History | |
---|---|
United Kingdom | |
Name | Clan Macfadyen |
Owner | Clan Line Steamers Ltd |
Operator | Cayzer, Irvine & Co Ltd |
Port of registry | Glasgow |
Builder | Ayrshire Dockyard Co Ltd, Irvine |
Yard number | 490 |
Launched | 15 February 1923 |
Completed | May 1923 |
Identification |
|
Fate | Torpedoed 26 November 1942 |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | Clan Macnab-class cargo liner |
Tonnage | |
Length | 418.2 ft (127.5 m) |
Beam | 53.4 ft (16.3 m) |
Draught | 27 ft 9 in (8.46 m) |
Depth | 33.6 ft (10.2 m) |
Installed power |
|
Propulsion |
|
Speed | 13 knots (24 km/h) |
Crew | 84 plus eight DEMS gunners |
Sensors and processing systems |
|
Armament |
|
Notes | sister ships: Clan Macnab, Clan Macnair, Clan Macnaughton, Clan Macneil, Clan Macfarlane |
SS Clan Macfadyen was a UK steam cargo liner. She was launched in 1923 and spent her entire career with Clan Line. A U-boat sank her in 1942 with the loss of 82 lives.
She was the second of three Clan Lines ship to be called Clan Macfadyen. The first was a steamship that was built in 1899 and sold in 1921. The third was a ship bought from the Ministry of Transport in 1947 and sold in 1958.
The Ayrshire Dockyard Co Ltd of Irvine, Ayrshire, built a class of six sister ships for Clan Line. Clan Macnab was launched in 1921 and gave her name to the class. [1] Clan Macnair, Clan Macnaughton and Clan Macneil were launched in 1921, and ClanMacfarlane was launched in 1922. [2]
Clan Macfadyen was the final member of the class to be built. [3] She was launched on 15 February 1923 [4] and completed that May. She was 418.2 ft (127.5 m) long, had a beam of 53.4 ft (16.3 m) and draught of 27 ft 9 in (8.46 m). Until 1931 her tonnages were 6,224 GRT and 3,864 NRT. [5]
Clan Macfadyen was built with a triple-expansion engine made by Dunsmuir and Jackson of Govan that developed 630 NHP. In 1928 she was sent to Deutsche Schiff- und Maschinenbau in Germany to be the first Clan Line ship to be fitted with a Bauer-Wach exhaust steam turbine. [3] This increased her total power to 743 NHP [5] and increased her speed, but a problem with her condenser prevented it from improving her fuel economy as it was designed to do. Despite this setback, and the £10,000 cost of the installation, Clan Line decided to have Bauer-Wach turbines installed in numerous existing ships in the fleet, and to specify them for new steamships with reciprocating engines. [3]
In 1931 Clan Macfadyen's tonnages were revised to 6,191 GRT and 3,779 NRT. By 1936 Clan Macfadyen had been fitted with an echo sounding device. [6]
Clan Macfadyen's UK official number was 146317. Her code letters were KNWL until 1933–34, [5] when they were superseded by the call sign GDKZ. [6]
In the Second World War Clan Macfadyen was defensively armed with a 4-inch naval gun on her stern, plus a quick-firing 12-pounder gun and four machine guns for anti-aircraft cover. [7]
On 7 February 1940 the UK Government requisitioned Clan Macfadyen. [3]
On 17 November 1942 Clan Macfadyen left Pernambuco in Brazil, sailing to Trinidad with a cargo of rum, mail, 5 tons of hemp and 6,705 tons of sugar. She was unescorted and steering a zigzag course. At 1324 hrs on 26 November U-508 fired two torpedoes at her but both missed. Clan Macfayden's crew did not notice the attack, and about 2300 hrs she stopped zigzagging. [7]
At 0002 hrs on 27 November the ship was near the Orinoco Delta on the coast of Venezuela, about 95 miles southeast of Trinidad, when U-508 attacked again. Two torpedoes hit Clan Macfadyen on her starboard side, breaking her in two. Her forepart capsized and sank, her after part sank on an even keel, and both had sunk within four minutes. [7]
The crew had no time to launch any of her four lifeboats. Nine crewmen and one DEMS gunner managed to climb aboard two liferafts that floated clear of the wreck. On 31 November the schooner Harvard rescued three crewmen and a gunner from one liferaft and took them to Trinidad. On 1 December six men reached Trinidad on the other liferaft. [7]
The Master, Percy Williams, 11 Merchant Navy officers, 63 lascar crewmen, seven DEMS gunners and a 17-year-old Merchant Navy apprentice were killed. [8]
Shin'yō Maru was a cargo steamship that was built in 1894, had a fifty-year career under successive British, Australian, Chinese and Greek owners, was captured by Japan in the Second World War, and sunk by a United States Navy submarine in 1944.
