as the La Perouse Strait and had to be repaired in rough seas. Litke arrived in Petropavlovsk on 10 July, making an average 7 knots (13 km/h) with only four out of its six boilers working.[15][nb 2] In the following week it resupplied from a Japanese coaler, taking special precautions to block any contacts between Soviet and Japanese crews.[16] The sailing to Provideniya (18–26 July) was uneventful, except for a minor storm off Cape Olutorsky, once again damaging the barges.[17]

While the convoy assembled in a formation off Cape Dezhnev, two larger transports, Anadyr and Suchan, attempted to head west to Kolyma on their own. They were stopped by heavy ice; Litke released them on 31 July and immediately returned to Cape Dezhnev.[18] Most of August was spent seeking ice-free westward passages. With scout planes grounded by bad weather until 15 August, the ships moved by trial and error around impassable ice formations. Litke, with half of the transports, headed west, making 12 to 25 miles (19 to 40 km) a day; the other transports were relieved from a possibly fatal attempt for them.[19]

The convoy reached Ambarchik Bay (Kolyma inlet) on 4 September. Ambarchik became the main "port of entry" for the prisoners of Kolyma for the next decade. A P Bochek, the leader of the expedition, cited the efforts of Litke as the main factor in the operation's success.[19] However, the convoy ultimately failed to unload its cargo – 18 out of the 20 days in Ambarchik anchorage were stormy, so 5,980 of the 10,890 tonnes of cargo were left in the holds.[20] Thus it was decided to relocate the transports to a safe winter anchorage in Chaunskaya Bay; however the short journey was plagued by increasingly heavier ice that damaged Litke's rudder on 26 September. Divers confirmed that the damage could be fixed only in a dry dock. Litke could now only sail accompanied by a tugboat.[21]

Between 2–7 October, the crippled Litke was busy clearing a passage to Uritsky off Cape Shelagsky. Fearing that Litke itself would be trapped away from the convoy, Bochek and his staff ordered that it cease its efforts. Litke joined the main forces in Chaun Bay, preparing to stay there for the long Arctic winter.[21] On 31 October, Litke was fully prepared for the winter; it still carried 500 tonnes of coal, with 150 allocated for heating at the anchorage.[22] Its large luxurious saloons were used for propaganda and entertainment assemblies for the whole convoy.[23] Meanwhile, the morale of its crew was plummeting. The ship surgeon and cook were relieved from duty for absenteeism.[24]

1933: Chelyuskin disaster edit

After a winter in Chaun bay, Litke was declared seaworthy again on 20 June 1933. On 28 June, Litke assisted two transports, beached by a storm, and on 1 July sailed once more to attempt to release Uritsky from the ice.[25] On this occasion Litke carried 450 tonnes of coal – enough to last for seven days in heavy ice. To save fuel, she moved in a start-stop manner, shutting down her boilers for days on end when ice density or fog forced her to idle. On 18 July Litke finally approached Uritsky and both ships safely reached Kolyma Inlet on 21 July.[26] Meanwhile, the fleet in Chaun Bay finally unloaded their cargoes and on 16 August, Litke, along with Anadyr, sailed to Vladivostok, picking up other stranded ships on their way. The short run to the Bering Strait was a hazardous operation, and numerous ships again became trapped in the ice with fuel running low. As the coastal ice grew heavier, the convoy had to turn north, and reached Vankarem only on 13 September.[27] Later in September, the convoy, in small isolated groups, was stuck in coastal ice east of Vankarem. Litke, the only icebreaker in the Chukotka area, managed to get them through, but sustained wear and damage from the ice was gradually reducing her capability.[28]

At the same time SS Chelyuskin, attempting a single-season passage from Murmansk to Vladivostok, was stuck in ice in the same area, off Cape Koluchin. On 22 September, while attempting to clear a passage for three ships trapped in the ice, Litke again damaged its rudder and propeller, hardly escaping entrapment in the ice itself, and had to retreat to clear water in Provideniya bay.[29] In the middle of October, Cheluskin was firmly trapped in solid pack ice and drifting westward through the Chukchi Sea. Litke, protecting a far larger convoy, had to complete her mission at the cost of leaving Cheluskin alone in the Arctic.

On 10 October, Litke reached Cape Dezhnev in clear water, but the next day ice floes pushed it back, westward. Two transports, Schmidt and Sverdlovsk, were nearly crushed by the ice and had to be rescued at all costs. When Litke reached Cape Dezhnev again on 14 October, she suffered multiple hull cracks, a damaged rudder, lost propeller blades and most importantly, her right shaft was warped to the point that it rendered the right engine useless.[30] At half power, Litke could not break through thick ice and had to retreat to Provideniya. On 26 October Sverdlovsk and Schmidt managed to break through and all three ships arrived in Providenya on 2 November. Meanwhile, Cheluskin, drifting in the pack ice off Cape Dezhnev,[30] became the subject of a massive propaganda campaign and its rescue became a national emergency.

On 5 November, Litke, still crippled, offered help by radio. Otto Schmidt, aware of Litke's condition, at first declined the offer. Five days later, however, a desperate Schmidt himself radioed Litke for help, hoping that an icebreaker and explosive blasting could clear a passage through three-quarters of a mile of thick ice. Litke put to sea without a proper refit and in the next few days she was damaged to the point when the captain considered beaching her onto the Alaska coast to save his own crew.[31] Schmidt let Litke abort her mission on 17 November, when the two ships were separated by 30 miles (48 km). Litke, assisting Smolensk and other transports south of Bering Strait, reached Petropavlovsk on 14 December, and after two weeks of makeshift repairs, finally sailed to Vladivostok for an overhaul, arriving there on 4 January 1934.[32]

Litke was refitted in Japan[33] while Cheluskin sank in February 1934, crushed by the ice it had been trapped in. Contemporary authors directly link Litke's failure in November 1933 to the wear and damage it had sustained after two Dalstroy seasons.[29]

1934 expedition edit

 
Litke on a 1976 Soviet postage stamp. Here it is named an icebreaker although in 1930s it was classified as ice-cutter due to a clipper bow design.

