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Finally got my 2012
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About a dozen more
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SHIPYARD FIRE 1936

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HISTORY REPEATS:
The worlds biggest 
wooden building burns
in Kittery Yard in 1936

STOBART DOES SHOALS

Maritime painter
John Stobart created
new works just for
Portsmouth! That is
a very big deal
READ MORE

 

SLAVE OWNING GUV?

Don't miss this debate
-- Did Gov. John Langdon
own slaves? Historians
say signs point to NO.
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SHOW IS OPEN!

Six months of work
and the doors are
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OF SHOALS


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Home Places & Events Historic Portsmouth Memorial Bridge Guards Nazi U-boats
See my brand new autographed gift book click here
Memorial Bridge Guards Nazi U-boats Print E-mail
Written by SeacoastNh Archives   

371_00SeacoastNH.com Presents 
Historic Portsmouth #371

This started out as another rare shot of Memorial Bridge, a tiny one with a unique perspective from the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in Kittery. The two boats in the foreground are German U-505 and U-3008. Here the story explodes. According to Wikipedia (so correct me, if I’m wrong) U-3008 was among the captured Nazi subs towed to the shipyard in 1945. (Continued below)

 

Here the German technology was studied. It was put back into active service in the US Navy until the 1950s and eventually scrapped.  Amazingly, one of only six German boats captured by Allied forces in WWII, the U-505 survives as a museum ship in Chicago today. Launched in 1940, the U-505 conducted 12 patrols. During one of them, her commander committed suicide in the engine room while his boat was submerged and under attack from British depth charges. The captured vessel yielded extensive information on German secret codes, and then lingered at Kittery for almost a decade after the war where it was stripped and nearly scrapped. It was shipped to the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry in the mid-1950s for an enormous restoration project and is currently on display there.  (Courtesy of Portsmouth Athenaeum)

READ: Uboats Surrender in Portsmouth

Captured Nazi Uboats in Portsmouth Naval Shipyard near Memorial BRidge/ Portsmouth Athenaeum photo

BONUS PHOTOS FROM CHICAGO MUSEUM

371_U505

371_U505_on_display

(c) Text by SeacoastNH.com, Portsmouth, NH

READER RESPONSES

 

Your article on U-boats in Portsmouth Harbor implies  - or could be interpreted to mean - that one of the four Uboats that entered the harbor was ultimately shipped to Chicago.  This is incorrect.  The U505, which is currently on display in Chicago, was not one of those four.  The U505 was captured by a U.S. Navy task force in June, 1944, almost a year before those four Uboats surrendered.
-- Bill Leslie
Your  picture of German subs at portsmouth reminded me visiting with my father,Capt. G.. L. Smith, USN  these boats tied up in Portsmouth.  Looking on bridge hand rail, I saw a GE searchlight and a Polarus issued by US Bur of ships!
-- Joy Smith Starr, Exeter

 

 

 

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