M-96
Technical Data
- Soviet Malyutka-class diesel-electric submarine, XII series
- Length: 44.5 meters
- Armament: one 45mm gun, 2 torpedo tubes, 2 torpedoes
- Crew: 22 men
- Lost without a trace September 9-10, 1944
- Discovered jointly with Estonian team MaxStar Explorers in 2020, identified July 2021
- Depth: 42 m
Ship History
M-96 was in many respects a legendary and unique submarine. Her first commander was the famous Alexander Ivanovich Marinesco. M-96 fought in the Baltic from 1941 and took part in all Baltic Fleet campaigns, even conducting a combat patrol on Lake Ladoga. No other Baltic Fleet submarine can boast such a rich biography. The Malyutka’s combat missions mainly consisted of reconnaissance near enemy bases and landing scouts behind enemy lines.
M-96 departed on her seventh and final patrol on September 7, 1944 under Captain-Lieutenant Nikolai Ivanovich Kartashov. She was tasked with crossing the German Seeigel mine barrage and conducting reconnaissance in Narva Bay. After heading out to sea, M-96 never made radio contact again and was considered missing in action for all these years.
Our team searched within Russian territorial waters for nearly three years in the area of the Seeigel mine barrage. In 2021, based on data from Mikhail Ivanov, colleagues from Maxstar Explorer detected with their sonar an object resembling a submarine, lying just a couple of kilometers from the Russian-Estonian border.
Submarine M-96 was the only submarine lost by the Baltic Fleet in 1944. All 22 crew members perished.
According to Russian historian Miroslav Morozov, based on analysis of German documents, M-96 most likely perished on September 10, 1944 at 3:38 AM. At that time, a German submarine in Narva Bay recorded a mine explosion on its hydroacoustic equipment.
Discovery and Cause of Sinking
The diving survey on July 10, 2021 confirmed through distinctive features and mine protection details that the submarine was M-96.
The submarine lies on heading 210 degrees. The hull rests with a list to starboard and a slight bow-down trim, barely settled into the dense seabed.
The German mine exploded under the hull on the starboard side, behind the starboard bow hydroplane. The blast created a meter-wide dent with a jagged breach of the pressure hull. On impact with the bottom, the bow fractured at the breach and tilted to starboard.
Otherwise the hull is undamaged apart from corroded light superstructure elements.
The 21-K gun is stowed; muzzle plug missing, sights removed.
The conning tower fairing was destroyed by fishing trawls and corrosion.
The upper conning tower hatch is open, torn off by trawls, lying on the seabed to starboard. The periscope is retracted.
All bridge instruments were torn off by trawls. Only the engine telegraph is accessible, its stand bent at 90 degrees. The telegraph reads “Full Ahead.”
The propeller-rudder group at the stern is fully accessible. Stern hydroplanes at neutral. Rudder turned to starboard. Bow hydroplanes inaccessible.
The aft emergency hatch is closed. No emergency buoy — an open cavity in its place.
Notably, 120 meters away, German minesweeper R73 was found, sunk June 14, 1944 in the same minefield.
Historical Photos
Wreck Photos from the Seabed
Video
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