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OUR BALTIC RECORD

HEAVY TOLL IN FIVE WEEKS' OPERATIONS. Tho Naval Corespondent of the ''Daily News," writing under date November 9, says:— It is only live weeks since our submarines settled down to business in the Baltic, and in that period they havo not • only sunk two, or possibly four, enemy warships, but havo inflicted relatively far more damage on the remains of the German soa-borne commerce than wo liavo suffered in nearly eight months of the "submarine blockade." The following is the record of German merchant ships oatpured or destroyed by our vessels since the beginning of October:— October 3.—Svanen. October B.—A transport I shelled and sunk. October 9.—Lulea. October 10.—Transport torpedoed and sunk, Eutrune. October 11.—Nicomedia, Tyrgos, and Emgard. October 12. —Walter Leonhardt. October 13.—Rippenhaven. October 15.—Gertrud. . October 18.—Pernambuco, Soderham, Johannes Rnss, and Dalalsven. October 20—John Wuls, Hemosand, and Fried Arp. October 23.—Electra, Rendsburg, and Glaven. November 2.—Suomi and Gedana. November 3. —Franz Karl and another (unnamed) captured. On October 28 it was officially reported in the Russian communique that four snips had been slink by British submarines, and on October 16 that five enemy transports had been sunk and one driven ashore by them. It is not known whether all or any of these are included among those named above. 'Besides the work of our own submarines the Russian Fleet has not been idle, and several victims, either sunk or captured, are officially reported to have fallen to a, cruiser and to tho submarines Alligator'and Kaiman. The warships sunk by our submarines in the Baltic are: — July 2—Pommern, battleship, 13,040 tons. October 23. Prinz Adalbert, armoured cruiser, 8856 tons. November 7—Undine, light cruiser. 2656 tons. In January the small crniser Gazelle was put permanently out of action, it is believed by a British submarine, and on October 14 another of our craft was unofficially reported to have sunk a torpedo boat and a destroyer. On tho following day another. German destroyer was sunk in collision' with a ferry boat, and a mine patrol vessel was blown up and destroyed. It will be remembered that survivors of tho Prinz Adalbert said they saw two torpedoes cutting the water side by side, and from this it was assumed in Germany that the British submarine "was equipped with the new double torpedo tube system which the latest English models are said to carry." It. is reported now that the Undiiie was also struck by two torpedoes.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19160106.2.60

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Dominion, Volume 9, Issue 2662, 6 January 1916, Page 6

Word count
Tapeke kupu
406

OUR BALTIC RECORD Dominion, Volume 9, Issue 2662, 6 January 1916, Page 6

OUR BALTIC RECORD Dominion, Volume 9, Issue 2662, 6 January 1916, Page 6

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