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Russia 1979, RV Vityaz moves German refugees, studies plankton and radoactive rain

This ship, the Vityaz lead quite a life, from commercial pre war use, to end of war desperate evacuations of German civilians from soon to be not German cities, to being passed around war booty, to studying plankton, to being part of the push to end cold war nuclear testing, to hosting Jacques Cousteau and Thor Heyerdahl, to being a still existing museum ship. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

The ships 40 year career in the service of three countries was coming to an end at the time of this stamp. So it made the cut on the 6 stamp research vessel stamp issue. That limits it to display it’s research work on plankton conducted by Professor Veniamin Bogorov. Perhaps one of the less interesting  periods of it’s service.

Todays stamp is issue A2271, a 2 Kopeck stamp issued by the Soviet Union on Christmas Day in 1979. It was a 6 stamp issue in various denominations. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents used.

The ship that became the RV Vityaz was built in Bremen as the Mars and served commercially as part of the Neptun Line. It is 360 feet long and displaces 5,700 tons. In 1942 the ship was taken over by the Kriegsmarine. In late January 1945 the Mars took part in one of the navy’s largest operations of the war, Operation Hannibal. This was the evacuation of German civilians by sea from Baltic areas facing imminent Soviet occupation. The Mars ferried civilians from Konigsberg and Pillau as they were then known to peaceful but still German occupied Copenhagen. The Mars was the last German ship to make it out of Pillau.

Civilians in 1945 evacuated by sea from Pillau, the city is now called Baltiysk and is in Russia.

Seized by the British, it briefly served the Prince line as the Empire Forth. In 1946, she was passed on to the Soviet Union and went through 3 names as it was refurbished as a research vessel and allocated to the Shirshov Institute of Oceanography as the RV Vityaz. The ship’s new home port was Vladivostok.

In the mid 1950s there was a push from the political left to ban nuclear bomb testing to avoid radiation. The Soviets proposed a moratorium. Republican American President Eisenhower kept testing. There was testing in 1957 in the Nevada desert under Operation Plumbbob that due to a malfunction sent a radioactive raincloud toward Los Angeles. Embarrassed, Eisenhower limited the time, bomb size, and number of detonations of upcoming Operation Hardtack that was to take place on, above, and below unoccupied Johnston Island in the Pacific. 15 nuclear detonations occurred including the first at ultra high altitude creating the first electromagnetic pulse. It was part of anti ballistic missile research. This time there were no misfires. The USA though was embarrassed when the RV Vityaz was able to record dangerous levels of radiation in rainfall afterward despite being many miles away. On a brighter note, there was a worry that the test so high in the atmosphere would cause a hole in the ozone layer, and that does not appear to have happened.

The crater left by a nuclear detonation during Operation Hardtack

In 1979 the ship was retired from service but received a rebuilding to serve as a museum ship. It has been open to tourists in Saint Petersburg since 1994. Plankton Professor Bogorov as also seen on the stamp is the namesake of a current research vessel in Russian service.

Well my drink is empty. Come again tomorrow when there will be another story to be learned from stamp collecting.