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RMS Asturias (1925)

RMS Asturias was a Royal Mail Lines ocean liner that was built in Belfast in 1925. She served in the Second World War as an armed merchant cruiser until she was crippled by a torpedo in 1943. She was out of action until 1948 when she returned to civilian service as an emigrant ship. She became a troop ship in 1954 and was scrapped in 1957.

RML poster of Asturias with her funnels raised in height after she was rebuilt as a turbine steamship.
Painting by Kenneth Shoesmith.
History
United Kingdom
Name
  • RMS Asturias (1925–39; 1943–57)
  • HMS Asturias (F71) (1939–43)
NamesakePrincipality of Asturias
Owner
Operator Royal Navy (1939–43)
Port of registry Belfast
RouteSouthampton – South America
BuilderHarland & Wolff, Belfast
Yard number507
Launched7 July 1925
Sponsored byRosalind Hamilton, Duchess of Abercorn
Completed6 February 1926
Identification
FateSold for scrap, 14 September 1957
General characteristics
Type
Tonnage
  • 22,071 GRT
  • tonnage under deck 15,937
  • 13,206 NRT
Length630 ft 6 in (192.18 m)
Beam78 ft 6 in (23.93 m)
Draught44 ft 9 in (13.64 m)
Depth40 ft 6 in (12.34 m)
Decks7
Installed powerAs built: 3,366 NHP; 10,000 ihp, 7,500 bhp
Propulsion
Speed
  • 16+12 knots (30.6 km/h) (until 1934)
  • 19 knots (35 km/h) (from 1934)
Boats & landing
craft carried
Launched with 30 lifeboats, later reduced to 28
Sensors and
processing systems
Armament
NotesSister ship: RMS Alcantara

Background edit

In the First World War the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company lost a number of ships to enemy action, including three of its "A-series" passenger liners: Alcantara, Aragon and Asturias.[3] After the 1918 Armistice RMSP prioritised the replacement of lost cargo ships,[4] using new refrigerated cargo ships to take a share of the growing trade in frozen meat from South America to the UK.[5]

High demand for new merchant ships to replace First World War losses kept shipbuilding prices high, so RMSP Chairman Lord Kylsant deferred ordering any new passenger liners for a few years. However, in 1921 Parliament passed the first of five Trade Facilities Acts, which offered low-interest loans and Government guarantees for repayment. In 1924 Kylsant took advantage of the Act by ordering from Harland and Wolff of Belfast a pair of 22,200 GRT passenger liners[6] with a speed of 18 to 19 knots (33 to 35 km/h).[7]

Motor ships edit

 
Asturias as built in the 1920s as a motor ship with two low funnels

Harland and Wolff launched the new Asturias on 7 July 1925 and completed her in February 1926.[8] Her sister ship Alcantara was launched on 23 September 1926 and completed in February 1927.[9][10]

Asturias was named after Royal Mail Lines' previous Asturias, which had been a hospital ship in the First World War, survived being torpedoed in 1917 and then after returning to RMSP service after the war had been converted into the cruise ship Arcadian. The new Asturias was given the UK official number 148146 and code letters KTPJ.[11] When four-letter maritime call signs were introduced in 1934, Asturias was given the call sign GLQS.[12]

Each of the two new ships was powered by a pair of eight-cylinder four-stroke double-acting diesel engines built by Harland and Wolff to a Burmeister & Wain design. The engines gave each ship 10,000 ihp or 7,500 bhp, and at the time they were the World's largest motor ships.[10] However, their cruising speed was only 16+12 knots (30.6 km/h), which was less than that of competing ships already on the route between European ports and the South American east coast. This was an embarrassment for Lord Kylsant, who in 1924 had become Chairman of Harland and Wolff in addition to his position as chairman of RMSP.[13]

