War Mehtar (Tanker)

WAR MEHTAR (TANKER) Convoy Fs-50

Position ... 52 36'21,8"N / 02 08'54,5"E
Type ... Tanker
Built ... 1920
Builder ... G. W. Armstrong & Whitworth. Co Ltd, Newcastle-Upon-Tyne
Yard number ... 954
Official number ... 144350
Construction ... Steel
Engine builder ... Palmer's Shipbuilding & Iron Co. Ltd, Newcastle-Upon-Tyne
Engine ... x1 three cylinder triple expansion, x1 screw
Tonnage ... 5502 grt
Dimensions ... 121.9 x 15.8 x 7.9mtrs
Boilers ... x3 scotch type boilers, x9 corrugated furnaces in total
Power ... 517nhp
Speed ... 11 knots
Lost ... 20th November 1941
Cause ... Torpedo, S Boat, S104
Depth ... 40mtrs

History of ownership
Built in 1920 for the shipping controller Hunting & Son of London. In 1921 she was transferred to the Admiralty, however she still remained under the management of Hunting & Son. In 1937 the Admiralty took full control of the war Mehtar. At the time of her loss, the War Mehtar was under the ownership of the Admiralty.
Circumstances of loss
Whist attached to convoy Fs-50 ,  enroute from Grangemouth to Harwich, the War Mehtar with a cargo of fuel oil found herself under attack  from the S104 of the German 2nd S Boat flotilla. The War Mehtar took a direct torpedo hit from the S-104. During the attack on the convoy by the 2nd S Boat Flotilla, two additional vessels were also lost, these being the SS Waldinge and the SS Aruba. 
War Mehtar's captain, S.M.Woodward, on seeing the S Boats moving in and spotting torpedo trails heading for his ship, gave the order to swing to port. Sadly for the War Mehtar, despite her evasive manoeuvers she took a direct hit astern, this resulting in her cargo of fuel oil that had been destined for the Destroyers based at Harwich igniting and setting the War Mehtar ablaze. Soon on the scene was the tug Superman. Taking the still ablaze War Mehtar in tow, the Superman headed for Yarmouth. Sadly the damage inflicted by S-104 was to prove fatal. The War Mehtar whilst still under tow broke her back and sank.
                                                                                                           
                                                                                     Below ... Link to SS Waldinge and Aruba (Possibly) Convoy Fs-50

SS Waldinge (Convoy Fs-50) Aruba (Possibly)?

S-104 was a high speed German motor torpedo boat, at a length of 33mtrs and powered by 3 Daimler Benz marine diesel engines, she was capable of speeds up to 44 knots. Her armament consisted of 2 x 21 inch torpedo tubes with 4 torpedoes carried, 3 x 20mm cannons, 1 x twin and 1 x single along with a single 37mm flak cannon. The S in S boat stands for schnell, this meaning fast in German, the name given to these craft was Schnellboot (Fast boat).  S104, built by Schlichting Werft, Travemunde was launched on the 18th/2nd/41 and commissioned on the 27th/3rd/41. On the 9th January 1943, S104 is beleived to have been destroyed by a mine in the English Channel.

G.W. Armstrong & Whitworth Co Ltd (Newcastle-Upon-Tyne), builders of the War Mehtar was a major British manufacturing company of the early part of the 20th century. Armstrong Whitworth where involved in the construction of armaments, ships, locomotives, automobiles, and aircraft.


Palmer's Shipbuilding & Iron Co Ltd, (Newcastle-Upon-Tyne), builders of the War Mehtar's engine. Palmers Shipbuilding and Iron Company Limited of Jarrow, often referred to simply as Palmers.

