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SS Nailsea Court (1936)

SS Nailsea Court was a UK cargo steamship. She was launched in 1936 in Sunderland, England. She was named after Nailsea Court in Somerset, England, which is an historic Elizabethan manor house. A U-boat sank her in the North Atlantic in March 1943. 45 men died and only four survived.

History
United Kingdom
NameNailsea Court
NamesakeNailsea Court
OwnerBantham SS Co Ltd
OperatorEvans & Reid
Port of registryCardiff
BuilderBartram & Sons, Sunderland
Yard number272
Launched9 June 1936
CompletedAugust 1936
Identification
FateSunk by torpedo, 10 March 1943
General characteristics
Tonnage
Length420.3 ft (128.1 m)
Beam56.0 ft (17.1 m)
Depth25.4 ft (7.7 m)
Installed power255 NHP
Propulsion4-cylinder compound engine plus exhaust steam turbine
Speed10 kn (19 km/h)
Crew40 plus 7 DEMS gunners
Sensors and
processing systems
wireless direction finding
Armament
  • as DEMS:
  • 1 × 4-inch gun
  • 1 × QF 12-pounder gun
  • 4 × machine guns
  • 4 × PAC rockets
Notessister ships: Nailsea Meadow, Nailsea Manor, Nailsea Moor

Evans and Reid of Cardiff managed Nailsea Court, and she was the third ship under their management to bear this name. The first was a steamship launched in 1902 as Graphic. She was renamed Nailsea Court in 1915 and sunk by a U-boat in 1917.[1] The second was a steamship launched in 1920 as H. H. Asquith. She was renamed Nailsea Court in 1932, then Nailsea Manor in 1936, then sold and renamed Danbryn in 1937.[2]

Building edit

In 1936–37 Bartram & Sons built four sister ships for two companies linked to Evans and Reid of Cardiff.[3] Nailsea Court[4] and Nailsea Meadow[5] were launched in 1936. Nailsea Moor[6] and Nailsea Manor[7] were launched in 1937.

Nailsea Court was the first of the four sisters to be built. She was launched on 9 June 1936 and completed that August.[4]

Unusually for steamships built in the 1930s the four sisters each had a compound engine.[3][4] Triple-expansion engines had largely superseded compound engines in the 1860s. But in these four sisters the compound engine was combined with an exhaust steam turbine[3][4] to achieve a third stage of steam expansion and hence economy in bunkering.

The compound engine had two high- and two low-pressure cylinders and drove the propeller shaft by single-reduction gearing. Exhaust steam from its two low-pressure cylinders powered a single exhaust steam turbine, which drove the same propeller shaft via double-reduction gearing. The compound engine was made by White's Marine Engineering Company of Hebburn.[3] The compound engine plus exhaust turbine gave Nailsea Court a speed of 10 knots (19 km/h).[8]

War service edit

In the Second World War Nailsea Court was defensively armed. By 1943 her armament included one four-inch gun, one 12-pounder quick-firing gun, four machine guns and four PAC rockets.[9]

Nailsea Court sailed in numerous Battle of the Atlantic convoys. Between October 1939 and her loss in March 1943 she sailed in four HX convoys from Halifax, Nova Scotia to Liverpool and three SC convoys from Sydney, Nova Scotia to Liverpool.[10]

Her cargoes to the UK included wheat and cotton in Convoy HX 6 in October and November 1939, grain in Convoy HX 46 in May and June 1940,[11] sugar in Convoy SC 17 in December 1940 and January 1941,[12] wheat in Convoy HX 117 in March and April 1941,[13] steel in Convoy HX 134 in June and July 1941,[14] a mixed cargo in Convoy SC 44 in September 1941,[15] and copper bar, nickel ore and asbestos in Convoy SC 121 in February and March 1943.[16]

Nailsea Court occasionally sailed to other theatres of the war. In March and February 1940 she sailed to Alexandria in Egypt, with Convoy OG 16 taking her as far as Gibraltar.[17] In November 1941 she sailed to Freetown in Sierra Leone in Convoy OS 11. Her cargoes on these two voyages are not recorded.[18]

Loss edit

On 23 February 1943 Nailsea Court left New York City in Convoy SC 121 bound for Liverpool. Her cargo included 6,500 tons of copper bars, 800 tons of nickel ore, and asbestos.[19] Nailsea Court was also carrying two passengers: a mining engineer and an electrical engineer, both of whom had embarked at Freetown.[9]

SC 121 ran into Force 10 gales which lasted for nine days and forced the convoy to scatter to avoid collision. U-boats started to attack SC 121 on the night of 6–7 March and sank five cargo ships on 8 March. On 9 March escorts were reinforced by a US Navy destroyer, two US Coast Guard cutters and air cover from No. 120 Squadron RAF, but U-boats sank another four cargo ships.

