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SS Athenia (1922)

Coordinates: 56°44′N 14°5′W / 56.733°N 14.083°W / 56.733; -14.083

SS Athenia was a steam turbine transatlantic passenger liner built in Glasgow, Scotland, in 1923 for the Anchor-Donaldson Line, which later became the Donaldson Atlantic Line. She worked between the United Kingdom and the east coast of Canada until 3 September 1939, when a torpedo from the German submarine U-30 sank her in the Western Approaches.

Athenia in Montreal Harbour in 1933
History
United Kingdom
NameAthenia
Owner
  • Anchor-Donaldson Line (1923–1935)
  • Donaldson Atlantic Line (1935–1939)
Port of registry Glasgow
BuilderFairfield SB & Eng Co, Govan
Yard number596
Launched28 January 1922
Completed19 April 1923
Identification
FateSunk by U-30, 3 September 1939
NotesFirst UK ship sunk by Germany in World War II
General characteristics
Tonnage
  • 13,465 GRT
  • tonnage under deck 10,200
  • 8,118 NRT
Length526.3 ft (160.4 m) p/p
Beam66.4 ft (20.2 m)
Depth38.1 ft (11.6 m)
Decks3
Propulsion6 × steam turbines; twin screws
Speed15 knots (28 km/h; 17 mph)
Sensors and
processing systems
Notessister ship: Letitia

Athenia was the first UK ship to be sunk by Germany during World War II, and the incident accounted for the Donaldson Line's greatest single loss of life at sea, with 117 civilian passengers and crew killed. The sinking was condemned as a war crime. Among those dead were 28 US citizens, causing Germany to fear that the US might join the war on the side of the UK and France. Wartime German authorities denied that one of their vessels had sunk the ship. An admission of responsibility did not come from German authorities until 1946.

She was the second Donaldson ship of that name to be torpedoed and sunk off Inishtrahull by a German submarine. The earlier Athenia (1903) was similarly attacked and sunk in 1917.[1]

Construction

The Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company of Govan in Glasgow built Athenia, launching her on 28 January 1922 and completing her in 1923. She measured 13,465 gross register tons (GRT) and 8,118 net register tons (NRT), was 526.3 ft (160.4 m) long between perpendiculars by 66.4 ft (20.2 m) beam and had a depth of 38.1 ft (11.6 m). She had six steam turbines driving twin screws via double reduction gearing, giving her a speed of 15 knots (28 km/h; 17 mph).[2] She had capacity for 516 cabin class passengers and 1,000 in 3rd class.[citation needed] By 1930 her navigation equipment included wireless direction finding,[2] and by 1934 this had been augmented with an echo sounding device and a gyrocompass.[3]

Career

Athenia was built for Anchor-Donaldson Line, which was a joint venture between Anchor Line and Donaldson Line. Fairfield built a sister ship, Letitia, which was launched in October 1924 and was completed in 1925. Athenia and Letitia were the two largest ships in Donaldson's various fleets. The ships worked Anchor-Donaldson's trans-Atlantic route linking Liverpool and Glasgow with Quebec and Montreal in summer and to Halifax in winter. After the construction of the Pier 21 immigration complex in Halifax in 1928, Athenia became a more frequent caller at Halifax, making over 100 trips to Halifax with immigrants.[4] In 1935 Anchor Line went into liquidation and Donaldson Line bought most of its assets.[5] In 1936 Donaldson was reconstituted as Donaldson Atlantic Line.[6]

Loss

 
Workers painting Athenia's stern, summer 1937

On 1 September 1939 Athenia, commanded by Captain James Cook, left Glasgow for Montreal via Liverpool and Belfast. She carried 1,103 passengers, including about 500 Jewish refugees, 469 Canadians, 311 US citizens and 72 UK subjects, and 315 crew.[7] Despite clear indications that war would break out any day, she departed Liverpool at 13:00 hrs on 2 September without recall, and on the evening of the 3rd was 60 nautical miles (110 km) south of Rockall and 200 nautical miles (370 km) northwest of Inishtrahull, Ireland, when she was sighted by the German submarine U-30 commanded by Oberleutnant Fritz-Julius Lemp around 16:30. Lemp later claimed that the fact that she was a darkened ship steering a zigzag course which seemed to be well off the normal shipping routes made him believe she was either a troopship, a Q-ship or an armed merchant cruiser. U-30 tracked Athenia for three hours until eventually, at 19:40, when both vessels were between Rockall and Tory Island, Lemp ordered two torpedoes to be fired. One exploded on Athenia's port side in her engine room, and she began to settle by the stern.

Several ships, including the E-class destroyer HMS Electra, responded to Athenia's distress signal. Electra's commander, Lt. Cdr. Sammy A. Buss, was senior officer present and took charge. He sent the F-class destroyer HMS Fame on an anti-submarine sweep of the area, while Electra, another E-class destroyer, HMS Escort, the Swedish yacht Southern Cross, the 5,749 GRT Norwegian dry cargo ship MS Knute Nelson,[8] and the US cargo ship City of Flint, rescued survivors. Between them they rescued about 981 passengers and crew. The German liner SS Bremen, en route from New York to Murmansk, also received Athenia's distress signal, but ignored it as it was trying to evade capture by the British as a prize of war.[9] City of Flint took 223 survivors to Pier 21 at Halifax, and Knute Nelson landed 450 at Galway.