In 1934, the icebreaker Fyodor Litke became a Soviet propaganda icon as the first vessel to pass the complete Northern Sea Route, east to west, in one season. In the following season it escorted the first freighters to make the passage in the opposite direction. Since then, hundreds of vessels have completed the passage in both directions.

This time, captain Dublitsky was in overall charge of the convoy, with captain Nikolay Nikolaev in command of the ship and professor Vladimir Wiese in charge of the scientific programme. Litke sailed from Vladivostok on 28 June 1934 and passed the Bering Strait on the morning of 13 July. She was considerably delayed by ice at the Long Strait but on 2 August she was able to enter the Laptev Sea.

As she approached the Taymyr coast, Litke again encountered ice. By the evening of 11 August, whilst she was manoeuvering among heavy floes, Litke spotted the masts and funnels of three trapped ships close to the Komsomolskaya Pravda Islands. These were the Pravda, Volodarskiy and Tovarich Stalin. They appeared dead ahead, separated from Litke by 10 kilometers (6.2 mi) of solid sea ice. After a week of breaking through the ice, Litke succeeded in rescuing the freighters at the cost of major damage to the structure of her hull. The freed freighters went their separate ways: Stalin followed Litke west to Arkhangelsk via Vilkitsky Strait while Volodarskiy headed east towards the mouths of the Lena and Pravda southwards to Nordvik.[34]

Dublitsky, Nikolayev and Wiese received a welcoming address from Joseph Stalin on 23 September 1934[35] and became public celebrities.

1935–1938 edit

In 1935, Litke escorted two transports, Vantzetti and Iskra, through the Northern Route west to east. They sailed from Leningrad on 8 July and arrived at Vladivostok on 8 October 1935. At the same time Anadyr and Stalingrad made the east-to-west journey, reaching Leningrad on 16 October. Rabochiy made a near-double trip from Arkhangelsk to Kolyma and back.[36]

In 1936, Litke was temporarily relieved from NKVD duties. Litke, under the command of captain Yury Khlebnikov and the overall management of Otto Schmidt, completed a purely military operation – clearing the Arctic passage for the destroyers Stalin and Voykov, dispatched from Kronstadt via the Northern Route to join the Pacific Fleet. Litke, sailing from Arkhangelsk, reached Novaya Zemlya on 1 August. Here, the convoy picked up more transports and oil tankers and the destroyers reached Vladivostok in October 1936. The operation nearly ended in a disaster when the oil-powered destroyers ran short of fuel in stormy weather in the Sea of Okhotsk. Mechanics managed to burn wheat flour to maintain minimum boiler pressure.[37] Meanwhile, in the season of 1936, as many as 16 ships traversed the Northern Route.[36]

The season of 1937 was intended to be far more successful than past seasons in terms of the tonnage and number of ships making the Arctic passage; however, many of the ships attempting it were not fully suited to Arctic conditions.[38] Two convoys, led by Litke and Lenin, as well as Krasin, scrambled to rescue them and were trapped in the ice themselves, off Khatanga Gulf, for the winter. Through bad planning, weather and bad luck, 25 of the 64 ships underway on the Northern Route in 1937 were out of action – at least until next spring; one, Rabochiy, was lost.[36] Only in April 1938 did Krasin, resupplied from the coastal coal dumps, break through and release Litke and its transports. The failures of 1937 were used as a pretext for replacing the Northern Sea Route management, and at least 673 men fell victims to the Great Purge.[39] The Glavsevmorput was limited to maintaining coastal navigation, its auxiliary function relegated to Dalstroy and other organizations.[40]

1941–1945: World War II edit

In the late summer of 1941 during World War II, Litke was armed with artillery at Severodvinsk shipyard No. 402,[41] acquired the frigate pennant number SKR-18 and was assigned to the newly formed Northern Unit of the White Sea Flotilla.[42] Litke served the rest of 1941 in its principal function, guiding Arctic convoys in the Eastern sector (from the White Sea to Dudinka). In the winter of 1941–1942 it cleared the frozen approaches to Arkhangelsk for the Atlantic convoys. This seasonal work pattern – deep Arctic in summer, White Sea in winter, two refits at shipyard No. 402 – continued throughout the war. Sailing in the western Arctic could be as dangerous as in the Far East; for example, in February 1942 Litke failed to clear a passage to Indiga Bay and its convoy had to return to Iokanga, making it vulnerable to German air and submarine attacks.[43]

 
Map of Operation Wunderland showing extent of German presence in the Arctic

During Operation Wunderland, on 20 August 1942, the German submarine U-456 (Lt. Captain Teichert) tried to sink Litke off Belushya Guba in the Barents Sea by firing torpedoes at it, but was unsuccessful. On 26 August the German heavy cruiser Admiral Scheer succeeded in destroying the coal dump in Dikson. Litke and the icebreaker Taimyr were summoned to lead an emergency convoy of coal barges, saving the town from extinction.

In the same summer of 1943 the icebreaker Joseph Stalin, recently refitted in Seattle, escorted three transports from the United States to Tiksi. Here, Litke awaited the arrival of this convoy which would double Joseph Stalin's ice-breaking capacity. However, the threat of German submarines and bottom mines scattered in the shallow coastal passage caused a delay until the Navy could assemble an adequate defensive escort.

Two transports of VA-18 convoy – standing for Vilkitsky Strait to Arkhangelsk – Arkhangelsk and Kirov, and a minesweeper, were destroyed by submarines in the Kara Sea on 30 September and 1 October. The surviving transports of VA-18 convoy were left behind in Dikson,[42] but the Navy could not afford to leave the icebreakers there for the whole Arctic winter because they were needed in western ports to assist the Atlantic convoys. Despite an increasing submarine presence, Litke and Joseph Stalin sailed west from Tiksi to Arkhangelsk with a minesweeper escort, codenamed Convoy AB-66.[nb 3] A deep sea route via Amderma and the Kara Strait was safe from bottom mines, but at least 600 nautical miles (1,100 km) of the 1,100-nautical-mile (2,000 km) journey was packed with 'young' ice, slowing down the convoy and consuming fuel (Litke sailed with only 900 tonnes of coal and 290 tonnes of water). The second leg of the journey was almost entirely in pack ice (eliminating the submarine threat).

