The
25,484 ton German luxury cruise liner was built to carry 1,465 passengers
and a crew of 400. The Gustloff and her sister ship Robert Ley were
the world's first purpose-built cruise ships. The ship, now converted
to a 500 bed hospital ship, set sail from the Bay of Danzig en route
to the port of Stettin, overcrowded with 4,658 persons including 918
naval officers and men, 373 German Women Naval Auxiliaries, 162 wounded
soldiers of whom 73 were stretcher cases, and 173 crew, all fleeing
from the advancing Red Army. Just before midnight, as the ship plowed
her way through the icy waters of the Baltic Sea, the ship was hit
by three torpedoes from the Russian submarine S-13 (a German designed
boat) commanded by Alexander Marinesko. The first torpedo hit the
bow of the ship, the second, below the empty swimming pool on E-deck
where the Women Auxiliaries were accommodated (most were killed) and
the third hit amidships. Indescribable panic reigned as the ship listed
and sank in about ninety minutes near the Danish island of Bornholm.
Rescue boats picked from the stormy seas 964 survivors, many of whom
were landed at Sassnitz on the island of Ruegen and taken on board
the Danish hospital ship Prince Olaf which was anchored in the harbour.
The exact number of drowned will never be known, as many more refugees
were picked up from small boats as the Wilhelm Gustloff headed for
the open sea and were never counted. (Latest research puts the number
of people on board at 10,582) Many of the 964 persons rescued from
the sea, died later, and it is likely that well over 7,000 souls perished.
From one of the many
stories of Wilhelm Gustlof on the Internet;
On the bitter cold night of January 30th, 1945, the former KdF Cruise
Liner Wilhelm Gustloff, at the time serving as a barracks ship for
the Kriegsmarine, left from the Baltic port of Gotenhafen and set
sail for the relative safety of the west, away from the advance of
Soviet forces that were converging on the region. The Gustloff, designed
to carry a maximum of 1,865 people total, was transporting 10,582
refugees, soldiers, sailors, and crew - including scores of sick and
injured, as well as women, children and the elderly. All were fleeing
from the terrible fate that awaited most of those left in the wake
of the Soviet advance, including Germans and non-Germans alike. When
the gray light of dawn lifted over the freezing cold waves of the
Baltic Sea on January 31st, 1945, it would fail to fall upon the decks
of the Gustloff, for that night it had been sunk by the Soviet sub
S-13 and disappeared under the dark sea in less than 50 minutes, taking
with it 9,343 lives, marking its loss as the most tragic naval loss
in all of history. The Wilhelm Gustloff as a KdF ship pre-1939 The
Wilhelm Gustloff (25484 BRT) was launched in 1937 as the crown jewel
of the Kraft durch Freude or Strength through Joy organization (KdF).
The KdF was a subgroup of the Deutsche Arbeitsfront or German Labor
Front (DAF). The DAF had been organized in place of unions which had
been banned by the NSDAP. The DAF had as its goal the control and
direction of the entire German labor force, and the KdF was used as
a means towards this end by providing activities such as trips, cruises,
concerts, and cultural activities. These events were specifically
directed towards the working class and it was through the KdF that
the NSDAP hoped to bring to the "common man" the pleasures
once reserved only for the rich. By opening the door for the working
class to easily and affordably take part in activities once reserved
only for the rich, it was hoped that the labor force could be lulled
into being more flexible and productive. The launching of the Gustloff
in 1937 in Hamburg The Wilhelm Gustloff was named after a man considered
by some during the time to be a German martyr. Wilhelm Gustloff had
been the leader of the NSDAP in Switzerland and he was assassinated
in 1936. His name was chosen for the largest liner of the KdF fleet
and in 1937 when it was launched, his widow christened the bow on
its maiden voyage. The Gustloff was launched as the flag ship for
the entire KdF fleet, of which there were a great number of ships
both large and small, many of which would go on to experience similar
stories during WWII. The Wilhelm Gustloff in harbor as a KdF ship
in 1938 For nearly two years after it was launched the Wilhelm Gustloff
sailed on pleasure cruises in the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean
and North Seas. Then in May of 1939, four months before WWII began,
the Gustloff took part in a slightly different role. Along side five
other ships, the Robert Ley, the Deutsche, the Stuttgart, the Sierra
Cordoba, and the Oceana, (the first four ship of the KdF fleet), the
Gustloff took part in transporting back to Germany the Legion Condor
from Spain. These men were being brought home after the successful
defeat of the Republican forces by Franco's Nationalists. The Gustloff,
along with other ships of the transport fleet, arrived in Vigo, Spain
on May 24th, 1939 and unloaded large amounts of medical supplies and
other materials that were given to the Spanish Social Help organization.
