Ad
related to: u76 46d12 004e01
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
She was laid down at Bremer Vulkan in Bremen on 28 December 1939 as yard number 4. She was launched on 3 October 1940 and commissioned on 9 December.. U-76 was available for service from March 1941 following the completion of her working-up period and sea trials.
Convoy HG 76 (19 to 23 December 1941) was an Allied convoy of the HG (Homeward from Gibraltar) series, during the Second World War.It was notable for the destruction of five German U-boats, although the true total was not known to the British until after the war.
History; German Empire; Name: U-76: Ordered: 9 March 1915: Builder: AG Vulkan, Hamburg: Yard number: 58: Launched: 12 March 1916: Commissioned: 11 May 1916: Fate: 22 January 1917 - Foundered in bad weather off North Cape after damage by collision with a Russian trawler. 1 dead, unknown number of survivors
U-76 may refer to one of the following German submarines: . SM U-76, a Type UE I submarine launched in 1916 and that served in World War I until sunk 22 January 1917 During World War I, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
U76, a line of the Düsseldorf Stadtbahn This page was last edited on 10 June 2023, at 22:47 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
HMS Londonderry (U76) was a Grimsby-class sloop launched in 1935 and sold in 1948. HMS Londonderry (F108) was a Rothesay -class frigate launched in 1958. She was a training ship between 1984 and 1988, and was expended as a target in June 1989 (After rocket hits, finally sunk by the long range gunfire of the German destroyer Rommel ).
Flo29. German submarine U-77 was a Type VIIC U-boat of Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine built by the Bremer Vulkan-Vegesacker Werft, Bremen-Vegesack.Her keel was laid down on 28 March 1940, by Bremer Vulkan of Bremen-Vegesack, Germany as yard number 5.
HMS Londonderry was one of two Grimsby-class sloops constructed under the 1933 construction for the Royal Navy.She was ordered from Devonport Dockyard on 1 March 1934. Two Grimsby-class sloops had been ordered under each of the 1931 and 1932 programmes, and two more would be ordered in the programme for next year, giving a total of eight Grimsby-class ships built for the Royal Navy.