Trisha Shetty (Editor)

SS Empire Cross

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Name
  
Empire Cross

Builder
  
Sir J Laing & Sons Ltd

Launched
  
28 June 1945

Port of registry
  
London

Yard number
  
765

Length
  
105 m

Owner
  
Ministry of War Transport (1945) Ministry of Transport (1945-46) Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co Ltd (1946)

Operator
  
Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co Ltd

Empire Cross was a 3,750 GRT tanker that was built in 1941 by Sir J Laing & Sons Ltd, Sunderland, Co Durham, United Kingdom for the Ministry of War Transport (MoWT). Sold into merchant service in 1946, she capsized and sank on 2 August following an explosion and fire at Haifa, Palestine.

Contents

Description

Empire Cross was built in 1945 by Sir J Laing & Sons Ltd, Sunderland. She was Yard Number 765.

The ship was 344 feet (105 m) long, with a beam of 48 feet (15 m). She was assessed at 3,750 GRT.

The ship was propelled by a triple expansion steam engine.

History

Empire Cross was built for the MoWT. She was launched on 28 June 1945 and completed in November. The United Kingdom Official Number 181112 and Code Letters GKLF were allocated. She was operated under the management of the Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co Ltd, London.

Empire Cross was completed in November 1945, by which time the MoWT had become the Ministry of Transport. She was sold in 1946 to the Anglo Saxon Petroleum Co, who intended to rename her Balea. On 2 August, Empire Cross exploded and caught fire while discharging aviation fuel in Haifa Roads, Palestine. HMS Venus and HMS Virago assisted in the rescue. The Admiralty discounted a theory that the explosion was caused by a depth charge dropped by a British destroyer in an anti-terrorist measure to prevent the fixing of limpet mines to ships. Captain John Banks, in charge of the Empire Cross at the time, was on the bridge and observed the activity on the two naval vessels indicating personnel were aware of frogmen in the water around them, which indeed was probably the Haganah attempting to attach limpet mines, and he noted the sound of depth charges being dropped into the harbour around the vessels.

Twenty one of her crew of 56 were reported to be missing following the incident. Four other people were reported to have been killed. At the inquest, the page from the day's activities was missing from the log book of the suspect naval vessel, Virago. The crew were buried in Haifa. Captain Banks signalled to abandon ship when he saw the line go, and dived overboard, swimming under the flames until he lost consciousness, and was rescued by members of the Haganah. Empire Cross was scrapped in 1952.

The noted correspondent Clare Hollingworth, at the time reporting from Palestine to the News of the World, asserted that the Empire Cross was indeed blown up by the Haganah. A few days later a spokesperson for the Haganah phoned the paper and hotly denied the charge, accusing Hollingworth of being "biased and motivated by hatred". The issue was never conclusively clarified.

References

SS Empire Cross Wikipedia