MS Piłsudski explained

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Ship Image:MS Piłsudski, Nowy Jork.jpg
Ship Caption:MS Piłsudski in New York
Ship Country:Poland
Ship Name:Pilsudski
Ship Namesake:Józef Piłsudski
Ship Owner:PTTO
Ship Registry: Gdynia, Poland
Ship Builder:CRDA, Monfalcone
Ship Yard Number:1126
Ship Launched:19 December 1934
Ship Maiden Voyage:15 September 1935
Ship Out Of Service:1939
Ship Identification:Call sign

SPED

Ship Fate:Sunk, 26 November 1939
Ship Length:162m (531feet)
Ship Beam:21.6m (70.9feet)
Ship Propulsion:Two diesel engines
Ship Speed:18kn
MS Piłsudski (later renamed ORP Piłsudski) was a medium-size ocean liner of the Polish Merchant Marine, named for Marshal Józef Piłsudski, a national hero of Poland.[1]

History

She was built in Italy by the CRDA yard at Monfalcone, yard number 1126, for Polskie Transatlantyckie Towarzystwo Okrętowe ("Polish Transatlantic Shipping Company Limited" or PTTO), which in 1934 became Gdynia – Ameryka Linie Zeglugowe (Gdynia – America Line), with part of the payment being shipments of coal from Poland. Launched in December 1934, her tonnage was 14,294 tons gross, with a length of 162m (531feet) and beam of 71feet. She was propelled by two diesel engines driving a pair of propellers giving a speed of 18kn.

She entered the regular service as a liner on the trans-atlantic route in September 1935, setting sail for a maiden voyage from Gdynia to New York. As a liner, she was very badly damaged by her first ocean storm. In 1939, she was taken over for war service and scheduled to be converted into an armed merchant cruiser. The plans of that conversion were dropped, the ship being instead converted into a troop transport ship. During her first wartime voyage on 26 November 1939 sailing out of Newcastle, she struck a mine (most likely) or was torpedoed (lack of confirmation in German sources). Abandoned too soon by her crew, quite capable of being saved, she sank off the Humber. She was the older sister ship to Poland's most famous ocean liner, the MS Batory. The Pilsudski's first skipper was Master Mariner Mamert Stankiewicz.

The liner found posthumously its place in the history of Polish literature. In the novel Eccentrics, written by Mr. W. Kowalewski and published by Marginesy-Publishers in 2015, the main character of the novel - a Polish swingman and dancer born in Lemberg, Fabian Apanowicz, takes part in the last peacetime voyage of the Pilsudski as a member of the ship's band, and after his return to Poland after the war, he tells the story of the unfinished voyage to his six years younger sister Wanda, a dentist in Ciechocinek (cf. W. Kowalewski, Excentrycy/Eccentrics, Marginesy Warsaw 2015, pp. 36–43).The wreck is located at 53.7625°N 45.67°W in 34m (112feet).

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Polish Titanic: TFN explores the sinking of the MS Piłsudski . 19 August 2022.