Photo. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/be/German_blockade_runner_Odenwald_underway%2C_in_
November_1941_%28NH_123749%29.jpg
Cargo: 6,223 tons
3,857 tons of Crude rubber, 545 tons of Oats, 900 tons of Peanuts, 7 tons of Oatmeal, 102 Goodrich Auto tires, 97 tons of Tannic Acid, 360 tons of Brass, 50 tons of Copper, 25 tons of Dried Fruits, 3 tons of Wax, 26 tons of Roots, 226 tons of Steel, 0,5 ton of Hair, 3,5 tons of Fish oil, 17 tons of Nuts, 4 tons of Tea.
Odenwald seen astern of the boarding party. Photo. www.history.navy.mil
Prisoners from Odenwald seen aboard USS Omaha bound for San Juan. Among them there was a former crewmember from raider Graf Spee. Photo. www.history.navy.mil
Photo. www.history.navy.mil
Odenwald Incident, November 6, 1941. MS Odenwald, Hamburg alias, Willmoto, captured on 6 November 1941. Image taken by U.S. Naval Air Station, San Juan, Puerto Rico, 18 November 1941. Official U.S. Navy Photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives. (2014/9/14) https://www.history.navy.mil/content/history/museums/nmusn/explore/photography/wwii/wwii-atlantic/battle-of-the-atlantic/pre-us-entry-into-wwii/80-cf-1058-1.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S9XTvYhTj-g
Above a footage on the seizure of Odenwald and her arrival at Puerto Rico late November 1941.