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SM UB-85
SM UB-85
from Wikipedia
UB-148 at sea, a U-boat similar to UB-85.
History
German Empire
NameUB-85
Ordered23 September 1916[1]
BuilderAG Weser, Bremen
Cost3,341,000 German Papiermark
Yard number285
Laid down24 January 1917[2]
Launched26 October 1917[3]
Commissioned24 November 1917[3]
FateSunk 30 April 1918[3]
General characteristics [3]
Class & typeType UB III submarine
Displacement
  • 516 t (508 long tons) surfaced
  • 647 t (637 long tons) submerged
Length55.85 m (183 ft 3 in) (o/a)
Beam5.80 m (19 ft)
Draught3.72 m (12 ft 2 in)
Propulsion
Speed
  • 13.4 knots (24.8 km/h; 15.4 mph) surfaced
  • 7.5 knots (13.9 km/h; 8.6 mph) submerged
Range
  • 8,180 nmi (15,150 km; 9,410 mi) at 6 knots (11 km/h; 6.9 mph) surfaced
  • 50 nmi (93 km; 58 mi) at 4 knots (7.4 km/h; 4.6 mph) submerged
Test depth50 m (160 ft)
Complement3 officers, 31 men[3]
Armament
Service record
Part of:
  • V Flotilla
  • 10 February – 30 April 1918
Commanders:
  • Kptlt. Günther Krech[4]
  • 24 November 1917 – 30 April 1918
Operations: 2 patrols
Victories: None

SM UB-85[Note 1] was a Type UB III U-boat in the German Imperial Navy (German: Kaiserliche Marine) during World War I. Ordered on 23 September 1916, the U-boat was built at the AG Weser shipyard in Bremen and commissioned on 24 November 1917, under the command of Kapitänleutnant Günther Krech.[2]

Construction

[edit]

SM UB-85 was built by AG Weser of Bremen and following just under a year of construction, launched at Bremen on 26 October 1917, and was commissioned later that same year. Like all Type UB III submarines, UB-85 carried 10 torpedoes and was armed with a 8.8 cm (3.46 in) deck gun. UB-85 would carry a crew of up to 3 officers and 31 men and had a cruising range of 8,180 nautical miles (15,150 km; 9,410 mi). UB-85 had a displacement of 516 t (508 long tons) while surfaced and 647 t (637 long tons) when submerged. Her engines enabled her to travel at 13.4 knots (24.8 km/h; 15.4 mph) when surfaced and 7.5 knots (13.9 km/h; 8.6 mph) when submerged.

Service history

[edit]

On her second patrol, she was picked up by HM Drifter Coreopsis II [Note 2] off the coast of Belfast, Northern Ireland on 30 April 1918, after she was partly flooded through a semi-open hatch while trying to evade attack by the British vessel.[2] The ingress of water could not be controlled, since cables for a heater in the officers' compartment had previously been laid through a watertight door, by order of Kapt. Krech.[5] The submarine was forced to surface and was abandoned by her crew while under fire at position 54°47′N 5°23′W / 54.783°N 5.383°W / 54.783; -5.383. No casualties occurred amongst the 34 crew who were taken as prisoners of war.[6]

Relationship with cryptozoology

[edit]

Under interrogation, the captain is reported to have said that the submarine had surfaced the night before to recharge the batteries and had been attacked by a large sea creature, a "strange beast" that rose out of the deep and damaged the vessel, leaving it unable to submerge. The crew had fired their sidearms at the creature.[7][8]

Wreck

[edit]

Engineers working on an electricity cable, the Western HVDC Link, discovered the almost intact wreck of a Type UB III submarine, believed to be either UB-85 or UB-82, lying off the Galloway coast in October 2016.[9] Dr Innes McCartney who identified the wreck said: "We are certainly closer to solving the so-called mystery of UB-85 and the reason behind its sinking - whether common mechanical failure or something that is less easily explained."[7]

