fbpx
Wikipedia

HMT Aragon

HMT Aragon, originally RMS Aragon, was a 9,588 GRT[3] transatlantic Royal Mail Ship that served as a troop ship in the First World War. She was built in Belfast, Ireland in 1905 and was the first of the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company's fleet of "A-liners"[7] that worked regular routes between Southampton and South American ports including Buenos Aires.[2]

Aragon in 1908 as a civilian ocean liner
History
United Kingdom
Name
  • RMS Aragon (1905–14)
  • HMT Aragon (1915–17)
NamesakeThe Spanish Kingdom of Aragon
Owner Royal Mail Steam Packet Co
Operator
  • Royal Mail SP Co (1905–14)
  • Royal Navy (1915–17)
Port of registryBelfast
Route
BuilderHarland and Wolff, Belfast
Yard number367
Launched23 February 1905[1]
Completed22 June 1905
Maiden voyage14 July 1905
Out of service30 December 1917
Identification
FateSunk by torpedo 30 December 1917
General characteristics
Class and typeRMSP "A" series
TypeOcean liner
Tonnage
Length513.2 ft (156.4 m)[3]
Beam60.4 ft (18.4 m)[3]
Depth31.0 ft (9.4 m)[3]
Installed power762,[6] 827[3] or 875[1] NHP
Propulsion
Speed
  • 15 knots (28 km/h)[3] or
  • 16 knots (30 km/h)[1][5]
Boats & landing
craft carried
12 lifeboats, 1 dinghy, 1 gig
Capacity
CrewAs troop ship: 200[3]
Armament2 × stern-mounted QF 4.7-inch (120 mm) guns (from 1913)[4]
Notes

In 1913 Aragon became Britain's first defensively armed merchant ship ("DAMS") of modern times. In the First World War she served as a troop ship, taking part in the Gallipoli Campaign in 1915. In 1917, a German submarine sank her in the Mediterranean, killing 610 of the personnel aboard.

Building edit

Owen Philipps became chairman of RMSP in 1903 and quickly addressed the company's need for larger ships on its South America route. RMSP ordered Aragon from Harland and Wolff, who built her on slip number 7 of its South Yard in Belfast.[8] The Countess Fitzwilliam[5] launched her on 23 February 1905.[3] Harland and Wolff completed the ship on 22 June.[6]

Philipps had discussed with Charles Parsons the possibility of steam turbine propulsion, which had been demonstrated by the steam launch Turbinia in 1894. The first turbine-powered passenger ship, TS King Edward, had entered service on the Firth of Clyde in 1901 but Philipps decided that another year of evaluation was needed to establish if and how to apply the new form of steam power to commercial ships.[9]

Accordingly, Aragon was built with a pair of conventional quadruple-expansion steam engines.[3] Their combined power is variously quoted as 762,[6] 827[3] or 875[1] NHP. They drove twin screws[4] that gave her a speed of 15 knots (28 km/h).[3]

Aragon had a single large funnel amidships.[7] She had 12 lifeboats on her boat deck plus a dinghy and a gig aft.[10] Her first class dining saloon had a panelled ceiling inlaid with paintings of Christopher Columbus discovering the Americas.[11]

Aragon had five cargo holds, some of which were refrigerated to carry meat and fruit from South America. Number 5 hold and the lower levels of numbers 1 and 2 holds were for frozen cargos. The 'tween decks of numbers 1 and 2 holds and upper 'tween deck of number 5 hold were for chilled cargos. A steam-powered refrigerating plant used "carbonic anhydride" as the refrigerant, and the holds were insulated with "silicate cotton".[12] Her bunkers held 2,000 tons of coal[10] and she had water tanks with a capacity of about 2,000 tons.[12]

RMSP registered Aragon at Belfast. Her UK official number was 120707 and her code letters were HCST.[13]

A-series development edit

Aragon was followed by series of generally similar but progressively larger and heavier liners.[7] In 1906 Harland and Wolff built sister ships Amazon and Avon, while another Belfast shipyard, Workman, Clark and Company, built Araguaya. Harland and Wolff added a fifth sister ship, Asturias, in 1908. RMSP gave each of this series a name beginning with "A", with the result that colloquially they were dubbed the "A-series"[7] or "A-liners".

A few years later the final four A-series ships followed from Harland and Wolff: Arlanza in 1912, Andes and Alcantara in 1913 and Almanzora in 1915.[5] Apart from being larger again, they differed from Aragon and her first four sisters by having three screws instead of two, and by making limited use of the turbine propulsion that Phillips and Parsons had discussed a few years earlier. Their two outer screws were driven by conventional triple-expansion steam engines. A low-pressure steam turbine drove the middle screw via reduction gearing.[10]

Civilian service edit

From the 1850s RMSP passenger liners had served a regular route between Britain and the River Plate ports in South America. They sailed from Southampton in southern England, called at the islands of Madeira and Tenerife off the West African coast; at Pernambuco, Salvador de Bahia and Rio de Janeiro on the coast of Brazil; and then at Montevideo in Uruguay before completing their voyage at Buenos Aires in Argentina.[7] Aragon and her sisters modernised RMSP's Southampton – River Plate service,[2][4] replacing vessels such as RMS Atranto that had been in service from 1889 onwards.[7]

The A-series ships hugely increased the profitability of the route. In 1906 she made four voyages to and from South America and netted a total profit of £45,368.[14] In 1908 she ran aground off the Isle of Wight, but that aside her civilian service was generally uneventful.[15]

By 1913 Aragon was equipped for wireless telegraphy, operating on the 300 and 600 metre wavelengths. Her call sign was MBN.[16]

