MV Struma

Summary

MV Struma was a small ship with a long history that included a number of changes of use and many changes of name. She was built in 1867 as a British marquess's luxury steam yacht and ended up 75 years later as a Greek and Bulgarian diesel ship for carrying livestock. She was launched as Xantha, but subsequently carried the names Sölyst, Sea Maid, Kafireus, Esperos, Makedoniya and finally Struma.[1][2]

British yacht Xantha in about 1890
In 1941 she was renamed Struma
History
Name
  • Xantha (1867–88)
  • Sölyst (1888–92)
  • Sea Maid (1892–1901)
  • Kafireus (1901–30)
  • Esperos (1930–33)
  • Makedoniya (1933–41)
  • Struma (1941–42)
Owner
  • The Marquess of Anglesey (1867– )
  • Thomas Chivers (1873– )
  • Viscount Macduff (1875– )
  • William Barneby (1877– )
  • Harry Edwards (1887– )
  • John Phipps (1895– )
  • DE Hadji Constanti & Bros (1901– )
  • Thrakiki Atmoploia (1916– )
  • Socratos Goumaris & Co ( –1930)
  • Giorgios Mylonas (1930–33)
  • Dimiter Nenkov (1933–41)
  • Jean D Pandelis (1941–42)
Port of registry
  • United Kingdom Newcastle (1867– )
  • United Kingdom Colchester (1871– )
  • United Kingdom Liverpool (1892– )
  • Greece Syros (1901– )
  • Greece Thessaloniki ( –1933)
  • Bulgaria 1933–41
  • Panama 1941–42
BuilderPalmers SB & Iron Co
Yard number217
Launched23 June 1867
Completed1867
Identification
FateSunk by torpedo, 24 February 1942
General characteristics
Type
Tonnageafter 1901: 240 GRT; 158 NRT
Length
  • 1867: 116.0 ft (35.4 m)
  • 1875: lengthened to 134.0 ft (40.8 m)
  • 1901: lengthened to 148.4 ft (45.2 m)
Beam19.3 ft (5.9 m)
Draught
  • 1867: 9.0 ft (2.7 m)
  • 1901: 9.9 ft (3.0 m)
Installed power
Propulsionsingle screw
Sail planthree-masted schooner (as built)
Crew10 (1941–42)

As Struma she tried to take nearly 800 Jewish refugees from Romania to Palestine in December 1941. Turkey detained her in Istanbul because Britain refused to admit her passengers to Palestine. In February 1942 a Soviet submarine torpedoed and sank Struma in the Black Sea after Turkish authorities had towed her out to sea and cast her adrift.

Building edit

 
Engraving by Francis William Wilkin of Henry Paget, 2nd Marquess of Anglesey,
for whom Xantha was built

Palmers Shipbuilding and Iron Company[1] of Jarrow in North East England built her in 1867 as the iron-hulled yacht Xantha for Henry Paget, 2nd Marquess of Anglesey,[3] who was a courtier to Queen Victoria and Lord Lieutenant of Anglesey in North Wales.

She was built with a 40 NHP Palmer's compound steam engine[3] and three schooner-rigged masts.[2]

Changes of owner, length and use edit

In 1871 Xantha was registered at Colchester. In 1873 she was acquired by a Thomas Chivers. In 1875 she was acquired by Viscount Macduff and lengthened to 134.0 ft (40.8 m). In 1877 she was acquired by a William Barneby. In 1887 she was acquired by a Harry Edwards.[3]

In 1888 she was renamed Sölyst and registered at South Shields. In the same year her original compound steam engine was replaced with a 49 NHP Ernest Scott & Co quadruple-expansion steam engine.[3] In 1892 she was acquired by a Charmes McIver, who renamed her Sea Maid and registered her at Liverpool. In 1895 she was acquired by a John Phipps.[3]

In 1901 she was acquired by DE Hadji Constanti and Brothers of Syros, who renamed her Kaphireus. They had her lengthened to 148.4 ft (45.2 m) and converted into a cargo ship.[3] One source suggests that in 1913 during the Balkan Wars the Kingdom of Greece requisitioned her as a troopship to take soldiers from Chalkidiki to Amphipolis.[4] In 1916 Thrakiki Atmoploia[2] ("Thracian Steamships") acquired her and used her as a coastal trading vessel. At an unknown date she passed to Socratis Goumaris and Company of Thessaloniki, who renamed her Esperos. In 1930 she was acquired by Giorgios Mylonas,[3] who registered her in Thessaloniki.[4]

In 1933[3] Mylonas sold her to a Bulgarian owner, Dimiter Kenkov, who renamed her Makedoniya,[2] based her in the port of Varna and used her to carry cattle on the River Danube.[4] Lloyd's Register of Shipping does not list her as Makedoniya, and she last appears as Esperos in the 1934 edition.[5] If she was no longer ocean-going she may have been de-registered. One source claims Makedoniya was not in service after 1937.[4]

In 1941 Kenkov sold her to Compañía Mediterránea de Vapores Limitada, which was controlled by a Greek shipping agent, Jean D Pandelis.[4] He renamed her Struma and registered her under the Panamanian flag of convenience.[2][6]

At some date one of the ship's three masts had been removed. Lloyd's Register of Shipping lists her as still having her steam engine in 1934, but within a few years it had been replaced with a three-cylinder marine diesel engine built by Benz & Cie. of Mannheim in Germany.[4] Some sources claim that the diesel engine had been salvaged from a wreck sunk in the Danube.[4][7]

