SS Shuntien was a 3,059 GRT[1] coastal[7] passenger and cargo liner of the British-owned The China Navigation Company Ltd (CNC). She was built in Hong Kong in 1934 and sunk by enemy action in the Mediterranean Sea with great loss of life in 1941. A Royal Navycorvette rescued most of Shuntien's survivors, but a few hours later the corvette too was sunk and no-one survived.
Peacetime service
Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Company in Hong Kong built Shuntien for CNC in 1934.[3][5] She replaced an earlier and smaller SS Shuntien that Scotts at Greenock on the Firth of Clyde had built in 1904 and that was scrapped in 1935.[3][8] The new Shuntien was a sister ship of SS Shengking, which Scotts had built in 1931.[3][9] Both Taikoo Dockyard and CNC were owned by John Swire and Sons Ltd, which is British-owned but based in Hong Kong.[10]
The new Shuntien's engines were steam turbines built by Taikoo Dockyard.[1] She was built to trade along the coast of China, where her relatively shallow draught enabled her to turn in the Hai River at Tianjin and her icebreaker bow equipped her against sea ice in northern waters.[6]
In 1937 Shuntien returned to Taikoo Dockyard for maintenance, and while she was there the Great Hong Kong Typhoon of 1937 blew her ashore.[3] She survived, was refloated and returned to service.[6]
Approximate position of Shuntien's wreck: just off the coast of Cyrenaica east of Tobruk
In the Second World War the British government requisitioned Shuntien and converted her into a Defensively-Equipped Merchant Ship (DEMS).[6] Photographs of Shuntien taken about that time by a US photographer, Harrison Forman, show Shuntien in the Port of Shanghai apparently being converted into a prison ship. Shuntien moved to the Mediterranean, where her British officers supplemented her Chinese crew with Arab and Maltese recruits.[11]
At about 1902 hrs on the evening of 23 December the Type VIICGerman submarine U-559 torpedoed Shuntien,[11] blowing off her stern[6] and killing her captain, four officers and chief steward.[3][13] Her bow rose in the air and she sank within five minutes without having been able to launch any of her lifeboats.[6]
A convoy escort, the Flower-classcorvetteHMS Salvia, rescued Shuntien's Master, William Shinn, 46 of the ship's officers and men and an unknown number of her prisoners, DEMS gunners and DLI guards.[15] The total number of survivors that Salvia rescued was about 100.[12][16] The Hunt-classdestroyerHMS Heythrop rescued a smaller number: between 11[16] and 19.[6]
A few hours later, at about 0135 hrs on 24 December, U-568 torpedoed Salvia about 100 nautical miles (190 km) west of Alexandria.[15] The torpedo broke the corvette in two and poured burning bunker oil onto the sea; no-one survived.[15] The small party of survivors aboard Heythrop was landed at Alexandria.[6] It included only one of Shuntien's officers, Second Engineer John Hawkrigg.[6]
See also
RMS Nova Scotia — torpedoed November 1942 while carrying Italian prisoners of war and interned civilians
^ abcdefghijklmno"Shuntien II". WikiSwire. 16 January 2013. Retrieved 23 April 2013. N.b. WikiSwire is a wiki with multiple authors. Unlike Wikipedia it does not generally cite previously published sources to verify its content.
^Harnack, Edwin P (1938) [1903]. All About Ships & Shipping (7th ed.). London: Faber and Faber. p. 443.