Defensively armed merchant ship edit

From the turn of the 20th century, growing tensions between Europe's Great Powers included an Anglo-German naval arms race that threatened the security of merchant shipping. From 1911 the British Intelligence became aware that the German Empire was secretly arming some of its passenger liners, and the UK Government and British Admiralty discussed how to respond.[17]

Towards the end of 1912 the Admiralty decided to match the German policy by arming some British passenger liners, starting with RMS Aragon.[18] She was due to carry naval guns from December 1912, but within the British Government and Admiralty there was uncertainty as to how foreign countries and ports would react.[19] In January 1913 Rear Admiral Henry Campbell recommended that the Admiralty should send a merchant ship to sea with naval guns, but without ammunition, to test foreign governments' reaction.[19] A meeting chaired by Sir Francis Hopwood, Civil Lord of the Admiralty agreed, and Sir Eyre Crowe recorded "If nothing happens, it may be possible and easy, after a time, to place ammunition on board."[19]

On 25 April 1913 Aragon left Southampton as Britain's first defensively armed merchant ship (DAMS), carrying two QF 4.7-inch (120 mm) naval guns on her stern.[4] Governments, newspapers and the public in South American countries that Aragon visited took little notice and expressed no concern.[2] There was criticism from some serving and retired naval figures in Britain[20] but the policy continued. Aragon's sister ship RMS Amazon was made the next DAMS, and in the following months further RMSP "A-liners" were armed.[4] They included the newly built Alcantara, which in the First World War served as an armed merchant cruiser.

Gallipoli edit

During the First World War the ship was requisitioned as a troop ship and became HMT Aragon. She took part in the Gallipoli Campaign, in which one source states that she began by taking the 5th Battalion, the Hampshire Regiment and Royal Army Medical Corps units to the campaign in March 1915.[21] As the landings were not until 25 April, this may refer to troops moving from the UK to the Eastern Mediterranean in preparation for the landings. Her duties included evacuating nearly 1,500 wounded personnel to Alexandria and Malta.[21]

On 8 April Aragon was in Alexandria where she embarked the 4th Battalion, the Worcestershire Regiment and the 2nd Battalion, the Hampshire Regiment.[22][23] Both battalions were units of the 88th Brigade, which as part of the 29th Division had been ordered to take part in the Gallipoli Landings.[23]

On 11 April she left Alexandria for the Aegean island of Lemnos, where French and British ships were assembling in the large natural harbour of Moudros in final preparation for the landings.[22][23] On 13 April 1915 Aragon's troops transferred to the cargo steamer SS River Clyde[5] in preparation for the landing at Cape Helles 10 days later.

Later in the Gallipoli Campaign a British Forces Post Office, Base Army Post Office Y, transferred from Arcadian, another troop ship, to Aragon.[24] BAPO Y later redeployed from Aragon to a land base at Moudros.[24]

The invasion was a costly failure and in January 1916 French and British forces withdrew from the Gallipoli peninsula. On 13 February Aragon left Moudros for Malta, taking troops on leave including four officers and 270 men of the 63rd (Royal Naval) Division (RND).[25]

On 14 May Aragon was again at Moudros to withdraw troops; this time including the 1st Battalion the Royal Marines[26] and elements of the 2nd (Royal Naval) Brigade.[25] She reached Marseille in southern France at 0630 hrs on 19 May.[26]

Later in 1916 Aragon served in the Indian Ocean. In December 1916 she sailed from Kilindini Harbour in the British East Africa Protectorate, reaching Durban on Christmas Day.[27]

Alexandria Roads edit

Late in 1917 Aragon spent two weeks at anchor off Marseille before receiving orders in December to sail for Egypt.[5] She took about 2,200 troops[1] to reinforce the Egyptian Expeditionary Force in the Palestine Campaign against the Ottoman Empire, plus about 150 military officers, 160 VADs and about 2,500 bags of Christmas mail.[1] She and another transport, the Nile, then sailed in convoy with an escort of destroyers[5] for Egypt. On 23 December[5] they reached Windy Bay, Malta, where the two transports stayed at anchor for four[1][5] or five[28] days. There they celebrated Christmas, and according to one VAD those aboard Aragon had a "top hole" time.[28]

 
Acheron-class destroyer HMS Attack

Aragon and Nile then continued to Egypt with a fresh escort: the Acheron-class destroyer HMS Attack plus two Imperial Japanese Navy destroyers.[1] The convoy weathered a gale,[29] and off the Egyptian coast at daybreak on Sunday 30 December it divided.[5] The two Japanese destroyers escorted Nile to Port Said, while Attack escorted Aragon to Alexandria.[5] On approach to the port Attack zig-zagged ahead to search the channel for mines while Aragon waited in Alexandria Roads.[21]

The armed trawler HMT Points Castle approached Aragon flying the international flag signal "Follow me". The troop ship did so, until Attack returned and signalled "You have no right to take orders from a trawler".[21] The destroyer intercepted Points Castle and then ordered Aragon to return to sea.[1][3] The troop ship obeyed and turned back to sea.[21]

The most senior of Aragon's officers to survive what followed tried to make sense of the confusion:

"The only explanation that the writer can put forward is that the commander of the Attack had a warning of mines in the channel, causing him to order Aragon to disregard Points Castle's "Follow me". Evidently the enemy laid mines at the appropriate time in the knowledge that the ship would be kept out and thus present a target for torpedo attack."[21]

Aragon and Attack were in Alexandria Roads[30] about 8 miles (13 km)[5] or 10 miles (16 km) outside the port, awaiting permission to enter, when at about 1100 hrs[5] the German Type UC II submarine SM UC-34 torpedoed Aragon,[1][3] hitting her port side aft[1] and causing extensive damage in her almost empty number 4 hold.[21][28] Aragon's deck officer of the watch, Lieut. J.F.A. Thompson, stated that she then listed to starboard.[5]

Rescue edit

Let us take our chance with the Tommies.

