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SS West Lashaway

Coordinates: 10°30′N 55°10′W / 10.500°N 55.167°W / 10.500; -55.167
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
SS West Lashaway after launch
SS West Lashaway shortly after launch and before the completion of her superstructure, 12 September 1918
History
NameSS West Lashaway
Operator
BuilderSkinner & Eddy
Laid down8 July 1918
Launched12 September 1918
Completed30 September 1918
Commissioned30 September 1918–12 April 1919
In service30 September 1918–30 August 1942
Stricken12 Apr 1919
FateTorpedoed by U-66, 30 August 1942
General characteristics
TypeDesign 1013 cargo ship
Tonnage5,600 gross, 8,800 dwt
Displacement11,390 tons
Length
  • 423 ft 9 in (129.16 m)
  • 410 ft 5 in (125.10 m) bp
Beam54 ft (16 m)
Draft24 ft 2 in (7.37 m)
Depth of hold29 ft 9 in (9.07 m)
Installed power1 × steam turbine
PropulsionSingle screw
Speed11.5 kn (21.3 km/h)
Complement
  • World War I (USN): 70
  • Peacetime: about 40
  • World War II: 47 (38 crew, 9 gunners)
Armament
  • World War I: none
  • World War II: n/a

SS West Lashaway was a steelhulled cargo ship that saw service with the U.S. Navy during World War I as the auxiliary ship USS West Lashaway (ID-3700). She was later engaged in mercantile service, until being sunk by a U-boat in 1942.

West Lashaway was commissioned into the Navy immediately upon completion in September 1918, but only had time to complete one voyage before the end of the war. In the months that followed, the ship made several more voyages with the Navy, including a children's relief mission to Eastern Europe, before decommissioning in 1919. West Lashaway was subsequently placed in commercial service, operating between the United States and various ports in Europe. Later, the ship was employed in trade between the U.S. and Africa.

In August 1942, West Lashaway was torpedoed and sunk by U-66 in the Caribbean. The handful of survivors, including four children, endured a three-week ordeal in an open boat with minimal supplies before being rescued. One of them would later write a book about the experience.

Construction and design

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West Lashaway was built in Seattle, Washington in 1918 at the No. 1 Plant of the Skinner & Eddy Corporation—the 16th in a series of 24 steel-hulled Design 1013 cargo ships built by Skinner & Eddy for the United States Shipping Board's emergency wartime shipbuilding program.[1] The ship was laid down on 8 July, launched just 55 working (65 calendar) days later on 12 September, and completed on 30 September—a total time under construction of 69 working (84 calendar) days,[2] making West Lashaway one of the fastest-built ships of the war.[3]

West Lashaway had a design deadweight tonnage of 8,800 tons and gross register tonnage of 5,600. The ship had an overall length of 423 feet 9 inches, a beam of 54 feet and a draft of about 24 feet.[4] She was powered by a Curtis geared turbine[5] driving a single screw propeller, delivering a service speed of 11 to 11.5 knots.[6]

Service history

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U.S. Navy service, 1918-1919

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West Lashaway was delivered to the Navy on 30 September 1918 and commissioned the same day at the Puget Sound Navy Yard, Bremerton, Washington as USS West Lashaway (ID-3700).[4]

Assigned to the Naval Overseas Transportation Service (NOTS), West Lashaway conducted sea trials off the northwest Pacific coast before loading 7,790 tons of flour and sailing for the east coast on 17 October. Arriving at New York via the Panama Canal on 11 November—the day upon which the armistice ending World War I was signed—the freighter then underwent a few minor repairs. On 28 November, West Lashaway departed New York for Trieste, Italy on a relief mission for children in Austria and Yugoslavia. Arriving at Trieste three days before Christmas, West Lashaway discharged her cargo of flour and cocoa and subsequently departed for New York City, arriving there on 30 January 1919 where she again underwent general repairs.[4]