On May 26th, 1939 the members of the Legion were loaded on the ships
in Vigo harbor, with the Gustloff taking on 1,405 men. On May 30th,
1939 the ships arrived in German waters and were escorted into the
Port of Hamburg by a parade of vessels including the yacht Hamburg,
Panzerschiffe Admiral Graf Spee and Panzerschiffe Admiral Scheer.
Passengers onboard the Gustloff on a cruise in 1938 Passengers onboard
in 1938, notice the life boat cranes behind them On September 22nd,
1939, shortly after the Second World War broke out, the Wilhelm Gustloff
was offically commissioned into the Kriegsmarine by the German Armed
Forces for use as a hospital ship. It was classified as Lazaretschiff
D, or Hospital Ship D. Lazaretschiffe in the German Armed Forces served
as floating hospitals for the sick and wounded, and as with many other
nations during the period, their use was strictly monitored and followed
a specific set of international procedures for their employement.
Depending on their intended region of use, they were required to be
painted entirely white, with the inclusion of a green band running
the length of the ship on all sides and various red cross markings
on the deck, stacks, and sides. They were also prohibited from carrying
any form of offensive of defensive weapons. It was in this role that
the Gustloff would first enter WWII. The first employement of the
Gustloff as Lazaretschiff D was in Danzig-Neufahrwasser at the end
of the Polish Campaign. The first wounded taken on board were 685
soliders from the defeated Polish Army. The Gustloff went on to serve
in the Danzig Bay region for the next many weeks, later taking part
in relief operations for the thousands of Baltic Germans that were
being moved from regions recently brought under the control of the
Soviets, back to Germany or to areas controlled by Germans. The Gustloff
took part in this operation alongside a number of other former KDF
ships such as the Stuttgart, Der Deutsche, Robert ley and the Oceana.
From May of 1940 until July of the same year, the Gustloff was on
station in Norway in Oslo as a floating hospital for the sick and
wounded from the Norwegian Campaign. The Gustloff left Oslo and headed
for Stettin on July 2nd, 1940, carrying on board 563 wounded. During
the late summer and early fall of 1940, the Gustloff was ordered to
prepare for operations during the planned Invasion of England, which
eventually were cancelled in late summer 1940. Once more, on October
20th, 1940, the Gustloff sailed again to Oslo and took on 414 wounded
for transport back to Swinemünde. Shortly after this trip, the
Gustloff was to end its service as a Lazarettschiff when it was directed
that it move to Gotenhafen for service as a barracks ship for the
U-boot arm of the Kriegsmarine. From September 22nd, 1939 until November
20th, 1940, the Gustloff took on a total of 3,151 wounded and sick,
and over the course of four trips, transported 1,961 wounded back
to Germany. The Gustloff as Hospital Ship "D" in 1939 As
a Wohnschiff (barracks ship) of the Kriegsmarine, under the control
of the 1.Unterseeboots-Lehrdivision, and later the 2.Unterseeboots-Lehrdivision,
the Gustloff lay at anchor in Gotenhafen, its new resting place, for
over four years. Then, in January of 1945, the Gustloff was once more
put into service, this time as a part of the largest planned naval
evacuation operation in history, the rescue and transport of millions
of refugees, soldiers, sick, injured and others fleeing from the advance
of the Soviet forces in east. Nearly all of the former KdF liners,
along with many other freight and cargo ships, naval auxiliaries,
and even combat vessels, took part in this massive rescue operations.
Of the largest ships that took part were the liners and passenger
ships, which mostly, like the Gustloff, were until then being used
as barrack and accommodation ships in either Danzig, Pillau or Gotenhafen.
The largest ships were the following: Cap Arcona (27561), Robert Ley
(27288), Hamburg (22117), Hansa (21131), Deutschland (21046), Potsdam
(17528), Pretoria (16662), Berlin (15286), General Steuben (14660),
Monte Rosa (13882), Antonio Delfino (13589), Winrich von Kniprode
(10123), Ubena (9554), and the Goya. At the end of the War, the operation
proved to be a huge success, in light of the crushing and total defeat
of Germany, in so far that over 2,000,000 people were rescued from
areas of the Soviet advance. Had these 2,000,000 refugees not been
rescued, as has been well documented elsewhere (As in the volumes
"Documents on the Expulsion of the Germans from Eastern-Central-Europe),
the plight of many of the refugees was likely to have been grim. Out
of the total number rescued, about 25,000 to 30,000 lives were lost,
the majority with the sinking of the Gustloff and the Goya with a
combined total of over 15,000 deaths. Considering the number of people
transported and the conditions and time of the transport (January
- May, 1945), the number of lives lost versus the number rescued remains
to this day a stark reminder of the size, scope and determination
of the massive German sea rescue. Rare color photo of the Gustloff
at anchor in Gotenhafen When the Gustloff left the relative protection
of the harbor at Gotenhafen on January 30th, 1945, the weather was
very poor; wind strength of 7, it was snowing, the temperature was
10 degrees below zero, and ice flows were in the water. Any chance
of survival once in the water in weather like this was next to impossible.
