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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of A Merchant Fleet at War, by Archibald Hurd
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: A Merchant Fleet at War
-
-Author: Archibald Hurd
-
-Release Date: July 4, 2021 [eBook #65761]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: deaurider, Charlie Howard, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The Internet
- Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MERCHANT FLEET AT WAR ***
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Note: Italic text is indicated by _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: (cover)]
-
-
-[Illustration: MAP SHEWING INCIDENTS, DETAILS OF WHICH ARE GIVEN IN THE
-TEXT.]
-
-
-
-
- A MERCHANT
- FLEET AT WAR
-
-[Illustration: “AQUITANIA” LEADING THE TRANSPORTS]
-
-
-
-
- A MERCHANT
- FLEET AT WAR
-
-
- By
- ARCHIBALD HURD
-
- Author of “The British Fleet in the
- Great War,” “Command of the Sea,”
- “Sea-Power,” etc. etc.
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- CASSELL AND COMPANY, LTD
- London, New York, Toronto and Melbourne
- 1920
-
-
-
-
-_All rights reserved_
-
-
- _Over the warring waters, beneath the wandering skies,
- The heart of Britain roameth, the Chivalry of the sea,
- Where Spring never bringeth a flower, nor bird singeth in a tree,
- Far, afar, O beloved, beyond the sight of our eyes,
- Over the warring waters, beneath the stormy skies._
-
- ROBERT BRIDGES.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-During a war, which was at last to draw into its vortex practically
-the whole human race--the issue depending, first and foremost, on sea
-power--there was little time or opportunity or, indeed, inclination
-on the part of British seamen to keep a record of their varied
-activities. The very nature of many of the incidents recorded in the
-following pages precluded the preparation of detailed reports at the
-time. Nor can we forget that many of the officers and men, to whose
-resource, courage, and devotion this volume bears testimony, have
-joined the great silent army of the dead to whose exploits the freedom
-of conscience of every man and woman in the British Empire, as well as
-their state of material comfort, bear witness.
-
-This book has been written under not a few difficulties, and it owes
-whatever merit it possesses to many individuals--captains, officers,
-engineers, pursers and other ministers to British sea-power--who have
-assisted in its preparation, whether by recounting incidents in which
-they took part, by placing written records at my disposal, or by
-lending photographs from which the illustrations have been prepared. I
-would especially emphasise that the illustrations have been made from
-photographs of all sorts and shapes, taken by all kinds of cameras,
-though for the most part of pocket size. Many of the pictures were
-snapped under dull and forbidding skies, and some were secured in the
-very presence of the enemy in mad pursuit of his piratical policy. Some
-of these pictures were soaked with sea water, and other were recovered
-from destruction at the last moment. The value of the illustrations
-lies not so much in their perfection as in the knowledge that they were
-taken “on active service.”
-
-Finally a word should be said, perhaps, of another difficulty which
-confronts any one who endeavours to tell the story of what merchant
-sailors did during the Great War. These men dislike publicity and their
-modesty disarms the inquisitor. Like their comrades of the Royal Navy,
-they are content if they can feel that they have done their duty.
-They would leave it at that. But were silence to be maintained, later
-generations would be robbed, for the progress of humanity depends, in
-no small measure, on the manner in which the memory of great deeds
-is preserved, and handed down from age to age. No man can live unto
-himself.
-
-The story of the contribution which British seamen have made to the
-happiness and well being of the world can never be half told, and these
-pages form merely a footnote to one of the most glorious epics in human
-annals. They go forth in the hope that they may help to perpetuate
-those sterling virtues which find increasing expression in the British
-race throughout the world. James Anthony Froude once declared that all
-that this country has achieved in the course of three centuries has
-been due to her predominance as an ocean power. “Take away her merchant
-fleets; take away the navy that guards them; her empire will come to
-an end; her colonies will fall off like leaves from a withered tree;
-and Britain will become once more an insignificant island in the North
-sea.” So I hope this book may be regarded not merely as a footnote to
-history, but may remind all and sundry of the priceless heritage which
-our seamen of all classes and degrees have left in our keeping.
-
- ARCHIBALD HURD.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
- Foreword xvii
-
- CHAPTER
-
- I. Mobilisation 1
-
- II. Combatant Cunarders 12
-
- III. Carrying on 38
-
- IV. The Ordeal of the “Lusitania” 58
-
- V. The Toll of the Submarines 87
-
- VI. Shore Work for the Services 119
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- _In Colour_
-
- “AQUITANIA” LEADING THE TRANSPORTS _Frontispiece_
-
- _To face page_
- “AQUITANIA” ESCORTED BY DESTROYERS 4
-
- “MAURETANIA” ESCORTED BY DESTROYERS 12
-
- TORPEDOING OF THE “IVERNIA” 28
-
- “CARMANIA” SINKING “CAP TRAFALGAR” 36
-
- TORPEDOING OF THE “AUSONIA” 44
-
- TORPEDOING OF THE “LUSITANIA” 52
-
- “PHRYGIA” SINKING A SUBMARINE 60
-
- TORPEDOING OF THE “THRACIA” 68
-
- “VALERIA” SINKING A SUBMARINE 84
-
- TORPEDOING OF THE “VOLODIA” 92
-
- “AQUITANIA” AS HOSPITAL SHIP 108
-
- “CAMPANIA” AS SEAPLANE SHIP 124
-
-
- _In Monochrome_
-
- _To face page_
- “AQUITANIA” AT SOUTHAMPTON WITH CANADIAN TROOPS 2
-
- EMBARKATION 6
-
- TRANSPORT IN SOUTHAMPTON WATER 6
-
- CANADIAN TROOPS ON “CARONIA” BEING ADDRESSED BY THEIR
- COMMANDER 8
-
- THE “CAMPANIA” SINKING IN THE FIRTH OF FORTH 10
-
- THE “CARMANIA” STARBOARD FORWARD GUNS 14
-
- ROPE PROTECTION ON “CARMANIA” AGAINST SHELL SPLINTERS 14
-
- LIFE ON A TRANSPORT (i): KIT INSPECTION 16
-
- LIFE ON A TRANSPORT (ii): RIFLE DRILL 16
-
- THE “CARMANIA” READY FOR ACTION 18
-
- SOUTH AFRICAN INFANTRY ON BOARD THE “LACONIA” 22
-
- THE “CARONIA” LEAVING DURBAN 24
-
- H.M.S. “MERSEY” ALONGSIDE THE “LACONIA” OFF THE RUFIGI
- RIVER 26
-
- THE “CARMANIA” APPROACHING TRINIDAD 30
-
- ONE OF THE “CARMANIA’S” GUNS 30
-
- “ABANDON SHIP” DRILL AT SEA 32
-
- AFTER THE FIGHT 32
-
- CHART-HOUSE AND BRIDGE OF THE “CARMANIA” AFTER THE FIGHT 34
-
- THE “LACONIA” AT DURBAN 38
-
- FINAL OF THE S.A.I. HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP ON THE “LACONIA” 38
-
- THE NELSON PLATE PRESENTED TO THE “CARMANIA” 40
-
- CREW LEAVING THE “FRANCONIA” AFTER SHE WAS TORPEDOED 42
-
- SCENE ON BOARD AFTER THE TORPEDOING OF THE “IVERNIA” (i) 46
-
- SCENE ON BOARD AFTER THE TORPEDOING OF THE “IVERNIA” (ii) 48
-
- THE TORPEDOING OF THE “IVERNIA”: SURVIVORS AFLOAT ON RAFT 50
-
- THE TORPEDOING OF THE “IVERNIA”: SURVIVORS BEING TAKEN
- IN ONE OF THE BOATS 54
-
- THE “LUSITANIA” 56
-
- THE “MAURETANIA” AS A HOSPITAL SHIP OFF NAPLES HARBOUR 58
-
- THE “ALAUNIA” AS AN EMERGENCY HOSPITAL SHIP 62
-
- THE “LUSITANIA” PASSING THE OLD HEAD OF KINSALE 64
-
- THE “WHITE WAKE” THAT STRETCHED TO THE BEACHES OF GALLIPOLI 66
-
- OFFICERS, NURSES AND R.A.M.C. ORDERLIES OF H.M.H.S. “AQUITANIA” 70
-
- “HOMEWARD BOUND.” 70
-
- THE SUN-CURE 72
-
- THE “FRANCONIA” PASSING THROUGH THE SUEZ CANAL 72
-
- AMERICAN TROOPS NEVER FORGOT THE “LUSITANIA” 74
-
- IN THE SPRING OF 1918 THE “MAURETANIA” BROUGHT 33,000
- AMERICAN SOLDIERS TO EUROPE 78
-
- THE “AQUITANIA’S” STAGE 80
-
- THE “SAXONIA,” CAMOUFLAGED, LEAVING NEW YORK WITH
- AMERICAN TROOPS FOR EUROPE 80
-
- WELCOMING THE FIRST CONTINGENT OF RETURNING AMERICAN
- TROOPS, NEW YORK, DECEMBER 1918 82
-
- THE “MAURETANIA” ARRIVING AT NEW YORK, DECEMBER 1918 82
-
- BOAT DRILL ON A CUNARD HOSPITAL SHIP 86
-
- THE “AQUITANIA’S” GARDEN LOUNGE AS HOSPITAL WARD 88
-
- THE “AURANIA” ASHORE AFTER BEING TORPEDOED 90
-
- THE “IVERNIA” SETTLING DOWN 90
-
- THE “IVERNIA” SURVIVORS ARRIVING IN PORT 94
-
- TROOPS LANDING FROM THE “MAURETANIA” 94
-
- THE “DWINSK” SETTLING DOWN AFTER BEING TORPEDOED 96
-
- SURVIVORS FROM THE “DWINSK” AFTER EIGHT DAYS IN THE
- LIFEBOAT 96
-
- THE “MAURETANIA” LEAVING SOUTHAMPTON 98
-
- “FATHER NEPTUNE” CARED LITTLE FOR THE PREYING SUBMARINES 102
-
- AN ARMED CRUISER’S RANGE FINDER 102
-
- THE “THRACIA” FAST 104
-
- THE “AQUITANIA” RE-APPEARS IN THE MERSEY 106
-
- OFFICERS OF THE TORPEDOED “FRANCONIA” 110
-
- A CUNARD CREW BUYING WAR SAVINGS CERTIFICATES 110
-
- ONE OF THE AMERICAN HOWITZERS, ASSEMBLED AT THE CUNARD
- WORKS 112
-
- THE “AQUITANIA’S” CHAPEL 112
-
- CUNARD NATIONAL AEROPLANE FACTORY 114
-
- INTERIOR OF THE AEROPLANE FACTORY (i) 118
-
- INTERIOR OF THE AEROPLANE FACTORY (ii) 118
-
- INTERIOR OF THE AEROPLANE FACTORY (iii) 120
-
- RUSSIAN REFUGEES ON THE “PHRYGIA” 120
-
- ONE OF THE ROOMS IN THE CUNARD SHELL WORKS 122
-
- A RECORD OF “STRIKING” VALUE 122
-
- A HOSPITAL WARD IN THE LOUNGE OF THE “MAURETANIA” 126
-
- THE “AQUITANIA” LOUNGE AS ORDERLY ROOM 128
-
- OFFICERS’ WARD IN THE SMOKING ROOM OF THE “AQUITANIA” 128
-
- MEN’S WARD IN THE LOUNGE OF THE “AQUITANIA” 132
-
- THE “FRANCONIA” SINKING 136
-
-
-
-
-FOREWORD
-
-
-There was never a time in our history when the value of the Mercantile
-Marine to our national life was as apparent as it is to-day. After
-passing through the crucible of war, we are what we are, mainly,
-because we are the possessors of ships.
-
-When the Great War came, we possessed only a small, though highly
-trained, Army, and the guns of our Navy extended little further than
-high-water mark. How could we, a community of islanders, in partnership
-with other islanders living in Dominions thousands of miles away,
-hope to make our strength felt on the battlefields of the Continent
-of Europe, where the military Powers were mobilising conscript armies
-counted not by thousands, but by millions? The original Expeditionary
-Force, as finely tempered a fighting instrument as ever existed, was
-at once thrown across the Channel in merchant ships and it held in
-check the victorious army of Germany, saving by a miracle, the Channel
-ports; then, having mobilised on the eve of the declaration of war,
-the Royal Navy, the great protective force of the British peoples, we
-mobilised also the Merchant Navy, their essential sustaining force,
-bridged the oceans of the world, and concentrated on the conflict
-the enormous and varied powers of the 400,000,000 inhabitants of the
-Commonwealth. In Belgium and France as in the Pacific, in Gallipoli
-as in Eastern Africa, in Salonica as in Mesopotamia, and in Italy as
-in Palestine, British troops were soon confronting the forces of the
-Central Alliance; every ocean was dominated by British men-of-war.
-The enemies had the advantage of interior military lines, but by the
-aid of ships--carrying troops, munitions, and stores--we gradually
-forged a hoop of steel round them and slowly but irresistibly drew it
-tighter and tighter until, their economic power having been strangled
-by sea power, their naval and military power was weakened and they were
-compelled to sue for peace. If it had not been for our ships--ships of
-commerce drawing strength from the seas, and ships of war, efficiently
-policing those seas--the Allies could not by any possibility have won
-the Great War and Germans would to-day be the dominant race, not only
-in Europe, but in both hemispheres.
-
-It is a common error to think of sea power in terms only of
-battleships, cruisers, destroyers and submarines. The secret of the
-spread of Anglo-Saxon civilisation, with its ideals of fair play,
-tolerance and personal liberty, its hatred of tyranny and love of
-justice, is not to be found as much in these emblems of organised
-violence as in merchant ships. Out of our island State the Merchant
-Fleet, a purely individualistic institution, developed by the
-compulsion of geographical necessities; the British people could not
-exist without ships even in days when their numbers were small and
-the standard of living was relatively low. The population has trebled
-in the last hundred years and the level of comfort of all classes
-has risen, and to-day the very existence of the 45,000,000 people of
-the British Isles, as well as their commercial and social relations
-with the other sections of the Empire, depends on the sufficiency and
-efficiency of the Mercantile Marine.
-
-We possessed a trading Navy, with fine traditions of peace and war,
-long before we had a Fighting Navy. The owners of merchant ships for
-many centuries defended this country from raids and invasions, just
-as it was the early merchant-adventurers who laid the foundations of
-the Empire. Thus as far back as the reign of Athelstan, we find this
-Saxon king granting a Thaneship--or, as one might say, a knighthood--to
-every merchant who had been three voyages of length in his own trading
-vessel. It was largely with the ships of merchant owners that in 1212
-the English, by raiding France, prevented a French invasion, and that
-in 1340 one of the greatest British naval victories was won over vastly
-superior forces at the battle of Sluys. And though, by the time of the
-Armada, merchant ships were but as it were the core of the fleets that
-fought and destroyed the threatened world domination of Spain, they
-played an exceedingly important part in that epoch-making struggle,
-which marked the emergence of this Island as a world power. Similarly
-the Indian Empire, the early American Colonies, and many other British
-Possessions all over the world, were founded by merchant shipping
-enterprise alone. From time immemorial, the British merchantman has
-carried the flag to the outermost parts of the world and thus helped to
-maintain its prestige.
-
-The Mercantile Marine and Navy have always been so closely knit that
-it is often difficult to separate their histories. The Mercantile
-Marine was in reality, as has been said, the parent of the latter.
-As the State grew, and civilisation became more complex, a process
-of separation between the ships of commerce and the ships of war was
-inevitable, and the Navy became more and more a distinct Royal Service.
-The increasing difficulties of the problems of defence, armament,
-and so on, led to a process of specialisation, and could only be
-adequately studied and the Empire’s growing needs supplied by a State
-Department. On the other hand, the Mercantile Marine remained, and
-still remains, individualistic, each merchant ship-owner, or company of
-ship-owners, building the sort of vessel best adapted to the particular
-enterprise in hand. Thus we have sailing from our ports, ships of
-all descriptions, ocean-going liners carrying passengers, cargoes
-and mails, as well as tramps, colliers, cold-storage vessels, and an
-infinity of other types.
-
-But while this process of separation, or specialisation, has been
-both inevitable and fruitful, the Mercantile Marine has, in every
-war, been called upon by the Navy to provide transports, auxiliary
-cruisers, hospital and munition ships, and, in the recent Great War,
-minesweepers, submarine chasers, ‘Q’ ships, and many other equally
-vital subsidiaries. Similarly, in the personnel of the Mercantile
-Marine, the Navy has always had a powerful reserve, not only of
-experienced sailors, but of actual navally-trained officers and men.
-Without these, it is safe to say that the Navy could never have
-undertaken, or accomplished, those vast and world-wide, and many of
-them unforeseeable, tasks, so magnificently and successfully carried
-out; and it is equally true that but for the Mercantile Marine, the
-armies of the whole Alliance would have been paralysed.
-
-In no history, however long and laboriously compiled, would it be
-possible to do full justice to the war-work of the British Mercantile
-Marine, but the present volume supplies, at any rate, an index to the
-scope and value of what it performed. In the re-action of one unit,
-of one old, honourable, and successful merchant shipping Company
-to the demands of the world war, it is perhaps possible to realise
-more clearly than by making a wider sweep of research, the amazing
-accomplishments of the whole; and where all rose, with magnificent
-unity, to heights of service never surpassed in our annals, none
-excelled either in the prescience or organizing ability of its
-directors, in the courage and resource of its captains and crews, or in
-the loyalty and ingenuity of its skilled and unskilled employees, the
-record of the Cunard Steamship Company.
-
-
-
-
-A MERCHANT FLEET AT WAR
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-Mobilisation
-
- _Oh hear! Oh hear!
- Across the sullen tide,
- Across the echoing dome horizon-wide,
- What pulse of fear
- Beats with tremendous boom?
- What call of instant doom,
- With thunder-stroke of terror and of pride,
- With urgency that may not be denied,
- Reverberates upon the heart’s own drum
- Come! ... Come! ... for thou must come!_
-
- HENRY NEWBOLT.
-
-
-In order to obtain the truest conception of what the Cunard Company
-stood for in 1914, it will be well not only to consider very briefly
-its first origin and steady growth, but to refresh our memories by
-recalling one or two of the tidemarks of ocean-going navigation. Thus
-it was in 1802, in the year, that is to say, following Nelson’s great
-victory at Copenhagen, in the year of the Peace of Amiens, and three
-years before the Battle of Trafalgar, that the first successful,
-practical steamer was launched. This was the _Charlotte Dundas_, built
-by William Symington on the Forth and Clyde Canal, and fitted with an
-engine constructed by Watt, which drove a stern wheel. This vessel
-proved to be an inspiration to Robert Fulton, who in 1807 built the
-_Clermont_ at New York, a wooden steamer 133 feet long, engined by
-Bolton and Watt. In the autumn of that year, this vessel made a trip
-from New York to Albany, a distance of 130 miles in 32 hours, returning
-in 30 hours, and thenceforward maintained the first continuous long
-distance service performed by any steam vessel. Five years later Bell’s
-famous steamer, the _Comet_, began the earliest, regular steamer
-passenger service in Europe.
-
-In 1814 the _Marjory_, the first steamer to run regularly on the
-River Thames, began her career; but it was not until 1819 that the
-_Savannah_, a wooden sailing ship of American construction, but fitted
-with engines and a set of paddles amidships, crossed the Atlantic,
-arriving at Liverpool after 29½ days. In the following year the
-_Condé de Palmella_ was the first engined ship to sail across the
-Atlantic from east to west, namely from Liverpool to the Brazils.
-
-[Illustration: “AQUITANIA” AT SOUTHAMPTON WITH CANADIAN TROOPS]
-
-These were but tentative experiments, however, and the Transatlantic
-Steamship Service, as we see it to-day, did not really begin till
-the year 1838, when the steamers _Sirius_ and _Great Western_ sailed
-within a few days of each other from London and Bristol respectively.
-Both ships crossed without mishap, the _Sirius_ in 17 days, and the
-_Great Western_ in 15. In the same year, the _Royal William_ and the
-_Liverpool_ crossed from Liverpool to New York in 19 days and 16½ days
-respectively.
-
-It was now clear that a new era in transatlantic navigation had dawned,
-and the Admiralty, who were then responsible for the arrangement of
-overseas postal contracts, and had hitherto been satisfied to entrust
-the carrying of mails to sailing vessels, invited tenders for the
-future conveyance of letters to America by steam vessels. One of their
-advertisements, as it happened, came into the hands of Mr. Samuel
-Cunard; he was the son of an American citizen of Philadelphia, who
-had settled in Halifax, Nova Scotia, in which city he had been born
-in 1787. For some time the idea of developing a regular service of
-steamers between America and England had been simmering in Mr. Cunard’s
-brain. He was already in his 50th year, a successful merchant and ship
-owner; and he now resolved to visit England with the intention, if
-possible, of raising sufficient capital to put his ideas into practice.