On 11 November, AB-66 reached open water and was joined by a defensive destroyer escort (Convoy AB-55). Six more destroyers sailed from Arkhangelsk and Iokanga to protect AB-55 in home waters. On 16 November the destroyers intercepted a German submarine and sighted a Ju 88 bombers; both intruders were forced to abort their missions. Two more submarines were intercepted by the minesweepers and the convoy reached Severodvinsk without casualties on 18 November 1943. According to Soviet reports, the total count of AB-55 and AB-66 stands at two submarines sunk and two damaged.[44] More importantly, Litke and Stalin proved the viability of extending polar navigation into October; their observation of young ice formation in October 1943 changed the previously held perception of the phenomenon.

Post-war service edit

In 1946–1947 Litke was refitted by Merseyside yards and continued Arctic exploration.[45][46] Two campaigns (1948 and 1955) were completely dedicated to hydrographic studies of Arctic seas.[47] In 1955, Litke set a world record by reaching 83°11', or only 440 nautical miles (810 km) from the North Pole "with normal propulsion and steering" and safely returning to her home port[45] (Fram went even further, to 86°14' – but was completely trapped in ice and unable to turn back). The 1955 expedition was also notable for locating the deepest known point of the Arctic Ocean, named the Littke Depression (5,449 m (17,877 ft)), and drilling geological samples from the ocean floor.[48]

After a long career, Litke was towed to the Murmansk scrapyard in August 1958[49] and broken up in 1960. She remained listed by Lloyd's Register until 1961.[4]

See also edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ Name of the ship was usually reduced to Litke, omitting Fyodor.
  2. ^ Four out of six boilers were normally used in clear water. Five or six were used in heavy ice only.
  3. ^ AB acronym stands for Deep Arctic to White Sea

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ The original builder's photograph was reproduced in 1949 in McMurtrie and Blackman, p. 297.
  2. ^ Fraser, p.3
  3. ^ Papanin, ch.3
  4. ^ a b c Fraser, p. 6
  5. ^ Seliverstov, p. 57
  6. ^ Combat chronicles..., p.426
  7. ^ History of World War I, vol.II, p. 379
  8. ^ Sokolov, p.413
  9. ^ Sokolov, p.418
  10. ^ Sokolov, p.428
  11. ^ Bochek, Introduction[permanent dead link]
  12. ^ a b c Bochek, Work in Vladivostok. Loading and sailing out[permanent dead link]
  13. ^ Bochek, Preparation work in Moscow[permanent dead link]
  14. ^ Larkov, Romanenko, p. 172
  15. ^ Bochek. Vladivostok to Petropavlovsk[permanent dead link]
  16. ^ Bochek, Resupplying in Petropaplovsk[permanent dead link]
  17. ^ Bocher. Petropavlovsk to Providenya[permanent dead link]
  18. ^ Bochek. Failure of Anadyr and Suchan[permanent dead link]
  19. ^ a b Bochek, Operations of the second group of ships[permanent dead link]
  20. ^ Bochek, Unloading process[permanent dead link]
  21. ^ a b Bochek, Kolyma to Chaun[permanent dead link]
  22. ^ Bochek. Personnel quarters and their preparation[permanent dead link]
  23. ^ Bochek, December 1932[permanent dead link]
  24. ^ Bochek, February 1933
  25. ^ Bochek, June 1933[permanent dead link]
  26. ^ Bochek, Winter on Uritsky[permanent dead link]
  27. ^ Bochek, Return from Ambarchik anchorage[permanent dead link]
  28. ^ Larkov, p.139
  29. ^ a b Larkov, p. 140
  30. ^ a b Bochek, Litke delayed in Polar region[permanent dead link]
  31. ^ Larkov, p. 141
  32. ^ Bochek, Provideniya to Vladivostok[permanent dead link]
  33. ^ Barr 1982, p. 324
  34. ^ Barr 1982, pp. 323–325
  35. ^ Stalin, v.18. p. 70
  36. ^ a b c Barr 1980, p. 4
  37. ^ Rudny, ch.5
  38. ^ Barr 1980, p. 17
  39. ^ 75 years of Northern Sea Route, p. 3
  40. ^ Barr 1980, p. 18
  41. ^ Schmigelsky
  42. ^ a b Dremlyug
  43. ^ Popov, p. 47
  44. ^ K. D. Smirnov
  45. ^ a b Fraser, p. 7
  46. ^ McMurtrie and Blackman, p. 297
  47. ^ A. V. Smirnov
  48. ^ Evseyev
  49. ^ Seliverstov, p. 181

References edit

  • (in English) Barr, W. The Drift of Lenin's Convoy in the Laptev Sea, 1937 – 1938. Arctic, v.33 no.1 (March 1980) p. 4–20 [1]
  • (in English) Barr, W. The First Soviet Convoy to the Mouth of the Lena. Arctic, v.35 no.2 (June 1982) p. 317–325 [2]
  • (in German) German Naval Warfare in 1942
  • (in English)
  • (in Russian) Bochek, A. P. Report on the 1932–1933 navigation (Бочек, А. П. Начальника Северо-Восточной Полярной Экспедиции НАРКОМВОДА – БОЧЕК А.П. – доклад Народному комиссару водного транспорта Янсон Н. М. 1934 г. )
  • (in Russian) Combat chronicles of the Russian Navy (Боевая летопись русского флота: Хроника важнейших событий военной истории русского флота с IX в. по 1917 г. – М.: Воениздат МВС СССР, 1948 [4][permanent dead link])
  • (in Russian) Dremlyug, V. V. Naval logistics in the Arctic (1941–1945) (В. В. Дремлюг. Обеспечение морских операций в Арктике (1941–1945) / Конференция "Война в Арктике", г.Архангельск, август-сентябрь 2000. [5] 2007-10-24 at the Wayback Machine)
  • (in Russian) Evseyev, V. V. Geological studies of the AANII (Евсеев, В.В. Горно-геологические исследования института. Arctic and Antarctic Institute 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine)
  • (in English) Fraser, R. J. Early Canadian Icebreakers. Arctic, v. 16, no. 1, Mar. 1963, p. 2-7, ill. [6]
  • (in Russian) History of World War I, vol.II (История первой мировой войны 1914–1918 гг. – М.: Наука, 1975, т.II)
  • (in Russian) Larkov, S. Cheluskin: historical myths and objective history (Ларьков, С., Челюскинская эпопея: историческая мифология и объективность истории. / Земцов А. Н. (ред.)., Враги народа за полярным кругом. – М: ИНЕТ им. С. И. Вавилова, 2007. ISBN 978-5-98866-014-9 [7][permanent dead link])
  • (in Russian) Larkov, S., Romamenko, F. Zakonvoirovannye zimovschiki (Ларьков, С., Романенко, Ф., Законвоированные зимовщики. / Земцов А. Н. (ред.)., Враги народа за полярным кругом. – М: ИНЕТ им. С. И. Вавилова, 2007. ISBN 978-5-98866-014-9

