Tag Archives: Wartime Visitor

S.T. Van Oost O296 (Wartime visitor)

© Mike Thompson for FMHT

Technical

Official Number: 149077
Yard Number: 461
Completed: 1926
Gross Tonnage: 352
Net Tonnage: 147
Length: 140.3 ft
Breadth: 24.0 ft
Depth: 12.9 ft
Engine: T.3-cyl and boiler by C. D. Holmes & Co Ltd, Hull
built: Cook, Welton & Gemmell Ltd, Beverley

History

24.10.1925: The board of Kingston Steam Trawling Co Ltd decided to build two more distant water trawlers to the same design as the ANDALUSITE (Yd.No.461) built by Cook, Welton & Gemmell Ltd. Contracts were signed with the shipyard to build the ships at a cost of £8,350 each and with C. D. Holmes & Co Ltd to make the engines and boilers at £6,175 each unit. Total cost £14,525 per vessel. Names chosen were SARDIUS and TOURMALINE.

4.3.1926: Launched by Cook, Welton & Gemmell Ltd, Beverley (Yd.No.482) for Kingston Steam Trawling Co Ltd, Hull as TOURMALINE.
20.4.1926: Registered at Hull (H290) (Official Number: 149077).
28.4.1926: Completed trials and accepted (John W. Lown, manager).
1.5.1926: Sailed on first trip to Iceland.
20.5.1926: Landed 858 kits grossed £1,050.
16.3.1939: Sold to N.V. Motorvisscherij, Ostend for £3,650.
20.3.1939: Hull registry closed.
4.1939: May have been registered at Ostend as VANDERMEER (O296) for a short period.
4.1939: Re measured 336.45Brt 129.48n.
4.1939: Registered at Ostend as VAN OOST (O296).
5.1940: Escaped to England.
21.5.1940: Arrived Fleetwood.
7.7.1940: Requisitioned for war service on miscellaneous Naval duties (P.N. FY.330). Based Reydarfjord, Iceland as Local defence trawler. Belgian crew.
13.11.1945: Returned to owner.
4.1946: Special Survey at Ghent. Re classed as a Steam Trawler.
1948: Re measured in accordance with British rules 352g 147n.
1.1948: Sold to Government of Poland, Warsaw (Ministry of Industry & Commerce) (“Dalmor” Przedsiobiorstwo Polowow DalekomorskichSp.z.ogr.odp, Gdynia, managers).
16.1.1948: Ostend registry closed.
16.1.1948: Registered at Gdynia as MERKURY (GDY120).
4.1962: Sold to Polish shipbreakers. Gdynia registry closed.

Click to enlarge images

S.T. Tourmaline H290

S.T. Tourmaline H290
Picture courtesy The Mike Thompson Collection

Changelog

10/08/2010: Page published. 4 updates since then.
08/09/2018: Removed FMHT watermark from image.

S.T. Van Dyck O298 (Wartime visitor)

© Mike Thompson with additional material by Maurice Voss

Technical

Official Number: 149080
Yard Number: 483
Completed: 1926
Gross Tonnage: 352
Net Tonnage: 147
Length: 140.3 ft
Breadth: 24.0 ft
Depth: 12.9 ft
Built: Cook, Welton & Gemmell Ltd, Beverley
Engine: T.3-cyl and boiler by C. D. Holmes & Co Ltd, Hull

History

21.1.1926: The board of Kingston Steam Trawling Co Ltd decided to build two more distant water trawlers to the same design as the ANDALUSITE built by Cook, Welton & Gemmell Ltd (Yd.No.461). Contracts were signed with the shipyard to build the ships at a cost of £8,450 each and with Charles D. Holmes & Co Ltd to make the engines and boilers at £6,130 each unit. Total cost £14,625 per vessel. A decision was made to add the Kingston prefix to the existing nomenclature. The names chosen were, KINGSTON DIAMOND and KINGSTON PEARL. The short lived General Strike of May 1926 and continuing Miners’ Strike led to delays in the completion of both vessels.

