Dundee Evening Telegraph, Monday, May 10th, 1915:
WEST HARTLEPOOL STEAMER Torpedoed Off Blyth. Pirates Search the Vessel. (Passed for Publication). The unknown vessel reported sunk by the German submarine off Blyth on Saturday proves to be the Queen Wilhelmina of West Hartlepool.
One of the Furness Line navigating officers interviewed at Middlesbrough to-day, said they left Leith at 6 o'clock on Friday night and when off Blyth at four on Saturday morning, witnessed the sinking of the steamer Don of Hull. Another steamer was sighted, but she cleared off and the submarine then attacked the Queen Wilhelmina, firing a dozen shots. The latter was doing about twelve knots, and though she made a race of it she was overhauled and the captain gave the order heave to. The submarine ordered the small boat to come alongside, and then fired a torpedo at the vessel, which missed the mark. The armed crew then searched the vessel before a second torpedo sank her.
After being in the water for two hours the crew was picked up by a patrol boat and landed at Shields.
Local and worldwide incidents, accidents and losses involving Hartlepool and West Hartlepool-owned ships.
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