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SS Lambridge

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History
United Kingdom
NameGlennevis[1]
NamesakeGlen Nevis, Scotland
OwnerWestern Steam Ship Co, Glasgow[2]
OperatorJames Gardiner & Co[2]
Port of registryUnited Kingdom Glasgow
BuilderAyrshire Dockyard Company Ltd, Irvine[1]
Yard number445[3][2]
Launched2 March 1917[3]
CompletedMay 1917[1]
Out of service1922[2]
FateSold
NameAfrican Prince[1]
OwnerRio Cape Line, Ltd.[1]
OperatorFurness Withy[1]
Port of registryUnited Kingdom Newcastle upon Tyne
Acquired1922[2]
Out of service1936[2]
Identification
FateSold[2]
NamePentridge Hill[4]
NamesakePentridge Hill, Dorset
OwnerDorset Steam Ship Company[4]
OperatorCounties Ship Management[4]
Port of registryUnited Kingdom London
Acquired1936[4]
Out of service1939[5]
Identification
FateSold
NameBotlea[5]
OwnerMinistry of War Transport (1939)[5]
Operator
Port of registryUnited Kingdom London
Acquired1939[5]
Out of service1939[2]
Identification
NameHMS Lambridge (X15)[3][2]
OwnerAdmiralty[3]
Operator Royal Navy[3]
Acquired1939[2]
In service1939
Out of service1941[2]
NameLambridge[3][2]
OwnerAdmiralty[3]
Port of registryUnited Kingdom
In service1941
Out of service1945[2]
FateScuttled[3][2]
General characteristics
TypeCargo ship[1]
Tonnage
Length400.7 feet (122.1 m)[1] p/p
Beam53.4 feet (16.3 m)[1]
Draught24 feet 1 inch (7.34 m)[1]
Depth27.4 feet (8.4 m)[1]
Installed power510 NHP[1]
Propulsion3-cylinder triple expansion steam engine; single screw[1]
Speed10.5 knots (19.4 km/h)[2]

SS Lambridge was a 5,119 GRT UK cargo ship that was built in 1917, gave 28 years of service and was scuttled in 1945.[3][2] She was launched as Glennevis but changed owners and names a number of times, successively becoming African Prince, Pentridge Hill, Botlea, HMS Lambridge and Lambridge. She was scuttled as part of a programme to dispose of UK stocks of chemical weapons.

Building

[edit]

The Ayrshire Dockyard Company Ltd. built the ship to the UK Shipping Controller's standard "B" type cargo ship design. She had nine corrugated furnaces with a combined grate area of 119 square feet (11 m2) heating three 180 lbf/in2 single-ended boilers with a combined heating surface of 7,647 square feet (710 m2).[1] The boilers fed a Dunsmuir and Jackson three-cylinder 510 NHP triple expansion steam engine that drove a single screw propeller.[1]

Names and owners

[edit]

The ship was launched in 1917 as Glennevis for the Western Steam Ship Company of Glasgow.[2] In 1922 she was sold to Furness Withy who renamed her African Prince.[2] In 1936 she was sold to the Dorset Steamship Company, which renamed her Pentridge Hill.[4] Dorset SS Co was a London-based company controlled by Counties Ship Management.[4]

In 1939 she was sold to Sir Wm. Reardon Smith & Sons, Ltd, who renamed her Botlea.[5] In September and October 1939 she became one of nine merchant ships that the Admiralty acquired to convert into Q-ships.[2] Botlea was commissioned into the Royal Navy as HMS Lambridge with the pennant number X15. The Q-ships were not successful and from February 1941 she served as the armed merchant cruiser Lambridge.[3]

Scuttling

[edit]

After the Second World War the Admiralty used her to dispose of redundant chemical ammunition.[2] On 30 December 1945 she was scuttled in the North Atlantic beyond the continental shelf, 120 miles (190 km) northwest of Ireland.[7] Her wreck is at 55°30′N 11°00′W / 55.500°N 11.000°W / 55.500; -11.000 in 8,200 feet (2,500 m) of water.[7]

Lambridge was one of four redundant cargo ships that the Admiralty used to dispose of chemical ammunition at the same site in the North Atlantic.[2] The others were Empire Simba on 11 September, Empire Cormorant on 1 October and Wairuna on 30 October.[2]

SS Lambridge is located in Oceans around British Isles
SS Lambridge
Approximate position of Lambridge's wreck

