The ship as Rotterdam, in a painting by Fred Pansing | |
History | |
---|---|
Name |
|
Namesake |
|
Owner |
|
Operator | 1917: Cunard Line |
Port of registry |
|
Route | |
Builder | Harland & Wolff, Belfast |
Yard number | 312 |
Laid down | 16 May 1896 |
Launched | 18 February 1897 |
Completed | 29 July 1897 |
Maiden voyage | 18 August 1897 |
Identification |
|
Fate | Torpedoed and sunk by U-151, 18 June 1918 |
General characteristics | |
Type |
|
Tonnage | 8,139 GRT, 5,160 NRT, 9,390 DWT |
Length | 470.3 ft (143.3 m) |
Beam | 53.2 ft (16.2 m) |
Depth | 22.3 ft (6.8 m) |
Decks | 3 |
Installed power | 954 NHP, 5,500 ihp |
Propulsion |
|
Speed | 15 knots (28 km/h) |
Capacity | |
Armament | by 1918: defensively armed |
SS Dwinsk was a transatlantic ocean liner that was launched in Ireland in 1897 as Rotterdam, renamed C. F. Tietgen in 1906, and renamed Dwinsk in 1913. A U-boat sank her in 1918, with the loss of 23 lives. The ship was built for Holland America Line (Nederlandsch-Amerikaansche Stoomvaart Maatschappij, or NASM), but was successively owned by Scandinavian America Line and Russian American Line, and after the Russian Revolution she was managed by Cunard Line.
She was the third of several NASM ships to be named after the city of Rotterdam. She was also the first ship that Harland & Wolff built for NASM.
Harland & Wolff built the ship in Belfast as yard number 312 on slipway number 9. [1] Her keel was laid on 16 May 1896, she was launched on 18 February 1897 as Rotterdam, and she was completed on 29 July 1897. [2] Her registered length was 470.3 ft (143.3 m), her beam was 53.2 ft (16.2 m) and her depth was 22.3 ft (6.8 m). [3] Her tonnages were 8,139 GRT, 5,160 NRT and 9,390 DWT. [2]
Rotterdam had berths for 212 passengres in first class, 112 in second class, and 837 in third class. Her holds had capacity for 323,000 cubic feet (9,100 m3) of baled cargo. [2]
The ship had twin screws, each driven by a three-cylinder triple-expansion steam engine. The combined power of her twin engines was rated at 954 NHP [3] or 5,500 ihp, and gave her a speed of 15 knots (28 km/h). She made her sea trials on 29 July 1897. [2]
NASM registered Rotterdam at Rotterdam. Her code letters were WLJR. [3] On 18 August 1897 she left Rotterdam on her maiden voyage, which was to New York via Boulogne. Her final voyage in this route began from Rotterdam on 17 February 1906. [4]
On 5 April 1906 Scandinavian America Line bought Rotterdam and renamed her C. F. Tietgen, [2] after the Danish industrialist Carl Frederik Tietgen. She was registered in Copenhagen, and her code letters were NPRK. [5] On 29 April she began her first voyage from Copenhagen to NewYork via Christiania and Kristiansand. [4]
On 28 June 1906 C. F. Tietgen collided with the 70-foot (21.3 m), 63 GRT US schooner E. C. Hay in the North River off the Desbrosses Street Ferry terminal in New York City. E. C. Hay sank, but all four people aboard her survived. [6]
By 1910 C. F. Tietgen was equipped for wireless telegraphy. [7] On 7 July 1910 she left Copenhagen on a cruise to the North Cape, calling at Bergen and Trondheim. [8] By 1913 her call sign was DCF. [9] On 29 July 1913, Nordisk Film chartered her to appear in the film Atlantis . [8] On 6 November 1913 she began her final voyage from Copenhagen to New York. [4] She completed 110 transatlantic crossings for Scandinavian America Line. [8]
On 24 December 1913 Russian American Line bought C. F. Tietgen and renamed her Dwinsk (Двинск), which is a Russian name for the city of Daugavpils in what was then the Vitebsk Governorate of the Russian Empire. She was registered in Libau (now Liepāja in Latvia), her code letters were IWAR, [10] and her wireless telegraph call sign was RDK. [11]
On 10 February 1914, Dwinsk began her first voyage from Libau to New York. Her final voyage on this route began on 28 July 1914, the day the First World War began. On 20 September 1914 she began her first voyage from Archangel to New York via Hammerfest. [4]