See also

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References

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Bibliography

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
SM UB-85 was a Type UB III of the (Kaiserliche Marine) during , designed for torpedo attacks on enemy shipping in near-shore waters. Ordered on 23 September 1916 as part of a wartime expansion of the fleet, she was constructed by the A.G. Weser in under yard number 285, laid down on 24 January 1917, launched on 26 October 1917, and commissioned into service on 24 November 1917 under the command of Günther Krech. Measuring 55.30 in length with a displacement of 516 tons surfaced and 651 tons submerged, UB-85 was armed with four bow tubes and one (carrying 10 torpedoes total), an 8.8 cm deck gun, and a crew of 34 officers and ratings. Assigned to the 5th Flotilla based in , she conducted two patrols in the targeting British merchant vessels, but recorded no confirmed sinkings during her brief operational career. On 30 April 1918, during her second patrol off the coast of , UB-85 was forced to surface after attempting to dive under fire from HM Drifter , an armed drifter equipped with depth charges and quick-firing guns; the flooded due to an incompletely sealed hatch, leading her crew to abandon ship and scuttle her. All 34 crew members survived and were taken prisoner by the British, with no fatalities reported in the engagement. A wreck believed to be UB-85 was discovered in 2016 during seabed surveys off southwest , lying at a depth of approximately 100 meters in the . UB-85 gained posthumous notoriety through a persistent urban legend claiming her crew encountered and was damaged by a giant sea monster during the incident, forcing surrender; this tale, which emerged in online forums around 2005, lacks any supporting evidence from naval records, survivor accounts, or official reports and is widely regarded by historians as a modern fabrication or misinterpretation of the battle damage. As one of 96 Type UB III boats built—many of which contributed to Germany's unrestricted submarine warfare campaign—UB-85 exemplifies the Imperial Navy's shift toward more versatile coastal submarines in the later stages of the war, though her short service underscores the high attrition rate among U-boats, with over half lost to Allied action by 1918.

Design and Construction

Type UB III Specifications

The Type UB III was the final and most advanced iteration of the coastal submarine (Küstensubmarine) series developed for the Imperial German Navy during World War I, designed primarily for operations in the confined waters of the North Sea and Baltic Sea. Building on the lessons from earlier UB I and UB II classes and drawing from the successful UC II minelayer design, the UB III incorporated enhancements such as larger overall dimensions and displacement for increased torpedo capacity (replacing mine tubes with additional torpedo storage and adding a fifth tube), more powerful diesel engines for improved surface speed and range, enlarged saddle tanks, and an enlarged conning tower with a second periscope, though submerged performance was limited by reduced battery capacity compared to some predecessors. These submarines emphasized stealth, endurance for patrol duties, and offensive capability against merchant shipping, forming a key component of Germany's unrestricted submarine warfare campaign. Key technical specifications of the Type UB III class are summarized below (values for UB-85 where specific):
CategoryDetails
Displacement516 tonnes surfaced; 647 tonnes submerged
DimensionsLength: 55.85 m (overall); Beam: 5.80 m; Draught: 3.67 m
PropulsionTwin propeller shafts; 2 × Daimler 6-cylinder diesel engines (1,060 hp surfaced); 2 × electric motors (580 hp submerged)
PerformanceTop speed: 13.4 knots surfaced, 7.8 knots submerged; Range: 9,020 nautical miles at 6 knots surfaced, 55 nautical miles at 4 knots submerged
Armament4 × bow torpedo tubes, 1 × stern torpedo tube (10 torpedoes total); 1 × 8.8 cm (88 mm) deck gun (160 rounds)
Crew34 (3 officers + 31 enlisted)
These features provided the UB III with balanced capabilities for hit-and-run tactics, though limitations in submerged speed and range restricted long-duration underwater operations.

Building and Commissioning

SM UB-85 was ordered on 23 September 1916 as part of the Imperial German Navy's expansion of its U-boat fleet in anticipation of intensified unrestricted submarine warfare. The Type UB III design facilitated rapid wartime production across several shipyards, enabling efficient assembly of coastal submarines like UB-85. Construction began when the keel was laid down at the A.G. Weser shipyard in Bremen—assigned yard number 285—on 24 January 1917. The submarine progressed through fabrication over the following months, reflecting the standardized modular approach of the UB III class that shortened build times amid the demands of total war. UB-85 was launched on 26 October 1917 and formally commissioned into the Imperial German Navy on 24 November 1917. Following commissioning, she underwent initial fitting out and sea trials in the vicinity of Bremen to verify systems and crew readiness before departing for her operational base in the Flanders region.