In comparison, Compagnie de Navigation Sud-Atlantique had two 15,000 GRT liners on the route, Lutetia (1913) and Massilia (1920), that were smaller and older but at 20 knots (37 km/h)[14] could offer a passage that was quicker by several days. Hamburg Süd also competed on the route with its 20,517 GRT, 19-knot (35 km/h) Cap Polonio.[15] In 1927 Hamburg Süd strengthened its competition by introducing the liner Cap Arcona, which not only matched the speed of the French ships[16] but at 27,561 GRT also became the largest ship on the route between Europe and South America.[17]

Steam turbine ships edit

 
Painting by Kenneth Shoesmith of Asturias in Brazil in the later 1930s, after conversion to a steam turbine ship and with her funnels increased in height

In 1931 the Royal Mail Case resulted in the jailing of Lord Kylsant, and in 1932 the company was reconstituted as a new body, Royal Mail Lines, chaired by Lord Essendon. He claimed that German, Italian and French competitors were running ships to South America at 22 knots (41 km/h), giving a passage about five days quicker than RMSP.[15] The new RML company immediately considered how to raise the speed of Asturias and Alcantara.[13] Essendon concluded that foreign competitors were losing money at 22 knots, but a range of options to raise the speed of Asturias and Alcantara to 19 to 22 knots (35 to 41 km/h) should be evaluated. Essendon also proposed inviting foreign competitors to agree on a 19-knot speed limit on the South American route, so that all companies could economise on fuel and attempt to cover their costs.[18]

At that time marine diesel power was at a relatively early stage of development, and RML considered it unable to increase the two ships' speed to the required level. Lord Essendon therefore recommended steam turbines, and two options for the drive system: either conventional reduction gearing, or the newer turbo-electric transmission that had been pioneered in the US and successfully applied to US, UK and French ocean liners. Whichever transmission was chosen, the cost of re-engining Asturias and Alcantara was estimated at £500,000. Lord Essendon also urged RML directors to order a third ship of similar speed to share the route with Asturias and Alcantara.[18]

Given the Great Depression at the time, the RML board rejected the idea of a new ship. At first it was prepared to have only one ship re-engined, and proposed reassigning the other to cruising to replace the ageing A-series liner Atlantis. However, in May 1933 the board consented to have both Asturias and Alcantara re-engined, and at the same time to lengthen their bows by 10 feet (3 m) and improve some of the accommodation. RML awarded the work to Harland and Wolff, but with a condition in the contract that the ships must achieve at least 18+34 knots (34.7 km/h), and a graduated penalty clause in case the actual speed increase should fall short of that figure.[19] In the same year, Lord Essendon succeeded in getting RML's competitors to accept a 19-knot speed limit on the South American route.[15]

Harland and Wolff fitted each ship with three water tube boilers supplying superheated steam at 435 lbf/in2 to a set of six turbines that drove her twin propeller shafts by single reduction gearing. The National Physical Laboratory helped the shipyard to design new aerofoil-section manganese bronze three-bladed propellers, and the rudders were also streamlined.[19] The new machinery succeeded in increasing each ship's nominal horsepower by 25% and increased their speed to about 19 knots (35 km/h).

Each ships had two funnels, of which the forward one was a dummy.[13] As built the funnels were low, which was a fashion for some 1920s and '30s motor ships. When the ships were re-engined in 1934 each funnel was increased in height.

The improvement to passenger accommodation was on "C" deck. A large number of small cabins was replaced with a smaller number of more spacious ones. As revised, "C" deck on each ship had 61 cabins, 47 of which were given en suite bathrooms.[19]

Asturias was converted first, going to Belfast in May 1934 and returning to service in October. Only after Asturias had successfully completed a voyage from Southampton to Rio de Janeiro and back did RMS send Alcantara to Harland and Wolff at Belfast in November. She returned to service in May 1935.[20]

Second World War service edit

In 1939 the Admiralty requisitioned Asturias and Alcantara and had each ship converted into an armed merchant cruiser (AMC).

