Rifles A number of rifles were recovered from
Libau before the vessel was scuttled. Several examples exist in various museums in Britain and Ireland. Among these are the
Cork Public Museum in Fitzgerald's Park in Cork, a museum in Lurgan County Armagh, the
National Museum of Ireland in Dublin, and the
Imperial War Museum in London. A number of rifles recovered from the
Libau, ammunition, port holes and other original artifacts form part a permanent exhibition on
Spike Island in
Cork Harbour, near where the
Libau was scuttled and the crew of the
Libau were held for a short time. Two Irishmen engaged in the gunrunning activity,
Austin Stack and
Con Collins, were also held on the island after capture. The exhibition also includes a working version of the
Mosin–Nagant rifle, large maps of the route taken, an image of
Roger Casement on board the submarine that carried him to Ireland, and video taken of the wreck of the
Libau as it sits on the sea bed, filmed in the 2000s. The majority of the rifles are the model known as the
Mosin–Nagant M1891, or "three-line rifle", captured in the German rout of Russian forces in the
Battle of Tannenberg. The different calibre of these rifles meant they were not attractive for issuing to German troops, for logistical reasons, and through the misunderstanding of this point they have since been widely described as 'outmoded and out of date.' In actuality, the Allies manufactured a great quantity of the rifles during the First World War. A slightly modified (M91/30) version continued to be used by European national armies through World War II and beyond. The Mosin–Nagant was a magazine rifle, enabling the user to pre-load five rounds from a clip plus, if needed, one more in the breech, and then fire accurately in reasonably rapid succession, using relatively modern .30 calibre (
7.62×54mmR) spitzer-nosed bullets. Per Russian preference, the rifles aboard
Libau were equipped with the Russian model of socket bayonets, s.c. "Rat-tails".
Anchors In 2012, a licensed salvage operation raised
Libaus anchors from the wreck site outside the entrance to
Cork Harbour at Daunt Rock. Following conservation and desalination works, the anchors were put on public display. == References ==