 
Survivors in one of Athenia's lifeboats alongside City of Flint

Athenia remained afloat for more than 14 hours, until she finally sank stern first at 10:40 the next morning. Of the 1,418 aboard, 98 passengers[10][11] and 19 crew members were killed.[12] Many died in the engine room and aft stairwell, where the torpedo hit.[13] The British crews were said to be famous for putting the passengers' lives before their own[dubious ], and were expertly trained to handle such "events"; nonetheless, about 50 people died when one of the lifeboats was crushed in the propeller of Knute Nelson.[14] No. 5A lifeboat came alongside the empty tanker and tied up, against advice, astern of No 12 lifeboat.[citation needed] Only 15 feet (5 m) separated the life boat from the tanker's exposed propeller. Once No. 12 lifeboat was emptied it was cast adrift and began to sink. This fact was reported to the bridge of Knute Nelson. For some reason the ship's engine order telegraph was then set to full ahead. 5A lifeboat's mooring line or "warp" parted under the stress, causing the lifeboat to be pulled back into the revolving propeller.

There was a second accident at about 05:00 hrs when No. 8 lifeboat capsized in a heavy sea below the stern of the yacht Southern Cross, killing ten people. Three passengers were crushed to death while trying to transfer from lifeboats to the Royal Navy destroyers. Other deaths were due to falling overboard from Athenia and her lifeboats, or to injuries and exposure.

54 dead were Canadian and 28 were US citizens, which led to German fears that the incident would bring the US into the war.[7]

Aftermath

 
 
class=notpageimage|
Approximate position of Athenia's wreck

It was not until the Nuremberg Trials after the War that the truth of the U-boat sinking of Athenia finally came out. The sinking was given dramatic publicity throughout the English-speaking world.[15] The front pages of many newspapers ran photographs of the lost ship along with headlines about the UK's declaration of war. For example, the Halifax Herald for 4 September 1939 had a banner across its front page announcing "LINER ATHENIA IS TORPEDOED AND SUNK" with, in the centre of the page, "EMPIRE AT WAR" in outsized red print.

A Canadian girl, 10-year-old Margaret Hayworth,[16] was among the casualties, and was one of the first Canadians to be killed by enemy action. Newspapers widely publicised the story, proclaiming "Ten-Year-Old Victim of Torpedo" as "Canadians Rallying Point", and set the tone for their coverage of the rest of the war. One thousand people met the train that brought her body back to Hamilton, Ontario, and there was a public funeral attended by the mayor of Hamilton, the city council, the Lieutenant-Governor, Albert Edward Matthews, Premier Mitchell Hepburn, and the entire Ontario cabinet.[17]

When Grand Admiral Raeder first heard of the sinking of Athenia, he made inquiries and was told that no U-boat was nearer than 75 mi (121 km) to the location of the sinking. He therefore told the US chargé d'affaires in good faith that the German Navy had not been responsible. When, on 27 September, U-30 returned to Wilhelmshaven, Lemp reported to Admiral Dönitz that he had sunk Athenia in error. Dönitz at once sent Lemp to Berlin, where he explained the incident to Raeder. In turn, Raeder reported to Hitler, who decided that the incident should be kept secret for political reasons. Raeder decided against court-martialling Lemp because he considered that he had made an understandable mistake, and the log of U-30, which was seen by many people, was altered to sustain the official denials.[citation needed]

A month later the Völkischer Beobachter, the Nazi party's official newspaper, published an article which blamed the loss of Athenia on the UK, accusing Winston Churchill, then First Lord of the Admiralty, of sinking the ship to turn neutral opinion against Germany. Raeder claimed not to have known about this previous to publication and said that if he had known about it, he would have prevented its appearing.[18]

In the US, 60 per cent of respondents to a Gallup poll believed the Germans were responsible, despite their initial claims that Athenia had been sunk by the UK for propaganda purposes, with only 9 per cent believing otherwise. Some anti-interventionists called for restraint while at the same time expressing their abhorrence of the sinking. Boake Carter described it as a criminal act.

Some were not completely convinced that Germany was in fact responsible. Herbert Hoover expressed his doubts, saying, "It is such poor tactics that I cannot believe that even the clumsy Germans would do such a thing", while North Carolina senator Robert Rice Reynolds denied that Germany had any motive to sink Athenia. At best, he said, such an action "could only further inflame the world, and particularly America, against Germany, with no appreciable profits from the sinking." He added that Britain could have had a motive – "to infuriate the American people".[19]

It was not until January 1946, during the case against Admiral Raeder at the Nuremberg trials, that a statement by Admiral Dönitz was read in which he finally admitted that Athenia had been torpedoed by U-30 and that every effort had been made to cover it up. Lemp, who claimed he had mistaken her for an armed merchant cruiser, took the first steps to conceal the facts by omitting to make an entry in the submarine's log, and swearing his crew to secrecy.

After Athenia's sinking, conspiracy theories were circulated by pro-Axis and anti-British circles. For example, one editor in Boston's Italian News suggested the ship had been sunk by British mines and blamed on German U-boats to draw America into the war.[20] The claims were unfounded.

Cargo

A cargo of 888 tons was taken on in Glasgow, 472 tons of which were building bricks. Other items included granite curling rocks from Scotland, textbooks for the Toronto school system, a number of sealed steel boxes containing new clothes purchased in Europe by tourists, and watercolour paintings by passenger and English illustrator Winifred Walker, intended for her planned book, Shakespeare's Flowers.[21][22][23]

Excavations of Urartu antiquities by the American scholars Kirsopp and Silva Lake during 1938–1940 and most of their finds and field records were lost in the sinking of the ship.