SS Clan Alpine was a UK steam cargo liner. She was launched in 1918 and sunk by a U-boat in 1943.
SS City of Venice was an intermediate ocean liner that was launched in 1924 in Northern Ireland for Ellerman Lines. In the Second World War she was a troop ship. In 1943 a U-boat sank her in the Mediterranean, killing 22 of the crew and troops aboard.
SS Corinthic was a British cargo steamship. She was built on Teesside in 1924, sailed in a number of convoys in the Second World War, survived an overwhelming German attack on Convoy SC 7 October 1940, but was sunk by a German U-boat off West Africa in April 1941.
MV Spreewald was a Hamburg America Line (HAPAG) cargo motor ship that was launched in 1922 and sunk in a friendly fire incident in 1942. She was renamed Anubis in 1935, and reverted to her original name Spreewald in 1939.
RMS Orcades was a British passenger ship that Vickers-Armstrongs Ltd of Barrow-in-Furness built as an ocean liner in 1937. Her owner was Orient Line, which operated her between Britain and Australia 1937–39, and also as a cruise ship. The British Admiralty then requisitioned her and had her converted into a troopship.
SS Clan Macneil was a UK steam cargo liner. She was launched in 1921, survived the Second World War and scrapped in 1952. She spent her entire career with Clan Line.
SS Primrose Hill was a British CAM ship that saw action in World War II, armed with a catapult on her bow to launch a Hawker Sea Hurricane. She was completed by William Hamilton & Co in Port Glasgow on the Firth of Clyde in September 1941.
MV Tower Grange was a cargo ship completed by William Doxford & Sons Ltd in Sunderland in 1940. She was owned by Tower Steamships Co Ltd and managed by Counties Ship Management Co Ltd of London (CSM), both of which were offshoots of the Rethymnis & Kulukundis shipbroking company. Tower Grange was a sister ship of MV Putney Hill, which Doxford built in the same year for another CSM company, Putney Hill Steamships Co Ltd.
SS Marietta E was a British cargo ship completed by William Hamilton & Co in Port Glasgow on the Firth of Clyde in June 1940. She had a single 520 NHP triple-expansion steam engine built by David Rowan and Company of Glasgow, that drove a single screw. She had eight corrugated furnaces heating two 225 lbf/in2 single-ended boilers with a combined heating surface of 7,643 square feet (710 m2), plus one auxiliary boiler.
SS Calabria was a passenger and cargo steamship. AG Weser built her for Norddeutscher Lloyd. She was launched as D/S Werra and completed in 1922.
SS Hertford was a refrigerated cargo steamship that was launched in Germany in 1917, seized by the United Kingdom in 1920 as World War I reparations, and sunk by a U-boat in 1942 with the loss of four members of her crew.
SS Clan Macarthur was a British refrigerated cargo steamship. She was built for Cayzer, Irvine and Company's Clan Line Steamers Ltd as one of its Cameron-class steamships. She was launched in Greenock in 1936 and sunk in the Indian Ocean by enemy action in August 1943.
SS Avoceta was a British steam passenger liner. She was built in Dundee in 1923 and was sunk by enemy action in the North Atlantic in 1941. She belonged to Yeoward Line, which carried passengers and fruit between Liverpool, Lisbon, Madeira and the Canary Islands.
SS Mohamed Ali El-Kebir, formerly SS Teno, was one of a pair of steam turbine ocean liners built in Scotland in 1922 for the Chilean company CSAV. She and her sister ship Aconcagua ran between Valparaíso and New York via the Panama Canal until 1932, when CSAV was hit by the Great Depression and surrendered the two ships to the Scottish shipbuilder Lithgows to clear a debt.
Bristol City was a British cargo steamship that was launched in 1919 and sunk in the Battle of the Atlantic in 1943. She was the third of five ships of that name owned by Bristol City Line.
SS Clan Macalister was a Clan Line heavy-lift cargo liner. She was launched in 1930 in Scotland and sunk by enemy aircraft during the Dunkirk evacuation in 1940 with the loss of 18 of her crew. She was the largest ship to take part in the Dunkirk evacuation.
SS Santa Fé was a German refrigerated cargo steamship. She is now a Black Sea shipwreck and part of her cargo is of interest to marine archaeologists.
HMS Malvernian was an Ellerman Lines cargo steamship that was built in 1937. In January 1941 she was converted into an ocean boarding vessel. That July she sank after a German air attack crippled her in the Atlantic Ocean.
SS Florian was an Ellerman Lines cargo steamship that was launched in 1939 and completed in 1940. A U-boat sank her with all hands in 1941 in the Battle of the Atlantic.