Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

British Splendour

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Name
  
MV British Splendour

Launched
  
1931

Type
  
tanker

Length
  
134 m

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Owner
  
British Tanker Co., Ltd, London, England

Builder
  
Palmers Shipbuilding & Iron, Co. Ltd. Jarrow and Hebburn-on-Tyne

Identification
  
United Kingdom Official Number 162546Code Letters LGVD

Fate
  
Sunk by German submarine U-552, 7 April 1942, off Ocracoke, NC

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MV British Splendour was a tanker which was torpedoed and sunk on 7 April 1941 during World War II by German submarine U-552. British Splendour was making her way from Houston, Texas to ultimately meet a British bound convoy off of Nova Scotia and deliver 10,000 tons of gasoline.

Contents

Diving on the british splendour


History

The ship was a steel hulled oil tanker built in 1931 by Palmers Shipbuilding & Iron Company for the British Tanker Company. She could travel at a speed of up to 11 knots.

Wartime service

In 1939 British Splendour, along with her sister ships, was chartered by the British Government to transport fuel supplies for the armed forces.

On 20 February 1941 she was bombed and damaged by enemy aircraft one mile off South Black Head. She was sunk 7 April 1942 by torpedo from U-552,

Sinking

The tanker was carrying 10,000 tons of gasoline, which caught fire quickly when the torpedo hit. Out of the ship's 53 crew members, 12 died in the attack. Captain John Hail ordered the crew to abandon ship and the 41 survivors escaped on lifeboats and a raft. The trawler St Zeno later rescued them from the sea and took them to Norfolk.

References

British Splendour Wikipedia


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