HMHS Newfoundland

{{Short description|Sunk British Royal Mail and hospital ship}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2020}}

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{{Infobox ship image

|Ship image=HMHS Newfoundland (38) broadside view.jpg

|Ship caption=

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{{Infobox ship career

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|Ship country=United Kingdom

|Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United Kingdom|civil}} {{shipboxflag|United Kingdom|naval}}

|Ship name=*RMS Newfoundland (1925–40)

  • HMHS Newfoundland (?–1943)

|Ship owner= Johnston Warren Lines (1925–40){{cite book |url= https://plimsoll.southampton.gov.uk/shipdata/pdfs/35/35b0594.pdf |year=1935 |title=Lloyd's Register, Steamers and Motorships |location=London |publisher=Lloyd's Register |access-date=29 March 2013}}

|Ship operator= Furness, Withy & Co (1925–40)

|Ship route= LiverpoolSt John's, NewfoundlandHalifax, Nova ScotiaBoston, MA (1925–?)

|Ship ordered=

|Ship builder= Vickers, Sons & Maxim, Barrow-in-Furness

|Ship yard number= 617

|Ship way number=

|Ship laid down=

|Ship launched= 24 January 1925

|Ship completed= June 1925

|Ship christened=

|Ship acquired=

|Ship in service=

|Ship out of service= 13 September 1943

|Ship registry= {{flagicon|UK|civil}} Liverpool

|Ship identification=*UK official number 147312

  • code letters: KSPG{{cite book |url= https://plimsoll.southampton.gov.uk/shipdata/pdfs/33/33b0637.pdf |year=1933 |title=Lloyd's Register, Steamers and Motorships |location=London |publisher=Lloyd's Register |access-date=21 May 2013}} (until 1933)
  • {{ICS|Kilo}}{{ICS|Sierra}}{{ICS|Papa}}{{ICS|Golf}}
  • Call sign: GKJF (from 1934)
  • {{ICS|Golf}}{{ICS|Kilo}}{{ICS|Juliet}}{{ICS|Foxtrot}}

|Ship fate= Damaged by a Luftwaffe bomb 40 miles off Salerno, 13 September 1943

Scuttled, 14 September 1943

|Ship notes=

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{{Infobox ship characteristics

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|Header caption=

|Ship class=

|Ship type=*Passenger ship;

|Ship tonnage= {{GRT|6791}}; {{NRT|3828}}

|Ship displacement=

|Ship length= {{convert|406.1|ft|abbr=on}}

|Ship beam= {{convert|55.4|ft|abbr=on}}

|Ship draught= {{convert|31.8|ft|abbr=on}}

|Ship power= 1,047 NHP

|Ship propulsion= Vickers quadruple expansion steam engine

|Ship speed= {{convert|15|kn}}

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|Ship crew=

|Ship notes= sister ship: {{RMS|Nova Scotia|1926|6}}

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HMHS Newfoundland was a British Royal Mail Ship that was requisitioned as a hospital ship in the World War II. She was sunk in 1943 in a Luftwaffe attack off southern Italy. At that point she was one of three ships brightly illuminated, bearing standard Red Cross markings as hospital ships, which was her function, so due protection under the Geneva Convention.

Building

Vickers, Sons & Maxim, Ltd of Barrow-in-Furness built Newfoundland for Furness, Withy & Co of Liverpool. Her 1,047 NHP quadruple expansion steam engine was fed by five 215 lbf/in2 single-ended boilers with a total heating surface of {{convert|16095|sqft|0}}. Her boilers were heated by 20 oil-fuelled corrugated furnaces with a grate surface of {{convert|377|sqft|0}}.

Civilian service

Newfoundland worked Furness, Withy's regular transatlantic mail route between Liverpool and Boston via St John's, Newfoundland and Halifax, Nova Scotia.{{cite web |url= http://www.timetableimages.com/maritime/images/fur.htm#warren |title=Furness, Withy & Co. |work=Maritime Timetable Images |publisher=Björn Larsson |date=2001–2013 |access-date=29 March 2013}} In May 1926 she was joined by a sister ship, {{RMS|Nova Scotia|1926|6}}.{{cite book |url=http://www.plimsollshipdata.org/pdffile.php?name=41b0636.pdf |year=1941 |title=Lloyd's Register, Steamers and Motorships |location=London |publisher=Lloyd's Register |access-date=29 March 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140228045134/http://www.plimsollshipdata.org/pdffile.php?name=41b0636.pdf |archive-date=28 February 2014 |url-status=dead }}

