News

U-111 is the last known enemy submarine wreck from WWI in waters off the eastern seaboard—and never should have been found.
The wreck of a WWI German U-boat sunk by the U.S. Navy in 1922 has been discovered off the East Coast of the United States, about 40 miles off Virginia and at a depth of about 400 feet.
A British dive team recovered the bell from the first U.S. destroyer sunk in World War I and will return it to Washington.
The wreck of the German U-Boat U-111 was intentionally sunk by the U.S. Navy in 1923 after it was captured at the end of the war.
HMS Hawke was torpedoed by a German u-boat on 15 October 1914 and has lain undiscovered on the seabed.
Sunken WWI U-boat surveyed for first time Remembering Irish sailors of World War One Storm repairs to St Kilda kirk famous for WW1 U-boat attack History Shipwrecks ...
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 went ...
Both submarines were used by the Imperial German Navy, which controlled the waters off the Belgian coast during WWI. One of the submarines is a type "U-5" U-boat measuring around 187 feet in ...
Nearly 110 years ago, the HMS Hawke was sent plunging to the bottom of the sea by a torpedo launched from a German U-boat. Lost within minutes of the German strike on October 15, 1914, the ...
The USS F-1 was hit broadside by another sub during a training exercise and sank in seconds, killing 19 members of the crew.
U-Boat is famous for having made the world’s largest watch, the U-Boat 1942, which was 64.4mm wide and 18mm thick. Now, the diving watch specialist has made its thinnest watch ever, a ladies ...