Based in Jarrow, the company also had operations in Hebburn on the River Tyne. The latter yard was later absorbed by Vickers-Armstrongs and formed into Palmers Hebburn Co, a ship repair establishment with the largest graving dock in the North East of England. 1852 The company was established by Charles Mark Palmer and his elder brother George Robert Palmer. They were the sons of George Palmer, a prosperous South Shields businessman and ship-owner. Charles initially worked for his father before establishing his own shipyard at Jarrow. The land for the yard was leased from Mr Carr-Ellison of Hebburn in order to build steam colliers to ship coal to London. 1852 Palmer Brothers and Company launched their first ship, a paddle tug called Northumberland. 1852 Palmers' first sea-going screw collier – the John Bowes - was launched on 30th June; this was the yard’s second ship. It had a very long life under the Spanish flag before foundering as Villa Selgas in 1933. The Yard built 25 colliers of 12,210 grt in the two years following the launch of John Bowes

1853 Palmer started an engineering side to the business to build engines for his vessels. 1854 The first rolled armour plates were produced for warships. 1856 The Yard was a major builder of warships for the Royal Navy manufacturing 20 warships plus many small torpedo boat destroyers.

1856 The Iron hulled, iron armoured floating battery HMS Terror (1856) was built, intended to destroy the Russian forts at Cronstadt. 1860 Output increased to 22,000 tons. Charles Palmer purchased 14 collieries to safeguard his coal supply, leased land in North Yorkshire and set up the Grindle Park Mining Company in order to mine it. He also built a harbour at Port Mulgrave near Staithes to ship the ore back to Jarrow. 1860 A yard was purchased at Howden-on-Tyne, where the firm built cargo vessels, oil tankers (probably the first yard to do so), and passenger ships. The Howden Yard was used for a high percentage of the total output of the company. 1861 Palmer secured a contract from the Italian Government to build mail steamers. 1863 In August, Charles Mark Palmer launched four ships, one better than the triple launch of Charles Mitchell in 1856 at Low Walker.

Between 1863 and 1873 Palmer played an important part in establishing the National Line along with Thomas Ismay, owner of the White Star Line.1865 The company was established. Palmers Shipbuilding and Iron Co. Ltd was incorporated as a limited liability company. Manchester interests held most of the shares with Palmer as Chairman and Managing Director.

Charles Palmer also had interests in the Tyne Plate Glass Company to supply ship’s fittings and the Bede Metal Company to supply copper. 1870 Charles Palmer built Palmers Memorial Hospital for the exclusive use of shipyard employees. A bronze statue of him was placed in the hospital grounds in 1903 following his death. It was then moved to the river-front at Jarrow where it can still be seen today.1872 First use of double bottoms for water ballast in Vaderland, Nederland and Switzerland built between 1872 and 1874 for carrying oil.

1874 Charles Mark Palmer was elected M.P. for North Durham and made Mayor in 1875. George retired from the business and Charles carried on.

1883 The peak year for Palmers: 15 out of 33 ships were built at Howdon. 1883 Launched the Linares, the 500th steamer built by the company. 1884 Five sailing ships were built along with a number of tramps, coastal steamers and coastal liners. 1886 Tankers figured prominently in the yard output. Up to 1906 the yard had the second highest output in the North East. 1889 Hall Brothers paid tribute to Sir Charles Mark Palmer by naming their last tramp built by him as Lady Palmer completed in October 1889.

1889 May. Paris Exhibition. Showed models of ships built. 1893 Charles resigned from the company, aged 71 following heavy losses of £33,000 in 1890/91.

1894 Antwerp Exhibition. Details of their exhibits including a model of a triple-expansion engine of 1,100 hp. Awarded Diploma of Honour in the metallurgy section. 1898 'BURIED IN MOLTEN IRON. A labourer named John Meakin has met with a horrible death at Palmer’s Works. Jarrow-on-Tyne. He was assisting in the tipping of slag when the crust of one of the slag balls burst, and he was enveloped in the burning liquid. His struggles only lasted a few seconds, and the slag stiffening formed a casing around him.  c.1902 Christopher Furness acquired the interests of Sir Charles Mark Palmer in Palmers Shipbuilding and Iron Co (Limited) and was appointed chairman. Acquired for Palmers a lease, with an option of purchase, of the new graving dock at Hebburn-on-Tyne belonging to Robert Stephenson and Co (Limited). 1906 Electric overhead trolley cranes on elliptical-shaped gantries were introduced on the berths. The production of tramps and cargo-liners was speeded up. 1911 The seven-berth shipyard of Robert Stephenson and Co at Hebburn was leased in 1911 together with their 715 foot dry dock.