After the October Revolution in the Russian Empire, the United Kingdom government seized Dwinsk. The Shipping Controller appointed Cunard Line to manage her. Her UK official number was 142312 and her code letters were JSKH. [10] She was defensively armed with one or more naval guns. On at least one voyage she carried troops from Halifax, Nova Scotia to Great Britain. [12]
On 18 June 1918 Dwinsk was making 13 knots (24 km/h) en route from Brest, France to the USA. Sources differ as to whether her destination was Newport News [2] or New York. [13] The weather was fine, the sea was smooth, with a slight swell, and visibility was good. At about 09:20 hrs U-151 fired a torpedo at her about 400 nautical miles (740 km) north of Bermuda. Dwinsk's lookouts sighted the torpedo on her port quarter at a range of 200 yards (180 m). Her helm was put hard to port, but the torpedo hit her and exploded in her number 4 hold. U-151 then surfaced and opened fire with her two 88 mm deck guns. One round hit Dwinsk's magazine, which exploded. Her Master gave the order to abandon ship, and her crew launched seven of her lifeboats. Dwinsk sank at about 11:15 hrs at position 39°10′N63°10′W / 39.167°N 63.167°W . [13]
U-151 interrogated the occupants of the boat commanded by the Second Officer, but took no prisoners. The U-boat remained in the area, waiting to attack any ship that came to rescue survivors. Later on 18 June, the troopship USS Von Steuben approached the lifeboats. U-151 fired a torpedo at her, but by changing course Von Steuben avoided being hit, and the troop ship returned fire, firstly with her 5-inch guns, and then with depth charges. [14]
In the ensuing days, the lifeboats became separated. On 21 June the westbound troop ship USS Siboney found two of Dwinsk's boats and rescued their occupants. [15] Four more boats were found and their occupants rescued. One boat, commanded by the boatswain's mate, was found after eight days. The boat commanded by the Chief Officer lost one occupant to drowning. [13] On 28 June USS Rondo found the boat and rescued its remaining occupants. [16] The boat commanded by the Second Officer was never found. Including the Second Officer, it carried 22 people. [13]
In January 1919 Dwinsk's Chief Officer, Robert Pritchard, and Boatswain's Mate, Philip Larbalastier, were awarded the Distinguished Service Medal [17] for their "good seamanship, management and fortitude" in command of their respective boats. [13]
Alexander Sibiryakov was a steamship that was built in Scotland in 1909 as Bellaventure, and was originally a seal hunting ship in Newfoundland. In 1917 the Russian government bought her to be an icebreaker. She served the RSFSR and Soviet Union until 1942, when she was sunk by enemy action. The ship gave notable service in the Russian Arctic during the 1930s.
SS California was a twin-screw steamer that D. and W. Henderson and Company of Glasgow built for the Anchor Line in 1907 as a replacement for the aging ocean liner Astoria, which had been in continuous service since 1884. She worked the Glasgow to New York transatlantic route and was sunk by the German submarine SM U-85 on 7 February 1917.
SS Potsdam was a steam ocean liner that was launched in Germany in 1899 for Holland America Line. In 1915 Swedish American Line acquired her and renamed her Stockholm.
SS Noordam was a steam ocean liner that was launched in Ireland in 1901 and scrapped in the Netherlands in 1928–29. Holland America Line owned her throughout her career. From 1923 to 1924 Swedish American Line chartered her and renamed her Kungsholm.
USS Rijndam (ID–2505) was the Holland America Line (HAL) ocean liner Rijndam, also spelt Ryndam, which was launched in Ireland in 1901 and scrapped in the Netherlands in 1929. The US requisitioned her as the United States Navy troopship USS Rijndam from 1918 until 1919. She was the first of four Holland America Line ships to be called Ryndam.
