The ship as Georgia | |
History | |
---|---|
Name |
|
Namesake |
|
Owner |
|
Operator |
|
Port of registry | |
Route | |
Builder | Barclay, Curle & Co, Glasgow |
Yard number | 365 |
Launched | 14 November 1890 |
Completed | January 1891 |
Maiden voyage | 15 April 1891 |
Identification |
|
Fate | scuttled 1917 |
General characteristics | |
Type | cargo liner |
Tonnage | 3,144 GRT, 2,042 NRT |
Length | 331.0 ft (100.9 m) |
Beam | 41.1 ft (12.5 m) |
Depth | 19.2 ft (5.9 m) |
Decks | 1 |
Installed power | 265 NHP or 1,550 ihp |
Propulsion |
|
Speed | 11 knots (20 km/h) |
Capacity | passengers: 10 × 1st class; 620 × 3rd class |
Crew | 1917: 37 |
SS Georgia was a passenger and cargo ship that was launched in Germany in 1891 as Pickhuben. The Hamburg America Line acquired her in 1892, and renamed her Georgia in 1895. In 1915 a US company bought her and renamed her Housatonic.
Mostly the ship traded across the North Atlantic. She carried European immigrants to the United States. In 1893 she brought to the US the German exhibits for the World's Columbian Exposition. In 1891 and 1894 she voyaged under charter to Australia. In 1914 she took refuge in the neutral US. In 1917 a German U-boat captured and scuttled her, contributing to increasing diplomatic tension that eventually led the US to declare war on Germany.
Pickhuben's first owner was Dampfschiffs-Reederei „Hansa“ ("Steamship line "Hansa") of Hamburg. DR „Hansa“ should not be confused with the larger and better-known DDG „Hansa“ company of Bremen. HAPAG took over DR „Hansa“ in 1892, and renamed the ship in 1895. [1]
This was the first of two steamships that HAPAG named after the US State of Georgia. The second was launched in 1922, sold in 1936, and renamed in 1937. [2]
Between July 1890 and January 1891, DR „Hansa“ enlarged its fleet with five new single-screw cargo ships from four different builders. Charles Connell and Company in Glasgow built Grimm and Stubbenhuk. Blohm+Voss in Hamburg built Baumwall. Joh. C. Tecklenborg in Bremerhaven built Wandrahm. Barclay, Curle & Co in Glasgow built Pickhuben. All five ships were named after streets in Hamburg. No two ships were exactly the same, but all five were two-masted, three-castle ships of similar in size and appearance. They ranged from 319.3 to 331.0 feet (97.3 to 100.9 m) in length, and from 40.0 to 41.3 feet (12.2 to 12.6 m) in beam. [3]
Barclay, Curle built Pickhuben as yard number 365, launched her on 14 November 1890, [4] and completed her in January 1891. Her registered length was 331.0 ft (100.9 m), her beam was 41.1 ft (12.5 m), and her depth was 19.2 ft (5.9 m). [5] She had berths for 630 passengers: ten in first class, and 620 in third class. [6] Her tonnages were 3,144 GRT and 2,042 NRT. [5] Her single screw was driven by a three-cylinder triple-expansion engine that was rated at 265 NHP [7] or 1,550 ihp, [8] and gave her a speed of 11 knots (20 km/h). [6]
DR „Hansa“ registered Pickhuben at Hamburg. Her code letters were RJFD. [5] On 15 April 1891 she left Hamburg on her maiden voyage, which was to Quebec and Montreal. [6] On a voyage that summer from Hamburg via Antwerp, she carried mostly Jewish refugees from the Russian Empire. On 4 July, at position 50°09′N14°25′W / 50.150°N 14.417°W , she passed the burning wreck of the British barque Octavia from South Shields. No crew and no boats remained aboard the sailing ship, so it was assumed they had abandoned ship in her boats. Pickhuben kept a lookout for boats and survivors, but found none. [9]
Later that year the Deutsch-Australische Dampfschiffs-Gesellschaft (DADG) chartered her for a voyage to Australia. She left Hamburg on 17 October; called at Antwerp; and took 90 passengers and 4,500 tons of general cargo to Melbourne [10] and Sydney, reaching the latter on 22 December. [11] On 13 January 1892 she left Sydney on her return voyage to Hamburg via Melbourne, carrying cargo that included 6,876 bales of wool. [12]
HAPAG took over DR „Hansa“ in March 1892, [6] and sent Pickhuben on her first voyage to New York on 17 April that year, [13] but thereafter she mostly reverted to the Montreal route. [6] On 8 March 1893 she arrived in Baltimore carrying the German Government's exhibits for the World's Columbian Exposition. They included a railroad coach; exhibits from Saxon woollen mills; electrical products; books; and a gallery of artworks including pictures, bronzes, and statues. [14]
