Type UC I submarine
The Type UC I coastal submarines were a class of small minelaying U-boats built in Germany during the early part of World War I. They were the first operational minelaying submarines in the world, although the Russian submarine Krab was laid down earlier. A total of fifteen boats were built. The class is sometimes also referred to as the UC-1 class after, the class leader. Eleven of these U-boats joined the Flanders U-boat flotilla whilst the other four went to the Pola Flotilla.
Design
On 18 August 1914, ten days after the start of World War I, the German Navy started to explore the idea of small, coastal submarines which could be built in a matter of months. On 11 September the idea was rejected but on 25 August as the German Army made rapid advances in Belgium and reached the coast, the idea was revived and the German Navy asked naval yards to design a small U-boat which could be transported by rail. On 15 October fifteen Type UB I U-boats were ordered, with an expected construction time of four months only. Based on the same Type UB I, the German Navy ordered on 23 November a further fifteen Type UC I coastal minelaying U-boats. As the traditional U-boat yards, Kaiserliche Werft Danzig and Germaniawerft, were already overloaded with orders and since AG Weser had started U-boat construction with the previous Type UB I, ten Type UC I were ordered from the AG Vulcan yard in Hamburg, and a further five from AG Weser. These yards expected a building time of five to six months.The Type UC I had a revised bow section housing inclined minelaying tubes and uprated engines to compensate for the increased displacement and less streamlined form. The boats were armed with six internal mine tubes with 12 mines. To make it possible to lay mines whilst moving, the mine shaft were not mounted vertically but at a slope. The minelaying system was difficult to operate, and when some U-boats were lost without trace it was suspected that mines became armed before exiting their tubes and exploded prematurely. Most of the wrecks of these U-boats have been located and dived on, their mine shafts were found empty, contradicting the premature explosion theory.
The ten Type UC I submarines – built by AG Vulcan Hamburg were powered on the surface by a four-cylinder, four-stroke Daimler RS166 diesel engine producing, whilst the five U-boats –, built by AG Weser received six-cylinder, four-stroke Benz diesel engine producing. The pressure hull of the Hamburg U-boats was long, on the Weser U-boats the pressure hull was long. This caused small differences in weight, draught, speed and endurance between these two series of U-boats: UC-1 – UC-10 had a maximum surface speed of and could travel at. UC-11 – UC-15 had a maximum surface speed of and could travel at.
The Type UC I had a displacement of when at the surface and while submerged and had a draught of. UC-11 – UC-15 displaced submerged and had a draught of. They had a length overall of and a beam of. Whilst submerged, the submarines were powered by an electric motor producing, and one propeller shaft, which provided a maximum submerged speed of. When submerged, they could operate for at. They were capable of operating at a depth of.
They were fitted with six mine tubes, twelve UC 120 mines, and one machine gun. The mine shafts were not mounted in the pressure hull, but were open to the sea. The mines were kept in wet storage and were not accessible from within the U-boat. The depth setting had to be determined before they were stowed in the tubes so once the U-boat left on patrol, the target zone could not be altered anymore, unless it required the same depth setting. Their complement was fourteen crew members. In 1916 UC-11 was fitted with a single external bow torpedo tube.
In the summer of 1915 it became clear that the war was not going to end soon, and more coastal U-boats were needed. The small Type UB I and Type UC I U-boats had fullfilled the expectations, but had their disadvantages. When the one-shaft drivetrain broke down, the U-boat was helpless. A two-shaft drivetrain would be more robust and secure. The lack of any offensive weapons like a deck gun or torpedoes caused much frustration as U-boat commanders could not engage any target going back and forth between the English coast. Therefore no more Type UC I were ordered, but these issues were corrected in the subsequent Type UC II.