Asturias was requisitioned on 28 August,[21] shortly before the Second World War broke out. She steamed from Southampton to Belfast to be refitted for the Royal Navy. Her First Class accommodation was removed. Her forward dummy funnel was removed to increase the arc of fire for their anti-aircraft guns. Her deck and hull were strengthened to bear a primary armament of eight BL 6 inch Mk XII naval guns and secondary armament of several QF 3 inch 20 cwt anti-aircraft guns. On 28 September work was completed, she was commissioned as HMS Asturias with the pennant number F71[21] and sailed to the Royal Navy anchorage at Scapa Flow.[22]

In October 1939 Asturias joined the Halifax Escort Force, escorting transatlantic convoys between Halifax, Nova Scotia and the UK. From November 1939 until April 1940 she served in the Northern Patrol. In May 1940 she returned to convoy work with the North Atlantic Escort Force, but in June she was again switched to the Northern Patrol.[21]

26.05.40. - Geoffrey William Penny - British officer served as paymaster aboard HMS Asturias, whilst at Gibraltar; "Alongside the mole when mattress stored in the baggage room suffered spontaneous combustion and the ship burst into fire, a lot of water was poured into the ship and there was a danger of losing the ship, the authorities thought the ship was going to sink so the crew were put ashore. The ship cast off drifted then came back once the fire had been put out, but the ship deck had buckled".

In July 1940 Asturias was transferred to the South Atlantic Station. On 28 January 1941 she was patrolling northeast of Puerto Rico in the western Atlantic when she captured a large Vichy French cargo ship, the 8,199 GRT turbine steamer Mendoza.[21]

Later in 1941 Asturias was upgraded in Newport News, Virginia. Her mainmast was removed to improve her arc of fire and her armament was modernised. Her Second Class accommodation aft was removed and replaced with an aircraft hangar, and she was fitted with an aircraft catapult. She returned to the South Atlantic Station, where for a time she was the area flagship.[23] She remained on the South Atlantic Station until April 1943.[21]

On 28 April 1943 Captain Sir John Meynell Alleyne, Baronet, took command of Asturias. In May she was transferred to the naval arm of the West Africa Command.[21] In July 1943 she left Brazil towing a floating dock to deliver to Freetown in Sierra Leone. On 25 July she was about 400 nautical miles (740 km) from her destination when the Cagni-class Italian submarine Ammiraglio Cagni torpedoed her port side. The explosion was next to Asturias' boiler room, and four members of her crew were killed.[21] An estimated 10,000 tons of water flooded her engine room but she remained afloat. She was towed to Freetown, where the damage was found to be so extensive that she was laid up.[23]

Asturias was written off as a constructive total loss.[23][24] On 30 May 1944 her ownership was transferred to the Ministry of War Transport.[21] She was towed to Gibraltar where she received temporary repairs. By the time these were completed the war had ended. Asturias was towed to Belfast for permanent repairs and conversion back into a civilian passenger liner.[23]

Post-war service edit

 
The Ministry of Transport flag: a Blue Ensign defaced with an anchor, wheel and crown

Emigrant ship edit

After the Second World War British migration to Australia was encouraged. Asturias joined this trade, owned by the Ministry of Transport and managed by RML. She remained in her wartime Royal Navy grey until the end of 1949, when her superstructure was painted white and her one remaining funnel was returned to RML buff. But even then her hull remained grey until May 1950, when it was painted black with pink boot-topping.[23]

Troop ship edit

Asturias' years as an emigrant ship were interrupted by several voyages as a troop ship. One was in September 1953, when she brought UK troops from South Korea to Gibraltar on their way home from the Korean War.[25] The troops were 530 British soldiers who had been prisoners of war in North Korea. Most were members of the Gloucestershire Regiment who had been captured two and a half years earlier at the Battle of the Imjin River in April 1951. She reached Southampton on 16 September, where her troops were greeted by family members and a large contingent of the Gloucestershire Regiment.[26]

 
Asturias as a troop ship, 1954–57

In 1954 she was displaced from emigrant service and transferred to full-time trooping. For this her hull was repainted white with a blue band and her funnel was painted yellow.[23]