Late in 1894 DADG chartered Pickhuben to go to Australia again, as a substitute for its steamship Erlangen. Pickhuben left Hamburg on 14 September, called at Antwerp and Plymouth, and bunkered at Las Palmas. She sailed via the Cape of Good Hope, and about 80 nautical miles (150 km) from Cape Town she found the British sailing ship Abbie S. Hart flying a distress signal with signal flags. Almost the entire crew of the sailing ship was ill, and her Second Officer had died, so Pickhuben towed Abbie S. Hart to Cape Town. Pickhuben continued her voyage via Port Elizabeth and Adelaide. [15] On 19 November she reached Melbourne, where she collided with the 500-ton hopper barge Fawkner while the tugboat Eagle was towing her along the Coode Canal. [16] Pickhuben reached Sydney on 23 November. [15] On 17 December a court of marine inquiry in Melbourne dismissed charges against Pickhuben's Victorian pilot, and against Fawkner's Captain. [17] Pickhuben loaded 7,344 bales of wool, [18] and in December left Sydney for Hamburg via Melbourne and Antwerp. [19]
In 1895 HAPAG renamed the ship Georgia. [6] On 24 April 1895 she sailed from Stettin in Pomerania (now Szczecin in Poland) to New York via Helsingborg and Gothenburg in Sweden, and Kristiansand in Norway. She remained on this route until 11 November 1897. [6] On 2 April 1900 Georgia began her first voyage on the route between Genoa in Italy and New York via Naples. She began her last voyage on this route on 2 March 1902. On 7 May 1902 she began her first voyage on the route between Odesa and New York via Istanbul, Smyrna, and Piraeus. She began her last voyage on this route on 13 March 1904. [6]
When the First World War began in August 1914, Georgia took refuge in New Orleans. [20] On 16 April 1915 the Housatonic Steamship Corporation bought her for $85,000 and renamed her Housatonic. [21] She was registered in New York, her US official number was 213094, her code letters were LFHT, and Edward F Geer was her manager. [8] [22] On 23 February 1916 a British company, Brown, Jenkinson & Company of London, chartered her "for the term of the present war", [21] purely as a cargo ship.
On 6 January 1917 Housatonic left Galveston, Texas carrying 144,200 bushels of wheat. She called at Newport News, Virginia, where she left on 16 January for Liverpool, England. [23] On 31 January, Germany announced an exclusion zone around the coasts of the Entente Powers. It declared that "Neutral ships navigating these blockade zones do so at their own risk". It imposed conditions on US shipping trading with the Entente Powers, one of which was that the US Government "guarantees that no contraband (according to the German contraband list) is carried by those steamers". [24]
At 10:30 hrs on 3 February U-53 intercepted Housatonic about 20 nautical miles (37 km) southwest of Bishop Rock, Isles of Scilly. [25] The U-boat fired two warning shots at a range of about 250 yards (230 m), forcing Housatonic to heave to. U-53's commander, Hans Rose, ordered Housatonic's US Master, Captain Thomas Ensor, to bring his ship's papers aboard the U-boat for inspection. Rose told Ensor "I find that the vessel is laden with grain for London. It is my duty to sink her." After Ensor protested, Rose replied "You are carrying foodstuffs to an enemy of my country, and though I am sorry, it is my duty to sink you". [26]
A German boarding party came aboard Housatonic. All 37 members of Housatonic's crew abandoned ship in two of her lifeboats: one commanded by Captain Ensor, and the other by her Chief Officer. The boarding party planted explosives in various places below decks, [25] opened her hatches, and knocked off her seacocks. They also took soap from the ship, explaining that the German munitions industry's demand for glycerine had caused a shortage of soap. [26]
U-53 towed the lifeboats clear; there were two large explosions; [25] and Housatonic sank at position 49°35′N06°08′W / 49.583°N 6.133°W . [27] Ensor persuaded Rose to tow the lifeboats toward land. After about two hours, Ensor sighted the Royal Navy naval trawler HMAT Salvator. [25] Rose ordered two shots fired from one of the U-boat's deck guns; satisfied himself that the patrol boat had seen the lifeboats; and ordered U-53 to dive. The patrol boat rescued Housatonic's survivors and took them to Penzance. [26] Ensor returned to the US on the liner Orduña, and his crew followed on the liner Philadelphia . [25]