[8][permanent dead link])

  • (in English) McMurtrie, Francis E., and Blackman, Raymond V.B., Jane's Fighting Ships 1949-50. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc., 1949
  • (in Russian) Popov, G. P. Navy College to the War (Попов, Г. П. Из мореходки – на войну. / Ceверные конвои. Исследования, воспоминания, документы. – Архангельск: 1991 [9])
  • (in Russian) Papanin, I. Ice and Fire (Папанин, И. Д., Лёд и пламень. – М: Политиздат, 1977 chapter 3
  • (in Russian) Rudny, V. A. Maximum readiness (Рудный В.А. Готовность № 1 (О Кузнецове Н.Г.) – М.: Политиздат, 1982 [10])
  • (in Russian) Schmigelsky, L. Molotovsk and the war in Arctic 1941–1945 (Шмигельский, Л. Молотовск и война в Арктике 1941–1945 / Конференция "Война в Арктике", г.Архангельск, август-сентябрь 2000. [11] 2011-06-06 at the Wayback Machine)
  • (in Russian) Seliverstov, L. S. Pomorie to the Ocean (Селиверстов Л.С. Из Поморья – в океан : записки моряка.- Мурманск: 2005. ISBN 5-85510-293-9)
  • (in Russian) 75 years of Northern Sea Route (75 лет Северному морскому пути. Пресс-релиз. ААНИИ, 21.02.2008. Arctic and Antarctic Institute[permanent dead link])
  • (in Russian) Smirnov, A. V. History of biological studies at the Arctic and Antarctic Institute (A. В. Смирнов. Исторический очерк биологических исследований, проводившихся Арктическим и Антарктическим научно-исследовательским институтом. ААНИИ, 2007. Arctic and Antarctic Institute 2011-07-17 at the Wayback Machine)
  • (in Russian) Smirnov, K. D. 1943 ice operation in the Arctic (К. Д. Смирнов. Крупная ледовая операция в 1943 году в Арктике )
  • (in Russian) Sokolov, B. The fall of Northern Region (Борис Соколов. Падение Северной области. / Гражданская война в России: Война на Севере. – М: ООО «Издательство ACT». ISBN 5-17-024052-X)
  • (in Russian) Stalin, J. S. Complete works, 2006 edition, v.18 (Cталин, И. В. Cочинения. – Т. 18. – Тверь: Информационно-издательский центр «Союз», 2006.)

