- RMS Laconia (1921)
The second RMS "Laconia" was a Cunard
ocean liner built by Swan, Hunter & Wigham Richardson as a successor to the "Laconia" of 1911 to 1917. Like her predecessor, which was sunk during theFirst World War , this "Laconia" would also be destroyed by a GermanU-boat . The new ship was launched onApril 9 ,1921 , and made her maiden voyage onMay 25 ,1922 fromSouthampton toNew York .Early career
In January 1923 "Laconia" began the first around-the-world cruise, which lasted 130 days and called at 22 ports.
On
September 24 ,1934 "Laconia" was involved in a collision off the US coast, while traveling from Boston to New York in dense fog. It rammed into the port side of , a US freighter. Both ships suffered serious damage but were able to proceed under their own steam. "Laconia" returned to New York for repairs, and resumed cruising in 1935.Drafted into war service
On
September 4 ,1939 , "Laconia" was requisitioned by theAdmiralty to be converted into an armed merchant cruiser. By January 1940 she was fitted with eight six-inch guns and two three-inch high-angle guns. After trials off theIsle of Wight , she embarked gold bullion and sailed for Portland,Maine and Halifax,Nova Scotia onJanuary 23 . She spent the next few months escorting convoys toBermuda and to points in the mid-Atlantic, where they would join up with other convoys.On
June 9 , she ran aground in theBedford Basin at Halifax, suffering considerable damage. It was not until the end of July that she had been fully repaired. In October her passenger accommodation was dismantled and some areas were filled with oil drums to provide extra buoyancy. This was done so she would keep afloat longer if torpedoed.During the period June-August 1941 "Laconia" returned to St. John,
New Brunswick and was refitted, then returned to Liverpool to be used as a troop transport for the rest of the war. OnSeptember 12 ,1941 , she arrived at Bidston Dock, Birkenhead and was taken over byCammell Laird and Company to be converted. By early 1942 the work was complete, and for the next six months she made trooping voyages to the Middle East. On one such voyage the ship was used to carry POWs, mainly Italian. She traveled toCape Town and then set a course for Freetown, following a zigzag course and undertaking evasive steering during the night.Final moments
On
September 12 ,1942 , at 8:10pm, 130 miles north-northeast ofAscension Island , "Laconia" was hit by a torpedo on the starboard side, fired byU-boat "U-156". There was an explosion in the hold and most of the 450 Italian prisoners the ship was carrying were killed instantly. The vessel immediately took a list to starboard. Captain Sharp, who had also commanded "Lancastria" when she was torpedoed, was beginning to control the situation when a second torpedo hit Number Two hold.Captain Sharp ordered the ship abandoned and the women, children and injured taken into the lifeboats first. Some of the 32 lifeboats had been destroyed by the explosions and some surviving Italian prisoners tried to rush those that remained. The efforts of the Polish guards were instrumental in controlling the chaotic situation on board and certainly saved many lives.Fact|date=March 2008
At 9:11pm "Laconia" sank with many Italian prisoners still on board. The prospects for those who escaped the ship were only slightly better; sharks were common in the area and the lifeboats were adrift in the mid-Atlantic with little hope of being rescued.
However, before "Laconia" went down, "U-156" surfaced. The U-boat's efforts to rescue survivors of its own attack began what came to be known as the "Laconia" incident.
When the commanding officer of "U-156" realized civilians and POW were on board, he surfaced to rescue survivors, and asked "BdU" (the U-Boat Command in Germany) for help. Several U-Boats were dispatched, and all did wave
Red Cross flags, and were saying on the radio that a rescue operation was underway.Ignoring those signs, a U.S. [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A5LsJdxmSNw documentary about Atlantic War, @5:00] B-24 Plane started attack runs on some of the submarines which already had survivors on their deck. The Germans ordered their submarines to dive, abandoning many survivors. The American command always denied knowledge of a rescue operation underway. After the incident, Admiral
Karl Dönitz ordered his commanders not to rescue survivors after attacks. In all, 3,254 people died.For "Laconia" casualites and saved, see [http://www.ubootwaffe.net/ops/ships.cgi?boat=156;nr=23]
General characteristics
* Gross Tonnage - 19,860 tons
* Length - 183 m (600 feet)
* Beam - 22.5 m (74 ft)
* Number of funnels - 1
* Number of masts - 2
* Construction - Steel
* Propulsion - Twin-screw
* Engines - Steam turbines, direct acting by Wallsend Slipway Co Ltd
* Service speed - 16 knots
* Builder - Swan, Hunter & Wigham Richardson Ltd, Wallsend-on-Tyne
* Launch date - 9 April 1921
* Passenger accommodation - 350 1st class, 350 2nd class, 1,500 3rd classReferences
See also
*
List of ship launches in 1921
*List of shipwrecks in 1942
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.