History | |
---|---|
United Kingdom | |
Name |
|
Owner | British India SN Co |
Port of registry | Glasgow |
Route |
|
Builder | Barclay, Curle & Co, Whiteinch |
Yard number | 593 |
Launched | 21 November 1921 |
Completed | 16 March 1923 |
Refit | 1939 |
Identification |
|
Fate | sunk by torpedo, 1943 |
General characteristics | |
Type |
|
Tonnage | 8,427 GRT, 5,122 NRT, 10,400 DWT |
Length |
|
Beam | 58.3 ft (17.8 m) |
Draught | 27 ft 11 in (8.51 m) |
Depth | 32.9 ft (10.0 m) |
Decks | 2 |
Installed power |
|
Propulsion |
|
Speed | 13.6 knots (25.2 km/h) |
Capacity |
|
Troops | in the Second World War: 500 |
Complement | in the Second World War: 139 crew + 21 RAF personnel + 9 DEMS gunners |
Sensors and processing systems | by 1927: wireless direction finding |
Armament |
|
Notes | sister ship: Domala |
MV Dumana was a British cargo liner that was laid down as Melma, but launched in 1921 as Dumana. She British India Steam Navigation Company (BI) owned her, and ran her on routes between London and India.
In 1939 she was chartered and refitted as a depot ship. She served the Fleet Air Arm until 1940, and then the Royal Air Force. From 1942 she was a flying boat tender. A U-boat sank her in 1943 with the loss of 39 lives.
In 1920 Barclay, Curle & Co of Whiteinch, Glasgow, launched the first major ocean-going passenger ship to be built in the United Kingdom as a motor ship. She was built as yard number 579, launched as Magvana, but renamed Domala before she was completed. Her design was similar to the "M" class steamships that Barclay, Curle had been building for BI since 1913, but with diesel engines instead of steam, and electric winches instead of steam. BI at first gave her a name beginning with "M" to group her with the "M" class, but changed it to a name beginning with "D" to distinguish her as a diesel-powered ship. [1]
Domala was completed on 14 December 1921, almost a year after she was launched. Three weeks before that, on 21 November, Barclay, Curle launched her sister ship. Yard number 593 was laid down as Melma, but launched as Dumana. Again, BI changed her to a name beginning with "D" to distinguish her diesel propulsion. [2]
Dumana's dimensions were the same as Domala and the earlier "M" class steamships. Her lengths were 464.0 ft (141.4 m) overall and 450.0 ft (137.2 m) registered, her beam was 58.3 ft (17.8 m), her depth was 32.9 ft (10.0 m) and her draught was 27 ft 11 in (8.51 m). [3] Her tonnages were 8,427 GRT, 5,122 NRT, and 10,400 DWT. [2]
Dumana had a straight stem, counter stern, one funnel, and two masts. [4] As built, she had first and second class accommodation for passengers. There is some uncertainty about numbers: she had berths for either 60 in first class and 77 in second class, or 83 in first class and 47 in second class. [2]
Like her sister, Dumana had a pair of single-acting four-stroke diesel engines, built by the North British Diesel Engine Works. As built, the combined power output of the twin engines was rated at 963 NHP. [5] She made 13.6 knots (25.2 km/h) on her sea trials. [2] By 1927 her engines had been re-rated to a combined total of 1,110 NHP. [6]
Unlike her sister, Dumana had steam-powered winches on deck. A boiler heated by exhaust gas supplied the steam. [4] By 1927 her navigation equipment included wireless direction finding. [6]
BI registered Dumana at Glasgow. Her United Kingdom official number was 146327 and her code letters were KNQW. [5] [7] By 1930 her call sign was GDNF. [8] By 1934 this had superseded her code letters. [9]
BI put Dumana on its service between London and Bombay (now Mumbai, India, via the Suez Canal and Karachi. [4] By 1929 BI's usual ports of call on this route were Plymouth, Port Said, Suez, and Aden. [10]
In 1928 Dumana was converted into a one-class ship, with berths for 111 passengers. In 1933 BI transferred her to its service between London and Calcutta. [2] BI's regular ports of call on this route were Gibraltar, Marseille, Port Said, Suez, Aden, Colombo, and Madras (now Chennai). [10] In 1934 her passenger accommodation was increased to 140 passengers, still all in one class. [2] By 1937, BI's ports of call between London and Calcutta were Tangier, Marseille, Valetta, Port Said, Suez, Aden, Colombo and Madras. [10]
On 25 January 1935, when Dumana was in port in Marseille, fire broke out in a cargo of jute in her number 4 hold. The fire was contained by flooding the hold. [2]
Dumana had limited refrigeration capacity. Originally it was 1,000 cubic feet (28 cubic metres). [11] By 1936 this had been increased to 7,110 cubic feet (201 cubic metres). [12]
