Saint Anselm
British Steam merchant
Name | Saint Anselm | ||
Type: | Steam merchant | ||
Tonnage | 5,614 tons | ||
Completed | 1919 - Northumberland Shipbuilding Co Ltd, Howden-on-Tyne | ||
Owner | Saint Line Ltd (Rankin, Gilmour & Co), Liverpool | ||
Homeport | Liverpool | ||
Date of attack | 30 Jun 1941 | Nationality: British | |
Fate | Sunk by U-66 (Richard Zapp) | ||
Position | 31° 00'N, 26° 00'W - Grid DG 6214 | ||
Complement | 67 (34 dead and 33 survivors). | ||
Convoy | SL-78 (straggler) | ||
Route | Calcutta - Freetown - Hull | ||
Cargo | 2150 tons of pig iron, 650 tons of linseed and 5154 tons of groundnuts | ||
History | Laid down as War Turret for The Shipping Controller, completed in September 1919 as Saint Andrew for Saint Line Ltd (Gilmore Rankin & Co Ltd), Liverpool. 1936 renamed Saint Anselm for the same owner. | ||
Notes on event | At 05.59 hours on 30 Jun 1941 the Saint Anselm (Master Thomas Ross), a straggler from convoy SL-78, was hit by one torpedo from U-66 and sank by the stern after 25 minutes west of Madeira. The zigzagging ship had been spotted at 19.30 hours the day before and was missed by a first torpedo at 01.10 hours after which the master was alerted and avoided skillfully several attacks. The second torpedo fired at 01.46 hours from a distance of only 400 meters was avoided, also the next at 03.28 hours from 1000 meters. Two minutes later a torpedo hit but proved to be a dud while the fifth torpedo at 03.32 hours missed again. The U-boat then reloaded the tubes and fired another torpedo at 05.58 hours which was also a dud before the seventh torpedo hit one minute later. 34 men from the Saint Anselm were lost. The master and 17 survivors were picked up by HMS Moreton Bay (F 11) (Capt C.C. Bell (retired), RN) and landed at Freetown on 13 July. 15 other survivors were picked up by the Spanish steam merchant Tom and landed at Buenos Aires. | ||
On board | We have details of 39 people who were on board. |
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