Much of Asturias' trooping work was in the Far East.[23] This included her final voyage, when she brought home the First Battalion of the Royal Sussex Regiment from South Korea. She left Inchon on 28 July 1957, called at Hong Kong on 31 July, Singapore on 4 August and Colombo in Sri Lanka on 9 August. She anchored off Aden and then passed through the Suez Canal, which had only recently been cleared of blockships after the 1956 Suez Crisis. She then called at Gibraltar on about 23 August before reaching Southampton on 27 August.[27]

A Night To Remember edit

Asturias' career ended in 1957. She was sold to Shipbreaking Industries Ltd, and on 14 September she arrived at Faslane to be scrapped.[28]

As Shipbreaking Industries were demolishing Asturias' starboard side, The Rank Organisation used her port side to film scenes for the 1958 feature film A Night to Remember. That side was painted in White Star Line livery to represent the 1912 liner RMS Titanic. After filming was completed, Shipbreaking Industries completed her demolition.[29]

References edit

  1. ^ "BR 6in 45cal BL Mk XII". NavHist. Flixco Pty Limited. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  2. ^ "BR 3in 45cal 12pdr 20cwt QF Mk I To IV". NavHist. Flixco Pty Limited. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  3. ^ Nicol 2001b, p. 121.
  4. ^ Nicol 2001b, p. 233.
  5. ^ Nicol 2001b, pp. 236–237.
  6. ^ Nicol 2001b, p. 231.
  7. ^ Nicol 2001b, p. 232.
  8. ^ "Asturias". The Yard. Robert C. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  9. ^ "Alcantara". The Yard. Robert C. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  10. ^ a b Nicol 2001b, p. 131.
  11. ^ Lloyd's Register, Steamers & Motorships (PDF). London: Lloyd's Register. 1933–34. Retrieved 28 June 2020.
  12. ^ Lloyd's Register, Steamers & Motorships (PDF). London: Lloyd's Register. 1934–35. Retrieved 28 June 2020.
  13. ^ a b c Nicol 2001b, p. 132.
  14. ^ Talbot-Booth 1942, p. 394.
  15. ^ a b c Nicol 2001b, p. 139.
  16. ^ Talbot-Booth 1942, p. 410.
  17. ^ Talbot-Booth 1942, p. 332.
  18. ^ a b Nicol 2001b, pp. 138–139.
  19. ^ a b c Nicol 2001b, p. 140.
  20. ^ Nicol 2001b, p. 142.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h Helgason, Guðmundur (1995–2017). "HMS Asturias (F 71)". uboat.net. Guðmundur Helgason. Retrieved 28 May 2017.
  22. ^ Nicol 2001b, p. 143.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g Nicol 2001b, p. 146.
  24. ^ Nicol 2001a, p. 172.
  25. ^ Nicol 2001b, pp. 146–147.
  26. ^ Doherty, Vicky. "Troop Service". SS Asturias. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  27. ^ Hamilton, David. "Last Voyage of the Asturias". SS Asturias. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  28. ^ Nicol 2001b, p. 147.
  29. ^ Doherty, Vicky. "From Launch to Scrap – the Asturias Story". SS Asturias. Retrieved 29 May 2017.

Sources and further reading edit

  • Nicol, Stuart (2001a). MacQueen's Legacy; A History of the Royal Mail Line. Vol. 1. Brimscombe Port and Charleston, SC: Tempus Publishing. ISBN 0-7524-2118-2.
  • Nicol, Stuart (2001b). MacQueen's Legacy; Ships of the Royal Mail Line. Vol. 2. Brimscombe Port and Charleston, SC: Tempus Publishing. pp. 130–149. ISBN 0-7524-2119-0.
  • Osborne, Richard; Spong, Harry & Grover, Tom (2007). Armed Merchant Cruisers 1878–1945. Windsor: World Warship Society. ISBN 978-0-9543310-8-5.
  • Talbot-Booth, EC (1942) [1936]. Ships and the Sea (Third ed.). London: Sampson Low, Marston & Co. Ltd.

