Suvarna Garge (Editor)

SS Dalfram

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
SS Dalfrom

Completed
  
April, 1930

Launched
  
2 April 1930

Tonnage
  
5.041 million kg

Yard number
  
546

Fate
  
sunk on 4 August 1943

Length
  
124 m

Beam
  
16 m

Operator
  
Campbell Brothers & Co, Newcastle-upon-Tyne

Propulsion
  
1-Screw, Q4cyl (21.5, 31, 45, 65 x 48in), 457nhp

Builder
  
Scotts Shipbuilding and Engineering Company

SS Dalfram (1930-1943) was a British Cargo Steamer of 4,558 tons built in 1930 by Scotts Shipbuilding and Engineering Company, Greenock for Campbell Brothers and Co, Newcastle-upon-Tyne. The ship was launched on 2 April 1930.

The vessel is best known for its part in the Dalfram dispute of 1938 at Port Kembla in Australia while contracted by Japanese company Mitsui to carry a cargo of pig iron to the steel works in Kobe, Japan. The ten week dispute earned Australian Attorney General (later Prime Minister) Robert Menzies the nickname of "Pig Iron Bob" when he attempted to force the workers to load the cargo.

On 2 May 1942 the Dalfram had a narrow escape when she struck a mine laid by German ship Doggerbank, a British built ship captured by the Germans and then used as an auxiliary minelayer. Dalfram, after hitting the mine, was able to return to Cape Town under her own power for repairs.

Dalfram, carrying a load of coal, was sunk on 4 August 1943 with three of her 43 crew lost, when on route from Lourenco Marques and Durban for Aden and Alexandria via Mauritius. The ship was torpedoed by German submarine U-181 and sunk east of Madagascar.

The crew of Dalfram abandoned ship taking to the lifeboats. They were picked up by the German U-boat and questioned for eight days, before being landed on the island of Île Sainte-Marie, east of Madagascar.

References

SS Dalfram Wikipedia