-Armed with an introduction to Mr. Robert Napier, a well-known Clyde
-shipbuilder and engineer, he went to Glasgow, after having received but
-little sympathy in London. Through Mr. Napier he became acquainted with
-Mr. George Burns, a fellow Scotsman of great ability and long practical
-experience as a ship-owner, and through him with Mr. David McIver,
-also a Scotsman of sagacity and enterprise, then living at Liverpool.
-Between the three of them the necessary capital was obtained, and Mr.
-Cunard was able to submit to the Admiralty a tender for the conveyance
-of mails once a fortnight between Liverpool, Halifax, and Boston,
-U.S.A. His tender was considered so much better than that offered by
-the owners of the _Great Western_ that it was accepted, and a contract
-for seven years was concluded between the Government and the newly
-formed British and North American Royal Mail Steam Packet Company, as
-it was then called.
-
-[Illustration: “AQUITANIA” ESCORTED BY DESTROYERS]
-
-Such was the beginning of the Cunard Company in the shape of four
-wooden paddle-wheel steam vessels, built on the Clyde, the _Britannia_,
-_Acadia_, _Caledonia_, and _Columbia_; and its history from then
-until 1914 was one of steady and enterprising, cautious and daring,
-development. This is not the place to linger in detail over the
-technical strides made since 1840 by the Cunard Company’s directors,
-but one or two of the more important milestones should perhaps be
-noted. In the year 1804, John Stevens in America had successfully
-experimented with the screw-propeller, and in 1820, at the Horsley
-Iron Works, at Tipton in Staffordshire, Mr. Aaron Manby had designed
-and built the first iron steamer. It had always been the policy of the
-Cunard Company to keep in touch with every new marine experiment, but
-at the same time it had been their wise habit, both from the commercial
-point of view and that of the safety of their passengers and crews,
-to move circumspectly in the adoption of new devices. It was not,
-therefore, until 1852 that the first four iron screw steamships were
-added to their fleet, namely the _Australian_, _Sydney_, _Andes_,
-and _Alps_, four vessels that were also the first belonging to the
-Company to be fitted with accommodation for emigrants. For the next
-ten years, however, it was found that passengers still preferred
-the old paddle-wheel system, and side by side with their iron screw
-steamers, the Company continued to build these until, in 1862, the
-_Scotia_ proved to be the last of a dying type. Meanwhile, in 1854,
-the Government was to realise another side of the value to the nation
-of the Cunard Company. During the Crimean War, in response to a strong
-Government appeal, the Company immediately placed at the Admiralty’s
-disposal, six of their best steamers, the _Cambria_, _Niagara_,
-_Europa_, _Arabia_, _Andes_, and _Alps_; later adding to these their
-two most recent acquisitions, the _Jura_ and _Etna_. Throughout the
-campaign these eight vessels were continuously employed upon various
-important missions, supplying the needs of the military forces.
-
-[Illustration: EMBARKATION: “ARE WE DOWNHEARTED?”]
-
-[Illustration: TRANSPORT IN SOUTHAMPTON WATER: COLONIALS’ FIRST VIEW OF
-“BLIGHTY”]
-
-Perhaps the next most important era began with the invention in 1869
-of compound engines, and in 1870 the _Batavia_ and _Parthia_ were
-fitted with these, and proved extremely successful, maintaining good
-speeds, with a reduced consumption of fuel. The Company was now sailing
-one vessel under contract with the General Post Office every week
-from Liverpool to New York, calling at Queenstown, and from New York
-to Liverpool, also calling at the South Irish port, and receiving a
-certain subsidy for so doing. They were also maintaining services
-between Liverpool and the principal ports in the Mediterranean,
-Adriatic, Levant, Bosphorus, and Black Sea, and between Liverpool
-and Havre. In 1881 the first steel vessel, the _Servia_, was built
-for the Cunard Company. This was the most powerful as well as the
-largest ship, with the exception of the famous _Great Eastern_, that
-the world had then seen. She was followed in 1884 by the _Etruria_
-and _Umbria_, the former of which in August, 1885, set up the record
-for speed from Queenstown to New York, the journey being accomplished
-in 6 days 6 hours and 36 minutes. In the meantime, research work, in
-the construction of marine engines had been continued, and Dr. Price
-had invented the triple expansion engine, which effected further
-considerable economies in the consumption of fuel; and these were
-fitted by the Cunard Company into the two great twin-screw vessels, the
-_Campania_ and _Lucania_, built in 1893. With the _Campania_ we shall
-deal again, as she performed valuable services in the late war, and
-it is interesting to note that it was on board the _Lucania_ in 1901
-that Mr. Marconi carried out certain important experiments in wireless
-telegraphy, this vessel being the first, under the Cunard management,
-to be fitted with a wireless installation.
-
-Through all these years the Cunard Company had of course been submitted
-to very great competition in the transatlantic trade, not only by
-British lines, but by American and Continental shipping companies
-also; and in the year 1900 with the _Deutschland_ and in 1902 with
-the _Kaiser Wilhelm II_, what has been called the “blue ribbon” of
-the Atlantic passed to Germany, these vessels having an average speed
-of 23½ knots. It was then decided that the supremacy in this respect,
-should, if possible, be regained by Great Britain, and, with Government
-help, and in return for certain definite prospective services if
-required, the Cunard Company laid down the _Lusitania_ and the
-_Mauretania_. In 1907, these vessels making use of Sir Charles Parsons’
-turbine engines, were put into service and soon afterwards attained a
-speed of over 26 knots, and the mastery, in respect of speed, of the
-Atlantic.
-
-[Illustration: CANADIAN TROOPS ON “CARONIA,” BEING ADDRESSED BY THEIR
-COMMANDER]
-
-Enormous as were the proportions, however, of these huge vessels, they
-were yet to be eclipsed by the Cunard Company’s later and most recent
-giant, the _Aquitania_, a vessel that might more fitly be described
-as a floating city of palaces, libraries, art galleries, and swimming
-baths, than the steamship child of the little _Britannia_ of 1840.
-Let us for a moment compare them, remembering that only the ordinary
-span of a human life-time intervened between them. The _Britannia_
-was 200 feet long, a wooden paddle-wheel steamer of 1,154 tons, 740
-horse-power, and a speed of 8½ knots. The _Aquitania_ is 902 feet
-long, of 46,000 tons, with quadruple screws driven by turbine engines
-of a designed shaft of 60,000 horse-power, maintaining a speed of
-24 knots. With her Louis XVIth staircase, her garden Lounge, her
-Adams drawing-room, her frescoes, her Palladian lounge, her Carolean
-smoking-room, and her Pompeian swimming bath, she can carry in the
-comfort of a first-class hotel more than 3,200 passengers, together
-with a crew of over 1,000.
-
-Such then has been what one may best call, perhaps, the technical
-advance of the Cunard Company, and in 1914, at the commencement
-of hostilities, it had in commission 26 vessels, apart from tugs,
-lighters, and other subsidiaries. Of these, since we shall presently
-deal with their individual adventures, the following list may be found
-convenient:
-
- Name of Ship. Tonnage.
- Gross.
-
- AQUITANIA 45,646
- MAURETANIA 30,703
- LUSITANIA 30,395
- CARONIA 19,687
- CARMANIA 19,524
- FRANCONIA 18,149
- LACONIA 18,098
- SAXONIA 14,297
- IVERNIA 14,278
- CARPATHIA 13,603
- ANDANIA 13,404
- ALAUNIA 13,404
- CAMPANIA[A] 12,884
- ULTONIA 10,402
- PANNONIA 9,851
- ASCANIA 9,111
- AUSONIA 8,152
- PHRYGIA 3,353
- BRESCIA 3,235
- VERIA 3,228
- CARIA 3,032
- CYPRIA 2,949
- PAVIA 2,945
- TYRIA 2,936
- THRACIA 2,891
- LYCIA 2,715
-
- [A] This vessel was sold for breaking up a few weeks prior to
- the outbreak of war. Her career as a warship is referred to
- in these pages.
-
-[Illustration: THE “CAMPANIA” SINKING IN THE FIRTH OF FORTH]
-
-From this it will be seen that the total tonnage possessed by the
-Cunard Company in 1914 was considerably over 300,000, and the Company
-was operating services not only between the United Kingdom and the
-United States of America and Canada, but also between the United States
-of America and the Mediterranean, as well as from Liverpool and other
-British ports to the Mediterranean and France.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-Combatant Cunarders
-
- _Sleep on, O Drake, sleep well,
- In days not wholly dire!
- Grenville, whom nought could quell,
- Unquenched is still thy fire.
- And thou that hadst no peer,
- Nelson, thou needst not fear!
- Thy sons and heirs are here,
- And shall not shame their sire._
-
- WILLIAM WATSON.
-
-
-With the war now over, and after five years, during which the public
-mind has been accustomed to emergency arrangements of all sorts,
-nothing is more difficult than to reconstruct the enormous and
-unprecedented activities that were called so suddenly into being in
-the first war weeks of 1914; and in these the Cunard Company had a
-typical and vitally important part to play. Of the number of navigating
-officers in their employment, namely 163, no fewer than 139 were in
-the Royal Naval Reserve, and as such were immediately mobilised, being
-instructed to report themselves for naval duty upon their arrival
-in a British port; and by the end of the year 131 of these officers
-had actually done so. Nor was this the least of the problems that the
-Company had to face, in that, at a time when not only every reliable
-officer and man was worth his weight in gold to them, so large a
-proportion of their best and most highly trained servants had thus to
-be yielded up to the senior service.
-
-[Illustration: “MAURETANIA” ESCORTED BY DESTROYERS]
-
-In the latest agreement arrived at with the Government in 1903, the
-whole of the Cunard Fleet was, in time of war, to be placed at its
-disposal, and there was considerable uncertainty at first as to the
-various purposes to which the ships might be allocated. In the present
-chapter we shall confine ourselves to dealing with those of the Cunard
-vessels that were commandeered by the Admiralty for strictly combatant
-purposes, of which the more important were the _Aquitania_, _Caronia_,
-_Laconia_, _Campania_, and _Carmania_; and since the _Campania_ had
-only just passed from Cunard control, it may be well, perhaps, in view
-of her distinguished and lengthy service under the Company’s flag to
-deal with her first. She became a seaplane carrier; after having at
-first however, taken a large share in repatriating Americans stranded
-in the British Isles owing to the exigencies of war. Her after funnel
-was removed and a smaller one put abreast of the forward funnel; and
-this alteration, together with the dazzle paint with which she was at
-a later date covered, rendered her almost unrecognisable even to the
-old Cunarders who had been familiar with her for many years. Throughout
-the war she was fortunate in escaping injury both from enemy gunfire
-and submarine attack, and her honourable career only came to an end
-at the conclusion of the armistice, when she was accidentally sunk in
-collision with H.M.S. _Revenge_ in the Firth of Forth.
-
-Turning now to the other vessels, the _Aquitania_ and _Caronia_, these
-were fully dismantled and fitted out as armed cruisers in the first
-days of August, 1915. This, of course, meant the ruthless stripping
-out of all their luxurious fittings and those splendid appointments to
-which reference has been made in the last chapter; and for all these
-articles storage had to be found on shore at the shortest notice. Some
-idea of the work involved in this conversion can best be gathered
-perhaps, by realising that no less than 5,000 men were employed upon
-this herculean task, and that more than 2,000 waggon loads of
-fittings were taken ashore from these two liners. While these two ships
-were thus being fitted, yet a third, the _Carmania_, arrived in port
-to be similarly transformed; and a brief account of what took place
-on board this famous vessel may be taken, perhaps, as typical of what
-occurred in all three.
-
-[Illustration: THE “CARMANIA’S” STARBOARD FORWARD GUNS]
-
-[Illustration: ROPE PROTECTION ON “CARMANIA” AGAINST SHELL SPLINTERS]
-
-Arriving at Liverpool landing stage at 8 o’clock in the morning of
-August 7th, 1914, she was almost immediately boarded by Captain Noel
-Grant, R.N. and Lieutenant-Commander E. Lockyer, R.N., who were to be
-respectively her Captain and First Lieutenant under the new conditions.
-At that moment she looked about as unlike a man-of-war as she could
-well have done. From half a dozen gangways, baggage was being landed at
-express speed, while first and second class passengers were also going
-ashore from the overhead gantries. Owing to the fact that there were
-known to be Germans amongst the passengers on board, a considerable
-number of police and custom officials were present upon the vessel;
-and this necessitated the detention of a large number of third-class
-passengers, who had to be carefully scrutinised and sorted out.
-
-While all this was going on arrangements for the new equipment
-and personnel of the vessel were already being discussed, and the
-proportions of Cunarders and Naval ratings for the _Carmania’s_ future
-war service being determined. It was decided that the engine staff was
-to be Cunard, the men being specially enrolled for a period of six
-months in the Royal Naval Reserve, while the Commander of the ship,
-Captain J. C. Barr, was to remain on board as navigator and adviser to
-Captain Grant, with the temporary rank of Commander R.N.R. The Chief
-Officer, Lieutenant Murchie, with certain other officers, also remained
-on board, Lieutenant Murchie, owing to his special knowledge of the
-ship, ranking next to Lieutenant-Commander Lockyer for general working
-purposes. The ship’s surgeon, her chief steward and about 50 of the
-Cunard ratings for cooks, waiters, and officers’ servants, were also
-retained, as well as the carpenter, who was kept on board as Chief
-Petty Officer and given six mates, the cooper, blacksmith, plumber, and
-painter, being also retained with the same rank.
-
-[Illustration: LIFE ON A TRANSPORT (i): KIT INSPECTION]
-
-[Illustration: LIFE ON A TRANSPORT (ii): RIFLE DRILL]
-
-Leaving the stage about noon, the _Carmania_ was immediately docked at
-Sandon, where after some further delay the third-class passengers
-were landed. Owing to the fact that the _Caronia_ was already in the
-_Carmania’s_ proper berth, being fitted out as an armed cruiser, and
-that both she and the _Aquitania_ were already well on the way to
-completion for their new task, the _Carmania_ could for the moment
-neither discharge her cargo nor bunker owing to the shortage of labour.
-As many painters, however, as could be assembled began at once to alter
-her hull and funnels, blackening out her well-known red and black tops,
-while a gang of shipwrights started to cut out the bulwarks fore and
-aft on the ‘B’ deck, in order to allow of the training to suitable
-angles of the guns that were to be placed in position there. Other
-Cunard stewards and joiners also concentrated at once upon the task of
-clearing out passenger accommodation from the vessel. During Saturday
-and Sunday the _Carmania_ remained in the basin, and it was on this
-day that her future midshipmen turned up, and had to be provided with
-accommodation in the midst of the existing confusion. On Monday she
-was able to get an empty berth, where she began at once to discharge
-her cargo, and to bunker at express speed. Armoured plates were now
-being put in position upon all her most vulnerable parts, and these
-were also being re-inforced with coal and bags of sand by way of extra
-protection. All the woodwork in the passengers’ quarters was being
-taken away; two of her holds were being fitted with platforms and
-magazines were being built on them; while means for flooding were also
-being installed, speaking-tubes fitted in the aft steering gear room,
-control telephones being run up, and her eight guns placed in position.
-
-These were all of 4.7 inch calibre and with a range of about 9,300
-yards. In addition a 6 ft. Barr and Stroud range-finder was being
-fitted, together with two semaphores. Two searchlights were being
-mounted on slightly raised platforms on the bridge ends, while two
-ordinary lifeboats and eighteen Maclean collapsible boats were retained
-for war purposes. By Wednesday all the coal was in, all the bunkers
-being full, and the protection coal was in place. At 5 o’clock the next
-morning, the Naval ratings in charge of Lieutenant-Commander O’Neil,
-R.N.R., arrived from Portsmouth, most of them being R.N.R. men, but
-a good many belonging to the Royal Fleet Reserve, while the Marines on
-board were drawn in equal proportions from the Royal Marine Artillery,
-and the Royal Marine Light Infantry. The able seamen were for the most
-part Scotch fishermen of the finest type.
-
-[Illustration: THE “CARMANIA” READY FOR ACTION]
-
-On the same day messing, watch, and sleeping arrangements were made,
-ammunition was taken aboard and stored in the magazines, together with
-a limited number of small arms, in addition to the marines’ rifles: and
-so unremitting had been the work of all engaged, and so efficient the
-organisation evoked by the crisis, that the _Carmania_ was actually
-at sea as a fully equipped armed cruiser by Friday, August 14th, only
-a week after she had entered port as an ordinary first-class Atlantic
-liner. With her later adventures we shall deal in a moment, but before
-doing so let us follow the adventures of the other three vessels that
-were converted into armed cruisers.
-
-The _Aquitania_, fitted with 6-inch guns, sailed on August 8th, but
-unfortunately was damaged in collision and on returning to port was
-dismantled at the end of September. From May to August, 1915, she was
-employed in carrying troops, when she was fitted out as a Hospital
-Ship, in which capacity she continued to work until April of the
-following year. She was again requisitioned as a Hospital Ship in
-September, 1916, plying between England and the Mediterranean until
-Christmas. She was then laid up by the Government for the whole
-of 1917, and in March, 1918, was again put into commission by the
-Admiralty as a transport, and played an important part in bringing
-American troops to Europe at that critical time.
-
-The _Caronia_ had a somewhat longer career as an armed cruiser. She
-was commissioned on 8th August, 1914, by Captain Shirley-Litchfield,
-R.N., with Captain C. A. Smith, Cunard Line, as navigator. She sailed
-from Liverpool on August 10th, for patrol duties in the North Atlantic,
-being attached to the North American and West Indies Station, under the
-command of Rear-Admiral Phipps-Hornby, with Halifax (N.S.) as base.
-
-She was employed on the usual patrol duties, stopping, boarding and
-examining shipping. In the very early days of the war, she captured at
-sea and towed into Berehaven the four-masted barque _Odessa_, and, some
-little time after, she took over from a warship and towed to Halifax a
-six thousand ton oil tanker.
-
-Eight 4.7-in. quick-firing guns were originally mounted in the
-_Caronia_, but, on her return to England for refit in May, 1915, they
-were replaced by a similar number of six-inch.
-
-She was at sea again in July, 1915, for another commission on the same
-station, with Captain Reginald A. Norton, R.N., in command, and Captain
-Henry McConkey, Cunard Line, as navigator. She remained away until
-August, 1916, when she returned to this country to pay off.
-
-The _Caronia_ was then employed in trooping between South and East
-Africa and India until her return to the Company’s service.
-
-During the whole of this time, she was manned chiefly by mercantile
-marine ratings, enrolled for temporary service in the R.N.R. for the
-duration of hostilities.
-
-The _Laconia_, for the first two years of the war was also used as
-an armed cruiser, seeing special service on the German East African
-Coast, and taking part in the operations which ended in the destruction
-of the German cruiser _Konigsberg_ in the Rufigi River. She was then
-taken out of commission, and returned to the Company’s transatlantic
-service. She was finally sunk by a German submarine on the 25th
-February, 1917, American lives being lost aboard her. There is no doubt
-that this was the “overt act” that helped to confirm the decision of
-America to enter the war on the side of the Allies.
-
-It is safe to say that all these vessels maintained in their new naval
-roles, not only the best traditions of the Cunard Company itself,
-but those of the Mercantile Marine of which they had once been so
-distinguished a part, and the British Navy of which they became not the
-least useful and honourable units. To the _Carmania_, indeed, fell the
-singular honour of being the only British armed auxiliary cruiser to
-sink a German war vessel in single armed combat; and the five years war
-at sea produced few more kindling and romantic stories than that of her
-duel with the _Cap Trafalgar_ in September, 1914, near Trinidad Island
-in the South Atlantic.
-
-[Illustration: SOUTH AFRICAN INFANTRY ON BOARD THE “LACONIA”]
-
-Leaving the Mersey, as we have seen, on Saturday, August 15th, she
-first went up the Irish Channel examining merchant vessels, on her way
-to the Halifax trade route; where she was to carry out her first
-patrol duties. Having kept this track, however, for twenty-four hours
-without adventure, she received orders to sail for Bermuda, and on her
-way there seized the opportunity of dropping a target and carrying out
-some practice, firing which not only proved that her gun-layers were
-exceptionally skilful, but which gave all on board considerably greater
-confidence in the ship as a fighting unit. On the evening of August
-22nd, she sighted the searchlights off St. George, Bermuda, and early
-next morning performed the difficult task of navigating a channel that
-no vessel of anything like her great size had ever before been through.
-Here for the next five days she coaled, while officers and men were
-able to obtain certain articles in the way of tropical clothing, that
-they had not had time to procure at Liverpool.
