Some pictures and other details about each ship are provided below.
SS Merisaar The
Merisaar was a 2,348-ton merchant steamer built in Austria-Hungary in 1900. She was 290 ft. long with a breadth of 42 ft. and 18 ft. of draught. Originally named
Anna Goich, she was sold to Estonian interests after WWI and after Merilaid acquired the ship in 1930 she was renamed
Merisaar.
Merisaars home
port of Tallinn is clearly seen in aft views of the ship. On June 23, 1940,
Merisaar left New Orleans for Cork, Ireland with a cargo of timber. In the North Atlantic Ocean, late in the evening of July 12, 1940, German submarine
U-99 attacked
Merisaar with one torpedo, which missed. About an hour later another torpedo was fired but this also missed, as the seas were very rough. The U-boat then forced the ship to stop by using its 20mm gun, and the German commander ordered the ship to proceed to Bordeaux, France, that was under German control. A few days later, on the evening of July 14,
Merisaar was strafed by a Luftwaffe
Heinkel He 111 bomber. The 26 crewmembers lowered the life rafts and abandoned ship, rowing away as fast as they could. On its next run the aircraft dropped a bomb on the engine room and the ship caught fire and sank off Queenstown, Ireland. The entire crew survived and was left with about 120 miles to row to shore. A French
fishing trawler found them two days later and took them to Lorient, France. After three months' internment in a German camp the ship's captain, August Schmidt (1883–1974), and crew were released. In 1991 Capt. Schmidt's son, artist
Erik Schmidt (15.8.1925-18.4.2014), created a painting showing the German bomber attacking
Merisaar and donated it to the Estonian Maritime Museum. Erik Schmidt's painting "Merisaarele" is donated by
Einar Sanden to
korp! Sakala's convent house in
Tartu.
SS Naissaar The
Naissaar was built in Great Britain in 1911 and was originally named
Ford Castle. After Capt. Roos returned to Estonia from China he helped Merilaid identify suitable ships to acquire, and the
Ford Castle was purchased in 1933. The ship was renamed
Naissaar and Johann Kalmar, who had returned from Shanghai to Estonia in 1932, became her captain. After the Soviets annexed Estonia in 1940,
Naissaar was expropriated by the USSR and was operated by the newly created Estonian State Shipping Company. On August 29, 1941, while in a convoy from Tallinn to St. Petersburg, she struck a mine east of Mohni Island, Estonia and was then bombed and destroyed by Luftwaffe aircraft.
SS Kuressaar In 1935 Johann Kalmar went to England and, under Merilaid's authorization, found and negotiated the purchase of a suitable ship built in the U.K. in 1914 called
Inverawe. Merilaid renamed this ship
Kuressaar and Kalmar became her captain until early 1940 when he took the ship to England where Capt. August Tarius was to take
Kuressaar to the U.S. On June 21, 1940 the U.S.S.R. invaded the Republic of Estonia and on August 6, 1940 they annexed Estonia and the other Baltic nations. The Soviets installed new governments and had these communist governments issue decrees nationalizing all industrial and commercial enterprises, including transportation companies, and expropriating their assets without compensation. The communist governments also attempted to get title and control over various ships owned privately by Estonian, Latvian and Lithuanian interests that had been in foreign waters when the decrees were issued. The U.S. did not recognize the occupation of the Baltic Republics by the U.S.S.R. and froze the transfer of all assets owned by Baltic nationals so the Soviets could not benefit from them. The U.S. also affirmed its recognition of Johannes Kaiv, the existing Consul General of the Republic of Estonia in New York, as the lawful representative of Estonia in the U.S. One of the ships that the newly annexed Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic tried to claim ownership and control of through American courts was the
Kuressaar, that was lying in
Baltimore harbor. Various lawsuits were heard regarding the ownership of this vessel including A/S Merilaid & Co. v. Chase Natl. Bank, 189 Misc. 285, 71 N.Y.S.2d 377 (Sup.Ct.N.Y.County 1947). Anticipating the Soviet claim, Estonia's Consul General, Kaiv, had already organized a new company, Estoduras Steamship Company Inc., registered in the Honduras, and transferred title of