On 4 September 1939, curling stone manufacturer Andrew Kay & Co. sent a cablegram to its sales representative in Toronto stating, "We now learn that the Athenia was this morning sunk off the coast of Scotland, and we regret that the finest consignment of curling stones that have ever yet left our factory has gone with it." According to James Wyllie, secretary and director of Kays of Scotland (as the company is now known) in 2018, three bills of lading for this shipment included 48 pairs of Blue Hone Ailsa curling stones for the London, Ontario Curling Club, 41 pairs of Blue Hone Ailsa curling stones for the Toronto High Park Curling Club, and 50 pairs of Red Hone Ailsa curling stones for the Lindsay Curling Club. This is a total of 278 Andrew Kay & Co. Excelsior Ailsa curling stones with handles and cases weighing nearly six tons with a 1939 value of £585.12 (equivalent to £38,594 in 2021).[24]

Wreck discovery

In 2017, the oceanographer and marine archaeologist David Mearns found a wreck he believes to be Athenia. Mearns located the wreck on Rockall Bank using sonar imagery that was scanned by the Geological Survey of Ireland to map the sea floor. He stated "Can I go into a court of law and say, '100%, that's Athenia?' No. But barring a photograph I can say in my expert opinion there's a very, very high probability that that's Athenia. Everything fits."[25]

Legality of sinking

As Athenia was an unarmed passenger ship, the attack violated the Hague conventions and the London Naval Treaty of 1930 that allowed all warships, including submarines, to stop and search merchant vessels, but forbade capture as prize or sinking unless the ship was carrying contraband or engaged in military activity.[26] Even if this was the case, and if it was decided to sink their ship, it was required that passengers and crew must be transferred to a "place of safety" as a priority. Although Germany had not signed the 1930 treaty, the German 1936 Prize Rules (Prisenordnung) binding their naval commanders copied most of its restrictions.[26] Lemp of U-30 did none of these things, choosing instead to fire without warning.

Memorials

The lost British members of Athenia's crew are commemorated at the Tower Hill Memorial in London. Canadian crew who died are listed at the Halifax Memorial (Sailor's Memorial) at Point Pleasant Park in Halifax, Nova Scotia[27] as well as by special plaque for Hannah Russell Crawford Baird, 66, a civilian stewardess from Montreal, she was the first Canadian killed in the war and is commemorated in a memorial to female merchant mariners in Langford, British Columbia.[28][29]


Popular culture

No movie has been made of the full story of the sinking, but the film Arise, My Love (1940), directed by Mitchell Leisen and starring Claudette Colbert and Ray Milland, had a sequence involving the torpedoing of the liner.

The song Rollerskate Skinny, written by Rhett Miller and performed by his band The Old 97's, mentions Athenia's sinking.[citation needed]

In John Dickson Carr's novel The Man Who Could Not Shudder, Dr Fell announces the end of story by showing his audience a newspaper bearing headline "LINER ATHENIA: FULL LIST OF VICTIMS". He means to say that the Second World War has begun and the truth of the mystery is now unlikely to surface.

The sinking of Athenia is also mentioned in Alyson Richman's novel The Lost Wife about pre-war Prague and how the dreams of two young lovers are shattered when they are separated by the Nazi invasion, their endurance and experiences during World War II and the Holocaust only to find one another again decades later in the United States.

Recent extensive research concerning the incident appears in Cay Rademacher's 2009 book Drei Tage im September – die letzte Fahrt der Athenia, 1939 ("Three Days in September - the Last Voyage of the Athenia, 1939") published by MareVerlag of Hamburg.

In the novel by Norman Collins, London Belongs to Me, he describes the sinking of Athenia as war breaks out across Europe. As a result of the sinking, Londoners are in no doubt war has started, and start bracing themselves for what's to come. Similarly, at the close of Patrick Hamilton's Hangover Square (1941) the protagonist, George Bone, finds that the newspapers were "all about the sinking of the Athenia".

The sinking of Athenia also forms part of the beginning in the movie U 47 – Kapitänleutnant Prien (1958).

A graphic firsthand account of the sinking and rescue appears as the first chapter of James A. Goodson's autobiographical account of his wartime experiences as a fighter ace.[30]

The sinking of Athenia plays an integral part of the plot of the novel Nemesis by Rory Clements.

