| Ship | State | Description |
|---|
| Boschdijk | Kriegsmarine | World War II: Thetarget ship was sunk.[1] |
| Cretehawser | United Kingdom | World War II: The 125-foot (38 m) concrete tugboat, was bombed and holed in theRiver Wear, she was towed up river and beached opposite the oldHylton Colliery sometime in 1942.[2] |
| LAS 21 | Spanish Navy | TheDAR 1-class anti-submarine motor launch was lost sometime in 1942.[citation needed] |
| Norman H. Davis | United States | Thedredger was destroyed by fire atKey West, Florida.[3] |
| HMT Senateur Duhamel | Royal Navy | Thenaval trawler collided withUSS Semmes ( United States Navy) in the Atlantic Ocean offCape Lookout, North Carolina, United States and sank on 6 April or 6 May 1942. Survivors were rescued by USSSemmes.[4][5] |
| Shch-304 | Soviet Navy | World War II: TheShchuka-classsubmarine struck amine and sank in theBaltic Sea sometime after 29 October.[6] |
| Sisunthon Nawa | United Kingdom | Thecargo ship was reported missing in early 1942. Presumed captured or sunk by theJapanese.[7] |
| Trabajador | United States Navy | Thetug was sunk, probably by Japanese artillery, offCorregidor,Philippines. She was salvaged post-war and served under the nameResolute into the late 1970s. |
| HMS Triumph | Royal Navy | World War II: TheT-classsubmarine disappeared sometime between 30 December 1941 and 9 January 1942 with the loss of all 59 crew. She possibly struck a mine and sank in theMediterranean Sea.[8] |
| Unnamed | United States | Thebarge foundered in theGulf of Mexico (30°00′N87°21′W / 30.000°N 87.350°W /30.000; -87.350) southwest ofPensacola, Florida.[9] |
| Unknown (formerlyCretecove) | German Army | The concrete-hulled barge was wrecked atRøssøyvågen, Norway.[10][11] |