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Not sure about WWI, but for WWII: "The crew numbers aboard a U-boat varied greatly between different U-boat types and the mission it was undertaking. A Type II U-boat comprised of 25 officers and seamen, while a Type VII housed approximately 45. A Type IX had about 50 and Type XXI had a 57 man crew."
No. On a 1994 expedition, Fred Shannon's team observed a crew member wearing a life jacket outside of the wreck itself. This is the only known sighting of a crew member. The families of the crew members consider the wreck a grave site, and the final resting place of their loved ones.
they copied there butts
I guess you mean to ask what was the number of regular "crew" members of a Lancaster? As the Lancaster could have carried many more people without its regular payload (Bombs and fuel).Anyway the answer is seven (7) as follows:Bomb aimer/Nose gunnerPilotFlight engineer/Co-pilotNavigatorRadio operatorMid-upper gunner andTail gunnerIn some specialised missions the crew members were reduced and in a few a couple of extra specialists were carried aboard.
The ship called the HMS Blazer. The captain ordered blue jackets for all crew members and the idea caught on.
850 men were on the HMS Beagle. Living under cramped conditions the crew lived on this ship for 5 years.
There were sixty two people on the HMS Beagle including passengers.
he had 227 crew members
About 10 crew members.
150 crew members
he had 110 crew members
he had 110 crew members
=there were 23 crew members on the ship=
About six crew members on the iss
40 crew members
Crew members whipped the Africans if the did not eat.
That's what they are called, "crew members"