Operational Career

Assignment and Command

Upon commissioning on 24 November 1917, SM UB-85 was placed under the command of Kapitänleutnant Günther Krech, who led the vessel throughout its operational service. Krech, born in 1886, had prior experience in the Imperial German Navy and served as the sole commander during UB-85's active period. Following commissioning at the AG Weser shipyard in Bremen, UB-85 conducted initial training and shakedown cruises in late 1917 and early 1918 to prepare the crew and test the submarine's systems. These included diving trials, torpedo practice runs, and a major training patrol departing Bremerhaven on 23 February 1918, routing through the Little Belt to Stavanger, westward across the Dogger Bank, and returning to Kiel via the Kattegat on 9 March 1918. On 10 February 1918, UB-85 was formally assigned to the V Flotilla (also known as the Flandern Flotilla), a key unit of the Imperial German Navy's submarine forces intended for operations from bases in Ostend, Belgium. However, due to its brief service, UB-85 conducted its training and patrols from North Sea bases in Germany, such as Bremerhaven and Helgoland, rather than deploying to Flemish ports like Ostend, Zeebrugge, and Bruges. The V Flotilla, established as part of the broader Flanders submarine organization in 1915, played a central role in Germany's unrestricted submarine warfare campaign initiated in 1917, focusing on interdicting Allied merchant shipping to disrupt supply lines to Britain.

Patrols and Final Mission

UB-85's first operational patrol took place from 9 to 16 April 1918, departing the Weser Yard to test equipment and address mechanical issues, including periscope and engine problems. During this sortie, the crew experienced illnesses, such as influenza, and the submarine returned to Helgoland for further preparations. No enemy engagements were recorded. The submarine's second and final patrol began on 16 April 1918 from Helgoland, shifting focus to the Irish Sea and North Channel off the United Kingdom's west coast to interdict merchant shipping. Operating near Belfast Lough, UB-85 encountered several potential targets but achieved no victories; for instance, on 21 April it fired a torpedo at a steamer but missed after striking the seabed, and on 26 April it pursued a large vessel into Belfast waters without success. The patrol was marked by mechanical issues, such as engine exhaust problems, ongoing crew illnesses including influenza, and repeated evasions of Allied forces, including dives to avoid aircraft on 20 April, destroyer pursuits and depth charges on 28 April, and sightings of convoys in fog on 27 April. These efforts reflected the intensifying Allied anti-submarine measures, including convoys, patrols, and aerial surveillance, which severely hampered U-boat effectiveness. In total, UB-85 undertook two operational patrols dedicated to disrupting Allied merchant traffic, but recorded no sinkings despite multiple sightings and attack attempts. By April 1918, the broader German U-boat campaign operated under conditions of late-war desperation, exacerbated by fuel shortages from the Allied blockade and mounting losses—over 70 submarines sunk that year alone—as resources dwindled and operational risks escalated. This context underscored the final mission's high-stakes nature in the Irish Sea, where UB-85 patrolled until its encounter off Black Head starting late on 29 April.

Sinking

Incident Details

On the night of 29–30 April 1918, during its final patrol in the , SM UB-85 surfaced off for battery recharge. The U-boat was positioned approximately at 54°40′N 05°30′W in the North Channel. At around 02:45 on 30 April, lookouts on the British drifter Coreopsis II spotted the conning-tower-down heading southwest and challenged it. When UB-85 failed to respond, Coreopsis II opened fire at 02:50 with its 3-pounder , scoring hits on the bow and abaft the conning tower. The U-boat attempted a crash dive to evade the attack, but accidental flooding occurred through a semi-open conning tower hatch, causing rapid water ingress into the hull. This led to a loss of buoyancy, preventing the submarine from maintaining depth or maneuvering effectively. German commander Kapitänleutnant Günther Krech reported in his interrogation that "the rush of water was so strong that it was impossible to close either the conning tower hatch or the lower hatch," resulting in severe flooding of the battery compartment and engine room. The submarine's batteries short-circuited, forcing UB-85 to resurface involuntarily around 04:00. Under continued gunfire from Coreopsis II and approaching patrol vessels, the crew abandoned ship; the U-boat then sank stern-first at 04:33. While British records attribute the sinking to the engagement with Coreopsis II, German accounts emphasize the self-inflicted flooding as the primary cause, with no confirmation of enemy action beyond the initial detection and gunfire contributing directly to the loss.

