Koll
Norwegian Motor tanker
Name | Koll | ||
Type: | Motor tanker | ||
Tonnage | 10,044 tons | ||
Completed | 1930 - Deutsche Werft AG, Betrieb Finkenwärder, Hamburg | ||
Owner | Odd Bergs Tankrederi A/S, Oslo | ||
Homeport | Oslo | ||
Date of attack | 6 Apr 1942 | Nationality: Norwegian | |
Fate | Sunk by U-571 (Helmut Möhlmann) | ||
Position | 34° 39'N, 68° 25'W - Grid CA 9922 | ||
Complement | 36 (3 dead and 33 survivors). | ||
Convoy | |||
Route | Baytown - Galveston (29 Mar) - Halifax - Clyde | ||
Cargo | 96.067 barrels of high grade diesel oil | ||
History | Completed in October 1930 | ||
Notes on event | At 17.00 hours on 6 April 1942, U-571 fired a spread of two torpedoes at the unescorted Koll (Master Einar Knudsen) east of Cape Hatteras and hit her with both torpedoes on the port side. The explosions killed two men on watch below and set the ship on fire. After 33 survivors abandoned ship in three lifeboats, the U-boat came alongside the boats and asked the usual questions and handed the survivors some crackers. Whereupon the U-boat fired 30 rounds of 8.8cm gunfire into the #1 tank, which exploded and caused the ship to sink at 17.15 hours, while burning gasoline spread across the water with a tremendous development of smoke and heat. A Canadian crew member on a raft took his clothes off when the flames approached and managed to swim away and was picked up after 30 minutes by one of the boats. In the evening on 7 April, the other two lifeboats came across a lifeboat from Kollskegg, which had been sunk by U-754 (Oestermann) that day, but because of heavy seas and a strong wind and rain they could not get close enough to carry on a proper conversation with the survivors in it and they soon lost sight of them. The following day the two boats became separated, because the weather was bad and they constantly had to bail and it was biting cold. On 14 April, the weather improved and the ten survivors in one of the boats could set sail, but in the morning on the next day a light was spotted in the horizon so they sent up rockets. These were seen by the Swiss steam merchant St. Cergue and the survivors were picked up and landed in New York on 17 April. | ||
More info | |||
On board | We have details of 35 people who were on board. |
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