Francis E. Powell departed
Port Arthur, Texas, bound for
Providence, Rhode Island. She carried 81,000 barrels of
furnace oil and
gasoline. She was manned by eight officers and 24 crewmen. On January 27, 1942,
Francis E. Powell was sailing completely blacked out at . At 9:43 AM, she was struck by the last torpedo of
U-130 about northeast of the Winter Quarter Light Vessel. The torpedo hit the tanker on her port side, aft of the midships house, between the #4 and #5 tanks. The explosion ignited a small fire in the
pump room and destroyed the
radio antenna.
U-130 was spotted a few hundred yards away from
Francis E. Powell. The submarine planned to attack the tanker with its
deck gun, though rejected this proposition when other ships were spotted nearby. The tanker's crew abandoned ship in two lifeboats, though her master was crushed when he slipped and fell between a lifeboat and the ship. That boat was lifted back onto the ship by a wave, forcing the occupants to launch a different lifeboat. Another officer and two crewmen died. The tanker caught fire, broke in two, and sank, all around 2:00 PM. Five hours after the torpedo struck, the 17 men in one lifeboat were rescued by the American tanker
W.C. Fairbanks and taken to
Lewes, Delaware. The remaining eleven were rescued by a
US Coast Guard boat from the
Assateague Station and taken to
Chincoteague, Virginia. == Wreck ==