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
SS Lambridge was a British cargo steamship of 5,119 gross register tons (GRT), built in 1917 by the Ayrshire Dockyard Company at Irvine, Scotland, originally launched as Glennevis for the Indian Steamship Company.[1] She measured 400.7 feet in length, 53.4 feet in beam, and 29.8 feet in depth, powered by a triple-expansion steam engine producing 510 nominal horsepower.[1] During her 28-year career, the vessel changed names and owners multiple times, including African Prince in 1921 under Furness, Withy & Co., Pentridge Hill in 1936 for the Dorset Steam Ship Company, and Botlea in 1939 for the Ministry of Shipping.[1] In World War I, Glennevis supported Allied efforts by transporting rice, serving as a Royal Navy collier, and carrying nitrates in convoy operations from 1917 to 1918.[1] Between the wars, she operated commercially under various lines, including the Rio Cape Line, facilitating cargo transport across global routes.[1] Requisitioned by the Admiralty at the outset of World War II, she was converted into a decoy vessel and commissioned as HMS Lambridge (X15) from 1939 to 1941, functioning as a Q-ship designed to lure and engage enemy submarines by disguising her armament of 7 × 4-inch guns, 4 × Lewis machine guns, 4 × 21-inch torpedo tubes, and 100 depth charges.[1][2][3] The Q-ship program proved largely ineffective against U-boats, leading to her reversion to merchant service as Botlea in July 1941, after which she continued in armed convoy duties.[3] Deemed surplus to requirements postwar, Lambridge—renamed for the operation—was scuttled on 30 December 1945 in the North Atlantic at coordinates 55°30′N 11°00′W, approximately 120 miles northwest of Ireland, at a depth of 2,500 meters.[1][2] She was deliberately sunk as part of a British program to dispose of obsolete chemical munitions and poison gas stocks, serving as an underwater ammunition dump beyond the continental shelf to prevent environmental and security risks.[3][2] Her wreck remains in that position today, a testament to the ship's transition from peacetime commerce to wartime deception and postwar hazardous waste management.[2]

Construction

Building

The SS Lambridge was constructed by the Ayrshire Dockyard Company Ltd. at Irvine, Scotland, under yard number 445, following the UK Shipping Controller's standard "B" type cargo ship design intended to rapidly bolster wartime merchant tonnage with simple, uniform vessels of approximately 5,030 gross register tons, two decks, and a single-screw propulsion system.[1][4] Her keel was laid down in early 1917, and she was launched on 2 March 1917 as Glennevis for the Indian Steamship Company Ltd., managed by J. Gardiner & Co. of Glasgow.[1] Fitting out proceeded swiftly, with completion in May 1917, including the installation of boiler and triple-expansion steam engine systems supplied by Dunsmuir & Jackson Ltd. of Govan.[1] Following completion, amid acute World War I shipping shortages, the vessel promptly entered wartime service supporting Allied efforts, including transporting rice from Burma, serving as a Royal Navy collier, and carrying nitrates in convoys, without extended peacetime commercial operations under her original owners.[1]

Specifications

The SS Lambridge was a steel-hulled cargo steamer with a gross register tonnage of 5,119 and a net register tonnage of 3,245. Official number 137842.[1] Her principal dimensions measured 400.7 feet (122.1 m) in length between perpendiculars, a beam of 53.4 feet (16.3 m), and a depth of 29.8 feet (9.1 m).[1] Propulsion was provided by a single three-cylinder triple-expansion steam engine manufactured by Dunsmuir & Jackson Ltd. of Govan, featuring high-pressure, intermediate-pressure, and low-pressure cylinders of 27-inch, 43-inch, and 72-inch diameters respectively, with a 48-inch stroke and a nominal power output of 510 NHP; this drove a single screw propeller, enabling a service speed of 10.5 knots.[1][2] Steam was generated by three coal-fired, single-ended Scotch boilers equipped with nine corrugated furnaces, representative of the efficient, high-pressure designs common in early 20th-century tramp steamers.[2] Designed as a versatile tramp steamer under the standard "tramp" configuration, the vessel accommodated bulk cargoes such as rice, nitrates, and other commodities in her holds, with basic crew quarters for around 40–50 personnel typical of her class and era.[1]

Service History

World War I Service

The SS Lambridge, operating under its original name Glennevis throughout World War I, was requisitioned by Furness, Withy & Co Ltd on 27 September 1917 for wartime service under the UK Shipping Controller.[1] Shortly thereafter, on 14 November 1917, management was transferred to Rio Cape Line Ltd, a subsidiary managed by Furness, Withy & Co Ltd in Newcastle.[1] This requisition aligned with broader Allied efforts to bolster supply lines amid the demands of the conflict.[1] Prior to full government control, Glennevis completed its maiden voyage from 30 June to 24 October 1917, transporting rice from Burma to the United Kingdom to support food supplies for the Allied war effort.[1] From 25 October 1917 to 12 April 1918, with an interruption for military cargo, the vessel served as a Royal Navy collier, designated as collier No. 1862, delivering coal to key naval bases to fuel warships and sustain maritime operations.[1] Concurrently, between December 1917 and November 1918, it undertook two dedicated voyages carrying nitrates under the Commercial Branch (Military) to facilitate explosives production essential for artillery and munitions.[1] Following the Armistice on 11 November 1918, Glennevis transitioned to liner service on 29 November 1918, remaining under government management to aid in postwar logistics and repatriation efforts.[1] Throughout this period, the ship retained its original name, reflecting its role in the wartime convoy system without alteration.[1] During her service, there were crew losses, including incidents in 1918.[3]

