USS Henry R. Mallory (ID-1280)

USS Henry R. Mallory in port, c. 1918–19
History
Name: SS Henry R. Mallory
Namesake: Henry R. Mallory
Owner: Mallory Lines
Launched: 1916
Fate: Expropriated by U.S. Army, 24 May 1917
United States
Name: USAT Henry R. Mallory
Acquired: 24 May 1917
Out of service: 13 April 1918
Fate: transferred to U.S. Navy
United States
Name: USS Henry R. Mallory
Acquired: 13 April 1918
Commissioned: 17 April 1918
Decommissioned: 30 August 1919
Fate: Returned to civilian owners
Name: SS Henry R. Mallory
Acquired: 1920
Fate: Sunk 7 February 1943 by U-402
General characteristics
Displacement: 10,910 t[1]
Length: 440 ft 2 in (134.16 m)[1]
Beam: 54 ft 6 in (16.61 m)[1]
Draft: 24 ft (7.3 m)[1]
Speed: 15 knots (28 km/h)[1]
Troops: 2,200[1]
Armament:
  • World War I:
    • 4 × 5-inch (130 mm) guns
  • World War II:[2]
    • 1 × 4-inch (100 mm) guns
    • 2 × 3-inch (76 mm) guns
    • 8 × 20 mm AA guns

USS Henry R. Mallory (ID-1280) was a transport for the United States Navy during World War I. She was also sometimes referred to as USS H. R. Mallory or as USS Mallory. Before her Navy service she was USAT Henry R. Mallory as a United States Army transport ship. From her 1916 launch, and after her World War I military service, she was known as SS Henry R. Mallory for the Mallory Lines. Pressed into service as a troopship in World War II by the War Shipping Administration, she was torpedoed by the German submarine U-402 in the North Atlantic ocean and sank with the loss of 272 men—over half of those on board.

World War I

SS Henry R. Mallory was built by the Newport News Shipbuilding & Drydock Co. of Newport News, Virginia (yard no. 193), and delivered to the Mallory Steamship Line on 21 October 1916.[3] Named for Mallory Lines president Henry R. Mallory, she operated on a New Orleans – New York route, carrying passengers and freight.[4]

U.S. Army service

After the United States declared war on Germany in April 1917, the United States Army, needing transports to get its men and materiel to France, had a select committee of shipping executives pore over registries of American shipping. The committee selected Henry R. Mallory and thirteen other American-flagged ships that were sufficiently fast, could carry enough fuel in their bunkers for transatlantic crossings, and, most importantly, were in port or not far at sea.[5][6] After Henry R. Mallory discharged her last load of passengers and cargo, she was officially handed over to the Army on 24 May, one of the first three ships acquired.[4]

Before any troop transportation could be undertaken, all of the ships were hastily refitted. Of the fourteen ships, ten, including Henry R. Mallory, were designated to carry human passengers; the other four were designated as animal ships. The ten ships designated to carry troops had all of their second- and third-class accommodations ripped out and replaced with berths for troops. Cooking and toilet facilities were greatly expanded to handle the large numbers of men aboard. Gun platforms were installed on each ship before docking at the Brooklyn Navy Yard to have the guns themselves installed.[7][Note 1] All the ships were manned by merchant officers and crews but carried two U.S. Navy officers, Navy gun crews, quartermasters, signalmen, and wireless operators. The senior Navy officer on board would take control if a ship came under attack.[8]

The American convoy carrying the first units of the American Expeditionary Force was broken into four groups;[9] Henry R. Mallory was in the third group with San Jacinto and Finland, and escorts consisting of cruiser Charleston, armed collier Cyclops, and destroyers Allen, Preston, and McCall.[10] Henry R. Mallory departed with her group on 14 June for Brest, France, steaming at a 13-knot (24 km/h) pace.[11] A thwarted submarine attack on the first convoy group,[12] and reports of heavy submarine activity off of Brest resulted in a change in the convoy's destination to Saint-Nazaire.[13]

After her return from France, Henry R. Mallory sailed again in the 5th convoy on 31 July,[14] the 7th convoy on 8 September,[14] and the 12th convoy on 26 November,[15] all of which sailed from the New York embarkation point in Hoboken, New Jersey.[14] In January 1918, Henry R. Mallory became the first transport to sail from the Newport News embarkation port, when—loaded with eight aero squadrons—she sailed on 17 January.[16][Note 2] Departing again from Hoboken on 14 March in the 24th convoy, Henry R. Mallory began her last journey under Army charter. After arriving in France on 26 March and landing her troops, Henry R. Mallory began her return to the United States with Army transport Tenadores and Navy transport Mercury. At 11:45 on 4 April, a German submarine fired torpedoes at the group. Through evasive maneuvers, none of the ships were hit, and with timely gunfire targeting the sub, no more was seen of the threat.[17] Arriving back in the United States on 13 April,[18] Henry R. Mallory was handed over to the U.S. Navy.[1]

