fbpx
Wikipedia

SM U-117

SM U-117 was a Type UE II long-range minelayer submarine of the Imperial German Navy. She was laid down in 1917, at Hamburg, Germany, by Aktiengesellschaft Vulcan and launched on 10 December 1917. She was commissioned in the Imperial German Navy on 28 March 1918, with Kapitänleutnant Otto Dröscher in command. After shakedown, U-117 was posted to the U-Kreuzer Verband (submarine cruiser unit) on 1 June 1918. Over the next five weeks, she completed fitting out at Kiel.

SM U-117 at Cape Charles
History
German Empire
NameU-117
BuilderAG Vulcan Stettin
Yard number91
Laid down1917
Launched10 December 1917
Commissioned28 March 1918
HomeportKiel
Fate
  • Surrendered, 21 November 1918
  • Taken over by the US Navy, 1919
United States
NameU-117
AcquiredMarch 1919
FateSunk as a target, 22 June 1921
General characteristics [1]
Class and typeGerman Type UE II submarine
TypeCoastal minelaying submarine
Displacement
  • 1,164 t (1,146 long tons) surfaced
  • 1,512 t (1,488 long tons) submerged
Length81.52 m (267 ft 5 in) (o/a)
Beam7.42 m (24 ft 4 in)
Height10.16 m (33 ft 4 in)
Draught4.22 m (13 ft 10 in)
Installed power
Propulsion2 shafts, 2 × 1.61 m (5 ft 3 in) propellers
Speed
  • 14.7 knots (27.2 km/h; 16.9 mph) surfaced
  • 7 knots (13 km/h; 8.1 mph) submerged
Range
  • 13,900 nmi (25,700 km; 16,000 mi) at 8 knots (15 km/h; 9.2 mph) surfaced
  • 35 nmi (65 km; 40 mi) at 4.5 knots (8.3 km/h; 5.2 mph) submerged
Test depth75 m (246 ft)
Complement4 officers, 36 enlisted
Armament
Service record
Commanders:
  • Kptlt. Otto Dröscher
  • 28 March – 11 November 1918
Operations: 1 patrol
Victories:
  • 20 merchant ships sunk
    (27,459 GRT)
  • 3 merchant ships damaged
    (12,845 GRT)
  • 1 warship damaged
    (18,000 tons)

Service history

Operations off North America

On 11 July, U-117 departed Kiel and took the eastern route through the Baltic Sea around Denmark and out into the North Sea by way of the Skagerrak. After rounding the Shetland Islands, she set a course for the coast of North America to lay minefields off the coast of the United States and to conduct cruiser warfare. During the voyage across the Atlantic, heavy weather foiled her attempts to attack two lone steamers, two convoys, and a small cruiser.

U-117 reached the American coastal zone on 8 August 1918, and her fortunes improved soon thereafter. On 10 August, she encountered a fleet of fishing craft and went on a spree, sinking eight of the vessels with explosives and gunfire. On 12 August, she sighted the ballast-laden steamer Sommerstadt and, after observing that the Norwegian steamer was armed, made a submerged attack that sank her with a single torpedo. The following day, the U-boat made another submerged torpedo attack and hit the 7,127 gross register tons (GRT) American tanker Frederic R. Kellogg, bound from Tampico, Mexico, to Boston, Massachusetts, with 7,500 barrels of crude oil. The action occurred only 12 mi (19 km) north of Barnegat Light, New Jersey; however, Frederic R. Kellogg was disabled in such shallow water that the Americans were able to salvage her.

Later that same day, the minelayer submarine began the other half of her duty by laying mines near Barnegat Light. The effort subsequently bore fruit when the Mallory Line steamship San Saba struck a mine and sank on 4 October 1918 and the Cuban cargo ship Chaparra struck another mine and sank on 27 October. On 14 August, U-117 took a break from mining operations to resume cruiser warfare when she encountered the American schooner Dorothy B. Barrett. The U-boat brought her deck guns to bear on the sailing vessel and sank her. Shortly thereafter, however, the hunter became the hunted when an American seaplane forced the submarine to seek refuge beneath the surface. The aircraft and submarine chaser SC-71 subjected U-117 to a brief barrage of bombs, and SC-71 attacked the submarine with depth charges before losing track of her.