-
-On August 29th she left the Bermudas, and on September 2nd passed
-through the Bocas del Dragos, at the mouth of the Gulf of Paria. Here,
-amidst scenery new and entrancing to many on board, she approached
-the Port of Spain, whence after a couple of days’ coaling, she
-left to join Admiral Cradock’s ill-fated squadron, which was then
-searching the coast of Venezuela, and the mouths of its rivers, for
-the German cruisers _Dresden_ and _Karlsruhe_. To this squadron
-she became attached about a week later, and soon received orders
-to investigate Trinidad Island in the South Atlantic. On September
-11th, however, while on her way there, she received orders to try and
-intercept, in conjunction with the cruiser _Cornwall_, the German
-collier _Patagonia_, which was supposed to be leaving Pernambuco that
-night; but she was not found, and, as a matter of fact, did not sail
-for another three days, when she succeeded, in the absence of the
-_Cornwall_, in getting away. Before this, however, the _Carmania_
-had received orders to continue on her original mission, namely the
-examination of Trinidad Island, and she accordingly headed down
-for it. This is a small and lonely piece of land, about 500 miles
-distant from the South American coast, rising to a height of some
-2,000 feet, and being only some 3 miles long by 1½ miles broad, but
-with a good anchorage on its south-west side. Though often sighted by
-sailing vessels homeward bound from Cape Horn, this island was well
-out of reach of any ordinary steamer, and was thus an extremely
-likely place for an enemy vessel desiring to coal in a convenient and
-unobserved position. Moreover, although both Great Britain and Brazil
-had at various times attempted to form small settlements there for
-the purpose of cultivating the castor oil plant indigenous to the
-island, these attempts had never been successful, and the island was
-uninhabited.
-
-[Illustration: THE “CARONIA” LEAVING DURBAN]
-
-It was at nine in the morning of Monday, September 14th that the
-_Carmania_ sighted the island ahead; and soon after 11 a.m. a large
-vessel was made out, lying on the island’s westward side. It was a
-bright clear day, with a gentle north-easterly breeze blowing, and the
-mast of the unknown vessel showed distinctly above the horizon, two
-funnels becoming visible a little while later. It was at once concluded
-that she must be an enemy, since it was known that there were no
-British war vessels in the neighbourhood, and that no British merchant
-vessel was at all likely to be here. Her exact identity, however,
-remained a problem that was not to be solved, as it happened, until
-several days afterwards. The only enemy vessels that might possibly
-be in the neighbourhood according to the knowledge of those on board
-the _Carmania_, were the _Karlsruhe_, with four funnels, the _Dresden_
-with three funnels, the _Kron Prinz Wilhelm_ with four funnels, and the
-_Konig Wilhelm_, an armed merchant cruiser which had one funnel. Even
-had the funnels been altered it could not have been any of these, since
-the outlines of all these vessels were known to one and another of the
-experienced and widely travelled observers on board the _Carmania_,
-and this uncertainty added to the excitement of a peculiarly thrilling
-occasion. The sudden pouring out of smoke from the strange vessel’s
-funnels showed at once that the _Carmania_ had been sighted and that
-the enemy was getting up steam, while the position of the island added
-further to the thrilling possibilities of the situation.
-
-[Illustration: H.M.S “MERSEY” ALONGSIDE THE “LACONIA,” OFF THE RUFIGI
-RIVER]
-
-It was true that there were no other vessels in sight, but the
-_Carmania_ had approached so as to head for the middle of the island,
-in order that any observer who might be on the look out should be
-unable to tell on which side the armed cruiser meant to pass. This
-meant, however, that the greater part of the island’s lee side was
-out of sight, and behind its shelter other enemy vessels such as the
-_Karlsruhe_ or _Dresden_, might well be lying in wait--the visible
-vessel merely acting as a decoy to the approaching Britisher. That
-other ships were indeed present, became manifest almost at once, as a
-smaller steamer, a cargo vessel, as it appeared, of about 1,800 tons,
-was now seen backing away from behind the enemy ship. This vessel
-at once began steaming away to the south-east, probably in order to
-discover whether or no the _Carmania_ was accompanied by consorts at
-present hidden by the land. There were also to add to the anxiety of
-the _Carmania’s_ commanding officer, two more masts appearing above the
-side of the unidentified ship that obviously belonged to a vessel still
-out of sight. Fortunately, however, this proved to be only another
-small cargo boat, who very soon detached herself and steamed away to
-the north-west.
-
-This left them up to the present only the one big vessel as an
-opponent, a vessel of some 18,500 tons, and an armed cruiser like the
-_Carmania_. It promised, therefore, as regards numbers at least, to be
-an equal fight, and in preparation for it dinner was ordered for all
-hands that could be excused duty, for the hour of 11.30, in accordance
-with the old naval principle--food before fighting. Meanwhile every
-endeavour was being made to identify the mysterious enemy, and the
-conclusion arrived at was that she must be the _Berlin_, a German
-vessel of 17 knots. She was, as a matter of fact, although those on
-the _Carmania_ were not to learn this for several days, the _Cap
-Trafalgar_, the latest and finest ship of the Hamburg South American
-Line--a vessel of 18 knots that had as yet only made one voyage. She
-had been built with three funnels, one of them being a dummy one used
-only for ventilation, and this had been done away with, reducing the
-number to two. She had been in Buenos Aires when war broke out, and had
-left that port, as it chanced on the very day that the _Carmania_ had
-sailed from Liverpool, her destination being unknown and her cargo one
-of coal.
-
-[Illustration: TORPEDOING OF THE “IVERNIA”]
-
-The _Carmania_ had by this time gone to “General Quarters,” and all on
-board were ready for the encounter. The largest ensigns floated both
-from the flagstaff aft and the mastheads, and the _Cap Trafalgar_ now
-ran up the white flag with the black cross of the German Navy. It was
-still, however, not quite certain that the enemy was armed, and it was
-therefore necessary that the usual formalities should be attended
-to. Well within range, Captain Grant ordered Lieutenant Murchie to fire
-a shot across her bow, and the shell, very skilfully aimed, dropped
-about 50 yards ahead of this. The reply was immediate, the enemy firing
-two shells which only just cleared the _Carmania’s_ bridge, and dropped
-into the water about 50 yards upon her starboard side.
-
-The fight had now begun in earnest, and the firing on both sides was
-of a high order, although the first round or two from the _Carmania_
-fell short, while those of the _Cap Trafalgar_ erred a little in the
-opposite direction. Quite soon, however, hits were being made by both
-sides, and soon one of the _Carmania’s_ gun layers lay dead, his No. 2
-dying, and almost the whole of the gun’s crew wounded.
-
-For the first few minutes of the duel, only three of the _Carmania’s_
-guns could be brought to bear, but soon by porting a little she was
-able to bring another gun into action, and some very successful
-salvoes at once followed. The British gun-layers, firing as coolly
-as if they had been at practice, were now hitting with nearly every
-shot, and the vessels were closing one another rapidly, when at
-about 5,500 yards the new and sinister sound of machine-gun firing
-began to thread the din of the bursting shells. By this time a well
-placed enemy shell had carried away the _Carmania’s_ control, so that
-it was no longer possible for ranges to be given from the bridge to
-the guns by telephone, and it was evidently the _Cap Trafalgar’s_
-intention to disable the bridge entirely, shell after shell hitting its
-neighbourhood, or only just missing it. It was at once clear to those
-on board that if the enemy’s machine-gun could now get the range, the
-guns and ammunition parties on the unprotected decks of the _Carmania_
-would be inevitably mown down. The order was therefore given to port,
-and the _Carmania_ wore away in order to increase the range. This
-brought the enemy astern and another of the _Carmania’s_ guns into
-action, and for a brief moment she had five guns bearing upon the _Cap
-Trafalgar_. Still porting, however, the guns on that side ceased to
-fire, and the turn came for the starboard gunners to take their hand.
-The enemy now also ported, and as she did so, it became clear that she
-was visibly listing to starboard; she had already been set on fire
-foreward, but this fire seemed to have been extinguished.
-
-[Illustration: THE “CARMANIA” APPROACHING TRINIDAD (“Cap Trafalgar” to
-the right)]
-
-[Illustration: ONE OF THE “CARMANIA’S” GUNS]
-
-The _Carmania’s_ gunners, on the soundest principles, were steadily
-aiming at the _Cap Trafalgar’s_ water line, and there was no doubt that
-as a result of this policy she was already beginning rapidly to make
-water. It was by no means, however, the case of the honours resting
-with one side entirely, and the enemy was constantly registering hits
-on the _Carmania’s_ masts, ventilators, boats, and derricks, and it
-is an amazing fact, considering that at one time the range was not
-more than 1½ miles, that her casualties should have been so few.
-The _Carmania’s_ gunners were now firing so fast that the paint was
-blistering off the guns, and at the same time she herself was on fire
-to an extent that might have proved very serious. The main pipes having
-been shot away, no water could be got through the hose pipes and
-brought to play upon this fire, and reliance had therefore to be placed
-upon water buckets handled under the most difficult conditions of smoke
-and heat.
-
-It was now evident that the _Carmania’s_ bridge would in a very short
-time be untenable, and her Captain therefore ordered the control to be
-changed to the aft steering position, and this was accordingly done,
-the enemy being kept at about the same bearing. The bridge was now well
-alight, and the flames were licking upward with increasing ferocity.
-The port side of the main rigging was hanging in festoons from the only
-remaining shroud. The wireless gear had been shot away in the first
-moment of the action. Many of the ventilator cowls were in ribbons, and
-a large hole yawned in the port side of the aft deck.
-
-Battered as she was, however, it was now clear that the _Cap Trafalgar_
-was in a far worse case. She was listing heavily, and her firing,
-though still rapid, was becoming wild. She was badly on fire, and
-almost wholly wrapped in smoke. Suddenly she turned abruptly to port
-and headed back for the island, leaning right over with silent guns,
-and already beginning to get her boats out.
-
-[Illustration: “ABANDON SHIP” DRILL AT SEA]
-
-[Illustration: AFTER THE FIGHT]
-
-Upon this all the _Carmania’s_ hands, except the gun layers, were
-employed in trying to extinguish the fire. Bucket gangs were formed,
-and at last a lead of water was arranged from the ship’s own fire
-main once more. It was, of course, hopeless now to attempt to save
-the bridge and the boat deck cabins, but there was still a hope of
-preventing the fire from spreading, and in order to stop the draught
-the engines were slowed down. It was a fierce task, and one that
-demanded every energy on the part of all on board, but it was one in
-which they were encouraged, as they toiled and sweated, by the sight of
-their heeling enemy, from whose sides half a dozen boats had already
-cleared, pulling towards one of her smaller colliers who was standing
-about 3 miles away.
-
-More and more the big liner fell over until at last her funnels lay
-upon the water, and then, after a moment’s apparent hesitation, with
-her bow submerged, she heaved herself upright and sank bodily. It had
-been a good fight and she had fought honourably to the end and gone
-down with her ensign flying, and when, as she vanished, the men of the
-_Carmania_ raised a cheer, it was hardly less for their own victory
-than as a tribute to the enemy.
-
-By now, thanks to their unremitting exertions, the crew of the
-_Carmania_ had overcome the fire, but a new danger was already reported
-and necessitated prompt action on the part of her Commander. Smoke
-had been reported on the northern horizon, and soon afterwards four
-funnels appeared, the new comer being undoubtedly another enemy,
-probably summoned by wireless by the _Cap Trafalgar_. Crippled as she
-was, and with nearly a quarter of her guns’ crews and ammunition supply
-parties either killed or injured, it would have been the sheerest
-madness for the _Carmania_ to risk another action at that moment,
-and she accordingly increased her speed, shaping a course to the
-south-west, and steering by sun and wind, until she could assemble what
-was left of her shattered navigating gear. Afterwards it was learned
-that the enemy sighted was the _Kron Prinz Wilhelm_, who, on learning
-by wireless of the _Cap Trafalgar’s_ fate, decided that discretion was
-the better part of valour and did not approach any nearer.
-
-During the night the _Carmania_ succeeded in getting into touch
-with the cruiser _Bristol_, with whom she arranged a rendezvous for
-the next morning, and under whose care, and afterwards that of the
-_Cornwall_, she came to anchor near the Abrolhos Rocks at eight
-o’clock on the morning of the day after. Here, with the aid of the
-_Cornwall’s_ engineers, the worst of her holes were patched up, and
-with what navigating gear she could borrow, and in company with
-the _Macedonia_, the _Carmania_ set out for Gibraltar at 6 p.m. on
-September 17th. Well did she deserve, as she did so, the hearty cheers
-of the _Cornwall_, and the two accompanying colliers, and those of the
-old battleship _Canopus_ whom she passed early on the morning of the
-19th.
-
-[Illustration: CHART-HOUSE AND BRIDGE OF THE “CARMANIA” AFTER THE FIGHT]
-
-She arrived at Pernambuco on the same afternoon, leaving there Captain
-Grant’s despatches for the Admiralty, and reached Gibraltar nine days
-later. Her re-fitting took several months, but she remained as an armed
-cruiser until May, 1916, when she was again restored to the Cunard
-Company’s service. Her casualties in this brilliant action amounted
-to nine killed or dying of wounds, and four severely and twenty-two
-slightly wounded. There were no Cunarders among the casualties. Besides
-other honours conferred upon participants in this fight, his Majesty
-the King decorated Captain Barr with the well deserved Companionship of
-the Bath, in recognition of his splendid services in what was to prove
-a unique action of the war at sea.
-
-Twelve months later, on September 15th, 1919, there was an interesting
-sequel on board the _Carmania_, which had then returned to the
-Cunard Company’s service. A piece of plate which belonged to Lord
-Nelson, and was with him at Trafalgar, was presented to the ship in
-commemoration of her very gallant fight. Twenty-four of these pieces
-of plate came into the possession of the Navy League who asked the
-Admiralty to allocate them to various ships. The _Carmania_ was the
-only merchant vessel to receive this honour. In notifying the Company
-of the presentation, the General Secretary of the Navy League stated
-that “the Navy League realises that while every unit of the fleet has
-rendered service in accordance with the best traditions of the Royal
-Navy, _H.M.S. Carmania_ has been able to render herself conspicuous
-amongst her gallant comrades, and in accepting this souvenir, the Navy
-League trusts that you will recognise it as an expression of gratitude
-to the glorious fleet of which that ship was so distinguished a
-representative.”
-
-The veteran Admiral, the Hon. E. R. Fremantle who was present, stated
-that there never was a single ship action which reflected greater
-credit, both on the R.N. and on the Mercantile Marine, and more
-especially on the R.N.R. It had very aptly been compared with the
-fight of the _Shannon_ and the _Chesapeake_.
-
-[Illustration: “CARMANIA” SINKING “CAP TRAFALGAR”]
-
-Captain Grant was unfortunately unable to be present, but in a letter
-read at the function he claimed that “this action was the only one
-throughout the war in which an equal, or as a matter of fact, a
-slightly inferior vessel annihilated the superior force.... I shall
-always feel proud of the fact that it was my great good fortune to
-command a ship in action in which the glorious traditions of the
-British Navy were upheld by every soul on board.”
-
-Captain Barr, who retired from the Company’s service in 1917, said that
-the Captain of the _Cap Trafalgar_ put up a very gallant fight. “I do
-not know his name,” he said, “but he is the only German I would care to
-meet.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-Carrying On
-
- _The lofty liners in their pride
- Stem every current, every tide:
- At anchor in all ports they ride._
-
- _The menace of the berg and floe,
- The blindness of the fog and snow.
- All these the English seamen know._
-
- _And still they calmly jog along
- By Bay and Cape, an endless throng.
- As endless as some dog-watch song._
-
- MORLEY ROBERTS.
-
-
-We have confined ourselves so far to the adventures of the Cunard
-vessels that were used in the early stages of the war for purely
-combatant purposes. They were, as has been seen, merely a small, though
-important, fraction of the whole fleet, and indeed the distinction
-that we have drawn is a somewhat difficult one to maintain. Thus,
-from acting, as we have shewn, as purely combatant cruisers, the
-_Aquitania_, _Caronia_, _Laconia_ and _Carmania_ passed to different
-and even more valuable work; and at the same time many other Cunard
-vessels were upon the outbreak of war withdrawn from their usual
-avocation for more or less militant purposes. We find the _Mauretania_,
-for example, originally intended for employment as an armed cruiser,
-converted into a Troopship in 1915, and from this into a Hospital
-Ship in 1916, while in 1917 she again became a Transport, fitted with
-6-in. guns. In all these capacities she did magnificent work, not
-without imminent risk of destruction, and it was only by the brilliant
-seamanship of Commander Dow, one of the Cunard Company’s oldest and
-most trusted skippers, that she escaped being sunk while plying between
-England and Mudros, in her role of Troopship. Attacked by a submarine,
-Commander Dow noticed the wake of the approaching torpedo on his
-starboard bow, and immediately ordering the helm to be flung hard aport
-the torpedo was missed by not more than 5 feet, the _Mauretania’s_
-great speed fortunately thereafter placing her beyond range of the
-enemy.
-
-[Illustration: THE “LACONIA” AT DURBAN]
-
-[Illustration: FINAL OF THE S.A.I. HEAVY-WEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP ON THE
-“LACONIA”]
-
-The _Franconia_ and _Alaunia_ were also employed in carrying troops
-from September, 1914, onwards until both of them were sunk, curiously
-enough within a few days of one another in October, 1916. During
-this period they carried troops not only from Canada to England, but
-made several voyages to India and various parts of the Mediterranean.
-It was while she was on her way from Alexandria to Salonica, though
-fortunately after she had disembarked 2,700 soldiers, that the
-_Franconia_ (Captain D. S. Miller), was torpedoed, about 200 miles N.E.
-of Malta. Twelve of her crew were killed by the explosion. The ship
-sank fifty minutes after she was hit, the survivors being picked up
-by H.M. Hospital Ship _Dover Castle_, whose R.A.M.C. Surgeon, Dr. J.
-D. Doherty chanced himself to be one of the Cunard Company’s Medical
-Officers. The _Alaunia_, again, as it happened, having landed her
-passengers and mails at Falmouth, after a voyage from New York, was
-torpedoed on her way to London, about two miles south of the Royal
-Sovereign Light Vessel. Captain H. M. Benison, in command, hoped to
-beach the ship, but unfortunately the water gained too rapidly, and the
-necessary tugs did not arrive in time. Two members of the crew were
-found to be missing, probably as the result of the explosion, the rest
-being saved by patrol boats and destroyers and the _Alaunia’s_ own
-lifeboats.
-
-[Illustration: THE NELSON PLATE PRESENTED TO THE “CARMANIA”]
-
-The _Andania_, _Ascania_, _Ivernia_, and _Saxonia_, were all for
-several months used as prison ships in 1915, each of them providing
-accommodation for nearly 2,000 German prisoners. They were afterwards
-employed as Transports, both to India and the Mediterranean, the
-_Ivernia_, _Ascania_ and _Andania_, in the end, all being sunk by enemy
-submarines. These losses represented a heavy sacrifice by the Company,
-particularly in view of the post-war needs of navigation.
-
-It was on January 27th, 1918, that the _Andania_ was torpedoed without
-warning, having sailed the day previously from Liverpool, _via_ the
-North of Ireland, with 51 passengers and mails. Captain J. Marshall,
-in command, immediately ordered her boats to be lowered with the
-result that within a quarter of an hour all the passengers and crew
-were clear of the ship, except the Captain himself, the Chief, First,
-Second and Third Officers, who made a special request to the Captain
-to be allowed to remain on board. The manner in which the boats were
-thus speedily lowered and filled and navigated to positions of safety
-was an evolution which reflected favourably on the organisation of the
-ship. Captain Marshall then made an examination of the ship and called
-for volunteers from the nearest boat. The response was immediate and
-unanimous, and the Chief Engineer, Purser, Wireless Operator, and two
-Stewards, with two Able Seamen at once returned on board with a fine
-carelessness to their own safety and rendered valuable assistance in
-getting out hawsers forward and aft. At half-past two, these men were
-again ordered to leave the vessel, and, with the occupants of the
-other boats, were picked up by patrols. Captain Marshall himself and
-his Chief Officer (Mr. Murdoch) boarded a drifter and stood by the
-_Andania_ until 4 o’clock in the evening, when they again returned
-on board to make her fast to a tug which had just arrived, still
-entertaining the hope that it might be possible to save her. Unhappily
-their efforts were of no avail, the vessel sinking about half-past
-seven. Seven lives were unfortunately lost, probably as the result of
-the explosion.
-
-[Illustration: CREW LEAVING THE “FRANCONIA” AFTER SHE WAS TORPEDOED]
-
-On the morning of the 28th December, 1916, the _Ivernia_ left
-Marseilles with a crew of 213, 94 officers and 1,950 troops. Shortly
-after her departure from Marseilles Captain Turner received orders to
-proceed 11 miles south of Damietta (Malta), but prior to altering
-course he received further orders to proceed north of Gozo Island
-(Malta), where the _Ivernia’s_ escort, _H.M.S. Camelia_ (Destroyer),
-was relieved by _H.M.S. Rifleman_ (Destroyer). On approaching the
-Adriatic, Captain Turner was instructed not to pass through the danger
-zone in daylight. As the _Ivernia_ was proceeding she received a signal
-from the escort that permission had been requested and granted from the
-Admiralty at Malta to proceed through the danger zone at daybreak.
