HMHS Llandovery Castle | |
---|---|
Postcard of the RMS Llandovery Castle | |
Career | |
Name: | RMS Llandovery Castle |
Namesake: | Llandovery Castle |
Operator: | Union-Castle Line |
Builder: | Barclay Curle, Glasgow |
Yard number: | 504 |
Launched: | 3 September 1913 |
Completed: | January 1914 |
Fate: | Requisitioned, 1916 |
Career | |
Name: | HMHS Llandovery Castle |
Commissioned: | 26 July 1916 |
Fate: | Sunk by SM U-86, 27 June 1918 |
General characteristics | |
Type: | Ocean liner / Hospital ship |
Tonnage: | 10,639 GRT |
Length: | 500 ft 1 in (152.43 m) |
Beam: | 63 ft 3 in (19.28 m) |
Propulsion: |
Quadruple expansion steam engines 6,500 IHP Twin screws |
Speed: | 15 knots (28 km/h; 17 mph) |
Capacity: |
As ocean liner: 429 passengers (213 1st class, 116 2nd class, and 100 3rd class) As hospital ship: 622 beds and 102 medical staff |
Complement: | 258 |
HMHS Llandovery Castle, built in 1914 in Glasgow as RMS Llandovery Castle for the Union-Castle Line, was a Canadian hospital ship on a voyage from Halifax, Nova Scotia to Liverpool, England that was torpedoed off southern Ireland on 27 June 1918 with the loss of 234 lives. In terms of the number of dead, the sinking was the most significant Canadian naval disaster of WW1. The incident became renowned as one of the war’s worst atrocities. After the war, the case of the Llandovery Castle was one of six British cases presented at the Leipzig trials.
The Sinking[]
Firing at a hospital ship was against international law and standing orders of the Imperial German Navy. The captain of the SM U-86, Helmut Brümmer-Patzig, sought to destroy the evidence of torpedoing the ship. When the crew took to the lifeboats, SM U-86, surfaced, ran down all the lifeboats and executed by machine-gunfire the survivors remaining on the water and in the lifeboats. 24 people in one remaining lifeboat survived. They were rescued shortly afterwards and testified as to what had happened. Only 6 of the 97 hospital personnel survived. Among those lost were fourteen nursing sisters from Canada, including the Matron Margaret Marjory (Pearl) Fraser from Nova Scotia (daughter of Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia Duncan Cameron Fraser).[1][2]
Survivor Sergeant Aurthur Knight was on board lifeboat #5 with the nurses. Knight reported:
- "Our boat was quickly loaded and lowered to the surface of the water. Then the crew of eight men and myself faced the difficulty of getting free from the ropes holding us to the ship's side. I broke two axes trying to cut ourselves away, but was unsuccessful. With the forward motion and choppy sea the boat all the time was pounding against the ship's side. To save the boat we tried to keep ourselves away by using the oars, and soon every one of the latter were broken. Finally the ropes became loose at the top and we commenced to drift away. We were carried towards the stern of the ship, when suddenly the Poop deck seemed to break away and sink. The suction drew us quickly into the vacuum, the boat tipped over sideways, and every occupant went under.
- "Unflinchingly and calmly, as steady and collected as if on parade, without a complaint or a single sign of emotion, our fourteen devoted nursing sisters faced the terrible ordeal of certain death--only a matter of minutes--as our lifeboat neared that mad whirlpool of waters where all human power was helpless.
- I estimate we were together in the boat about eight minutes. In that whole time I did not hear a complaint or murmur from one of the sisters. There was not a cry for help or any outward evidence of fear. In the entire time I overheard only one remark when the matron, Nursing Matron Margaret Marjory Fraser, turned to me as we drifted helplessly towards the stern of the ship and asked:
- "Sergeant, do you think there is any hope for us?"
- "I replied, 'No,' seeing myself our helplessness without oars and the sinking condition of the stern of the ship. A few seconds later we were drawn into the whirlpool of the submerged afterdeck, and the last I saw of the nursing sisters was as they were thrown over the side of the boat. All were wearing lifebelts, and of the fourteen two were in their nightdress, the others in uniform. It was doubtful if any of them came to the surface again, although I myself sank and came up three times, finally clinging to a piece of wreckage and being eventually picked up by the captain's boat."[3]
The 24 remaining in the only surviving lifeboat were rescued by the HMS Lysander. Afterward, the HMS Morea steamed through the wreckage. Captain Kenneth Cummins recalled the horror of coming across the nurses' floating corpses;
- "We were in the Bristol Channel, quite well out to sea, and suddenly we began going through corpses. The Germans had sunk a British hospital ship, the Llandovery Castle, and we were sailing through floating bodies. We were not allowed to stop - we just had to go straight through. It was quite horrific, and my reaction was to vomit over the edge. It was something we could never have imagined . . . particularly the nurses: seeing these bodies of women and nurses, floating in the ocean, having been there some time. Huge aprons and skirts in billows, which looked almost like sails because they dried in the hot sun."[4]
The Trial[]
After the war, in 1921, the captain of U-86, Lieutenant Helmut Patzig, and two of his lieutenants, Ludwig Dithmar and John Boldt, were arraigned for trial in Germany on war crimes. The case became famous as one of the "Leipzig trials". Patzig left the country and avoided extradition; and though Dithmar and Boldt were convicted and sentenced to four years in prison, they both escaped. At the Court of Appeal, both lieutenants were acquitted on the grounds that the captain was solely responsible.
Legacy[]
The Canadian reaction was typified by Brigadier George Tuxford, a former homesteader from Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan: "Amongst those murdered were two Moose Jaw nurses, Sister Fraser and Sister Gallagher. I gave instructions to the Brigade that the battle cry on the 8th of August (Battle of Amiens (1918)) should be 'Llandovery Castle,' and that that cry should be the last to ring in the ears of the Hun as the bayonet was driven home."[5] There is a memorial plaque to Matron Margaret Fraser and the 13 other Canadian nurses sponsored by Lady Dufferin was placed at the Nurses House of the Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Hospital in London, England.[6]
There is also a memorial plaque to the ship at the Stadacona Hospital, CFB Halifax, Nova Scotia.
See also[]
- Atlantic U-boat Campaign (World War I)
- Military history of Nova Scotia
- List of maritime disasters
- Military history of Canada
Links[]
- WWI commemorations must not turn into 'anti-German festival', Eric Pickles warns
- Newspaper responses
References[]
- ↑ She was born in New Glasgow, Nova Scotia. Some accounts erroneously state that she was from Moose Jaw, Sask.
- ↑ http://www.canadiangreatwarproject.com/searches/soldierDetail.asp?ID=65682
- ↑ http://www.gwpda.org/naval/lcastl11.htm
- ↑ Obituary, The Independent, 18 December 2006
- ↑ Amiens - Dawn of Victory, James McWilliams and R. James Steel, p 31
- ↑ Montreal Gazette 17 September 1938
- The Llandlovery Castle Case
- Campaign history at uboat.net
- War crime trial; account at gwpda.org
- Llandovery Castle at red-duster.co.uk
- RCN Medical Service at gwpda.org
- Llandovery Castle at ssmaritime.com
Coordinates: 51°18′00″N 009°54′00″W / 51.3°N 9.9°W
The original article can be found at HMHS Llandovery Castle and the edit history here.