The next day, 15 August 1918, U-117 resumed her mine laying operations off Fenwick Island Light. That field later claimed two victims, one damaged and the other sunk. On 29 September 1918, Minnesota struck one of those mines and suffered extensive damage. The Naval Overseas Transportation Service cargo ship Saetia entered the same field on 9 November, struck a mine, and sank. Later that day – still 14 August – the submarine moved farther south and, after laying a third minefield near Winter Quarter Shoals Lightship, halted an American sailing vessel, the 1,613 GRT Madrugada, and sank her with gunfire. A patrolling American seaplane foiled a subsequent attempt by the U-boat that day to stop another sailing ship.

On 16 August 1918, U-117 resumed her mining operations, this time off Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, but the approach of the 6,978 GRT British steamer Mirlo interrupted her labors. Approaching the target submerged, U-117 fired a single torpedo that sent the merchantman to the bottom. Following that attack, the submarine again began laying mines, sowing her fourth and final field. At that point, a severe shortage of fuel forced the U-boat to head for Germany.

Return journey

The return voyage proved to be both more eventful and more successful than the outward-bound cruise. On 17 August 1918, she stopped a Norwegian sailing ship, the 2,846 GRT Nordhav, out of Buenos Aires, Argentina, bound for New York laden with linseed. U-117 sailors placed bombs on board the cargo carrier that sank the prize. Three days later, the U-boat engaged in an unsuccessful surface gun duel with an unidentified, strongly armed steamer. On 26 August, she stopped the 145 GRT Rush and sank that American trawler with bombs placed on board. The next day, U-117 caught sight of the Norwegian freighter Bergsdalen, steaming in ballast from La Pallice, France, to Baltimore, Maryland, and sank her quarry with a single torpedo. Three days later, on 30 August, she encountered her final two victims, when she stopped the 136 GRT British fishing trawlers Elsie Porter and Potentate and sank both with explosive charges.

After an unsuccessful attempt at a torpedo attack on a lone British steamer, War Ranee, on 5 September 1918, U-117 concentrated on making the final run-in toward the Skagerrak and safety. Her critical fuel shortage forced the submarine to make wireless contact with U-140 on 8 September, to set up a fuel replenishment rendezvous. The two U-boats met on 12 and 13 September, near the Faroe Islands, and U-117 took on about 6,000 US gal (23,000 l; 5,000 imp gal) of diesel oil before continuing on toward Kiel. The submarine pulled into her destination rather ignominiously on 22 September, having had to call upon a patrolling torpedo boat to tow her the last leg of her journey.

For the rest of the war, U-117 remained inactive. On 23 October 1918, she was reassigned to the U-Flotille, Hochseeflotte (1st Submarine Flotilla, High Seas Fleet); but remained in a shipyard for the duration.

Turned over to US Navy

 
U-117, partially dismantled, at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, 1920

The armistice of 11 November 1918, ended hostilities, and required Germany to turn over her submarines to the Allies. U-117 surrendered at Harwich, England, ten days later. Over the ensuing weeks, the United States Navy expressed an interest in acquiring several former German submarines to serve as exhibits during a Victory Bond campaign. U-117 became one of the six boats set aside for that purpose. In March 1919, her American crew took over the submarine and placed her in special commission, Lieutenant Commander Aquilla G. Dibrell in command.

