Rahul Sharma (Editor)

SS David H. Atwater

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Name
  
SS David H. Atwater

Type
  
Steam cargo ship

Launched
  
June 1919

Yard number
  
505A

Tonnage
  
2,600 GRT 4,125 LT DWT

Length
  
77 m

SS David H. Atwater uboatnetmediaalliesmerchantsamdavidhatwate

Owner
  
Atwacoal Transportation Co., Fall River, MA

Fate
  
Sunk by German submarine U-552, 2 April 1942, between Cape Charles and Cape Henlopen

Builder
  
Great Lakes Engineering Works

The SS David H. Atwater was a small unarmed coastal steamer which was sunk on 2 April 1942 by gunfire from German submarine U-552 in one of the more controversial actions of the Kriegsmarine during World War II, primarily due to the manner of the sinking.

Contents

History

The ship began life as the Crabtree, constructed by the Great Lakes Engineering Works of Ecorse, Michigan for the United States Shipping Board, and launched in June 1919. She was renamed W.J. Crosby in 1922, for the North Shore Transit Company of Port Huron, Michigan, and in 1929 was sold to the Canada Forwarding Company Ltd. of Port Arthur, Ontario. In 1935 she was renamed David H. Atwater for the Atwacoal Transportation Company of Fall River, Massachusetts, which became her home port.

Sinking

On the night of 2 April 1942, at the height of the U-boat offensive against US shipping known as the Second Happy Time, the David H. Atwater was en route from Norfolk, Virginia to Fall River, Massachusetts, with a full load of 4,000 tons of coal. Her master, William K. Webster, had disregarded instructions and sailed from the Chesapeake in the afternoon, therefore could not make the run to the Delaware Capes before nightfall.

Around 21:00, between Cape Charles and Cape Henlopen, the ship was ambushed by U-552 , commanded by Erich Topp, which had followed her underwater. U-552 surfaced about 600 yd (550 m) from the freighter and opened fire with her 88mm deck gun and automatic weapons (possibly including the submarine's 20mm cannon) without warning, one of her first shells destroying the bridge and killing all of the officers. In all, 93 shots were fired from the deck gun, with 50 hits being recorded on the small freighter, which rapidly began to sink. Many of Atwater's crewmen were hit as they tried to man the lifeboats. When Captain Webster was shot, the crew abandoned attempts to launch the lifeboats and leapt into the sea.

Aftermath

The first ship to arrive on the scene was the small Coast Guard Patrol Boat USS CG-218, which found a lifeboat holding three survivors and three bodies; the survivors reported that they had dived overboard and swam to the boat. Next on the scene was Coast Guard cutter USCGC Legare (WPC-144), which had heard the gunfire and arrived just fifteen minutes later. The Legare found a second lifeboat with a body aboard; the boat was discovered to have been riddled by gunfire, and lent strength to the widespread belief at the time that U-boats were deliberately murdering the survivors of ships they had sunk. The Legare landed the three survivors and four bodies at Chincoteague Island Coastguard Station, then returned to sea to carry out further searching. The destroyers USS Noa and USS Herbert were directed to the scene at 21:22 and arrived at 24:00, but the U-552 had by then escaped the scene, going on to sink other vessels.

Bodies, and lifeboats and liferafts from the Atwater recovered by the Coast Guard were landed at Ocean City, Maryland. It was commonly believed at the time that U-552 had deliberately machine-gunned the Atwater's crewmen in the boats and rafts.

Liberty Ship William Cox

The Liberty Ship William Cox (2485), launched on 4 December 1944, was named for one of the David H. Atwater's firemen.

References

SS David H. Atwater Wikipedia