On 24 April 1939 Dumana was chartered as a depot ship. Sources disagree as to whether at first the Admiralty chartered her for the Royal Navy, [2] the Ministry of Shipping (later the Ministry of War Transport) chartered her for the Air Ministry, [13] or the Air Ministry chartered directly. She was refitted with aircraft overhaul workshops, a troop deck for 500 men, and a galley, bakery and recreation room to cater for them. [2]
She was allocated to Mediterranean Air Command. On 5 May 1939, in London, the headquarters of the No. 86 (General Reconnaissance) Wing RAF reformed aboard her. Fleet Air Arm units also embarked on her. On 10 May 1939 she left London. On 19 May she called at Grand Harbour, Valetta, where the FAA units disembarked. On 2 June she reached Alexandria, Egypt. On 10 October the headquarters of No. 86 Wing disembarked at Aboukir. On 12 October 1939 the headquarters of No. 86 Wing re-embarked with 802 Naval Air Squadron. On 2 December she reached Marsaxlokk, Malta, where 802 Squadron disembarked. She reached Grand Harbour on 4 December, and left on 14 December for Gibraltar. [14]
In 1941 Dumana evacuated RAF personnel from Crete after German forces invaded the island. In 1942 she was converted into a base ship for Short Sunderland flying boats, and stationed at Bathurst (now Banjul), Gambia with two RAF squadrons. She was later transferred to Port-Étienne (now Nouadhibou), Mauritania. [13]
Late in 1943 Domana left Port-Étienne carrying 300 tons of RAF stores to deliver to ports between there and Takoradi, Gold Coast, including a call at Marshall, Liberia. Her Master was Captain Otto West. She carried a crew of 36 Europeans, 103 lascars, 21 RAF maintenance personnel, and nine DEMS gunners. By then her armament was one four-inch gun, one 12-pounder gun, four Oerlikon 20 mm cannons and four machine guns. [13]
At Freetown, Sierra Leone, Domana joined Convoy STL 8, which was going to Lagos, Nigeria. [15] However, she and two escorts, the naval trawlers HMS Arran and Southern Pride, lost contact with the rest of the convoy. [13]
On the night of 24 December 1943 the trio were off Ivory Coast, sailing at 8+1⁄2 knots (16 km/h), when U-515 attacked them. Despite warnings of U-boats in the area, the ships were not steering an evasive course, and Domana had not deployed her torpedo nets. At 21:18 hrs the U-boat fired a G7es torpedo at one of the trawlers. It missed, and the trawler's crew failed to notice it. At 21:37 U-515 fired three torpedoes, two of which hit Domana's starboard side in her numbers 2 and 3 holds. The explosions destroyed the starboard wing of her bridge, two of her starboard lifeboats, and many of the wooden ladders in her troop accommodation. Her engines survived intact, but her generators soon failed, shutting down all lighting and communication. The ship began to list to port. [13]
Domana's crew launched numbers 2, 6, and 8 lifeboats on her port side. They also launched number 5 lifeboat on her starboard side, but wreckage in the water capsized it. The ship's increasing list caused temporary wooden superstructures on her shade deck to become detached and slide overboard, hitting some of the lifeboats alongside, and killing some of their occupants. Within seven minutes Domana sank by her bow at position 04°27′N06°58′W / 4.450°N 6.967°W . [13]
Domana dragged some of her lifeboats underwater as she sank. Only her motor boat floated free. 40 survivors climbed into it. Arran rescued Captain West and about 60 other survivors, as Southern Pride provided a defensive screen. Survivors who were in boats or clinging to wreckage were left until the next day, [13] Christmas Day, when the rescue resumed at first light, around 06:30 hrs. [16] Both trawlers searched the area until 11:30 hrs, when they left for either Takoradi [13] or Sassandra [16] (accounts differ). 13 European crew, 17 lascars, seven RAF personnel and two DEMS gunners were killed. [13]
Six unidentified bodies were washed up on a beach at Sassandra in Ivory Coast, and were buried in Imperial War Graves Commission plot at Sassandra Municipal Cemetery, marked by a standard IWGC headstone with a Merchant Navy inscription. [17] A year after the sinking, the Free French erected a monument to the dead in Sassandra. [16] The Governor, André Latrille, dedicated it on 29 December 1944.[ citation needed ]
The 13 European members of Domana's crew who were killed are commemorated on panel 36 of the Second World War monument at Tower Hill Memorial. The 17 lascars are commemorated on a roll of honour, one copy of which is held at Chittagong War Cemetery in Bangladesh, and the other at the Indian Seamen's Home at Mumbai in India. [18] The seven RAF members are commemorated on the Air Forces Memorial at Englefield Green, England.
