U-Boat 977
by Schaeffer, Heinz
Published by : William Kimber (London) Physical details: 207 Pages 22x14 cm | HBItem type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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General Stacks | Non-fiction | 940.953 S291U 1955 (Browse shelf) | Available | 6372 | |
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General Stacks | Non-fiction | 940.953 S291U 1955 (Browse shelf) | Available | 6371 |
Browsing Garrison Public Library Multan Shelves , Shelving location: General Stacks , Collection code: Non-fiction Close shelf browser
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940.953 L712G 1979 The German Generals Talk : Startling Revelations from Hitler's High Command | 940.953 L712G 1979 The German Generals Talk : Startling Revelations from Hitler's High Command | 940.953 L794D 1959 The Divine Wind : Japan's Kamikaze Force in World War II | 940.953 S291U 1955 U-Boat 977 | 940.953 S291U 1955 U-Boat 977 | 940.95491 T595T 2017 Tareekh-e-Pakistan kay Mutnaza Adwaar | 941 B171C 1987 The Country Life Book of the Living History of Britain |
Foreword by Nicholas Monsarrat
Include Map and Colour Illustration
U-boat 977 was the German submarine that escaped to Argentina at the end of World War Two. This epic journey started from Bergen in Norway, where in April 1945 it was temporarily based, and took three and a half months to complete. Because of continuing allied naval activity the commander decided to make the first part of the journey underwater. Before surfacing near the west coast of Africa U-977 had spent a remarkable sixty-six days submerged! It was inevitable that when U-977's journey and escape to Argentina and its port of Mar del Plata became known it would be the center of rumor and theory.
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