31.3.1926: Launched by Cook, Welton & Gemmell Ltd, Beverley (Yd.No.483) for Kingston Steam Trawling Co Ltd, Hull as KINGSTON DIAMOND.
18.5.1926: Registered at Hull (H294) (O.N.149080).
19.5.1926: Programmed to carry out basin trials but delayed through shortage of coal.
27.7.1926: Taken over from builder.
9.8.1926: Completed trials and accepted (John W. Lown, manager).
14.8.1926: Sailed on first trip to Iceland.
7.9.1926: Landed 807 kits grossed £1,059.
3.1929: Skipper taken ill and put ashore at Reykjavik.
3.1929: Took onboard Sk. Godmund and crew of KINGSTON JASPER (H494) stranded 17.2.1926 at Medalland, Iceland.
7.3.1929: Sailed for Hull with Sk. Godmund in command.
12.3.1929: Arrived Hull and grossed £793 for the 44 day trip.
3.3.1930: Stranded at Valloc, Norway but got off without assistance. Berthed Sandnessjoen for survey; forepeak full of water, crew’s quarters, flooded, rudder and rudder frame badly damaged.
7.3.1930: Sailed Trondheim for Hull after temporary repairs.
1938: Laid up with Special Survey due and offered for sale.
11.3.1939: Sold to N.V. Motorvisscherij, Ostend for £3,562 with Special Survey due and without fishing gear and fishroom boards.
16.3.1939: Hull registry closed.
4.1939: Registered at Ostend as VAN DYCK (O298).
4.1939: Re measured 336.45Brt 129.48n.
5.1940: Escaped to England.
29.5.1940: Arrived Fleetwood. Transferred to Belgian Economic Mission, London. Fishing from Fleetwood.
21.9.1940: Homeward (to Fleetwood) from Icelandic grounds picked up seventeen crew and twelve passengers from boat, part of survivors from British steamer CITY OF SIMLA (10,138grt/1921) (Capt Herbert Percival) (Convoy OB-216 London/Glasgow for Cape Town and Bombay) torpedoed by U.boat (U138) 52 miles NW of Rathlin Island (20.9.1940).
22.9.1940: As directed landed at Liverpool.
12.2.1941: Requisitioned for war service as an anti submarine trawler (P.No.FY.106). Based at Scapa Flow with A/S Group 12 (French crew ?).
7.11.1945: Returned to Belgium.
13.11.1945: Returned to owner. With surveys outstanding, Special Survey at Ghent. Re classed as a Steam Trawler.
20.3.1946: Completed.
9.10.1948: Sold to Eidis Trolarafelag, Eidi, Faroe Islands.
9.10.1948: Ostend registry closed.
4.1948: Re measured 43,59 (143.0) x 7,35 (24.1) metres (feet) – 341g 135n.
10.1948: Registered at Eidi (Fuglefjord for Osterö Syssel)as EIDESKOLLUR (FD226).
17.10.1948: Sailed for Faroe Islands.
By 1952: Owned by P/f Eidis Trolarafelag A/S.
1952: Sold to P/f Nypan, Sandevaag. Registered at Sandevaag as VENUS (VA51).
1962: Sold to B. J. Nijkerk N.V, Ghent.
12.4.1962: Breaking commenced at Boom.

Click to enlarge image

S.T. Van Dyck O298

S.T. Van Dyck O298
Picture courtesy of The Peter Green Collection

S.T. Van Dyck FD226

S.T. Van Dyck FD226
Picture from the Internet

S.T. Venus VA51

S.T. Venus VA51
Picture from the Internet

Changelog
09/08/2010: Page published. 5 updates since then.
08/04/2015: Picture added.
02/07/2016: Picture added.
07/09/2018: Removed FMHT watermark from image.
10/08/2021: Updated history.

S.D/T. D’Arcy Cooper YH370 (Seasonal)

Copyright 2010 Barry Banham.
Additional information courtesy of David Slinger

Technical

Official Number: 144156
Yard Number: 1018
Gross Tonnage: 126.61
Net Tonnage: 54.76
Length: 94.35 ft
Breadth: 19.6 ft
Depth: 10.0 ft
Engine: 275ihp T.3-cyl and boiler by C. D. Holmes & Co ltd, Hull