At 0104 hrs on 10 March SC 121 was south of Iceland when German submarine U-229 fired a salvo of two torpedoes at the convoy. One damaged the cargo ship Coulmore, and 40 of her 47 crew were lost.[20] The other hit the port side of Nailsea Court in her number one hold. The Second Engineer, who survived, reported a second torpedo then hitting her in her number two hold.[9]

The order was given to abandon ship. The engine room crew, led by the Fourth Engineer, Ronald Dryden, shut down Nailsea Court's engines and her circulating pump. Both actions were important to evacuate the ship safely. The outlet from the circulating pump discharged from the side of the ship just where one of the lifeboats was to be lowered. Had it not been shut down, its discharge would have swamped the lifeboat.[9]

There was no time for the wireless officers to transmit a distress message or for anyone to fire a distress flare.[9]

The starboard motor boat was damaged, and the port lifeboat had been damaged the day before by a heavy sea, so only the starboard lifeboat and the ship's life-rafts were usable. As the crew tried to launch this boat its forward fall jammed, and as they tried to free it a seaman got his hand caught in the block. Eventually the Second Officer, RA Johannesen, and some seamen managed to lift the boat and free the man's hand.[9]

The lifeboat was launched carrying 25 men, and most of the rest of the crew got away in life-rafts. The last four men left aboard were the Master, Robert Lee, Second Officer Johannesen, the Second Engineer, HCC Bette, and one of the ship's apprentices. They jumped overboard, with Captain Lee being last to go. Nailsea Court sank 12 minutes after she was hit, bow first and with her stern lifted clear of the water.[9]

Nailsea Court's lifeboat picked up Captain Lee, Mr Bette, and several survivors from Colmore, until the boat was carrying 37 men. She was shipping water and her occupants were struggling to bale her out. The Royal Canadian Navy corvette HMCS Dauphin tried to reach the lifeboat, but her steering gear failed forcing her to stop only 250 yards away.[9]

 
HMCS Dauphin was within 250 yards of Nailsea Court's lifeboat when she was stopped by the failure of her steering gear. As a result, 34 of the boat's occupants were lost and only three were rescued.

About half an hour later the lifeboat capsized. The sea swept away exhausted men. Bette counted 17 men clinging to the keel of the upturned boat, but later he counted only seven. Dauphin managed to reach the boat about three and a half hours after it capsized. The corvette rescued Bette, the mess-room steward and a greaser. Bette could not tell whether the other four men were dead, or dared not let go of the boat to be rescued.[9]

The rescue ship Melrose Abbey[19] found the port life-raft. Two men were in it, but only one was left alive.[9]

Captain Lee, 33 of his officers and men, all nine DEMS gunners and both passengers were lost.[19]

Aftermath edit

Bette reported that all of the officers and men conducted themselves well and there was no panic. He particularly praised Captain Lee and Mr Johannesen for their leadership in the abandonment of the ship, and Fourth Engineer Dryden, Greaser William Perkes and Fireman Percy Barnes for remaining at their posts in the engine room until they had made it safe to abandon ship.[9]

In July 1943 Johannesen, Dryden, Perkes and Barnes were awarded commendations. Johannesen's commendation was posthumous.[21]