External links edit

  • Doherty, Vicky. "About This Site". SS Asturias.

asturias, 1925, other, ships, with, same, name, hmhs, asturias, asturias, royal, mail, lines, ocean, liner, that, built, belfast, 1925, served, second, world, armed, merchant, cruiser, until, crippled, torpedo, 1943, action, until, 1948, when, returned, civili. For other ships with the same name see HMHS Asturias RMS Asturias was a Royal Mail Lines ocean liner that was built in Belfast in 1925 She served in the Second World War as an armed merchant cruiser until she was crippled by a torpedo in 1943 She was out of action until 1948 when she returned to civilian service as an emigrant ship She became a troop ship in 1954 and was scrapped in 1957 RML poster of Asturias with her funnels raised in height after she was rebuilt as a turbine steamship Painting by Kenneth Shoesmith History United Kingdom NameRMS Asturias 1925 39 1943 57 HMS Asturias F71 1939 43 NamesakePrincipality of Asturias OwnerRMSP Meat Transports 1925 32 Royal Mail Lines 1932 44 Ministry of War Transport 1944 46 Ministry of Transport 1946 57 OperatorRoyal Navy 1939 43 Port of registryBelfast RouteSouthampton South America BuilderHarland amp Wolff Belfast Yard number507 Launched7 July 1925 Sponsored byRosalind Hamilton Duchess of Abercorn Completed6 February 1926 IdentificationUK official number 148146 Code letters KTPJ until 1933 Call sign GLQS from 1934 FateSold for scrap 14 September 1957 General characteristics TypeOcean liner 1926 39 Armed merchant cruiser 1939 43 lLaid up 1943 45 emigrant ship 1948 54 troop ship 1954 57 Tonnage22 071 GRT tonnage under deck 15 937 13 206 NRT Length630 ft 6 in 192 18 m Beam78 ft 6 in 23 93 m Draught44 ft 9 in 13 64 m Depth40 ft 6 in 12 34 m Decks7 Installed powerAs built 3 366 NHP 10 000 ihp 7 500 bhp Propulsiontwin screws powered by 2 8 cylinder 4 stroke double acting Burmeister amp Wain diesel engines until 1934 6 steam turbines from 1934 Speed16 1 2 knots 30 6 km h until 1934 19 knots 35 km h from 1934 Boats amp landing craft carriedLaunched with 30 lifeboats later reduced to 28 Sensors and processing systemsWireless direction finding echo sounding device Armamentas AMC 8 BL 6 inch Mk XII naval guns 1 QF 3 inch 20 cwt anti aircraft guns 2 NotesSister ship RMS Alcantara Contents 1 Background 2 Motor ships 3 Steam turbine ships 4 Second World War service 5 Post war service 5 1 Emigrant ship 5 2 Troop ship 6 A Night To Remember 7 References 8 Sources and further reading 9 External linksBackground editIn the First World War the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company lost a number of ships to enemy action including three of its A series passenger liners Alcantara Aragon and Asturias 3 After the 1918 Armistice RMSP prioritised the replacement of lost cargo ships 4 using new refrigerated cargo ships to take a share of the growing trade in frozen meat from South America to the UK 5 High demand for new merchant ships to replace First World War losses kept shipbuilding prices high so RMSP Chairman Lord Kylsant deferred ordering any new passenger liners for a few years However in 1921 Parliament passed the first of five Trade Facilities Acts which offered low interest loans and Government guarantees for repayment In 1924 Kylsant took advantage of the Act by ordering from Harland and Wolff of Belfast a pair of 22 200 GRT passenger liners 6 with a speed of 18 to 19 knots 33 to 35 km h 7 Motor ships edit nbsp Asturias as built in the 1920s as a motor ship with two low funnels Harland and Wolff launched the new Asturias on 7 July 1925 and completed her in February 1926 8 Her sister ship Alcantara was launched on 23 September 1926 and completed in February 1927 9 10 Asturias was named after Royal Mail Lines previous Asturias which had been a hospital ship in the First World War survived being torpedoed in 1917 and then after returning to RMSP service after the war had been converted into the cruise ship Arcadian The new Asturias was given the UK official number 148146 and code letters KTPJ 11 When four letter maritime call signs were introduced in 1934 Asturias was given the call sign GLQS 12 Each of the two new ships was powered by a pair of eight