-
-There was a fresh breeze which accounted for a heavy swell, the morning
-sun was shining brightly on the starboard side, when Captain Turner
-observed the wake of a torpedo approaching his vessel, too late to
-enable him to do anything to avoid it. The torpedo struck the _Ivernia_
-on the starboard side, abreast the funnel, and consequently rendered
-the engines out of commission, owing to the bursting of the steam pipe,
-by the explosion. This explosion accounted for the loss of 13 stewards
-and 9 firemen.
-
-Fortunately, at the time, all troops were mustered on deck and were
-standing by boat stations. The boats were immediately lowered clear of
-the water.
-
-The destroyer _Rifleman_ immediately manœuvred for the purpose of
-locating the submarine, by which time several of the _Ivernia’s_ boats
-were in the water. At this juncture an unfortunate incident occurred.
-The destroyer dashed by the port quarter at full speed without having
-an opportunity of avoiding a collision with the ship’s lifeboat,
-containing Chief Engineer Wilson and Dr. Parker, among other members of
-the crew, the boat sinking immediately. Dr. Parker was picked up but
-died almost immediately from injuries received. Chief Engineer Wilson
-was not seen.
-
-Two steam trawlers came alongside the _Ivernia_, after the destroyer
-had left with 600 survivors on board, which took the remainder of the
-Military and Crew, which apparently left only Captain Turner and Second
-Officer Leggett remaining on board. The Second Officer, however, went
-round the decks and discovered a soldier on the after deck who had
-sustained a broken thigh. Two soldiers were immediately ordered aboard
-for the purpose of assisting in strapping a board to the man’s damaged
-thigh, he being eventually lowered on to one of the trawlers by means
-of a bowline, where he was placed in charge of the R.A.M.C.
-
-[Illustration: TORPEDOING OF THE “AUSONIA”]
-
-The Second Officer then went aboard the trawler, later followed by
-Captain Turner, who first of all made sure that the vessel was sinking.
-
-The trawlers then cruised around among the boats and wreckage picking
-up survivors.
-
-One of the trawlers unfortunately became disabled owing to the ropes
-fouling her propellers, which necessitated her being towed by the other.
-
-The trawlers proceeded to Crete, where the survivors were billeted for
-14 days, after which time they were taken on board the P. & O. S.S.
-_Kalyan_ and conveyed to Marseilles, from which port they were sent
-overland to England.
-
-The _Ausonia_ was another of the fine Cunard vessels which the enemy
-succeeded in destroying. In February, 1915, she had taken over 2,000
-refugees from Belgium to La Pallice, being afterwards employed as a
-Troopship from February to May, 1916, working to Mediterranean and
-Indian ports. She was then returned to the Cunard Company’s service,
-and was sunk on the 30th of May, 1918. Once before, this ship had
-been struck by a torpedo, off the south coast of Ireland, in June,
-1917, while on a voyage from Montreal to Avonmouth. In this case she
-was fortunately salved, and her valuable cargo of food stuffs safely
-discharged. On the second occasion, while sailing from Liverpool,
-she was less fortunate. The _Ausonia_ was some 600 miles west of the
-Irish coast at 5 p.m. on May 30th, when a torpedo struck her, causing
-a terrific explosion. As her Commander, Captain R. Capper, afterwards
-said, he saw rafts, ventilators, ladders, and all kinds of wreckage
-coming down as if from the sky, falling round the after part of the
-ship. Captain Capper who, at the moment, was at the entrance of his
-cabin, at once went to the bridge, put the telegraph to ‘Stop’--‘Full
-Speed Astern’ but received no reply from the Engine Room. All hands
-were at once ordered to their boat stations, and the wireless operator
-tapped out the ship’s position on his auxiliary gear. Ten boats were
-lowered, and, within a quarter of an hour after the ship was struck,
-they had safely left her. When about a quarter of a mile astern,
-Captain Capper mustered them together and called the roll. It was then
-discovered that eight stewards were missing, having been at tea in a
-room immediately above the part of the ship struck by the torpedo.
-
-[Illustration: SCENE ON BOARD AFTER THE TORPEDOING OF THE “IVERNIA”
-(i)]
-
-Half an hour after the vessel was torpedoed, a periscope was sighted
-on the port bow, and an enemy submarine came to the surface and fired
-about 40 shells at the ship, some of these dropping within fifty yards
-of the boats. After the _Ausonia_ had sunk, the submarine approached
-the boats, and Captain Capper, who was at the oars was ordered to come
-alongside. Upon the submarine’s deck several of her crew were lounging,
-laughing and jeering at the shipwrecked survivors. After enquiring as
-to the _Ausonia’s_ cargo, the submarine commander ordered the boats to
-steer in a north-easterly direction; in callous disregard of the peril
-which confronted the _Ausonia’s_ crew the submarine herself then made
-off northwards.
-
-Captain Capper gave orders to the officers in charge of the boats that
-they were to keep together, and endeavour to get into the track of
-convoys, the weather being fine at the time. Until midnight the boats
-were successful in remaining in each other’s company, but the wind,
-having risen in the night, two boats, one of them in charge of the
-first officer, and the other in charge of the boatswain were, on the
-following morning, not to be seen. Captain Capper had assembled the
-survivors in seven boats, and he now gave orders to the remaining five
-that they should make themselves fast together. In this formation, they
-continued throughout the following day and night, when the ropes began
-to part. They were also retarding progress and were therefore cast off,
-the boats, however, still continuing to remain pretty well together.
-
-On Sunday, January 2nd, to add to the misery of their occupants, the
-weather became bad, heavy rain falling and soaking them all to the
-skin. On Monday and Tuesday, conditions improved a little, but on
-Wednesday a storm broke, and by mid-day a heavy sea was running, and
-a gale blowing from the north-west. The boats were now running before
-this, with great seas breaking over them and saturating everybody on
-board. These conditions continued until Friday the 7th, when land
-was at last sighted, turning out to be Bull Rock. A wise and strict
-rationing had been enforced, only two biscuits a day and one ounce
-of water having been allowed for the first two days, and one biscuit
-and a half and four tablespoons of water the subsequent ration. The
-crew were approaching the extremities of exhaustion when hope of
-deliverance was awakened in them. Fortunately, on sighting land, the
-wind fell a little, but it was another fifteen hours before the unhappy
-survivors were picked up by H.M.S. _Zennia_, an American Destroyer also
-assisting. Captain Capper’s boat had only 25 biscuits left together
-with half a bucketful of water--but one day’s meagre supply when the
-terrible ordeal ended. The little boats, it was calculated, had covered
-900 miles since the _Ausonia_ disappeared before their eyes. Under
-these conditions the conduct of the Cunarder’s crew was of the highest
-order, that of the stewardess, Mrs. Edgar, of Orrell Park, Aintree, the
-only woman on board the vessel, being particularly courageous.
-
-[Illustration: SCENE ON BOARD AFTER THE TORPEDOING OF THE “IVERNIA”
-(ii)]
-
-Special mention must also be made of the butcher’s boy, Robinson. At
-the moment of the explosion, together with the pantry boy, Lister,
-he was in one of the cooling chambers, and the explosion made it
-impossible for the two boys to get out. Robinson had several wounds
-on his hips and thighs, and his left arm was lacerated. Both boys, in
-addition, had both legs broken above the ankle. Robinson, however,
-managed to crawl out on both his hands and knees and secure a board
-and place it across the gaping hole in the deck, thus enabling Lister
-also to reach a place of comparative safety. The two boys then crawled
-on hands and knees up two sets of ladders to the boat deck, and
-were placed in the boats. The doctor attended to the boy Robinson’s
-injuries, as far as was possible, but it was not for 30 hours that
-Captain Capper was able to transfer him to the boat in which Lister
-was lying, so that he also might receive medical aid. In spite of
-their experiences and injuries, both boys remained calm and cheerful,
-and indeed in high spirits, but it is sad to record that Robinson
-subsequently succumbed in hospital, as the result of his injuries.
-
-More, however, to Captain Capper than to any one man, was the salvation
-of the five boat loads due, and it was in recognition of his dogged
-determination and splendid seamanship that his Majesty the King
-afterwards bestowed upon him the Distinguished Service Cross.
-
-[Illustration: THE TORPEDOING OF THE “IVERNIA”: SURVIVORS AFLOAT ON
-RAFT]
-
-The _Ultonia_, in August, 1914, was the means by which some of the
-old “Contemptibles” were brought from Malta to England, and she then
-proceeded to India with Territorial troops. She was subsequently
-returned to the Company’s Service and was finally sunk in June, 1917.
-She was at this time eastward bound, and about 350 miles west from
-Land’s End. She disappeared in ten minutes, so deadly was the blow she
-received. Fortunately, she was at the time, being escorted by one of
-the “Q” boats, by whom her crew was picked up and safely landed the
-next day at Falmouth, one man unfortunately being killed during the
-operation of leaving the ship. Captain J. Marshall was in command.
-
-Meanwhile, with their ordinary carrying power thus depleted, the Cunard
-management had been looking about for reinforcements, and had entered
-into negotiations with certain other lines for additional vessels.
-Thus they took over from the Canadian Northern Steamship Company (The
-Royal Line and The Uranium Steamship Company), the _Royal George_,
-and three other vessels, which they re-christened respectively the
-_Folia_, _Feltria_, and _Flavia_. They also purchased five additional
-vessels which they re-christened the _Vinovia_, _Valeria_, _Volodia_,
-_Valacia_, and _Vandalia_.
-
-Now during the years 1915 and 1916, merchant shipping, apart from
-those ships especially chartered by the Government, continued under
-the direction of its various owners. In 1917, however, the Liner
-Requisitioning Scheme, came into being, and a Shipping Controller was
-appointed.
-
-Under this scheme all British shipping came under the control of the
-Government, the object being, in view of the shortage of tonnage caused
-by the depredations of the submarines, to confine steamers to those
-trades necessary for providing the Allies with the essential foodstuffs
-and munitions of war. The greatest percentage of these had, of course,
-to be obtained from America, and in consequence many steamers which had
-been trading to other parts of the world, were diverted to the North
-Atlantic, and placed under the management of the Companies already
-established on these particular routes. The owners of these transferred
-steamers were given permission to allot their ships to any of the
-lines so established, and it came about that the Cunard Company, in
-addition to their own ships, had the management of a large number of
-vessels thus diverted. It is estimated, in fact, that the number of
-additional steamers so handled by the Company, amounted to more than
-400. In addition to this, the Company managed several prize steamers
-captured from the enemy and neutral steamers that had been placed
-at the disposal of the Allies, and it thus happened that the Cunard
-management found itself in charge of vessels from the Indian, China,
-South African, and Australian trades, assembled from the ends of the
-earth in this vital emergency.
-
-[Illustration: TORPEDOING OF THE “LUSITANIA”]
-
-Some idea of the magnitude of the work thus carried upon the shoulders
-of the Cunard management may be gathered from the facts that in one
-year alone not less than 200 sailings were made from American and
-Canadian ports, and that over 10,000 tons of cargo were often carried
-in one steamer.
-
-With the entrance of America into the war, the carrying problem became
-at once more complicated and greater in bulk; and in its solution the
-Cunard Company may once more justly be said to have played a major
-part. Let us consider first its work in the carriage of troops. The
-Cunard organisation was responsible for the transport during the war of
-over 900,000 officers and men. This excludes the big total repatriated
-after the Armistice was signed. When it is remembered that this
-aggregate is greater than the total population of either Liverpool,
-Manchester or Birmingham; that 900,000 men, marching in column of route
-in sections of fours would take, without halting, nearly six days to
-pass a single point, it becomes possible to visualise the immensity
-of the task represented by these bald figures. When it is further
-remembered that the total British Expeditionary Force first thrown
-across the English Channel in August, 1914, was only 80,000; that this
-was less than one-tenth of the number carried during the war by the
-Cunard Company; and that the number so carried was equal to not less
-than one-eighth of the whole British Army at its greatest strength, the
-nation’s debt to this great Company can be estimated.
-
-Nor was the mere provisioning of these troops while _en route_ a
-negligible feat of transport. Taking an average voyage as ten days,
-the food required to feed this number of men amounted to no less than
-9,750,000 pounds of meat, 11,250,000 pounds of potatoes, 4,500,000
-pounds of vegetables, 9,575,000 loaves of bread, 1,275,000 pounds of
-jam, 900,000 pounds of tea and coffee, and among other things 900,000
-pounds of oatmeal, 600,000 pounds of butter and 127,000 gallons of
-milk.
-
-[Illustration: THE TORPEDOING OF THE “IVERNIA”: SURVIVORS BEING TAKEN
-IN ONE OF THE BOATS]
-
-Vast as these figures are, however, they are dwarfed when we begin to
-consider what was accomplished during the five years of war in the
-way of cargo carrying--in the humdrum performance of an unadvertised
-and often little appreciated service, upon which, fundamentally, our
-whole war structure rested. Between August, 1914, and November, 1918,
-7,314,000 tons of foodstuffs, munitions of war, and general cargo were
-carried from America and Canada to the British Isles; over 340,000 tons
-from the British Isles to Italy and the Adriatic; over 500,000 tons
-from the British Isles to other Mediterranean Ports; nearly 320,000
-tons from this country to France; and nearly 60,000 tons from France to
-this country. In addition to this, huge quantities were also carried
-westwards from this country, amounting to a total, in the same period,
-of more than 1,000,000 tons.
-
-Not the least important service rendered in this way was connected
-with the supply of oil fuel, of which the stocks in this country
-were seriously depleted--so seriously that at one time they were
-insufficient to supply the needs of the Navy for more than a few
-weeks ahead. In this predicament the Admiralty, realizing the
-danger, approached Sir Alfred Booth, Chairman of the Cunard Company,
-and asked him to put the matter before other leading ship-owners.
-He readily consented to do so, and all owners running ships in the
-North Atlantic, at once agreed to take the necessary steps to allow
-of oil being carried in the double bottoms of their ships, the Cunard
-Company themselves adapting for this purpose the double bottoms of the
-_Andania_, _Carmania_, _Carpathia_, _Pannonia_, _Saxonia_, _Valacia_,
-_Vandalia_, _Valeria_, and _Vinovia_, each of which brought on each
-voyage to this country, about 2,000 tons of oil. The Cunard Company
-alone, in a little over a year, thus brought over 100,000 tons of oil
-across the Atlantic.
-
-[Illustration: THE “LUSITANIA”]
-
-During all this time, of course, it must be remembered that the Cunard
-Company, as throughout the war, plied in a zone particularly exposed
-to hostile attack by enemy raiders and submarines; and as we have
-already shown, and shall show again, a very heavy toll of their vessels
-was taken by hostile torpedoes. How greatly the Cunard steamers were
-concentrated upon dangerous routes will be seen on reference to the
-map,[B] which indicates the most important services of Cunard Steamers
-during the war. Finally, let it be stated that from August, 1914 to
-November, 1918, without taking into account such outside steamers as
-were working under the Cunard Company’s direction, its own steamers
-steamed not less than 3,313,576 miles, with a consumption of 1,785,000
-tons of coal. This distance is equivalent to the circum-navigation of
-the world no less than 132 times.
-
- [B] This map will be found in the inside front cover of the
- book.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-The Ordeal of the _Lusitania_
-
- _Oh, have you ever seen a foundered horse,
- His great heart broken by a task too great
- For his endurance, but unbroken yet
- His spirit--striving to complete his course,
- Failing at last, eyes glazed and nostril wide,
- And have not ached with pity? Pity now
- A brave ship shattered by a coward blow
- That once had spurned the waters in her pride._
-
- N. N. F. CORBETT.
-
-
-With the subsequent progress in infamy of Germany’s submarine campaign
-it was natural that the sensibilities of the civilised world, so
-shocked by the ruthless sinking of the _Lusitania_, should have become
-somewhat dulled. But it is clear, in retrospect, that this tragic
-event marked an epoch in the slow gathering of the non-combatant
-world’s condemnation. Upon the general events preceding the loss of
-this world-famous vessel, this is not, perhaps, the place to dwell. It
-will be remembered however, that from February 18th, 1915, the German
-Government announced that it proposed to consider the waters round
-Great Britain and Ireland and the entire English Channel as what
-they described as a “War Zone,” stating that they would “endeavour to
-destroy every merchant ship found in this area of war, without its
-always being possible to avert the peril that thus threatens persons
-and cargoes.”
-
-[Illustration: THE “MAURETANIA” AS A HOSPITAL SHIP, OFF NAPLES HARBOUR
-(The “Mauretania” was a sister ship of the “Lusitania”)]
-
-To this the British Government issued a reply on the following March
-1st, that the German announcement was in fact a claim to torpedo at
-sight, regardless of the safety both of the crew or passengers, any
-merchant vessel under any flag. The British Government proceeded to
-remind Germany and the world, that by all the accepted traditions of
-the sea, and under the terms of international law, it was the duty of
-an enemy vessel to bring a captured ship to a Prize Court, where all
-the circumstances of the case could be impartially investigated, and
-where neutrals might recover their cargoes. The sinking of prizes was
-therefore, as the British Government pointed out, always a questionable
-proceeding, and could only be justified in exceptional circumstances,
-and after full provision had been made for crews and passengers. The
-legal responsibility of verifying the status of any vessel always
-rested with the attacking ship, while the obligations of humanity
-required adequate provision to be made for the safety of all crews and
-passengers of merchant vessels, whether enemy or neutral.
-
-It is now both common and tragic knowledge that these protests, as
-well as all the canons, so long established, of sea chivalry, were
-entirely ignored by the German Government, and it was on May 7th, 1915,
-that this became finally and startlingly clear to every intelligent
-observer in the civilised world. That the German Government possessed
-any special spite towards the _Lusitania_ may not perhaps have been the
-case, but, as we have seen, it was by means of the _Lusitania_ and her
-sister ship the _Mauretania_ that the “blue ribbon” of the Atlantic, in
-the matter of speed, had been wrested from German hands.
-
-[Illustration: “PHRYGIA” SINKING A SUBMARINE]
-
-Built in 1907 for the Cunard Company by Messrs. John Brown & Co., of
-Clyde Bank, she had been constructed under Admiralty Survey, and in
-accordance with Admiralty requirements, and was classed 100 A1. at
-Lloyds. Built throughout of steel, she had a cellular double bottom,
-with a floor at every frame, the depth of this on the centre line being
-60 inches, and 72 inches where it supported the turbine machinery.
-This double bottom extended up the ship’s side to a height of eight
-feet above the keel. All her decks were steel plated throughout, and
-the transverse strength of the ship was largely dependent on the 12
-transverse water-tight bulkheads which had been purposely strengthened
-and stiffened to enable her to stand the necessary pressure in the
-event of accident. Inside her hull was a second “skin,” running the
-whole length of her vital parts, so that she was virtually a ship
-within a ship.
-
-Her length all over was 785 feet. She was 88 feet in breadth, and
-nearly 60 feet in depth, with a gross tonnage of over 30,000 tons,
-and a load draft of 36 feet. Including the hold she had nine decks,
-with accommodation for 523 first class, 295 second class, and 1,300
-third class passengers, together with a crew of about 800. She had
-turbine engines of 63,220 horse power, four for ahead and two for
-astern motion, and her speed in 1914 was from 24½ to 25 knots. Her
-four great funnels rose to a height of 154 feet above the keel, and
-the diameter of each being not less than 24 feet. Her masts were 210
-feet high, while the navigating bridge stood 110 feet above the keel.
-At a moderate estimate, the cost of running her to New York and back,
-including wages, victualling and fuel, was in 1914 about £30,000, and
-she was operated, under the terms of the agreement with the Admiralty,
-by a crew of which at least three-quarters had to be British subjects.
-
-She was provided with boat accommodation for 2,605 persons, the number
-of persons on board during her last voyage being 1,959. She carried 48
-lifeboats, 22 of which were ordinary boats hanging from davits, with
-a total carrying capacity of 1,323. The remaining 26 were collapsible
-boats, with a total carrying capacity of 1,282. In addition, the ship
-was provided with 2,325 life jackets and 35 lifebuoys, all of these
-being conveniently distributed on board.
-
-[Illustration: THE “ALAUNIA” AS AN EMERGENCY HOSPITAL SHIP]
-
-Now at the beginning of the war it had been a very difficult question
-for the directors of the Cunard Company to decide as to whether the
-transatlantic traffic, under the new and unprecedented conditions,
-would be sufficient to justify the continued running of two such large
-and costly vessels as the _Lusitania_ and the _Mauretania_. It was
-decided, however, after much consideration, that the _Lusitania_
-could be run once a month, providing that her boiler power was reduced
-by one-fourth. The consequent saving in coal and labour of this would,
-the Directors considered, enable them to run the vessel without loss,
-although with no hopes of making a profit. Six of the _Lusitania’s_
-boilers were accordingly closed, and the ship began to run in these
-conditions in November, 1914, the effect of the closing of the six
-boilers being to reduce her maximum speed to 21 knots. It is to be
-noted, however, that this reduction still left the _Lusitania_ very
-considerably faster than any other transatlantic steamer.