Under its own power, the Wilhelm Gustloff began to punch its way through
the choppy, blustery Baltic Sea, un-escorted against the threat of
submarine attacks, with its only protection being the few anti-aircraft
guns it had onboard to protect against air attack. Against the deadly
submarine, the Gustloff was naked. According to the ships own records,
the list of passengers on the 30th included 918 Naval officers and
men, 173 crew, 373 members of the Woman's Naval Auxiliary units, 162
wounded, and 4,424 refugees, for an official total of 6,050 people.
This is according to the official list though, and doesn't take into
account the many hundreds of other people that one way or another,
were able to make their way onto the seemingly safe decks of the Gustloff.
In fact, new research has now shown that the total number of people
on the Gustloff at the time it was sunk was actually 10,582! Newly
published research by Heinz Schon has set the number of people on
the Gustloff as follows: 8,956 refugees, 918 officers NCOs and men
of the 2.Unterseeboot-Lehrdivision, 373 female naval auxiliary helpers,
173 naval armed forces auxiliaries, and 162 heavily wounded soldiers,
for a total of 10,582 people on board on January 30th. Then, at 2108
01.30.45, (9:08pm, January 30th, 1945 Gotenhafen time; 7:08pm Moscow
time; 2:08pm Milwaukee, WI, USA time), the Soviet sub S-13, commanded
by Alexander Marinesko, hit the Gustloff with a spread of three torpedoes.
The Gustlof immediately leaned to starboard, righted itself, and then
leaned to again. She then launched rescue flares and broadcast an
SOS. According to an eye-witness account of Oberbootsmannsmatt Karl
Hoffman, the first torpedo struck the Gustloff at the bow, directly
below the helm deep below the waterline. The second torpedo exploded
under the area of the ship that was the swimming pool, and the third
torpedo hit amidship in the forward part of the engine room, ripping
the ship hull and shattering the machinery. Soon, the forecastle was
nearly underwater, with the stern beginning to rise above the waterline.
In under 50 minutes time, the Gustloff was gone, taken beneath the
icy black waters of the Baltic, and with her, 9,343 men, women and
children. Amazingly, 1,239 people were saved by the heroic and selfless
work of a number of German ships in the area. Torpedoboot T-36 rescued
564 people, Torpedoboot Löwe 472 people, Minensuchboot M387 98
people, Minensuchboot M375 43 people, Minensuchboot M341 37 people,
steamer Gottingen saved 28 people, Torpedofangboot TF19 saved 7, freighter
Gotland 2 people, and Vorpostenboot 1703 saved one person, a 1 year-old
child. The flight from the Eastern regions and the loss of the Gustloff
When the Gustloff sank it was an event unlike any in naval history,
if for no other reason, because of the sheer scale of the tragedy.
Many ships have sunk with horrible loss of life, but never have so
many lives been lost with a single ship. Like all naval tragedies,
the scene was one of sheer and complete horror. The suffering of those
on the Gusltoff was unspeakable, it transcends all time and place,
all nationality, and all borders. It was a terrifying loss of human
life, and one that few know of today. In 1955, a German film called
"Nacht fiel über Gotenhafen" was released that portrayed
the final voyage of the Gustloff, a film that is both very accurate
and a very touching tribute to those lost at sea. Lastly, of the very
few books on the Gustloff, a recently published book by Heinz Schon
called "SOS Wilhelm Gustloff - Die größte Schiffekatastrophe
der Geschicte" is now considered to be the defenitive work on
the sinking and the previous history of the ship. An artists drawing
from diver reports of the position of the wreck of the Gusloff today
What is now left of the Wilhelm Gustloff is a broken wreck designated
officially as a grave site and off limits to most divers. The bow
and stern of the ship are well preserved while the mid-section is
heavily damaged and crushed in upon itself. We shall always remember
those lost with Gustloff. May they rest in peace.