cylinder four stroke double acting diesel engines built by Harland and Wolff to a Burmeister amp Wain design The engines gave each ship 10 000 ihp or 7 500 bhp and at the time they were the World s largest motor ships 10 However their cruising speed was only 16 1 2 knots 30 6 km h which was less than that of competing ships already on the route between European ports and the South American east coast This was an embarrassment for Lord Kylsant who in 1924 had become Chairman of Harland and Wolff in addition to his position as chairman of RMSP 13 In comparison Compagnie de Navigation Sud Atlantique had two 15 000 GRT liners on the route Lutetia 1913 and Massilia 1920 that were smaller and older but at 20 knots 37 km h 14 could offer a passage that was quicker by several days Hamburg Sud also competed on the route with its 20 517 GRT 19 knot 35 km h Cap Polonio 15 In 1927 Hamburg Sud strengthened its competition by introducing the liner Cap Arcona which not only matched the speed of the French ships 16 but at 27 561 GRT also became the largest ship on the route between Europe and South America 17 Steam turbine ships edit nbsp Painting by Kenneth Shoesmith of Asturias in Brazil in the later 1930s after conversion to a steam turbine ship and with her funnels increased in height In 1931 the Royal Mail Case resulted in the jailing of Lord Kylsant and in 1932 the company was reconstituted as a new body Royal Mail Lines chaired by Lord Essendon He claimed that German Italian and French competitors were running ships to South America at 22 knots 41 km h giving a passage about five days quicker than RMSP 15 The new RML company immediately considered how to raise the speed of Asturias and Alcantara 13 Essendon concluded that foreign competitors were losing money at 22 knots but a range of options to raise the speed of Asturias and Alcantara to 19 to 22 knots 35 to 41 km h should be evaluated Essendon also proposed inviting foreign competitors to agree on a 19 knot speed limit on the South American route so that all companies could economise on fuel and attempt to cover their costs 18 At that time marine diesel power was at a relatively early stage of development and RML considered it unable to increase the two ships speed to the required level Lord Essendon therefore recommended steam turbines and two options for the drive system either conventional reduction gearing or the newer turbo electric transmission that had been pioneered in the US and successfully applied to US UK and French ocean liners Whichever transmission was chosen the cost of re engining Asturias and Alcantara was estimated at 500 000 Lord Essendon also urged RML directors to order a third ship of similar speed to share the route with Asturias and Alcantara 18 Given the Great Depression at the time the RML board rejected the idea of a new ship At first it was prepared to have only one ship re engined and proposed reassigning the other to cruising to replace the ageing A series liner Atlantis However in May 1933 the board consented to have both Asturias and Alcantara re engined and at the same time to lengthen their bows by 10 feet 3 m and improve some of the accommodation RML awarded the work to Harland and Wolff but with a condition in the contract that the ships must achieve at least 18 3 4 knots 34 7 km h and a graduated penalty clause in case the actual speed increase should fall short of that figure 19 In the same year Lord Essendon succeeded in getting RML s competitors to accept a 19 knot speed limit on the South American route 15 Harland and Wolff fitted each ship with three water tube boilers supplying superheated steam at 435 lbf in2 to a set of six turbines that drove her twin propeller shafts by single reduction gearing The National Physical Laboratory helped the shipyard to design new aerofoil section manganese bronze three bladed propellers and the rudders were also streamlined 19 The new machinery succeeded in increasing each ship s nominal horsepower by 25 and increased their speed to about 19 knots 35 km h Each ships had two funnels of which the forward one was a dummy 13 As built the funnels were low which was a fashion for some 1920s and 30s motor ships When the