After a hectic time preparing for sea, U-117 stood down the English Channel from Harwich on 3 April, in company with the submarine tender Sumner, and UB-88, UB-148, and UC-97. This unlikely American task organization, dubbed the Ex-German Submarine Expeditionary Force, called at the Azores and Bermuda before reaching New York City on 27 April 1919, where the submarines were soon opened to the public. Tourists, photographers, reporters, Navy Department technicians, and civilian submarine manufacturers all flocked in to see the six war trophies. Then orders came for her to begin a series of port visits to sell Victory Bonds. U-117 drew one of the east coast itineraries during the course of which she stopped at Washington, D.C., and spent a significant period of time at the Washington Navy Yard there. At the conclusion of the bond drive late that summer, the U-boat was laid up at the Philadelphia Navy Yard along with U-140 and UB-148. There, she remained – partially dismantled – until taken out to sea in June 1921, to serve as a target for aerial bombing tests conducted by the Navy and Army.

Sinking

 
U-117 as a target ship

On 21 June 1921, three Navy Felixstowe F5L flying boats flying at an altitude of 1,200 ft (370 m) bombed and sank U-117 at anchor in smooth water 50 nautical miles (93 km; 58 mi) East of Cape Charles Light Vessel, with twelve 163 lb (74 kg) bombs, each loaded with 117 lb (53 kg) of TNT.

The bombs were dropped in two salvos, one of three bombs and one of nine bombs. Both salvos straddled and fell close to the target, all within 150 ft (46 m) of it, all bombs functioned as designed. The submarine sank within seven minutes after the second salvo. The Board of Observers did not inspect her.

Summary of raiding history

Date Name Nationality Tonnage[Note 1] Fate[2]
10 August 1918 Aleda May   United States 31 Sunk
10 August 1918 Cruiser   United States 28 Sunk
10 August 1918 Earl & Nettie   United States 24 Sunk
10 August 1918 Katie L. Palmer   United States 31 Sunk
10 August 1918 Mary E. Sennett   United States 26 Sunk
10 August 1918 Progress   United States 34 Sunk
10 August 1918 Reliance   United States 19 Sunk
10 August 1918 William H. Starbuck   United States 53 Sunk
12 August 1918 Sommerstad   Norway 3,875 Sunk
13 August 1918 Frederic R. Kellogg   United States 7,127 Damaged
14 August 1918 Dorothy B. Barrett   United States 2,088 Sunk
15 August 1918 Madrugada   United States 1,613 Sunk
16 August 1918 Mirlo   United Kingdom 6,978 Sunk
17 August 1918 Nordhav   Norway 2,846 Sunk
20 August 1918 Ansaldo III   Kingdom of Italy 5,310 Damaged
24 August 1918 Bianca   United Kingdom 408 Damaged
26 August 1918 Rush   United States 145 Sunk
27 August 1918 Bergsdalen   Norway 2,555 Sunk
30 August 1918 Elsie Porter   United Kingdom 136 Sunk
30 August 1918 Potentate   United Kingdom 136 Sunk
29 September 1918 USS Minnesota   United States Navy 18,000 Damaged
4 October 1918 San Saba   United States 2,458 Sunk
27 October 1918 Chaparra   Cuba 1,510 Sunk
9 November 1918 Saetia   United States 2,873 Sunk

References

Notes

  1. ^ Merchant ship tonnages are in gross register tons. Military vessels are listed by tons displacement.

Citations

  1. ^ Gröner 1991, p. 15.
  2. ^ Helgason, Guðmundur. "Ships hit by U 117". German and Austrian U-boats of World War I - Kaiserliche Marine - Uboat.net. Retrieved 30 April 2016.

