HistoryByggd 1892 på Campbeltown Shipbuilding Co., Campbeltown (Scotland)
Sista ägare:
[1] Rederi A/B Svea, Stockholm SS H. Wicander (+1917) period 1913 ~ 1917 IMO/Off. no.: 0092 call sign: J B C D
Föregående ägare:
[2] Wicanders Rederi, Stockholm SS H. Wicander period 1892 ~ 1913 IMO/Off. no.: 0092 call sign: J B C D
Kapten: Österberg R. besättning: 19
Fartyg: H. WICANDER
Bredd över allt 9,9 meter
Längd över allt 69,2 (LPP) meter
Reg. Nr.: 92
Rederi: Stockholms Rederi AB Svea
Byggår: 1892
Varv: Campbeltown Shipbuilding Co., Campbeltown (UK)
Övrigt: Fartyget sänktes av tyska stridskrafter i Nordsjön den 17.10.1917.
Namnsignal: JBCD;
D.w.t.: 1740;
Br.t.: 1956,24;
Lloyds Register 1917-18 Nr H.21
SS H. Wicander was a steel ship of 1.256 tons built in 1892 for Rederi AB Svea, Stockholm. She had a crew of 19. H. WICANDER (R. Osterberg) was part of a convoy along with eleven other merchant ships and two British destroyers en route from Gothenburg to Hull.
In the morning of October 17th, 1917, the convoy was attacked by two German cruisers roughly about 114 nm West of Marstens Fyr. The German cruisers sank all the ships in the convoy. Captain Osterberg stopped the engine and sat out the lifeboats, despite the continued bombardments, but all 19 were lost in the battle.
GERMAN CRUISERS ATTACK CONVOY
On the afternoon of the 16/10/1917, HMS Mary Rose (C.L. Fox) left Marsten with twelve merchantmen, 2 British (Benelench), 1 Belgian, 2 Danish (Margrethe, Stella), 5 Norwegian (Dagbjørg, Habil, Silja, Sørhaug, Kristine) and 3 Swedish (Visbur, H. Wicander), and 2 armed trawlers in convoy bound for Shetland, joined later by HMS Strongbow (Edward Brooke). At 0600 hours the following morning at 60 deg 6 min N, 1 deg 6 min E, HMS Strongbow sighted two German cruisers, the Bremse and the Brummer in poor visibility and mistook them for British cruisers.
The Brummer had closed to within 3000 yards and opened up with devastating fire, knocking out Strongbow’s main steampipe and wireless. Many of the hands below were scalded to death, those on deck were struck down by well directed fire. Just before this the Strongbow had been attempting to transmit a warning but the German cruisers jammed the signal. The wireless office and the bridge were wrecked by shells, the Captain badly wounded and the Quartermaster killed.
Lieutenant-Commander Brooke was hit in the leg by a shell splinter, but continued in command, not allowing anybody to attempt to leave the ship until he was absolutely certain that every confidential book and paper had been destroyed. He commanded that the ship should be sunk. The Strongbow was abandoned and sank at about 0930 hours with the loss of 47 Officers and men, after the German ships had made three separate attacks against her.
The German ships then turned their attention to the merchantmen and quickly sank 4 of them. The Mary Rose had heard the firing astern of her and closed in to fight against desperate odds. Lieutenant-Commander Fox had no idea that the convoy was being attacked by anything other than a submarine. A few moments later he sighed the German cruisers and grasped the real position.
Without a moments hesitation he approached the enemy at high speed, and at about twenty minutes past six the gunners opened fire at a distance which was estimated at between 6000 and 7000 yards. When at a distance of about 2000 yards from the enemy Lieutenant-Commander Fox put the helm hard over, and the German gunners got the range as the Mary Rose was on the turn.
After that the end came quickly. She sank in a very short time taking with her most of her compliment of 88 Officers and ratings, including Lt. Cdr. Fox, who was last seen swimming in the water just before the Mary Rose went down. A few survivors with one Officer, Sub Lt. Freeman managed to escape on a raft.
The Germans subjected all the boats and rafts to an indiscriminate shelling whereby many persons lost their lives, although this was disputed in later reports. The captain of the armed trawler Elise contrived to keep his ship out of the fire of the German cruisers, and returned to the scene of the disaster as soon as he could, where he picked up a number of survivors, amongst them Lieutenant-Commander Brooke and the party from the Strongbow.
Sub-Lieutenant Freeman and the men from the Mary Rose reached the Norwegian coast near Bergen, where the lighthouse keepers took them in and fed them and attended to their injuries. Altogether about 250 lives were lost in this. Only ten men from the Mary Rose and forty five from the Strongbow survived including her Commanding Officer, Lt Cdr Brooke who died of pneumonia some twelve months later.
In addition to the Elise, the trawler P. Fannon and three other steamships managed to escape. Nine of the convoy ships perished. There were strong British forces at sea in the area but as no word of the action was received until 1550 hours on the 17th, they were not in a position to intercept the Bremse and the Brummer and they returned to their home port in safety.
ref. used: hmsstrongbow.org.uk (Wrecksite.eu)