USS Maartensdijk

Last updated

USS Maartensdijk World War I.jpg
The ship as Maartensdijk in NASM colors
History
Name
  • 1902: Egyptiana
  • 1902: Rapallo
  • 1909: Maartensdijk
  • 1923: Benvrackie
  • 1927: Ani
Owner
Operator
Port of registry
Builder Furness, Withy, Middleton
Yard number261
Launched12 March 1902
Completed14 May 1902
Acquiredby US Government, 20 March 1918
Commissionedinto US Navy, 28 March 1918
Decommissioned25 February 1919
Identification
Fatescrapped in 1933
General characteristics
Type cargo ship
Tonnage6,483  GRT, 3,360  NRT, 9,241  DWT
Displacement13,000 tons
Length400.5 ft (122.1 m)
Beam52.1 ft (15.9 m)
Draught28 ft 6 in (8.69 m)
Depth29.3 ft (8.9 m)
Decks2 + shelter deck
Installed power489 NHP, 2,800 ihp
Propulsion
Speed11+12 knots (21.3 km/h)
Capacity452,000 cu ft (12,800 m3) grain; 411,000 cu ft (11,600 m3) bale
Complement113
Armament
Notes sister ship: Como

USS Maartensdijk was a cargo steamship that was laid down in England in 1902 as Egyptiana, but launched as Rapallo. She served in the United States Navy as USS Maartensdijk from 1918 until 1919, with the Naval Registry Identification Number ID-2497.

Contents

She passed through various German, British, Dutch and Belgian owners, including Hamburg America Line (HAPAG), Holland America Line (NASM), Ben Line, and two subsidiaries of Furness, Withy. She was renamed Maartensdijk in 1909, Benvrackie in 1923 and Ani in 1927. She was scrapped in Italy in 1933.

Building

Furness, Withy owned both a shipyard and several shipping companies. In 1901 its shipyard on the River Tees in Middleton, Hartlepool, England laid down a pair of ships for a Furness, Withy subsidiary called the British Maritime Trust. Yard number 261 was laid down as Egyptiana, [1] and a sister ship was laid down as yard number 262. [2]

Before the ships were launched, the German company Rob. M. Sloman agreed to buy both of them. Number 261 was launched on 12 March as Rapallo, [1] and completed on 14 May. [3] Number 262 was launched on 23 April as Como, and completed that July. [4]

Rapallo's registered length was 400.5 ft (122.1 m), her beam was 52.1 ft (15.9 m) and her depth was 29.3 ft (8.9 m). Her tonnages were 6,483  GRT, 3,360  NRT and 9,241  DWT. Her holds had capacity for 452,000 cubic feet (12,800 m3) of grain, or 411,000 cubic feet (11,600 m3) of baled cargo. [3]

Rapallo had a single screw, driven by a three-cylinder triple-expansion steam engine built by Richardsons Westgarth & Company of Hartlepool. It was rated at 489 NHP [5] or 2,800 ihp, and gave her a speed of 11+12 knots (21.3 km/h). [3]

Rob. M. Sloman registered Rapallo at Hamburg. Her code letters were RMNH. [5]

Changes of owner in the 1900s

In August 1904 a different Furness, Withy subsidiary called Gulf Line Ltd acquired Rapallo from Rob. M. Sloman, [3] and registered her at West Hartlepool. Her United Kingdom official number was 115130 and her code letters were WBRG. [6] Gulf Line traded between the UK and the west coast of South America, and Sir Christopher Furness wanted the company to trade with Australia as well. However, he faced stiff competition, combined with poor trading conditions in Australia. [7]

On 17 March 1906 HAPAG acquired Rapallo from Gulf Line and registered her at Hamburg. [3] Her code letters were RPCM. [8] On 21 March 1908 Gulf Line bought Rapallo back from HAPAG, and registered her at West Hartlepool. [3] Her code letters were HMKL. [8] [9]

In April 1909 NASM acquired Rapallo from Gulf Line, renamed her Maartensdijk, and registered her in Rotterdam. [3] Her code letters were PJSD. [10]

US Navy service

On 20 March 1918 the United States Customs Service seized Maartansdijk under angary at New York. The next day she was transferred to the US Navy, who commissioned her on 28 March as USS Martinsdijk (ID 2497). She was assigned to the Naval Overseas Transport Service Army Account. [11] She was fitted with one 6-inch/50-caliber gun and one 3-inch/50-caliber gun as defensive armament. [12]