1912 The Stephenson Yard was then purchased in 1912 for merchant ship production. The Stephenson Yard produced one battleship, one cruiser, three monitors, 198 destroyers and two submarines. Merchant ship output included four cargo-liners, five standard WAR ‘Z’ tankers, five ’B’ type dry-cargo ships.

1912 The Howden Yard was closed.

1914 Shipbuilders, Marine Engineers and Manufacturers of Steel and Iron. 

1914 Directory: Listed as Iron Ship Builders. Palmers (Hebburn) Shipbuilding and Iron Co of Hebburn and Palmers Shipbuilding and Iron Co of Ellison Street, Jarrow.

WWI the yard made one battleship, one cruiser, three monitors and two submarines. The Company purchased the small yard of the Amble Shipbuilding Co. Ltd at Amble, Northumberland during the War

After the War the Company started to manufacture cargo liners with many of these being turbine propelled with turbines built at the Amble Yard.

1922 Early in the year Palmers Shipbuilding and Iron Co decided to form a ship-repairing establishment at Swansea and for that purpose the subsidiary company was formed under the title of Palmers (Swansea) Dry Dock Co.

1922 A 560 feet dry-dock was brought into use in Swansea.

1923 The large British cable-layer CS Faraday was completed in April having been launched in February. However tankers predominated in the post WW1 years with over fifty being made between 1921 and 1930.

1924 Advert says they are shipbuilders and engineers, boiler makers, iron and steel manufacturers, forgemasters, galvanisers and iron & brass founders. Also ship, engine and boiler repairs. Works are at Hebburn and Jarrow. 

1926 The oil tanker British Inventor was handed over to the British Tanker Co following successful trials.

1927 April: The Palmer Shipbuilding Company at Jarrow-on-Tyne restarted two of its five blast-furnaces. The whole plant had been idle since the miners' strike in 1921, except that two furnaces worked for four months in 1923.

1927 The first bracket-less tanker designed by Sir Joseph Isherwood, the Beaconstreet was completed in July. It had a triple expansion steam engine.

1928 The largest warship built after WW1, the 8” gun cruiser HMS York was launched on 17th July by the Queen Mother. It was later sunk by German dive-bombers during the invasion of Crete.

1930 The tanker Peter Hurll was the thousandth ship launched by Palmers on 24th July.

1931 The last merchant ship built at the yard was the tanker British Strength completed on 28th April.

1932 The last launch took place on 19th July: the destroyer HMS Duchess.

1933 The complete closure of the shipyard, engine works, blast furnaces and rolling mills had a devastating impact on Jarrow as the yard had been the main employer. The yard was rescued for a further 18 months thanks to the efforts of Sir John Jarvis, High Sheriff of Surrey.

1935 The Palmer Shipyard was acquired by National Shipbuilders Security Ltd in 1933 and demolished in 1935. The Hebburn dry-dock was taken over by Vickers-Armstrongs and continued to trade as Palmers (Hebburn).

(Credit Graces Guide)

Of note ...  The S Boat S-104 was responsible for the sinking of the V Class Destroyer HMS Vortigern on the 15th March 1942 off Cromer.
UKHO
25/11/1941 ... 1 mast & 20 feet of ship showing
21/03/1942 ... Swept clear at 44 feet
1971 ... Swept clear at 28.1mtrs, foul at 29.1mtrs in a general depth of 40mtrs. Large wreck about 650 feet long, obvious swirl at most states of tide
21/12/1971 ... Lying on port side
24/10/1994 ... Swept clear at 26.6mtrs, foul at 26.9mtrs. General depth 39mtrs, scour depth 2-3mtrs. Height 13.5mtrs, length 132mtrs, width 15mtrs. In one piece, possibly upturned
07/08/2017 ... Least depth 27.6mtrs in a general depth of 39mtrs. Length 124mtrs, width 16.6mtrs, height 13.3mtrs. Wreck is a large, intact and upright target

The War Mehtar today
Awaiting divers report
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