History

24.4.1928: Launched by Mrs Evelyn H. A. Cooper, wife of Unilever chairman, Francis D’Arcy Cooper, at Cochrane & Sons Ltd, Selby (Yd.No.1018) for Bloomfields Ltd, Gt. Yarmouth as D’Arcy Cooper.
5.6.1928: Completed. Neil Mackay designated manager.
5.6.1928: Registered at Yarmouth (YH370). First skipper Tom Manship.
2.1929: On Gabbard grounds iced up and could not work. Returned to Yarmouth.
1930s: Seasonal trawling from Padstow and Fleetwood (Lowestoft Fish Selling Co Ltd, Lowestoft/Bloomfields Ltd, Fleetwood, managing agents).
26.11.1934: At Gt. Yarmouth landed 140 crans of herring.
16.7.1935: With Sk. Richard Brown in command, along with OCEAN PIONEER (YH189) (Sk. Roper George), represented Great Yarmouth at the King George V Silver Jubilee Review at Spithead.
17.5.1937: Sailed Fleetwood for Spithead, dressed overall for Coronation Review.
20.5.1937: Represented Great Yarmouth at the King George VI Coronation Review at Spithead.
11.10.1938: At Gt. Yarmouth landed 170 crans of herring.
8.10.1939: Requisitioned for war service on Examining Service (Hire rate £63.2.10d/month).
9.4.1941: At Harwich (2nd Hand D. Noble), attacked by German aircraft and in damaged condition beached. Four crew MPK/Killed. Subsequently salved but declared a Total loss, The Admiralty paid £5000 in restitution.
28.11.1946: Yarmouth registry closed.

(MPK – David F. Noble, 2nd Hand (I/C); George F. Hayward, Engineman; John W. Hodds, Seaman. Killed – Bernard P. Oates, O/S)

Click to enlarge image

S.T. D'Arcy Cooper YH370

S.T. D'Arcy Cooper YH370
Picture courtesy of The Barry Banham Maritime Photo Collection

S.D/T. D'arcy Cooper YH 370

S.D/T. D’arcy Cooper YH 370 at Fleetwood.
Picture courtesy of The Barry Banham Maritime Photo Collection

Changelog

29/04/2010: Page published. 5 updates since then.
10/07/2018: Removed FMHT watermarks from images.
26/08/2018: Updated information.

S.T. Edouard Anseele O158

© Mike Thompson

Technical

Official Number: 149099
Yard Number: 994
Completed: 1926
As built: 351g 141n 140.3 x 24.0 x 13.3 feet
Gross Tonnage: 351
Net Tonnage: 141
Length: 140.3 ft
Breadth: 24.0 ft
Depth: 13.3 ft
Built: Cochrane & Sons Ltd, Selby
Engine: T.3-cyl and boiler by C. D. Holmes & Co Ltd, Hull

History

14.4.1926: Launched by Cochrane & Sons Ltd, Selby (Yd.No.994) for John McCann, Hull as FOAMFLOWER.
29.6.1926: Completed.
20.10.1926: Registered at Hull (H313). O.N.149099.
15.11.1926: Sold to Yorkshire Steam Trawling Co Ltd, Hull (A. Turgoose, manager).
16.8.1938: Sold to Fishing Vessel Brokers Ltd Hull.
2.1939: Sold to Société Anonyme Armement Ostendais, Ostend.
6.2.1939: Hull registry closed.
1939: Re measured 42,79 x 7,32 x 4,1 metres – 337.78 Bgrt 129.42n.
18.2.1939: Registered at Ostend as EDOUARD ANSEELE (O158).
5.1940: Escaped to England via France. Arrived Fleetwood.
6.1940: Transferred to Belgian Economic Mission, London. Fitted with 1-20mm Oerlikon aft of funnel (I.D.No.151). Complement increased by one Belgian DEMS gunner. Engaged transporting fish from Iceland to Fleetwood. Boston Deep Sea Fishing & Ice Co Ltd managing agents.
27.4.1941: Picked up 82 survivors of London motor vessel BEACON GRANGE (10119grt/1938) torpedoed and sunk by U.boat (U552) south of Iceland in approx position 62.05N 16.20W. Survivors transferred to HMS GLADIOLUS (P.No.K34) and landed at Londonderry.
17.5.1943: Typical landing, Iceland grounds. 1895 kits – cod/codling-1500, haddock-350, flats-1, ling/coley-40.
8.1945: Returned to Belgium.
24.9.1949: Chartered to “Weser” Hochseefischerei-und Fischnandels GmbH, Bremerhaven.
8.1950: Returned to owners.
9.1950: Sold to “Dalmor” Przedsiebiorstwo Polowow Dalekomorskich Sp.Z.ogr.odp, Gdynia.
16.9.1950: Ostend registry closed.
13.10.1950: Registered at Gdynia as PRGAZ (GDY110).
29.3.1958: Gdynia registry closed sold for breaking up.
13.10.1958: Listed as decommissioned and broken up.