Montrose was a British merchant steamship that was built in 1897 and wrecked in 1914. She was built as a cargo liner for Elder, Dempster & Company. In 1903 the Canadian Pacific Railway bought her and had her converted into a passenger liner.
SS Taormina was a transatlantic ocean liner that was launched in Scotland in 1907 for an Italian shipping line. She was owned successively by Italia Società di Navigazione a Vapore, Lloyd Italiano and Navigazione Generale Italiana (NGI). Taormina was briefly chartered as a troop ship for the US Armed Forces in 1918. She was scrapped in 1929.
SS Statendam was a transatlantic ocean liner that was launched in Ireland in 1898 for Holland America Line. She was the first of several ships in the company's history to be called Statendam. She was NASM's first ship of more than 10,000 GRT, and she was the largest ship in the company's fleet until Potsdam was completed in 1900.
USS Santa Rosalia (ID-1503) was a cargo steamship that was built in Scotland in 1910 and served in the merchant fleets of the United Kingdom, United States and Greece. She served in the United States Navy in 1918–19. She was renamed Stefanos Costomenis in 1929 and sank in the North Atlantic in 1936.
USS Oosterdijk was a Holland America Line cargo steamship that was built in 1913 and sank as a result of a collision in 1918. She served in the United States Navy, with the Naval Registry Identification Number ID–2586, from March 1918 until her loss that July. Some sources anglicise her name as Oosterdyk, but Lloyd's Register registered her with the Dutch spelling Oosterdijk.
The Queen was an English Channel passenger ferry that was built in 1903 and sunk in 1916. She was the South Eastern and Chatham Railway (SECR)'s first steam turbine ship.
SS Orteric was a Bank Line cargo and passenger steamship that was built in Scotland in 1910–11 and sunk by a U-boat in the Mediterranean Sea in 1915. In 1911 she took 960 Spanish and 565 Portuguese migrants to Hawaii to work on the sugar plantations.
SS Maasdam was a Dutch turbine steamship that was launched in 1920 and sunk in 1941. She was the third Holland America Line ship to be named after the village of Maasdam in South Holland.
Nieuw Amsterdam was a steam ocean liner that was launched in Ireland in 1905, completed in 1906 and scrapped in Japan in 1932. Holland America Line owned and operated her throughout her career.
SS Verona was a transatlantic ocean liner that was built in Ireland in 1908 for an Italian shipping line. She was a troop ship in the Italo-Turkish War of 1911–12 and in the First World War in 1917–18. In 1918 a German submarine sank her in the Mediterranean with great loss of life.
SS Copenhagen was a North Sea passenger ferry that was built in Scotland in 1907. She was the Great Eastern Railway (GER)'s first turbine steamship. In 1916 she was requisitioned as an ambulance ship. A U-boat sank her in 1917 with the loss of six lives.
SS Grampian was a transatlantic ocean liner that was built in Scotland in 1907 and scrapped in the Netherlands in 1925. She was operated originally by Allan Line, and later by Canadian Pacific Steamships. In the First World War she remained in commercial service but carried Canadian troops. In 1919 she survived a collision with an iceberg. In 1921 she was gutted by fire while being refitted. The refit was abandoned, and in 1925–26 she was scrapped.
SS Rotterdam was a steam ocean liner that was launched and completed in Ireland in 1908, and scrapped in the Netherlands in 1940. Holland America Line (HAL) owned and operated her throughout her career. She was the fourth of seven HAL ships to have been named after the Dutch city of Rotterdam. Until Statendam entered service in 1929, Rotterdam was the largest and swiftest ship in the company's fleet, and was the company's flagship.
SS Caledonia was a British ocean liner that was built in Scotland in 1905 and converted into a troop ship in 1914. She was sunk by a German U-boat in the Mediterranean in 1916.
SS Westerdijk was a Holland America Line cargo steamship that was completed in 1913 and scrapped in 1933. She served in the United States Navy, with the Naval Registry Identification Number ID–2514, from March 1918 until September 1919. Some sources anglicise her name as Westerdyk, but Lloyd's Register registered her with the Dutch spelling Westerdijk.