The US reacted cautiously to Housatonic's sinking. The New York Times noted the courtesy and propriety with which Rose had applied the rules of war. [28] The US Government did not regard Housatonic's sinking as a casus belli . [29] However, U-boats sank two other US ships without loss of life: the schooner Lyman M. Law on 12 February, and steamship Algonquin on 12 March. This led President Woodrow Wilson to address both houses of Congress on 26 February, asking for the power to arm US merchant ships defensively, and to give those ships gunners to crew them. [30]
The US refrained from declaring war against Germany. However, on 16 March 1917 a U-boat sank the US steamship Vigilancia without warning, killing 15 of her crew, including six US citizens. [31] [32] US newspapers called that an act of war, or words to that effect. [33] On 21 March an explosion, caused by either a mine or a torpedo, sank the US oil tanker Healdton, killing 21 of her crew, including seven US citizens. [34] [35]
On 2 April, President Wilson asked Congress to declare war against Germany. During the congressional debate of the proposal, news came that a U-boat had sunk Aztec, causing the death of 28 of her crew, including 11 US citizens. [36] On 6 April, Congress passed the motion by an overwhelming majority, and the US declared war on Germany. [37] [38]
The Housatonic Steamship Company sued for $839,600 damages from the Government of Germany for Housatonic's sinking. Edwin B. Parker, Commissioner of the American–German Claims Commission, heard the case on 14 May 1926. After an argument as to the value of the ship, Parker found in favour of the steamship company, but awarded it only $4,500 plus five percent annual interest from the date of the sinking. [39]
SS Vadala was a cargo steamship that was launched in Scotland in 1890, renamed Kenkon Maru No. 12 in 1913, and sank as the result of a collision in 1928. She was built for the British India Steam Navigation Company (BI). In 1895 she took Indian indentured labourers to Fiji. In 1899 was a troop ship in the Second Boer War. From 1913 she was in Japanese ownership.
USS Pequot (ID-2998) was a cargo steamship that was built in 1910 for DDG Hansa of Germany as Ockenfels. She was the second of three DDG Hansa ships to be named after Ockenfels in the Rhineland-Palatinate.
Empire Bittern was a steamship, built as a livestock-carrying cargo ship in 1902 at Belfast, Ireland as Iowa for the White Diamond Steamship Company Ltd of Liverpool. The ship was sold to the Hamburg America Line and renamed Bohemia in 1913.
Komagata Maru was a cargo steamship that was built in Scotland in 1890, was in German ownership until 1913, and then had a succession of Japanese owners until she was wrecked in 1926. She was launched as Stubbenhuk, renamed Sicilia in 1894, Komagata Maru in 1913 and Heian Maru in 1924.
SS Abessinia was a cargo steamship of the Hamburg America Line (HAPAG). She was built in North East England in 1900, and wrecked in North East England in 1921. In her early years she sailed from Hamburg to and from China, Australia, and the East Coast of the United States. From 1907 to 1912 she sailed from Hamburg to and from the West Coast of the United States and the British Columbia Coast. In 1913 she survived a storm in the North Atlantic that swept away her rudder and disabled her propulsion. She spent the First World War in Chile. Her remains are now a wreck diving site in the Farne Islands.
USS Shoshone (ID-1760) was a German-built cargo liner that the United States Navy chartered during the First World War. She was launched in 1911 for the Hamburg America Line (HAPAG) as Wasgenwald. The Kerr Steamship Company bought her in 1917 and renamed her Shoshone. In 1919 she spent six months in the United States Navy, in which she made two round trips to and from France to repatriate US troops.
SS Ypiranga was a cargo liner that was launched in Germany in 1908 for the Hamburg America Line (HAPAG). In 1919 the United Kingdom seized her for World War I reparations. In 1921 Anchor Line acquired her and renamed her Assyria. In 1929 the Companhia Colonial de Navegação (CCN) bought her and renamed her Colonial. In 1950 she was sold for scrap, but she sank off the coast of Scotland while being towed to a scrapyard.
