'Vetehinen' was a Finnish 500 tonne
Vetehinen class submarine that was constructed in the early 1930s and who served in the
Finnish Navy during the
second World War. The submarine was the first ship of its class of three submarines.
On
November 5,
1942, Vetehinen rammed the
Soviet submarine Щ 305 (ShCh 305) in the southern
Gulf of Bothnia and sank it. According to crewmembers still alive today, Vetehinen was on a night patrol searching for Soviet submarines, which stayed underwater during daytime but usually came up during the night to recharge their batteries. A contact was found, and after confirmation of an enemy contact Vetehinen launched a torpedo, which missed. Vetehinen soon launched a second torpedo, and by the order of its Captain opened fire with its deck guns. The second torpedo also missed, but the deck guns managed to damage the Soviet submarine which by now had started an emergency dive. The Captain of Vetehinen, determined not to let the submarine escape ordered his submarine to ram the other vessel which at last was a success - the "teeth" on the bow of the ship ripped open the soviet submarine's hull and caused it to sink. Vetehinen suffered a minor leak because of this but managed to return to its home port.
Name ''vetehinen'' means a
merman.
Submarines of the class
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''Vetehinen''
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''Vesihiisi''
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''Iku-Turso''
References
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Submarine construction details
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Dutch Export Submarines - Ingenieurskantoor voor Scheepsbouw