fyodor, litke, 1909, icebreaker, other, icebreakers, with, same, name, fyodor, litke, icebreaker, icebreaker, fyodor, litke, russian, Фёдор, Литке, СКР, active, soviet, arctic, until, late, 1950s, built, 1909, england, saint, lawrence, river, service, initiall. For other icebreakers with the same name see Fyodor Litke icebreaker The icebreaker Fyodor Litke SKR 18 Russian Fyodor Litke SKR 18 was active in the Soviet era in the Arctic until the late 1950s It was built in 1909 in England for the Saint Lawrence River service and initially named CGC Earl Grey after Albert Grey Governor General of Canada 2 After four years in Canada it was sold to the Russian government and eventually renamed Fyodor Litke in honour of the Arctic explorer Fyodor Petrovich Litke Postcard version of photograph of Earl Grey while on builder s trials in 1909 1 HistorySoviet UnionNameFyodor Litke Fyodor LitkeOwnerGovernment of Canada 1910 1914 Russian Empire 1914 1917 Northern Sea Route 1932 1958 BuilderVickers Barrow in FurnessLaunched18 June 1909Out of serviceAugust 1958FateScrapped 1960General characteristicsTypeIcebreaking freighterDisplacement4 850 tonnesInstalled power7 000 hp 5 200 kW Speed17 knots 31 km h Litke nb 1 became famous for its Arctic operations in 1932 1935 survived World War II and was retired in 1958 after nearly 50 years of service Unlike conventional icebreakers that crush ice with their own weight from above Litke belonged to an older generation of vessels relying on ramming and cutting ice without any downward movement 3 For this reason Litke was uniquely classified as an ice cutter Russian ledorez or icebreaking steamship Russian ledokolnyj parohod rather than a true icebreaker Contents 1 History 1 1 CGS Earl Grey 1 2 Canada and the Russian Civil War 1 3 Fyodor Litke 1 3 1 1929 expedition 1 3 2 1932 First Dalstroy campaign 1 3 3 1933 Chelyuskin disaster 1 3 4 1934 expedition 1 3 5 1935 1938 1 3 6 1941 1945 World War II 1 3 7 Post war service 2 See also 3 Explanatory notes 4 Footnotes 5 ReferencesHistory editCGS Earl Grey edit CGS Earl Grey redirects here For the icebreaker commissioned in 1986 see CCGS Earl Grey Albert Grey the ninth Governor General of Canada paid his first visit to the Hudson Bay area in 1910 returning home in a luxuriously appointed suite on board an icebreaker bearing his name CGS Earl Grey Grey was interested in the construction of a coastal railroad establishing new seaports including Port Nelson and charting the waters of Hudson Bay CGS Earl Grey was built in 1909 in Barrow in Furness for the Saint Lawrence River winter service as an icebreaking freight and passenger steamer 4 Its engine was just 30 less powerful than the engine of Yermak the largest true icebreaker of the period although Yermak was slower due to a bulky ice crushing layout Earl Grey was equipped with a clipper style Stanley bow giving it a yacht like appearance and its owners claimed it to be the First Canadian ice fighting machine 4 Later Russian crew members praised its living quarter luxuries but scorned the substandard shower room The ship also rolled excessively even on relatively calm seas 5 Canada and the Russian Civil War edit Earl Grey continued service between Charlottetown and Pictou until the outbreak of World War I In 1914 she was sold to the Imperial Russian government and renamed Canada operating in the Arkhangelsk area from 9 October 1914 6 Canada and another Canadian icebreaker Lintrose Sadko in Russian service were key in extending the navigation season around Murmansk in 1914 to the end of January 1915 escorting a total of 146 British transports with military supplies 7 In 1918 1920 during the Russian Civil War when General Evgenii Miller controlled Arkhangelsk Canada remained in port loyal to Miller s government However on 19 February 1920 when a defeated Miller was evacuating the city Canada and Ivan Susanin refused to cooperate with the white forces and stayed in Solombala harbor 8 Canada now in the hands of local commissars who were leaning towards the Bolsheviks was armed and sailed out to sea becoming trapped in ice after chasing and intercepting a convoy on the morning of 21 February 9 An artillery duel between Canada and Miller s icebreaker Kozma Minin was probably the only sea battle ever to take place between icebreakers and ended in favor of Miller Canada retreated due to hull damage and the Bolsheviks blamed the failure on commissars Petrov and Nikolayev who could have negotiated with the fugitives 10 Fyodor Litke edit The new Bolshevik owners changed the name of Canada to III International and eventually to Fyodor Litke after Fyodor Petrovich Litke the notable Arctic explorer geographer and tutor of Grand Duke Konstantin Nikolayevich of Russia 1929 expedition edit In 1926 a team of Soviet explorers equipped with three years of supplies landed on Wrangel Island The clear waters which had facilitated the 1926 landing were followed by years of continuous heavy ice Attempts to reach Wrangel Island by sea failed and it was feared that the team would not survive their fourth winter In 1929 Litke as one of the most capable Soviet icebreakers was chosen for a rescue operation The vessel sailed from Sevastopol with captain Konstantin Dublitsky in command reaching Vladivostok on 4 July 1929 In Vladivostok all the Black Sea sailors were relieved and replaced with local crew Ten days later Litke sailed to the North passed through the Bering Strait safely and attempted to pass Long Strait in order to approach the island from the south On 8 August a scout plane reported seeing impassable ice in the strait and Litke turned north heading to Herald Island It failed to escape the mounting ice and on 12 August the captain shut down the engines in order to save coal and had to wait two weeks until ice pressure eased up Making only a few hundred meters a day Litke reached the settlement on 28 August On 5 September Litke went to sea once more bringing all the islanders to safety This operation earned Litke the order of the Red Banner of Labour 20 January 1930 as well as memorial badges for the crew 1932 First Dalstroy campaign edit From 1932 until 1933 Litke was employed by Dalstroy which was an NKVD organization in charge of Far Eastern gold mining The gold mines were separated from Magadan Harbor by virtually impassable mountains however the mines could be reached from the Arctic coast of Chukchi Sea by river if the ships managed to break through from Bering Strait to Kolyma River inlet On 23 January 1932 the government assigned Litke and a smaller icebreaker Davydov to guide Arctic convoys with over 13 000 tonnes of supplies over 1 000 passengers and numerous small river craft to the Kolyma settlements The plan also considered the possibility that the ships would be trapped in the ice for the winter of 1932 1933 and they were supplied sufficiently to survive 14 months 11 12 Formation of the first convoy was