


Wilhelm Gustloff
國家 | 德國 |
造船廠 | Blohm und Voss |
Yard Number | 511 |
Slip/Drydock Number | VII |
安放龍骨日期 | 1936年8月1日 |
下水日期 | 1937年5月5日 |
服役日期 | 1939年9月1日 |
沉沒日期 | 1945年1月30日 |
排水量 | 25,484 tons standard |
長度 | 684 feet |
寬度 | 77 feet |
吃水 | 21 feet |
動力來源 | Four MAN 8-cylinder diesel engines rated at 9,500hp each, two twin-screws |
速度 | 15 knots |
續航力 | 12,000nm at 15 knots |
乘員 | 173 |
武裝 | 3x105mm anti-aircraft guns, 8x20mm anti-aircraft cannons |
Passenger Capacity | 1,465 |
Two-Bed Rooms | 248 |
Four-Bed Rooms | 241 |
Contributor: C. Peter Chen
ww2dbaseThe Wilhelm Guftloff was the first purpose-built cruiser liner of the German Labor Front (Deutsche Arbeitsfront, DAF), used to provide recreation for German workers. In the summer of 1939, she was conscripted into the German Navy. Her first role was to bring German servicemen of the Condor Legion back from Spain. On 1 Sep 1939, she was requisitioned by the German Navy. In the first year of the European War, she served as a hospital ship off Poland and Norway with the designation Lazarettschiff D, or Hospital Ship D. On 20 Nov 1940, she had her medical equipment removed and was repainted the standard naval gray of the German Navy, and she was launched as an accommodations ship for about 1,000 men of the 2nd Submarine Training Squadron, stationed at Gotenhafen, Germany (now Gdynia, Poland), near Danzig. She remained at Gotenhafen for the following four years. During Operation Hannibal, as Russian troops approached Gotenhafen , she took on somewhere between 6,000 to 10,000 civilians and servicemen and disembarked for Kiel, Germany on 30 Jan 1945. She sailed with passenger liner Hansa, escorted by two torpedo boats. En route, Hansa and one of the torpedo boats developed mechanical trouble, thus Wilhelm Gustloff and torpedo boat Löwe sailed on ahead. Against the advise of the military captain Lieutenant Commander Wilhelm Zahn, senior civilian captain Friedrich Petersen kept the ship in deep water. When Petersen was informed that a German minesweeping convoy was near by, he turned on the ship's red and green navigation lights to avoid a potential collision. Shortly after the navigation lights were turned on, at about 2100 hours, she was spotted by Russian submarine S-13, commanded by Captain Third Class Alexander Marinesko. S-13 launched three torpedoes at Wilhelm Gustloff, with the first hitting near the port bow, the second hitting just ahead of midships, and the third hitting the engine room. Aboard the ship, panicked passengers trampled each other toward the rescue equipment (which was inadequate for the overcrowded ship) as the ship settled by the bow and listed to starboard and then to port. Many began to jump into the water, which was at about freezing point. The ship sank bow first less than 45 minutes after the torpedo hits. 1,200 survivors were rescued; somewhere between 5,000 and 10,000 lives were lost, making it possibly the greatest loss of life in a maritime disaster in history. After the sinking, although all four captains survived, only the military captain, Lieutenant Commander Wilhelm Zahn, was questioned; the inquiry was never completed before the German surrender. After the war, many called the sinking a war crime as thousands of civilians died as the result of the Russian submarine attack, although the counter-arguments were made that she made no attempt to display that she was carrying civilians, plus she was indeed carrying about 1,000 active military personnel.
ww2dbaseSource: Wikipedia.
Last Major Revision: Aug 2009
Wilhelm Gustloff 互動地圖
Photographs
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Wilhelm Gustloff Operational Timeline
1936年8月1日 | The keel of Wilhelm Gustloff was laid down by Blohm und Voss shipyard in Hamburg, Germany. |
1937年5月5日 | Wilhelm Gustloff was launched at Slip VII of the Blohm und Voss shipyard in Hamburg, Germany. |
1938年3月15日 | Wilhelm Gustloff was completed. |
1939年9月1日 | Wilhelm Gustloff was requisitioned by the German Navy. |
1939年9月22日 | Wilhelm Gustloff began its service as a Navy hospital ship. |
1940年11月20日 | Wilhelm Gustloff completed its service as a Navy hospital ship. |
1945年1月30日 | While transporting civilians from Ostpreußen (East Prussia), Germany, German Navy passenger ship Wilhelm Gustloff was sunk by Soviet submarine S-13, under the command of Captain 3rd Class Alexander Marinesko, taking somewhere between 5,000 and 10,000 lives, possibly making it the greatest loss of life in a maritime disaster in history. |
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Visitor Submitted Comments
2 Feb 2022 06:34:52 PM
Is there any information about where most of the civilian evacuees came from? Were they mostly East Prussians as one would suppose? If there were Estonians and Latvians, is there an indication of numbers or a percentage? I did read that registrations did end before final boarding numbers were complete but the information I’m asking for would still be really interesting for my research. Thank you.
5 May 2022 12:41:40 PM
You can find some information like about the refugees seeking evacuation on the Wilhelm Gustloff in the book Salt to the Sea. Its a good book!
22 Feb 2023 11:39:04 AM
go read salt to the sea it has some relations to this (note that the book is a fiction book!).
All visitor submitted comments are opinions of those making the submissions and do not reflect views of WW2DB.

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James Forrestal, Secretary of the Navy, 23 Feb 1945
21 Dec 2018 10:25:18 AM
Im doing this topic for history for school. I have a lot of information but I feel like I need more. All the websites give me the same info. I feel like I need more. If you know any other info please email me