References edit

  1. ^ "Graphic". Tees Built Ships. North East Maritime Forum. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  2. ^ "H. H. Asquith". Tees Built Ships. North East Maritime Forum. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d "Steamers & Motorships". Lloyd's Register (PDF). Vol. II. London: Lloyd's Register. 1942. Retrieved 3 November 2020 – via Plimsoll Ship Data.
  4. ^ a b c d "Nailsea Court". Wear Built Ships. North East Maritime Forum. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  5. ^ "Nailsea Meadow". Wear Built Ships. North East Maritime Forum. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  6. ^ "Nailsea Moor". Wear Built Ships. North East Maritime Forum. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  7. ^ "Nailsea Manor". Wear Built Ships. North East Maritime Forum. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  8. ^ Allen, Tony; Claes, Johnny. "SS Nailsea Court (+1943)". Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Shipping Casualties Section – Trade Division (23 March 1943). "Report of an Interview with the 2nd Engineer, Mr HCC Bette; SS "Nailsea Court" – 4946 gt". Ministry of War Transport. Retrieved 3 November 2020 – via ss Nailsea Court.
  10. ^ Hague, Arnold. "Ship Movements". Port Arrivals / Departures. Don Kindell, ConvoyWeb. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  11. ^ Hague, Arnold. "Convoy HX.46". SC Convoy Series. Don Kindell, ConvoyWeb. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  12. ^ Hague, Arnold. "Convoy SC.17". SC Convoy Series. Don Kindell, ConvoyWeb. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  13. ^ Hague, Arnold. "Convoy HX.117". SC Convoy Series. Don Kindell, ConvoyWeb. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  14. ^ Hague, Arnold. "Convoy HX.134". SC Convoy Series. Don Kindell, ConvoyWeb. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  15. ^ Hague, Arnold. "Convoy SC.44". SC Convoy Series. Don Kindell, ConvoyWeb. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  16. ^ Hague, Arnold. "Convoy SC.121". SC Convoy Series. Don Kindell, ConvoyWeb. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  17. ^ Hague, Arnold. "Convoy OG.16". OG Convoy Series. Don Kindell, ConvoyWeb. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  18. ^ Hague, Arnold. "Convoy OS.11". OS/KMS Convoy Series. Don Kindell, ConvoyWeb. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  19. ^ a b c Helgason, Guðmundur. "Nailsea Court". Uboat.net. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  20. ^ Helgason, Guðmundur. "Coulmore". Uboat.net. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  21. ^ "No. 36078". The London Gazette (Supplement). 2 July 1943. p. 3033.

External links edit

  • "ss Nailsea Court". – memorial website, with biographies of some of the officers and men

