SS Antilles (1906)

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Southern Pacific Co., New York-New Orleans, Steamships, Momus, Antilles, Creole (NBY 21832).jpg
Postcard of Antilles
History
Flag of the United States (1912-1959).svgUnited States
NameAntilles
Operator
  • Southern Pacific SS Co
  • US Army Chartered Transport 1917
Builder William Cramp & Sons, Philadelphia
Launched3 December 1906 [1]
Identification
FateSunk by U-62, 17 October 1917
General characteristics
Type Passenger-cargo ship
Tonnage6,878  GRT 4,326  NRT
Displacement10,500 tons (normal coal supply)
Length
  • 421 ft 11.5 in (128.6 m) on load line
  • 410.0 ft (125.0 m) registered
Beam53.2 ft (16.2 m)
Draftmean: 26 ft (7.9 m)
Depth25.6 ft (7.8 m)
Decks3
Installed power860 NHP
Propulsion

SS Antilles was a US passenger-cargo ship launched in 1906. Chartered by the US Army in 1917 for use as a troop transport, Antilles was sunk by a German U-boat on 17 October 1917, resulting in the loss of 67 lives. At the time of its sinking the Antilles was the largest single largest loss of US lives to that point in World War I.

Contents

History

Construction

Antilles, US official number 204018, was a 6,879  GRT ship built in the shipyards of William Cramp & Sons Shipbuilding Company, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania delivered April 1907. [2] [3] Antilles was a twin screw steam vessel with nominal speed of 15 knots (28 km/h; 17 mph) and dimensions of 421 feet 11.5 inches (128.6 m) on load line, extreme beam 53.2 feet (16.2 m) and mean draft of 26 feet (7.9 m) with a displacement at normal coal supply of 10,500 tons. [4]

The vessel was operated as a combined passenger and cargo ship by the Southern Pacific Steamship Company from the time of its launch until 1917. [2] Antilles and sister ship Momus, along with several other ships, operated between New York and New Orleans with Southern Pacific Steamship's Morgan Line. [5]

Destruction

With America's first convoy. The troop ships are the Henderson, Antilles, Momus and Lenape. America's First Convoy 1917.png
With America's first convoy. The troop ships are the Henderson, Antilles, Momus and Lenape.

Following American entry into World War I, selected by the Shipping Control Committee, Antilles was turned over 26 May 1917 and chartered by the United States Army for use as a civilian crewed US Army Chartered Transport (USACT). [2] [6] [note 1] The ship was among those in the first troop convoy to depart on 14 June, after considerable confusion and delays in troop loading, from the Hoboken Port of Embarkation. [7] Antilles sailed from New York on 24 September in a four ship convoy, designated Group Number 8, composed of Antilles, a new Navy transport Henderson, another Army chartered transport Finland and another Army chartered ship that turned back, Lenape. [8] The convoy made the crossing successfully but both Antilles and Finland were torpedoed on the return voyage. [8]

Landing US Army personnel at Saint-Nazaire Base Hospital No. 9, A.E.F. - a history of the work of the New York hospital unit during two years of active service (1920) (14757473726).jpg
Landing US Army personnel at Saint-Nazaire

On 17 October 1917, three days out of Saint Nazaire, France and two days out of Quiberon Bay where another ship had joined the convoy for the return voyage, Antilles was torpedoed by German U-boat U-62 reportedly sinking in four and a half minutes after being hit. [2] [9] The ship was in a small convoy composed of Antilles, Henderson and Willehad escorted by the patrol yachts USS Alcedo, USS Aphrodite, USS Corsair and USS Kanawha. [10] Both Aphrodite and Corsair had been among the escort on that first convoy to France in June. [11] In rough weather Kanawha had been forced to turn back due to the weather with the convoy slowed by the same weather. [10] At about 6:45 a.m., during a course change, Antilles was astern of Corsair and seen to suddenly sheer out of formation and began settling by the stern. [12] Alcedo turned back to where Antilles had sunk and began picking up survivors while Corsair circled in a search for the submarine until about 8:30 with no sign of a submarine found and the search for survivors and the submarine discontinued at 10:30. [13]

Survivors of the USACT Antilles were rescued by USS Alcedo Antilles-Survivors-1917.jpg
Survivors of the USACT Antilles were rescued by USS Alcedo

The majority, 118 survivors, were rescued by Alcedo with 50 rescued by Corsair. [2] [14] [15] Among the fifty persons rescued by Corsair was then Brigadier General William Sharp McNair who had been ordered to return to take command of 151st Field Artillery Brigade. [16] [17] A total of 67 people died in the sinking. [2] The loss of life was the first case in the war involving a large number of US casualties. [18]

Survivors were landed in France on 21 October where they were immediately cared for by the Red Cross. [19] [20] Those that died were some of the first to come under the new war-insurance law allowing payment of $6,000 ($ 142,700 in 2024) payable to families in installments of $25 ($590 in 2024) per month over twenty years. [18]

Footnotes

  1. Army owned vessels of the period were US Army Transports (USAT) while the WW I abbreviation for Army chartered civilian vessels was USACT (US Army Chartered Transport).

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References

  1. "Antilles (2204018)" . Miramar Ship Index . Retrieved 28 February 2020.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Naval History And Heritage Command & (31 January 2006).
  3. Colton: Shipbuilding History.
  4. Department of Commerce: Merchant Vessels of the United States 1918, p. 476.
  5. Pacific Marine Review, April 1917, p. 78.
  6. Crowell & Wilson 1921, pp. 314–315, 623.
  7. Crowell & Wilson 1921, pp. 316–318.
  8. 1 2 Crowell & Wilson 1921, pp. 428–429.
  9. Paine 1920, pp. 101–102.
  10. 1 2 Paine 1920, pp. 101–103.
  11. Crowell & Wilson 1921, p. 395.
  12. Paine 1920, p. 104.
  13. Paine 1920, pp. 104–105.
  14. Naval History And Heritage Command: Alcedo.
  15. Naval History And Heritage Command: Corsair.
  16. Paine 1920, p. 112.
  17. Russell 1919, p. 12.
  18. 1 2 Naval Institute Proceedings, July 1917, p. 3027.
  19. Chicago Tribune (October 28, 1917).
  20. Naval Institute Proceedings, July 1917, p. 3025.

Bibliography