SS Stanbrook
SS Stanbrook was a British cargo steamship. She was launched in 1909 as Lancer, and was renamed Stanbrook in 1937. She was a blockade runner in the Spanish Civil War, in which she survived a number of Nationalist air attacks. One of these sank her in August 1938, but she was raised and repaired. In March 1939 she was one of the last blockade runners to leave Republican-held Spain before it fell to the Nationalist faction. In November 1939 a German U-boat sank Stanbrook with all hands in the North Sea. BuildingThe Tyne Iron Shipbuilding Company built the ship at Willington Quay on the River Tyne as yard number 172. She was launched on 16 August 1909 as Lancer for Fisher, Renwick and Company's Manchester–London Steamers, Ltd, and completed that September.[1] Lancer's registered length was 230.1 ft (70.1 m), her beam was 34.0 ft (10.4 m), and her depth was 21.8 ft (6.6 m). Her tonnages were 1,363 GRT and 851 NRT. She had a single screw, driven by a three-cylinder triple-expansion engine built by the North East Marine Engine Company Ltd of Newcastle upon Tyne. It was rated at 163 NHP,[2] and gave her a speed of 11 knots (20 km/h).[1] LancerFisher, Renwick registered Lancer at Manchester. Her UK official number was 124287 and her code letters were HPRT.[2][3] By 1930 she was equipped for wireless telegraphy.[4] By 1934 her call sign was MDBG, and this had superseded her code letters.[5][6] StanbrookIn 1937 the Stanhope Steamship Company bought Lancer, renamed her Stanbrook, and registered her in London.[7] During the course of 1937, ownership of Stanbrook briefly passed to the Greek ship-owner GM Mavroleon, who renamed her Polyfloisvios, and registered her in Piraeus.[8] It then returned to the Stanhope SS Co, which reverted her name to Stanbrook.[9] When she returned to the UK registry, her call sign was changed again, to MMST.[10] Stanhope was managed by Jack Billmeir, who was expanding his fleet of tramp ships to trade with the Spanish Republic. This involved evading the Nationalist faction of the Spanish Navy, and risked Nationalist air attacks when in Republican ports. On 24 January 1938, Stanbrook left Malta in ballast for Odesa in the Soviet Union, where she loaded a cargo that she took to the Spanish Republic. After discharging her cargo in Spain she went in ballast to Bône in Algeria, where she arrived in 1 March. There a cargo was transhipped from the Spanish steamship Escolana to Stanbrook, which took the cargo to Spain.[11] On 30 April 1938 Stanbrook was one of a dozen UK merchant ships in Barcelona. There were two Nationalist air raids on the port that day, and most of the UK ships were damaged. One member of Stanbrook's crew was wounded, and was taken to the English Hospital in Barcelona for treatment.[12] On 10 June 1938 seven UK shipmasters submitted a written protest to the British Consul in Barcelona about the air attacks on their ships. The seven included Captain G Davies, who at the time was Stanbrook's Master.[13] On 19 August 1938 Stanbrook was lying off Vallcarca, south of Barcelona, with a cargo of cement, when she suffered two Nationalist air attacks. In the first attack, one bomb hit her bridge, and another holed her No. 1 hold below the waterline. She was slowly sinking, so her crew tried to beach her, but failed. In the second attack, one bomb holed her below the waterline in No. 2 hold, sinking her in shallow water. None of her crew was harmed. On 23 August she was refloated and towed to Barcelona, where she was dry docked and repaired.[14] On 9 February 1939 Stanbrook and another Stanhope ship, Stanforth, were in Valencia unloading cargoes of food when there was a Nationalist air raid on the port. Both ships were damaged by shrapnel.[15] Refugees from AlicanteOn 28 March 1939 Stanbrook was in Alicante,[16] waiting to load a cargo of oranges and saffron. By now a different captain, Archibald Dickson, was her Master. Thousands of refugees were in Alicante to flee the advancing Nationalist forces, but Billmeir had given an order not to embark any of them. Dickson decided to disobey orders, and embark as many refugees as possible. One passenger, Antonio Vilanova, was a customs officer who late wrote the book Los Olvidados about Republican refugees while in Mexico. In a letter to a friend he described the embarkation
Helia González, who at the time was a 4 year old girl, later recounted:
Dickson described what he saw in Alicante, and explained why he decided to embark the refugees, in a letter to the Sunday Dispatch published on 4 April 1939:[18]