58°45′N 21°57′W / 58.750°N 21.950°W / 58.750; -21.950

nailsea, court, 1936, nailsea, court, cargo, steamship, launched, 1936, sunderland, england, named, after, nailsea, court, somerset, england, which, historic, elizabethan, manor, house, boat, sank, north, atlantic, march, 1943, died, only, four, survived, hist. SS Nailsea Court was a UK cargo steamship She was launched in 1936 in Sunderland England She was named after Nailsea Court in Somerset England which is an historic Elizabethan manor house A U boat sank her in the North Atlantic in March 1943 45 men died and only four survived History United Kingdom NameNailsea Court NamesakeNailsea Court OwnerBantham SS Co Ltd OperatorEvans amp Reid Port of registryCardiff BuilderBartram amp Sons Sunderland Yard number272 Launched9 June 1936 CompletedAugust 1936 IdentificationUK official number 162113 call sign GYYM FateSunk by torpedo 10 March 1943 General characteristics Tonnage4 946 GRT 2 914 NRT Length420 3 ft 128 1 m Beam56 0 ft 17 1 m Depth25 4 ft 7 7 m Installed power255 NHP Propulsion4 cylinder compound engine plus exhaust steam turbine Speed10 kn 19 km h Crew40 plus 7 DEMS gunners Sensors and processing systemswireless direction finding Armamentas DEMS 1 4 inch gun 1 QF 12 pounder gun 4 machine guns 4 PAC rockets Notessister ships Nailsea Meadow Nailsea Manor Nailsea Moor Evans and Reid of Cardiff managed Nailsea Court and she was the third ship under their management to bear this name The first was a steamship launched in 1902 as Graphic She was renamed Nailsea Court in 1915 and sunk by a U boat in 1917 1 The second was a steamship launched in 1920 as H H Asquith She was renamed Nailsea Court in 1932 then Nailsea Manor in 1936 then sold and renamed Danbryn in 1937 2 Contents 1 Building 2 War service 2 1 Loss 3 Aftermath 4 References 5 External linksBuilding editIn 1936 37 Bartram amp Sons built four sister ships for two companies linked to Evans and Reid of Cardiff 3 Nailsea Court 4 and Nailsea Meadow 5 were launched in 1936 Nailsea Moor 6 and Nailsea Manor 7 were launched in 1937 Nailsea Court was the first of the four sisters to be built She was launched on 9 June 1936 and completed that August 4 Unusually for steamships built in the 1930s the four sisters each had a compound engine 3 4 Triple expansion engines had largely superseded compound engines in the 1860s But in these four sisters the compound engine was combined with an exhaust steam turbine 3 4 to achieve a third stage of steam expansion and hence economy in bunkering The compound engine had two high and two low pressure cylinders and drove the propeller shaft by single reduction gearing Exhaust steam from its two low pressure cylinders powered a single exhaust steam turbine which drove the same propeller shaft via double reduction gearing The compound engine was made by White s Marine Engineering Company of Hebburn 3 The compound engine plus exhaust turbine gave Nailsea Court a speed of 10 knots 19 km h 8 War service editIn the Second World War Nailsea Court was defensively armed By 1943 her armament included one four inch gun one 12 pounder quick firing gun four machine guns and four PAC rockets 9 Nailsea Court sailed in numerous Battle of the Atlantic convoys Between October 1939 and her loss in March 1943 she sailed in four HX convoys from Halifax Nova Scotia to Liverpool and three SC convoys from Sydney Nova Scotia to Liverpool 10 Her cargoes to the UK included wheat and cotton in Convoy HX 6 in October and November 1939 grain in Convoy HX 46 in May and June 1940 11 sugar in Convoy SC 17 in December 1940 and January 1941 12 wheat in Convoy HX 117 in March and April 1941 13 steel in Convoy HX 134 in June and July 1941 14 a mixed cargo in Convoy SC 44 in September 1941 15 and copper bar nickel ore and asbestos in Convoy SC 121 in February and March 1943 16 Nailsea Court occasionally sailed to other theatres of the war In March and February 1940 she sailed to Alexandria in Egypt with Convoy OG 16 taking her as far as Gibraltar 17 In November 1941 she sailed to Freetown in Sierra Leone in Convoy OS 11 Her cargoes on these two voyages are not recorded 18 Loss edit On 23 February 1943 Nailsea Court left New York City in Convoy SC 121 bound for Liverpool Her cargo included 6 500 tons of copper bars 800 tons of nickel ore and asbestos 19 Nailsea Court was also carrying two passengers a mining engineer and an electrical engineer both of whom had embarked at Freetown 9 SC 121 ran into Force 10 gales which lasted for nine days and forced the convoy to scatter to avoid collision U boats started to attack SC 121 on the night of 6 7 March and sank five cargo ships on 8 March On 9 March escorts were reinforced by a US Navy destroyer two US Coast Guard cutters and air cover from No 120 Squadron RAF but U boats sank another four cargo ships At 0104 hrs on 10 March SC 121 was south of Iceland when German submarine U 229 fired a salvo of two torpedoes at the convoy One damaged the cargo ship Coulmore and 40 of her 47 crew were lost 20 The other hit the port side of Nailsea Court in her number one hold The Second Engineer who survived reported a second torpedo then hitting her in her number two hold 9 The order was given to abandon ship The engine room crew led by the Fourth Engineer Ronald Dryden shut