RMS Laconia was a Cunard ocean liner, built by Swan, Hunter & Wigham Richardson as a successor of the 1911–1917 Laconia. The new ship was launched on 9 April 1921, and made her maiden voyage on 25 May 1922 from Southampton to New York City. At the outbreak of the Second World War she was converted into an armed merchant cruiser, and later a troopship. She was sunk in the South Atlantic Ocean on 12 September 1942 by torpedoes. Like her predecessor, sunk during the First World War, this Laconia was also destroyed by a German submarine. Some estimates of the death toll have suggested that over 1,658 people were killed when the Laconia sank. The U-boat commander Werner Hartenstein then staged a dramatic effort to rescue the passengers and the crew of Laconia, which involved additional German U-boats and became known as the Laconia incident.
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SS Chenab was a steamship that was built in England in 1911 and scrapped in Scotland in 1953. For nearly two decades she was part of Nourse Line, which carried Girmityas from India to colonies in the Caribbean and the Pacific. In 1914 she was requisitioned for service in the First World War.
SS Minnedosa was one of a pair of transatlantic steam ocean liners that were built in the United Kingdom, launched in 1917 and operated by Canadian Pacific until 1935. Her sister ship was Melita.
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MV Domala was a British cargo liner that was launched in 1920 as Magvana, but completed in 1921 as Domala. She was the first major ocean-going passenger ship to be built in the United Kingdom as a motor ship.
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MV British Prudence was a tanker built by Sir James Laing & Sons Ltd. of Sunderland in 1939 and operated by the British Tanker Company. A U-boat sank her in 1942 off the coast of Newfoundland. She was a victim of the Second Happy Time: the Kriegsmarine's Operation Drumbeat to sink Allied merchant shipping in the Western Atlantic
SS Norwich City was a British cargo steamship. She was built in 1911 as Normanby, and renamed Norwich City in 1919. She was wrecked in the Pacific Ocean in 1929. For many years her wreck was a sea mark on the atoll of Nikumaroro. The wreck is now largely broken up.
SS Monte Nevoso was a cargo steamship that was launched in 1920 in England, owned in Italy, and wrecked in 1932 in the North Sea off the coast of Norfolk.
SS Meriones was a Blue Funnel Line refrigerated cargo steamship. She was launched in 1921 on the River Tyne as one of a class of 11 ships to replace many of Blue Funnel's losses in the First World War.
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MV Deucalion was a Blue Funnel Line refrigerated cargo ship that was built in England in 1930 and sunk in the Second World War in 1942. She survived being damaged in the Liverpool Blitz in December 1940 and took part in two Malta convoys to relieve the Siege of Malta. She survived air attacks during the first of these, Operation Substance, in July 1941 but was lost on her second Malta Convoy, Operation Pedestal, in August 1942. This was the third of five Blue Funnel ships to be named after Deucalion, a mythological king of Thessaly in Ancient Greece.
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