MS Batory

MS Batory was an ocean liner of the Polish Merchant Navy, named after Stefan Batory, the sixteenth-century king of Poland. She was the sister ship of MS Piłsudski. After Allied wartime service, mainly under the UK Admiralty, she became in 1951 the flagship of the Polish Ocean Lines and the Polish merchant fleet.

MS Batory before World War 2
History
Poland
Name: Batory
Namesake: King Stefan Batory
Owner:
Operator:
Port of registry: Gdynia
Ordered: 29 November 1933
Builder: Cantieri Riuniti dell'Adriatico, Monfalcone
Yard number: 1127
Laid down: 1 May 1934
Launched: 3 July 1935
Acquired: 23 April 1936
In service: 1936
Out of service: 2 June 1971
Identification:
Nickname(s): Lucky Ship
Fate: Scrapped, 1971
General characteristics
Type: Ocean liner
Tonnage:
Length: 160.4 m (526.25 ft)
Beam: 21.6 m (70.87 ft)
Draught: 7.5 m (24.6 ft)
Decks: 4 + 3 in superstructure
Installed power: two Sulzer 2SSA 9-cylinder diesel engines, 12 680 hp (12 500 hp from April 1947)
Propulsion: 2 propellers
Speed: 18 knots (33 km/h)
Capacity:
  • to March 1940: 760
  • from March 1940: 1650 troops
  • from February 1941: 2200 troops
  • from April 1947: 832
  • from May 1957: 816
  • from June 1969: 600
Crew:
  • to December 1939: 313
  • from April 1947: 343

History

Construction

Gdynia America Line (Gdynia–Ameryka Linie Żeglugowe, GAL), a Polish-Danish partnership based in Gdynia, was formed in 1934 as successor to Polskie Transatlantyckie Towarzystwo Okrętowe (PTTO), an enterprise originally dedicated to transporting Polish migrants to the USA. It changed its focus to leisure travel and for that purpose decided to commission a new vessel. Batory was built in 1934–5 at the Cantieri Riuniti dell'Adriatico Monfalcone shipyard in Trieste, Italy,[1] under an arrangement where part of the commission was paid in shipments of coal from Poland.

She was among the best-known Polish ships of all time. She was launched on 3 July 1935. She was powered by two Sulzer diesel engines driving two screws giving a speed of 18 knots (33 km/h). She began regular service in May 1936 on the Gdynia — New York run, and by 1939 had carried over 30,000 passengers.

World War II

Batory in WWII

Mobilized at the outbreak of World War II, she served as a troop ship and a hospital ship by the Allied Navy for the rest of the war. In 1940 she, along with Chrobry, transported allied troops to Norway. She was also used for secretly shipping many valuable Polish treasures to Canada for safekeeping. She participated in the evacuation of Dunkirk late May early June, taking aboard 2,500 people. Later she carried as many as 6,000 people in one evacuation. In June to July, she secretly transported much of the UK's gold reserves (£40 million) from Greenock, Scotland to Montreal, Canada for safekeeping. On 4 August 1940 she left Liverpool with convoy WS 2 (Winston's Specials) evacuating 480 children to Sydney, Australia, under the Children's Overseas Reception Board until the war was over. She sailed via Cape Town, India, Singapore to where she had carried 300 troops and Sydney. The journey had been a happy one, with so much music and laughter that the Batory was dubbed the "Singing Ship" and was the subject of a book of the same name.[2] In April 1942 British writer Roald Dahl was on board to America.

She was involved in the allied invasion of Oran, Algeria in 1942. That same year she took troops to India and took part in the occupation of Sicily and southern France, where she was the flagship of General Jean de Lattre de Tassigny, Commander-in-Chief of the French Army. She came under attack several times from the ground and the air, but managed to escape serious damage.

Dubbed the Lucky Ship for her military career during World War II, she was a sister ship to the less fortunate Piłsudski which sank in November 1939 off the east coast of Scotland.

Postwar career

Returned to post-war Poland in 1946, she resumed civilian service after a refit, transporting such eminent people as Ryszard Kapuściński. From May 1949 through to January 1951, she was the subject of several political incidents in which American dockers and shipyard workers in the United States refused to unload her cargo, or to service the ship.

After these incidents, she was withdrawn from the North Atlantic route, refurbished at Hebburn for service in the tropics, and sailed in August 1951 from Gdynia and Southampton to Bombay and Karachi, via Gibraltar, Malta, Aden, and Suez. In 1957, she returned to the North Atlantic run. She continued in service until 1971, when she was decommissioned in Hong Kong.

She was replaced by a larger vessel Stefan Batory, which operated from April 1969 until 1988.

References

  1. Lloyd's Register, Steamers and Motor Ships (PDF). London: Lloyd's Register. 1945. Retrieved 13 October 2020.
  2. Maclean, Meta (1941). The singing ship: an odyssey of evacuee children. Sydney: Angus and Robertson.
  • ts/s Stefan Batory. Gdynia: Polish Ocean Lines. 1971.
  • Mitchell, WH; Sawyer, LA (1967). Cruising Ships. New York: Doubleday.

Further reading

  • Swoger, Gordon (2004). The Strange Odyssey of Poland's National Treasures, 1939–1961: A Polish-Canadian Story. Toronto: Dundurn Press.
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