Crew and Aftermath

The of SM UB-85 consisted of 34 officers and enlisted men commanded by Günther Krech. On April 1918, after the submarine partially flooded through a semi-open hatch and resurfaced in the North Channel off , the entire abandoned ship under from British patrol vessels and was captured without . Of the 36 captured, 27 were taken aboard HM Drifter Coreopsis II and 9 by HMS Valorous, then transferred to British custody. Following their capture, the crew underwent interrogation by British naval intelligence, after which they were interned as prisoners of war in camps within the United Kingdom until the Armistice of 11 November 1918. Krech and the others were repatriated shortly thereafter; however, Krech died of unknown causes on 7 March 1919 at age 33 in Keighley, England. The loss of UB-85 inflicted minimal strategic damage on the Imperial German Navy's U-boat operations in the war's final months, as it was one of 202 submarines sunk out of approximately 375 commissioned, adding to the attritional toll that eroded the fleet's effectiveness but did not decisively shift the trajectory of the unrestricted submarine campaign.

Cultural Legacy

The Sea Monster Narrative

The narrative surrounding SM UB-85 originated in a compiling alleged eyewitness accounts of marine . In Sea Monsters: A Collection of Eyewitness Accounts by James B. , the attributes the submarine's disablement to an encounter with a massive unidentified creature during a patrol in the on the night of April 30, 1918. According to the account, while UB-85 was surfaced and charging its batteries, a 50-foot-long beast resembling a crocodile—with a horny skull, small head, glistening teeth, and large glowing eyes—emerged from the depths and rammed the vessel's starboard bow, causing it to list severely and damaging the forward gun mount and periscope gear, preventing submersion. The crew, including Captain Günther Krech, reportedly fired pistols at the roaring intruder, which then released its grip and vanished beneath the waves, leaving the U-boat vulnerable to British forces. This apocryphal story specifically ties the incident to Krech's alleged during his as a aboard HMS Coreopsis, the British patrol ship that captured UB-85 shortly after the supposed attack. The narrative draws on longstanding cryptozoological fascination with sea serpents and unknown marine giants, portraying the creature as a or reptilian horror that surfaced dramatically under , evoking ancient mariner lore of leviathans clashing with modern naval . The legend gained traction in the late 20th century through reprints and discussions in literature, including works exploring historical sea monster sightings. By the 2010s, following the 2016 rediscovery of UB-85's wreck off the Scottish coast, the tale proliferated in popular media, inspiring episodes in podcasts such as Stuff to Blow Your Mind and articles in outlets like Live Science and that linked it to broader myths like the . This propagation has cemented the UB-85 story as a cultural emblem of wartime encounters with the unexplained, blending historical naval events with enduring folklore.

