Ships hit by U-boats


Elizabeth

American Steam merchant



Elizabeth under her former name Floridian. Photo from City of Vancouver Archives, CVA 447-2219

NameElizabeth
Type:Steam merchant
Tonnage4,727 tons
Completed1918 - Standard Shipbuilding Corp, Shooter´s Island NY 
OwnerA.H. Bull & Co Inc, New York 
HomeportNew York 
Date of attack21 May 1942Nationality:      American
 
FateSunk by U-103 (Werner Winter)
Position21° 35'N, 84° 48'W - Grid DM 4741
Complement42 (6 dead and 36 survivors).
Convoy
RouteNew York - San Juan, Puerto Rico 
Cargo3500 tons of general cargo, including 40 US Army trucks and construction material 
History Laid down as Swedish Scandinavic for Rederi A/B Transatlantic (G. Carlsson), Gothenburg. Taken over by US Shipping Board (USSB) and completed in March 1918 as Muscatine. 1928 renamed Floridian for Strachan’s Southern SS Co (Strachan Shipping Co), Savannah GA. 1936 renamed Elizabeth for A.H. Bull SS Co Inc, New York. 
Notes on event

About 04.15 hours on 21 May 1942, U-103 fired from about 400 yards a star shell across the bow of the unescorted Elizabeth (Master Walter Gwynn Hudgins), which was en route on a zigzag course at 11 knots about 30 miles south of Cape Corrientes, Cuba. Three minutes later a shell struck the stack. At 04.35 hours, one torpedo was fired that struck the port side between the #3 hatch and the engine room. The explosion killed the three men on watch below and destroyed the main steam line, the condenser, the shelter deck and the radio shack. The ship quickly stopped and the radio operator sent distress signals and received acknowledgments. The armed guards fired two shots from the after 4in gun (the ship was also armed with two .30cal guns) at the U-boat but missed. Ten minutes later the complement of eight officers, 27 men and seven armed guards abandoned ship in one lifeboat and one raft. After another ten minutes the vessel sank stern first. Three men on the raft were never seen again. 21 hours after the attack the remaining 36 men landed on the western Cuban coast, halfway between Cape San Antonio and Cape Corrientes.

 
On boardWe have details of 7 people who were on board


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