The 9th
of December will be the 100th anniversary of the torpedoing in the
Eastern Mediterranean of the SS Orteric. This 6,535-ton, 460-feet cargo and
passenger liner was a relatively new ship, built in Scotland and entering
service in 1911. At the time of her loss
to a torpedo fired by the German submarine U-39 she was carrying a cargo of sodium
nitrate from Chile to Egypt. Two seamen lost their lives – a tragedy for their direct
families, but small in scale compared with that occasioned by so many other sinkings
in the period. It also played by comparison with a much more dreadful tragedy –
if not to say scandal – in which the Orteric
had been involved shortly after entering service four years previously.
SS Orteric in peacetime |
An earlier
blog on this site dealt with the conditions in which steerage-class passengers
were carried on board ship in the last decades of the 19th Century (click here for link). It is however
somewhat of a shock to read of conditions as bad, or worse, prevailing on a
newly-built, modern ship, just before the outbreak of World War 1. Managed for ship-owner Andrew Weir of Glasgow,
whose interests included the Bank Line and the Inver Transport & Trading Company,
the Orteric was set to work to carry
Spanish and Portuguese families to Hawaii to work as contract labour in the sugar-cane
fields there.
Departure of Italian emigrants in the same period - the scenes at Lisbon and Gibraltar must have been similar |
The Orteric left Europe in February 1911, carrying an
incredible 1525 emigrants, of which 960 were Spanish and 565 Portuguese. The Portuguese
boarded at Lisbon and the Spanish – apparently Andalusians – boarded at
Gibraltar (scene of another emigrant shiptragedy – click here for blog link). As
this was a year before the Titanic
disaster was to expose the scandal of even luxurious passenger liners carrying
insufficient numbers of life boats, one can only question how many of these
1525 people could have been saved in the event of collision, fire or wrecking. It
is hard to imagine what the accommodation provisions must have been – one
presumes temporary bunks in the cargo spaces – and one wonders also how the catering
and sanitation needs could have been met. The conditions these emigrants were
fleeing from in their homelands must have been dreadful if a voyage of this
nature was accepted by so many as the price of deliverance. Portuguese immigration to Hawaii had been
underway since 1878, mostly coming from Madeira and the Azores, but it was only
from 1907 that Spaniards were recruited to work on the plantations and given
free passage. In this case “free” almost certainly implied that accommodation and
provisioning costs would be the lowest possible.
Sugar-cane cutters on Madeira - the same labour they emigrated to Hawaii to do |
The Spanish and
Portuguese did not appear have got on well together on the Orteric – later newspaper reports
indicated that they fought with each other during the long voyage, "so much so that they had to be
separated. The women . . . went as far as hair pulling." Given that
most of these people had probably never previously been more than a few miles from
their home villages, distrust of strangers was probably unavoidable.
The voyage to
Hawaii lasted 48 days and rough conditions in the Atlantic, and rougher ones
still when rounding Cape Horn at the tip of South America, made it an
uncomfortable one. This might have been tolerable – just – had it not been for
an outbreak of measles. This resulted in 58 deaths, the majority of them of children.
The overcrowding, and the necessarily poor ventilation during stormy
conditions, must have made rapid cross-infection unavoidable. The fact also
that many of these people were from rural communities meant that they had little
chance of having built up immunity to common childhood diseases. In this respect
the child growing up in an urban slum might have been better protected than one
from a remote rural village. The mind recoils from imaging the nightmare of
illness, death and bereavement endured
by the families on the Orteric and
yet it is hard to find much evidence that this largely preventable tragedy
evoked any great public outrage in Britain. It would be interesting to know how – or if at
all – the directors and shareholders of the company owning that Orteric reacted to the news.
Spanish immigrants on arrival at Hawaii in 1907 |
By 1915 the Orteric was in service as a cargo vessel
and supporting Britain’s war effort. On the 9th of the month she had
the misfortune to encounter U-39, commanded by Kapitänleutnant Walter Forstmann
(1883 –1973), south of the Greek island of Crete. Forstmann was to be one of the
most successful U-boat commanders of the war, scoring the highest tonnage loss –
384,304 tons – and sinking 146 ships. On sighting the U-boat on the surface the
Orteric tried to escape but when this
proved impossible the decision was taken to surrender. The ship was torpedoed
anyway but the occupants, other than two seamen, got away in three boats. They were
picked up by a British hospital ship three hours later.
Forstmann with Blue Max |
Forstmann’s
career continued – his most spectacular coup being to sink five steamers – together
carrying over 31,500 tons of coal – in the Straits of Gibraltar in only two
days in 1916. It was to win him the coveted Pour
le Mérite – the so-called Blue Max. Surviving the war, he was to qualify as
a lawyer thereafter and to work – most appropriately – for the Thyssen coal
company. He was an active member of the conservative-liberal German People's
Party until its dissolution after the Nazis came to power in 1933. He returned
to the navy during World War 2 and assigned to administrative positions. His subsequent
peacetime career was concerned with housing management and in 1956 was involved
with the design of Pestalozzi villages, a charity set up after the war for accommodation
and education of children from all sides in the conflict. It is still active, sponsoring
study by students from developing countries. It is strange to think of such
admirable work having remote links to the tragedies involving the SS Orteric and that a man who had been
responsible for so much destruction should have played a such a role in
reconciliation.
And the
owners of the Orteric? One presumes
that they were compensated for their loss. And, even if it was paid, no compensation
could ever have made up for the deaths of the 58 peacetime deaths in her holds.
-----------------------------
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