Early war service

In April 1943 Newfoundland repatriated some Allied servicemen from Lisbon to Avonmouth, England. Among them was Flight Lieutenant John F. Leeming RAF, who had been captured with Air Marshal Owen Tudor Boyd (as his Aide-de-Camp) in 1940. His escape plan from Vincigliata PG 12 prisoner of war camp in Italy was by cleverly faking a very bad nervous breakdown case. He succeeded so well that the international medical board, with Swiss and Italian doctors, unhesitatingly accepted his case. As he describes in his book:

{{bquote|In the late afternoon (18 April 1943) we went aboard the British hospital ship Newfoundland, which was lying at the quay ready to sail for England. I walked quickly up the gangway, and as I felt my two feet touch the ship's deck I looked up - I suppose I am too sentimental - at the flag flying from the masthead. "Done it!" I said aloud.''{{cite book |last=Leeming |first=John F |author-link=John F. Leeming |year=1951 |title=Always To-morrow |location=London |publisher=George G. Harrap and Co. |pages=185–6}}}}

File:HMHS Newfoundland.jpg harbour, 1943.]]

Hospital ship

{{Unreferenced section|date=March 2013}}

After the Allied invasion of Italy in September 1943, HMHS Newfoundland was assigned as the hospital ship of the Eighth Army, and was one of two hospital ships sent to deliver 103 American nurses to the Salerno beaches on 12 September. The hospital ships were attacked twice that day by dive bombers, and by evening they were joined by a third hospital ship. Concerned by a number of near misses, it was decided to move the ships out to sea and anchor there for the night. All three ships were brightly illuminated and carried standard Red Cross markings to identify them as hospital ships, and their protection under the Geneva Convention.

At 5:00 a.m. on 13 September while under the command of Captain John Eric Wilson O.B.E, Newfoundland was hit by a Henschel Hs 293 air-launched glide bomb {{convert|40|nmi|km}} offshore of Salerno. The bomb was launched by a Dornier Do 217 bomber belonging to KG 100. It struck on the boat deck, abaft of the bridge. The ship was only carrying two patients and 34 crew members. Communications were lost but, more importantly, the fire fighting equipment was completely shattered. {{USS|Mayo|DD-422|2}} came alongside to rescue the patients, and also put a party on board to help with damage control. By now the ship had caught fire. There was another explosion and it became clear that the oil tanks had also caught fire. The injured crew left the boat and 12 crew members battled the fire for a further 36 hours. The ship was beyond repair and was towed further out to sea and intentionally scuttled the day after the attack by the destroyer {{USS|Plunkett|DD-431|2}}. Of the people on board, six of the British staff nurses and six medical officers had been killed. One of the medical officers was Lt Col Hartas Foxton, MC 1889 - 1943 who had been a GP in Uttoxeter until the War.

Four of the other RAMC doctors who were killed were Major Charles Ryan, RAMC 65313 aged 38, Major George Alexander Hay Adam, RAMC 108781, Major George North Watson, RAMC 75408 and Captain Harry Mathews, RAMC 157582 aged 29. The six Nurses who were killed were Matron Agnes McInnes Cheyne, QAIMNS, 206099, Sister Una Cameron, TANS, 209965 aged 31, Sister Dorothy Mary Cole, QAIMNS, 218052 aged 29, Sister Phyllis Gibson, QAIMNS, 223596 aged 31, Sister Mary Lea, TANS, 213741, aged 31, and Sister Margaret Annie O’Loughlin, QAIMNS, 234988, aged 27.

See also

References

{{reflist}}

Further reading

  • {{cite book |last=Burrell |first=David |year=1992 |title=Furness Withy, 1891-1991 |location=Kendal |publisher=World Ship Society |isbn=0905617703 }}
  • {{cite book |last=Haws |first=Duncan |year=2000 |title=Furness Withy |series=Merchant Fleets |volume=37 |location=Crowborough |publisher=Travel Creatours Ltd |isbn=094637838X }}
  • {{cite book |last1=Monahan |first1=Evelyn |last2=Neidel-Greenlee |first2=Rosemary |title=And If I Perish: Frontline U.S. Army Nurses in World War II |location=New York |publisher=Knopf |year=2003 |isbn=0-375-41514-9 |oclc=51978030 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/andifiperishfron00mona }}