SS Dronning Maud (1925) explained

SS Dronning Maud was a 1,489 ton steel-hulled steamship built in 1925 by the Norwegian shipyard Fredrikstad Mekaniske Verksted in Fredrikstad. Dronning Maud was ordered by the Trondheim-based company Det Nordenfjeldske Dampskipsselskap for the passenger and freight service Hurtigruten along the coast of Norway. She served this route as the company flagship until she was sunk under controversial circumstances during the 1940 Norwegian Campaign.

Before the Second World War

Building and commissioning

Dronning Maud was ordered from Fredrikstad Mekaniske Verksted shortly after the loss of Det Nordenfjeldske Dampskipsselskap's Haakon Jarl. Haakon Jarl had suffered a collision with fellow Nordenfjeldske ship Kong Harald in the Vestfjord on 17 June 1924, sinking with the loss of 12 passengers and seven crew members.[1] The building order of Dronning Maud made her the first new ship to join the Hurtigruten route since Finmarken in 1912. After her 8 May 1925 launch she had her first test run in the Oslofjord on 30 June 1925 and was formally handed over to Nordenfjeldske on 3 July. Nordenfjeldske immediately sent her northwards to Trondheim from where she joined the northbound Hurtigruten service, sailing from Brattøra at 12:00 on 13 July.

Characteristics

With the construction of Dronning Maud a new concept was introduced to the Hurtigruten ships, with the First Class section moved forward to amidships and the Second Class removed altogether in order to make room for a greatly improved Third Class in the aft section. The salons and cabins in the Third Class area on board Dronning Maud were described at the time as both "light and practical". Her outer appearance was characterized by long, clean lines, a large superstructure and a long continuous promenade deck. She was considered a very seaworthy vessel and in 1931 became the first Hurtigruten ship to be equipped with the new safety feature of wireless telegraphy. By 1936 all the Hurtigruten ships had been equipped with the new technology.[2]

Hurtigruten service

After she entered service with Nordenfjeldske Dronning Maud sailed with passengers and freight along the coast of Norway. During her regular coastal service in the 1920s and 1930s the ship repeatedly had to come to the assistance of ships in difficulties. In 1926 she assisted the 556 ton steamer Pallas after the latter had run aground off Grønøy[3] and in 1927 she helped a British trawler after it had run aground in the sound Magerøysund in Finnmark. Dronning Maud herself had an accident when she ran aground south of Florø in October 1929.

Second World War

At the outbreak of the Second World War Norway declared herself neutral and the Hurtigruten service continued as normal in the first months of the war.

Johann Schulte

During this period Dronning Maud was involved in a dramatic incident when on 1 January 1940 the 5,334 ton German merchantman shipwrecked at Buholmråsa after losing her propeller. Coming to the iron ore-laden[4] Johann Schultes rescue through a north-westerly gale and snow Captain Edward M. Grundt brought his vessel close enough to the German ship so that a line could be thrown on board and used to drag the shipwrecked people to safety. In all Dronning Maud and her crew saved all 36 German sailors and two Norwegian pilots from the sinking ship.[5] [6] After everyone on board had been pulled to safety the German ship hit a reef near Bessaker and was crushed.[4] During the rescue operation, carried out at night in pitch black conditions, some 100 passengers and 45 crew were on board the Hurtigruten ship.[4] The rescued Germans were set ashore in Rørvik while the two pilots remained on board as Dronning Maud continued northwards.[5] Johann Schulte rescue has been described as one of the most incredible ever accomplished on the Norwegian coast,[7] and resulted in congratulatory telegrams to the ship when it reached Svolvær and later monetary gifts to the crew.[4] In the 1960s Captain Grundt received a gold medal from the German rescue society and a diploma from the Norwegian counterpart for his efforts.[4]

Norwegian Campaign

Troopship duties

When the Germans invaded Norway on 9 April 1940 Dronning Maud was northbound off Sandnessjøen in Nordland and continued northwards to her end port of Kirkenes in Finnmark. After arriving in Kirkenes she was requisitioned by the Norwegian government as a troopship.[8]

Dronning Mauds first troopship assignment was to take part in the transport of Battalion I of Infantry Regiment 12 (I/IR12) from Sør-Varanger Municipality to the Tromsø-Narvik area. Escorted by the British heavy cruiser Berwick and the destroyer Inglefield, Dronning Maud and two smaller vessels from Vesteraalens Dampskibsselskab (the 874 ton[9] SS Kong Haakon and Hestmanden) disembarked most of the Norwegian infantry battalion at Sjøvegan in Troms on 16 April 1940. The remainder of the battalion was transported on the fellow Nordenfjeldske Dampskibsselskab steamer Prins Olav a few days later.[10] [11] [12] The next day, 17 April, Dronning Maud and Kong Haakon were escorted northwards to Sagfjorden by the Norwegian the off-shore patrol vessel Heimdal.[12]

The second troopship mission Dronning Maud carried out was the transport of one infantry company, the battalion's staff, the communications platoon and one heavy machine gun platoon of the Alta Battalion from Alta in Finnmark to areas closer to the front line in Troms.[13] The rest of the battalion was transported on the Kong Haakon and the 858 ton[14] cargo ship Senja. The three troopships were originally meant to be escorted by the off-shore patrol vessel Fridtjof Nansen but this order was changed and the ships were instead to sail without escort.[13] The three ships set off from Alta singly; Kong Haakon at 21:00 on 19 April, Dronning Maud at 22:00 the same day, and Senja at 04:00 on 20 April. Each of the three ships carried a heavy machine gun platoon for anti-aircraft defence, Senja had two platoons as she was transporting the battalion's horses. Dronning Maud and Kong Haakon arrived almost simultaneous at Tromsø at 09:00 on 20 April, then continuing southwards after a short conference with the naval authorities in Tromsø. Dronning Maud that time sailed at 10:00, while Kong Haakon followed at 11:00, both ships still without escort. As Dronning Maud reached the island of Dyrøya she was stopped by the patrol boat Thorodd and told to wait for Kong Haakon. When Kong Haakon reached Dyrøy the two Hurtigruten ship continued to Sjøvegan under escort by Thorodd, arriving at 17:30 on 20 April and disembarking the troops.