— A VAD, quoted in The Northern Star, 8 April 1918

Attack and Points Castle came to the rescue.[1][3] One account states that two trawlers were present.[29] The VADs were ordered into the first lifeboats to be launched.[28][31] Two or three of the VADs protested at being given priority and one pleaded "Let us take our chance with the Tommies" before they all obeyed orders.[31] The VADs' boats rescued some troops from the water[28] and then transferred their survivors to one[29] or two[29] trawlers. Aragon released her life rafts[5] but the explosion had smashed one of her lifeboats[31] and her increasing list prevented her crew from launching some of the remainder.[5] Aragon's crew worked until they were waist deep in water to launch what boats they could.[31]

I have heard the chorus Keep the Home Fires Burning on many occasions but I don't think that I have ever heard it given with so much power.

— A survivor, quoted in The Northern Star, 8 April 1918

Attack drew right alongside Aragon to take survivors aboard as quickly as possible,[29] helped by lines cast between the two ships.[5] The troop ship sank rapidly by the stern.[5][29] More than one survivor stated that soldiers waiting on deck to be rescued started singing.[28] One said "I have heard the chorus 'Keep the Home Fires Burning' on many occasions but I don't think that I have ever heard it given with so much power".[31]

By now there was an increasing number of men in the water, and trooper James Werner Magnusson of the New Zealand Mounted Rifles saw an injured soldier struggling in the very rough sea.[32] He dived overboard from the ship, rescued the man and placed him in a boat.[32] Magnusson then returned aboard, rejoined his unit, and went down with the ship.[32] He was posthumously awarded the Albert Medal.[32]

A draft of 3rd (Reserve) Battalion, Buffs (East Kent Regiment) sent to reinforce the 10th (Royal East Kent and West Kent Yeomanry) Battalion, Buffs, won high praise for its discipline. First, Lance-Sergeant Canfor (himself injured by the explosion) called the roll, then men were detailed to cut away the life rafts while the rest sang. When the rafts were launched Lance-Corporal Baker volunteered to jump into the water to secure a life raft that was drifting away, assuring the safety of about 20 men. The rest of the draft then entered the water and clung onto the rafts for two and a half hours, singing and cheering on the rescue efforts. Only one man of the draft was lost.[33]

We felt that all our friends were drowning before our eyes.

— A VAD, quoted in MacDonald 1984, pp. 230–231

About 15 minutes[5] after the torpedo struck Aragon, her Master, Captain Bateman, gave the order from her bridge "Every man for himself".[31] Those remaining aboard rushed to get over her side,[5] and her bow rose out of the sea as soldiers swarmed down her side into the water.[29] One of the VADs who survived later recorded "We felt that all our friends were drowning before our eyes".[29] About 17[28] to 20 minutes after being hit Aragon went down, and she suffered a second explosion as the cold seawater reached her hot boilers.[5] Some of her boats were left upturned in the water.[5]

 
Cigarette card portrait of BSM Ernest Horlock VC, who was among the hundreds of troops killed when Aragon was sunk

Attack was now crowded with 300 to 400 survivors:[31] some naked, some wounded, many unconscious and dying.[29] One soldier, Sergeant Harold Riddlesworth of the Cheshire Regiment, repeatedly dived from the destroyer into the sea to rescue more survivors.[34] He survived and was decorated with the Meritorious Service Medal.[34][35]

 
HMS Attack sinking

Then a torpedo struck Attack amidships and blew her into two pieces,[28] both of which sank with five to seven minutes.[5] The explosion ruptured Attack's bunkers, spilling tons of thick, black bunker fuel oil into the sea as she sank.[29] Hundreds of men were in the water, and many of them became covered in oil or overcome by its fumes.[29]

Aragon's surviving lifeboats now ferried hundreds of survivors to the trawlers, where the VADs "worked unceasingly and with great heroism" to tend the many wounded.[5] Other trawlers came out to assist,[5] and the first trawler or trawlers[5] returned to harbour for safety.[29]

Deaths and survivors edit

Of those aboard Aragon, 610 were killed[1][3] including Captain Bateman, 19 of his crew,[3] and six of the VADs.[29] Hundreds of troops were killed. One was Ernest Horlock, a Royal Field Artillery Battery Sergeant Major who had received the VC for "conspicuous gallantry" shown on the Western Front in 1914.[29] Private Fred J. Barnes, a Essex Regiment soldier who had worked as a songwriter before the war, also died.[36] Airman 2nd Class Alfred Moore who died age 22 from Lower Edmonton, London. Another 25 of those killed were new recruits to the 5th Battalion the Bedfordshire Regiment.[37] Soldiers killed in the sinking are among those commemorated by the Chatby Memorial in the Shatby district of eastern Alexandria.[38]

Aragon's second officer was among the survivors.[39] A month later he told the Master of an Australian troopship, the converted AUSNC liner HMAT Indarra, that as Aragon sank Captain Bateman shouted from her bridge to Attack's commander that he would demand an enquiry into his ship having been ordered out of port.[39] Bateman then jumped overboard and was not seen again.[39]

Many of the survivors from Aragon's crew were repatriated to England, reaching Southampton on 10 February 1918.[31] Some voyaged all the way by steamship, but the majority travelled overland.[31]