Notable individuals aboard

See also

Citations

  1. ^ "SS Athenia [+1917]". Wreck Site. 13 March 2021. Retrieved 4 September 2021.
  2. ^ a b Lloyd's Register 1930.
  3. ^ Lloyd's Register, Steamships and Motor Ships (PDF). London: Lloyd's Register. 1934. Retrieved 4 October 2014.
  4. ^ "Ship Arrival Database". Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21.
  5. ^ Swiggum, Susan; Kohli, Marjorie (3 May 2006). "Donaldson Line". Retrieved 3 October 2014.
  6. ^ "SS Athenia". Clydebuilt database. Clydeships. Retrieved 6 November 2019.
  7. ^ a b Johnmeyer, Hillard. "The Sinking of the Athenia". Something About Everything Military. Retrieved 13 August 2014.
  8. ^ Holm Lawson, Siri. "M/S Knute Nelson". Warsailors.com.
  9. ^ Brennecke 2003, pp. 15–16.
  10. ^ "S.S. Athenia". Commonwealth War Graves Commission. The CWGC puts the number of civilians killed at 64
  11. ^ Gregory, Mackenzie J. "Martha Goddard died on the Athenia in Sept 1939". Ahoy – Mac's Web Log.
  12. ^ Gregory, Mackenzie J. "SS Athenia, First Casualty of the U-Boat War on the 3 September 1939". Ahoy – Mac's Web Log.
  13. ^ Padfield 1996, p. 7.
  14. ^ Blair 1996, p. 67.
  15. ^ Williams 2003, p. 17.
  16. ^ "Hayworth, Margaret Janet". Commonwealth War Graves Commission.
  17. ^ Houghton 2003, pp. 75–76.
  18. ^ Davidson 1997, p. 381.
  19. ^ Doenecke 2003, p. 68.
  20. ^ Santosuosso, PA (15 September 1939). "Dear Joe". Italian News. p. 5. (weekly column)
  21. ^ a b Francis M. Carroll (2012). "Chapter 2, In All Respects Ready For Sea". Athenia Torpedoed: The U-Boat Attack that Ignited the Battle of the Atlantic. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-61251-155-9.
  22. ^ Caulfield, Max. Tomorrow Never Came - The Story of the S.S. Athenia. Retrieved 12 March 2019.
  23. ^ "Gifts For the Gardener". The Washington Post. Retrieved 12 March 2019.
  24. ^ MacTavish, Angus (11 April 2018). "The Finest Consignment of Curling Stones Ever..." Retrieved 12 March 2019.
  25. ^ Amos, Jonathan (5 October 2017). "Wreck could be sunken Athenia from WW2". BBC News.
  26. ^ a b Harwood 2015, p. 20.
  27. ^ "SS Athenia (Glasgow)". Commonwealth War Graves Commission Find War Dead Database.
  28. ^ "Hannah Baird". Veterans Affairs Canada. 20 February 2019. Virtual War Memorial
  29. ^ . Hansard. Archived from the original on 13 November 2007. Retrieved 30 October 2007.
  30. ^ James Goodson (28 January 2016). "Chapter One, The Kings Enemies". Tumult in the Clouds: Original Edition. Penguin Books Limited. ISBN 978-1-4059-2552-5.
  31. ^ Fairclough 1995, p. 61.
  32. ^ "Noted Painter of Flowers Visitor in Palm Springs". Desert Sun (1934–1989). Palm Springs, California. 22 January 1943. Retrieved 12 March 2018.

General sources

  • Lloyd's Register, Steamships and Motor Ships (PDF). London: Lloyd's Register. 1930. Retrieved 4 October 2014.
  • Blair, Clay (1996). Hitler's U-Boat War. Vol. I: The Hunters, 1939–1942. New York: Random House. ISBN 0-304-35260-8.
  • Brennecke, Jochen (2003). The Hunters and the Hunted. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press. p. 310. ISBN 1-59114-091-9.
  • Cain, Lt Cdr Timothy J (1959). HMS Electra. London: Frederick Miller. ISBN 0-86007-330-0.
  • Caulfield, Max (1958). A Night of Terror. London: Pan Books.
  • Crabb, Brian James (2006). The Loss of British Commonwealth Mercantile and Service Women at sea During the Second World War. Donington, Lincolnshire: Shaun Tyas. p. 310. ISBN 1 900289 66-0.
  • Davidson, Eugene (1997). The Trial of the Germans: an account of the twenty-two defendants before the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press. p. 381. ISBN 0-8262-1139-9.
  • Doenecke, Justus D (2003). Storm on the Horizon: The Challenge to American Intervention, 1939–1941. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 68. ISBN 0-7425-0785-8.
  • Evans, Alan (1990). Orphans of the Storm. Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 0-340-54414-7.
  • Fairclough, Ellen (1995). Saturday's Child: Memoirs of Canada's First Female Cabinet Minister. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p. 61. ISBN 0-802-007368.
  • Harwood, Jeremy (2015). World War Two at Sea. Hove, England: Quid Publishing. p. 20. ISBN 978-1-921966-76-7.
  • Houghton, Margaret (2003). The Hamiltonians: 100 Fascinating Lives. Toronto: James Lorimer & Company. pp. 75–76. ISBN 1-55028-804-0.
  • Padfield, Paddy (1996). The War Beneath The Sea: Submarine Conflict During World War II. New York: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-146242.
  • Paine, Lincoln P. (1997). Ships of the World: An Historical Encyclopedia. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 0-395-715563.
  • Rademacher, Cay (2009). Drei Tage im September. Hamburg: MareVerlag. ISBN 978-3-866-480995.
  • Williams, Andrew (2003). The Battle of the Atlantic: Hitler's Gray Wolves of the Sea and the Allies' Desperate Struggle to Defeat Them. New York: Basic Books. p. 17. ISBN 0-465-09153-9.

External links

  • Allen, Tonya (1995–2014). "The Sinking of the S.S. Athenia". uboat.net. Guðmundur Helgason.
  • Jones, Daniel H (2003). . SMML. Archived from the original on 5 September 2008.
  • "Joan Hecht". The Daily Telegraph. 6 September 2009.
  • "Ship Name: Athenia Gross Tonnage: 13581". Merchant shipping movement cards 1939–1945. The National Archives.
  • "Sinking of SS Athenia". German U-Boats and Battle of the Atlantic. Uboataces.com. 2005–2012.
  • IWM Interview with survivor Mary Bauchop
  • IWM Interview with survivor Pax Walker-Fryett
  • Anchor-Donaldson Line History and Ephemera (Letitia and Athenia) at the GG Archives
  • Roll of Honour

