Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

The SS Harry Luckenbach, built as a cargo ship ordered by the Luckenbach Steamship Company and built at Sun Shipbuilding and Drydock Co. in Chester, Pennsylvania in 1919. The as yet unnamed ship was requisitioned by the United States Shipping Board (USSB) before completion and converted to a troop transport. The USSB allocated the ship, which had been fitted out with temporary troop accommodation in its cargo spaces, to the Navy which commissioned the ship on 7 July 1919 as USS Sol Navis with the Identification number 4031A. The ship was decommissioned October 1919 after two trips to France.

SS Harry Luckenbach -
History
Name
  • Sol Navis (1919—1920 )
  • Harry Luckenbach (1920—1943)
Owner
Operator
  • U.S. Navy (1919)
  • United States Shipping Board (1919—1920)
  • Luckenbach Steamship Company (1920—1943)
Port of registryPhiladelphia, Pa.
BuilderSun Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Co.
Yard number10
Launched9 February 1919
Acquired7 July 1919
In service1919-1943
Identification
FateSunk 17 March 1943 by U-91
NotesCommissioned U.S. Navy 7 July 1919—22 October 1919
General characteristics
TypeCargo
Tonnage
Displacement6,366 long tons (6,468 t)
Length
  • 448 ft 7 in (136.73 m) LOA
  • 448.9 ft (136.8 m) (registry)[1]
Beam60.2 ft (18.3 m)[1]
Draft37.7 ft (11.5 m)
Depth
  • 28.2 ft (8.6 m)[1]
  • 37.8 ft (11.5 m) (to main deck)[2]
Decks2 with shelter deck
Propulsion4 x De Laval Steam turbine engines SR geared to two screw shafts, 4 water tube boilers,968 n.h.p.[2]
Speed13.5 knots (25.0 km/h; 15.5 mph)
Crew50-53
Notes1919 armament: 1x 3inch gun, 1x 4inch gun, 8x 20mm guns[4]

In 1920 Luckenbach Steamship purchased the ship and operated it commercially as Harry Luckenbach in intercoastal trade. In April 1942 the ship was turned over to the War Shipping Administration (WSA) with the company assigned as the WSA operating agent. On 17 March 1943 she was sunk by Uboat U-91 with loss of all eighty persons aboard.

Construction

edit

The yet unnamed ship was the last of four sister ships ordered by the Luckenbach Steamship Company from the Sun Shipbuilding and Drydock Co., Chester, Pennsylvania.[note 1] The United States Shipping Board (USSB) requisitioned all merchant ships under construction or on order in American shipyards for emergency World War I service on 3 August 1917. Yard hull number 10 was launched on 9 February 1919, completed in July 1919 as Sol Navis, U.S. Official Number 218157 and delivered to the USSB on 7 July 1919.[5][6] The USSB assigned the ship to the U.S. Navy which on delivery 7 July 1919 commissioned the ship as Sol Navis with the Identification Number 4031A.[6]

Sol Navis was registered as a freighter with signal LRHP at 8,713 GRT, 5,489 NRT, 448.9 ft (136.8 m) registry length, 60.2 ft (18.3 m) beam and 28.2 ft (8.6 m) depth, 5,000 i.h.p., a crew of 50 at Philadelphia.[1] The 1920 Lloyd's Register of Ships shows the same tonnage with additional information of two steel decks with shelter deck, 37.8 ft (11.5 m) depth to main deck, four boilers and four geared turbines driving twin screws and owner USSB.[2]

U.S. Navy service

edit

Sol Navis had been fitted out with temporary troop accommodations and was assigned to the Cruiser and Transport Force assigned to bring soldiers home from Europe at the end of World War I. The ship departed Philadelphia on 12 July 1919 for Brest, France arriving and anchoring in the harbor on 23 July 1919. Troops were ferried to the anchored ship which departed 13 August with 30 Army officers and 846 enlisted men arriving at the Hoboken Port of Embarkation on 23 August. The ship made a second trip, departing Hoboken 4 September 1919 and anchoring at Brest 13 September. After embarking 67 officers, 1,699 soldiers, one civilian and 100 Sailors for a total of 1,867 passengers on 16 September the ship sailed arriving at the Port of Embarkation's Bush Terminal[note 2] in Brooklyn on 26 September after a night at the quarantine anchorage off Staten Island.[6]

Sol Navis was put into drydock for repairs at Robins Dry Dock, Erie Basin, Brooklyn on 9 October 1919. Having completed he mission the Navy decommissioned her on 22 October 1919.[6][7] There had been some intent to transfer the ship to the War Department (Army) but the ship was immediately returned to the USSB upon decommissioning.[8]

Commercial service

edit

In 1920 the Luckenbach Steamship Company purchased the ship from the USSB renaming the ship Harry Luckenbach operating it commercially until sunk in World War II.[6]

Schedules during the 1930s show the ship, along with many other of the line's ships on an intercoastal service between Boston and Seattle with port calls at cites between those locations.[9] In April 1941 the line announced a number of its ships would be diverted, alternately, from the intercoastal routes to Manila, Hong Kong, Singapore, Penang and the Dutch East Indies to "assist in the movement of essential foreign commodities.” While on those voyages the ships would be under charter to American President Lines. Harry Luckenbach was the second ship to be so diverted scheduled to leave San Pedro, California on 26 May 1941.[10]

