SS Desabla

The SS Desabla was built by Hawthorn Leslie & Co. Ltd at Newcastle upon Tyne in 1913 for Bank Line, Glasgow (Andrew Weir Shipping & Trading Co. Ltd). She was the first oil tanker to join the Bank Line fleet and was chartered and operated for approximately one year by General Petroleum Company along the Pacific coast of the United States, Chile and Canada. In 1914 she was re-chartered to the British Government to transport oil from Texas to the United Kingdom. In 1915 she was torpedoed and sunk by German submarine U-17 off the coast of Scotland.[1]

History
Name: Desabla
Owner: Bank Line Ltd., Glasgow
Operator: Andrew Weir Shipping & Trading Co. Ltd.
Port of registry: Glasgow
Builder: Hawthorn Leslie & Co Ltd, Newcastle
Yard number: 461
Launched: 18 Sept 1913
Out of service: 12 June 1915
Identification:
  • United Kingdom Official Number: 133159
  • Code Letters: JDKN
  • Wireless Code: GYV (1914)
Fate: Sunk by SM U-17
General characteristics
Type: Oil Tanker
Tonnage:
  • 6,047 GRT
  • 5,742 under deck
  • 3,788 NRT
Length: 420.3 ft (128.11 m)
Beam: 54.6 ft (16.64 m)
Depth: 32.4 ft (9.88 m)
Crew: 35

Known timeline

Date Event
1913Built in Newcastle, England.
29 November 1913Departed from North Shields, England (most of the crew joined here).
14 Feb - 2 March 1914Travelled from Antofagasta, Chile to San Pedro, California
14 May - 2 June 1914Travelled from Taltal, Chile to San Luis Obispo, California
3 June 1914Departed for Vancouver, British Columbia
14 – 18 June 1914Travelled from Victoria, British Columbia to Port Harford, San Luis Obispo, California
19 June 1914Departed for Iquique, Chile
12 October 1914Passed through the Panama Canal en route from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil to San Pedro, California
12 June 1915Sunk by German submarine U-17

Main source: shipping records available on Ancestry.com[2]

Sinking

On 12 June 1915 she was carrying a cargo of linseed oil from Port Arthur, Texas bound for Hull under the command of Mr. Fred S. Cowley. She was chased and intercepted by German submarine U-17. While the crew escaped in lifeboats, she was shelled, torpedoed and finally had to be scuttled with charges placed in the hull to sink her.[3]

Excerpt from the Admiralty Report into the sinking:
"This Admiralty Oiler Transport No.63 was steaming on course when the German Submarine U-17 was seen right astern, gaining rapidly on the Steamship. The Master endeavoured to keep the vessel astern making various violent changes of course, but the submarine was much faster and rapidly took up a position close to the ship. The Enemy commenced to shell the Desabla at 07:20 am and kept up a continual fire at her from a Deck Gun. Realising that escape was impossible, the master stopped his Engine and ordered all hands into the Boats, which were successfully lowered at 08:20 am, allowing all the Crew to escape safely. Shortly after the enemy fired a Torpedo into the Ship at 08:30 am, but as she did not sink immediately some members of the crew went aboard her, presumably to place explosive charges and to loot her. When last seen by the Master at 12:30 pm, his ship was sinking fast and the Submarine had submerged out of sight. The survivors were picked up by the Armed Trawlers at 3:30 pm and taken ashore."

The wreck

The official report stated the wreck was 10 miles from Tod Head, Scotland. Divers searched there for years. However, the wreck of the SS Desabla is actually 35 miles from Montrose, Scotland. After a number of attempts,[4] she was located in 2010 by divers from Marine Quest based in Eyemouth, Berwickshire.

References

  1. "Oil Ship Desabla Sunk" (PDF). The New York Times. 18 June 1915.
  2. "California Passenger and Crew Lists, 1893-1957". Ancestry.com (subscription required).
  3. "Royal Naval Vessels Lost and Damaged at Sea in WWI". naval-history.net.
  4. "Wreck of SS Exmouth discovered off Eyemouth". The Berwickshire News.

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