athenia, 1922, this, article, about, ship, built, 1923, sunk, 1939, ship, built, 1903, sunk, 1917, athenia, 1903, coordinates, athenia, steam, turbine, transatlantic, passenger, liner, built, glasgow, scotland, 1923, anchor, donaldson, line, which, later, beca. This article is about the ship built in 1923 and sunk in 1939 For the ship built in 1903 and sunk in 1917 see SS Athenia 1903 Coordinates 56 44 N 14 5 W 56 733 N 14 083 W 56 733 14 083 SS Athenia was a steam turbine transatlantic passenger liner built in Glasgow Scotland in 1923 for the Anchor Donaldson Line which later became the Donaldson Atlantic Line She worked between the United Kingdom and the east coast of Canada until 3 September 1939 when a torpedo from the German submarine U 30 sank her in the Western Approaches Athenia in Montreal Harbour in 1933HistoryUnited KingdomNameAtheniaOwnerAnchor Donaldson Line 1923 1935 Donaldson Atlantic Line 1935 1939 Port of registryGlasgowBuilderFairfield SB amp Eng Co GovanYard number596Launched28 January 1922Completed19 April 1923IdentificationUK official number 146330 code letters KNRT until 1933 Call sign GFDM from 1934 FateSunk by U 30 3 September 1939NotesFirst UK ship sunk by Germany in World War IIGeneral characteristicsTonnage13 465 GRT tonnage under deck 10 200 8 118 NRTLength526 3 ft 160 4 m p pBeam66 4 ft 20 2 m Depth38 1 ft 11 6 m Decks3Propulsion6 steam turbines twin screwsSpeed15 knots 28 km h 17 mph Sensors and processing systemswireless direction finding by 1930 echo sounding device by 1934 gyrocompass by 1934 Notessister ship LetitiaAthenia was the first UK ship to be sunk by Germany during World War II and the incident accounted for the Donaldson Line s greatest single loss of life at sea with 117 civilian passengers and crew killed The sinking was condemned as a war crime Among those dead were 28 US citizens causing Germany to fear that the US might join the war on the side of the UK and France Wartime German authorities denied that one of their vessels had sunk the ship An admission of responsibility did not come from German authorities until 1946 She was the second Donaldson ship of that name to be torpedoed and sunk off Inishtrahull by a German submarine The earlier Athenia 1903 was similarly attacked and sunk in 1917 1 Contents 1 Construction 2 Career 3 Loss 3 1 Aftermath 3 2 Cargo 3 3 Wreck discovery 3 4 Legality of sinking 4 Memorials 5 Popular culture 6 Notable individuals aboard 7 See also 8 Citations 9 General sources 10 External linksConstruction EditThe Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company of Govan in Glasgow built Athenia launching her on 28 January 1922 and completing her in 1923 She measured 13 465 gross register tons GRT and 8 118 net register tons NRT was 526 3 ft 160 4 m long between perpendiculars by 66 4 ft 20 2 m beam and had a depth of 38 1 ft 11 6 m She had six steam turbines driving twin screws via double reduction gearing giving her a speed of 15 knots 28 km h 17 mph 2 She had capacity for 516 cabin class passengers and 1 000 in 3rd class citation needed By 1930 her navigation equipment included wireless direction finding 2 and by 1934 this had been augmented with an echo sounding device and a gyrocompass 3 Career EditAthenia was built for Anchor Donaldson Line which was a joint venture between Anchor Line and Donaldson Line Fairfield built a sister ship Letitia which was launched in October 1924 and was completed in 1925 Athenia and Letitia were the two largest ships in Donaldson s various fleets The ships worked Anchor Donaldson s trans Atlantic route linking Liverpool and Glasgow with Quebec and Montreal in summer and to Halifax in winter After the construction of the Pier 21 immigration complex in Halifax in 1928 Athenia became a more frequent caller at Halifax making over 100 trips to Halifax with immigrants 4 In 1935 Anchor Line went into liquidation and Donaldson Line bought most of its assets 5 In 1936 Donaldson was reconstituted as Donaldson Atlantic Line 6 Loss Edit Workers painting Athenia s stern summer 1937 On 1 September 1939 Athenia commanded by Captain James Cook left Glasgow for Montreal via Liverpool and Belfast She carried 1 103 passengers including about 500 Jewish refugees 469 Canadians 311 US citizens and 72 UK subjects and 315 crew 7 Despite clear indications that war would break out any day she departed Liverpool at 13 00 hrs on 2 September without recall and on the evening of the 3rd was 60 nautical miles 110 km south of Rockall and 200 nautical miles 370 km northwest of Inishtrahull Ireland when she was sighted by the German submarine U 30 commanded by Oberleutnant Fritz Julius Lemp around 16 30 Lemp later claimed that the fact that she was a darkened ship steering a zigzag course which seemed to be well off the normal shipping routes made him believe she was either a troopship a Q ship or an armed merchant cruiser U 30 tracked Athenia for three hours until eventually at 19 40 when both vessels were between Rockall and Tory Island Lemp ordered two torpedoes to be fired One exploded on Athenia s port side in her engine room and she began to settle by the stern Several ships including the E class destroyer HMS Electra responded to Athenia s distress signal Electra s commander Lt Cdr Sammy A Buss was senior officer present and took charge He sent the F class destroyer HMS Fame on an anti submarine sweep of the area while Electra another E class destroyer HMS Escort the Swedish yacht Southern Cross the 5 749 GRT Norwegian dry cargo ship MS Knute Nelson 8 and the US cargo ship City of Flint rescued survivors Between them they rescued about 981 passengers and crew The German liner SS Bremen en route from New York to Murmansk also received Athenia s distress signal but ignored it as it was trying to evade capture by the British as a prize of war 9 City of Flint took 223 survivors to Pier 21 at Halifax and Knute Nelson landed 450 at Galway Survivors in one of Athenia s lifeboats alongside City of Flint Athenia remained afloat for more than 14 hours until she finally sank stern first at 10 40 the next morning Of the 1 418 