Difference between revisions of "SS Orcades"
From Our Contribution
(→Port Tewfik to Oosthaven, Sumatra 31 January - 15 February 1942) |
(→Port Tewfik to Oosthaven, Sumatra 31 January - 15 February 1942) |
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*[[James Robert McCormack]] | *[[James Robert McCormack]] | ||
*[[Charles Owen Parkin]] | *[[Charles Owen Parkin]] | ||
+ | *† [[James Pryor Thatcher]] | ||
The 105 Transport Company on 17 February 1942 disembarked at Tanjong Priok (Jakarta's port) | The 105 Transport Company on 17 February 1942 disembarked at Tanjong Priok (Jakarta's port) |
Revision as of 20:56, 26 June 2020
History | |
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Name | HMY Orcades |
Builder/Built | 1937 Vickers-Armstrong Ltd, Barrow-in-Furness |
Type | Ocean Liner |
Displacement | 23,456 tons |
Speed | 21 knots |
Contents
Remarks
Built for the Orient Line to operate between Australia and England. The Admiralty requisitioned her in 1939 and had her converted into a troopship.
On 9 Oct 1942 the German submarine U-172 attacked her about 410 km south west of Cape Town. Orcades crew and gunners fought to fend off the submarine and save their ship, and it took U-172 two and a half hours and seven torpedoes to sink her. When she eventually sank she took 45 members of crew with her, but 1,022 survivors were picked up by the SS Narwik. Orcades Master, Charles Fox, was decorated by the Crown and Lloyd's of London for his bravery and leadership.
In 2014 the wreck of Orcades was discovered in 4800 meters of water by survey company Deep Ocean Search.
Soldiers carried
Port Tewfik to Oosthaven, Sumatra 31 January - 15 February 1942
2nd/3rd Machine Gun Battalion
The 105 Transport Company on 17 February 1942 disembarked at Tanjong Priok (Jakarta's port)