Kuressaar to this entity in order to preserve the ship for her original owner, Merilaid & Co. American courts did not recognize the Soviet claims made on this ship and ownership of the vessel remained with Estoduras. Somewhat ironically, Soviet attempts to get control over other Estonian vessels continued to 1943, even though by this time Germany had invaded Estonia and had taken control of the country from the Russians. Estoduras changed the name of the ship to SS
Mérida and continued to own and operate the ship, largely under the auspices of Peter Mender and his son-in-law Erich Harkna (1911–1991), who both lived in the U.S. Some years later, Johannes Mänder, who lived in Sweden, wished to manage
Mérida from Stockholm and sought support for this from other Swedish-Estonian shareholders, including a group led by Arved Mägi. According to Mägi's memoirs, an agreement was eventually made with Harkna to transfer control of the
Mérida. The total cost for doing so grew to about £250,000 and comprised £100,000 for the ship plus the assumption of various other liabilities, which the Swedish Estonians financed through equity, loans and personal guarantees. This was an unexpectedly large amount and fortunately the subsequent 1956 Suez Crisis resulted in charter rates increasingly substantially. After a few charters from Portugal to England with a cargo of cast iron,
Mérida earned enough to repay all of the loans and have monies left over to refurbish the ship. At this time some of the ship's shareholders, and perhaps also those that were shareholders in Mägi's company, Ola de Navegación Estoco S.A. of Panama City, that held the majority interest, wanted to sell their shares. Mänder wasn't among the sellers but wasn't a buyer himself, and Mägi's group ended up acquiring all of the shares in
Mérida that they didn't already own. However, Lydia Soone, the daughter of Capt. Soone, one of Merilaid's founders, had by then completed her sentence in Siberia, returned to Estonia and retained a lawyer. Mägi ended up making a deal that resulted in Lydia Soone exchanging her interest in the
Mérida for the house owned by Arved Mägi's parents in Tallinn, with his parents being able to live on the lower level of the home as long as they wished. The ship continued to generate attractive profits but as she was old and in need of a major overhaul, the cost of which was uncertain, the ship was sold to a Greek firm. Mägi writes that their experience with the
Mérida turned out very profitably . As a footnote, Mägi turned out to be an unscrupulous ship-owner who ended up in jail for committing
insurance fraud for the 1950 sabotage and sinking of SS
Energi, in which 10 crewmembers were killed. While this event raised some suspicions at the time, there was no evidence to disprove the subsequent investigation's plausible conclusion that the ship had struck an old WWII mine and then sunk. It wasn't until 15 years later that additional information came to light, primarily from a confession, that dynamite had been placed on board the ship and had been the cause of her fate, and Mägi and his accomplices went to jail.
SS Osmussaar Osmussaar was built in the U.K. in 1909 and was originally named
Magdalena. The ship was requisitioned by the U.S. government and operated under the U.S. flag in 1918-1919. In 1922 she was renamed
Duddington. Merilaid acquired the ship in 1936, renamed her
Osmussaar and Johannes Mänder became her captain. After the U.S.S.R. annexed Estonia in 1940, orders were issued instructing all Estonian ships to return to a Soviet port and that any captains disregarding this order would have their families held to account. In fall 1940, the recently married Johannes Mänder wanted to make it more difficult for the communists to make use of the
Osmussaar and to follow the order, and he took the ship north to the port of Murmansk and turned it over to the Russian authorities there. He then returned to Estonia by rail. Ship registries for 1942 list the ship as being based in Vladivostok. Under Soviet control,
Osmussaar was unchanged during WWII and then underwent post-war reconstruction. The Soviet Far Eastern Shipping Register 1880–2005 (Реестр судов ДВМП 1880–2005) lists the ship as belonging to the Soviet Northern Fleet from 1940 to 1943, the Far Eastern Shipping Fleet from 1943 to 1949 and then the Sakhalin Steam Ship Company, before being scrapped. ==The seven founders and their families==