German naval ship Mühlhausen

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History
Germany
Name
  • Walther von Ledebur (1967-1994)
  • Mühlhausen (1995-2007)
NamesakeMühlhausen
BuilderBurmester-Werft, Bremen
Launched30 June 1966
Commissioned1967
Decommissioned2007
ReclassifiedTraining & support ship for mine-clearing divers (1995)
RefitPeene-Werft shipyard, Wolgast (1994-1995)
General characteristics
Tonnage854 GRT
Length63.16 m (207 ft 3 in)
Beam10.84 m (35 ft 7 in)
Draft2.9 m (9 ft 6 in)
Propulsion2 Maybach diesel engines, 1,912 kW each
Complement34 + 15
Notes1 recompression chamber for 6 divers

Mühlhausen was a naval ship in service with the German Navy. The ship was launched June 30, 1966 at the Burmester Werft in Bremen with the name Walther von Ledebur. She was a prototype of a new class of ocean-going minesweepers, which however was not accepted by the Bundesmarine. She was commissioned in 1967 and served with a civilian crew as a trials ship for the Wehrtechnische Dienststelle (Defence Technology Agency) until decommissioning in 1994. She had the pennant number A1410 and was categorized as a Type 742 class ship.

After her decommissioning the German Navy decided to convert her into a training and support vessel for mine-clearing divers. The rebuilding was done at the Peene-Werft shipyard in Wolgast and on April 6, 1995 she was recommissioned as Mühlhausen (M1052) and classified as Type 742A ship.

After forty years in service, the Mühlhausen was decommissioned in 2007 and was replaced by the converted Frankenthal-class minehunter Rottweil.

At the time of her decommissioning, Mühlhausen was the largest naval ship still in service with a hull made of glued laminated timber (mahogany).

References[edit]

  • "Minentaucherboot MÜHLHAUSEN" (in German). Deutsche Marine. Retrieved 4 August 2008.