SS Clearton
History | |
---|---|
Name | SS Clearton |
Operator | R. Chapman & Son, Newcastle-upon-Tyne |
Builder | Richardson, Duck and Company, Stockton-on-Tees |
Launched | 29 July 1919[1] |
Completed | September 1919 |
Fate | sunk 1 July 1940 |
General characteristics | |
Tonnage | 5,219 GRT |
Crew | 34 |
SS Clearton was a 5,219 gross register tons (GRT) British cargo steamship. She was launched on 29 July and completed in September 1919 by Richardson, Duck and Company, Stockton-on-Tees for the shipping firm of R. Chapman & Son, Newcastle-upon-Tyne. Her homeport was Newcastle-upon-Tyne.
Career and loss[]
In the Second World War she sailed in convoys, carrying food supplies to the United Kingdom. Her last convoy, SL 36, took her from Rosario, Argentina to Manchester, via Freetown, Sierra Leone, where she arrived on 15 June 1940. She was carrying a cargo of 7,320 tons of cereals, commanded by her Master, John Edward Elsdon.
At 1155 hours on 1 July 1940 German submarine U-102 torpedoed and damaged Clearton about 180 miles west of Ushant. The ship fell behind the convoy and at 1325 hours U-102 torpedoed her again, sinking her 042° 240 miles from Smalls. Eight crew members were lost out of a total complement of 34. The Admiralty-modified W-class destroyer HMS Vansittart sank the submarine, rescued Clearton's Master, 24 crew members and one DEMS gunner, and brought the survivors to Plymouth.
Footnotes[]
- ^ "Clearton (1142845)". Miramar Ship Index. Retrieved 2 January 2021.
- 1919 ships
- Merchant ships of the United Kingdom
- Maritime incidents in July 1940
- Ships sunk by German submarines in World War II
- Standard World War I ships
- Steamships of the United Kingdom
- Ships built on the River Tees
- World War II merchant ships of the United Kingdom
- World War II shipwrecks in the Atlantic Ocean