Stanbrook left Alicante at sunset on 28 March with 2,638 people aboard, leaving no-one on the quay, as Dickson promised.[19] She was significantly overloaded, and listed listed below her load line as she sailed.[citation needed] The Nationalist cruiser Spanish cruiser Canarias was blockading the port and opened fire, but Stanbrook managed to avoid being hit. Dickson at first set course toward the Balearic Islands, but the Nationalist navy continued to intimidate Stanbrook, forcing her toward a Nationalist-held Spanish port. Dickson tried to escape overnight, while his wireless telegraphist radioed for help. At last a Royal Navy cruiser intervened and saved Stanbrook, allowing her to change course to the south to Oran in Algeria.[20][17] Helia González recalled the journey:[21]
Refugees in AlgeriaAfter a 22-hour journey, during which Dickson, according to his own recollection, gave “a little coffee and food to the weakest of the refugees”,[17] Stanbrook reached Mers El Kébir, near Oran. Spanish residents in Oran brought them food and medicine in small boats. Two days later, thanks to Dickson's efforts, the French authorities allowed women, children, the injured and the infirm to disembark, who were taken into the former prison of Cardinal Cisneros. Helia González recalled:
French authorities did not allow the 1,500 or so[21] men aboard to disambark for another month, as the Nationalists demanded their return. After several rounds of negotiation, a change of public opinion in France, and intervention from the international community, who had begun to become aware of the terrible repression and extermination that the Republican prisoners were suffering at the hands of the winning side, France's agreement to return the passengers to Francoist Spain was eventually thwarted. This enabled the ship to dock in Oran, and for her remaining refugees to claim asylum.[22] Antonio Vilanova recalled: “We disembarked covered in vermin. It was there that I saw trimotores for the first time – lice of a monstrous size.” They were directed to an accommodation centre where they were showered, vaccinated and given food provided by Quakers.[17] As they disembarked from the boat, they were registered, for fear that they had firearms in their possession. Most of Stanbrook refugees were taken to Camp Morand concentration camp in Ksar Boukhari in inland Sahara, guarded by Senegalese riflemen, where they were treated badly. One of the refugees, who was able to flee to France with his brother and later to Mexico, wrote in his diary:
One of the punishments subjected by guards was el tombeau, where a prisoner would dig his own grave and lie down in it. They were only allowed to leave twice a day to relieve themselves. “You don’t shoot much, but you kill slowly!”, wrote another refugee, a Republican fighter pilot.[17] Helia González remembered:
Loss and commemorationOn 18 November 1939 Stanbrook left Antwerp in Belgium in ballast for Blyth in North East England. At 02:13 hrs on 19 November U-57 fired one torpedo at Stanbrook at close range. The explosion broke the ship in two, quickly sinking her at position 51°51′N 02°25′E / 51.850°N 2.417°E, west-northwest of the North Hinder lightship. Captain Dickson and all 19 of his crew were killed.[23] When news of Stanbrook's loss and Dickson's death reached the concentration camps in Algeria, Republican refugees there observed a minute's silence in his memory.[24] A street in Alicante is now named after Stanbrook.[25] In March 2014, professor and composer Miguel Brotóns composed a symphonic poem called Stanbrook. This was one of the activities organised during the 2nd International Conference presented by the University of Valencia’s Faculty of Language Studies, Translation and Communication, on the occasion of the 75th anniversary of the end of the Spanish Civil War in Alicante and the loss of democracy in Spain. The composition Elegía, part of the symphonic poem Stanbrook, was performed for the first time by members of the sextet of the University of Alicante Philharmonic Orchestra.[26][27] The Generalitat Valenciana, by the law 14/2017 of 10 November for Democratic Heritage, made 28 March a day of remembrance and homage for victims of the civil war and the dictatorship, commemorating Stanbrook's departure from Alicante in 1939.[28] References
Bibliography
External linkMedia related to Lancer (ship, 1909) at Wikimedia Commons |
Portal di Ensiklopedia Dunia