delayed owing to the lack of Arctic ready transport ships that had to be assembled from the Black Sea and Baltic Sea fleets or built at the Dalzavod yards in Vladivostok 13 Ships of the first large convoy Litke six transport ships and a motor schooner towing 26 smaller craft 12 and carrying 867 passengers most of them convicts 14 sailed from Vladivostok individually between 27 June and 5 July 1932 Litke under the command of captain Nikolay Nikolayev sailed on 2 July 12 Due to delays in Vladivostok the convoy missed the optimal calm period June and faced heavy storms in the Sea of Okhotsk Two 500 tonne welded barges towed by Litke suffered hull cracks as early in the voyage as the La Perouse Strait and had to be repaired in rough seas Litke arrived in Petropavlovsk on 10 July making an average 7 knots 13 km h with only four out of its six boilers working 15 nb 2 In the following week it resupplied from a Japanese coaler taking special precautions to block any contacts between Soviet and Japanese crews 16 The sailing to Provideniya 18 26 July was uneventful except for a minor storm off Cape Olutorsky once again damaging the barges 17 While the convoy assembled in a formation off Cape Dezhnev two larger transports Anadyr and Suchan attempted to head west to Kolyma on their own They were stopped by heavy ice Litke released them on 31 July and immediately returned to Cape Dezhnev 18 Most of August was spent seeking ice free westward passages With scout planes grounded by bad weather until 15 August the ships moved by trial and error around impassable ice formations Litke with half of the transports headed west making 12 to 25 miles 19 to 40 km a day the other transports were relieved from a possibly fatal attempt for them 19 The convoy reached Ambarchik Bay Kolyma inlet on 4 September Ambarchik became the main port of entry for the prisoners of Kolyma for the next decade A P Bochek the leader of the expedition cited the efforts of Litke as the main factor in the operation s success 19 However the convoy ultimately failed to unload its cargo 18 out of the 20 days in Ambarchik anchorage were stormy so 5 980 of the 10 890 tonnes of cargo were left in the holds 20 Thus it was decided to relocate the transports to a safe winter anchorage in Chaunskaya Bay however the short journey was plagued by increasingly heavier ice that damaged Litke s rudder on 26 September Divers confirmed that the damage could be fixed only in a dry dock Litke could now only sail accompanied by a tugboat 21 Between 2 7 October the crippled Litke was busy clearing a passage to Uritsky off Cape Shelagsky Fearing that Litke itself would be trapped away from the convoy Bochek and his staff ordered that it cease its efforts Litke joined the main forces in Chaun Bay preparing to stay there for the long Arctic winter 21 On 31 October Litke was fully prepared for the winter it still carried 500 tonnes of coal with 150 allocated for heating at the anchorage 22 Its large luxurious saloons were used for propaganda and entertainment assemblies for the whole convoy 23 Meanwhile the morale of its crew was plummeting The ship surgeon and cook were relieved from duty for absenteeism 24 1933 Chelyuskin disaster edit After a winter in Chaun bay Litke was declared seaworthy again on 20 June 1933 On 28 June Litke assisted two transports beached by a storm and on 1 July sailed once more to attempt to release Uritsky from the ice 25 On this occasion Litke carried 450 tonnes of coal enough to last for seven days in heavy ice To save fuel she moved in a start stop manner shutting down her boilers for days on end when ice density or fog forced her to idle On 18 July Litke finally approached Uritsky and both ships safely reached Kolyma Inlet on 21 July 26 Meanwhile the fleet in Chaun Bay finally unloaded their cargoes and on 16 August Litke along with Anadyr sailed to Vladivostok picking up other stranded ships on their way The short run to the Bering Strait was a hazardous operation and numerous ships again became trapped in the ice with fuel running low As the coastal ice grew heavier the convoy had to turn north and reached Vankarem only on 13 September 27 Later in September the convoy in small isolated groups was stuck in coastal ice east of Vankarem Litke the only icebreaker in the Chukotka area managed to get them through but sustained wear and damage from the ice was gradually reducing her capability 28 At the same time SS Chelyuskin attempting a single season passage from Murmansk to Vladivostok was stuck in ice in the same area off Cape Koluchin On 22 September while attempting to clear a passage for three ships trapped in the ice Litke again damaged its rudder and propeller hardly escaping entrapment in the ice itself and had to retreat to clear water in Provideniya bay 29 In the middle of October Cheluskin was firmly trapped in solid pack ice and drifting westward through the Chukchi Sea Litke protecting a far larger convoy had to complete her mission at the cost of leaving Cheluskin alone in the Arctic On 10 October Litke reached Cape Dezhnev in clear water but the next day ice floes pushed it back westward Two transports Schmidt and Sverdlovsk were nearly crushed by the ice and had to be rescued at all costs When Litke reached Cape Dezhnev again on 14 October she suffered multiple hull cracks a damaged rudder lost propeller blades and most importantly her right shaft was warped to the point that it rendered the right engine useless 30 At half power Litke could not break through thick ice and had to retreat to Provideniya On 26 October Sverdlovsk and Schmidt managed to break through and all three ships arrived in Providenya on 2 November Meanwhile Cheluskin drifting in the pack ice off Cape Dezhnev 30 became the subject of a massive propaganda campaign and its rescue became a national emergency On 5 November Litke still crippled offered help by radio Otto Schmidt aware of Litke s condition at first declined the offer Five days later however a desperate Schmidt himself radioed Litke for help hoping that an icebreaker and explosive blasting could clear a passage through three quarters of a mile of thick ice Litke put to sea without a proper refit and in the next few days she was damaged to the point when the captain considered beaching her onto the Alaska coast to save his own crew 31 Schmidt let Litke abort her mission on 17 November when the two ships were separated by 30 miles 48 km Litke assisting Smolensk and other transports south of Bering Strait reached Petropavlovsk on 14 December and after two weeks of makeshift repairs finally sailed to Vladivostok for an overhaul arriving there on 4 January 1934 32 Litke was refitted in Japan 33 while Cheluskin sank in February 1934 crushed by the ice it had been trapped in Contemporary authors directly link Litke s failure in November 1933 to the wear and damage it had sustained after two Dalstroy seasons 29 1934 expedition