Trisha Shetty (Editor)

SM U 51

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Name
  
U-51

Laid down
  
19 December 1914

Fate
  
Sunk on 14 July 1916

Construction started
  
19 December 1914

Draft
  
3.64 m

Ordered
  
23 August 1914

Commissioned
  
24 February 1916

Class and type
  
Type U 51 submarine

Launched
  
25 November 1915

Builder
  
Friedrich Krupp Germaniawerft

SM U-51 was a Type U 51 submarine, one of 329 submarines in the Imperial German Navy in World War I. She engaged in commerce warfare during the First Battle of the Atlantic.

She was ordered from Germaniawerft, at Kiel, on 23 August 1914 and laid down there on 19 December. She was launched on 25 November 1915 and commissioned on 24 February 1916. Kapitänleutnant Walter Rumpel was her captain for her entire career.

Operations

Completed at Kiel about March 1916, she carried out trials at Kiel School until the end of April when she proceeded to Heligoland. British Naval Intelligence (better known as Room 40): monitored and recorded her activities. She was attached to the 2nd Half Flotilla and carried out a patrol in the North Sea between 2 May and 6 May 1916, traveling to Hantsholm in company with SM U-70, escorted by two Zeppelins. She was again in the North Sea between 16 May and 3 June 1916, during the Battle of Jutland. She fired two torpedoes at the British battleship HMS Warspite, but missed her.

On 14 July the British submarine HMS H5 spotted U-51 leaving the Ems and torpedoed her. U-51 sank with the loss of 34 of her crew; four survivors were rescued.

The wreck of U-51 was raised and broken up in 1968.

References

SM U-51 Wikipedia