Elisabeth Smit Explained

Elizabeth Smit was a ship built in 1941, and scrapped in 2020. It was built at the HMS MMS 54. It was transferred to the Royal Netherlands Navy in 1944, serving as HNLMS Marken. In 1957, it became a school ship for the Dutch Zeekadetenkorps. It was sold in 1977 and turned into a barquentine in civilian service, renamed Elizabeth Smit. It was badly damaged in 2002 and was scrapped in 2020.

Description

As built, it was 105feet long between perpendiculars, with a beam of 23feet. It had a depth of 11feet and a draught of 9feet. The ship was powered by a diesel engine which was built by Crossley Brothers, Manchester. It had eight cylinders of NaNinches diameter by NaNinches stroke. It drove a single screw propeller. Maximum speed was 11kn.[1]

History

Naval service

HMS MMS 54 was ordered on 5 September 1940. It was built by Herd & Mackenzie, Buckie, Fife. It was launched on 22 September 1941 and was completed on 25 December. Assigned the pennant number J554, it was assigned to the Royal Navy's 103rd Minesweeping Flotilla, based at Sheerness. In 1942, it was assigned to the 102nd Minesweeping Flotilla, also based at Sheerness. In 1944, it was transferred to the Royal Netherlands Navy.[1] and commissioned on 23 August as HNLMS Marken, named after the village and former island of Marken in North Holland, with the pennant number FY54. The ship was a replacement for, which had struck a mine and sank in the Thames Estuary off the Sunk Lightvessel.[2] In 1945, it was assigned to the 139th Minesweeping Flotilla, operating in Dutch waters.[1]

HNLMS Haren subsequently carried the pennant numbers MV7 and M863. In 1957, it was transferred to the Zeekadettencorps, based at Utrecht. [1]

Passenger ship

Marken was sold in 1977 to the Stichting Het Varend Museumschip of Muiden, Netherlands. It was converted to a barquentine, renamed Elisabeth Smit and used for passenger cruises on the IJsselmeer.[1] In May 1981, politician Jan Terlouw, leader of the Democrats 66 party, chartered the ship to stage a protest against the proposed reclamation of the Markerwaard.[3] Elisabeth Smit was severely damaged in a storm whilst moored at Muiden in October 2002. The ship became derelict.[1] It was broken up on and after 7 December 2020.[4]

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: MMS 54 . Caledonian Maritime Research Trust. Scottish Built Ships . 25 March 2024 .
  2. Web site: 105 feet class - minesweepers . Netherlands Navy . 25 March 2024.
  3. Web site: Jan Terlouw als stuurman ("Jan Terlouw as helmsman") . Het Geheugen . Koninklijke Bibliotheek . 25 March 2024 . The Hague . nl.
  4. News: Muider spookschip eindelijk geborgen (Muider Ghost Ship finally salvaged) . 25 March 2024 . Binnenvaartkrant . Riomar BV . 8 December 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230130121344/https://binnenvaartkrant.nl/muider-spookschip-eindelijk-geborgen . 30 January 2023 . Capelle aan den IJssel . nl. live.