USS St. Francis

Last updated

USS St. Francis (ID-1557).jpg
San Francisco in 1917
History
Name
  • 1914: San Francisco
  • 1918: St. Francis
  • 1919: San Francisco
  • 1933: Lammot du Pont
Namesake
Owner
Operator1918: United States Navy
Port of registry
BuilderNorth of Ireland SB Co
Yard number57
Launched14 February 1914
CompletedMay 1914
Identification
Fatesunk by torpedo, 1942
General characteristics
Type cargo ship
Tonnage5,102  GRT, 3,164  NRT
Displacement11,528 tons
Length405.0 ft (123.4 m)
Beam52.0 ft (15.8 m)
Draft25 ft 9+12 in (7.86 m)
Depth28.1 ft (8.6 m)
Decks2
Installed power525 NHP
Propulsion triple-expansion engine
Speed12+12 knots (23.2 km/h)
Complement1918: 62
Crew
  • 1942: 45 crew
  • + 9 armed guards
Sensors and
processing systems
by 1934: gyrocompass
Armament

USS St. Francis (ID-1557) was a cargo steamship. She was built in Ireland in 1914 as San Francisco, and renamed St. Francis in 1918 when she was commissioned into the United States Navy. In 1933 she was renamed Lammot du Pont. In 1942 she was sunk by a U-boat, and 19 of her crew were lost.

Contents

Building and registration

The North of Ireland Ship Building Co built San Francisco in Derry, Ireland. She was launched on 14 February 1914 [1] and completed that May. Her registered length was 405.0 ft (123.4 m), her beam was 52.0 ft (15.8 m) and her depth was 28.1 ft (8.6 m). Her tonnages were 5,102  GRT and 3,164  NRT. [2]

She had a single screw, driven by a three-cylinder triple-expansion steam engine built by Richardsons Westgarth & Company of Hartlepool, England. It was rated at 525 NHP [2] or 2,250 ihp and gave her a speed of 12+12 knots (23.2 km/h). [3]

San Francisco's first owner was the Isthmian Steamship Company, a British company owned by the United States Steel Products Company. At first whe was registered in London. Her United Kingdom official number was 136675. [4] From new San Francisco was equipped for wireless telegraphy. [2] In 1914 her UK call sign was MIB. [5]

When the First World War started at the end of July, all of Isthmian's ships were transferred to the direct ownership of the US parent company, and re-registered in New York. San Francisco's US official number was 212786 and her code letters were LDPV. By 1918 her US call sign was KRT. [6]

US Navy service

In 1918 the United States Shipping Board chartered the ship from the US Steel Products Co on behalf of the US Navy. The Navy acquired the ship at Baltimore on 19 June and commissioned her there on 25 June. The Navy already had a USS San Francisco, so the ship was commissioned as USS St.Francis. The Navy gave her the Identification Number (ID) 1557. [7]

USS St. Francis made three voyages for the Naval Overseas Transportation Service: two to France before the Armistice of 11 November 1918 and one to Latin America afterwards. For her first voyage she loaded US Army supplies at Baltimore, sailed to New York, and there joined a convoy which left on 4 July. The convoy reached Brest, France on 19 July, from where St. Francis continued to England to discharge her cargo. [lower-alpha 1] She left England on 15 August and got back to Baltimore on 27 August.

In Baltimore St. Francis was again loaded with Army supplies. She left on 18 September, again went via New York, reached La Pallice on 13 October and continued to Saint-Nazaire, where she arrived on 14 October to discharge her cargo. From there she returned to the US, reaching Baltimore on 14 November, three days after the Armistice. [7]

St. Francis was then transferred from an Army to a US Shipping Board Account.[ clarification needed ] On 26 January 1919 she left the US for Cristóbal. She passed through the Panama Canal, and on 17 February reached Valparaíso, Chile. She returned through the canal, loaded a commercial cargo of sugar at Cienfuegos, Cuba, and on 8 April arrived in New York. The Navy decommisisoned her at New York at 28 April 1919, and returned her via the US Shipping Board to her owners, [7] who restored her name to San Francisco.

