Year |
Name |
Owner |
|
---|---|---|---|
1910 | Stephen Furness | Tyne-Tees Steam Shipping Co. |
Requisitioned as an Armed Boarding Vessel, the British steamship Stephen Furness was torpedoed and sunk by UB-64 off the Isle of Man, on December 13th, 1917, with the loss of 101 lives. The ship was on passage from Lerwick to Liverpool for repairs.
This section will, in time, contain the stories of more than 450 merchant ships built or owned in the Hartlepools, and which were lost during the First World War. As an illustration of the truly global nature of shipbuilding, these ships were owned by companies from 22 different countries, including more than 30 sailing under the German flag at the outbreak of war.
The Stephen Furness of 1910: an extract from an article of the same name by James Layton, which appeared in the May 2001 issue of the ‘Tees Packet’
In the summer of 1909, the Tyne-Tess Shipping Co. announced that it was considering ordering a new ship for the Newcastle to London passenger service. Tenders for the new ship were invited from shipyards in the North-East early in October and an order was placed with Irvines Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co. Ltd., West Hartlepool, in November 1909. The Irvine tender of £43,500 was considerably lower than the four other tenders received, as was the final cost of £44,158, with delivery at the end of June 1910. The ship was named Stephen Furness after the Vice-Chairman of the Tyne-Tees Company and was launched by his wife on May 10th, 1910.
As a shlter deck ship she was quite different from her predecessors which were built with a topgallant forecastle, a well-deck forward and a long poop deck. Her registered length was 290.3ft, breadth 37.3ft and depth to the main deck 16.4ft. Her bridge deck was 130ft long. Gross and Net tonnages were 1,712 and 745 tons. The hull was divided by four transverse watertight bulkheads providing two cargo holds, one forward and one aft of the engineroom which was placed amidships, the forward hold having two hatchways and the aft hold one. Derricks and steam cranes were provided at each hatchway for cargo work.
When she was completed, her hull was painted grey, which had been the colour for most of the fleet since 1906 and was retained until late 1912/13 when the ships reverted to the black hull colour of pre-1906. Richardsons Westgarth Co. Ltd., Hartlepool, provided her triple-expansion steam engine which had cylinder diameters of 26, 42 and 72 inches, and a stroke of 48 inches. Steam was provided by three single-ended coal-fired boilers that were fitted with Howden’s system of forced draught and had a maximum operating pressure of 180 pounds per square inch. On trials she achieved an average speed of 15.5 knots.
She had luxurious accommodation for 250 first-class and 120 second-class passengers in cabins on the shelter deck and main deck. The Dining Saloon was at the forward end of the bridge deck, with seating arranged in bays all round the Saloon, each bay having a table for four people. A Smoke Room and Bar was situated towards the aft end of the bridge deck. Electric lighting was installed throughout the ship and electric fans and natural draught provided ventilation throughout the accommodation. A piano was provided for the entertainment of passengers.
The 1st-class single fare from Newcastle to London was 12 shillings and 2nd-class 8 shillings. A return ticket, which was valid for three months, cost 18 shillings and 12 shillings respectively. Food was not included in the fare but meals were provided throughout the voyage for 6 shillings or 3 shillings, if arrangements were made with the Steward before sailing. Food and drink could also be bought as and when required during the voyage from a general refreshment tariff.
The Stephen Furness left the Hartlepool shipyard on July 11th, 1910 and proceeded to the Tyne-Tees Wharf, Middlesbrough, where she loaded 506 tons of steel rails. She sailed later that day for London via the Tyne, running trials over the measured mile off Northumberland before berthing at Newcastle Quay. She was open to the public on July 13th and many Tynesiders took the opportunity to look over the new ship. An admittance charge of three pence was made with the proceeds going to the Newcastle Infirmary.
She sailed on her maiden voyage to London during the evening of July 14th, 1910, with her cargo of steel rails, some general cargo that had been loaded at Newcastle, 46 First-class and 32 Second-class passengers. The voyage itself was made in hazy weather with a slight sea at an average speed of 15 knots. On the return voyage the sea and weather conditions were les favourable as a strong easterly wind was blowing and the sea was rough. However, she maintained her 15 knots speed throughout the voyage without any sign of vibration. On this leg she had over 200 passengers aboard. Her Master on her maiden voyage, and for most of the next four years, was Captain John Bruce, the Commodore of the Tyne-Tees fleet.
An interesting fact regarding the lifesaving facilities aboard the Stephen Furness emerged following the sinking of the Titanic in April 1912. It was noted that the Stephen Furness was licensed for 550 people but had lifeboats for only 196. To meet the shortfall two additional lifeboats were acquired for occasional use aboard, as it was seldom that the number of people on board exceeded the lifeboat places that were available.