-
-Nor had she lacked in exciting experiences before the fatal 1st of
-May, 1915, on which she left New York for the last time. On the very
-day that war was declared in 1914, she had started from New York
-for Liverpool, under the command of Captain Daniel Dow, one of the
-best-known and most respected figures in the Cunard Company’s service,
-who retired after 43 years’ service in 1919. Within a few hours of
-leaving New York, an enemy warship was sighted on the horizon, and
-observed to change her course immediately, with the presumed object of
-intercepting the _Lusitania_. Without a moment’s hesitation, Captain
-Dow set his course for a fog bank to the south, where he was soon lost
-to sight by the enemy. As soon as he was out of view, Captain Dow swung
-the _Lusitania_ round again and steamed northwards at his highest
-speed. Having thus out-manoeuvred the hostile commander, he resumed
-his eastward course again, navigating his great ship by night without
-lights, and safely reaching Liverpool.
-
-Again in February, 1915, while Captain Dow was still in command of her,
-the _Lusitania_, on an eastward voyage, received a wireless message to
-the effect that enemy submarines were cruising in the Irish Sea. He
-received instructions to fly a neutral flag--a perfectly legitimate
-ruse--and having on board some 400 Americans, together with the United
-States mails, he decided to hoist the American flag. Having done so,
-he crossed the Irish Sea at full speed, without stopping to take up
-a pilot; steered straight for the Mersey, and once more brought his
-vessel home in safety. Soon after this, Captain Dow, upon whom the
-strain of responsibility had been very great, was retained ashore by
-the Directors for a brief and much needed rest, and Captain W. T.
-Turner, one of the Cunard Company’s most trusted commanders took his
-place, with an assistant captain, Captain Anderson, also on board.
-
-[Illustration: THE “LUSITANIA” PASSING THE OLD HEAD OF KINSALE, WITHIN
-A FEW MILES OF THE SPOT WHERE SHE WAS TORPEDOED]
-
-That an attempt was to be made upon the _Lusitania_ had for some days
-been current rumour in New York, and on Saturday, May 1st, 1915, her
-advertised sailing date, the following advertisement appeared in the
-New York Times, New York Tribune, New York Sun, New York Herald, and
-the New York World. “Travellers,” it stated, “intending to embark on
-the Atlantic voyage are reminded that a state of war exists between
-Germany and her Allies, and Great Britain and her Allies, that the
-zone of war includes the waters adjacent to the British Isles, that in
-accordance with formal notice given by the Imperial German Government,
-vessels flying the flag of Great Britain, or of any of her Allies, are
-liable to destruction in those waters, that travellers travelling in
-the war zone in ships of Great Britain or her Allies do so at their own
-risk. April 22nd, 1915, The Imperial German Embassy, Washington, D.C.”
-It is safe to say, however, that but small attention was paid to this
-notice, very few people contemplating that such a diabolical threat
-as was implied in this notice would be seriously carried out by any
-civilised Christian Power. On the 1st May, therefore, the vessel sailed
-in fine weather, and with a calm sea. The voyage till May 7th was
-marked by no untoward event. As the danger zone was approached, Captain
-Turner took all the necessary precautions. All the lifeboats under
-davits were swung out; all bulkhead doors, except such as were required
-to be kept open in order to work the ship, were closed, the portholes
-being also closed; the look-outs on the ship were doubled--two men
-being sent to the crow’s nest, and two to the eyes of the ship; two
-officers were always on the bridge, and a quartermaster was stationed
-on either side with instructions to look out for submarines.
-
-Up to 8 o’clock on the morning of May 7th the vessel’s speed had been
-maintained at 21 knots, but at 8 o’clock this was somewhat reduced,
-the object being to ensure that the _Lusitania_ should arrive outside
-the bar at the mouth of the Mersey at such an hour on the morning of
-the 8th as would enable her to make immediate use of the tide, thus
-avoiding loitering in a vicinity where Captain Turner had reason to
-suppose enemy submarines might be watching for him. Soon after this
-reduction of speed the weather became thick, and the fog into which she
-had run necessitated a further reduction to 15 knots. Just before 12
-o’clock, however, the fog lifted, and the vessel’s speed was increased
-again to 18 knots--a speed that was maintained until she was struck by
-the enemy torpedo.
-
-[Illustration: THE “WHITE WAKE” THAT STRETCHED TO THE BEACHES OF
-GALLIPOLI]
-
-At the same time orders were sent to the engine-room to keep the
-steam-pressure as high as possible, so that in case of emergency the
-_Lusitania_ might be able to put on all possible speed, should this be
-ordered from the bridge. Land was now in sight, about two points abaft
-the beam, and Captain Turner took this to be Brow Head. Owing to the
-recent fog, however, he was not able to identify it with sufficient
-certainty to enable him to fix the _Lusitania_ upon the chart. He,
-therefore, kept her upon her course, which was S.87.E and parallel with
-the land, until twenty minutes to one, when, in order to make a better
-landing, he altered the course to N.67.E.
-
-This brought him nearer to the Irish Coast, and he shortly afterwards
-sighted the old Head of Kinsale. Having identified this, at twenty
-minutes to two, he altered his course back to S.87.E. and, having
-steadied her on that course, began ten minutes later to have a four
-point bearing taken, and this was being carried out when the ship was
-torpedoed.
-
-This occurred at a quarter past two, when the _Lusitania_ was steaming
-some ten miles off the Old Head of Kinsale, the atmosphere having then
-cleared and the sea being smooth. A seaman, Leslie N. Morton, seems
-to have been the first person on board actually to have seen the wake
-of the torpedo, and he reported it at once to the Second Officer,
-who in turn reported it to Captain Turner, then on the port side of
-the lower bridge. Captain Turner looking to starboard saw a streak
-of foam travelling towards the ship, and immediately afterwards the
-_Lusitania_ was struck full on the starboard side, between the third
-and fourth funnels, the explosion breaking to splinters one of the
-lifeboats. Almost simultaneously a second torpedo also struck her
-on the starboard side, the two having been fired apparently from a
-distance of from two to five hundred yards. No warning of any kind had
-been given. Immediately on being struck the _Lusitania_ listed heavily
-to starboard, and in less than twenty minutes she had sunk in deep
-water, carrying to their graves no less than 1,198 men, women and
-children.
-
-[Illustration: TORPEDOING OF THE “THRACIA”]
-
-Perhaps the most lucid, and, since he was an American, the most
-impartial account of the occurrence was that afterwards given by Mr.
-James Brooks of Bridgeport, Connecticut, one of the saloon passengers.
-Mr. Brooks, who was making the voyage to England for business purposes,
-had, in common with most of the other American passengers, read the
-warning notice issued by the German Embassy, to which we have already
-referred. Like most of his fellow-countrymen, however, he had decided
-to ignore it. “No one in America,” he said, “ever dreamed that the
-Germans would dare to carry out their terrible threat to destroy such a
-magnificent vessel, and with it hundreds of the lives of innocent men,
-women and children.... A good many passengers were still at lunch when,
-on Friday afternoon, the attack came in reality. I had just finished a
-run on deck and had reached the Marconi Deck, when I glanced out over
-the water. It was perfectly smooth. My eyes alighted on a white streak
-making its way with lightning-like rapidity towards the ship. I was
-so high in that position above the surface of the water that I could
-make out the outline of a torpedo. It appeared to be about twelve feet
-long, and came along possibly three feet below the surface, its sides
-white with bubbles of foam. I watched its passage, fascinated, until
-it passed out of sight behind the bridge, and in another moment came
-the explosion. The ship, recoiling under the force of the blow, was
-jarred and lifted, as if it had struck an immovable object. A column
-of water shot up to the bridge deck, carrying with it a lot of debris,
-and, despite the fact that I must have been twenty yards from the
-spot at which the torpedo struck, I was knocked off my feet. Before I
-could recover myself, the iron forepart of the ship was enveloped in
-a blinding cloud of steam, due, not, I think, to the explosion of a
-second torpedo, as some thought, but to the fact that the two forehold
-boilers had been jammed close together and ‘jack-knifed’ upwards. This
-I was told by a stoker afterwards.
-
-[Illustration: OFFICERS, NURSES AND R.A.M.C. ORDERLIES OF H.M.H.S.
-“AQUITANIA”]
-
-[Illustration: “HOMEWARD BOUND”]
-
-“We had been in sight of land for some time, and the head of the ship,
-which had already begun to settle, was turned towards the Old Head
-of Kinsale. We must have been from twelve to fifteen miles from
-land at the time the ship was struck. All the boats on the ship had
-been swung out the day previous, and the work of launching them was
-at once commenced. The attempt in the case of the first boat was a
-tragic failure. The women and children were taken first and the boat
-was practically filled with them, there being only a few men. The boat
-was lowered until within its own length of the water, when the forward
-tackle jammed, and the whole of its occupants, with the exception of
-three, were thrown into the water. The _Lusitania_ was then on an even
-keel. On the decks of the doomed vessel absolute coolness prevailed.
-There was no rushing about, and nothing remotely resembling panic. In
-just a few isolated cases there were signs of hysteria on the part of
-the women, but that was all.
-
-“Meanwhile the ship had taken a decided list, and was sinking rapidly
-by the head. The efforts made to lower the boats had apparently not met
-with much success. Those on the port side had swung inboard and could
-not be used, while the collapsible boats which were lashed beneath
-them could not be got at. The ladies were standing quite coolly,
-waiting on board to enter the boats when they could be released by the
-men from the davits. The davits by this time were themselves touching
-the water, the ship having sunk so low that the bridge deck was only
-four feet or so from the surface of the sea. Losing no time, the men
-passed the women rapidly into the boats, and places had been found by
-now for all the people about the midships section. I stepped into one
-of the lifeboats and attempted to assist in getting it clear. I saw
-the list was so great that the davits pinched the gear, rendering it
-improbable that they could be got away when the ship went down, so I
-stepped on to the gunwale and dived into the water. I had no lifebelt
-and am not a good swimmer, but I decided to take the risk. I had been
-wetted right through when the explosion occurred, and I believe that
-had I gone in dry I should have swallowed so much water that I should
-not have lasted long.
-
-[Illustration: THE SUN-CURE]
-
-[Illustration: THE “FRANCONIA” PASSING THROUGH THE SUEZ CANAL]
-
-“I swam as hard as I could away from the vessel, and noticed with
-feelings of apprehension the menacing bulk of the huge funnels as they
-loomed up over my head. I expected them momentarily to fall on me
-and crush me as I swam, but at last I judged myself to be clear, and I
-turned round and trod the water in order to watch the great hull heel
-over. The monster took a sudden plunge, and, noting the crowd still on
-her decks and the heavily laden boats filling with helpless women and
-children glued to her side, I sickened with horror at the sight. The
-liner’s stern rose high out of the water; there was a thunderous roar
-as of the collapse of a great building during a fire, and then she
-disappeared, dragging hundreds of fellow-creatures into the vortex.
-Many never rose again to the surface, but the sea rapidly grew black
-with the figures of struggling men, women, and children. The wireless
-installation came over with a crash into the sea. It struck my uplifted
-arm as it fell, and I felt it pass over my body as it sank, almost
-dragging me under.
-
-“The rush of water over the steamer’s decks swept away a collapsible
-boat, and I swam towards it. Another man reached it shortly after, and
-after we were rescued I found him to be Mr. James Lauriat, jun., of
-Boston. Two seamen also managed to swim to the boat and to climb on
-to it. One had a knife, and the other asked me for mine, and together
-they set about cutting away the canvas cover of the boat. When they
-had finished, I climbed inside, and the three of them followed me. We
-started to rescue the unfortunate people in the water, or at least
-those of them who were still living. We quickly had about 30 of them in
-the little craft. Around us in the water were scores of boats. There
-were no oars in our boats. We managed to raise the sides of the boat as
-they should be raised when the boat is in use, and we collected five
-oars from the mass of floating timber in the water. Then we started
-to row towards the lighthouse, which we could see in the distance.
-At the time the liner was torpedoed there was absolutely no ship of
-any kind in sight, with the exception of a trawler--the _Peel 12_, of
-Glasgow; she was close inshore under the lighthouse, and, owing to
-the lightness of the wind, she was of no use so far as the rescue of
-persons actually in the sea was concerned. She came along as fast as
-she could, however, and was able to pick up about one hundred and ten
-persons from lifeboats and life-rafts. Her limited capacity was pushed
-to the utmost, and I even had to sit with one leg hanging over
-the sides because there was no room to put it on the inside. We took
-in tow a lifeboat and a raft, which were also filled to the gunwale,
-and when the occupants were able to be taken out they were cast off.
-The auxiliary boat _Indian Prince_ had by that time arrived from
-Queenstown. The _Peel 12_ was the first boat on the scene, and she was
-followed by a tramp Greek steamer, which came up from the west, and was
-able to pick up several lifeboats which had got away.”
-
-[Illustration: AMERICAN TROOPS NEVER FORGOT THE “LUSITANIA”]
-
-Such was the experience of Mr. Brooks, and in his moving narrative we
-can not only divine something of a tragedy beyond the scope of any
-human pen, but gather also an impression of heroism, of unquestioning
-devotion to duty, at which every member of the Cunard Company may well
-thrill with pride.
-
-Particularly noticeable perhaps, was the conduct and sound judgment of
-the young sailor, Leslie N. Morton, to whom we have already referred,
-and he was especially commended by Lord Mersey, the Commissioner in
-charge of the formal investigation afterwards held into the loss of
-the _Lusitania_. This boy, for he was only 18, had been stationed
-as extra look-out on the forecastle head, starboard side, during the
-fatal watch; and it was, as we have said, he who was the first to
-perceive the approach of the torpedo. This began, as he described it,
-with a “big burst of foam about 500 yards away.” This was followed by
-a “thin streak of foam, making for the ship at a rapid speed, followed
-by another going parallel with the first one, and a little behind it.”
-Having immediately reported this through a megaphone to the bridge,
-Morton made for the forecastle to go down below to call his brother
-who was asleep, and on the way there he saw what he took to be the
-conning-tower of a submarine just submerging.
-
-Having called his brother, he went along the starboard side of the
-main deck and up on to the starboard side of the bridge deck, where he
-found the starboard boats useless owing to the vessel’s heavy list.
-He then went to his own boat No. 13, and assisted in filling it with
-passengers. Giving up his own seat, he then went to No. 11 boat, and
-assisted in filling that one also; and it was in this one that he
-eventually took his place. Unfortunately, owing it appears to the
-unskillful action of some of the passengers, this lifeboat was unable
-to push away from the ship, and it was eventually sunk. Morton then
-swam for it and succeeded in reaching an empty collapsible boat, into
-which he climbed, succeeding with the help of another young sailor,
-Joseph Parry, in ripping off the cover and rescuing from the water some
-50 people. He then made for a fishing kedge about five miles away,
-and having reached it transferred his passengers to it, and returned
-for some more, subsequently rescuing about 30 people from a sinking
-lifeboat--the little collapsible boat being subsequently rescued by a
-mine-sweeper. These two boys were thus instrumental in saving nearly
-100 lives; and in recognition of their bravery they were awarded
-decorations by the Board of Trade, Morton receiving the Silver Medal
-for Gallantry, and Parry the Bronze Medal for Gallantry.
-
-Equally heroic was the conduct of the First Officer, Mr. Arthur
-Rowland Jones, who was in the luncheon saloon when the torpedo struck
-the vessel. He immediately went to his boat station on the starboard
-side and began to fill his boat with passengers--a matter of extreme
-difficulty, owing to the ever increasing angle which the ship was
-presenting to the sea, which caused the boat to swing away from the
-tilted surface of the deck. After great efforts, however, he succeeded
-in getting about 80 passengers aboard before she was lowered into
-the water, entered her himself when the boat deck was level with the
-surface of the sea, and only some 15 seconds before the _Lusitania_
-sank. It was fortunate for the passengers that he succeeded in doing
-so, since it was only by his skill and coolness, combined with that of
-two or three members of the crew who had also clambered on board, that
-the little lifeboat was able to survive the suction and disturbance
-caused by the disappearing liner.
-
-[Illustration: IN THE SPRING OF 1918 THE “MAURETANIA” BROUGHT 33,000
-AMERICAN SOLDIERS TO EUROPE]
-
-She did so however, and afterwards transferred some of her passengers
-into another empty boat, the two boats then putting back in order to
-attempt further rescues. This they succeeded in doing, and the First
-Officer again filled his boat up, thereupon pulling off to a little
-fishing smack, the _Bluebell_, then about five miles distant. Having
-disembarked his passengers, Mr. Jones once more went back to the scene
-of the disaster, and after pulling some two and a half miles, fell in
-with a broken collapsible boat in a bad condition with about 35
-people inside it. Some of these were lying exhausted in the bottom of
-the boat and others were injured, so Mr. Jones took them all on board,
-afterwards transferring them to a trawler. He then pulled off once more
-and saved yet another 10 people, whom he took to the _Flying Fox_, a
-Queenstown Tender. By this time it was 8 o’clock in the evening, and
-his crew were at the last point of exhaustion, having been working hard
-without food and water. There was too, by this time, a large number of
-destroyers and patrol boats on the scene, so Mr. Jones and his weary
-helpers themselves boarded the _Flying Fox_.
-
-Mention must also be made of the conduct of Alfred Arthur Bestwick,
-the Junior Third Officer, who was responsible for the working of five
-boats on the port side of the ship, and courageously remained there
-endeavouring to launch them under practically impossible conditions,
-until the _Lusitania_ went under. He was dragged down with her,
-but fortunately came to the surface, and succeeded in reaching a
-collapsible boat, into which, with the help of a companion, he dragged
-several people from the water. These he transferred to a second and
-more navigable empty boat that they afterwards came across; and he
-then returned and saved three more people whom he had previously
-noticed supporting themselves by means of a bread tank, besides taking
-on board several others who were keeping themselves afloat by means of
-lifebelts.
-
-All this time on every hand deeds of self-sacrifice, recorded and
-unrecorded, were being performed. A typical one was that of one of
-the able seamen of the watch, who had been sucked down by the sinking
-vessel and coming to the surface again had managed to sustain himself
-by means of a floating piece of wood. Clutching this he then found
-himself drifting towards a woman struggling unaided in the water,
-whereupon he pushed towards her his piece of wood, which could only
-support one person, and swam away himself on the chance of finding
-some other means of escape. Presently he found a collapsible boat
-containing one of the ship’s officers, and a few other persons, but
-this unfortunately proved to be extremely unseaworthy. Capsizing again
-and again, it was only righted by the determination and skill of this
-seaman and his comrades, and on each occasion, alas, lives were lost
-until but a few survivors remained to be picked up by another of the
-ship’s boats.
-
-[Illustration: THE “AQUITANIA’S” STAGE]
-
-[Illustration: THE “SAXONIA,” CAMOUFLAGED, LEAVING NEW YORK WITH
-AMERICAN TROOPS FOR EUROPE]
-
-Such is the story of the greatest maritime crime in history and, now
-that the war is over, it is well that it should not be forgotten, with
-its record of heroism and self-sacrifice, of competent seamanship and
-resourceful initiative, of suffering and death. Lord Mersey’s report on
-the disaster, after he had heard a mass of evidence from officers and
-men, as well as from surviving passengers, is a document which after
-generations will read with pride. It contains not the personal opinion
-merely of a former President of the Probate, Divorce and Admiralty
-Division of the High Court of Justice, but is a considered judgment
-in which Admiral Sir F. S. Inglefield and Lieutenant Commander Hearn,
-both officers of the Royal Navy, and Captain D. Davies and Captain
-J. Spedding, of the Merchant Service, acting as the four assessors,
-concurred. The report contained a short, but consolatory statement of
-the competency with which the sudden emergency was confronted when
-the ship was attacked. “The Captain was on the bridge at the time his
-ship was struck,” Lord Mersey recorded, “and he remained there giving
-orders until the ship foundered. His first order was to lower all the
-boats to the rail. This order was obeyed as far as it possibly could
-be. He then called out ‘Women and children first.’ The order was then
-given to hard-a-starboard the helm with a view to heading towards
-the land, and orders were telegraphed to the engine-room. The orders
-given to the engine-room are difficult to follow and there is obvious
-confusion about them. It is not, however, important to consider them,
-for the engines were put out of commission almost at once by the inrush
-of water and ceased working, and the lights in the engine-room were
-blown out. Leith, the Marconi operator, immediately sent out an S.O.S.
