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A Potted History Of Hartlepool
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Hartlepool at War
Hartlepool Ships & Shipping
Year |
Name |
Owner |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| 1901 | Battersea Bridge | Bridge Steam Shipping Co. Ltd. | |
| 1905 | Battersea Bridge | W. Gray & Co. Ltd. | |
| 1912 | Florrieston | Florrieston S.S. Co. Ltd. |
The British steamship Florrieston was torpedoed and sunk by the German submarine U-91 (Alfred von Glaenapp) off Portavogie, Northern Ireland, on April 20th, 1918. The ship was on a voyage from Almeria, Spain to Glasgow with a general cargo. 19 crew were lost. Master John J. Cunningham.
Battersea Bridge - Lives lostMasters: 1901-02 GW Lennard: 1904-05 LS Berryman: 1905-06 R Chivers: 1907-09 MS Pallett: 1915-17 E Smith: 1918 John K Cunningham.
Defensively armed & On a voyage from Almeria for the Clyde with a cargo of copper ore Florrieston was torpedoed without warning by German submarine U-91 (Alfred von Glasenapp) & sank 6 miles E ½ N from South Stack, Anglesy on 20 April 1918. 19 lives lost.
Lives lost April 1918: Aitken, David, chief steward, 49, b. Glasgow; Baxter, John, 3rd engineer, 23, Glasgow; Boulton, Thomas, 4th engineer, 25, Glasgow; Cameron, Lachlan, able seaman, 28, b. Mull, resided Glasgow; Cassidy, Hugh, fireman/trimmer, 38, Glasgow; Clelland, Robert, 1st mate, Holmlea Rd. Glasgow; Cunningham, John K, master; Friel, Michael, fireman/trimmer, 28, Glasgow; Fritzhall, Louis, sailor/carpenter, 44, b. Linkoping, Sweden; Kerr, John Alexander Cameron, mess room steward, 17, b. Saltcoats, resided Glasgow; Johnsen, Carl, sailor, 44, b. Russia; McCulloch, James, donkeyman, 51, Glasgow; McGill, John, fireman/trimmer, 45, Glasgow; McLellan, John, fireman/trimmer, 34, Glasgow; Mill, James, 1st engineer, 38, b. Corran Ferry; Rayner, Edwin, fireman/trimmer, 37, b. Manchester; Rogers, George Ernest, private, 32, Maidenhead; Sharpe, Asbert Augustus, sailor, 27, b. Clarendon; Smith, David Templeton, 2nd engineer, 26, Maryport.
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Hartlepool Ship Losses - First World WarThis 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.
