Puneet Varma (Editor)

Malygin (1912 icebreaker)

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Name
  
Malygin

Port of registry
  
Murmansk

Out of service
  
1940

Length
  
79 m

Displacement
  
3.2 million kg

Owner
  
Soviet Union

Completed
  
September 1912

Launched
  
1912

Weight
  
3,200 tons

Malygin (1912 icebreaker)

Fate
  
Sunk in a storm on 28 October 1940

Builders
  
Napier and Miller, Glasgow

Icebreaker Malygin was a Russian and Soviet icebreaker ship of 3,200 tonnes displacement. She was named after Stepan Malygin.

History

Malygin was built in 1912 as the SS Bruce for the Newfoundland shipping company and sold to Russia in 1915. The ship was originally named Solovei Budemirovich (Соловей Будимирович) after Nightingale the Robber. She was renamed Malygin in 1921.

In 1928, she took part in the search of the Umberto Nobile's dirigible expedition. In 1922-1939, she performed hydrological research in the Arctic Ocean. In July 1931, Professor V. Yu. Vize led an expedition on the Malygin to Franz Josef Land and the northern part of the Kara Sea. Captain D.T. Chertkhov was in command of the Malygin. Other members included technicians whose mission was to locate a suitable place for a Soviet floatplane base in Franz Josef Land. During this expedition German airship Graf Zeppelin made a memorable rendezvous with icebreaker Malygin at Bukhta Tikhaya in Hooker Island, Franz Josef Land.

In 1937, she took part in drifting expedition together with Icebreaker Sadko and Icebreaker Sedov.

The Malygin sank in a storm near Kamchatka on 28 October 1940 with all 98 people on board while returning from a hydrographic expedition.

References

Malygin (1912 icebreaker) Wikipedia