Wreck edit

 
 
class=notpageimage|
Approximate position of Aragon's wreck

Aragon remains a wreck off the Egyptian coast, lying in about 40 metres (130 ft) of water.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r "Aragon". North Coast Shipwrecks. Shipwrecks of Egypt. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d Seligmann 2012, p. 144
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Lettens, Jan (9 November 2009). "SS Aragon [+1917]". The Wreck Site. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Seligmann 2012, p. 132
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad . Royal Mail Steam Packet Company. Merchant Navy Officers. Archived from the original on 11 June 2011. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  6. ^ a b c "Aragon". Shipping and Shipbuilding. Shipping and Shipbuilding Research Trust. Retrieved 16 January 2021.
  7. ^ a b c d e f "Royal Mail to Plate". Ships-Worldwide.com. Trains-WorldExpresses.com. 2012. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  8. ^ "Aragon". Harland and Wolff. Retrieved 16 January 2021.
  9. ^ Nicol 2001, p. 99.
  10. ^ a b c Nicol 2001, p. 101.
  11. ^ Sivell, Jay (22 April 2010). "6. Great steamers white and gold". A sailor's life. WordPress. Retrieved 7 April 2013.
  12. ^ a b Nicol 2001, p. 104.
  13. ^ Registrar General of Shipping and Seamen (1906). Mercantile Navy List. Board of Trade. p. 23. Retrieved 19 January 2021 – via Crew List Index Project.
  14. ^ Nicol 2001, p. 100.
  15. ^ Nicol 2001, p. 106.
  16. ^ The Marconi Press Agency Ltd 1913, p. 245.
  17. ^ Seligmann 2012, p. 136.
  18. ^ Seligmann 2012, p. 139.
  19. ^ a b c Seligmann 2012, p. 141.
  20. ^ Seligmann 2012, p. 145.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g Nicol 2001, p. 117.
  22. ^ a b Scully, Louis (2002–2012). "4th Battalion Worcestershire Regiment - 1915". The Worcestershire Regiment – The History of the Regiment 1694 – 1970. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  23. ^ a b c "White, Frederick". Hurst War Memorial. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  24. ^ a b "Report of the Meeting of 20th – 22nd July 2012 York Weekend 60th Anniversary Conference". Forces Postal History Society. July 2012. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  25. ^ a b Clegg, Jack (2000–2012). . The Campaign for War Grave Commemorations. Archived from the original on 18 April 2016. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  26. ^ a b Clegg, Jack (2000–2012). . The Campaign for War Grave Commemorations. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  27. ^ Grice, Rob (September 2009). "East London's Edkins brothers in WWI". The South African Military History Society. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  28. ^ a b c d e f g h Jones, Maureen (November 2007). . The War Poetry Web Site. Archived from the original on 20 September 2018. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n MacDonald 1984, pp. 230–231
  30. ^ Helgason, Guðmundur. "Ships hit during WWI: Aragon". German and Austrian U-boats of World War I - Kaiserliche Marine - Uboat.net. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  31. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Last Song on Doomed Ship". The Northern Star. Lismore, New South Wales. 8 April 1918. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  32. ^ a b c d "Board of Trade, Whitehall Gardens, 7th March, 1918". The London Gazette. 8 March 1918. p. 229. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  33. ^ Moody, pp. 64–5.
  34. ^ a b "Amazing tale of 'luckiest soldier'". Macclesfield Express. Trinity Mirror. 20 July 2011. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  35. ^ "His Majesty the KING has been graciously pleased to approve the award of the Meritorious Service Medal to the undermentioned". The London Gazette. 8 March 1918. p. 5037. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  36. ^ "Casualty Details: F J Barnes". Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 16 October 2021.
  37. ^ Fuller, Steven (2003–2013). "The sinking of the S.S. Aragon, 30th December 1917". The Bedfordshire Regiment in the Great War. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  38. ^ "Chatby Memorial". Cemetery details. Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  39. ^ a b c Thompson 1918, pp. 20–21

Sources and further reading edit

  • MacDonald, Lyn (1984) [1980]. The Roses of No Man's Land (2nd ed.). Harmondsworth: Papermac. ISBN 014017866X.
  • The Marconi Press Agency Ltd (1913). The Year Book of Wireless Telegraphy and Telephony. London: The St Katherine Press.
  • Col R.S.H. Moody, Historical Records of The Buffs, East Kent Regiment, 1914–1919, London: Medici Society, 1922/Uckfield, Naval & Military Press, 2002, ISBN 978-1-84342395-9.
  • Nicol, Stuart (2001). MacQueen's Legacy; Ships of the Royal Mail Line. Vol. Two. Brimscombe Port and Charleston, SC: Tempus Publishing. pp. 101–105, 117–118. ISBN 0-7524-2119-0.
  • Seligmann, Matthew S (2012). The Royal Navy and the German Threat 1901 – 1914: Admiralty Plans to Protect British Trade in a War Against Germany. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 132. ISBN 978-0-19-957403-2.
  • Thompson, JEM (13 October 1917 – 29 October 1918). Diary. State Library of New South Wales. MLMSS 2889/Item 1. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)

External links edit

  • RMS Aragon Short video with numerous interior images of the ship
  • Rawlins, John. "John Pugh". Machen First World War Memorial Site. — memorial to a Royal Engineers sapper, illustrated with Imperial War Museum photographs of Aragon in service and sinking
  • "HAMILTON: 7/4/1-42 Instructions, reports, orders of battle, staff diary and related papers of General Headquarters, Mediterranean Expeditionary Force, 1915". Catalogues. King's College London. Retrieved 9 April 2013. — catalogue of military documents dating from 9 July 1915 to 8 May 1916 about Aragon's part in the Gallipoli Campaign.