ships were re engined in 1934 each funnel was increased in height The improvement to passenger accommodation was on C deck A large number of small cabins was replaced with a smaller number of more spacious ones As revised C deck on each ship had 61 cabins 47 of which were given en suite bathrooms 19 Asturias was converted first going to Belfast in May 1934 and returning to service in October Only after Asturias had successfully completed a voyage from Southampton to Rio de Janeiro and back did RMS send Alcantara to Harland and Wolff at Belfast in November She returned to service in May 1935 20 Second World War service editIn 1939 the Admiralty requisitioned Asturias and Alcantara and had each ship converted into an armed merchant cruiser AMC Asturias was requisitioned on 28 August 21 shortly before the Second World War broke out She steamed from Southampton to Belfast to be refitted for the Royal Navy Her First Class accommodation was removed Her forward dummy funnel was removed to increase the arc of fire for their anti aircraft guns Her deck and hull were strengthened to bear a primary armament of eight BL 6 inch Mk XII naval guns and secondary armament of several QF 3 inch 20 cwt anti aircraft guns On 28 September work was completed she was commissioned as HMS Asturias with the pennant number F71 21 and sailed to the Royal Navy anchorage at Scapa Flow 22 In October 1939 Asturias joined the Halifax Escort Force escorting transatlantic convoys between Halifax Nova Scotia and the UK From November 1939 until April 1940 she served in the Northern Patrol In May 1940 she returned to convoy work with the North Atlantic Escort Force but in June she was again switched to the Northern Patrol 21 26 05 40 Geoffrey William Penny British officer served as paymaster aboard HMS Asturias whilst at Gibraltar Alongside the mole when mattress stored in the baggage room suffered spontaneous combustion and the ship burst into fire a lot of water was poured into the ship and there was a danger of losing the ship the authorities thought the ship was going to sink so the crew were put ashore The ship cast off drifted then came back once the fire had been put out but the ship deck had buckled In July 1940 Asturias was transferred to the South Atlantic Station On 28 January 1941 she was patrolling northeast of Puerto Rico in the western Atlantic when she captured a large Vichy French cargo ship the 8 199 GRT turbine steamer Mendoza 21 Later in 1941 Asturias was upgraded in Newport News Virginia Her mainmast was removed to improve her arc of fire and her armament was modernised Her Second Class accommodation aft was removed and replaced with an aircraft hangar and she was fitted with an aircraft catapult She returned to the South Atlantic Station where for a time she was the area flagship 23 She remained on the South Atlantic Station until April 1943 21 On 28 April 1943 Captain Sir John Meynell Alleyne Baronet took command of Asturias In May she was transferred to the naval arm of the West Africa Command 21 In July 1943 she left Brazil towing a floating dock to deliver to Freetown in Sierra Leone On 25 July she was about 400 nautical miles 740 km from her destination when the Cagni class Italian submarine Ammiraglio Cagni torpedoed her port side The explosion was next to Asturias boiler room and four members of her crew were killed 21 An estimated 10 000 tons of water flooded her engine room but she remained afloat She was towed to Freetown where the damage was found to be so extensive that she was laid up 23 Asturias was written off as a constructive total loss 23 24 On 30 May 1944 her ownership was transferred to the Ministry of War Transport 21 She was towed to Gibraltar where she received temporary repairs By the time these were completed the war had ended Asturias was towed to Belfast for permanent repairs and conversion back into a civilian passenger liner 23 Post war service edit nbsp The Ministry of Transport flag a Blue Ensign defaced with an anchor wheel and crown Emigrant ship edit After the Second World War British migration to Australia was encouraged Asturias joined this trade owned by the Ministry of Transport and managed by RML She remained