Maartensdijk made four transatlantic round trips between the US and France to supply the American Expeditionary Forces: three before the Armistice of 11 November 1918, and one after. For her first trip she loaded Army cargo, and on 10 April 1918 departed in convoy to France via Halifax, Nova Scotia. She reached Saint-Nazaire on 14 May, discharged her cargo, and on 15 June she started her return trip to the US. Her subsequent voyages were from New York and Boston. [11]

Maartensdijk's fourth and final transatlantic voyage with the US Navy began from Boston on 12 December 1918. After discharging her cargo in France, she loaded Army supplies to be returned to the US. On 9 February 1919 she reached New York, where on 25 February she was simultaneously decommissioned, transferred to the United States Shipping Board, and returned to NASM. [11]

Changes of owner in the 1920s

By 1921 Maartensdijk was equipped for wireless telegraphy. [13] On 10 December 1923 Ben Line Steamers bought her, renamed her Benvrackie, [3] and registered her at Leith. Her code letters were KPWC. [14] At the time, she was one of the largest ships in Ben Line's fleet, [15] which traded mainly between the UK and the Far East. [16] She was the first [15] of five [17] Ben Line ships to be called Benvrackie.

In February 1927 the Compagnie Internationale de Commerce et d'Armement acquired Benvrackie, renamed her Ani, and registered her at Antwerp. [3] Her code letters were MALC, and M Gumuchdjian was her manager. [18]

From 25 April 1932 Ani was laid up at Antwerp. In 1933 she was sold for scrap. That April she arrived at Trieste in Italy to be broken up.

Related Research Articles

<i>Nimrod</i> (ship) Steam-assisted barquentine built in 1867, best known for Antarctic exploration

Nimrod was a wooden-hulled, three-masted sailing ship with auxiliary steam engine that was built in Scotland in 1867 as a whaler. She was the ship with which Ernest Shackleton made his Nimrod Expedition to Antarctica in 1908–09. After the expedition she returned to commercial service, and in 1919 she was wrecked in the North Sea with the loss of ten members of her crew.

Junyō Maru Cargo steamship that became a Japanese hell ship

Jun'yō Maru (順陽丸) was a cargo steamship that was built in Scotland in 1913, served a succession of British owners until 1927, and was then in Japanese ownership until a Royal Navy submarine sank her in 1944.

SS <i>Shinyō Maru</i> Second World War Japanese hell ship

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 <i>Dwinsk</i> 1897 ocean liner sunk by a U-boat in 1918

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, but was successively owned by Scandinavian America Line and Russian American Line, and after the Russian Revolution she was managed by Cunard Line.

SS <i>Empire Bittern</i> World War II merchant ship of the United Kingdom

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 Amerika Linie and renamed Bohemia in 1913.

SS <i>Komagata Maru</i> Cargo steamship that in 1914 was involved in an immigration dispute in Canada

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.

USS <i>Zuiderdijk</i> Cargo steamship that was briefly in the United States Navy

USS Zuiderdijk was a cargo ship that was built in England in 1912 as Sharistan, but was renamed Zuiderdijk later that year when she changed owners. She was USS Zuiderdijk with the Naval Registry Identification Number ID-2724, from 1918 until 1919. She was renamed Misty Law in 1923, Edera in 1931, Frin in 1956 and Mahfuz later in 1956.

SS <i>Statendam</i> (1898) Ocean liner operated by Holland America Line, Allan Line and Canadian Pacific

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 <i>Charlton Hall</i> Cargo steamship that served in the US Navy in World War I

USS Charlton Hall (ID-1359) was a cargo steamship that was built in Scotland in 1907 and served in the merchant fleets of the United Kingdom, United States and Greece. She served in the United States Navy in 1918. She was renamed Atlantis and then Anastasis in 1930. She was scrapped in China in 1934.

USS <i>Oosterdijk</i> Dutch cargo ship that served in the United States Navy in 1918

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.

SS <i>Polar Chief</i> British merchant steamship

SS Polar Chief was a merchant steamship that was built in England in 1897 and scrapped in Scotland in 1952. In its 55-year career it had previously been called Montcalm, RFA Crenella, Crenella, Rey Alfonso, Anglo-Norse and Empire Chief. Early in the First World War it spent eight months pretending to be the battleship HMS Audacious.