-signal, and, later on, another message, ‘Come at once, big list, 10
-miles south Head Old Kinsale.’ These messages were repeated continually
-and were acknowledged. At first, the messages were sent out by the
-power supplied from the ship’s dynamo; but in three or four minutes
-this power gave out and the messages were sent out by means of the
-emergency apparatus in the wireless cabin.”
-
-[Illustration: WELCOMING THE FIRST CONTINGENT OF RETURNING AMERICAN
-TROOPS, NEW YORK, DECEMBER, 1918]
-
-[Illustration: THE “MAURETANIA” ARRIVING AT NEW YORK, DECEMBER, 1918]
-
-Was the _Lusitania_ well found? Did she comply with the requirements of
-the Merchant Shipping Acts? Was she armed? Did she carry war material?
-Was the conduct of the Captains, officers and men consistent with
-the high traditions of the Merchant Service? To all these questions the
-report furnished satisfactory answers. The ship was well provided with
-boats, which were in good order at the moment of the explosion, and
-“the launching was carried out as well as the short time, the moving
-ship, and the serious list would allow.” Lord Mersey added that he
-found that the conduct of the masters--for as already stated there were
-two--the officers and the crew was satisfactory. “They did their best
-in difficult and perilous circumstances, and their best was good.”
-
-And what of Captain Turner, upon whom the chief responsibility for the
-safety of the ship and the lives of passengers and crew mainly rested?
-He remained upon the bridge until the very last. He went down with the
-unhappy vessel and was only rescued by chance after having been in the
-water for three long hours. The Wreck Commissioner and the Assessors
-examined his every act from the moment when the _Lusitania_ entered the
-so-called “war zone” until this devoted officer found himself in the
-water confronted with death. In the opinion of Lord Mersey, Captain
-Turner “exercised his judgment for the best,” and the report added
-that “it was the judgment of a skilled and experienced man.” Captain
-Anderson, whose duty it was to assist in the care and navigation of the
-ship was, unfortunately, one of the victims of this German crime, but
-in Lord Mersey’s own words, “the two captains and the officers were
-competent men and they did their duty”--and higher praise than that
-there could not be.
-
-“The whole blame for the cruel destruction of life in this catastrophe
-must rest solely with those who plotted and with those who committed
-the crime.” The disaster was regarded in all civilised countries with
-horror. As Mr. Roosevelt said at the time, it represented “not merely
-piracy, but piracy on a vaster scale of murder than any old-time
-pirate ever practised,” and a Danish paper, in recording this terrible
-incident in the war, declared that “whenever in future the Germans
-venture to speak of their culture the answer will be ‘It does not
-exist: it committed suicide on May 7th, 1915.’” A Norwegian paper
-in denouncing the crime remarked that “the whole world looks with
-horror and detestation on the event.” In fact, throughout the whole
-civilised world the sinking of the _Lusitania_ with merciless disregard
-for the lives of those on board, was condemned as an act of wholesale
-murder which, as the _New York American_ added “violates all laws of
-common humanity.”
-
-[Illustration: “VALERIA” SINKING A SUBMARINE]
-
-In defiance of the judgment of civilisation, this dastardly act was
-hailed in Germany as a proud triumph. The _Kolnische Volkszeitung_ of
-May 10th, 1915, stated “The sinking of the _Lusitania_ is a success for
-our submarines which must be placed beside the greatest achievements
-in this naval war.... The sinking of the great British steamer is a
-success, the moral significance of which is still greater than the
-material success. With joyful pride we contemplate this latest deed of
-our Navy, and it will not be the last.” In the _Cologne Gazette_, of
-five days later, it was stated that “the news will be received by the
-German people with unanimous satisfaction, since it proves to England
-and the whole world that Germany is quite in earnest with regard to
-her submarine warfare.” In the _Neue Freie Presse_ of the same date it
-was remarked, “We rejoice over this new success of the German Navy.”
-The City of Magdeburg immediately proposed to honour the officers and
-men who had slaughtered so many hundreds of defenceless men, helpless
-women, and innocent children and brought the anguish of bereavement on
-so many hundreds of homes on both sides of the Atlantic. And to crown
-this achievement, which stands in isolation in the annals of the human
-race, a medal was struck in Munich commemorating this exploit of the
-German Fleet, which was afterwards to be surrendered and, then, to be
-scuttled by its own officers in Scapa Flow.
-
-[Illustration: IN VIEW OF THE FATE OF SO MANY HOSPITAL SHIPS, BOAT
-DRILL WAS REGULARLY CARRIED OUT ON THE GREAT CUNARDERS]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-The Toll of the Submarines
-
- _But some came not with break of light,
- Nor looked upon the saffron dawn;
- They keep the watch of endless night,
- On the soft breast of Ocean borne.
- O waking England, rise and pray
- For sons who guard thee night and day!_
-
- CECIL ROBERTS.
-
-
-We have dealt at length in the previous Chapter with the loss of the
-_Lusitania_ not only because, as we have said, her torpedoing marked an
-epoch in the history of crime at sea, and was perhaps the determining
-factor in the entrance of America into the war, but because the
-Cunard Company was thus identified with this world-tragedy, and its
-servants exemplified then, as always, the noblest traditions of the
-British Mercantile Marine. Unhappily the _Lusitania_, although the
-circumstances of her loss brought her, from so many points of view,
-into the limelight of publicity was, as we have already seen, by no
-means the only one of the Cunard vessels to be lost at sea in the
-service of this country, and in the present chapter it is proposed to
-deal briefly with some other of the Cunard Company’s vessels that fell
-victims, many of them after the bravest resistance, to the submarine
-menace. It will, perhaps, be the more convenient, for purposes of
-after reference, to deal with these alphabetically, rather than
-chronologically.
-
-Thus it was at 5.30 p.m. on February 4th, about 40 miles north of
-Londonderry that Captain W. R. D. Irvine of the _Aurania_ saw a
-torpedo approaching his ship, which eventually struck her between the
-funnels. The _Aurania_ immediately listed heavily to port, but then
-righted herself. The boats were immediately lowered and the crew and
-passengers, with the exception of Captain Irvine himself and some of
-his officers, were all safely aboard them within ten minutes after the
-torpedo had exploded. No sooner had they got into the boats, than the
-_Aurania_ was again struck by a second torpedo, a third following in
-the wake of this, just as the Captain and the remaining officers were
-coming down the ropes into the last boat. Seven men in the engine-room
-were killed by the explosions of the torpedoes, and two others were
-lost by drowning. The crew were in the boats for about one and a
-half hours, when they were picked up by some mine-sweepers.
-
-[Illustration: THE “AQUITANIA’S” GARDEN-LOUNGE AS HOSPITAL WARD]
-
-It was then seen that the ship was not sinking, and Captain Irvine with
-some of his crew, returned on board and made her fast with hawsers to
-one of the trawlers that had arrived on the scene. During the night,
-however, the ship broke adrift, and when day broke she was nowhere to
-be seen. A message was then received from one of the naval patrols to
-the effect that the _Aurania_ had drifted ashore at Tobermory, nearly
-50 miles from the place where she had been torpedoed. Unfortunately,
-she had grounded at a very exposed position and in the heavy weather
-that followed she went to pieces, it being found impossible to salve
-her. She was a particularly severe loss in that she was a new ship,
-only on her eighth trip.
-
-The _Dwinsk_, one of the steamers being operated by the Cunard Company
-for the Government, and in command of Captain H. Nelson, was torpedoed
-on June 18th of the same summer, at about 9.20 a.m., while some 650
-miles east of New York, the torpedo striking her on the port side in
-the region of No. 4 hold. Seven lifeboats were immediately lowered
-and all the crew successfully embarked. The submarine then came to
-the surface, and with a heavy calibre gun fired 19 shells into the
-torpedoed vessel, sinking her about two hours afterwards. A passing
-steamer then came in sight and firing five shots in the direction of
-the submarine, passed on her course, the submarine submerging. When
-the unknown steamer had disappeared, the submarine again came to the
-surface, and overtaking the boats in which the crew had taken refuge,
-hailed the one in charge of the Chief Officer, and after interrogating
-him, moved off in an easterly direction. Meanwhile, during the night,
-the little group of lifeboats became separated, meeting with various
-adventures but all except one ultimately reaching safety, their crews
-being landed as far apart as New York, Bermuda, Newport, and Nova
-Scotia. As in the case of the _Ausonia’s_ boats described in Chapter
-III, they underwent the severest hardships. The First Officer’s boat,
-for instance, after sailing all that day and through the night, sighted
-a steamer, but, though she showed signals of distress, received no
-reply. Toiling on, a barque, and another steamer, were sighted in the
-evening, but again the little boat was unsuccessful in attracting
-attention.
-
-[Illustration: THE “AURANIA” ASHORE AFTER BEING TORPEDOED]
-
-[Illustration: THE “IVERNIA” SETTLING DOWN. (Photographed against the
-sun from the rescuing trawler)]
-
-Fortunately, the weather up to then had remained favourable, and
-continued to do so through the next day, on which another ship was
-seen, but again failed to perceive the lifeboat’s dejected crew. Early
-on the following morning an empty boat was sighted, and found to be one
-of the _Dwinsk’s_ boats from which the crew had evidently been rescued.
-On this day the wind began to increase and by the evening a furious
-gale was raging. At six o’clock a great sea washed over the little
-boat, carrying one of its occupants overboard, and almost filling the
-boat with water. On the day after, a Sunday, the wind dropped again,
-and remained variable until the evening of the following Wednesday,
-when it again increased to such an extent that by midnight a fierce
-gale was once more blowing. On Thursday morning this died down, but it
-was not until half-past nine on Friday that a steamer which proved to
-be the _U.S.S. Arondo_ sighted the now almost famished crew and took
-them on board, clothed them, and provided them with medical attention.
-They had then been drifting about in every condition of the weather for
-no less than ten days, the highest ration allowed being one biscuit
-and a half glass of water per man per day, for the first six days,
-reduced on the ninth day to half a biscuit and a quarter of a glass of
-water. To the invincible optimism and seamanship of the First Officer,
-who himself steered the boat for the whole of the ten days, the crew
-unanimously announced afterwards that they considered the saving of
-their lives to be due.
-
-Of the other boats, one was at sea for eight days, three for three
-days, and one for a day and a half; one of them was never accounted
-for, probably having foundered in the storm, with the loss of 22 lives.
-
-It is pleasant to record that the First Officer Mr. Pritchard, as
-well as the boatswain’s mate, who was in charge of another boat, were
-specially commended in the _London Gazette_ for their great services.
-
-[Illustration: TORPEDOING OF THE “VOLODIA”]
-
-Nor must another incident in connection with the saving of the
-_Dwinsk’s_ lifeboats go unmentioned although the hero in this case
-was a gallant officer of the United States Navy, Lieutenant Ross P.
-Whitemarsh, who was one of the convoy officers to the _Dwinsk_ and
-went into No. 6 lifeboat with another American and nineteen British
-subjects. This boat experienced an extraordinary severe storm some
-four days afterwards, and Lieutenant Whitemarsh volunteered to take
-the tiller and remained on watch without a break throughout the night
-until five o’clock the next morning. One man was washed overboard and
-Lieutenant Whitemarsh then ordered the other occupants of the boat to
-lie down, two of them taking turns to hold on to this officer’s legs
-to prevent him, while at the tiller, from being carried away. For this
-Lieutenant Whitemarsh received from His Majesty the King, the Silver
-Medal for Gallantry in saving life at Sea.
-
-It was three years earlier and in a far distant sea that the _Caria_
-was sunk, while proceeding in ballast from Alexandria to Naples in
-charge of Captain J. A. Wolfe. In this case she was not torpedoed; the
-‘U’ boat after signalling to the _Caria_ to stop and abandon ship,
-fired some 10 shots at her, several of which struck her about the
-bows and the bridge. The _Caria_ was unarmed, and Captain Wolfe and
-his crew had accordingly no alternative than to abandon ship, having
-first destroyed all confidential papers. This was fortunate, since
-the submarine, hailing Captain Wolfe’s boat, ordered him alongside,
-and demanded the ship’s papers, which were given him. After 12 hours
-the crew of the _Caria_ were picked up by the _S.S. Frankenfels_,
-ironically enough a German prize vessel in the employ of the India
-Office, and landed at Malta. There were happily no casualties among the
-_Caria’s_ crew.
-
-In this respect the _Carpathia_, which was sunk on July 17th, 1918, was
-not so fortunate. Travelling in convoy, and at the time of the attack,
-some 120 miles west of the Fastnet, the escort had left some 3½ hours
-previously. Two torpedoes struck the _Carpathia_ within 30 seconds,
-one on the port side between No. 4 hold, and the stoke-hold, and the
-second, half a minute later, in the engine-room. After satisfying
-himself that there was no possibility of saving the ship, her
-commander, Captain W. Prothero, ordered everyone to the boats, and saw
-them safely embarked, a third torpedo striking the ship just after this
-was accomplished. Three trimmers and two firemen were unfortunately
-killed by the explosion, but the remaining 218 members of the crew,
-together with 57 passengers, were picked up by _H.M.S. Snowdrop_, and
-safely brought to Liverpool. A letter was afterwards received from
-the Admiralty in which the Lords Commissioners stated that in their
-opinion the discipline and organisation on board the _Carpathia_ had
-been of a very high order, and that Captain Prothero was to be publicly
-commended in the _London Gazette_ in recognition of his conduct in the
-crisis.
-
-[Illustration: THE “IVERNIA” SURVIVORS ARRIVING IN PORT]
-
-[Illustration: TROOPS LANDING FROM THE “MAURETANIA”; TWO DAYS LATER
-THEY WERE AT SUVLA BAY]
-
-It was on May 5th, 1917, at 7.30 p.m., while _en route_ to Avonmouth
-from New York, that the _Feltria_ was torpedoed without warning about
-eight miles south-east of Mine Head off the Irish coast. A very heavy
-sea was running at the time. No 1 boat was capsized during launching,
-and No. 4 boat blown to pieces by the explosion of the torpedo. Boats
-Nos. 2, 3, 5, and 6 were successful in clearing the ship’s side.
-Most of the crew were in boats Nos. 3 and 5, the captain and chief
-steward being alone in No. 2 boat, which had also been damaged by the
-explosion. The last boat away, No. 6, contained the Chief Officer,
-Second Officer, Purser, and three sailors, and it was this boat that
-the submarine, coming to the surface, ordered alongside. Having
-obtained particulars as to the _Feltria_ and her cargo, she then left
-but stopped to pick up Mr. Stott, one of the _Feltria’s_ engineers,
-and returned towards the lifeboat. From her deck, he was then assisted
-into the water. The _Feltria’s_ Quartermaster, Mr. Burt, with great
-courage, jumped into the water to meet him, and helped him to the
-boat’s side, where he was taken on board in a very exhausted condition,
-while huge breakers were washing over the little boat itself. Of the
-boat containing the Captain, Captain W. G. Price, and Chief Steward,
-nothing more was seen, their lives being lost, and by midnight, three
-other members of the _Feltria’s_ crew in No. 6 boat had died from
-exposure and exhaustion, one of the victims being Mr. Stott himself.
-The remaining five in this boat were picked up early on Sunday morning
-by the _S.S. Ridley_ and landed at Barrow; twenty other survivors were
-landed at Queenstown; but out of a crew of 69 no less than 44 lost
-their lives, 17 dying from exposure in the lifeboats.
-
-The _Flavia_ was the more fortunate in that the whole of her crew was
-saved, when early on the morning of August 24th, 1918, she was sunk
-off the Irish coast while on a voyage from Montreal to Bristol. Her
-commander, Captain E. T. C. Fear, had been below resting at the time,
-but the Officer in charge had kept the situation well in hand, and
-_H.M.S. Convolvulus_, standing by, picked up the survivors from the
-boats, landing them safely in Ardrossan.
-
-[Illustration: THE “DWINSK” SETTLING DOWN AFTER BEING TORPEDOED]
-
-[Illustration: SURVIVORS FROM THE “DWINSK” AFTER EIGHT DAYS IN THE
-LIFEBOAT]
-
-The next loss to be recorded is that of the _Folia_, Captain Francis
-Inch, which was sunk on Sunday, March 11th, 1917, at a quarter past
-seven in the morning, off the Irish coast, while on a voyage from
-New York to Bristol. The periscope of the attacking submarine was
-first sighted by the Third Officer some 500 feet away and nearly
-abeam. Immediately afterwards, he saw a torpedo approaching the ship,
-two of her boats being smashed in the explosion which followed, and
-the _Folia_ herself beginning rapidly to settle. Seven of the crew,
-including the Second Engineer, were killed by the explosion, but the
-rest of the officers and men were safely embarked in the four boats
-which were lowered.
-
-While the lifeboats were still in the neighbourhood, the submarine
-came to the surface, steamed round the ship and fired four shots into
-her, following this up with a second torpedo. The Captain then got
-his boats together and instructed the officers in charge to steer
-N.W. by compass, three of them making fast by painters so as not to
-get adrift from each other. About 11 a.m., the Captain, under the fog
-that had crept up, sighted breakers ahead, and told the other boats to
-follow in line behind him. Creeping along the edge of the breakers,
-they at last sighted smooth water at the base of some cliffs, and,
-pulling into shore, noticed the outline of a house high above them,
-with people standing in front of it. Shouting in unison, the crew
-succeeded in attracting attention and learned that the place was
-Ardmore, Youghal, Co. Cork, and from there they proceeded to Dungarvan,
-where they arrived at 8 o’clock in the evening, the inhabitants of both
-places treating the shipwrecked officers and crew with the greatest
-hospitality.
-
-[Illustration: THE “MAURETANIA” LEAVING SOUTHAMPTON WITH HOMEWARD-BOUND
-CANADIAN TROOPS]
-
-In all these cases the vessels attacked were either unarmed or so
-taken by surprise that no resistance was possible. But in the case of
-the _Lycia_, Captain T. A. Chesters, which was sunk on February 11th,
-1917, a most plucky action against odds was fought. It was nearly
-half-past eight in the morning, and about 20 miles north-west of the
-South Bishop’s Light, that the submarine was sighted, and by the time
-Captain Chesters had picked her up on the starboard beam, his
-vessel had already been struck by a shot from her. Captain Chesters
-immediately altered the _Lycia’s_ course so as to place the submarine
-astern, and himself opened fire at about 3,000 yards. His gun, which
-was of Russian make and of a very light type, was one of the first
-supplied to merchant ships under the Admiralty scheme, when there was
-a great shortage of armaments owing to the needs of the Army and Navy,
-and it misfired several times; the Third Officer, Third Engineer, and
-Steersman had been already wounded by the fire of the submarine.
-
-In the unequal duel that now ensued, the _Lycia’s_ funnel, starboard
-boats, forward cabin, chart room, officers’ and engineers’ quarters and
-bridge were all wrecked, and being unable to steer the ship under the
-growing force and accuracy of the enemy’s shells, Captain Chesters at
-last had no alternative but to abandon his vessel. He, therefore, gave
-orders to cease firing and stop the engines. As soon as the ship had
-sufficiently lost way, the crew was safely embarked in the port boat,
-with the exception of the Captain, Chief Officer, Third Engineer, the
-Gunner, and one of the boys, who succeeded in scrambling into the
-starboard boat which was dragging alongside.
-
-When the lifeboats cleared the ship, the submarine herself ceased
-firing, submerged, and re-appeared alongside Captain Chesters’ boat.
-The submarine commander then ordered Captain Chesters to go on board,
-which he did, and where, by what, alas, proved to be a rare exception,
-he was very courteously treated. The commander of the submarine then
-put three of his crew into the boat together with eight bombs, sent her
-back to the _Lycia_, and there the Germans hung the bombs on each side
-of the rigging, and in the engine-room. The ship’s papers, the breech
-plug of her gun, her telescopes and three cartridges, were lowered
-into the boat, after which the bomb safety pins were removed, and the
-bombs placed below the water-line. The boat was then ordered back to
-the submarine. Meanwhile, Captain Chesters had been asked by the ‘U’
-boat’s commander why he had fired his gun without flying his Ensign.
-Captain Chesters pointed out to him that before he could fire the gun,
-he had to remove the flagstaff; and he was then allowed to return to
-his boat, the bombs, a few minutes afterwards beginning to explode.
-The submarine then went in chase of another vessel that had appeared
-on the horizon, and shortly afterwards the _Lycia_ sank, stern first.
-Her boats were picked up the same evening by two mine-sweepers, and the
-_S.S. Ireland Moor_, the crew being treated with the utmost hospitality
-and safely landed at Holyhead. Their conduct had been worthy in Captain
-Chesters’ words “of all the traditions of British seamen.”
