RMS Alcantara (1926)

For other ships with the same name, see SS Alcantara (1913).
Alcantara off Rio de Janeiro between 1934 and 1939
History
United Kingdom
Name:
  • RMS Alcantara (1926–39; 1943–58)
  • HMS Alcantara (1939–43)
  • Kaisho Maru (1958)
Owner: Royal Mail Lines
Operator: United Kingdom Royal Navy (1939–43)
Port of registry: United Kingdom Belfast
Route: Southampton – South America
Builder: Harland & Wolff, Belfast
Yard number: 586
Launched: September 1926
Completed: 18 February 1927
Commissioned: 1939
Decommissioned: 1943
Identification:
Fate:
  • Returned to civilian service 1948
  • Broken up 1958
General characteristics
Type:
Tonnage:
  • 22,181 GRT
  • tonnage under deck 16,089
  • 13,189 NRT
Length:
  • 630.5 ft (192.2 m) p/p
  • 656 ft (200 m) o/a
Beam: 78.5 ft (23.9 m)
Depth: 40.5 ft (12.3 m)
Decks: 3
Installed power:
  • As built: 3,366 NHP; 10,000 ihp, 7,500 bhp
  • From 1934: 4,205 NHP; 24,000 shp
Propulsion:
Speed:
  • 16.5 knots (30.6 km/h) (until 1934)
  • 19 knots (35 km/h) (from 1934)
Boats & landing
craft carried:
built with 30 lifeboats, later reduced to 28
Capacity:
  • 1,430 passengers:
  • 432 1st class
  • 223 2nd class
  • 775 3rd class
Complement: 254
Sensors and
processing systems:
Armament:
Notes: sister ship: RMS Asturias

RMS Alcantara was a Royal Mail Lines ocean liner that was built in Belfast in 1926. She served in the Second World War as first an armed merchant cruiser and then a troop ship, was returned to civilian service in 1948 and scrapped in 1958.

Background

In the First World War the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company lost a number of ships to enemy action, including three of its "A-series" passenger liners: Alcantara, Aragon and Asturias.[3] After the 1918 Armistice RMSP prioritised the replacement of lost cargo ships,[4] using new refrigerated cargo ships to take a share of the growing trade in frozen meat from South America to the UK.[5]

High demand for new merchant ships to replace First World War losses kept shipbuilding prices high, so RMSP Chairman Lord Kylsant deferred ordering any new passenger liners for a few years. However, in 1921 Parliament passed the Trade Facilities Act, which offered low-interest loans and Government guarantees for repayment. In 1924 Kylsant took advantage of the Act by ordering from Harland and Wolff of Belfast a pair of 22,200 GRT passenger liners[6] with a speed of 18 to 19 knots (33 to 35 km/h).[7]

Motor ships

A 1928 painting of Alcantara by Kenneth Shoesmith for an RMSP poster. It shows her original appearance as a motor ship with two low funnels.

Harland and Wolff launched Asturias in July 1925 and her sister ship Alcantara in September 1926.[8] The latter was named after Royal Mail Lines' previous Alcantara, which was an armed merchant cruiser in the First World War and had been lost when she and the German armed merchant cruiser SMS Greif sank each other in 1916.

Each of the two new ships was powered by a pair of eight-cylinder four-stroke double-acting diesel engines built by Harland and Wolff to a Burmeister & Wain design. The engines gave each ship 10,000 ihp or 7,500 bhp, and at the time they were the World's largest motor ships.[8] However, their cruising speed was only 16.5 knots (30.6 km/h), which was less than that of competing ships already on the route between European ports and the South American east coast. This was an embarrassment for Lord Kylsant, who in 1924 had become Chairman of Harland and Wolff in addition to his position as chairman of RMSP.[9]

Compagnie de navigation Sud-Atlantique had two 15,000 GRT liners on the route, Lutetia (1913) and Massilia (1920), that were smaller and older but at 20 knots (37 km/h)[10] could offer a passage that was quicker by several days. In 1927 Hamburg Südamerikanische Dampfschifffahrts-Gesellschaft ("Hamburg South America Steamship Company") increased RML's embarrassment by introducing the liner Cap Arcona, which not only matched the speed of the French ships[11] but at 27,561 GRT also became the largest ship on the route between Europe and South America.[12]

Steam turbine ships

In 1931 the Royal Mail Case resulted in the jailing of Lord Kylsant, and in 1932 the company was reconstituted as a new body, Royal Mail Lines, chaired by Lord Essendon. He claimed that German, Italian and French competitors were running ships to South America at 22 knots (41 km/h), giving a passage about five days quicker than RMSP.[13] The new RML company immediately considered how to raise the speed of Asturias and Alcantara.[9] Essendon concluded that foreign competitors were losing money at 22 knots, but a range of options to raise the speed of Asturias and Alcantara to 19 to 22 knots (35 to 41 km/h) should be evaluated. Essendon also proposed inviting foreign competitors to agree a 19-knot speed limit on the South American route, so that all companies could economise on fuel and attempt to cover their costs.[14]

