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Allied Ships hit by U-boats


Waroonga


NameWaroonga
Type:Steam merchant
Tonnage9.365 tons
Completed1914 - William Denny & Brothers Ltd, Dumbarton 
OwnerBritish India Steam Navigation Co Ltd, London 
HomeportPlymouth 
Date of attack5 Apr, 1943Nationality:      British
 
FateSunk by U-630 (Werner Winkler)
Position57.10N, 35.30W - Grid AK 0114
- See location on a map -
Complement132 (19 dead and 113 survivors).
ConvoyHX-231 
RouteSydney, NSW - Panama - New York (25 Mar) - Liverpool 
Cargo5000 tons of butter, 1500 tons of lead, 1000 tons of canned meat, 1000 tons of beef and 218 bags of mail 
History Completed in May 1914 as Hororata for New Zealand Shipping Co Ltd, Plymouth. In August 1914 requisitioned by the Admiralty as transport, served for the Australian Expeditionary Force until September 1917 and returned to the owner in April 1919. In June 1939 renamed Waroonga for British India Steam Navigation Co Ltd, London. 
Notes on loss In the late evening on 4 Apr, 1943, U-635 (Eckelmann) attacked the convoy HX-231 and reported two ships with 13.000 grt sunk. At 01.58 hours on 5 April, U-630 also attacked two ships from the same convoy southeast of Cape Farewell, heard two detonations and sinking noises and reported one ship sunk and another probably sunk. The ships were Shillong and Waroonga, which had both been damaged in the attack of U-635 earlier.

The Waroonga (Master Charles Campbell Taylor) was scuttled by HMS Loosestrife (K 105) (T/Lt A.A. Campbell, RNR) in the morning on 6 April. Twelve crew members, one gunner and six passengers (one DBS) were lost. The master, 97 crew members, seven gunners and eight passengers (two DBS) were picked up by the corvette and the American steam merchant Joel Roger Poinsett and landed at Londonderry on 9 April.

 


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