Bibliography

External links

  • Photo gallery of USS U-117 at NavSource Naval History
  • Helgason, Guðmundur. "WWI U-boats: U 117". German and Austrian U-boats of World War I - Kaiserliche Marine - Uboat.net. Retrieved 30 April 2016.

type, long, range, minelayer, submarine, imperial, german, navy, laid, down, 1917, hamburg, germany, aktiengesellschaft, vulcan, launched, december, 1917, commissioned, imperial, german, navy, march, 1918, with, kapitänleutnant, otto, dröscher, command, after,. SM U 117 was a Type UE II long range minelayer submarine of the Imperial German Navy She was laid down in 1917 at Hamburg Germany by Aktiengesellschaft Vulcan and launched on 10 December 1917 She was commissioned in the Imperial German Navy on 28 March 1918 with Kapitanleutnant Otto Droscher in command After shakedown U 117 was posted to the U Kreuzer Verband submarine cruiser unit on 1 June 1918 Over the next five weeks she completed fitting out at Kiel SM U 117 at Cape CharlesHistoryGerman EmpireNameU 117BuilderAG Vulcan StettinYard number91Laid down1917Launched10 December 1917Commissioned28 March 1918HomeportKielFateSurrendered 21 November 1918 Taken over by the US Navy 1919United StatesNameU 117AcquiredMarch 1919FateSunk as a target 22 June 1921General characteristics 1 Class and typeGerman Type UE II submarineTypeCoastal minelaying submarineDisplacement1 164 t 1 146 long tons surfaced 1 512 t 1 488 long tons submergedLength81 52 m 267 ft 5 in o a Beam7 42 m 24 ft 4 in Height10 16 m 33 ft 4 in Draught4 22 m 13 ft 10 in Installed power2 diesel engines 2 400 PS 1 765 kW 2 367 shp 2 electric motors 1 200 PS 883 kW 1 184 shp Propulsion2 shafts 2 1 61 m 5 ft 3 in propellersSpeed14 7 knots 27 2 km h 16 9 mph surfaced 7 knots 13 km h 8 1 mph submergedRange13 900 nmi 25 700 km 16 000 mi at 8 knots 15 km h 9 2 mph surfaced 35 nmi 65 km 40 mi at 4 5 knots 8 3 km h 5 2 mph submergedTest depth75 m 246 ft Complement4 officers 36 enlistedArmament4 50 cm 19 7 in bow torpedo tubes 14 torpedoes 2 100 cm 39 in stern mine chutes 42 mines 1 15 cm 5 9 in SK L 45 deck gun 494 rounds 1 8 8 cm 3 5 in SK L 30 deck gun 310 roundsService recordCommanders Kptlt Otto Droscher 28 March 11 November 1918Operations 1 patrolVictories 20 merchant ships sunk 27 459 GRT 3 merchant ships damaged 12 845 GRT 1 warship damaged 18 000 tons Contents 1 Service history 1 1 Operations off North America 1 2 Return journey 1 3 Turned over to US Navy 1 4 Sinking 2 Summary of raiding history 3 References 3 1 Notes 3 2 Citations 4 Bibliography 5 External linksService history EditOperations off North America Edit On 11 July U 117 departed Kiel and took the eastern route through the Baltic Sea around Denmark and out into the North Sea by way of the Skagerrak After rounding the Shetland Islands she set a course for the coast of North America to lay minefields off the coast of the United States and to conduct cruiser warfare During the voyage across the Atlantic heavy weather foiled her attempts to attack two lone steamers two convoys and a small cruiser U 117 reached the American coastal zone on 8 August 1918 and her fortunes improved soon thereafter On 10 August she encountered a fleet of fishing craft and went on a spree sinking eight of the vessels with explosives and gunfire On 12 August she sighted the ballast laden steamer Sommerstadt and after observing that the Norwegian steamer was armed made a submerged attack that sank her with a single torpedo The following day the U boat made another submerged torpedo attack and hit the 7 127 gross register tons GRT American tanker Frederic R Kellogg bound from Tampico Mexico to Boston Massachusetts with 7 500 barrels of crude oil The action occurred only 12 mi 19 km north of Barnegat Light New Jersey however Frederic R Kellogg was disabled in such shallow water that the Americans were able to salvage her Later that same day the minelayer submarine began the other half of her duty by laying mines near Barnegat Light The effort subsequently bore fruit when the Mallory Line steamship San Saba struck a mine and sank on 4 October 1918 