She continued to sail between Newcastle and London until early November 1914 when she was chartered by the Admiralty. However, her passenger carrying days ended on August 5th, 1914, for on this day she sailed from the Tyne with about 200 passengers on board, bound for London. Soon after leaving the Tyne she was stopped by a Royal Navy warship and ordered to return to Newcastle Quay, where her passengers disembarked. The Stephen Furness was then allowed to resume her voyage to London. She was delivered to the Admiralty on December 1st, 1914, and served as a depot ship under the Blue Ensign before becoming a stor ship in May 1915. In March 1916 she was converted to an Armed Boarding Vessel under the White Ensign, with an armament of two 4.7inch guns. She was still serving in this capacity, under the command of Lieutenant T.M. Winslow, RNR, when she was torpedoed and sunk off Belfast Lough on December 13th, 1917, by the German submarine UB-64. Six officers and 95 Ratings lost their lives when she sank.
Lives lost December 1917:
Atkinson, John Ernest, boy 1st class, 17, b. Scarborough, resided Leeds
Bach, Thomas, trimmer
Barker, Arthur, engineers store keeper, 38, Hull
Barlow, Thomas Walter, signalman, 19, Birmingham
Bell, Andrew, greaser, 39, Lochee, Dundee
Blore, George William, ship’s steward, 35, Dovercourt, Harwich
Bond, Charles, fireman, 41, Canning Town, London
Brown, John, engineer/lieutenant, 45, Heaton, Newcastle-on-Tyne
Brown, John David, greaser, Tidal Basin, London
Buckett, Richard Henry, ass steward, 51, b. Isle of Wight, resided Stockbridge
Buckroyd, John Edwin, able seaman
Bunting, John, greaser, 33, Custom House, London
Burke, Joseph, greaser, 42, South Shields
Burns, Thomas, chief cook, 29, Liverpool
Camp, George Robert, ship’s cook, 39, Canning Town, London
Cattermole, Christopher Stanley Boyle
Churchouse, Arthur F
Clayton, Fred, able seaman, 19, Cleckheaton, Yorks.
Crang, Walter, able seaman, 30, Ilfracombe
Daley, J, able seaman, 26
Davies, Sidney Lewis, trimmer, 16, Glamorganshire
Deeley, Walter, able seaman
Duprey, Alfred Frank, signalman
Dyott, Kenelm Mitchill, surgeon, 29, Elford Hall, Tamworth
Etchells, William, able seaman
Evans, Vernon Arthur Martin, trimmer, 25, London
Frank, Alfred, 33
Gahan, Thomas, trimmer, 17, Canning Town, London
Galvin, Joseph, trimmer, 23, Condolkin, Dublin
George, Alastair Farquhar, able seaman, 21, Thurso
Gould, William Henry Felix, 24, Tavistock, Devon
Groves, Walter William, fireman
Hammond, Harry George, greaser, 34, South Ockendon, Essex
Haworth, William, wireman 2nd class
Heseletine, Willie, armourer’s crew, 22, Leeds
Hodgkinson, Francis George, petty officer 1st class
Hopkins, James, assistant steward, 44, Cheshire
Howse, Thomas John Albert, fireman, 21, Canning Town, London
Hunter, William Thomas, messman
Kelly, William Joseph, cook steward, 20, Liverpool
Lawes, HB, able seaman
Macrae, Alexander, able seaman, 27, Isle of Barra, Invernesshire
Mansell, Herbert, greaser, 44, Poplar, London
McCallum, David Crawford, ordinary seaman, 33, Kilfinan, Argyll
McDonald, James, fireman
McDonald, L, fireman
McGregor, Alexander Thomson, temp/engine
McKenzie, John, fireman
McKenzie, John McDonald, greaser
Meehan, Henry Leo, able seaman
Merideth, Arthur Reginald Boyle
Morrison, John, seaman, 35, resided Lewis, Ross, shire
Mullaney, John, able seaman, Clyde
Oakes, Albert
Palmer, George Walter
Patience, John William,
Rainford, Thomas Henry, fireman
Redford, Ralph, trimmer
Reed, Cuthbert Reveley
Rhodes, Arthur Leslie, steward’s asst
Ritchbe, Henry
Robinson, John, able seaman, Bristol
Robinson, John, fireman
Rogers, Henry Richard, fireman
Romans, William Franklyn, able seaman
Shirley, William, fireman
Skinner, John
Smith, Alfred A
Smith, Francis, trimmer
Cameron, Herbert Augustus Sorel, 39,
Southall, Sidney, assistant cook
Southwell, Alfred, steward
Stevens, George Philip Lancelot, donkey, man
Stevens, Sidney James
Talmey, WF, able seaman
Taylor, Francis Thomas, trimmer, 30, Shirley, Southampton
Taylor, James Henry, private,
Thorpe, James, trimmer
Wallia, John Edwin, ass steward
Watt, ED, able seaman
Wenborne, William, fireman, 25, East Ham, London
White, William John, able seaman
Wigmore, AE, able seaman
Williams, Frank David, able seaman
Williamson, Edward Thomas, sergeant, 33, South Lambeth, London
Wingate, JW, ordinary seaman, 18, Portsmouth
Winslow, Thomas Maitland, Lieutenant Commander
Woodhouse, James, leading seaman, 35, Annan, Dumfrieshire
Wybrow, Thomas James, private, 36, Upper Clapton, London
The steamship Stephen Furness at full speed.
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