U.S. Navy transport duties

After problems with crew discipline aboard Army transports Antilles and Finland when they were torpedoed,[Note 3] the U.S. Navy, led by the recommendations of Rear Admiral Albert Gleaves, insisted that all troop transports be manned entirely by Navy personnel. This was accomplished soon after so as to avoid the need for what Gleaves called "ignorant and unreliable men" who were "the sweepings of the docks".[19] Accordingly, Henry R. Mallory was handed over to the Navy on 13 April 1918 and commissioned on 17 April.[1]

Other than the official change command of the vessel, little else change for Henry R. Mallory. She sailed in her first convoy under Navy command on 23 April, and continued carrying troops to France, making five additional trips before the Armistice in November 1918.[20] In all, Henry R. Mallory carried 9,756 troops to France.[21]

With the fighting at an end, the task of bringing home American soldiers began almost immediately.[22] Henry R. Mallory did her part by carrying home 14,514 healthy and wounded men in seven roundtrips. Henry R. Mallory returned from her last Navy voyage on 29 August 1919, and was returned to the Mallory Lines the following day.[21]

World War II

In the early stages of World War II for the United States, the War Shipping Administration requisitioned Henry R. Mallory for use as a civilian-manned troopship in July 1942. Remaining under the operation of her owners, Agwilines, Inc., she began operation on U.S. Army schedules in July 1942, when she sailed from New York to Belfast. After her return to New York in August, she made way to Boston from whence she sailed to Saint John, Wabana, Newfoundland; Sydney, Nova Scotia; and Halifax, before returning to New York in October.[23]

After first sailing to Boston and Newport, Rhode Island,[23] Henry R. Mallory departed New York as a part of Convoy SC-118 headed for Liverpool via Halifax on 24 January 1943.[24] The crew on board Henry R. Mallory consisted of 9 officers, 68 crewmen, and 34 Naval Armed Guards (who manned the 11 guns on deck). Also on board were 383 passengers, consisting of 2 civilians, 136 from the U.S. Army, 72 from the U.S. Marine Corps, and 173 from the U.S. Navy.[2] As the convoy, which consisted of 60 ships and 26 escorts, sailed near Iceland, a "wolfpack" of Kriegsmarine U-Boats attacked the convoy repeatedly over a four-day period.[24][25] Some 20 U-boats participated, ultimately sinking 12 Allied ships, including Henry R. Mallory;[2] three U-boats were lost.[25]

It was at 06:59 on 7 February 1943 when, traveling in station 33 of the convoy, Henry R. Mallory was hit by one torpedo launched from German submarine U-402 (2) around 600 nautical miles (1,100 km) south-southwest of Iceland. Hit in the number three hold on the starboard side, the ship began settling by the stern and listing to port, and sank at about 07:30. Of Henry R. Mallory's ten lifeboats, only three were successfully launched, holding 175 men. Many other men jumped overboard for rafts in the water.[2]

None of the other ships in the convoy were aware of the Mallory's predicament. American destroyer Schenck—searching for survivors from the convoy's sunken rescue ship, SS Toward, sunk three hours earlier, also by U-402—saw lights but was denied permission to investigate. Only when survivors were found by U.S. Coast Guard cutter Bibb some four hours later was the fate of Henry R. Mallory made clear. Bibb rescued 205 men, 3 of whom later died. Another Coast Guard cutter, Ingham, rescued a further 22, of whom 2 later died. Among the 272 dead was the ship's master, 48 crewmen, 15 armed guards, and 208 passengers.[2]

Notes

  1. The only exception was for SS Finland, an American Line steamer in transatlantic service to Liverpool. Finland had already been outfitted for guns in early 1917.
  2. Crowell and Wilson show Henry R. Mallory sailing from Newport News on 24 January 1918 as part of the 18th convoy. See: Crowell and Wilson, p. 605.
  3. Antilles was sunk. Finland, carrying some of Antilles' survivors on board, was torpedoed but made it safely back to port for repairs.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Henry R. Mallory". DANFS.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Helgason, "Allied Ships".
  3. Colton, Tim. "Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co., Newport News VA". Colton Company. Retrieved 2008-08-05.
  4. 1 2 Crowell and Wilson, p. 315–16.
  5. Sharpe, p. 359.
  6. Crowell and Wilson, p. 313–14.
  7. Crowell and Wilson, p. 316.
  8. Gleaves, p. 102
  9. The individual groups of the first convoy were typically counted as separate convoys in post-war sources. See, for example, Crowell and Wilson, Appendix G, p. 603.
  10. Gleaves, p. 38.
  11. Gleaves, p. 42.
  12. Gleaves, pp. 42–43.
  13. Gleaves, p. 45.
  14. 1 2 3 Crowell and Wilson, p. 603.
  15. Crowell and Wilson, p. 604.
  16. Crowell and Wilson, p. 297.
  17. Gleaves, p. 168.
  18. Crowell and Wilson, p. 606.
  19. Gleaves, p. 108–10.
  20. First Navy convoy: Crowell and Wilson, p. 608. Number of Navy trips: Gleaves, p. 248.
  21. 1 2 Gleaves, pp. 248–49.
  22. Gleaves, p. 31.
  23. 1 2 Charles, p. 193.
  24. 1 2 "Convoy SC.118". Arnold Hague Convoy Database. ConvoyWeb. Retrieved 2008-08-04.
  25. 1 2 Helgason, "U-Boat Operations".

Bibliography

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