USS Moccasin (ID-1322) was a cargo liner that was launched in Germany in 1903 as Prinz Joachim. The US seized her in 1917. In 1918–19 she was renamed Moccasin and briefly served in the United States Navy. In 1920 she was returned to US merchant service and renamed Porto Rico. She was scrapped in 1933 or 1934.
SS Pisa was a cargo and passenger steamship that was built in Scotland in 1896. She was in German ownership until 1917, when the United States seized her and renamed her Ascutney.
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 Aztec was a cargo steamship that was built in England in 1894 as Canterbury. She was renamed Aztec when she changed owners in 1895. The Pacific Mail Steamship Company bought her in 1897. In March 1917 she was the first United States merchant ship to be defensively armed in response to the Central Powers' attacks on neutral US shipping in the First World War.
Rosalind was a steam cargo liner that was launched in England in 1890 for Dampfschiffs Rhederei zu Hamburg as Tosari. In 1891 Deutsche Ost-Afrika Linie (DOAL) bought her and renamed her Admiral. In 1902 the Bowring Brothers' New York, Newfoundland & Halifax Steamship Company bought her and renamed her Rosalind. In 1912 the St Laurence Shipping Company bought her and renamed her City of Sydney. She was wrecked off the coast of Nova Scotia in 1914.
SS Minnekahda was a transatlantic ocean liner that was launched in Ireland in 1917 and scrapped in Scotland in 1936. She was laid down in 1914 but the First World War delayed her completion. Because of the war she was completed in 1918 as a troop ship, and then worked as a cargo ship.
SS Prinz Oskar was a twin-screw cargo liner that was launched in Germany in 1902 for Hamburg America Line (HAPAG). She served various transatlantic routes between Europe and the Americas until the First World War began.
SS Augsburg was a cargo steamship that was built in Scotland in 1896 for the Deutsch-Australische Dampfschiffs-Gesellschaft (DADG). She disappeared in the North Atlantic in 1912 on a voyage from New York to Java via Durban. Several ships searched for her, but no trace was ever found.
SS Corcovado was a cargo liner that was launched in Germany in 1907 for the Hamburg America Line (HAPAG). In 1917 she was transferred to the Ottoman government and renamed Sueh. In 1919 the Ottomans surrendered her to France, and her name reverted to Corcovado. In 1920 the Società Sicula Americana bought her and renamed her Guglielmo Peirce. In 1927 Lloyd Sabaudo bought her and renamed her Maria Cristina. In 1930 the Companhia Colonial de Navegação (CCN) bought her and renamed her Mouzinho. She was scrapped in Italy in 1954.
SS Vigilancia was a merchant steamship that was built in Pennsylvania in 1890. She sailed between New York and Brazil via the West Indies until 1893, when her original owners went bankrupt. The New York and Cuba Mail Steamship Company, commonly known as Ward Line, owned her from 1894 until 1914, and ran her between New York and Mexico via Cuba. In 1898 she was a troopship in the Spanish–American War.
SS Willehad was a passenger and cargo steamship that was built in Germany in 1894 for Norddeutscher Lloyd (NDL). For her first few years she took emigrants from Bremen to the United States. In 1900 she made one round trip between Bremen and Australia via the Suez Canal. Between 1901 and 1903 her route was between Bremen and South America. For a few months in 1904 she sailed between Stettin in Germany and New York. From the end of 1904 to the beginning of 1907 she was a mail ship between Japan and Australia. From 1911 until 1914 she ran transatlantic services between Hamburg and the United States, and also between Hamburg and Canada.
SS Lourenço Marques was a steam cargo liner that was launched in Germany in 1905 as Admiral for Deutsche Ost-Afrika Linie (DOAL). Portugal seized her in 1916 and renamed her after the explorer Lourenço Marques. After a few years operated by Transportes Marítimos do Estado, she had a long career with Companhia Nacional de Navegação (CNN). In the Second World War she took refugees who had fled German-occupied Europe to the United States, and rescued survivors from Allied merchant ships sunk by the German Navy. She was scrapped in Scotland in 1950 or 1951.
SS Nyassa was a steam ocean liner that was launched in Germany in 1906 as Bülow for Norddeutscher Lloyd (NDL). In 1916 Portugal seized her, renamed her Trás-os-Montes, and placed her under the management of Transportes Marítimos do Estado (TME). In 1924 Companhia Nacional de Navegação (CNN) bought her and renamed her Nyassa. After a long career with CNN she was scrapped in England in 1951.