edit nbsp Litke on a 1976 Soviet postage stamp Here it is named an icebreaker although in 1930s it was classified as ice cutter due to a clipper bow design In 1934 the icebreaker Fyodor Litke became a Soviet propaganda icon as the first vessel to pass the complete Northern Sea Route east to west in one season In the following season it escorted the first freighters to make the passage in the opposite direction Since then hundreds of vessels have completed the passage in both directions This time captain Dublitsky was in overall charge of the convoy with captain Nikolay Nikolaev in command of the ship and professor Vladimir Wiese in charge of the scientific programme Litke sailed from Vladivostok on 28 June 1934 and passed the Bering Strait on the morning of 13 July She was considerably delayed by ice at the Long Strait but on 2 August she was able to enter the Laptev Sea As she approached the Taymyr coast Litke again encountered ice By the evening of 11 August whilst she was manoeuvering among heavy floes Litke spotted the masts and funnels of three trapped ships close to the Komsomolskaya Pravda Islands These were the Pravda Volodarskiy and Tovarich Stalin They appeared dead ahead separated from Litke by 10 kilometers 6 2 mi of solid sea ice After a week of breaking through the ice Litke succeeded in rescuing the freighters at the cost of major damage to the structure of her hull The freed freighters went their separate ways Stalin followed Litke west to Arkhangelsk via Vilkitsky Strait while Volodarskiy headed east towards the mouths of the Lena and Pravda southwards to Nordvik 34 Dublitsky Nikolayev and Wiese received a welcoming address from Joseph Stalin on 23 September 1934 35 and became public celebrities 1935 1938 edit In 1935 Litke escorted two transports Vantzetti and Iskra through the Northern Route west to east They sailed from Leningrad on 8 July and arrived at Vladivostok on 8 October 1935 At the same time Anadyr and Stalingrad made the east to west journey reaching Leningrad on 16 October Rabochiy made a near double trip from Arkhangelsk to Kolyma and back 36 In 1936 Litke was temporarily relieved from NKVD duties Litke under the command of captain Yury Khlebnikov and the overall management of Otto Schmidt completed a purely military operation clearing the Arctic passage for the destroyers Stalin and Voykov dispatched from Kronstadt via the Northern Route to join the Pacific Fleet Litke sailing from Arkhangelsk reached Novaya Zemlya on 1 August Here the convoy picked up more transports and oil tankers and the destroyers reached Vladivostok in October 1936 The operation nearly ended in a disaster when the oil powered destroyers ran short of fuel in stormy weather in the Sea of Okhotsk Mechanics managed to burn wheat flour to maintain minimum boiler pressure 37 Meanwhile in the season of 1936 as many as 16 ships traversed the Northern Route 36 The season of 1937 was intended to be far more successful than past seasons in terms of the tonnage and number of ships making the Arctic passage however many of the ships attempting it were not fully suited to Arctic conditions 38 Two convoys led by Litke and Lenin as well as Krasin scrambled to rescue them and were trapped in the ice themselves off Khatanga Gulf for the winter Through bad planning weather and bad luck 25 of the 64 ships underway on the Northern Route in 1937 were out of action at least until next spring one Rabochiy was lost 36 Only in April 1938 did Krasin resupplied from the coastal coal dumps break through and release Litke and its transports The failures of 1937 were used as a pretext for replacing the Northern Sea Route management and at least 673 men fell victims to the Great Purge 39 The Glavsevmorput was limited to maintaining coastal navigation its auxiliary function relegated to Dalstroy and other organizations 40 1941 1945 World War II edit In the late summer of 1941 during World War II Litke was armed with artillery at Severodvinsk shipyard No 402 41 acquired the frigate pennant number SKR 18 and was assigned to the newly formed Northern Unit of the White Sea Flotilla 42 Litke served the rest of 1941 in its principal function guiding Arctic convoys in the Eastern sector from the White Sea to Dudinka In the winter of 1941 1942 it cleared the frozen approaches to Arkhangelsk for the Atlantic convoys This seasonal work pattern deep Arctic in summer White Sea in winter two refits at shipyard No 402 continued throughout the war Sailing in the western Arctic could be as dangerous as in the Far East for example in February 1942 Litke failed to clear a passage to Indiga Bay and its convoy had to return to Iokanga making it vulnerable to German air and submarine attacks 43 nbsp Map of Operation Wunderland showing extent of German presence in the ArcticDuring Operation Wunderland on 20 August 1942 the German submarine U 456 Lt Captain Teichert tried to sink Litke off Belushya Guba in the Barents Sea by firing torpedoes at it but was unsuccessful On 26 August the German heavy cruiser Admiral Scheer succeeded in destroying the coal dump in Dikson Litke and the icebreaker Taimyr were summoned to lead an emergency convoy of coal barges saving the town from extinction In the same summer of 1943 the icebreaker Joseph Stalin recently refitted in Seattle escorted three transports from the United States to Tiksi Here Litke awaited the arrival of this convoy which would double Joseph Stalin s ice breaking capacity However the threat of German submarines and bottom mines scattered in the shallow coastal passage caused a delay until the Navy could assemble an adequate defensive escort Two transports of VA 18 convoy standing for Vilkitsky Strait to Arkhangelsk Arkhangelsk and Kirov and a minesweeper were destroyed by submarines in the Kara Sea on 30 September and 1 October The surviving transports of VA 18 convoy were left behind in Dikson 42 but the Navy could not afford to leave the icebreakers there for the whole Arctic winter because they were needed in western ports to assist the Atlantic convoys Despite an increasing submarine presence Litke and Joseph Stalin sailed west from Tiksi to Arkhangelsk with a minesweeper escort codenamed Convoy AB 66 nb 3 A deep sea route via Amderma and the Kara Strait was safe from bottom mines but at least 600 nautical miles 1 100 km of the 1 100 nautical mile 2 000 km journey was packed with young ice slowing down the convoy and consuming fuel Litke sailed with only 900 tonnes of coal and 290 tonnes of water The second leg of the journey was almost entirely in pack ice eliminating the submarine threat On 11 November AB 66 reached open water and was joined by a defensive destroyer escort Convoy AB 55 Six more destroyers sailed from Arkhangelsk and Iokanga to protect AB 55 in home waters On 16 November the destroyers intercepted a German submarine and sighted a Ju 88 bombers both intruders were forced to abort