aboard 98 passengers 10 11 and 19 crew members were killed 12 Many died in the engine room and aft stairwell where the torpedo hit 13 The British crews were said to be famous for putting the passengers lives before their own dubious discuss and were expertly trained to handle such events nonetheless about 50 people died when one of the lifeboats was crushed in the propeller of Knute Nelson 14 No 5A lifeboat came alongside the empty tanker and tied up against advice astern of No 12 lifeboat citation needed Only 15 feet 5 m separated the life boat from the tanker s exposed propeller Once No 12 lifeboat was emptied it was cast adrift and began to sink This fact was reported to the bridge of Knute Nelson For some reason the ship s engine order telegraph was then set to full ahead 5A lifeboat s mooring line or warp parted under the stress causing the lifeboat to be pulled back into the revolving propeller There was a second accident at about 05 00 hrs when No 8 lifeboat capsized in a heavy sea below the stern of the yacht Southern Cross killing ten people Three passengers were crushed to death while trying to transfer from lifeboats to the Royal Navy destroyers Other deaths were due to falling overboard from Athenia and her lifeboats or to injuries and exposure 54 dead were Canadian and 28 were US citizens which led to German fears that the incident would bring the US into the war 7 Aftermath Edit class notpageimage Approximate position of Athenia s wreck It was not until the Nuremberg Trials after the War that the truth of the U boat sinking of Athenia finally came out The sinking was given dramatic publicity throughout the English speaking world 15 The front pages of many newspapers ran photographs of the lost ship along with headlines about the UK s declaration of war For example the Halifax Herald for 4 September 1939 had a banner across its front page announcing LINER ATHENIA IS TORPEDOED AND SUNK with in the centre of the page EMPIRE AT WAR in outsized red print A Canadian girl 10 year old Margaret Hayworth 16 was among the casualties and was one of the first Canadians to be killed by enemy action Newspapers widely publicised the story proclaiming Ten Year Old Victim of Torpedo as Canadians Rallying Point and set the tone for their coverage of the rest of the war One thousand people met the train that brought her body back to Hamilton Ontario and there was a public funeral attended by the mayor of Hamilton the city council the Lieutenant Governor Albert Edward Matthews Premier Mitchell Hepburn and the entire Ontario cabinet 17 When Grand Admiral Raeder first heard of the sinking of Athenia he made inquiries and was told that no U boat was nearer than 75 mi 121 km to the location of the sinking He therefore told the US charge d affaires in good faith that the German Navy had not been responsible When on 27 September U 30 returned to Wilhelmshaven Lemp reported to Admiral Donitz that he had sunk Athenia in error Donitz at once sent Lemp to Berlin where he explained the incident to Raeder In turn Raeder reported to Hitler who decided that the incident should be kept secret for political reasons Raeder decided against court martialling Lemp because he considered that he had made an understandable mistake and the log of U 30 which was seen by many people was altered to sustain the official denials citation needed A month later the Volkischer Beobachter the Nazi party s official newspaper published an article which blamed the loss of Athenia on the UK accusing Winston Churchill then First Lord of the Admiralty of sinking the ship to turn neutral opinion against Germany Raeder claimed not to have known about this previous to publication and said that if he had known about it he would have prevented its appearing 18 In the US 60 per cent of respondents to a Gallup poll believed the Germans were responsible despite their initial claims that Athenia had been sunk by the UK for propaganda purposes with only 9 per cent believing otherwise Some anti interventionists called for restraint while at the same time expressing their abhorrence of the sinking Boake Carter described it as a criminal act Some were not completely convinced that Germany was in fact responsible Herbert Hoover expressed his doubts saying It is such poor tactics that I cannot believe that even the clumsy Germans would do such a thing while North Carolina senator Robert Rice Reynolds denied that Germany had any motive to sink Athenia At best he said such an action could only further inflame the world and particularly America against Germany with no appreciable profits from the sinking He added that Britain could have had a motive to infuriate the American people 19 It was not until January 1946 during the case against Admiral Raeder at the Nuremberg trials that a statement by Admiral Donitz was read in which he finally admitted that Athenia had been torpedoed by U 30 and that every effort had been made to cover it up Lemp who claimed he had mistaken her for an armed merchant cruiser took the first steps to conceal the facts by omitting to make an entry in the submarine s log and swearing his crew to secrecy After Athenia s sinking conspiracy theories were circulated by pro Axis and anti British circles For example one editor in Boston s Italian News suggested the ship had been sunk by British mines and blamed on German U boats to draw America into the war 20 The claims were unfounded Cargo Edit A cargo of 888 tons was taken on in Glasgow 472 tons of which were building bricks Other items included granite curling rocks from Scotland textbooks for the Toronto school system a number of sealed steel boxes containing new clothes purchased in Europe by tourists and watercolour paintings by passenger and English illustrator Winifred Walker intended for her planned book Shakespeare s Flowers 21 22 23 Excavations of Urartu antiquities by the American scholars Kirsopp and Silva Lake during 1938 1940 and most of their finds and field records were lost in the sinking of the ship On 4 September 1939 curling stone manufacturer Andrew Kay amp Co sent a cablegram