in her wartime Royal Navy grey until the end of 1949 when her superstructure was painted white and her one remaining funnel was returned to RML buff But even then her hull remained grey until May 1950 when it was painted black with pink boot topping 23 Troop ship edit Asturias years as an emigrant ship were interrupted by several voyages as a troop ship One was in September 1953 when she brought UK troops from South Korea to Gibraltar on their way home from the Korean War 25 The troops were 530 British soldiers who had been prisoners of war in North Korea Most were members of the Gloucestershire Regiment who had been captured two and a half years earlier at the Battle of the Imjin River in April 1951 She reached Southampton on 16 September where her troops were greeted by family members and a large contingent of the Gloucestershire Regiment 26 nbsp Asturias as a troop ship 1954 57 In 1954 she was displaced from emigrant service and transferred to full time trooping For this her hull was repainted white with a blue band and her funnel was painted yellow 23 Much of Asturias trooping work was in the Far East 23 This included her final voyage when she brought home the First Battalion of the Royal Sussex Regiment from South Korea She left Inchon on 28 July 1957 called at Hong Kong on 31 July Singapore on 4 August and Colombo in Sri Lanka on 9 August She anchored off Aden and then passed through the Suez Canal which had only recently been cleared of blockships after the 1956 Suez Crisis She then called at Gibraltar on about 23 August before reaching Southampton on 27 August 27 A Night To Remember editAsturias career ended in 1957 She was sold to Shipbreaking Industries Ltd and on 14 September she arrived at Faslane to be scrapped 28 As Shipbreaking Industries were demolishing Asturias starboard side The Rank Organisation used her port side to film scenes for the 1958 feature film A Night to Remember That side was painted in White Star Line livery to represent the 1912 liner RMS Titanic After filming was completed Shipbreaking Industries completed her demolition 29 References edit BR 6in 45cal BL Mk XII NavHist Flixco Pty Limited Retrieved 15 May 2017 BR 3in 45cal 12pdr 20cwt QF Mk I To IV NavHist Flixco Pty Limited Retrieved 15 May 2017 Nicol 2001b p 121 Nicol 2001b p 233 Nicol 2001b pp 236 237 Nicol 2001b p 231 Nicol 2001b p 232 Asturias The Yard Robert C Retrieved 15 May 2017 Alcantara The Yard Robert C Retrieved 15 May 2017 a b Nicol 2001b p 131 Lloyd s Register Steamers amp Motorships PDF London Lloyd s Register 1933 34 Retrieved 28 June 2020 Lloyd s Register Steamers amp Motorships PDF London Lloyd s Register 1934 35 Retrieved 28 June 2020 a b c Nicol 2001b p 132 Talbot Booth 1942 p 394 a b c Nicol 2001b p 139 Talbot Booth 1942 p 410 Talbot Booth 1942 p 332 a b Nicol 2001b pp 138 139 a b c Nicol 2001b p 140 Nicol 2001b p 142 a b c d e f g h Helgason Gudmundur 1995 2017 HMS Asturias F 71 uboat net Gudmundur Helgason Retrieved 28 May 2017 Nicol 2001b p 143 a b c d e f g Nicol 2001b p 146 Nicol 2001a p 172 Nicol 2001b pp 146 147 Doherty Vicky Troop Service SS Asturias Retrieved 29 May 2017 Hamilton David Last Voyage of the Asturias SS Asturias Retrieved 29 May 2017 Nicol 2001b p 147 Doherty Vicky From Launch to Scrap the Asturias Story SS Asturias Retrieved 29 May 2017 Sources and further reading editNicol Stuart 2001a MacQueen s Legacy A History of the Royal Mail Line Vol 1 Brimscombe Port and Charleston SC Tempus Publishing ISBN 0 7524 2118 2 Nicol Stuart 2001b MacQueen s Legacy Ships of the Royal Mail Line Vol 2 Brimscombe Port and Charleston SC Tempus Publishing pp 130 149 ISBN 0 7524 2119 0 Osborne Richard Spong Harry amp Grover Tom 2007 Armed Merchant Cruisers 1878 1945 Windsor World Warship Society ISBN 978 0 9543310 8 5 Talbot Booth EC 1942 1936 Ships and the Sea Third ed London Sampson Low Marston amp Co Ltd External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Asturias ship 1925 Doherty Vicky About This Site SS Asturias Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title RMS Asturias 1925 amp oldid 1212911124, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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