At that time marine diesel power was at a relatively early stage of development, and RML considered it unable to increase the two ships' speed to the required level. Lord Essendon therefore recommended steam turbines, and two options for the drive system: either conventional reduction gearing, or the newer turbo-electric transmission that had been pioneered in the USA and successfully applied to US, UK and French ocean liners. Whichever transmission was chosen, the cost of re-engining Asturias and Alcantara was estimated at about £500,000. Lord Essendon also urged RML directors to order a third ship of similar speed to share the route with Asturias and Alcantara.[14]

Given the Great Depression at the time, the RML board rejected the idea of a new ship. At first it was prepared to have only one ship re-engined, and proposed reassigning the other to cruising to replace the ageing A-series liner Atlantis. However, in May 1933 the board consented to have both Asturias and Alcantara re-engined, and at the same time to lengthen their bows and improve the accommodation. RML awarded the work to Harland and Wolff, but with a condition in the contract that the ships must achieve at least 18.75 knots (34.73 km/h), and a graduated penalty clause in case the actual speed increase should fall short of that figure.[15] In the same year, Lord Essendon succeeded in getting RML's competitors to accept a 19-knot speed limit on the South American route.[13]

Harland and Wolff fitted each ship with three water tube boilers supplying superheated steam at 435 lbf/in2 to a set of six turbines that drove her twin propeller shafts by single reduction gearing. The National Physical Laboratory helped the shipyard to design new aerofoil-section manganese bronze propellers, and the rudders were also streamlined.[15] The new machinery succeeded in increasing each ship's nominal horsepower by 25% and increased their speed to about 19 knots (35 km/h).

Asturias was converted first, going to Belfast in May 1934 and returning to service in October. Only after Asturias had successfully completed a voyage from Southampton to Rio de Janeiro and back did RMS send Alcantara to Harland and Wolff at Belfast in November. She returned to service in May 1935.[16]

Each ships had two funnels, of which the forward one was a dummy.[9] As built the funnels were low, which was a fashion for some 1930s motor ships. When the ships were re-engined in 1934 each funnel was increased in height.

Second World War service

In 1939 the Admiralty requisitioned Alcantara and Asturias and had each ship converted into an armed merchant cruiser. The mainmast and forward dummy funnel of each ship were removed to increase the arc of fire for their anti-aircraft guns.

Alcantara was sent to Malta for further modifications, but en route she had a major collision with the Cunard ship RMS Franconia. As a result, Alcantara continued to Alexandria for hull repairs. The beds from Alcantara were sent to Malta, installed in Admiralty House and used for bombed out civilians and naval staff.[17]

On 28 July 1940 Alcantara encountered the German German auxiliary cruiser Thor in the South Atlantic. With her steam turbines Alcantara made 21.5 knots (39.8 km/h) for four hours to chase Thor,[16] and two shells from Alcantara's six-inch main guns hit the German ship. But three shells from Thor hit Alcantara and one flooded her engine room. This forced Alcantara to reduce speed, enabling Thor to escape.

In 1943 Alcantara was converted into a troop ship.

Final years

Alcantara remained a troop ship well after the end of the war, and did not return to civilian service until October 1948. Asturias remained in UK Government service as an emigrant ship, and Alcantara alone resumed their route between Southampton and South America. In April 1958 she was withdrawn from service and sold to Japanese shipbreakers who renamed her Kaisho Maru, took her to Japan and broke her up in the same year. Asturias was also broken up in 1958, in Scotland. During her demolition, Asturias was used in the film 'A Night To Remember' to represent RMS Titanic for the evacuation and lifeboat launching scenes.

Artifacts

Alcantara panels at Żabbar Sanctuary Museum

As part of the conversion to an auxiliary ship, mahogany wood paneling in the lobby was removed and stored in order to be replaced after the war. Eventually, the panels were not reused but were sold to the Church of Our Lady of Grace in Żabbar, Malta, where they were used as the platform for the altar for the 1951 village feast. The panels are now in the Żabbar Sanctuary Museum.[18]

References

  1. "BR 6in 45cal BL Mk XII". NavHist. Flixco Pty Limited. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
  2. "BR 3in 45cal 12pdr 20cwt QF Mk I To IV". NavHist. Flixco Pty Limited. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
  3. Nicol 2001b, p. 121.
  4. Nicol 2001b, p. 233.
  5. Nicol 2001b, pp. 236–237.
  6. Nicol 2001b, p. 231.
  7. Nicol 2001b, p. 232.
  8. 1 2 Nicol 2001b, p. 131.
  9. 1 2 3 Nicol 2001b, p. 132.
  10. Talbot-Booth 1936, p. 394.
  11. Talbot-Booth 1936, p. 410.
  12. Talbot-Booth 1936, p. 332.
  13. 1 2 Nicol 2001b, p. 139.
  14. 1 2 Nicol 2001b, pp. 138–139.
  15. 1 2 Nicol 2001b, p. 140.
  16. 1 2 Nicol 2001b, p. 142.
  17. Vernon, Caroline (2011). Our Name Wasn't Written (3rd ed.). Canberra, Australia: Stringybark Publishing. p. 31. ISBN 9780987092212.
  18. "Zabbar Sanctuary Museum". Malta daily photo. 13 March 2010. Retrieved 19 November 2014.

Sources and further reading

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