Long-Lost Nazi U-Boat Finally Found (2024)

But the U-3523's contents and mission remain a mystery.

By David Grossman
Long-Lost Nazi U-Boat Finally Found (1)

Researchers in Denmark claim to have found German U-boat U-3523, bringing an end to a mystery surrounding the Nazi surrender in Europe at the end of World War II. The submarine, missing for decades, was rumored to have escaped to South America, and while its discovery proves that was not the case, its contents are still unknown.

In May 1945, Nazi Germany surrendered to Allied Forces across Europe. On April 30th Adolf Hitler had committed suicide, and within seven days the Nazis had surrendered in Italy and Berlin. On May 5th, German forces in Holland, northwest Germany and Denmark surrendered. It in the Netherlands it is currently celebrated as Bevrijdingsdag, or Liberation Day.

At this point, with German soldiers and officials in disarray and killing themselves en masse, it was unclear what a U-boat known as U-3523 was doing 10 nautical miles off the coast of Denmark. On May 6, a British RAF bomber dropped depth charges and sank it, killing all reported 58 hands.

Even before its mysterious final voyage, the U-3523 was a rarity. It was a working Type XXI, also known as "Elektroboote." The brainchild of Hellmuth Walter, a German engineer also responsible for rocket engines in the Messerschmitt Me 132, the Type XXI would radically change the development of warfare in the open ocean. Since the 1930s Walter had proposed that U-boats be powered with electric motors and that their energy come from storage batteries.

The Type XXI, alongside the later XXIIIs, were the culmination of his work. Powered by 2 diesel engines and 4 electric motors, Type XXI submarines were the first in history that could maneuver for extended periods of time while submerged, up to several days. From a hull design giving sailors more space to higher diving speeds, it emerged as the clearly superior submarine of its day. Only four were made due to errors in production, but after the war, Allied forces based submarines on XXI designs for decades. Both Soviet Whiskey-class and American Tang-class submarines used XXI designs.

Long-Lost Nazi U-Boat Finally Found (3)

The world’s only remaining Type XXI U-boat, on harbor at the German Maritime Museum in Bremerhaven.

The sinking of the U-3523 brought with it more questions than answers. The museum that found it, Sea War Museum Jutland, says in its findings that after the war, "there were many rumors about top Nazis who fled in U-boats and brought Nazi gold to safety, and the U-3523 fed the rumors. The Type XXI was the first genuine submarine that could sail submerged for a prolonged time, and the U-3523 had a range that would have allowed it to sail non-stop all the way to South America."

The museum doesn't know what's exactly inside the ship. It's partially embedded 130 yards into the seabed off the coast of north Denmark, making excavation difficult. The museum says it has no idea what's on board: "nobody knows if the U-boat had valuables or passengers aboard in addition to the 58 crew."

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A graphic representation of the sunken submarine in its current state.

That the ship had gone missing for so many years opened up theories that in fact it had reached South America successfully, but those theories can now be put to bed.

The museum has found 450 World War II wrecks. A month before worldwide celebrations over the end of the war, it's worth reflecting on the long arm of the conflict into this century. Recently, other elements in the Nazi navy were found to be hurting the Norwegian environment. And last year, a woman relaxing by the Elbe river in Hamburg found herself on fire thanks to World War II-era white phosphorous.

Source: CBS

Long-Lost Nazi U-Boat Finally Found (7)

David Grossman

David Grossman is a staff writer for PopularMechanics.com. He's previously written for The Verge, Rolling Stone, The New Republic and several other publications. He's based out of Brooklyn.

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Long-Lost Nazi U-Boat Finally Found (2024)

FAQs

Was the U-boat found with bodies? ›

BRUSSELS — An intact German World War I submarine containing the bodies of 23 people has been found off the coast of Belgium, authorities said Tuesday. Western Flanders Governor Carl Decaluwe told The Associated Press that the find on the floor of the North Sea “is very unique.”

Were the three missing U-boats found? ›

Though the Germans set their bunker for an explosion, three U-boats inside remained. There was an attempt to access and scrap the submarines in the 1940s, but it was too dangerous. Therefore, they remained in the bunker. However, in 1985, researchers rediscovered their location in the Elbe II bunker.