4147400315463578 31°18′N 29°48′E / 31.300°N 29.800°E / 31.300; 29.800

aragon, originally, aragon, transatlantic, royal, mail, ship, that, served, troop, ship, first, world, built, belfast, ireland, 1905, first, royal, mail, steam, packet, company, fleet, liners, that, worked, regular, routes, between, southampton, south, america. HMT Aragon originally RMS Aragon was a 9 588 GRT 3 transatlantic Royal Mail Ship that served as a troop ship in the First World War She was built in Belfast Ireland in 1905 and was the first of the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company s fleet of A liners 7 that worked regular routes between Southampton and South American ports including Buenos Aires 2 Aragon in 1908 as a civilian ocean linerHistory United Kingdom NameRMS Aragon 1905 14 HMT Aragon 1915 17 NamesakeThe Spanish Kingdom of Aragon OwnerRoyal Mail Steam Packet Co OperatorRoyal Mail SP Co 1905 14 Royal Navy 1915 17 Port of registryBelfast RouteSouthampton Buenos Aires 1905 14 2 BuilderHarland and Wolff Belfast Yard number367 Launched23 February 1905 1 Completed22 June 1905 Maiden voyage14 July 1905 Out of service30 December 1917 IdentificationUK Official number 120707 Code letters HCST Call sign MBN FateSunk by torpedo 30 December 1917 General characteristics Class and typeRMSP A series TypeOcean liner Tonnage9 588 GRT 3 5 6 038 NT 1 5 Length513 2 ft 156 4 m 3 Beam60 4 ft 18 4 m 3 Depth31 0 ft 9 4 m 3 Installed power762 6 827 3 or 875 1 NHP PropulsionQuadruple expansion steam engines 3 Twin screw propellers 4 Speed15 knots 28 km h 3 or 16 knots 30 km h 1 5 Boats amp landing craft carried12 lifeboats 1 dinghy 1 gig CapacityAs liner 306 1st class 1 5 66 2nd class 1 5 632 3rd class 1 5 CrewAs troop ship 200 3 Armament2 stern mounted QF 4 7 inch 120 mm guns from 1913 4 Notessister ships Amazon Avon Araguaya Asturias In 1913 Aragon became Britain s first defensively armed merchant ship DAMS of modern times In the First World War she served as a troop ship taking part in the Gallipoli Campaign in 1915 In 1917 a German submarine sank her in the Mediterranean killing 610 of the personnel aboard Contents 1 Building 2 A series development 3 Civilian service 4 Defensively armed merchant ship 5 Gallipoli 6 Alexandria Roads 6 1 Rescue 6 2 Deaths and survivors 7 Wreck 8 References 9 Sources and further reading 10 External linksBuilding editOwen Philipps became chairman of RMSP in 1903 and quickly addressed the company s need for larger ships on its South America route RMSP ordered Aragon from Harland and Wolff who built her on slip number 7 of its South Yard in Belfast 8 The Countess Fitzwilliam 5 launched her on 23 February 1905 3 Harland and Wolff completed the ship on 22 June 6 Philipps had discussed with Charles Parsons the possibility of steam turbine propulsion which had been demonstrated by the steam launch Turbinia in 1894 The first turbine powered passenger ship TS King Edward had entered service on the Firth of Clyde in 1901 but Philipps decided that another year of evaluation was needed to establish if and how to apply the new form of steam power to commercial ships 9 Accordingly Aragon was built with a pair of conventional quadruple expansion steam engines 3 Their combined power is variously quoted as 762 6 827 3 or 875 1 NHP They drove twin screws 4 that gave her a speed of 15 knots 28 km h 3 Aragon had a single large funnel amidships 7 She had 12 lifeboats on her boat deck plus a dinghy and a gig aft 10 Her first class dining saloon had a panelled ceiling inlaid with paintings of Christopher Columbus discovering the Americas 11 Aragon had five cargo holds some of which were refrigerated to carry meat and fruit from South America Number 5 hold and the lower levels of numbers 1 and 2 holds were for frozen cargos The tween decks of numbers 1 and 2 holds and upper tween deck of number 5 hold were for chilled cargos A steam powered refrigerating plant used carbonic anhydride as the refrigerant and the holds were insulated with silicate cotton 12 Her bunkers held 2 000 tons of coal 10 and she had water tanks with a capacity of about 2 000 tons 12 RMSP registered Aragon at Belfast Her UK official number was 120707 and her code letters were HCST 13 A series development editAragon was followed by series of generally similar but progressively larger and heavier liners 7 In 1906 Harland and Wolff built sister ships Amazon and Avon while another Belfast shipyard Workman Clark and Company built Araguaya Harland and Wolff added a fifth sister ship Asturias in 1908 RMSP gave each of this series a name beginning with A with the result that colloquially they were dubbed the A series 7 or A liners A few years later the final four A series ships followed from Harland and Wolff Arlanza in 1912 Andes and Alcantara in 1913 and Almanzora in 1915 5 Apart from being larger again they differed from Aragon and her first four sisters by having three screws instead of two and by making limited use of the turbine propulsion that Phillips and Parsons had discussed a few years earlier Their two outer screws were driven by conventional triple expansion steam engines A low pressure steam turbine drove the middle screw via reduction gearing 10 Civilian service editFrom the 1850s RMSP passenger liners had served a regular route between Britain and the River Plate ports in South America They sailed from Southampton in southern England called at the islands of Madeira and Tenerife off the West African coast at Pernambuco Salvador de Bahia and Rio de Janeiro on the coast of Brazil and then at Montevideo in Uruguay before completing their voyage at Buenos Aires in Argentina 7 Aragon and her sisters modernised RMSP s Southampton River Plate service 2 4 replacing vessels such as RMS Atranto that had been in service from 1889 onwards 7 The