their missions Two more submarines were intercepted by the minesweepers and the convoy reached Severodvinsk without casualties on 18 November 1943 According to Soviet reports the total count of AB 55 and AB 66 stands at two submarines sunk and two damaged 44 More importantly Litke and Stalin proved the viability of extending polar navigation into October their observation of young ice formation in October 1943 changed the previously held perception of the phenomenon Post war service edit In 1946 1947 Litke was refitted by Merseyside yards and continued Arctic exploration 45 46 Two campaigns 1948 and 1955 were completely dedicated to hydrographic studies of Arctic seas 47 In 1955 Litke set a world record by reaching 83 11 or only 440 nautical miles 810 km from the North Pole with normal propulsion and steering and safely returning to her home port 45 Fram went even further to 86 14 but was completely trapped in ice and unable to turn back The 1955 expedition was also notable for locating the deepest known point of the Arctic Ocean named the Littke Depression 5 449 m 17 877 ft and drilling geological samples from the ocean floor 48 After a long career Litke was towed to the Murmansk scrapyard in August 1958 49 and broken up in 1960 She remained listed by Lloyd s Register until 1961 4 See also editLitke NunatakExplanatory notes edit Name of the ship was usually reduced to Litke omitting Fyodor Four out of six boilers were normally used in clear water Five or six were used in heavy ice only AB acronym stands for Deep Arctic to White SeaFootnotes edit The original builder s photograph was reproduced in 1949 in McMurtrie and Blackman p 297 Fraser p 3 Papanin ch 3 a b c Fraser p 6 Seliverstov p 57 Combat chronicles p 426 History of World War I vol II p 379 Sokolov p 413 Sokolov p 418 Sokolov p 428 Bochek Introduction permanent dead link a b c Bochek Work in Vladivostok Loading and sailing out permanent dead link Bochek Preparation work in Moscow permanent dead link Larkov Romanenko p 172 Bochek Vladivostok to Petropavlovsk permanent dead link Bochek Resupplying in Petropaplovsk permanent dead link Bocher Petropavlovsk to Providenya permanent dead link Bochek Failure of Anadyr and Suchan permanent dead link a b Bochek Operations of the second group of ships permanent dead link Bochek Unloading process permanent dead link a b Bochek Kolyma to Chaun permanent dead link Bochek Personnel quarters and their preparation permanent dead link Bochek December 1932 permanent dead link Bochek February 1933 Bochek June 1933 permanent dead link Bochek Winter on Uritsky permanent dead link Bochek Return from Ambarchik anchorage permanent dead link Larkov p 139 a b Larkov p 140 a b Bochek Litke delayed in Polar region permanent dead link Larkov p 141 Bochek Provideniya to Vladivostok permanent dead link Barr 1982 p 324 Barr 1982 pp 323 325 Stalin v 18 p 70 a b c Barr 1980 p 4 Rudny ch 5 Barr 1980 p 17 75 years of Northern Sea Route p 3 Barr 1980 p 18 Schmigelsky a b Dremlyug Popov p 47 K D Smirnov a b Fraser p 7 McMurtrie and Blackman p 297 A V Smirnov Evseyev Seliverstov p 181References edit in English Barr W The Drift of Lenin s Convoy in the Laptev Sea 1937 1938 Arctic v 33 no 1 March 1980 p 4 20 1 in English Barr W The First Soviet Convoy to the Mouth of the Lena Arctic v 35 no 2 June 1982 p 317 325 2 in German German Naval Warfare in 1942 in English International Polar Year Badges for Imperial Russian Soviet Polar Exploration and Research in Russian Bochek A P Report on the 1932 1933 navigation Bochek A P Nachalnika Severo Vostochnoj Polyarnoj Ekspedicii NARKOMVODA BOChEK A P doklad Narodnomu komissaru vodnogo transporta Yanson N M 1934 g 3 in Russian Combat chronicles of the Russian Navy Boevaya letopis russkogo flota Hronika vazhnejshih sobytij voennoj istorii russkogo flota s IX v po 1917 g M Voenizdat MVS SSSR 1948 4 permanent dead link in Russian Dremlyug V V Naval logistics in the Arctic 1941 1945 V V Dremlyug Obespechenie morskih operacij v Arktike 1941 1945 Konferenciya Vojna v Arktike g Arhangelsk avgust sentyabr 2000 5 Archived 2007 10 24 at the Wayback Machine in Russian Evseyev V V Geological studies of the AANII Evseev V V Gorno geologicheskie issledovaniya instituta Arctic and Antarctic Institute Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine in English Fraser R J Early Canadian Icebreakers Arctic v 16 no 1 Mar 1963 p 2 7 ill 6 in Russian History of World War I vol II Istoriya pervoj mirovoj vojny 1914 1918 gg M Nauka 1975 t II in Russian Larkov S Cheluskin historical myths and objective history Larkov S Chelyuskinskaya epopeya istoricheskaya mifologiya i obektivnost istorii Zemcov A N red Vragi naroda za polyarnym krugom M INET im S I Vavilova 2007 ISBN 978 5 98866 014 9 7 permanent dead link in Russian Larkov S Romamenko F Zakonvoirovannye zimovschiki Larkov S Romanenko F Zakonvoirovannye zimovshiki Zemcov A N red Vragi naroda za polyarnym krugom M INET im S I Vavilova 2007 ISBN 978 5 98866 014 9 8 permanent dead link in English McMurtrie Francis E and Blackman Raymond V B Jane s Fighting Ships 1949 50 New York McGraw Hill Book Company Inc 1949 in Russian Popov G P Navy College to the War Popov G P Iz morehodki na vojnu Cevernye konvoi Issledovaniya vospominaniya dokumenty Arhangelsk 1991 9 in Russian Papanin I Ice and Fire Papanin I D Lyod i plamen M Politizdat 1977 chapter 3 in Russian Rudny V A Maximum readiness Rudnyj V A Gotovnost 1 O Kuznecove N G M Politizdat 1982 10 in Russian Schmigelsky L Molotovsk and the war in Arctic 1941 1945 Shmigelskij L Molotovsk i vojna v Arktike 1941 1945 Konferenciya Vojna v Arktike g Arhangelsk avgust sentyabr 2000 11 Archived 2011 06 06 at the Wayback Machine in Russian Seliverstov L S Pomorie to the Ocean Seliverstov L S Iz Pomorya v okean zapiski moryaka Murmansk 2005 ISBN 5 85510 293 9 in Russian 75 years of Northern Sea Route 75 let Severnomu morskomu puti Press reliz AANII 21 02 2008 Arctic and Antarctic Institute permanent dead link in Russian Smirnov A V History of biological studies at the Arctic and Antarctic Institute A V Smirnov Istoricheskij ocherk biologicheskih issledovanij provodivshihsya Arkticheskim i Antarkticheskim nauchno issledovatelskim institutom AANII 2007 Arctic and Antarctic Institute Archived 2011 07 17 at the Wayback Machine in Russian Smirnov K D 1943 ice operation in the Arctic K D Smirnov Krupnaya ledovaya operaciya v 1943 godu v Arktike 12 in Russian Sokolov B The fall of Northern Region Boris Sokolov Padenie Severnoj oblasti Grazhdanskaya vojna v Rossii Vojna na Severe M OOO Izdatelstvo ACT ISBN 5 17 024052 X in Russian Stalin J S Complete works 2006 edition v 18 Ctalin I V Cochineniya T 18 Tver Informacionno izdatelskij centr Soyuz 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fyodor Litke 1909 icebreaker amp oldid 1156609357, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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