-
-Happily it now becomes possible to record an equally gallant fight on
-the part of one of the Cunard Company’s vessels, with a successful
-issue. This was fought by one of the Mediterranean cargo boats, the
-_Phrygia_, a vessel of 3,350 tons, with a speed of not more than 9
-knots. It was at 2 p.m. on March 24th, 1916, when she was homeward
-bound and off the south-west coast of Ireland, that a submarine,
-whom she had not previously seen, fired two shots at her, probably
-with the intention of bringing her to a stop. The skipper, Captain
-F. Manley, immediately ordered his helm hard aport and the crew to
-go to “general stations.” There was a big sea running at the time,
-and this was fortunate, since the submarine, on divining Captain
-Manley’s intentions, had continued to fire at the _Phrygia_. None of
-her shells, however, struck the steamer. Captain Manley then succeeded
-in manoeuvring his ship so as to bring the submarine astern, when
-he opened fire, and there then began a duel lasting for 45 minutes,
-during the whole of which time, both the submarine and the _Phrygia_
-fired continuously at one another under the most adverse conditions.
-Then at last one of the _Phrygia’s_ shells found its mark; a great
-rush of smoke poured up from the submarine; her stern suddenly jumped
-out of the water; and she disappeared, amongst the loud cheers of the
-_Phrygia’s_ crew.
-
-In connexion with this incident, the following resolution was passed
-by the Directors of the Cunard Company at a meeting of the Board in
-April, 1916. “That the Company place on record their high appreciation
-of the gallant and successful efforts made by the Captain, Officers,
-and crew of the _Phrygia_ to save their vessel, and of the efficient
-preparations made beforehand by Captain Manley to deal with such an
-emergency, which contributed towards this result, and finally extend
-their heartiest congratulations to all concerned upon the splendid
-gunnery and seamanship which put the enemy submarine out of action.”
-Captain Manley and the _Phrygia’s_ crew also received recognition from
-the Admiralty for their achievement.
-
-[Illustration: “FATHER NEPTUNE” CARED LITTLE FOR THE PREYING SUBMARINES]
-
-[Illustration: AN ARMED CRUISER’S RANGEFINDER]
-
-It was on March 27th, 1917, at 8 o’clock in the evening, that the
-_Thracia_, Captain R. Nicholas, while on a voyage with ore from Bilbao
-to Ardrossan, was sunk at sight and without warning, leaving only one
-survivor. Disappearing in one minute, those on board were left with no
-possible chance of saving their lives, and it was only by a miracle
-that Cadet Douglas Duff, a boy of 16 years of age, was left to tell the
-tale. He succeeded in saving his life by clinging for sixteen hours
-to the keel of a capsized boat, during the early part of which time,
-he was seen and jeered at by the crew of the submarine. One of them
-indeed raised a rifle and aimed at him, whereupon he shouted, perhaps
-characteristically of the service to which he belonged “Shoot and be
-damned to you.” He was ultimately rescued by a French destroyer and
-landed at La Palais, Belle-ile-en-Mer. The body of the Chief Officer
-was also recovered, and it is touching to reflect that, as a mark of
-their respect and honour to the personnel of the British Mercantile
-Marine, a public funeral was accorded to him by the inhabitants of this
-little French seaport town.
-
-Before her loss, however, the _Thracia_ had performed, like all the
-vessels mentioned, most arduous and important duties, and one of her
-voyages, since it throws a sidelight upon the multifarious activities
-of the Company during the war, deserves special mention. She was then
-under the command of Captain Michael Doyle, and it was on the 27th of
-December 1914, that she left Liverpool for Archangel with stores for
-the Russian Government. All the way to the North Cape, she steamed in
-the teeth of heavy gales, and under stormy skies, and at this point,
-at this season of the year, entered a region where there was but one
-hour’s so-called daylight in the twenty-four. Entering the White Sea,
-on the night of the 7th of January, she ran the next day into an
-icefield, reaching out ahead of her as far as the eye could see. In the
-hope of breaking through to clear water, Captain Doyle, however, kept
-her going until, the ice becoming thicker and closer packed, it became
-impossible for the _Thracia’s_ engines to drive her through.
-
-[Illustration: THE “THRACIA” FAST: CAUGHT IN THE ICE IN THE WHITE SEA]
-
-After prolonged and arduous exertions, the _Thracia_ was at last
-extracted from her dangerous position in the ice and brought back to
-the open water harbour at Alexandrovsk. From this port, accompanied by
-an ice-breaker, she again made an attempt to reach Archangel on January
-24th, 1915. Heavy field-ice was once more encountered as soon as the
-White Sea had been entered, causing the utmost difficulty in steering,
-and reducing progress to the slowest limits. After covering, with much
-perseverance, a certain distance, huge floes of ice finally stopped
-the _Thracia’s_ progress; the ice-breaker was also in difficulties,
-and therefore unable to render any assistance. For a considerable time
-the _Thracia_ remained wedged in the drifting ice, and meanwhile a
-heavy north-east gale had packed the entrance to the White Sea. The
-action of this wind, however, presently opened the ice in the immediate
-neighbourhood of the vessel, and a certain amount of further progress
-towards the south became possible. Here, however, the ice was found to
-be once more heavily packed, while the north-east gale was choking the
-entrance with ever more and more drifting floes.
-
-The _Thracia’s_ propeller had by this time become badly damaged, and
-the ice-breaker herself was finding it all she could do to secure her
-own safety. It was now clear that to remain in the drifting ice would
-be bound in the long run to prove fatal, and thereupon Captain Doyle
-made an effort to drive his vessel close to the land ice, where some
-degree of shelter might be found from the gales which were constantly
-driving enormous floes up and down with the ebb and flow of the tides
-through the narrow neck of the White Sea.
-
-After many days and nights of the heaviest and most unremitting toil,
-the _Thracia_ was finally brought close to land, and a net-work of
-cables and ropes thrown out to secure her position there. For seven
-weeks, until the 18th of March, she was held here, during the whole
-of which time she was being submitted to the severest pressure owing
-to the alternating flow and ebb of the tides driving the packed ice
-against her side, under her bottom, and piling it up round her counter
-to a height of as much as 20 ft. Serious damage was done to her hull,
-and for three months her pumps had to be kept going constantly in order
-to keep her afloat, while the greatest skill and ingenuity had to be
-exercised in order to protect her rudder from the ice pressure under
-her counter.
-
-[Illustration: THE “AQUITANIA,” HAVING ESCAPED THE FATE OF SO MANY OF
-HER SISTERS, REAPPEARS IN THE MERSEY IN HER PEACE-TIME GUISE]
-
-So matters went on until the night of the 18th of March, when, owing to
-heavy off-shore gales, the _Thracia_ broke adrift, her anchors, cables,
-and ropes being lost and her windlass broken. Fortunately, a few days
-later, the ice began to open here and there, and with the courageous
-assistance of another vessel, and under her own steam, she succeeded
-at last in reaching a position inside the bar of the Archangel river
-on April 9th, when her cargo was landed in good condition on the
-stationary river ice and conveyed by sleighs to Archangel.
-
-Her troubles, however, were not yet over, for within less than three
-weeks, the river ice itself began to break, and the outgoing stream,
-carrying this broken ice to sea, drove the _Thracia_ on to the Bar. Her
-propeller blades were now reduced to the merest stumps, but in spite
-of this, she succeeded, at high water, in working herself free again
-by her own exertions. Obtaining ground tackle from another ship, which
-had come down from Archangel at the first break-up of the ice, the
-_Thracia_ was enabled to come to anchorage in the gulf, and here she
-remained for about a week until the Dwina river was finally cleared
-of ice. She then proceeded slowly up river to the town itself, where
-she arrived on May 9th. So great had been the damage sustained by her,
-that she was then dry-docked for the necessary repairs to enable her to
-return to England; and when she at last arrived home, about the middle
-of August, 1915, it was not until her voyage had lasted some seven and
-a half months.
-
-After this diversion, let us return to the record of the war
-experiences of other Cunarders. It was on March 30th, 1917, that the
-_Valacia_, Captain J. F. Simpson, left London for New York, and it
-was at 5.30 the next evening that she was struck on the port side by
-a torpedo, when in the English Channel off the Eddystone Lighthouse.
-An attempt was made by one of the torpedo boats, of which several
-happened to be in the neighbourhood, to tow the _Valacia_, whose No. 6
-hold, engine-room, and stoke-hold were all full of water. She proved
-too heavy, however, and tugs were accordingly sent from the shore, the
-Admiralty officials intending to try and beach the ship. Although a
-heavy gale was blowing at the time, Captain Simpson, in view of the
-fact that the bulkheads were holding, strongly advised that this
-course should not be pursued, but that an attempt should be made to
-tow the _Valacia_ into Plymouth Harbour. This advice was taken, and as
-it proved with complete success, the _Valacia_ being taken safely into
-Plymouth Harbour, where she was subsequently docked for repairs, and
-whence she was enabled, within a few months, to take her place again in
-the Company’s fleet, and do much useful service.
-
-[Illustration: “AQUITANIA” AS HOSPITAL SHIP]
-
-The hole in the ship’s side caused by the explosion of the torpedo was
-no less than 25 feet long by 20 feet deep, and the greatest credit
-is due to Captain Simpson for his splendid judgment and seamanship
-in bringing the vessel safely into port, and saving her both for the
-country and the Company.
-
-To the _Valeria_, under the command of Captain W. Stewart, fell the
-good fortune to destroy a German submarine on June 20th, 1917, while
-nearing the end of a voyage from New York. It was at 3 o’clock in the
-afternoon that both Captain Stewart, who was on the port side of the
-bridge, and the Second Officer who was on the starboard side, felt the
-ship quiver as if she had struck something. The Captain immediately
-crossed the bridge and saw that the object hit was an enemy submarine,
-the working of her motors being distinctly audible. For a moment
-the _Valeria’s_ gun crew were taken aback at this most unexpected
-appearance at such close quarters to the vessel. Captain Stewart,
-however, gave prompt orders to fire and the gunners depressing the gun
-as far as possible, immediately obeyed.
-
-A volume of vapour was then seen to rise up from the ‘U’ boat, together
-with fountain-like spouts of water. A second shot was fired, falling
-short, but the third struck the submarine fair and square, at the base
-of her conning tower, and caused her to sink. It is believed that
-the _Valeria_, when she first came into contact with the submarine,
-probably broke her periscope. Captain Stewart’s first impulse was to
-turn back in order to pick up any survivors, but in view of the fact
-that German submarines were at this time usually hunting in couples he
-thought it wiser to continue his voyage, and brought his ship safely
-back into Liverpool. For this successful action, both Captain Stewart
-and the crew received special awards from the Admiralty, the Cunard
-Company, and other Associations, the destruction of the German
-submarine being later verified by Admiralty trawlers.
-
-[Illustration: OFFICERS OF THE TORPEDOED “FRANCONIA”]
-
-[Illustration: A CUNARD CREW BUYING WAR SAVINGS CERTIFICATES]
-
-It was perhaps not an unexpected fact, but it was one, nevertheless,
-of which the whole nation may well be proud, that the rescued officers
-and crews of these torpedoed vessels, never for a moment hesitated, and
-indeed were anxious, as soon as possible, to render further service
-in other vessels. An example of this occurred when the _Vandalia_
-was torpedoed on June 9th, 1918, her commander, Captain J. A. Wolfe,
-having already, as has been seen, had a previous vessel, the _Caria_,
-torpedoed beneath him in the Mediterranean. The _Vandalia_ was in a
-convoy accompanied by six American destroyers, and though she settled
-down rapidly and was lost within less than two hours, no lives were
-lost.
-
-The _Veria_, Captain D. P. Thomson, was sunk on December 7th, 1915,
-in the Mediterranean, having left Patras in ballast for Alexandria on
-the 3rd. At noon on the same day, when about 50 miles from Alexandria,
-she had sighted two lifeboats containing the crew of a Greek steamer,
-the _Goulandris_ which had been sunk by a submarine, and at half-past
-four in the afternoon, it was probably the same submarine that was
-sighted approaching the _Veria_ at high speed from a distance of about
-eight miles. Almost at once the ‘U’ boat opened fire, dropping a shell
-about 20 feet ahead of the _Veria_, when Captain Thomson, having no
-alternative, stopped his ship and ordered the crew to muster at the
-boats. On a second shell dropping closer to the vessel, Captain Thomson
-ordered the crew to take to the boats; the submarine continued to fire
-as she approached, one of her shells destroying the chart house and
-the bridge, just as the boats were leaving the vessel’s side. Captain
-Thomson had already destroyed the confidential papers, and all that the
-German commander obtained, was the ship’s register. It was at 9.15 p.m.
-that the _Veria_ sank, her boats being not interfered with and arriving
-at Alexandria next morning, in safety.
-
-[Illustration: ONE OF THE AMERICAN HOWITZERS ASSEMBLED AT THE CUNARD
-WORKS]
-
-[Illustration: THE “AQUITANIA’S” CHAPEL]
-
-The next vessel to claim our attention is the _Vinovia_, and high
-as was the standard set by, and expected of the Cunard Company’s
-commanders, there were few instances of greater coolness and bravery
-than that of her skipper, Captain Stephen Gronow, when she was
-torpedoed in the English Channel on the 19th of December, 1917. She
-was then on her way from New York with a Chinese crew, and it was
-at half-past three in the afternoon that the torpedo struck her on the
-starboard side. As the _Vinovia_ did not at first appear to be sinking
-Captain Gronow ordered his engines full speed ahead, and made a gallant
-endeavour to reach the land. At 4 p.m. a small tug came on the scene
-and made fast to the _Vinovia_, after some of her crew had left the
-ship on one of the lifeboats. A patrol boat then came alongside, and
-the remainder of the crew jumped aboard her. For the next three hours
-Captain Gronow, the only man left on his sinking vessel, steered her
-by means of the hand gear. At seven o’clock in the evening a drifter
-approached and the Chief Engineer returned on board to assist his
-Captain in making a rope fast, and then returned to the patrol boat. It
-was now quite dark, but Captain Gronow, sticking to his forlorn hope,
-remained alone on board the _Vinovia_, and continued to steer her and
-attend to the ropes. By half-past seven, he noticed that she appeared
-to be making no headway, and groping forward by means of the rails,
-he found the forecastle deck already submerged four feet. He also
-discovered that the tug had slipped the wire. In making his way back
-again, he was so severely struck by a piece of wreckage that for a time
-he remained unconscious.
-
-On recovering he made his way to the bridge and put on a life-jacket.
-Here he remained until, at eight o’clock, five miles from land and in
-pitch darkness, the _Vinovia_ sank under his feet, and he was thrown
-into the water. He succeeded however, in supporting himself on some
-wreckage, to which as it happened the ship’s bell was attached; and it
-was this little fact that in the end proved his salvation. Attracted by
-the ringing of the bell, a small patrol boat the next morning decided
-to investigate the wreckage, and there Captain Gronow was found lying
-unconscious. Unhappily his vessel, with her valuable cargo, of 9,000
-tons was lost, but in endeavouring to save the _Vinovia_, Captain
-Gronow had provided yet another illustrious example for his successors
-at sea, and happily survived to receive from the Cunard Directors a
-handsome inscribed silver vase, together with a certificate, a silver
-medal and a monetary gift from Lloyds.
-
-[Illustration: CUNARD NATIONAL AEROPLANE FACTORY]
-
-Twice it has been our duty to record the torpedoing of vessels under
-the command of the gallant Captain J. A. Wolfe, but he underwent
-this ordeal three times. He was in command of the _Volodia_ on the
-21st of August, 1917, when, at half-past seven in the morning she was
-torpedoed and sunk some 300 miles from land. As was usual, there had
-been no warning, and the _Volodia_ was struck amidships, several of
-her engine-room crew, mostly Chinamen, being killed by the explosion.
-In addition, before she sank, the _Volodia_ was also shelled by the
-attacking submarine. Captain Wolfe, with the survivors of the crew,
-had, however, succeeded before this in getting away in three boats, in
-charge respectively of Captain Wolfe himself, the Chief Officer, and
-the Second Officer, and these boats were chased by the submarine. On
-catching up with the Second Officer’s boat, the submarine commander
-enquired for the Captain. He was told by the Second Officer that
-his last sight of Captain Wolfe was on the bridge of the torpedoed
-vessel. The Second Officer was then taken on board the submarine and
-questioned, but was subsequently allowed to return to his boat.
-
-Captain Wolfe then gave sailing directions, and the three boats kept
-together until nightfall, by which time the wind had increased to the
-violence of a gale. During the night the three boats became separated,
-and it was only the magnificent seamanship of Captain Wolfe and the
-two other Officers, together with the splendid endurance and courage
-of the crews, that succeeded in bringing any of them to safety. For
-three days they were adrift in the open Atlantic, rations being reduced
-to one biscuit and one dipper of water a day. The Captain and Chief
-Engineer were actually on one occasion washed out of their little boat.
-It was in the Captain’s boat that the sea-anchors and rudders were
-carried away, and Captain Wolfe then improvised a sea-anchor out of
-some canvass, sewing it with his penknife and rope-yarn, and putting in
-it the last three remaining seven-pound tins of meat, the only articles
-of weight left in the boat. This contrivance he lashed to the broken
-rudder, and by this means was enabled to weather the breaking seas. How
-well to the course the vessel was kept can be gathered from the fact
-that when she was picked up by a destroyer, she was within 30 miles of
-the Lizard, having sailed 300 miles without seeing a ship. Both the
-other boats had similar adventures, but both were at last found and
-their exhausted and almost helpless crews brought safely to land.
-
-Thus ends a record, perhaps equalled, but certainly not excelled, by
-any other of the great Mercantile Marine Companies, upon whose unsung
-exertions our success both on land and sea was primarily founded.
-The list which appears on the next page, in tabular form, summarises
-in brief the losses sustained by the Cunard Company during this, the
-severest ordeal, that any maritime nation has ever undergone.
-
-From this it will be seen that vessels amounting to over 205,000
-gross tonnage were lost by the Company, and this does not include the
-_Campania_, which had just passed from the Company’s service, or two
-further losses, that of the _Ascania_ and the _Valeria_, which were
-wrecked by stranding during 1918, and which added to the total another
-14,985 tons. In all, more than 56 per cent. of the Company’s gross
-tonnage was sacrificed in the performance of services of the highest
-importance to the nation in the hour of its greatest jeopardy.
-
- +-------------------------+--------+--------+--------------+
- | NAME OF SHIP. |Tonnage | Total | Date Lost. |
- | |(Gross).|Tonnage.| |
- +-------------------------+--------+--------+--------------+
- |LUSITANIA | 30,395 | | 7 May 1915. |
- |CARIA | 3,032 | | 6 Nov. ” |
- |VERIA | 3,228 | 36,655 | Dec. ” |
- +-------------------------+--------+--------+--------------+
- |FRANCONIA | 18,149 | | 4 Oct. 1916. |
- |ALAUNIA | 13,404 | 31,553 |19 ” ” |
- +-------------------------+--------+--------+--------------+
- |IVERNIA | 14,278 | | 1 Jan. 1917. |
- |LYCIA | 2,715 | |11 Feb. ” |
- |LACONIA | 18,098 | |25 ” ” |
- |FOLIA | 6,704 | |11 Mar. ” |
- |THRACIA | 2,891 | |17 ” ” |
- |VALACIA (towed into port)| 6,526 | | 1 Apl. ” |
- |FELTRIA | 5,253 | | 5 May ” |
- |AUSONIA (towed into port | 8,152 | |11 June ” |
- | but sunk the following | | | |
- | year) | | | |
- |ULTONIA | 10,402 | |27 ” ” |
- |VOLODIA | 5,689 | |21 Aug. ” |
- |VINOVIA | 5,503 | 71,533 |19 Dec. ” |
- +-------------------------+--------+--------+--------------+
- |ANDANIA | 13,404 | |27 Jan. 1918. |
- |AURANIA | 13,936 | | 4 Feb. ” |
- |AUSONIA | 8,152 | |30 May ” |
- |VANDALIA | 7,333 | | 9 June ” |
- |CARPATHIA | 13,603 | |17 July ” |
- |FLAVIA | 9,291 | |24 Aug. ” |
- |CAMPANIA (turned into | 12,884 | 78,603 | Nov. ” |
- | seaplane carrier) | | | |
- +-------------------------+--------+--------+--------------+
-
-[Illustration: INTERIOR OF THE AEROPLANE FACTORY (i)]
-
-[Illustration: INTERIOR OF THE AEROPLANE FACTORY (ii)]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-Shore Work for the Services
-
- _Here stand we; naught else can we do!
- Take us, all that we have, all we are!
- We bide by the issue with you,
- And this is our war!_
-
- MARGARETTA BYRDE.
-
-
-Enough, perhaps, has already been written to show how intimately
-the Cunard Company was bound up with every phase, not only of our
-mercantile, but our naval effort at sea; how its long experience of
-maritime organisation, placed unreservedly at the country’s disposal,
-became an asset in the hands of the Government of almost incalculable
-importance, and how, in the course of its everyday unadvertised duties,
-it lost more than half its tonnage. It was not only at sea, however,
-and not wholly in connection with the problems of transport that the
-Cunard Company rendered such yeoman service.