Sinking edit

 
Photo believed to show Struma in port in Istanbul, 1942

In 1941 the New Zionist Organisation and the Betar Zionist youth movement chartered Struma from Jean Pandelis to take Jewish refugees from Romania to Palestine.[8] On 12 December 1941 she left the port of Constanța in Romania carrying 10 crew and about 781 refugees.[9] Her diesel engine was not working so a tug towed Struma out to sea.[10] She drifted overnight while her crew tried in vain to start her engine.[10] She transmitted distress signals and on 13 December the tug returned and the tug's crew repaired Struma's engine in exchange for the passengers' wedding rings.[10][11] Struma then got under way but by 15 December her engine had failed again and she was towed into Istanbul in Turkey.[10]

While Turkish mechanics made unsuccessful attempts to repair Struma's engine, there was a 10-week impasse between British diplomats and Turkish officials over the fate of the refugees. Because of Arab and Zionist unrest in Palestine, Britain was determined to minimise Jewish immigration to Palestine under the terms of the White Paper of 1939. Under pressure from Britain, Turkey denied the refugees permission to come ashore. One pregnant refugee who suffered a miscarriage was allowed to disembark and admitted to an Istanbul hospital.[12]

 
Map of the Bosphorus strait showing where Struma anchored in quarantine in Istanbul harbour (1), and where she was torpedoed and sank in the Black Sea (2)

On 23 February 1942 Turkish authorities boarded Struma. Her engine still did not work so they towed her back out into the Black Sea and cast her adrift about 10 miles off Istanbul.[13] On the morning of 24 February the Soviet submarine Shch-213[14] torpedoed her.[15] Struma sank quickly and many people were trapped below decks and drowned.[16]

Many others aboard survived the sinking and clung to pieces of wreckage, but for hours no rescue came and all but one of them died from drowning or hypothermia.[16] Struma's First Officer clung to a piece of wreckage that was floating in the sea along with a 19-year-old refugee, David Stoliar.[16] The officer died overnight but Turks in a rowing boat rescued Stoliar the next day: the only survivor of 791 people (781 Jewish refugees[17] and 10 crew members, some Jewish) who were aboard.[16]

Memorials at Ashdod and Holon in Israel commemorate those who were killed by her sinking. Struma's wreck has not yet been found, although an attempt to do so was made in 2000.[11]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Steamers & Motorships under 300 tons, Trawlers &c.". Lloyd's Register (PDF). Vol. 1. London: Lloyd's Register. 1932. Retrieved 25 March 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d e Allen, Tony; Lettens, Jan (22 December 2012). "SS Struma (Струма) (+1942)". WreckSite.eu. Retrieved 25 March 2013.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h "Xantha". Tyne Built Ships. Retrieved 26 October 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g "סטרומה Kafireus Καφηρεύς Espiros Есперос Macedonia Makedoniya Македония Strymon Струма Struma". Haapalah / Aliyah Bet. 27 September 2011. Retrieved 25 March 2013.
  5. ^ "Steamers & Motorships under 300 tons, Trawlers &c.". Lloyd's Register (PDF). Vol. 1. London: Lloyd's Register. 1934. Retrieved 26 October 2020.
  6. ^ Ofer 1990[page needed]
  7. ^ "Day 834 December 12, 1941". World War II Day-by-Day. 11 December 2011. Retrieved 25 March 2013.
  8. ^ Ofer 1990[page needed]
  9. ^ Frantz & Collins 2003, pp. 295–335.
  10. ^ a b c d "David Stoliar Born 1922 Kishinev, Romania". Holocaust Personal Histories. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on 8 December 2012. Retrieved 25 March 2013.
  11. ^ a b McFadden, Robert D. (23 January 2016). "David Stoliar, Survivor of World War II Disaster, Dies at 91". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 January 2016.
  12. ^ Frantz & Collins 2003[page needed]
  13. ^ Frantz & Collins 2003[page needed]
  14. ^ Helgason, Guðmundur. "USSR Shch-213". uboat.net. Guðmundur Helgason. Retrieved 25 March 2013.
  15. ^ Rohwer 1964[page needed]
  16. ^ a b c d Rubinstein, Shimon. "David Stoliar". Personal Tragedies as a Reflection on a Great Tragedy Called Struma. Archived from the original on 19 May 2012. Retrieved 25 March 2013.
  17. ^ Food Packages Sent to Struma Victims Arrive in Palestine After Two-year Delay, JTA (Jewish Telegraphic Agency, 15 September 1943, taking 781 Jewish refugees from Rumania to their death.

Sources edit

  • Frantz, Douglas; Collins, Catherine (2003). Death on the Black Sea: The Untold Story of the Struma and World War II's Holocaust at Sea. London: HarperCollins. ISBN 0-06-621262-6.
  • McFadden, Robert D (23 January 2016). "David Stoliar, Survivor of World War II Disaster, Dies at 91". The New York Times.
  • Ofer, Dalia (1990). Escaping the Holocaust – Illegal Immigration to the Land of Israel, 1939–1944. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 149–171. ISBN 0-19-506340-6.
  • Rohwer, Jürgen (1964). Die Versenkung der Judischen Flüchtlingstransporter Struma und Mefkura im Schwartzen Meer Feb. 1942–Aug. 1944. Frankfurt am Main: Bernard Graefe Verlag für Wehrwesen.
  • Enghelberg, Hedi (2013). The Last Witness, The Sinking of SS/MV Struma Feb. 24, 1942. Fort Lauderdale: Eng Publishing.

External links edit

41°23′N 29°13′E / 41.383°N 29.217°E / 41.383; 29.217