and the Cuban cargo ship Chaparra struck another mine and sank on 27 October On 14 August U 117 took a break from mining operations to resume cruiser warfare when she encountered the American schooner Dorothy B Barrett The U boat brought her deck guns to bear on the sailing vessel and sank her Shortly thereafter however the hunter became the hunted when an American seaplane forced the submarine to seek refuge beneath the surface The aircraft and submarine chaser SC 71 subjected U 117 to a brief barrage of bombs and SC 71 attacked the submarine with depth charges before losing track of her The next day 15 August 1918 U 117 resumed her mine laying operations off Fenwick Island Light That field later claimed two victims one damaged and the other sunk On 29 September 1918 Minnesota struck one of those mines and suffered extensive damage The Naval Overseas Transportation Service cargo ship Saetia entered the same field on 9 November struck a mine and sank Later that day still 14 August the submarine moved farther south and after laying a third minefield near Winter Quarter Shoals Lightship halted an American sailing vessel the 1 613 GRT Madrugada and sank her with gunfire A patrolling American seaplane foiled a subsequent attempt by the U boat that day to stop another sailing ship On 16 August 1918 U 117 resumed her mining operations this time off Cape Hatteras North Carolina but the approach of the 6 978 GRT British steamer Mirlo interrupted her labors Approaching the target submerged U 117 fired a single torpedo that sent the merchantman to the bottom Following that attack the submarine again began laying mines sowing her fourth and final field At that point a severe shortage of fuel forced the U boat to head for Germany Return journey Edit The return voyage proved to be both more eventful and more successful than the outward bound cruise On 17 August 1918 she stopped a Norwegian sailing ship the 2 846 GRT Nordhav out of Buenos Aires Argentina bound for New York laden with linseed U 117 sailors placed bombs on board the cargo carrier that sank the prize Three days later the U boat engaged in an unsuccessful surface gun duel with an unidentified strongly armed steamer On 26 August she stopped the 145 GRT Rush and sank that American trawler with bombs placed on board The next day U 117 caught sight of the Norwegian freighter Bergsdalen steaming in ballast from La Pallice France to Baltimore Maryland and sank her quarry with a single torpedo Three days later on 30 August she encountered her final two victims when she stopped the 136 GRT British fishing trawlers Elsie Porter and Potentate and sank both with explosive charges After an unsuccessful attempt at a torpedo attack on a lone British steamer War Ranee on 5 September 1918 U 117 concentrated on making the final run in toward the Skagerrak and safety Her critical fuel shortage forced the submarine to make wireless contact with U 140 on 8 September to set up a fuel replenishment rendezvous The two U boats met on 12 and 13 September near the Faroe Islands and U 117 took on about 6 000 US gal 23 000 l 5 000 imp gal of diesel oil before continuing on toward Kiel The submarine pulled into her destination rather ignominiously on 22 September having had to call upon a patrolling torpedo boat to tow her the last leg of her journey For the rest of the war U 117 remained inactive On 23 October 1918 she was reassigned to the U Flotille Hochseeflotte 1st Submarine Flotilla High Seas Fleet but remained in a shipyard for the duration Turned over to US Navy Edit U 117 partially dismantled at the Philadelphia Navy Yard 1920 The armistice of 11 November 1918 ended hostilities and required Germany to turn over her submarines to the Allies U 117 surrendered at Harwich England ten days later Over the ensuing weeks the United States Navy expressed an interest in acquiring several former German submarines to serve as exhibits during a Victory Bond campaign U 117 became one of the six boats set aside for that purpose In March 1919 her American crew took over the submarine and placed her in special