-
-The possessors of highly efficient repairing shops, engine works,
-furnishing departments, and laundries, these also were at once
-mobilised at the outbreak of war, and put to the most various and vital
-purposes.
-
-Some of these, of course, were congruous with its useful efforts as a
-marine concern. Thus, amongst much other work of a similar nature, we
-find, for instance, that H.S. Sloops _Buttercup_ and _Gladiolus_ were
-refitted, their engines over-hauled, and their hull and deck plating
-repaired, while they were also provided with hydraulic release triggers
-in order to enable depth charges to be released from the bridge.
-
-H.M. ships _Riviera_ and _Empress_ were fitted out as sea-plane
-carriers by the Company at Liverpool. The after-decks of both vessels
-were stripped and hangars, capable of accommodating about six
-sea-planes, were built on them. A mechanics’ repair shop was also
-installed and special cranes, for lifting sea-planes out of the water,
-were fitted.
-
-[Illustration: INTERIOR OF THE AEROPLANE FACTORY (iii)]
-
-[Illustration: RUSSIAN REFUGEES ON THE “PHRYGIA” IN THE BLACK SEA,
-SPRING, 1919]
-
-The _Campania_, converted as we have seen into a sea-plane carrier, was
-refitted in 1916, a thorough overhaul being carried out, including the
-fitting of a new crank shaft, and the examination of, and repairs to,
-her hull and engines. In 1917, H.M.S. _Scotia_, the well-known Holyhead
-mail boat of the London and North Western Railway, was reconditioned,
-after having been in Admiralty employment, and all necessary repairs
-carried out in respect of her hull and engines. H.M.S. _Berwick_ was
-also partially refitted in the same year. No less than 3,200 Plunger
-control valve keys and retarding rams for 12-pound and naval guns
-were made at the Company’s works; and a large amount of work was also
-undertaken in connection with the fitting of submarines and mines.
-
-This included, as regarded submarines, the provision of 520 Oilers for
-exhaust valve boxes, 40 tail-end shafts, 20 complete thrust blocks,
-and the machining and complete fitting of four tail-end intermediate
-shafts. At the same time 456 save-alls for oil fuel were designed and
-provided--the pattern of these save-alls being afterwards adopted as
-the standard pattern for the Navy. Nineteen thousand, eight hundred
-manganese bronze spindles for mines were turned out, as well as 1,000
-mine mechanism plates. When the Admiralty decided to fit naval and
-merchant ships with the paravane contrivance, as a protection against
-mines, the Cunard Company manufactured for them 5,728 sets of wires for
-this gear. All this work was, of course, carried out in addition to the
-ordinary routine of overhauling the Company’s own fleet.
-
-This sort of work, however, valuable as it was, was perhaps only to
-be expected of a large marine Company, so efficiently organised for
-many years as the Cunard Company had been. But in addition, a large
-amount of work was done for the armies in the Company’s workshops,
-much of which required the highest degree of accuracy and extremely
-skilled workmanship. One of the most important of such contracts was
-the assembling of the 9·2 American Howitzer Equipment. These enormous
-guns were shipped from the United States in parts, and the work of
-completing, assembling, carrying out modifications in design, and
-getting them ready for use in France, was done entirely in the Cunard
-Works. Eighty-four of these equipments were dealt with, and, in
-addition, 100 carriages and limbers and brake gear, which were a part
-and parcel of the equipment, were manufactured. Owing to the fact that
-the firing beams, which were received from the United States, were
-found in practice to be insufficiently strong, the Company undertook
-the stripping and re-inforcing of 73 sets of these.
-
-[Illustration: ONE OF THE ROOMS IN THE CUNARD SHELL WORKS]
-
-[Illustration: A RECORD OF “STRIKING” VALUE]
-
-In the critical month of March, 1918, when the Allied armies were
-retreating on the Western Front, and it was clear that the crucial
-point of the war was imminent, the Ministry of Munitions sent out
-urgent appeals to all Munition Works. During the great retreat,
-although many of the actual guns were saved, there was no time to
-attempt to bring away the gun beds, and in consequence many of the
-larger calibre weapons were thus rendered useless. The Cunard Company
-was then asked to undertake to supply one hundred sets in as short a
-time as possible. Realising the urgency of the position, the Company
-succeeded in engaging the assistance of several outside firms, who
-carried out part of the work under Cunard supervision, with the amazing
-result that no less than 146 sets were finished and delivered complete
-within a fortnight.
-
-But for the unremitting attention of the Company’s officials and the
-high degree of organisation that had been attained, such a result
-would, of course, have been wholly impossible. The separate items
-manufactured by outside firms were all received and distributed from
-the Company’s Gun Department a special chart of progress being kept
-for the purpose. For this great achievement the Company received a
-special letter of congratulation from the Ministry of Munitions, which
-in their turn they passed on to their men, who had so magnificently
-responded to the calls of their country in the crisis, and also to the
-firms who had rendered such able assistance.
-
-Another very large contract, carried out by the Cunard Company, was
-the manufacture of artillery wheels. This work was distributed between
-the Company’s various establishments, the metal work being done by the
-Cunard’s Engine Works, and the wood work at the Furnishing Departments
-in Liverpool and London; in order to provide the necessary material,
-the Company’s timber experts had to make enormous purchases, not only
-having to buy complete cargoes, but in many instances, having to buy
-the timber before the trees were felled, and it cannot be denied that
-the Government was extremely fortunate in having the advantage of their
-great experience and wise advice. The metal parts provided consisted
-of pipe boxes, nots and naves, all of these being made of manganese
-bronze as required by the War Office, and the tyres--the wooden parts
-of the wheels being the spokes and felloes. Eleven hundred complete
-artillery wheels were thus made, as well as 1,400 sand tyres--a sand
-tyre being a contrivance fitted to the rim of the gun wheel in order
-to prevent it sinking into mud or sand. The reconstruction of damaged
-wheels was undertaken for the War Office by the Cunard Company’s London
-works and more than 8,000 wheels were dealt with in this manner.
-
-[Illustration: “CAMPANIA” AS SEAPLANE SHIP]
-
-It is impossible to give a detailed account of the whole of the work
-of this nature carried out by the Cunard Company, but a general idea
-can be obtained from the following list of some of the most important
-contracts carried out at Liverpool.
-
- 60 Loading trays for 6 in. shells. These are the trays
- which guide the shell into the breech of the gun.
-
- 1,200 Dial sight adaptors--to render sights adaptable for
- guns of different calibres.
-
- 12,000 Copper and leather washers for }
- recuperating gear; and } This recuperating gear
- } is the mechanism
- 12,000 Manganese Bronze Rings for } used to bring the
- supporting packing leathers } gun into firing position
- in recuperating gear attached } again after recoil.
- to 6 in. Howitzers. }
-
- 5,340 Actuating Nuts and Screws for Brake gear for 13 and
- 18 pounder Field Guns.
-
- 250 Sets of Cables for electing firing gear. This is the gear
- attached to 6 in. and 92 in. guns, to enable them
- to be fired by electricity.
-
- 24 Battery Boxes in connection with above.
-
- 500 Sets Rings and Discs protecting obturator. This is a
- contrivance in the breech of a gun to prevent
- the escape of the gases generated in firing.
-
- 35 Steel Crankshafts for the Motor Boats which were used
- for chasing submarines.
-
- 36 Magazine Barrows for transporting heavy shells from
- Magazine to Guns on board H.M. Ships.
-
- 160 Breech Rings for 18 pounder guns.
-
- 100 Clamp Bearings.
-
- 14,912 Shell Nose adaptors for correcting the thread in end
- of shell.
-
- 20,300 Dummy Shells for 18 pounder Guns. These were used
- in training new troops to handle guns and shells.
- To complete this contract in 1915 the Cunard
- Company bought all the mangle rollers that could
- be obtained and converted them into dummy shells.
-
-The Company’s Laundry, which before the war dealt with all the Linen,
-etc., from the Company’s steamers, was able during the last few years
-to assist many of the Military Hospitals and other institutions in
-the district by undertaking their Laundry work; at the same time, of
-course, they did whatever work was required for the Company’s ships and
-those under their management, whether acting as troop ships or hospital
-ships.
-
-[Illustration: A HOSPITAL WARD IN THE LOUNGE OF THE “MAURETANIA”]
-
-Nor did these activities exhaust the long list of the Cunard Company’s
-manifold contributions to the Nation’s improvised war industries.
-In 1916, realising the urgent need for aeroplanes, the Company’s
-Directors made certain suggestions to the Government, and placed their
-services at the Government’s disposal in this connexion. After some
-months consideration a definite scheme was formulated in July, 1917,
-providing for the erection of a factory at the Government’s expense,
-to be under the supervision of the Cunard Company, who would act as
-Managers under the Direction of the Ministry of Munitions. A site was
-selected near the race course at Aintree, the first sod was removed on
-the 4th October, 1917, and within less than nine months the factory
-was completed, many of the shops having been working at full pressure
-very much earlier than this. Although the Cunard Company had had no
-experience of aircraft work, and could not, of course, spare sufficient
-staff to man the factory, the arrangement of the various shops, and
-the selection of the machinery to be installed rested in their hands,
-and a certain number of the Company’s own officials were subsequently
-employed there.
-
-Even under normal conditions, the construction and fitting out of
-this the largest aeroplane factory in the country would have been a
-herculean task, but in war time, with the resultant difficulties to
-be encountered in obtaining the necessary material, the undertaking
-might well have baffled even the most enterprising brains. That it was
-accomplished at all is, perhaps, the best proof of the enormous reserve
-of initiative and capability that had been accumulated by the Company
-during the long years of its previous expansion; and some idea of what
-was achieved can perhaps be more easily obtained when it is remembered
-that the largest shop measured not less than 700 by 500 feet, and that
-there were several other shops each of which were about half this size;
-that for the necessary electrical power a cable had to be laid for a
-distance of six miles from the Lister Drive generating station; that,
-the local water and gas supply being totally inadequate, a supply well
-had to be sunk to a depth of 370 feet, thus providing the factory’s own
-water supply; that a special gas main had to be laid for a considerable
-distance; that a new siding from the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway
-had to be constructed, the line running right into the factory’s
-grounds; that the machinery and equipment had to be assembled not only
-from every part of the United Kingdom, but from the United States of
-America; that several of the most essential machines, which had been
-specially made, were lost in transit owing to the action of enemy
-submarines, so that new machines had to be made in their place; and
-that a canteen had to be provided, fully equipped with the latest
-cooking utensils and labour saving devices, which would accommodate at
-two sittings no less than 5,000 people.
-
-[Illustration: THE “AQUITANIA’S” LOUNGE (Once a hospital ward, it was
-used subsequent to the Armistice as an orderly room)]
-
-[Illustration: OFFICERS’ WARD IN THE SMOKING ROOM OF THE “AQUITANIA”]
-
-In spite of all this, however, the first complete aeroplane was turned
-out on June 7th, 1918, just eight months after the commencement, while
-within four or five months after this, the factory was in a position to
-turn out no less than 100 aeroplanes a month. Before this, however, the
-Ministry of Munitions had appointed a controller of National Aircraft
-Factories, so that on the 17th of October, 1918, the factory was handed
-over to the Government in full working order, another concrete instance
-of the organising skill and versatility of this great Mercantile Marine
-Company.
-
-Long before this the Cunard Company had embarked upon yet another
-subsidiary enterprise in the establishment of a factory for the
-manufacture of shells. This factory, which came to be known as the
-Cunard National Shell Factory, was established at Bootle, the building
-having before been used as a store for the fittings and furniture taken
-from such of the Cunard Company’s vessels as had been used as armed
-cruisers and in various other capacities. A new floor was built and
-the roof trusses were strengthened in order to carry shafting. Most
-of the lathes and other machine tools installed in the factory were
-of the type suitable for marine work, and therefore, special fittings
-were necessary in order to convert them into lathes suitable for the
-production of 4 in., 5 in., 6 in. and 8 in. shells; and these special
-fittings were designed and made by the Cunard’s Staff Engineers. The
-boring bars used for the 8 in. shells were made from the piston rods
-of the old Cunard liner _Lucania_, sister ship to the _Campania_, the
-vessel, as we have seen, on which Signor Marconi carried out some of
-his most important wireless experiments. The ingenuity displayed in
-this won a tribute of admiration from all the engineering experts who
-were brought in touch with it; and the proof of their success is to
-be found in the fact that the shells, ranging up to 6 in. and 8 in.
-diameter, were entirely completed by female labour.
-
-The Cunard National Shell Factory was, indeed, the first factory in
-Great Britain to produce 6 in. and 8 in. shells with female labour,
-and was thus the pioneer in the employment of women on shells of large
-calibre. In order that the women might be able to handle these heavy
-shells great attention had, of course, to be paid to the lifting
-appliances; and it may, perhaps, here be mentioned that one of the
-women operators worked throughout the whole period from October,
-1915, to November, 1918, without the loss of a single minute of time,
-probably creating a record. To this factory also several of the retired
-engineering officers of the Cunard Company’s ships returned to work in
-order to assist their country in increasing the output of shells, while
-the factory was self-contained in that it manufactured all its own
-tools, jigs, and other necessary appliances.
-
-In this factory work was continuous, being carried out in three shifts,
-one working from seven in the morning till three in the afternoon, the
-next from three in the afternoon till ten at night, and the third from
-ten p.m. until seven next morning; while on Saturdays one shift worked
-from seven a.m. till noon, and another from noon till five p.m.
-
-In 1916 the Bottle Nosing Plant for the large shells was instituted--a
-plant that turned out to be a great success, while at the same time a
-system for the mixing of gas and air to enable a furnace temperature
-of 1,400 degrees centigrade to be maintained was also installed--a
-contrivance that resulted in a very considerable saving both in upkeep
-and expenditure.
-
-On an average about 1,000 people were employed in this factory, of
-whom 80 to 90 per cent. were women. The factory contained excellent
-kitchens and dining rooms, so that hot meals could be served both for
-the day and night shifts. The welfare of the workers was scrupulously
-attended to; and a recreation room fitted with a theatrical stage and
-all accessories was very popular with the workers in their spare time.
-
-[Illustration: MEN’S WARD IN THE LOUNGE OF THE “AQUITANIA”]
-
-When on November 11th, 1918, hostilities ceased, upon the acceptance
-by the enemy of the Armistice terms, work on shell production was
-stopped. The factory being closed down on Saturday, November 16th,
-each operator was presented on leaving with a 4·5 in. shell as a
-souvenir, together with a letter of appreciation signed by the Chairman
-and General Manager of the Company. A total of 410,302 shells of
-various calibres was turned out during the months through which the
-factory worked. Out of every 500 shells made, one was selected by the
-Government to be fired as a test, and of the shells manufactured at the
-Cunard Factory not a single one failed to pass.
-
-Lastly should be mentioned one of the most beneficent minor activities
-initiated by the Cunard Staff in the provision of entertainments for
-wounded soldiers. It was in 1916, after the Company moved into their
-great new building, that the staff first approached the Management with
-a view to obtaining permission to hold a concert for wounded soldiers
-in one of the new and spacious rooms. The suggestion was readily agreed
-to, and the Company undertook to bear the cost, the staff doing the
-work. So successful was this concert that a second entertainment was
-given, this being followed by a third, until these concerts became a
-regular institution through the winters of 1916–1917, 1917–1918, and
-1918–1919. In all about 20 concerts were given, at which more than
-7,000 wounded soldiers were entertained and provided with refreshment.
-A first-class orchestra of 20 performers was created, as well as a
-chorus that would have done credit to any London stage; and it is safe
-to say that these Cunard concerts were eagerly looked forward to by
-every Military Hospital in the district.
-
-During the summer months also the Company lent their tender, the
-_Skirmisher_, for river cruises; and more than 6,400 wounded men were
-thus provided with yet another means of recreation. A similar trip
-was organised in 1918 by the Cunard Company’s Bristol Staff, while
-the Liverpool Office Concert Party was indefatigable in attending
-at various hospitals, munition works, and camps in order to provide
-additional entertainment to their wounded brothers. The Britannia Rooms
-were also used for dances and receptions for American Officers and
-American Red Cross Units, and when on Independence Day, July 4th, 1918,
-the Lord Mayor of Liverpool entertained 4,000 American Troops, the
-whole of the catering arrangements were carried out by the Cunard line.
-
-Now to have initiated, organised, and won success in departments of
-service so various and vital would not, of course, have been possible
-without the unanimous and unremitting personal devotion of every
-Director and member of this great Company; and it cannot be denied that
-the Government paid them the compliment of using their activities to
-the very highest degree. The Chairman, Sir Alfred Booth, in addition
-to the enormous responsibilities resting upon him in virtue of his
-executive position, acted also as Chairman of the North Atlantic
-Committee, appointed under the Liner Requisitioning Scheme, while he
-also served on several Royal Commissions dealing with questions of
-urgent national importance in relation to reconstruction and other
-post-war problems; and, at the same time, he had many calls upon him
-owing to his connexion with the Employers’ Federation, the War Risks,
-and Liverpool Steam Ship Owners’ Associations.
-
-The Deputy Chairman, Sir Thomas Royden, acted as Deputy Shipping
-Controller, where his wide experience of shipping affairs was
-invaluable, Sir Thomas being frequently entrusted with foreign missions
-requiring the greatest tact and ability. Early in the war he went to
-Mudros in order to organise the transport arrangements in connexion
-with the Gallipoli campaign, and at a later date he was in Washington
-discussing the international shipping problems that arose when the
-United States cast her lot with the Allies. He organised the shipment
-of American and Colonial troops to the various theatres of war, and was
-selected to represent the Shipping Controller on the Peace Conference.
-
-Sir Percy Bates, Sir Aubrey Brocklebank, and Mr. Walter Tyser all
-occupied administrative positions at the Ministry of Shipping, and Mr.
-A. C. F. Henderson was selected to represent the Ministry at one of
-the chief Mediterranean ports. Sir Ashley Sparks, one of the Company’s
-Directors, and its New York Agent, was appointed direct representative
-of the Ministry of Shipping at Washington, soon after the United States
-came into the war, and was made a Knight Commander of the Order of the
-British Empire in January, 1919, in recognition of his great services.
-No less responsible and intricate were the duties devolving upon the
-General Manager, Mr. A. D. Mearns, and the other managers, Mr. S. J.
-Lister and Mr. F. Litchfield--Mr. Mearns being elected to a seat on
-the Board of Directors in 1918.
-
-[Illustration: THE “FRANCONIA” SINKING, WATCHED BY SURVIVORS FROM THE
-BOATS]
-
-Many of the Company’s officials and technical experts were frequently
-called upon to render assistance to various Government Departments,
-and it is deeply to be regretted that the Cunard Company’s loved and
-respected Marine Superintendent, Captain G. H. Dodd, lost his life at
-sea through a torpedo attack whilst on an important Government mission.
-
-We have already referred to the mobilisation on the outbreak of war of
-a very large proportion of the Company’s navigating officers, and it
-is estimated that at least 1,500 sailors, firemen, and stewards joined
-the colours, of whom 88 were killed or drowned. Nor was the clerical
-staff behind them in its eagerness to serve the country in a combatant
-capacity. When a brigade of business men was formed in Liverpool, in
-1914, not less than 120 Cunarders from the Liverpool staffs enlisted on
-the first day, while from the clerical staffs alone of the principal
-Cunard Offices in Great Britain, 387 men joined the Army, besides 65
-who joined from the Canadian and American Offices--a total of 452. Of
-these 53 lost their lives in the service of their country, while a
-large proportion received more or less serious wounds, several being
-permanently disabled.
-
-Many distinctions and honours were gained both on the field of battle
-and at sea, to be engraved upon the Company’s records as one of their
-proudest trophies. They include a Victoria Cross and, in numerous
-cases, the D.S.O., D.S.C., M.C., M.M., etc. Various members of the
-staff have received other British, and also French, Belgian, Russian
-and United States, decorations and medals.
-
-Such then in brief were the war activities of one of our chief
-Mercantile Marine Companies, and it is surely a record of which the
-whole Empire, not less than every member and employee of the Cunard
-Company itself, may well be proud. In the study of it we have perhaps
-been able to perceive, as in a wider survey of a larger number of
-units might have been less possible, something of the peculiar genius
-for organisation and adaptation that, in spite of so much ignorant
-criticism, our race possesses. It is at any rate an indication that the
-sea instinct that has been our inheritance for so many centuries is as
-strong to-day as ever, and a happy augury for the future of a country,
-whose very breath of life depends upon its maintenance of Admiralty, in
-the widest sense of the word.
-
-
- Thos. Forman & Sons, Printers,
- Nottingham, Liverpool, London
-
-
-[Illustration: MAP SHEWING PRINCIPAL ROUTES SET BY CUNARD SHIPS DURING
-THE WAR]
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made consistent when a
-predominant preference was found in the original book; otherwise they
-were not changed.
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