After simultaneously bunkering and loading 5,144 tons of Quartermaster's and YMCA supplies, the freighter departed for France, arriving at Nantes on 19 February. Having discharged her cargo, West Lashaway loaded a return cargo—which included 300 tons of Army ordnance materials—and sailed for New York City on 20 March. After unloading and undergoing general repairs at New York following her arrival on 4 April, West Lashaway was simultaneously decommissioned, struck from the Navy List and returned to control of the USSB on 12 April 1919.[4]

Merchant service

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Following her decommission, West Lashaway was placed in mercantile service by the USSB as SS West Lashaway. From 1919 through the mid-1920s West Lashaway was active in transatlantic service, carrying cargo between New York and various European ports such as Lisbon, Portugal; La Pallice, France; Valencia, Spain and Genoa, Naples, Palermo, Trieste and Fiume, Italy.[7]

By the early 1930s, West Lashaway had been chartered to the American-West African Line (Barber Steamship Lines),[4] and would spend much of the decade plying the trade routes between U.S. ports such as Boston and New York and various African destinations such as Lagos, Nigeria; Accra, Ghana and the Belgian Congo.

West Lashaway appears to have had quite an eventful history through this part of her career. In 1931, the freighter was used to bring five gorillas from French Cameroon to the U.S. for study.[8] In 1935, U.S. customs agents uncovered and seized a stash of 1,000 bottles of contraband Scotch whisky on board the ship upon her return from the Cape Verde Islands.[9] West Lashaway again made headlines in July 1937 when a crew member was handed to port authorities in chains after allegedly attempting to set fire to the vessel on the open sea and murder the captain.[10] In 1938, the vessel played host to a wealthy big game hunter, his wife, their entourage and two "jungle yachts"—luxurious, air-conditioned trailers, which the hunter proposed to use as a base while tracking a mysterious 8-foot-tall (2.4 m) ape he professed to have sighted on a previous expedition to the Congo.[11] In 1939, the ship's crew was involved in a strike that won American merchant mariners a 25% wartime wage increase for "sailing in dangerous waters".[12] On April 5, 1941 the West Lashaway docked in Boston and a stowaway female Basenji dog was found half-starved in the cargo hold.[13] She had survived a 21 day journey from Monrovia, Liberia with a stop at Freetown before docking in Boston. She was adopted by a local breeder and became one of the earliest founders of the Basenji breed in the United States.[14]

Sinking

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After the United States entered World War II in December 1941, West Lashaway continued to operate in the Africa trade. On the night of 30 August 1942, while returning to the United States from Matadi, Congo with nine civilian passengers and a cargo of 7,670 tons of tin, copper, cocoa beans and palm oil, West Lashaway was struck on the starboard side at around 2:30 pm by two torpedoes fired from U-66. The ship sank very quickly—in two minutes or less—and consequently there was no time to launch any lifeboats. Fortunately, the vessel was also equipped with a number of prepared wooden rafts which floated free when the ship went down, allowing the survivors to board them.[15][16]

Survivors' ordeal

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Shortly after the sinking, U-66 surfaced and briefly opened fire with small arms, but soon departed, leaving a total of 42 survivors on four rafts from the ship's original complement of 56. The rafts stayed together for the first few days, but then two became separated and were never seen again. The remaining two, which had been lashed together, later decided to separate in hopes of increasing their chances of being found. One of these rafts contained 19 people, including the ship's captain, 11 crew, two armed guards, and five of the ship's original nine passengers including a missionary's wife, Mrs Bell, and her two children aged 13 and 11, and two children from another family. The captain and one of the armed guards died within the first few days, leaving a total of seventeen.[15][16]

The occupants of this raft initially assumed they would be rescued quickly, but two weeks went by until even with strict rationing they were running low on food and water.[15][17] They were eventually sighted by aircraft and some supplies dropped. After nineteen days on the open sea, they were rescued by the destroyer HMS Vimy (D33), but not before the rescuers had fired 16 rounds at the raft in the mistaken impression it was a German submarine. After transfer to the Dutch merchant steamship Prins William Van Oranje, the survivors were landed at Barbados.[15][17] One of the children, Robert Bell, would later write a book, In Peril on the Sea: A Personal Remembrance, about the ordeal.

