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Allied Ships hit by U-boats


Samuel Q. Brown

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NameSamuel Q. Brown
Type:Steam tanker
Tonnage6.625 tons
Completed1921 - Merchant Shipbuilding Corp, Chester PA 
OwnerTide Water Associated Oil Co, New York 
HomeportWilmington 
Date of attack23 May, 1942Nationality:      American
 
FateSunk by U-103 (Werner Winter)
Position20.15N, 84.37W - Grid DM 7174
- See location on a map -
Complement55 (2 dead and 53 survivors).
Convoy 
RouteNew Orleans - Cristobal - Honolulu, Hawaii 
Cargo66.000 barrels of fuel oil 
History  
Notes on loss At 09.26 hours on 23 May, 1942, the unescorted Samuel Q. Brown (Master Aksel Andersen) was hit by one torpedo from U-103 about 100 miles south of Cape Corrientes, Cuba. The ship had been spotted at 01.39 hours and was missed by a spread of two torpedoes at 04.02 hours. The torpedo struck on the port side at the bulkhead between the #9 tank and the after fuel tanks and set the vessel on fire immediately. The engines were stopped and the master ordered the boats to be launched, but the eight officers, 31 crewmen and 16 armed guards (the ship was armed with one 4in, four 20mm and two .30cal guns) were forced to jump overboard and swam to two lifeboats and two rafts that were cut loose. Two crew members were lost. The survivors were questioned by the U-boat that surfaced 20 minutes after the hit and then left the area after hitting the tanker with a coup de grāce at 10.35 hours.
On 23 May, the survivors, now together in the two lifeboats, were spotted by a patrol plane of the US Navy from Upham, Canal Zone. The plane took five injured men on board and brought them to a hospital at Key West, Florida. The remaining survivors were picked up the next day by USS Goff (DD 247) and taken to Cristobal after the hulk was scuttled by gunfire from the destroyer on 25 May. 


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