SS Prinz Oskar was a twin-screw cargo liner that was launched in Germany in 1902 for Hamburg America Line (HAPAG). She served various transatlantic routes between Europe and the Americas until the First World War began.
From 1914 she sheltered in Philadelphia to avoid capture by the Entente Powers. In 1917 the United States seized her, and by 1919 she had been renamed Orion. In 1922 Marcus Garvey's Black Star Line tried to buy her from the United States Shipping Board (USSB). She was scrapped in 1930.
Between 1901 and 1903, HAPAG had seven new cargo liners built, each named after a prince of the House of Hohenzollern. Two were twin-screw ships, built by Bremer Vulkan Schiffbau & Machinenfabrik in Bremen-Vegesack. was launched on 21 August 1902 and completed on 12 January 1903. Her sister ship German: Prinz Oskar was launched on 15 December 1902 and completed on 14 June 1903.
The other five formed a class of single-screw ships. Reiherstieg Schiffswerfte & Maschinenfabrik in Hamburg built Prinz Eitel Friedrich and . AG "Neptun" in Rostock built Prinz Sigismund. Flensburger Schiffbau-Gesellschaft in Flensburg built German: Prinz August Wilhelm and Prinz Joachim.
German: Prinz Adalbert and German: Prinz Oskar were about 32feet longer and broader than the single-screw ships. The pair thus forms either a sub-class or a separate class.
German: Prinz Oskar was named after Prince Oskar of Prussia. Her registered length was, her beam was, and her depth was . Her tonnages were,, and . As built, she had berths for 1,160 passengers: 125 in first class, and 1,035 in steerage.
German: Prinz Oskar had a pair of quadruple-expansion engines to drive her twin screws. Their combined power was rated at 402 NHP or 3,250 ihp, and they gave her a speed of NaNkn.
HAPAG registered German: Prinz Oskar at Hamburg. Her code letters were RMVL. In June 1903 she began her maiden voyage, which was from Hamburg to Brazil.
From 10 October 1903 German: Prinz Oskars route was between Genoa in Italy and New York via Naples.[1] By 1905 it included a call at Palermo in Sicily on westbound voyages only.[2] On 5 June 1904 Olivia Langdon Clemens, wife of author Mark Twain, died in Italy. On 28 June Twain embarked on German: Prinz Oskar at Naples to bring her body home to New York.[3]
In August 1904 HAPAG announced that from 1 October its steerage fares from New York would be $15 to Naples and Genoa, and $16 to Trieste in Italy and Fiume in Austria-Hungary (now Rijeka in Croatia).[4] On 6 September 1904 German: Prinz Oskar left New York on a crossing to Italy. When she reached Naples on 22 September a passenger, Romulo Alcivar, shot her Master, Captain Dugge, and another passenger, Frank Shattuck. Both victims survived, but Dugge was wounded in the mouth, and Shattuck had a bullet in his left shoulder. Alcivar was overpowered and taken to a Lunatic asylum.[5] German: Prinz Oskars Chief Officer took command, and the ship's doctor, and a doctor from among the passengers, treated Captain Dugge.[6] Shattuck continued his voyage to Naples.[7] [8]
On a westbound crossing in January 1906 a storm in the North Atlantic loosened some of the rivets on the port side of German: Prinz Oskars hull, causing a leak in one of her holds. The leak was about above the waterline, abreast of the forward part of her superstructure. Seawater damaged hundreds of boxes of macaroni and several thousand lemons in her cargo, and her pumps were run continually to minimise the water in the damaged hold. The storm also damaged her steam-powered steering engine. Her crew used her manual steering gear until her engine department completed the steering engine's repair. She reached New York on 11 January, four days late.[9]
German: Prinz Oskar carried migrants to the USA. On one crossing in March 1906 she landed 1,102 people at Ellis Island.[10] On 16 April on her next crossing she landed 1,105 people.[11]
On 22 September 1906 German: Prinz Oskar inaugurated a new HAPAG route to the ports of the Río de la Plata. In January 1908 HAPAG announced that from that May, German: Prinz Adalbert and German: Prinz Oskar would serve a route to Brazil.[12]
By September 1910 German: Prinz Oskars route was between Hamburg and New York.[13] Also by 1910, German: Prinz Oskar was equipped with submarine signalling and wireless telegraphy. By July 1911 she was sailing to Philadelphia, reportedly from Bremen.[14] By 1913 German: Prinz Oskars wireless call sign was DDO. By 1914 German: Prinz Adalbert and German: Prinz Oskar served a North Atlantic route between Hamburg and Philadelphia, sometimes with an intermediate call at Emden.[15]
On the night of 1–2 February 1913 German: Prinz Oskar left Philadelphia carrying 30 passengers in steerage and three in first class. About half-past midnight she was emerging from the Delaware Breakwater when her watch sighted the four-masted cargo schooner City of Georgetown near the Five Fathom Bank lightship. The liner put her engines full astern and both ships changed course, but three minutes later the wooden schooner struck her port bow. The schooner lost all four of her masts and began to settle by her bow. City of Georgetowns Master and crew launched a dory and abandoned ship, with four men in the boat, and the other four in the water clinging to the boat. The schooner sank within minutes.[16]
German: Prinz Oskar lowered a lifeboat, with which City of Georgetowns crew was rescued. German: Prinz Oskar developed a list from water entering the hole in her bow. She turned back and anchored off Gloucester City, New Jersey to await a berth to disambark her passengers and unload her cargo, before being repaired.[16]
On 22 July 1914 German: Prinz Oskar left Hamburg with 360 passengers for Philadelphia.[17] On 31 July HAPAG announced the suspension of all its services.[18] On 3 August 1914 Germany declared war on Belgium and France, and the next day the United Kingdom declared war on Germany. German: Prinz Oskar blacked out all lights except her navigation lights, and continued at full speed. On 5 August she reached Philadelphia.[17]
On 7 May 1915 a German U-boat sank RMS Lusitania. 1,199 people were killed, including 128 US citizens. The USA considered going to war with the Central Powers, in which case it would seize their ships in ports that it controlled, including German: Prinz Oskar in Philadelphia.[19]
In March 1916 it was denied that American International Corporation, via W. R. Grace and Company, was negotiating to buy German: Prinz Oskar and Rhaetia from HAPAG for the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, which the two companies jointly owned.[20] Rhaetia was in Philadelphia with German: Prinz Oskar.[21]
On 1 February 1917 Germany resumed unrestricted submarine warfare against the Entente Powers. On 4 February the US government ordered that the crews of Central Powers ships in US-controlled ports be confined to their ships.[22] The Collector of the Port of Philadelphia increased the number of US Customs men guarding German: Prinz Oskar, Rhaetia and the Austro-Hungarian cargo ship Franconia.[23]
On 6 April 1917 the USA declared war on Germany, and seized German ships in US ports. On 11 June the USSB announced that it would time trip charter German: Prinz Oskar, Rhaetia, and the Deutsch-Australische DG ship German: Magdeburg to the Italian government.[24] On 30 June President Woodrow Wilson issued an executive order authorising the USSB to take possession and title of 87 German ships, including German: Prinz Oskar.[25]
By 1919 German: Prinz Oskar had been renamed Orion. Her US official number was 202863 and her code letters were LMCW. She was one of 103 German ships that the USSB put up for sale on 25 December 1919.[26]
By 1922 Orion was registered in the name of Marcus Garvey's Black Star Line (BSL). Garvey intended to rename her Phillis Wheatley, after the author Phillis Wheatley. But BSL went bankrupt that February, the ship's name remained Orion, and her ownership remained with the USSB. She was scrapped in Baltimore in 1930.