A series ships hugely increased the profitability of the route In 1906 she made four voyages to and from South America and netted a total profit of 45 368 14 In 1908 she ran aground off the Isle of Wight but that aside her civilian service was generally uneventful 15 By 1913 Aragon was equipped for wireless telegraphy operating on the 300 and 600 metre wavelengths Her call sign was MBN 16 Defensively armed merchant ship editMain article Defensively equipped merchant ships Anglo German arms race From the turn of the 20th century growing tensions between Europe s Great Powers included an Anglo German naval arms race that threatened the security of merchant shipping From 1911 the British Intelligence became aware that the German Empire was secretly arming some of its passenger liners and the UK Government and British Admiralty discussed how to respond 17 Towards the end of 1912 the Admiralty decided to match the German policy by arming some British passenger liners starting with RMS Aragon 18 She was due to carry naval guns from December 1912 but within the British Government and Admiralty there was uncertainty as to how foreign countries and ports would react 19 In January 1913 Rear Admiral Henry Campbell recommended that the Admiralty should send a merchant ship to sea with naval guns but without ammunition to test foreign governments reaction 19 A meeting chaired by Sir Francis Hopwood Civil Lord of the Admiralty agreed and Sir Eyre Crowe recorded If nothing happens it may be possible and easy after a time to place ammunition on board 19 On 25 April 1913 Aragon left Southampton as Britain s first defensively armed merchant ship DAMS carrying two QF 4 7 inch 120 mm naval guns on her stern 4 Governments newspapers and the public in South American countries that Aragon visited took little notice and expressed no concern 2 There was criticism from some serving and retired naval figures in Britain 20 but the policy continued Aragon s sister ship RMS Amazon was made the next DAMS and in the following months further RMSP A liners were armed 4 They included the newly built Alcantara which in the First World War served as an armed merchant cruiser Gallipoli editDuring the First World War the ship was requisitioned as a troop ship and became HMT Aragon She took part in the Gallipoli Campaign in which one source states that she began by taking the 5th Battalion the Hampshire Regiment and Royal Army Medical Corps units to the campaign in March 1915 21 As the landings were not until 25 April this may refer to troops moving from the UK to the Eastern Mediterranean in preparation for the landings Her duties included evacuating nearly 1 500 wounded personnel to Alexandria and Malta 21 On 8 April Aragon was in Alexandria where she embarked the 4th Battalion the Worcestershire Regiment and the 2nd Battalion the Hampshire Regiment 22 23 Both battalions were units of the 88th Brigade which as part of the 29th Division had been ordered to take part in the Gallipoli Landings 23 On 11 April she left Alexandria for the Aegean island of Lemnos where French and British ships were assembling in the large natural harbour of Moudros in final preparation for the landings 22 23 On 13 April 1915 Aragon s troops transferred to the cargo steamer SS River Clyde 5 in preparation for the landing at Cape Helles 10 days later Later in the Gallipoli Campaign a British Forces Post Office Base Army Post Office Y transferred from Arcadian another troop ship to Aragon 24 BAPO Y later redeployed from Aragon to a land base at Moudros 24 The invasion was a costly failure and in January 1916 French and British forces withdrew from the Gallipoli peninsula On 13 February Aragon left Moudros for Malta taking troops on leave including four officers and 270 men of the 63rd Royal Naval Division RND 25 On 14 May Aragon was again at Moudros to withdraw troops this time including the 1st Battalion the Royal Marines 26 and elements of the 2nd Royal Naval Brigade 25 She reached Marseille in southern France at 0630 hrs on 19 May 26 Later in 1916 Aragon served in the Indian Ocean In December 1916 she sailed from Kilindini Harbour in the British East Africa Protectorate reaching Durban on Christmas Day 27 Alexandria Roads editLate in 1917 Aragon spent two weeks at anchor off Marseille before receiving orders in December to sail for Egypt 5 She took about 2 200 troops 1 to reinforce the Egyptian Expeditionary Force in the Palestine Campaign against the Ottoman Empire plus about 150 military officers 160 VADs and about 2 500 bags of Christmas mail 1 She and another transport the Nile then sailed in convoy with an escort of destroyers 5 for Egypt On 23 December 5 they reached Windy Bay Malta where the two transports stayed at anchor for four 1 5 or five 28 days There they celebrated Christmas and according to one VAD those aboard Aragon had a top hole time 28 nbsp Acheron class destroyer HMS Attack Aragon and Nile then continued to Egypt with a fresh escort the Acheron class destroyer HMS Attack plus two Imperial Japanese Navy destroyers 1 The convoy weathered a gale 29 and off the Egyptian coast at daybreak on Sunday 30 December it divided 5 The two Japanese destroyers escorted Nile to Port Said while Attack escorted Aragon to Alexandria 5 On approach to the port Attack zig zagged ahead to search the channel for mines while Aragon waited in Alexandria Roads 21 The armed trawler HMT Points Castle approached Aragon flying the international flag signal Follow me The troop ship did so until Attack returned and signalled You have no right to take orders from a trawler 21 The destroyer intercepted Points Castle and then ordered Aragon to return to sea 1 3 The troop ship obeyed and turned back to sea 21 The most senior of Aragon s officers to survive what followed tried to