to its sales representative in Toronto stating We now learn that the Athenia was this morning sunk off the coast of Scotland and we regret that the finest consignment of curling stones that have ever yet left our factory has gone with it According to James Wyllie secretary and director of Kays of Scotland as the company is now known in 2018 three bills of lading for this shipment included 48 pairs of Blue Hone Ailsa curling stones for the London Ontario Curling Club 41 pairs of Blue Hone Ailsa curling stones for the Toronto High Park Curling Club and 50 pairs of Red Hone Ailsa curling stones for the Lindsay Curling Club This is a total of 278 Andrew Kay amp Co Excelsior Ailsa curling stones with handles and cases weighing nearly six tons with a 1939 value of 585 12 equivalent to 38 594 in 2021 24 Wreck discovery Edit In 2017 the oceanographer and marine archaeologist David Mearns found a wreck he believes to be Athenia Mearns located the wreck on Rockall Bank using sonar imagery that was scanned by the Geological Survey of Ireland to map the sea floor He stated Can I go into a court of law and say 100 that s Athenia No But barring a photograph I can say in my expert opinion there s a very very high probability that that s Athenia Everything fits 25 Legality of sinking Edit As Athenia was an unarmed passenger ship the attack violated the Hague conventions and the London Naval Treaty of 1930 that allowed all warships including submarines to stop and search merchant vessels but forbade capture as prize or sinking unless the ship was carrying contraband or engaged in military activity 26 Even if this was the case and if it was decided to sink their ship it was required that passengers and crew must be transferred to a place of safety as a priority Although Germany had not signed the 1930 treaty the German 1936 Prize Rules Prisenordnung binding their naval commanders copied most of its restrictions 26 Lemp of U 30 did none of these things choosing instead to fire without warning Memorials EditThe lost British members of Athenia s crew are commemorated at the Tower Hill Memorial in London Canadian crew who died are listed at the Halifax Memorial Sailor s Memorial at Point Pleasant Park in Halifax Nova Scotia 27 as well as by special plaque for Hannah Russell Crawford Baird 66 a civilian stewardess from Montreal she was the first Canadian killed in the war and is commemorated in a memorial to female merchant mariners in Langford British Columbia 28 29 Popular culture EditNo movie has been made of the full story of the sinking but the film Arise My Love 1940 directed by Mitchell Leisen and starring Claudette Colbert and Ray Milland had a sequence involving the torpedoing of the liner The song Rollerskate Skinny written by Rhett Miller and performed by his band The Old 97 s mentions Athenia s sinking citation needed In John Dickson Carr s novel The Man Who Could Not Shudder Dr Fell announces the end of story by showing his audience a newspaper bearing headline LINER ATHENIA FULL LIST OF VICTIMS He means to say that the Second World War has begun and the truth of the mystery is now unlikely to surface The sinking of Athenia is also mentioned in Alyson Richman s novel The Lost Wife about pre war Prague and how the dreams of two young lovers are shattered when they are separated by the Nazi invasion their endurance and experiences during World War II and the Holocaust only to find one another again decades later in the United States Recent extensive research concerning the incident appears in Cay Rademacher s 2009 book Drei Tage im September die letzte Fahrt der Athenia 1939 Three Days in September the Last Voyage of the Athenia 1939 published by MareVerlag of Hamburg In the novel by Norman Collins London Belongs to Me he describes the sinking of Athenia as war breaks out across Europe As a result of the sinking Londoners are in no doubt war has started and start bracing themselves for what s to come Similarly at the close of Patrick Hamilton s Hangover Square 1941 the protagonist George Bone finds that the newspapers were all about the sinking of the Athenia The sinking of Athenia also forms part of the beginning in the movie U 47 Kapitanleutnant Prien 1958 A graphic firsthand account of the sinking and rescue appears as the first chapter of James A Goodson s autobiographical account of his wartime experiences as a fighter ace 30 The sinking of Athenia plays an integral part of the plot of the novel Nemesis by Rory Clements Notable individuals aboard EditAndrew Allan head of CBC Radio Drama fiance of Judith Evelyn his father was lost Barbara Cass Beggs British Canadian teacher writer and musicologist her husband and young daughter also survived Judith Evelyn American stage and film actress Craig s Wife she survived as did her fiance Andrew Allan Thomas Eldreth Finley Jr head of Loomis Chaffee in Windsor Connecticut and his wife Mildred Shacklett Finley James A Goodson future fighter pilot of the RCAF and later USAAF fighter ace Richard Stuart Lake former Saskatchewan Lieutenant Governor and federal politician and his wife Dorothy Schreiber Lake Charles Prince Sr and Charles Prince Jr both from Kittery Maine and employees of the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard Nicola Lubitsch ten month old daughter of film director Ernst Lubitsch rescued from the water by her nurse Carlina Strohmeyer Prof John H Lawrence American physicist and MD later called father of nuclear medicine He returned to Berkeley California and worked with his brother physicist Ernest O Lawrence Gildas Molgat future Canadian politician with his father and two brothers Agnes Sharpe sitting CCF alderman for Hamilton s Ward Eight second female elected to Hamilton City Council 31 Prof Charles Wharton Stork American writer and essayist Day Dreams of Greece Dr Edward T Wilkes author of books on pediatrics founder and first president of the Pediatrics Society of New York and his son his wife and his other son were lost Margaretta Finch Hatton Countess of Winchilsea widow of Guy Finch Hatton 14th Earl of Winchilsea Helen Johnson