commission Lieutenant Commander Aquilla G Dibrell in command After a hectic time preparing for sea U 117 stood down the English Channel from Harwich on 3 April in company with the submarine tender Sumner and UB 88 UB 148 and UC 97 This unlikely American task organization dubbed the Ex German Submarine Expeditionary Force called at the Azores and Bermuda before reaching New York City on 27 April 1919 where the submarines were soon opened to the public Tourists photographers reporters Navy Department technicians and civilian submarine manufacturers all flocked in to see the six war trophies Then orders came for her to begin a series of port visits to sell Victory Bonds U 117 drew one of the east coast itineraries during the course of which she stopped at Washington D C and spent a significant period of time at the Washington Navy Yard there At the conclusion of the bond drive late that summer the U boat was laid up at the Philadelphia Navy Yard along with U 140 and UB 148 There she remained partially dismantled until taken out to sea in June 1921 to serve as a target for aerial bombing tests conducted by the Navy and Army Sinking Edit U 117 as a target ship On 21 June 1921 three Navy Felixstowe F5L flying boats flying at an altitude of 1 200 ft 370 m bombed and sank U 117 at anchor in smooth water 50 nautical miles 93 km 58 mi East of Cape Charles Light Vessel with twelve 163 lb 74 kg bombs each loaded with 117 lb 53 kg of TNT The bombs were dropped in two salvos one of three bombs and one of nine bombs Both salvos straddled and fell close to the target all within 150 ft 46 m of it all bombs functioned as designed The submarine sank within seven minutes after the second salvo The Board of Observers did not inspect her Summary of raiding history EditDate Name Nationality Tonnage Note 1 Fate 2 10 August 1918 Aleda May United States 31 Sunk10 August 1918 Cruiser United States 28 Sunk10 August 1918 Earl amp Nettie United States 24 Sunk10 August 1918 Katie L Palmer United States 31 Sunk10 August 1918 Mary E Sennett United States 26 Sunk10 August 1918 Progress United States 34 Sunk10 August 1918 Reliance United States 19 Sunk10 August 1918 William H Starbuck United States 53 Sunk12 August 1918 Sommerstad Norway 3 875 Sunk13 August 1918 Frederic R Kellogg United States 7 127 Damaged14 August 1918 Dorothy B Barrett United States 2 088 Sunk15 August 1918 Madrugada United States 1 613 Sunk16 August 1918 Mirlo United Kingdom 6 978 Sunk17 August 1918 Nordhav Norway 2 846 Sunk20 August 1918 Ansaldo III Kingdom of Italy 5 310 Damaged24 August 1918 Bianca United Kingdom 408 Damaged26 August 1918 Rush United States 145 Sunk27 August 1918 Bergsdalen Norway 2 555 Sunk30 August 1918 Elsie Porter United Kingdom 136 Sunk30 August 1918 Potentate United Kingdom 136 Sunk29 September 1918 USS Minnesota United States Navy 18 000 Damaged4 October 1918 San Saba United States 2 458 Sunk27 October 1918 Chaparra Cuba 1 510 Sunk9 November 1918 Saetia United States 2 873 SunkReferences EditNotes Edit Merchant ship tonnages are in gross register tons Military vessels are listed by tons displacement Citations Edit Groner 1991 p 15 Helgason Gudmundur Ships hit by U 117 German and Austrian U boats of World War I Kaiserliche Marine Uboat net Retrieved 30 April 2016 Bibliography EditGroner Erich Jung Dieter Maass Martin 1991 U boats and Mine Warfare Vessels German Warships 1815 1945 Vol 2 Translated by Thomas Keith Magowan Rachel London Conway Maritime Press ISBN 0 85177 593 4 This article incorporates text from the public domainDictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships The entry can be found here New York Times Report of U 117 sinking the SS SommerstadtExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to SM U 117 Photo gallery of USS U 117 at NavSource Naval History Helgason Gudmundur WWI U boats U 117 German and Austrian U boats of World War I Kaiserliche Marine Uboat net Retrieved 30 April 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title SM U 117 amp oldid 1135158774, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.