make sense of the confusion The only explanation that the writer can put forward is that the commander of theAttackhad a warning of mines in the channel causing him to orderAragonto disregardPoints Castle s Follow me Evidently the enemy laid mines at the appropriate time in the knowledge that the ship would be kept out and thus present a target for torpedo attack 21 Aragon and Attack were in Alexandria Roads 30 about 8 miles 13 km 5 or 10 miles 16 km outside the port awaiting permission to enter when at about 1100 hrs 5 the German Type UC II submarine SM UC 34 torpedoed Aragon 1 3 hitting her port side aft 1 and causing extensive damage in her almost empty number 4 hold 21 28 Aragon s deck officer of the watch Lieut J F A Thompson stated that she then listed to starboard 5 Rescue edit Let us take our chance with the Tommies A VAD quoted in The Northern Star 8 April 1918 Attack and Points Castle came to the rescue 1 3 One account states that two trawlers were present 29 The VADs were ordered into the first lifeboats to be launched 28 31 Two or three of the VADs protested at being given priority and one pleaded Let us take our chance with the Tommies before they all obeyed orders 31 The VADs boats rescued some troops from the water 28 and then transferred their survivors to one 29 or two 29 trawlers Aragon released her life rafts 5 but the explosion had smashed one of her lifeboats 31 and her increasing list prevented her crew from launching some of the remainder 5 Aragon s crew worked until they were waist deep in water to launch what boats they could 31 I have heard the chorus Keep the Home Fires Burning on many occasions but I don t think that I have ever heard it given with so much power A survivor quoted in The Northern Star 8 April 1918 Attack drew right alongside Aragon to take survivors aboard as quickly as possible 29 helped by lines cast between the two ships 5 The troop ship sank rapidly by the stern 5 29 More than one survivor stated that soldiers waiting on deck to be rescued started singing 28 One said I have heard the chorus Keep the Home Fires Burning on many occasions but I don t think that I have ever heard it given with so much power 31 By now there was an increasing number of men in the water and trooper James Werner Magnusson of the New Zealand Mounted Rifles saw an injured soldier struggling in the very rough sea 32 He dived overboard from the ship rescued the man and placed him in a boat 32 Magnusson then returned aboard rejoined his unit and went down with the ship 32 He was posthumously awarded the Albert Medal 32 A draft of 3rd Reserve Battalion Buffs East Kent Regiment sent to reinforce the 10th Royal East Kent and West Kent Yeomanry Battalion Buffs won high praise for its discipline First Lance Sergeant Canfor himself injured by the explosion called the roll then men were detailed to cut away the life rafts while the rest sang When the rafts were launched Lance Corporal Baker volunteered to jump into the water to secure a life raft that was drifting away assuring the safety of about 20 men The rest of the draft then entered the water and clung onto the rafts for two and a half hours singing and cheering on the rescue efforts Only one man of the draft was lost 33 We felt that all our friends were drowning before our eyes A VAD quoted in MacDonald 1984 pp 230 231 About 15 minutes 5 after the torpedo struck Aragon her Master Captain Bateman gave the order from her bridge Every man for himself 31 Those remaining aboard rushed to get over her side 5 and her bow rose out of the sea as soldiers swarmed down her side into the water 29 One of the VADs who survived later recorded We felt that all our friends were drowning before our eyes 29 About 17 28 to 20 minutes after being hit Aragon went down and she suffered a second explosion as the cold seawater reached her hot boilers 5 Some of her boats were left upturned in the water 5 nbsp Cigarette card portrait of BSM Ernest Horlock VC who was among the hundreds of troops killed when Aragon was sunk Attack was now crowded with 300 to 400 survivors 31 some naked some wounded many unconscious and dying 29 One soldier Sergeant Harold Riddlesworth of the Cheshire Regiment repeatedly dived from the destroyer into the sea to rescue more survivors 34 He survived and was decorated with the Meritorious Service Medal 34 35 nbsp HMS Attack sinking Then a torpedo struck Attack amidships and blew her into two pieces 28 both of which sank with five to seven minutes 5 The explosion ruptured Attack s bunkers spilling tons of thick black bunker fuel oil into the sea as she sank 29 Hundreds of men were in the water and many of them became covered in oil or overcome by its fumes 29 Aragon s surviving lifeboats now ferried hundreds of survivors to the trawlers where the VADs worked unceasingly and with great heroism to tend the many wounded 5 Other trawlers came out to assist 5 and the first trawler or trawlers 5 returned to harbour for safety 29 Deaths and survivors edit Of those aboard Aragon 610 were killed 1 3 including Captain Bateman 19 of his crew 3 and six of the VADs 29 Hundreds of troops were killed One was Ernest Horlock a Royal Field Artillery Battery Sergeant Major who had received the VC for conspicuous gallantry shown on the Western Front in 1914 29 Private Fred J Barnes a Essex Regiment soldier who had worked as a songwriter before the war also died 36 Airman 2nd Class Alfred Moore who died age 22 from Lower Edmonton London Another 25 of those killed were new recruits to the 5th Battalion the Bedfordshire Regiment 37 Soldiers killed in the sinking are among those commemorated by the Chatby Memorial in the Shatby district of eastern Alexandria 38 Aragon s second officer was among the survivors 39 A month later he told the Master of an Australian