ORP Komendant Piłsudski

ORP Komendant Piłsudski
History
Imperial Russia
Builder
  • Ab Crichton
  • Turku, Finland
LaunchedJanuary 24, 1917
FateSold to Poland, 1920
Poland
NameORP Komendant Piłsudski
Acquired1921
FateSunk, September 30, 1939
Nazi Germany
NameHeisternest (M 3109)
AcquiredRaised after September 30, 1939
FateSunk, September 16, 1943
General characteristics
Class and typeFilin-class guard ship
Displacement342 tons
Length55 m (180 ft 5 in)
Beam7 m (23 ft 0 in)
Draft2.9 m (9 ft 6 in)
Speed14.5 knots (26.9 km/h; 16.7 mph)
Complement60
Armament
  • 2 × 3 in (76 mm) guns
  • 4 × machine guns
  • 30 × mines

ORP Komendant Piłsudski was a Filin-class guard ship[1] originally built at Ab Crichton in Turku, Finland, for the Imperial Russian Navy. She was bought by the Polish Navy in 1920 and served until scuttled in the Invasion of Poland on September 30, 1939.

Raised by the Germans, she was subsequently renamed Heisternest (M 3109) and served in the Kriegsmarine. Heisternest was sunk in a U.S. bomb raid in Nantes, France, on September 16, 1943.

References

  1. ^ Gardiner, Robert, ed. (1985). Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1906-1921. London, England: Conway Maritime Press Ltd. p. 319. ISBN 0-85177-245-5.
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Filin-class guard ships
Finnish Navy
  • Turunmaa
  • Karjala
Polish Navy
  • General Haller
  • Komendant Piłsudski
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Shipwrecks and maritime incidents in September 1939
Shipwrecks
  • 1 Sep: ORP Mazur
  • 3 Sep: Athenia, ORP Gryf, ORP Mewa, ORP Wicher
  • 6 Sep: ORP General Haller
  • 8 Sep: HNLMS Willem van Ewijck
  • 10 Sep: SS Magdapur, HMS Oxley
  • 12 Sep: Davara
  • 14 Sep: Fanad Head, ORP Jaskółka, U-39
  • 16 Sep: Rudyard Kipling
  • 17 Sep: HMS Courageous
  • 18 Sep: ORP Warszawa
  • 20 Sep: U-27
  • 23 Sep: Martti Ragnar
  • 24 Sep: Phryné, Caldew
  • 29 Sep: HMS Caledonia
  • 30 Sep: ORP Komendant Piłsudski
  • 30 Sep: SS Clement
Other incidents
  • 2 Sep: USS Pigeon
  • 3 Sep: Hannah Böge
  • 4 Sep: Christian Van Doornum
  • 10 Sep: Triton
  • 16 Sep: City of Paris
  • 18 Sep: ORP Orzeł (incident)
  • 22 Sep: Martti Ragnar
  • Unknown date: HMS Vanquisher, HMS Walker
  • Unknown date: SS Toruń
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Shipwrecks and maritime incidents in September 1943
Shipwrecks
  • 3 Sep: I-25
  • 4 Sep: USS LCI(L)-339
  • 5 Sep: USS YP-279
  • 7 Sep: Maloja, Velella
  • 8 Sep: Calitea II, Etna, U-983, Vesuvio
  • 9 Sep: Antonio Bajamonti, Cattaro, Conte Verde, Ermanno Carlotto, FR 22, FR 118, Lepanto, USS Nauset, Roma, Taranto
  • 10 Sep: HMS Abdiel, Argo, Piero Foscari
  • 11 Sep: Conte di Savoia, Giuseppe La Masa, Pegaso, USS Rowan
  • 12 Sep: Ametista, USS Navajo, U-617
  • 13 Sep: Terra Nova
  • 14 Sep: Giuseppe Sirtori, Katsonis, Newfoundland
  • 15 Sep: Ro-101
  • 16 Sep: Heisternest
  • 18 Sep: Francesco Rismondo
  • 19 Sep: Kansai Maru, U-341
  • 20 Sep: HMCS St. Croix, U-338, U-346
  • 21 Sep: HMS Polyanthus
  • 22 Sep: U-229
  • 23 Sep: Gaetano Donizetti
  • 24 Sep: Francesco Stocco
  • 25 Sep: Giuseppe Sirtori, USS Skill
  • 26 Sep: HMS Intrepid, Vasilissa Olga
  • 27 Sep: Ardena, Enrico Cosenz, U-161, U-221
  • 28 Sep: USS Cisco
  • 30 Sep: Sanct Svithun
  • Unknown date: HMS Gallant, USS Grayling, I-20, I-182, USS LCT-209, K-1, USS Pompano, Sebastiano Caboto, U-669
Other incidents
  • 7 Sep: U-760
  • 8 Sep: USS Bluefish, U-988
  • 9 Sep: Giuseppe Finzi, USS Peto
  • 10 Sep: I-2
  • 11 Sep: USS Savannah
  • 13 Sep: HMHS Newfoundland, HMS Uganda
  • 14 Sep: HMS Warspite
  • 16 Sep: USS Pompon
  • 19 Sep: Tango Maru
  • 23 Sep: Kulmerland
  • 25 Sep: Enrico Cosenz


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