Navy service • broke in two in 1943. At 11 pm on 16 January 1943, a few days after completing her sea trials, the 501-foot-long T2 tanker
Schenectady broke in two amidships while lying at the outfitting dock in the constructors yard in Portland, Oregon. The temperature of the harbor water was about and water conditions were still. The air temperature was approximately and winds were light. The hull failure was sudden and accompanied by a report that was heard a mile away.
Schenectady, built by a
Kaiser Shipyard, was the first catastrophic T2 hull failure, made all the more impressive by the still conditions under which it occurred. The failure of
Schenectady initiated on the deck between two bulkheads and ran down to the keel (see photo). A defective weld was present in a region of stress concentration arising at a design detail point. Poor welding procedures were cited by the committee investigating the failure as contributory; however, at that time the
metallurgical problems were not fully understood. • SS
Caddo (1942) sank on 23 November 1942 after being hit by a
torpedo from the
U-boat in the North Atlantic while en route to Iceland. She had 8 survivors of the 59 men aboard. Also known as SS
Dorchester Heights. • SS
Esso Gettysburg sank on 10 June 1943 after being hit by a torpedo from while off the
Georgia coast. She was bound for Philadelphia with crude oil. She lost 57 of her 72 crew. • SS
Bloody Marsh sank on 2 July 1943 after being hit by a torpedo from
U-66.
Bloody Marsh was on her maiden voyage and sank east of
Savannah, Georgia. She lost three of her 77 crew. • US
Touchet sank on 3 December 1943 after being hit by a torpedo from . She sank in the
Gulf of Mexico while en route to New York from
Houston, Texas. • SS
McDowell sank on 16 December 1943 after being hit by a torpedo from off
Cuba. • sank on 2 November 1944 after being hit by a torpedo from in the
Indian Ocean. • SS
Jacksonville sank on 30 August 1944 after being hit by a torpedo off
Ireland by . She was in convoy CU 36, en route to
Loch Ewe, Scotland. • broke in two, sank at pier in
Boston, and was raised and scrapped in 1947. • SS
Nickajack Trail sank on 30 March 1946 in Eniwetok Harbor at
Enewetak Atoll on trip from Port Arthur to Yokohama. • SS ''Glenn's Ferry'' sank on 6 October 1945 at
Batag Island, Philippines on a trip from
Los Angeles to
Manila after an explosion.
Commercial service • SS
Bemis Heights sank on 5 November 1948 off Quoin Point, South Africa on trip from Santos to Abadan. • , broke in two on 18 February 1952 • , broke in two on 18 February 1952 • SS
Salem Maritime exploded on 17 January 1956 while taking on a load of fuel in Lake Charles, Louisiana. 18 crew members on board were killed, including the oncoming and the retiring Master; as well as 3 personnel ashore when the No. 8 port fuel tank exploded in flames. The
Salem Maritime and three tank barges in close proximity and shore installations were severely damaged. • SS
Midway Hills sank 2 October 1961 after she broke in two from an engine room explosion. She sank 110 miles east from
Jacksonville, Florida, on a trip from Houston to
Perth Amboy, New Jersey. • and its crew of 39 disappeared near the southern coast of Florida after 4 February 1963. • SS
Bunker Hill sank 6 March 1964 after an explosion, she broke in two near
Anacortes, Washington on a trip from
Tacoma, Washington to Anacortes. • SS
White Bird Canyon sank on 17 December 1964 with loss of all the crew in bad weather off
Ulak Island,
Aleutians on trip from
Vancouver to Yokohama. • SS
Rainier (T2-SE-A1) built by Swan Island. After World War II was sold to private company in 1948. Was converted to bulk cargo ship on 1962, was wrecked and sank on 22 December 1965 off Faja Grande Lighthouse,
Flores, Azores as SS
Papadiamandis. • SS
Fort Schuyler (T2-SE-A1) fire started in engine room, then was damaged by explosions and sank on 24 October 1966 off the coast of
Morgan City, Louisiana. • SS
Ninety-Six sank on 3 March 1971 after starting to leak in storm in the Indian Ocean, on trip from
Bunbury, Western Australia, to Savannah. • SS
Texaco Oklahoma sank on March 27, 1971 after breaking up off Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. (US Coast Guard incident report July 26, 1972) • , a T2 tanker, lost 1 February 1972 mistakenly believed to have been lost in the Bermuda Triangle • , a T2 that in 1980 collided with USCGC Blackthorn in Tampa Bay Florida • Sank 24 December 1972 in gale storm 800 miles south of Kodiak on trip from Vancouver to Yokohama. • , a T2 Tanker that in 1977 collided with a drawbridge in Virginia in a spectacular and costly accident. • , a T2 tanker that sank in a 1983 storm, the investigation of which led to major reforms in ship inspections and safety standards. •
Delta Conveyor sank in the
Mississippi River adjacent to Delta Bulk Terminal in
Convent, Louisiana. Raised in two sections: the bow in early 2003 and the aft section in late 2003. ==See also==