Rahul Sharma (Editor)

SS Winnipeg

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Class and type
  
Steam Passenger ship

Tonnage
  
9,807 tons


Name
  
1918-1930 SS Jacques Cartier 1930-1938 SS Winnipeg 1938-1941 Paimpol 1941 SS Winnipeg 1941-1942 SS Winnipeg II

Owner
  
1918-1938 Cie. Générale Transatlantique, Paris 1938-1941 Compagnie France-Navigation (C. F. N.), Le Havre 1941-1941 British Government 1941-1942 Canadian Pacific Steamships

Port of registry
  
1918-1941 France 1941 United Kingdom 1941-1942 Canada

Fate
  
22 October 1942 sunk by German submarine U-443 in the Atlantic Ocean

Builder
  
Ateliers et Chantiers de France

SS Winnipeg was a French steamer notable for arriving at Valparaíso, Chile, on 3 September 1939, with 2,200 Spanish immigrants aboard. The refugees were fleeing Spain after Franco's victory in the Spanish Civil War (1936–39). The Chilean President Pedro Aguirre Cerda had named the poet Pablo Neruda Special Consul in Paris for Immigration, and he was charged with what he called "the noblest mission I have ever undertaken": shipping the Spanish refugees, who had been housed by the French government in internment camps, to Chile.

History

After the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, Pablo Neruda noticed that many Spanish Republicans had fled in exile to France where they were detained in squalid camps in miserable conditions. The poet, who was then living in Chile, decided to organize their travel to Chile. He first worked as Chilean consul in Spain, before being named consul in Paris.

The ship was an old French cargo ship which ordinarily could not take more than 20 persons, but it was adapted so it could carry the 2,200 refugees. Neruda actively worked in this endeavour, reuniting families separated by the war. Beside the assistance of his friends artists and writers, he was helped by his wife Delia del Carril.

On the night when the Winnipeg set sail, on August 4, 1939, in the port of Trompeloup - Pauillac, Pablo Neruda wrote:

The Winnipeg arrived at the port of Valparaíso on September 3, 1939. On the following day, the Spanish Republicans were officially received by the Chilean authorities. Some of them had already landed, a few days before, in the port of Arica, in northern Chile. In a gesture of thanks, the refugees attached to the ship's mast a large canvas with the face of the Chilean President painted on it.

Most of the immigrants who landed in Chile stayed there. Among them were the historian Leopoldo Castedo, the typographer Mauricio Amster and the painters Roser Bru and José Balmes.

SS Winnipeg remained under French flag after the fall of France in 1940 and sailed under orders of the government of Vichy. She was captured on 26 May 1941 by the Dutch sloop HNLMS Van Kinsbergen (U 93) at the Caribbean Sea and confiscated by the British government. She was eventually purchased by a Canadian company, Canadian Pacific Steamships, some months later and renamed Winnipeg II. She was torpedoed and sunk by German submarine U-443 on 22 October 1942 while en route from Liverpool to Saint John, New Brunswick. All people on board were rescued by the Canadian corvette HMCS Morden.

References

SS Winnipeg Wikipedia