Analysis and Debunking

The sea monster narrative surrounding SM UB-85 lacks corroboration in any contemporary primary sources from either the German Imperial Navy or the British Royal Navy. Official records, including war diaries and engagement reports, describe the U-boat's fate solely as resulting from an encounter with the armed drifter HMS Coreopsis on 30 April 1918, where UB-85 was forced to surface after flooding due to an unsecured hatch during a crash dive to evade gunfire; no mention appears of a creature attacking the vessel. Similarly, accounts from Kapitänleutnant Günther Krech, the U-boat's commander, preserved in naval archives, omit any such incident, focusing instead on operational details of the patrol. The is widely regarded by historians as a fabrication first published in James B. Sweeney's book Sea Monsters: A Collection of Eyewitness Accounts, with no supporting from earlier sources, and may have arisen from with other U-boat mishaps or pervasive wartime . In-depth examination of the loss in Dwight R. Messimer's Verschollen: World War I U-Boat Losses () attributes the to a mundane technical fault: a recently installed heater cable in Krech's cabin had compromised the conning tower's seal, causing uncontrollable flooding that rendered the submarine unable to dive—conditions misattributed in later retellings to a mythical assault. Krech's death in 1919 at age 33, shortly after his capture, eliminated opportunities for him to address or dispel the emerging tale. Plausible alternative explanations center on the misinterpretation of the hatch flooding as a collision with an external , a narrative potentially amplified by the intense psychological strain on U-boat crews from prolonged, isolated patrols in contested , where fatigue and fear could transform routine failures into lore. Within the cryptozoological framework, the UB-85 account parallels other I-era reports of sea monsters, often involving misidentified like whales amid the chaos of , yet naval scholars dismiss it outright as a hoax owing to the total lack of physical corroboration, including any hull damage patterns indicative of an encounter rather than mechanical or combat-related issues.

Modern Rediscovery

Survey and Location

The wreck of SM UB-85 was discovered in October 2016 during a for the , a subsea project connecting Hunterston in western to in . The survey was part of route clearance efforts by a between ScottishPower Transmission and National Grid, aimed at identifying potential obstacles for cable installation. Engineers employed multibeam sonar for initial mapping, followed by detailed imaging and video footage captured by a remotely operated (ROV) to assess the anomaly. The site lies off the coast of in the region of southwest , within the , approximately 120 northwest of the planned cable corridor near , at a depth of about 100 . Initial analysis, led by nautical archaeologist Innes McCartney, confirmed the wreck as a Type UB III based on its measured approximately 45 meters in length (consistent with the main hull), visible deck fittings including a 105 mm gun mount, and structural profile consistent with wartime German coastal submarines. Cross-referencing with historical records of sinkings in April 1918 matched the position to UB-85's reported loss to British forces, distinguishing it from the nearby wreck of UB-82, which lies farther north and was positively identified through prior surveys.

Condition and Historical Value

The wreck of SM UB-85 rests in a well-preserved condition on the seabed at a depth of approximately 100 meters, with the hull remaining largely intact and structural features such as the , , and torpedo tubes prominently visible in imagery. Minor is evident on exposed metal surfaces, but there are no signs of significant salvage or deliberate disturbance, preserving the overall integrity of the vessel. The forward hatch area displays structural damage consistent with flooding, which aligns with historical records of the submarine's final moments during its encounter with British forces. Preservation efforts for the site emphasize protection under maritime heritage laws, including the Protection of Wrecks Act 1973, which safeguards significant underwater archaeological remains from unauthorized interference. During the 2016 subsea survey that led to its rediscovery, engineers from ScottishPower Renewables adjusted the installation route to avoid impacting the wreck, ensuring it was not disturbed. The location is subject to ongoing monitoring for potential environmental threats, such as activities or seabed erosion, to maintain its archaeological value. As a rare surviving example of the Type UB III class—one of the German Imperial Navy's most effective designs for near-shore operations in the later stages of —the UB-85 wreck holds substantial historical significance for naval . It enables detailed study of construction techniques, armament configurations, and operational adaptations during intensified Allied patrols in 1918. The site's examination provides concrete evidence of the submarine's sinking via conventional naval action, such as depth charges from HMS Coreopsis, thereby contextualizing and refuting the legendary claims through analysis of impact damage rather than fantastical causes. Post-rediscovery research has involved collaborative analysis by marine archaeologists, historians, and the discovering engineering team, utilizing high-resolution data to create detailed site mappings that reveal the wreck's layout and state of decay. These efforts have yielded insights into preservation challenges for early 20th-century steel hulls in temperate waters, informing broader studies of submarine losses. The findings have also sparked renewed public interest in the vessel's , highlighting its role in maritime mythology while prioritizing evidence-based historical interpretation over sensational narratives.

References

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