History
A total of 15 Type UC I submarines were built, only two of which, and , survived the war.| Name | launched | commissioned | ships sunk | Fate |
| 26 April | 7 May | 38 / 59.088 | Sunk on 18 July 1917, north of Sandettie Bank. | |
| 12 May | 17 May | none | Sunk on 2 July 1915 in the North Sea. | |
| 28 May | 1 June | 19 / 28.266 | Sunk on 27 May 1916 in the North Sea. | |
| 6 June | 10 June | 32 / 35.070 | Scuttled on 5 October 1918 off the coast of Flanders. | |
| 13 June | 19 June | 29 / 36.288 | Grounded on the Thames Estuary on 27 April 1916, captured and scrapped. | |
| 20 June | 24 June | 54 / 64.064 | Sunk on 27 September 1917 in the Thames estuary. | |
| 6 July | 9 July | 29 / 45.270 | Sunk on 7 July 1916 North of Zeebrugge. | |
| July | 5 July | none | Grounded on the Dutch coast on 4 November 1915, interned and served in the Royal Netherlands Navy as the HLNMS M-1 until broken up in 1932. | |
| 11 July | 15 July | none | Sunk on 21 October 1915 in the North Sea. | |
| 15 July | 17 July | 15 / 30.078 | Sunk on 21 August 1916 in the North Sea by British submarine. | |
| 11 April | 23 April | 25 / 33.198 | Sunk in a minefield on 24 July 1917 in the English Channel. | |
| 29 April | 2 May | 5 / 3.039 | Sunk on 16 June 1916 off Taranto. Raised and repaired by the Italians and on 13 April 1917 commissioned in the Italian Navy as X 1. She was scrapped in 1919. | |
| May | 15 May | 3 / 387 | Grounded in the Black Sea on 29 November 1915. | |
| 13 May | 5 June | 14 / 8.967 | Sunk by British mine on 3 October 1917 off Zeebrugge. | |
| 19 May | 28 June | 1 / 3.905 | Lost in November 1916 in the Black Sea. |
Flanders Flotilla
On 26 May 1915 the first Type UC I minelayer UC-11 arrived at Zeebrugge and nine more joined in 1915. UC-1,,, UC-5,,, and UC-10 were transported by rail to the Kaiserliche Werft Antwerpen in Hoboken, re-assembled and then transferred on pontoons, towed by barges, to Bruges. and served a few months as training U-boats in Kiel, before sailing in Oktober 1915 to the Flanders Flotilla in Zeebrugge. UC-8 was lost during the transit voyage. was stationed in Kurland until February 1916 before joining the Flanders Flotilla in Zeebrugge that same month. The first patrol by a Type UC I, the UC-11, on 29 May 1915 was very successful: five ships sank on the twelve mines laid by her in the vicinity of the Goodwin Sands, and the destroyer was damaged. By end September 1915 Type UC I boats had executed 42 operations, laying 39 minefields which claimed 25 ships. These minelayers operated in the English Channel as far as Le Havre and Yarmouth, but their main activity was in Thames Estuary and The Downs. The first Type UC I to be lost was UC-2: she was rammed whilst submerged by a British ship on 2 July, sank and blew up on her own mines a day later. British divers could locate the wreck, and when they discovered a minelaying submarine, the British finally understood the origin of the many mysterious minefields before their coast. In Autumn 1915 two Type UC I were lost: UC-9 was lost with all hands on 21 October and UC-8 ran aground in Holland and was interned on 4 November.Between Oktober 1915 and March 1916 the Type UC I U-boats of the Flanders Flotilla operated in two zones: UC-1, UC-3 and UC-5 operated between the lightships Kentish Knock, Galloper and Sunk, and UC-6, UC-7 and UC-10 operated on the shipping lanes north of the Thames until Humber. They sank 75 ships, including twenty-three neutrals. During this period UC-11 was in the shipyard for repairs. After the first unrestricted U-boat campaign came to a complete halt in March 1916, the naval blockade of the UK could only be continued with mines so the Type UC I U-boats were the only U-boats able to carry on attacks on merchant shipping. Between May and August 1917 seventeen ships were lost on their mines, but by 1917 only UC-4 and UC-11 were left in the Flanders Flotilla. UC-3, UC-7 and UC-10 had been lost with all hands in 1916 and UC-5 ran aground in the Thames estuary. Its scuttling charges failed to detonate the mines and the British captured the only lightly damaged U-boat, providing them more insight on how German minelaying U-boats were operated. In order to compensate partially the losses, UC-14 was transferred by rail from the Adriatic Sea to Flanders, but was lost nine months later in a British minefield. In 1918 UC-11 was lost in a German minefield before the English coast, that the British had left deliberatly unswept in order lo lure minelayers in their own trap. At the end of the war, only UC-4 remained, and was scuttled when the German Army retreated from the Belgian coast in October 1918.