down Nailsea Court s engines and her circulating pump Both actions were important to evacuate the ship safely The outlet from the circulating pump discharged from the side of the ship just where one of the lifeboats was to be lowered Had it not been shut down its discharge would have swamped the lifeboat 9 There was no time for the wireless officers to transmit a distress message or for anyone to fire a distress flare 9 The starboard motor boat was damaged and the port lifeboat had been damaged the day before by a heavy sea so only the starboard lifeboat and the ship s life rafts were usable As the crew tried to launch this boat its forward fall jammed and as they tried to free it a seaman got his hand caught in the block Eventually the Second Officer RA Johannesen and some seamen managed to lift the boat and free the man s hand 9 The lifeboat was launched carrying 25 men and most of the rest of the crew got away in life rafts The last four men left aboard were the Master Robert Lee Second Officer Johannesen the Second Engineer HCC Bette and one of the ship s apprentices They jumped overboard with Captain Lee being last to go Nailsea Court sank 12 minutes after she was hit bow first and with her stern lifted clear of the water 9 Nailsea Court s lifeboat picked up Captain Lee Mr Bette and several survivors from Colmore until the boat was carrying 37 men She was shipping water and her occupants were struggling to bale her out The Royal Canadian Navy corvette HMCS Dauphin tried to reach the lifeboat but her steering gear failed forcing her to stop only 250 yards away 9 nbsp HMCS Dauphin was within 250 yards of Nailsea Court s lifeboat when she was stopped by the failure of her steering gear As a result 34 of the boat s occupants were lost and only three were rescued About half an hour later the lifeboat capsized The sea swept away exhausted men Bette counted 17 men clinging to the keel of the upturned boat but later he counted only seven Dauphin managed to reach the boat about three and a half hours after it capsized The corvette rescued Bette the mess room steward and a greaser Bette could not tell whether the other four men were dead or dared not let go of the boat to be rescued 9 The rescue ship Melrose Abbey 19 found the port life raft Two men were in it but only one was left alive 9 Captain Lee 33 of his officers and men all nine DEMS gunners and both passengers were lost 19 Aftermath editBette reported that all of the officers and men conducted themselves well and there was no panic He particularly praised Captain Lee and Mr Johannesen for their leadership in the abandonment of the ship and Fourth Engineer Dryden Greaser William Perkes and Fireman Percy Barnes for remaining at their posts in the engine room until they had made it safe to abandon ship 9 In July 1943 Johannesen Dryden Perkes and Barnes were awarded commendations Johannesen s commendation was posthumous 21 References edit Graphic Tees Built Ships North East Maritime Forum Retrieved 3 November 2020 H H Asquith Tees Built Ships North East Maritime Forum Retrieved 3 November 2020 a b c d Steamers amp Motorships Lloyd s Register PDF Vol II London Lloyd s Register 1942 Retrieved 3 November 2020 via Plimsoll Ship Data a b c d Nailsea Court Wear Built Ships North East Maritime Forum Retrieved 3 November 2020 Nailsea Meadow Wear Built Ships North East Maritime Forum Retrieved 3 November 2020 Nailsea Moor Wear Built Ships North East Maritime Forum Retrieved 3 November 2020 Nailsea Manor Wear Built Ships North East Maritime Forum Retrieved 3 November 2020 Allen Tony Claes Johnny SS Nailsea Court 1943 Retrieved 3 November 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k Shipping Casualties Section Trade Division 23 March 1943 Report of an Interview with the 2nd Engineer Mr HCC Bette SS Nailsea Court 4946 gt Ministry of War Transport Retrieved 3 November 2020 via ss Nailsea Court Hague Arnold Ship Movements Port Arrivals Departures Don Kindell ConvoyWeb Retrieved 3 November 2020 Hague Arnold Convoy HX 46 SC Convoy Series Don Kindell ConvoyWeb Retrieved 3 November 2020 Hague Arnold Convoy SC 17 SC Convoy Series Don Kindell ConvoyWeb Retrieved 3 November 2020 Hague Arnold Convoy HX 117 SC Convoy Series Don Kindell ConvoyWeb Retrieved 3 November 2020 Hague Arnold Convoy HX 134 SC Convoy Series Don Kindell ConvoyWeb Retrieved 3 November 2020 Hague Arnold Convoy SC 44 SC Convoy Series Don Kindell ConvoyWeb Retrieved 3 November 2020 Hague Arnold Convoy SC 121 SC Convoy Series Don Kindell ConvoyWeb Retrieved 3 November 2020 Hague Arnold Convoy OG 16 OG Convoy Series Don Kindell ConvoyWeb Retrieved 3 November 2020 Hague Arnold Convoy OS 11 OS KMS Convoy Series Don Kindell ConvoyWeb Retrieved 3 November 2020 a b c Helgason Gudmundur Nailsea Court Uboat net Retrieved 3 November 2020 Helgason Gudmundur Coulmore Uboat net Retrieved 3 November 2020 No 36078 The London Gazette Supplement 2 July 1943 p 3033 External links edit ss Nailsea Court memorial website with biographies of some of the officers and men 58 45 N 21 57 W 58 750 N 21 950 W 58 750 21 950 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title SS Nailsea Court 1936 amp oldid 1186473828, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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