Edenhurst was a cargo ship that was built in 1930 by Furness Shipbuilding Ltd, Haverton Hill-on-Tees for British owners. She was sold in 1937 to Finnish owners and renamed Ilves. In 1939, she was sold to German owners and renamed Glückauf. In 1940 she was sold and renamed Warnow and was requisitioned by the Kriegsmarine in that year. She was seized by the Allies in Rendsburg in May 1945, passed to the Ministry of War Transport (MoWT) and renamed Empire Conleven. In 1946, she was allocated to the Soviet Government and renamed Alexandr Parkhomenko(Александр Пархоменко). The ship was deleted from Lloyd's Register in 1960.

SS Binnendijk was a Holland America Line (NASM) cargo steamship. She was one of NASM's "B" class ships: the company's first cargo ships to be powered by steam turbines. Binnendijk was built in South Holland in 1921, and sunk by a mine in the English Channel in 1939. She was the first ship that NASM lost in the Second World War. Her wreck off the coast of Dorset, England is now a wreck diving site, nicknamed "The Benny".

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.

HMS <i>Agamemnon</i> (M10) Cargo ship that was converted into an auxiliary minelayer

HMS Agamemnon was originally the Blue Funnel Line refrigerated cargo ship Agamemnon. She was built in 1929, traded between the UK and the Far East, and was scrapped in 1963. During the Second World War she was converted into an auxiliary minelayer in 1940, and then into an amenities ship in 1943.

HMS <i>Southern Prince</i> Motor ship that was a British reefer ship, WW2 minelayer, and Italian passenger ship

HMS Southern Prince was a motor ship that was built in 1929 as the refrigerated cargo ship Southern Prince. She was commissioned into the Royal Navy in 1940 as a minelayer. She became a headquarters ship and then an accommodation ship in 1944, was a fleet training ship in 1945, and returned to civilian trade in 1946. In 1947 she was sold to Italian owners who had her refitted as a passenger ship and renamed her Anna C. From 1952 she was a cruise ship. She was scrapped in 1972.

TSS City of Belfast was a passenger steamship that was built in England in 1893, renamed Nicolaos Togias in 1925, renamed Kephallinia in 1933 and sank in 1941. She was owned and registered in Britain until 1925, when she passed to Greek owners.

SS Benlomond was a British cargo steamship that was built in 1922 as Cynthiana, changed owners and names a number of times, and was sunk by a U-boat in 1942, with the loss of all but one of her 53 ship's company.

Teiryu Maru

SS Teiryu Maru was a steam cargo ship that was launched in England in 1914 as Northwestern Miller. Furness, Withy & Co managed her until 1927, when Norddeutscher Lloyd bought her and renamed her Augsburg.

SS Verdala was a cargo and passenger steamship that was built in Scotland in 1913. Several times she changed owners and was renamed: as Mongolian Prince in 1917, Istok in 1928 and finally Maycrest in 1940.

References

  1. 1 2 "Rapallo". Tees Built Ships. Shipping and Shipbuilding Research Trust. Retrieved 1 June 2023.
  2. "Como". Tees Built Ships. Shipping and Shipbuilding Research Trust. Retrieved 1 June 2023.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Maartensdyk – ID 3842". Stichting Maritiem-Historische Databank (in Dutch). Retrieved 1 June 2023.
  4. "Gorredyk – ID 2537". Stichting Maritiem-Historische Databank (in Dutch). Retrieved 1 June 2023.
  5. 1 2 Lloyd's Register 1903, RAM–RAP.
  6. Mercantile Navy List 1906, p. 366.
  7. Burrell 1992, pp. 41–42.
  8. 1 2 Lloyd's Register 1907, RAN–RAP.
  9. Mercantile Navy List 1909, p. 410.
  10. Lloyd's Register 1910, M..
  11. 1 2 3 Cressman, Robert J (30 November 2020). "Maartensdijk (Id. No. 2497)". DANFS . Naval History and Heritage Command . Retrieved 1 June 2023.
  12. Radigan, Joseph M. "Maartensdijk (ID 2497)". Identification Numbered Vessel Photo Archive. NavSource Online.
  13. Lloyd's Register 1921, M..
  14. Mercantile Navy List 1925, p. 52.
  15. 1 2 Blake 1956, p. 116.
  16. Blake 1956, pp. 117–118.
  17. Swiggum, Susan; Kohli, Marjorie (3 May 2006). "Ben Line / William Thomson & Co". TheShipsList. Retrieved 1 June 2023.
  18. Lloyd's Register 1927, ANG–ANN.

Bibliography