Corner of ul. Shkipersky protok and Nalichnaya ul.  

59.933082, 30.233821 (OpenStreetMap, Google Maps, Yandex Maps)

Submarine D-2 "Populist” (“Narodovolets”) Fence around the anchor located on the side facing Nalichnaya ul.
Total number of chain links of the whole fence
71

Историческая справка Рисунок к КП 335

The keel-laying ceremony of the first three submarines (“Decembrist”, “Populist”, and “Red Guard”) was held on 5 March 1927 at the Baltic Shipyard. The Chief Designer of the Series I submarines was B.M. Malinin, one of the few engineers personally involved in building submarines even before the revolution, which was a huge benefit to the construction process of the first Soviet submarine ships. Among them was the “Populist” (“Narodovolets”) submarine floated out on 19 May 1929. When the Great Patriotic War began, “Populist” (a D-2 submarine) was at the Baltic Shipyard, undergoing repairs. In 1942 it took part in its first military campaign. During the campaign the D-2 submarine got caught in an antisubmarine net which it managed to escape after two nights of hard and dangerous work. It broke through the defences into the southern part of the Baltic Sea where it successfully attacked enemy railroad ferries. Upon returning to Leningrad the submarine was personally welcomed by the Naval Commander-in-Chief N.G. Kuznetsov. Until 1956 D-2 was part of the Baltic Fleet, after which it was converted into an educational and training station for damage control, and remained in such status until 1987. The boat was taken to the place of its permanent mooring in the summer of 1989 and in 1994 it was opened to general public as a branch of the Central Naval Museum.

Входил в трассы категорий Лев & Единорог

Статистика взятия: 55/61 (90%).

По категориям:

  • Лев & Единорог: 55/61 (90%)