Lammot du Pont

In 1933 the International Freighting Corporation, Inc. bought San Francisco, renamed her Lammot du Pont and registered her in Wilmington, Delaware. Lammot du Pont (1831–1884) was an industrial chemist and member of the du Pont family, whose DuPont company had a business relationship with the International Freighting Corp. By 1934 her navigation equipment included a gyrocompass, and her four-letter call sign was WDCY. [8]

After the US joined the Second World War in December 1941, Lammot du Pont was defensively armed with one 4-inch/50-caliber gun and two M1919 Browning machine guns, and she carried nine US Navy armed guards to crew them. [9]

On the evening of 23 April 1942 she was steaming unescorted at 9+12 knots (17.6 km/h) about 500 nautical miles (930 km) southeast of Bermuda. At 20:53 hrs U-125 attacked her, hitting her with one torpedo between her number 4 hold and engine room. Lammot du Pont rapidly listed to port, and within five minutes rolled completely on her side. She sank at position 27°10′N57°10′W / 27.167°N 57.167°W / 27.167; -57.167 Coordinates: 27°10′N57°10′W / 27.167°N 57.167°W / 27.167; -57.167 . Six members of her crew were killed, but the remainder got clear on one lifeboat and three rafts. [9]

One of the rafts was broken and drifted away. Heavy seas prevented the other survivors from reaching it, and the two men aboard the broken raft were lost. There were eight crewmen and seven armed guards in the remaining two rafts. Two days later the Swedish motor cargo ship Astri found and rescued them. On 8 May she transferred them to the cruiser USS Omaha, which on 11 May landed them in Recife, Brazil. [9]

USS Tarbell rescued survivors from Lammot du Pont's lifeboat USS Tarbell (DD-142) underway in Charleston harbour, 17 December 1942.jpg
USS Tarbell rescued survivors from Lammot du Pont's lifeboat

The remaining lifeboat initially contained 31 crewmen and two armed guards. It drifted for 23 days, in which time seven crewmen and one of the guards died of fever. Then an aircraft sighted it about 40 nautical miles (74 km) from San Juan, Puerto Rico. The destroyer USS Tarbell rescued them and landed them at San Juan, where a further three crewmen died in hospital. In total 19 men died and 35 survived. [9]

Notes

  1. Naval History and Heritage Command claims that St.Francis discharged her cargo in a place called "West Hampton, England". No such port exists.

Related Research Articles

USS <i>Oglala</i> US minelayer sunk in 1941 at Pearl Harbor

USS Oglala (ID-1255/CM-4/ARG-1) was a minelayer in the United States Navy. Commissioned as Massachusetts, she was renamed Shawmut a month later, and in 1928, was renamed after the Oglala, a sub-tribe of the Lakota, residing in the Black Hills of South Dakota.

SS <i>Newfoundland</i>

SS Newfoundland was a wooden-hulled brigantine and steamship that was built in 1872 and wrecked in 1916. She was a cargo ship, and for part of her career she was a sealing ship. In 1916 she was renamed Samuel Blandford.

USS <i>Arethusa</i> (AO-7)

USS Arethusa (AO-7) was a steamship that was built in England in 1893 as the civilian oil tanker Luciline. The United States Navy bought her in 1898, and later had her converted into a Fleet oiler. She was sold back into civilian ownership in 1927,and by 1928 she was a civilian hulk in Boston.

SS <i>Akaroa</i> (1914)

SS Akaroa was a UK steam ocean liner and refrigerated cargo ship. She was launched in 1914 in Ireland as Euripides for Aberdeen Line. When new, she was the largest ship in the Aberdeen Line fleet.

SS <i>Cleveland</i>

SS Cleveland was a German transatlantic ocean liner that was launched in 1908 and scrapped in 1933. Cleveland was built for the Hamburg America Line (HAPAG) as a sister ship for Cincinnati.

SS <i>Georgia</i> Oil tanker lost at Haisborough Sands off the coast of Norfolk, England

SS Georgia was an oil tanker that was built in the United States in 1908 as Texas and spent most of her career in the United States Merchant Marine. In 1917 she was renamed Georgia. In 1927 she was transferred to Dutch ownership, and shortly thereafter ran aground and was lost on Haisborough Sands off the coast of Norfolk, England.

USS <i>Caesar</i> Collier of the United States Navy

USS Caesar (AC-16) was a collier that was built in England in 1896 and scrapped in Japan in 1935. She was launched as Kingtor for a British shipping company, served in the United States Navy as Caesar from 1898 to 1923, and then was sold to a Canadian shipping company who renamed her Mogul.