Interwar Service

Following the end of World War I, the ship returned to commercial service in 1919 as Glennevis under the ownership of Indian Steamship Company Ltd, managed by J. Gardiner & Co in Glasgow.[1] In 1921, she was sold to Furness Withy & Co Ltd and renamed African Prince, after which she served on general cargo routes that included transatlantic crossings between ports such as New York, Hull, and Dundee, as well as trades to South America and Africa, including the River Plate and Buenos Aires.[1][3] The African Prince operated reliably without major incidents throughout the 1920s and into the early 1930s, concentrating on the transport of bulk cargoes like grain from Argentine ports and ore on return voyages, contributing to the stability of peacetime global trade networks amid economic fluctuations such as the Great Depression, during which she was briefly laid up in Rothesay Bay in 1930. Crew deaths occurred in 1927 and 1932.[3] In July 1936, the vessel was sold to Dorset Steam Ship Company Ltd, managed by Counties Ship Management Ltd in London, and renamed Pentridge Hill, shifting her operations to cargo services primarily between South Africa and Madagascar.[1][3] No significant refits or structural alterations were made to the ship during the interwar years, preserving her original standard cargo configuration with capacity for general bulk and breakbulk loads.[1]

World War II Service

In 1939, the ship, previously known as Pentridge Hill, was sold to the Ministry of Shipping and placed under the management of Sir William Reardon Smith & Sons Ltd. of Cardiff, at which point it was renamed SS Botlea.[1] Shortly thereafter, in September 1939, the Admiralty acquired the vessel and commissioned it as the Q-ship HMS Botlea (pennant number X15), though it operated under the alias RFA Lambridge or SS Lambridge while in port to maintain its disguise as an unassuming merchant vessel.[3] The conversion, completed by December 1939, equipped the ship with concealed weaponry including up to seven 4-inch guns, four Lewis machine guns, four 21-inch torpedo tubes, and around 100 depth charges, enabling it to engage in anti-submarine warfare by luring German U-boats into revealing themselves.[2][3] As a Q-ship, HMS Botlea primarily served in the North Atlantic, participating in convoy escort duties such as with convoy HX 69 from August to September 1940, and conducting decoy operations designed to draw out U-boat attacks.[3] These efforts aimed to counter the German submarine threat to Allied shipping, though Q-ships like Botlea achieved no confirmed U-boat sinkings during World War II and were ultimately deemed ineffective by early 1941.[5] The vessel made port calls at locations including Gibraltar, Bermuda, and Simon's Town, South Africa, while maintaining its merchant disguise to avoid detection.[3] Despite operating in high-risk areas, it sustained no damage from enemy action during this phase.[6] In February 1941, following the Admiralty's decision to discontinue the Q-ship program, control of the vessel reverted to the Ministry of War Transport, and it was renamed SS Lambridge and refitted as an armed merchant cruiser with enhanced armaments for convoy protection and potential raiding roles.[1][5] This conversion occurred in March 1941 at Colombo, Ceylon, after which SS Lambridge continued operations on North Atlantic and Indian Ocean routes, including escorting HMS Capetown to Bombay in May 1941 and supporting activities in the Red Sea region such as the handling of Italian prisoners at Berbera and Aden. In 1943, Bosun Robert Fraser was awarded the British Empire Medal.[3][6] The ship survived multiple U-boat encounters without incident and remained in service until late 1945, contributing to the Allied war effort by safeguarding vital supply lines.[3][1]

Final Disposition

Scuttling

Following the end of World War II, the SS Lambridge was decommissioned in 1945 due to its obsolescence as a merchant vessel and the need to dispose of hazardous wartime stockpiles.[1] The British Admiralty selected the ship for this purpose, loading it with obsolete chemical munitions, including poison gas shells, to facilitate safe deep-water disposal and mitigate potential environmental and security risks from land storage.[3][7] Under Admiralty orders, the vessel—its name reverted to Lambridge for the operation—was towed to a designated position in the North Atlantic on 30 December 1945 by Royal Navy vessels.[1] With no crew aboard to avoid exposure to the dangerous cargo, the ship was deliberately scuttled beyond the continental shelf.[1] This method aligned with post-war protocols for eliminating chemical weapon remnants, as part of a broader program that saw at least 24 such ships sunk between 1945 and 1957.[8]

The Wreck

The wreck of SS Lambridge is situated at coordinates 55°30′N 11°00′W, roughly 120 miles (190 km) northwest of Ireland in the North Atlantic, at a depth of approximately 8,200 feet (2,500 m). The site lies beyond the continental shelf in international waters, where the vessel was intentionally scuttled on 30 December 1945 as part of post-World War II disposal operations. The hull remains largely intact, containing its cargo of chemical munitions, including an unknown quantity of gas-filled ammunition.[7] Due to the hazardous nature of the contents, the area has been designated a prohibited zone by the UK Ministry of Defence, restricting access for fishing, salvage, or other activities to prevent disturbance or exposure risks.[9] No salvage operations have been attempted, in line with international prohibitions on interfering with such sites under the London Convention. The UK Hydrographic Office marks the location on nautical charts as a danger area. As one of four ships scuttled at this disposal site, Lambridge exemplifies early post-war practices for eliminating surplus chemical weapons at sea, informing ongoing research into long-term underwater hazards and remediation strategies for similar legacy sites.[7]
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