troopship the converted AUSNC liner HMAT Indarra that as Aragon sank Captain Bateman shouted from her bridge to Attack s commander that he would demand an enquiry into his ship having been ordered out of port 39 Bateman then jumped overboard and was not seen again 39 Many of the survivors from Aragon s crew were repatriated to England reaching Southampton on 10 February 1918 31 Some voyaged all the way by steamship but the majority travelled overland 31 Wreck edit nbsp nbsp class notpageimage Approximate position of Aragon s wreck Aragon remains a wreck off the Egyptian coast lying in about 40 metres 130 ft of water 1 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Aragon North Coast Shipwrecks Shipwrecks of Egypt Retrieved 9 April 2013 a b c d Seligmann 2012 p 144 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Lettens Jan 9 November 2009 SS Aragon 1917 The Wreck Site Retrieved 9 April 2013 a b c d e f Seligmann 2012 p 132 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad 1914 1926 Royal Mail Steam Packet Company Merchant Navy Officers Archived from the original on 11 June 2011 Retrieved 9 April 2013 a b c Aragon Shipping and Shipbuilding Shipping and Shipbuilding Research Trust Retrieved 16 January 2021 a b c d e f Royal Mail to Plate Ships Worldwide com Trains WorldExpresses com 2012 Retrieved 9 April 2013 Aragon Harland and Wolff Retrieved 16 January 2021 Nicol 2001 p 99 a b c Nicol 2001 p 101 Sivell Jay 22 April 2010 6 Great steamers white and gold A sailor s life WordPress Retrieved 7 April 2013 a b Nicol 2001 p 104 Registrar General of Shipping and Seamen 1906 Mercantile Navy List Board of Trade p 23 Retrieved 19 January 2021 via Crew List Index Project Nicol 2001 p 100 Nicol 2001 p 106 The Marconi Press Agency Ltd 1913 p 245 Seligmann 2012 p 136 Seligmann 2012 p 139 a b c Seligmann 2012 p 141 Seligmann 2012 p 145 a b c d e f g Nicol 2001 p 117 a b Scully Louis 2002 2012 4th Battalion Worcestershire Regiment 1915 The Worcestershire Regiment The History of the Regiment 1694 1970 Retrieved 9 April 2013 a b c White Frederick Hurst War Memorial Retrieved 9 April 2013 a b Report of the Meeting of 20th 22nd July 2012 York Weekend 60th Anniversary Conference Forces Postal History Society July 2012 Retrieved 9 April 2013 a b Clegg Jack 2000 2012 1st Royal Marine Battalion aka 1st Bn RMLI War Diaries May 1916 to Jan 1919 The Campaign for War Grave Commemorations Archived from the original on 18 April 2016 Retrieved 9 April 2013 a b Clegg Jack 2000 2012 Royal Naval Division War Diary Jan to May 1916 The Campaign for War Grave Commemorations Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 9 April 2013 Grice Rob September 2009 East London s Edkins brothers in WWI The South African Military History Society Retrieved 9 April 2013 a b c d e f g h Jones Maureen November 2007 Poems of the First World War The War Poetry Web Site Archived from the original on 20 September 2018 Retrieved 9 April 2013 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n MacDonald 1984 pp 230 231 Helgason Gudmundur Ships hit during WWI Aragon German and Austrian U boats of World War I Kaiserliche Marine Uboat net Retrieved 9 April 2013 a b c d e f g h i Last Song on Doomed Ship The Northern Star Lismore New South Wales 8 April 1918 Retrieved 9 April 2013 a b c d Board of Trade Whitehall Gardens 7th March 1918 The London Gazette 8 March 1918 p 229 Retrieved 9 April 2013 Moody pp 64 5 a b Amazing tale of luckiest soldier Macclesfield Express Trinity Mirror 20 July 2011 Retrieved 9 April 2013 His Majesty the KING has been graciously pleased to approve the award of the Meritorious Service Medal to the undermentioned The London Gazette 8 March 1918 p 5037 Retrieved 9 April 2013 Casualty Details F J Barnes Commonwealth War Graves Commission Retrieved 16 October 2021 Fuller Steven 2003 2013 The sinking of the S S Aragon 30th December 1917 The Bedfordshire Regiment in the Great War Retrieved 9 April 2013 Chatby Memorial Cemetery details Commonwealth War Graves Commission Retrieved 9 April 2013 a b c Thompson 1918 pp 20 21Sources and further reading editMacDonald Lyn 1984 1980 The Roses of No Man s Land 2nd ed Harmondsworth Papermac ISBN 014017866X The Marconi Press Agency Ltd 1913 The Year Book of Wireless Telegraphy and Telephony London The St Katherine Press Col R S H Moody Historical Records of The Buffs East Kent Regiment 1914 1919 London Medici Society 1922 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2002 ISBN 978 1 84342395 9 Nicol Stuart 2001 MacQueen s Legacy Ships of the Royal Mail Line Vol Two Brimscombe Port and Charleston SC Tempus Publishing pp 101 105 117 118 ISBN 0 7524 2119 0 Seligmann Matthew S 2012 The Royal Navy and the German Threat 1901 1914 Admiralty Plans to Protect British Trade in a War Against Germany Oxford Oxford University Press p 132 ISBN 978 0 19 957403 2 Thompson JEM 13 October 1917 29 October 1918 Diary State Library of New South Wales MLMSS 2889 Item 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Aragon ship 1905 RMS Aragon Short video with numerous interior images of the ship Rawlins John John Pugh Machen First World War Memorial Site memorial to a Royal Engineers sapper illustrated with Imperial War Museum photographs of Aragon in service and sinking HAMILTON 7 4 1 42 Instructions reports orders of battle staff diary and related papers of General Headquarters Mediterranean Expeditionary Force 1915 Catalogues King s College London Retrieved 9 April 2013 catalogue of military documents dating from 9 July 1915 to 8 May 1916 about Aragon s part in the Gallipoli Campaign 4147400315463578 31 18 N 29 48 E 31 300 N 29 800 E 31 300 29 800 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title HMT Aragon amp oldid 1178532351, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.