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World War II veterans who were there when the U-505 on display at the Museum of Science and Industry was captured in 1944 visited the vessel on the 70th anniversary of its capture.
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Seven minutes after the first uncertain sonar contact, a Navy fighter pilot spotted the U-505's shadow and blasted bullets into the choppy seas below.
Tuesday marks 75 years since the U.S. Navy captured the U-505 German submarine, now on display at the Museum of Science and Industry.
Laurie Roberts: Old sailors will gather one last time today to remember a naval feat, the June 4, 1944 capture of U-505.
This story was originally published in the Chicago Tribune on Aug. 14, 1954: At the end of a 3,000 mile trip from the Atlantic ocean, the U-505, captured nazi submarine, was hauled ashore last even… ...
Seventy years ago, a then 18-year-old Gordon Hohne climbed aboard a deadly german U-505 submarine off the coast of West Africa. Gordon is the only living survivor of the nine man boarding party in … ...
One of the last surviving U.S. sailors who helped board and capture the German submarine U-505 during World War II was at the Museum of Science and Industry on Wednesday to celebrate the 70th ...