Click to enlarge images

S.T. Edouard Anseele O158

S.T. Edouard Anseele O158
Picture courtesy of The Maurice Voss Collection

S.T. Edouard Anseele O158

S.T. Edouard Anseele O158
Picture courtesy of the J. Grieve Collection

Changelog
04/09/2009: Page published. 3 updates since then.
23/09/2015: Picture added.
18/06/2018: Removed FMHT watermark from images.
12/09/2021: Updated history.

S.T. Joseph Duhamel H99

Technical

Official Number: 171318
Yard Number: 700
Completed: 1929
Gross Tonnage: 928
Net Tonnage: 363
Length: 191.5 ft
Breadth: 31.1 ft
Depth: 15.9 ft
Built: Hall Russell & Co Ltd, Aberdeen
Engine: T.3-cyl by Hall, Russell & Co Ltd, Aberdeen

History

1.11.1929: Launched by Hall, Russell & Co Ltd, Aberdeen (Yd.No.700) for Soc. Anon. Pêcheries de Fécamp, Fécamp as JOSEPH DUHAMEL.
12.1929: Completed. Cost to build c£24,750. Registered at Fécamp (F708).
23.2.1940: Sailed for Newfoundland fishery, subsequently based and landing into Saint-Pierrre.
29.6.1940: Fleet confined to port in Saint-Pierre.
15.12.1940: Ordered to sail for Casablanca.
26.12.1940: On passage to Casablanca (45 crew, 7 passengers), stopped by Ocean Boarding Vessel MARON (P.No.F.87) in position 34.30N 15.22W. Armed boarding party (Lt. Geoffrey Hobday RNR) placed on board and ordered to Gibraltar.
29.12.1940: Arrived Gibraltar. Seized by The Admiralty on behalf of French Administration, London.
17.1.1941: Offer to repatriate crew to Marseilles; twenty-two crew members volunteered to join the RN (as Free French).
1.1941: Proceeded to Hull via Belfast and Fleetwood. Requisitioned and transferred to ownership of MOWT (Hellyer Bros Ltd, Hull, managers). Fitted with 1-75mm, 1-20mm and 30mm AA armament. Employed as cargo/fish carrier UK – Iceland. Free French Naval Force (FNFL) crew.
3.1941: Examined and assigned a loadline (1200dw). Employed coasting.
12.6.1941: Registered at Hull (H99).
30.6.1941: Returned to cargo/fish carrying UK-Iceland.
9.1944: Transferred to French Administration, London.
29.9.1944: Fitting out for return to fishing. Based at Fleetwood under management of Boston Deep Sea Fishing & Ice Co Ltd, Fleetwood.
11.1944: Sailed Fleetwood for Icelandic grounds (Sk. André Lecoeur).
28.11.1944: First landing at Fleetwood.
12.1944: Transferred to Hull.
6.1945: Demobilised and returned to owners, Soc. Anon. Pêcheries de Fécamp, Fécamp.
11.7.1945: Hull registry closed. Registered at Fécamp (F708).
7.1945: Not practicable to use the port of Fécamp.
13.7.1945: Returned to Le Havre. Landed armament.
22.8.1945: Completion of fit-out for fishing at Newfoundland.
25.8.1945: Sailed on first trip to Newfoundland Banks.
11.1950: Awarded the Croix de Geurre for War Service. Painted on funnel between red bands.
1951: Laid up.
1.1953: Sold for breaking up at Le Havre.

Click to enlarge images

S.T. Joseph Duhamel H??

S.T. Joseph Duhamel H99
Picture courtesy of the JJ Collection

S.T. Joseph Duhamel F708

S.T. Joseph Duhamel F708
Picture from the Internet

S.T. Joseph Duhamel F708

S.T. Joseph Duhamel F708
Picture courtesy of The JJ Collection

S.T. Joseph Duhamel H99

S.T. Joseph Duhamel H99
Picture courtesy of The JJ Collection (SN)

Changelog
16/06/2009: Page published. 3 updates since then.
05/03/2017: Image added.
05/03/2021: Updated history.