World War II

edit

The company turned the ship over to the War Shipping Administration (WSA) at Mobile, Alabama on 20 April 1942. WSA retained Luckenbach Steamship Company as its operating agent with operations under a WSA/Army Transportation Corps Agreement (TCA).[11]

Harry Luckenbach was in Convoy HX-229, assigned station #111, from New York City to the United Kingdom. That station, leading the left column,[note 3] was considered exposed and the ship had to be recalled to the position when the master independently zig-zagged ahead of the convoy. The ship was hit early in the morning of 17 March 1943 about 400 nmi (460 mi; 740 km) off of Cape Farewell, Greenland (50°38′N 34°46′W / 50.633°N 34.767°W / 50.633; -34.767) by torpedoes fired by German submarine U-91 midship on her starboard side in the machinery room. The ship sank in about 3 minutes and survivors were sighted. HMS Pennywort had already picked up 108 survivors and could not take on more. HMS Anemone was ordered to find and rescue the survivors but failed to find them. The entire crew of 54 seaman and 26 Naval Armed Guard were lost.[6][4]

Successor ship

edit

In November 1949 the C3-S-A2 ship Sea Devil built by Western Steel, San Francisco, in 1943 was purchased by Luckenbach Steamship Company and renamed Harry Luckenbach. That ship, sold in 1959, was scrapped in 1973 as Copper State.[12]

Footnotes

edit
  1. ^ The four sister ships were, in order with hull numbers and U.S. Official Number: hull #5, O/N 217562, prospective name M.E. Luckenbach, completed as USSB ship South Bend, purchased 1922 renamed J.L. Luckenbach (not to be confused with 1886 ex-Saale), sold foreign 1948; hull #6, O/N 217859, prospective name Jacob Luckenbach, completed as USSB ship Marcia, purchased 1922 renamed Lillian Luckenbach, sunk collision 27 March 1943; hull #9, O/N 218199, no prospective name, conpleted as USSB ship Edellyn, purchased 1922 renamed Dorothy Luckenbach, U.S. Army Hospital Ship Ernestine Koranda (1944—1950), U.S. MARAD until scrapped 1957; hull #10, O/N 218157, this ship.
  2. ^ The WW I Bush Terminal facilities were leased. Brooklyn was later the site of the massive Brooklyn Army Terminal, the core of the WW II New York Port of Embarkation.
  3. ^ Lead ship in the left column. See diagram Figure 7-2, Column and lane numbering, page 7-5.

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d e Fifty-First Annual List of Merchant Vessels of the United States, Year ended June 30, 1919. Washington, D.C.: Department of Commerce, Bureau of Navigation. 1919. p. 165. hdl:2027/nyp.33433023733946. Retrieved 30 October 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d Lloyds. "Lloyd's Register 1920". Lloyd's Register. p. 990 (SOE-SOL). Retrieved 31 October 2021.
  3. ^ Lloyds. "Lloyd's Register 1943-44". Lloyd's Register. Retrieved 31 October 2021.
  4. ^ a b Lettens, Jan (2014). "SS Harry Luckenbach (+1943)". The Wrecksite. Retrieved 31 October 2021.
  5. ^ McKellar, Norman L. "Steel Shipbuilding under the U. S. Shipping Board, 1917-1921, Requisitioned Steel Ships, Part II" (PDF). Steel Shipbuilding under the U. S. Shipping Board, 1917-1921. ShipScribe. Retrieved 30 October 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Naval History And Heritage Command (September 10, 2015). "Sol Navis". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Naval History And Heritage Command. Retrieved 30 October 2021.
  7. ^ "USS Sol Navis (ID # 4031-A), 1919-1919. Possibly became U.S. Army Transport Sol Navis in 1919. Later operated as S.S. Harry Luckenbach (American Freighter, 1919-1943)". Online Library of Selected Images: U.S. Navy Ships. Naval Historical Center (now Naval History And Heritage Command; Archived at HyperWar). 16 December 2007. Retrieved 30 October 2021.
  8. ^ Construction & Repair Bureau (Navy) (November 1, 1919). "Ships' Data U.S. Naval Vessels". Ships' Data, United States Naval Vessels. Washington D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office: 321. hdl:2027/uiug.30112117713971. Retrieved 30 October 2021.
  9. ^ Larsson, Björn (2021). "Luckenbach Lines". Maritime Timetable Images. Retrieved 31 October 2021.
  10. ^ "Luckenbach to Send Ships to Far East Alternate Trips of Intercoastal Line to Continue to Dutch Indies". San Pedro News Pilot. Vol. 14, no. 36. 16 April 1941.
  11. ^ Maritime Administration. "Harry Luckenbach". Ship History Database Vessel Status Card. U.S. Department of Transportation, Maritime Administration. Retrieved 31 October 2021.
  12. ^ Maritime Administration. "Sea Devil". Ship History Database Vessel Status Card. U.S. Department of Transportation, Maritime Administration. Retrieved 31 October 2021.