25 days after the sinking of West Lashaway, the raft which had been cut loose washed up on the island of St. Vincent, with the body of Gunner's Mate 3/C Dalton Munn, and the sole survivor of this group, boatswain Elliott Gurnee.[15][17]

References

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  1. ^ "General Cargo Ships Built in Pacific Coast Shipyards" Archived 2009-04-22 at the Wayback Machine, shipbuildinghistory.com.
  2. ^ Pacific Ports Annual, pp. 64-65.
  3. ^ Hurley, p. 93. Note that Hurley does not specifically mention West Lashaway in his list of fastest-built ships, but at 84 calendar days the vessel would, according to Hurley's list, have been the equal-sixth fastest-built ship of the war.
  4. ^ a b c d e West Lashaway Archived 2012-11-03 at the Wayback Machine, Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, Naval History and Heritage Command website.
  5. ^ Silverstone, p. 169.
  6. ^ "West Lashaway", ellisisland.org.
  7. ^ Ellis Island Ship Database - West Lashaway[permanent dead link], ellisislandrecords.org.
  8. ^ "Brings Five Gorillas for Ape Study Here: Raven Returns With Trophies of Columbia Expedition for New Anatomical Data", New York Times, March 2, 1931 (subscription required).
  9. ^ "Whisky Found Hidden in Freighter's Cargo", New York Times, July 28, 1935 (subscription required).
  10. ^ "Seaman Accused of Attempt to Kill Captain Faces Unusual Boston Trial" Archived 2012-10-22 at the Wayback Machine, Hartford Courant, July 7, 1937 (subscription required).
  11. ^ "Jungle Invaders to Bathe in Pink Tubs, Drink at Bar", Milwaukee Journal, April 22, 1938.
  12. ^ "Pay Rise Ends Ship Strike: Nine Vessels Tied Up by War Wage Demands Prepare for Sailings" Archived 2012-10-22 at the Wayback Machine, Los Angeles Times, September 22, 1939 (subscription required).
  13. ^ "Barkless Dog Ship's Stowaway". Boston Post. April 9, 1941.
  14. ^ Elspet, Ford (1993). The Complete Basenji. Ringpress Books Ltd. p. 92. ISBN 978-0948955976.
  15. ^ a b c d e Helgason, Guðmundur. "Allied Ships Hit by U-boats - West Lashaway". German U-boats of WWII - uboat.net.
  16. ^ a b Whitbeck, Part 1.
  17. ^ a b c Whitbeck, Part 2.

Bibliography

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Books
  • Hurley, Edward N. (1920): The New Merchant Marine, p. 39, The Century Co., New York.
  • Jordan, Roger H. (2006): The World's Merchant Fleets, 1939: The Particulars And Wartime Fates of 6,000 Ships, Naval Institute Press, ISBN 978-1-59114-959-0.
  • Pacific Ports Inc. (1919): Pacific Ports Annual, Fifth Edition, 1919, pp. 64–65, 402-405, Pacific Ports Inc.
  • Silverstone, Paul H. (2006): The New Navy, 1883-1922, Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-97871-2.
Websites

Further reading

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  • Bell, Robert and Lockerbie, D. Bruce (1984): In Peril on the Sea: A Personal Remembrance, Doubleday, ISBN 978-0-385-18378-9. 1996 Abridged version, In Peril on the Sea: The Story of Ethel Bell and Her Children Mary and Robert (The Jaffray Collection of Missionary Portrails, Vol 14), published by Christian Publications, ISBN 978-0-87509-642-1.

10°30′N 55°10′W / 10.500°N 55.167°W / 10.500; -55.167