After the completion of her troop transporting missions the Norwegian authorities decided to use Dronning Maud to transport the 6th Landvern Medical Company (Norwegian: 6. landevernssanitetskompani) from Sørreisa Municipality to Foldvik in Gratangen Municipality.[12] The company she was tasked with transporting consisted of 119 medics, along with eight horses and three trucks.[7] In preparation for the voyage to Foldvik Dronning Maud had one 3-metre by 3-metre (9.8 ft by 9.8 ft) Red Cross flag stretched out over her bridge deck and flew two more Red Cross flags in her masts.[12]

Final voyage

Dronning Maud set off from Sørreisa at around 11:30 on 1 May 1940, arriving at Foldvik three to four hours later in calm seas and sunshine. As the ship was about to dock with the small wharf on her port side two[12] or three aircraft of the German Lehrgeschwader 1[15] made a low-level attack with bombs and machine gun fire on the Norwegian steamer. Seven bombs were dropped from the aircraft, with two being direct hits, one between the funnel and the bridge, the other just aft of the fore cargo hatch. The first bomb entered the engine room and blew out the ship's sides and the second exploded in the bottom of the hull. The first bomb killed everyone in the refrigeration room, four men and three women.[12] As the crew and passengers tried to abandon ship only one or two boats could be lowered into the water due to the fire that had broken out on board. The fire also threatened to destroy the wooden wharf at Foldvik, until a local fishing boat managed to pull the burning ship some distance away from shore.[12] Dronning Maud drifted a short distance, then ran aground, burned and sank listing to port.[8]

Following their attack on Dronning Maud the German aircraft proceeded to bomb nearby Gratangen, destroying several houses and killing two civilians.[16]

After the attack the wounded survivors were given first aid by the crew of the 378 ton[17] hospital ship MS Elieser. In the evening the British destroyer HMS Cossack brought the most severely wounded to hospital in Harstad while Elieser transported those less critically wounded to Salangsverket.[12]

Nine medics lost their lives during the attack, while a tenth later died in a hospital near Harstad. Of the ship's crew eight died and all the materiel on board was lost when Dronning Maud went down.[12] [18] Thirty-one medics and crew members were injured in the sinking of the ship,[19] two of them severely.[16]

The wreck of Dronning Maud remains where she sank, a short distance off the wharf at Foldvik in Gratangen. The ship is still upright at around 26 to 35 metres (85 to 115 ft) depth, at coordinates .

Reactions to the sinking

The sinking of Dronning Maud, an unarmed ship flying Red Cross flags and carrying medical personnel, brought a great amount of anger and criticism directed against the Germans. From the Norwegian perspective Dronning Maud had been a hospital ship and under the protection of the Geneva Conventions. The Germans retorted by pointing out that Dronning Maud had not been fully marked as a hospital ship, as she had retained her black hull instead of it being painted white with a horizontal green stripe.[12]

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Bakka 1993: 45–46
  2. Web site: Skipstrafikk . 25 February 2009 . Fauske . Henrik . Svolvær Historical Society . no .
  3. Web site: Lawson . Siri Holm . D/S Pallas . 25 February 2009 . Warsailors.com .
  4. Web site: D/S Dronning Maud . 25 February 2009 . Andresen . Dag-Jostein . 2 April 2004 . Vrakdykking i Nord- og Midt-Norge . 3 . no . 29 December 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081229013641/http://www.vrakdykking.com/maud3.htm . dead .
  5. Web site: D/S Dronning Maud . 25 February 2009 . Andresen . Dag-Jostein . 2 April 2004 . Vrakdykking i Nord- og Midt-Norge . 2 . no . 29 December 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081229013202/http://www.vrakdykking.com/maud2.htm . dead .
  6. News: World War: Conquering Heroes . . 15 January 1940 . https://web.archive.org/web/20101014065503/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,772325,00.html . dead . 14 October 2010 . 1 . 23 December 2009 .
  7. Web site: Dronning Maud . 25 February 2009 . . no . 25 May 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110525060149/http://www.minnehallen.no/ship_details.php?Skip=Dronning+Maud . dead .
  8. Abelsen 1986: 299
  9. Web site: Lawson . Siri Holm . D/S Kong Haakon . 25 February 2009 . Warsailors.com .
  10. Berg 1991: 43–44
  11. Web site: Naval Events, April 1940, Part 2 of 4 Monday 8th – Sunday 14th . 14 April 2010 . Kindell . Don . Naval-History.net .
  12. Web site: D/S Dronning Maud . 25 February 2009 . Andresen . Dag-Jostein . 2 April 2004 . Vrakdykking i Nord- og Midt-Norge . 4 . no . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110716085345/http://www.vrakdykking.com/maud4.htm . 16 July 2011 . dmy-all .
  13. Ramberg 1996: 101
  14. Web site: Lawson . Siri Holm . M/S Senja . 25 February 2009 . Warsailors.com .
  15. de Zeng 2007: 359
  16. Hafsten 1991: 43
  17. Web site: Lawson . Siri Holm . M/S Elieser . 25 February 2009 . Warsailors.com .
  18. Steen 1958, p. 233
  19. Voksø 1994: 36