aboard
Hansestadt Danzig In August 1939,
Hansestadt Danzig, which had been projected for wartime use, was requisitioned by the
Kriegsmarine and converted her into a
minelayer. Her first commander was former
U-boat commander Hans Howaldt, who was, however, replaced by Wilhelm Schroeder after only two weeks. On 7 April 1940, the ship departed Travemünde and, escorted by the icebreaker and the 13th
Vorpostenboote flotilla, transported the II Battalion of Infantry Regiment 308 of the
198th Infantry Division, to
Copenhagen for occupation as part of
Operation Weserübung, where the troops landed at 5:00 a.m. on 9 April. The following day,
Hansestadt Danzig brought the 2nd Battalion of the 308 Infantry Regiment to
Rønne on the Danish island of
Bornholm to occupy it as well. In January 1941,
Hansestadt Danzig participated with other ships in laying the minefield "Pommern" in the North Sea and in June 1941 the minefield "Apolda" in the
Baltic Sea.
Loss On 9 July 1941,
Hansestadt Danzig, together with the minelayers
Preussen and
Tannenberg, struck a Swedish minefield east of the southern tip of
Öland at and sank near the village of
Gräsgård. The minefield had been created by the
Swedish Navy at the German request to block Soviet ships from passing near Öland. The Swedish Navy had informed the
Oberkommando der Marine (OKM) of the location of the minefield, but the OKM did not pass on the information. Furthermore, the Swedish Navy had stationed its own minesweeper HSwMS
Sandön in front of the minefield to warn incoming ships. Despite this warning, the German unit commander allowed his ships to continue sailing, and they were caught in the minefield in this way.
Preussen and
Tannenberg also ran into mines and sank. Nine crew members died in the sinking of
Hansestadt Danzig. Subsequently, many German naval officers were court-martialed, but only the mine officer in the OKM, who had not passed on information about the location of the minefield, was sentenced to one year's imprisonment in a fortress with suspended sentences until the end of the war. Still in 1941, a memorial stone to the dead of the three minelayers was erected on the south coast of Öland near
Össby, which was dedicated in the presence of Crown Prince
Gustav VI Adolf and his wife
Louise. In 1952, the wreck, lying at a depth of , was salvaged by the Swedish salvage company Intermarin and subsequently scrapped. ==References==