How many German U-boats are still missing? ›

According to the definitive website Uboat.org, a total of 50 German U-boats remained unaccounted for after the end of World War II.

Was the German U-boat found off New Jersey? ›

On 2 September 1991, an unidentified U-boat wreck was discovered 73 meters (240 feet) deep (a hazardous depth for standard scuba diving) off the coast of New Jersey. Nicknamed U-Who, the exact identity of the wreck was a matter of frequent debate, and initially the wreck was thought to be either U-550 or U-521.

What happened to the bodies on the submarine? ›

The remains were carefully recovered from within Titan's debris and transported for analysis by US medical professionals. Captain John Noble has detailed what will happen to the bodies of the five passengers who lost their lives on the Titan submarine.

How many U-boats survived today? ›

The German Unterseeboot, or U-boat, was a submarine that appeared seemingly out of nowhere to destroy both military and commercial ships. Despite their prevalence during World War I and World War II, only four U-boats remain intact today.

Who destroyed the most U-boats? ›

Captain Frederic John Walker CB, DSO and three Bars, was a Royal Navy officer noted for his exploits during the Second World War and was the most successful anti-submarine warfare commander who sank 20 German U-boats under his command, which is more than any other British or Allied Commander during the Battle of the ...

Were U-boats found in the bunker? ›

The boats in question, U-2505, U-3004, and U-3506, all XXI type U-boats, were found in the remains of Elbe II — a U-boat bunker off the River Elbe in Hamburg which was constructed by the Nazis during the early years of the war.

How did they sink U-boats? ›

Submarines that were not used for target practice were to be sunk with explosive charges, with naval gunfire as a fall-back option if that failed. When Operation Deadlight began, the navy found that many of the U-boats were in poor condition from being moored in exposed harbours while awaiting disposal.

Do any German U-boats still exist? ›

In 1954, U-505 was donated to the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago, Illinois. She is now one of four German World War II U-boats that survive as museum ships, and just one of two Type IXCs still in existence with U-534.

Is Das Boot a true story? ›

Synopsis. The movie Das Boot is arguably the most beautiful and powerful story of a submarine and its crew ever told in cinema. This cult film is adapted from a novel based on the true story of U-96, one of Hitler's most fearsome and feared U-Boats.

How close were German U-boats to America? ›

In 1942, German U-Boats were waging a costly hidden war in the Gulf of Mexico, only a few miles off the coast of Louisiana. Lost among the histories of major World War Two battles with Nazi Germany are a series of attacks on American ships along the Gulf coast of Louisiana and other southern states.

Did German U-boats pick up survivors? ›

Up until that point, it was common for U-boats to assist torpedoed survivors with food, water, simple medical care for the wounded, and a compass bearing to the nearest landmass. It was extremely rare for survivors to be brought on board, as space on a U-boat was barely enough for its own crew.

What stopped the German U-boats? ›

The Allies' defence against, and eventual victory over, the U-boats in the Battle of the Atlantic was based on three main factors: the convoy system, in which merchant ships were herded across the North Atlantic and elsewhere in formations of up to 60 ships, protected, as far as possible, by naval escorts and ...

What happened to all the German U-boats? ›

Under the terms of armistice, all U-boats were to immediately surrender. Those in home waters sailed to the British submarine base at Harwich, after which the vessels were studied, then scrapped or given to Allied navies.

Have bodies been found in shipwrecks? ›

“Human remains were often washed ashore following shipwrecks, and were buried in the nearest available place,” she said, adding that the dates could vary from prehistoric to modern. In 2019, the skeletal remains of at least six people, believed to have been shipwreck victims, were found along the coast.

Were the bodies found in the USS Grayback? ›

Thanks to a Japanese amateur researcher, the wreck of the USS Grayback has been located off the coast of Okinawa, Japan, 75 years after the submarine mysteriously went missing in March 1944.

Did U-boats pick up survivors? ›

Up until that point, it was common for U-boats to assist torpedoed survivors with food, water, simple medical care for the wounded, and a compass bearing to the nearest landmass. It was extremely rare for survivors to be brought on board, as space on a U-boat was barely enough for its own crew.

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