Divers find wreck of German World War II ship that was bombed and sunk with 1,083 on board

Author: CBS/AP
Published:
A wreck of a German Second World War ship “Karlsruhe” is seen during a search operation in the Baltic sea in June 2020. TOMASZ STACHURA/ BALTICTECH/HANDOUT VIA REUTERS

A team of Polish divers say they have found almost intact the wreckage of German World War II steamer Karlsruhe, which was bombed by Soviet planes and sunk in the Baltic Sea in April 1945, killing hundreds on board. The 10-member Baltictech team say the wreckage rests 290 feet under the sea dozens of miles north of Poland’s coastal resort of Ustka.

In the wreckage, they say they have found military vehicles, china and sealed chests in the ship’s hold, all in good condition.

A wreck of a German Second World War ship “Karlsruhe” is seen during a search operation in the Baltic sea in June 2020.
TOMASZ STACHURA/ BALTICTECH/HANDOUT VIA REUTERS

“It looks like, after months of searching, we have finally found the wreckage of the Karlsruhe steamer,” the Baltictech group said on Facebook, posting an underwater photo of an apparently well-preserved military vehicle.

The group said the discovery could also help solve a 75-year-old mystery – the whereabouts of the Amber Room, an ornate Russian chamber that was looted by the Nazis. Dubbed the “Eighth Wonder of the World,” the room was part of the Catherine Palace near St. Petersburg, but was last seen in Koenigsberg, Reuters reported.

“We don’t want to get excited, but if the Germans were to take the Amber Chamber across the Baltic Sea, then Karlsruhe Steamer was their last chance,” the Baltictech group wrote on Facebook.

The Amber Room was constructed in Prussia and then given to Tsar Peter the Great of Russia in 1716 as a present. Reuters reports that the Germans dismantled the room and took it to Koenigsberg during the war. It disappeared during Allied bombing raids on the city. A replica of the Amber Room was later constructed in the Catherine Palace.

German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Doris Schroeder Koepf and Lyudmila Putin , from left, admire the reconstructed Amber Room in the Catherine Palace in St. Petersburg, Russia, Saturday, May 31, 2003.
ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICHENKO

The divers said they accessed Allied, German and Soviet documents detailing the fate of the steamer and spent more than a year looking for it, believing it was among the “most interesting, yet uncovered, stories from the Baltic Sea bed.”

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