USS <i>Long Beach</i> (AK-9) Cargo ship that served under British, Greek, German & US ownership

USS Long Beach (AK-9) was a cargo steamship that was built in England in 1892 as Yarrowdale, passed through a succession of British, Greek and German owners, and was seized by the United States in 1917. She served in the US Navy until 1921, then in the US Merchant Marine, and was scrapped in 1924. She was called Nicolaos Castriotis in Greek ownership, Hohenfelde in German ownership, and Golden Gate from 1923.

<i>A. Sibiryakov</i> (icebreaker)

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 <i>Pennsylvania</i> (1896)

SS Pennsylvania was a transatlantic liner that was launched in Ireland in 1896 and spent most of her career with Hamburg America Line (HAPAG). She was the first of a class of four HAPAG sister ships that were built in the United Kingdom and Germany between 1896 and 1899.

SS <i>Taormina</i> (1908) Transatlantic ocean 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.

USS <i>Howick Hall</i> Cargo steamship that served in the US Army, US Navy and US Maritime Commission

USS Howick Hall (ID-1303) was a cargo steamship that was built in Scotland in 1910 and served in the merchant fleets of the United Kingdom, United States, Italy and Panama. She served in the United States Army in 1917–18 and then the United States Navy in 1918–19. The United States Maritime Commission bought her in 1941, and a German air attack sank her in 1942.

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>Craster Hall</i> Cargo steamship that served in the United States Navy

USS Craster Hall (ID-1486) was a cargo steamship that was built in Scotland in 1909 and served in the merchant fleets of first the United Kingdom and then the United States. In 1918–19 she served in the United States Navy. In 1927 she was damaged in a collision off the coast of Peru, was beached to prevent her sinking, but was wrecked.

USS <i>Santa Rosalia</i> Cargo steamship that served in the US Navy in World War I

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 <i>Munwood</i> Cargo steamship that served in the United States Navy

USS Munwood (ID-4460) was a cargo steamship that was built in Scotland in 1914 and was part of the United States Merchant Marine until 1928. From 1918 to 1919 she served in the United States Navy. In 1928 Yugoslav interests bought her and renamed her Vila. In 1935 she sank as the result of a collision in the Adriatic Sea.

Spanish seaplane carrier <i>Dédalo</i> Spanish naval ship

Dédalo was a steamship that was built in England in 1901 as the cargo ship Neuenfels for the German shipping company DDG „Hansa“. Spain seized her in 1918 and had her converted into a seaplane tender and balloon carrier, entering Spanish Navy service in 1922. She served in the Rif War, in which her aircraft took part in the Alhucemas landing of French and Spanish forces in 1925. She was decommissioned in 1934 and scrapped in 1940.

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.

USS <i>Arcadia</i> (ID-1605)

USS Arcadia (ID-1605) was a transatlantic liner that was launched in Ireland in 1896 and spent most of her career with Hamburg America Line (HAPAG). She was one of a series of at least five HAPAG sister ships that were built in the United Kingdom in 1896 and 1897.

SS Potaro was a refrigerated cargo steamship that was built in Belfast in 1904, and captured and scuttled in the First World War in 1915.

References

  1. "San Francisco". Shipping and Shipbuilding. Shipping and Shipbuilding Research Trust. Retrieved 18 September 2022.
  2. 1 2 3 Lloyd's Register 1914b, SAM-SAN.
  3. Yarnall, Paul R. "Saint Francis (ID 1557)". NavSource Online: Civilian Identification Numbered Ships Photo Archive. Retrieved 18 September 2022.
  4. Lloyd's Register 1914a, SAM-SAN.
  5. The Marconi Press Agency Ltd 1914, p. 406.
  6. The Marconi Press Agency Ltd 1918, p. 790.
  7. 1 2 3 "St. Francis (Id. No. 1557)". Naval History and Heritage Command. 11 April 2014. Retrieved 18 September 2022.
  8. Lloyd's Register 1934, LAM–LAN.
  9. 1 2 3 4 Helgason, Guðmundur. "Lammot Du Pont". uboat.net. Retrieved 18 September 2022.

Bibliography