Submarine Emerges in the Middle of the City –Then Maintenance Workers Take a Look Inside

The 1971 mystery entry

One detail in the logbook had attracted less attention than the others, mostly because it appeared on the final page and seemed, at first, like a clerical anomaly. After the last wartime entry in November 1943, there were twenty-seven blank pages. And then, on the very last page of the book, a single line in handwriting that analysis would later confirm was different from Voss’s. It was written in English, in a neat, unhurried hand, and it said: Completed. See file AR-7. H. The entry was dated 3rd September 1971.

Someone had gone back to the submarine. Twenty-eight years after the war ended, someone had descended through that hatch into the sealed dark, written one line in the logbook, and left. File AR-7 was never found—not in the crate, not in any archive. The initial H matched no name in any record connected to the original project.

What had been completed in 1971 remained, and perhaps would always remain, a mystery. But the acoustic technology described in those wartime pages had been filed as a patent in the United Kingdom on 3rd September 1971. The applicant was listed as a private firm with a registered address that no longer existed.