Hannay daughter of judge Allen Burroughs Hannay George Penrose Woollcombe founder of Ashbury College Dr Lulu Edith Sweigard colleague of Mabel Elsworth Todd pioneer of Ideokinesis author Human Movement Potential Its Ideokinetic Facilitation Margaret Doggett future wife of Trammell Crow and mother of Harlan Crow Betty Jane Stewart 1921 2001 Dallas socialite and alumna of the Hockaday School Future wife of Giles Edwin Miller co owner of the 1952 Dallas Texans NFL and later paternal grandmother of singer songwriter Rhett Miller frontman for the alternative country band Old 97 s Bill Gadsby later a Hall of Fame defenceman in the National Hockey League from 1946 to 1966 Winifred Walker award winning botanical artist and official artist to the English Royal Horticultural Society of Westminster in England and later artist in residence at the University of California 21 32 See also EditLaconia incident RMS Lusitania MV Wilhelm Gustloff SS General von SteubenCitations Edit SS Athenia 1917 Wreck Site 13 March 2021 Retrieved 4 September 2021 a b Lloyd s Register 1930 Lloyd s Register Steamships and Motor Ships PDF London Lloyd s Register 1934 Retrieved 4 October 2014 Ship Arrival Database Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21 Swiggum Susan Kohli Marjorie 3 May 2006 Donaldson Line Retrieved 3 October 2014 SS Athenia Clydebuilt database Clydeships Retrieved 6 November 2019 a b Johnmeyer Hillard The Sinking of the Athenia Something About Everything Military Retrieved 13 August 2014 Holm Lawson Siri M S Knute Nelson Warsailors com Brennecke 2003 pp 15 16 S S Athenia Commonwealth War Graves Commission The CWGC puts the number of civilians killed at 64 Gregory Mackenzie J Martha Goddard died on the Athenia in Sept 1939 Ahoy Mac s Web Log Gregory Mackenzie J SS Athenia First Casualty of the U Boat War on the 3 September 1939 Ahoy Mac s Web Log Padfield 1996 p 7 Blair 1996 p 67 Williams 2003 p 17 Hayworth Margaret Janet Commonwealth War Graves Commission Houghton 2003 pp 75 76 Davidson 1997 p 381 Doenecke 2003 p 68 Santosuosso PA 15 September 1939 Dear Joe Italian News p 5 weekly column a b Francis M Carroll 2012 Chapter 2 In All Respects Ready For Sea Athenia Torpedoed The U Boat Attack that Ignited the Battle of the Atlantic Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 61251 155 9 Caulfield Max Tomorrow Never Came The Story of the S S Athenia Retrieved 12 March 2019 Gifts For the Gardener The Washington Post Retrieved 12 March 2019 MacTavish Angus 11 April 2018 The Finest Consignment of Curling Stones Ever Retrieved 12 March 2019 Amos Jonathan 5 October 2017 Wreck could be sunken Athenia from WW2 BBC News a b Harwood 2015 p 20 SS Athenia Glasgow Commonwealth War Graves Commission Find War Dead Database Hannah Baird Veterans Affairs Canada 20 February 2019 Virtual War Memorial Nova Scotia House of Assembly Committee on Veterans Affairs Hansard Archived from the original on 13 November 2007 Retrieved 30 October 2007 James Goodson 28 January 2016 Chapter One The Kings Enemies Tumult in the Clouds Original Edition Penguin Books Limited ISBN 978 1 4059 2552 5 Fairclough 1995 p 61 Noted Painter of Flowers Visitor in Palm Springs Desert Sun 1934 1989 Palm Springs California 22 January 1943 Retrieved 12 March 2018 General sources EditLloyd s Register Steamships and Motor Ships PDF London Lloyd s Register 1930 Retrieved 4 October 2014 Blair Clay 1996 Hitler s U Boat War Vol I The Hunters 1939 1942 New York Random House ISBN 0 304 35260 8 Brennecke Jochen 2003 The Hunters and the Hunted Annapolis MD Naval Institute Press p 310 ISBN 1 59114 091 9 Cain Lt Cdr Timothy J 1959 HMS Electra London Frederick Miller ISBN 0 86007 330 0 Caulfield Max 1958 A Night of Terror London Pan Books Crabb Brian James 2006 The Loss of British Commonwealth Mercantile and Service Women at sea During the Second World War Donington Lincolnshire Shaun Tyas p 310 ISBN 1 900289 66 0 Davidson Eugene 1997 The Trial of the Germans an account of the twenty two defendants before the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg Columbia MO University of Missouri Press p 381 ISBN 0 8262 1139 9 Doenecke Justus D 2003 Storm on the Horizon The Challenge to American Intervention 1939 1941 Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield p 68 ISBN 0 7425 0785 8 Evans Alan 1990 Orphans of the Storm Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 0 340 54414 7 Fairclough Ellen 1995 Saturday s Child Memoirs of Canada s First Female Cabinet Minister Toronto University of Toronto Press p 61 ISBN 0 802 007368 Harwood Jeremy 2015 World War Two at Sea Hove England Quid Publishing p 20 ISBN 978 1 921966 76 7 Houghton Margaret 2003 The Hamiltonians 100 Fascinating Lives Toronto James Lorimer amp Company pp 75 76 ISBN 1 55028 804 0 Padfield Paddy 1996 The War Beneath The Sea Submarine Conflict During World War II New York John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 0 471 146242 Paine Lincoln P 1997 Ships of the World An Historical Encyclopedia Boston Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 0 395 715563 Rademacher Cay 2009 Drei Tage im September Hamburg MareVerlag ISBN 978 3 866 480995 Williams Andrew 2003 The Battle of the Atlantic Hitler s Gray Wolves of the Sea and the Allies Desperate Struggle to Defeat Them New York Basic Books p 17 ISBN 0 465 09153 9 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Athenia ship 1923 Allen Tonya 1995 2014 The Sinking of the S S Athenia uboat net Gudmundur Helgason Jones Daniel H 2003 SS Athenia SMML Archived from the original on 5 September 2008 Joan Hecht The Daily Telegraph 6 September 2009 Ship Name Athenia Gross Tonnage 13581 Merchant shipping movement cards 1939 1945 The National Archives Sinking of SS Athenia German U Boats and Battle of the Atlantic Uboataces com 2005 2012 IWM Interview with survivor Mary Bauchop IWM Interview with survivor Pax Walker Fryett Anchor Donaldson Line History and Ephemera Letitia and Athenia at the GG Archives Roll of Honour Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w 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