Tag Archives: flying dutchman

The Lost Battleship of the Atlantic

80 years ago this month: Here we see the Great War-vintage Brazilian dreadnought São Paulo in Recife, in March 1944, with the old battlewagon at this point in her career reduced to a role as a harbor defense ship.

Laid down by Vickers, Barrow-in-Furness, on 30 April 1907 just 13 days after her sister, Minas Geraes, was laid down at Armstrong in Elswick, the 20,000-ton beast carried a full dozen EOC 12″/45 guns, which were also used on a dozen battlewagons for the Emperor of Japan.

Protected by a 9-inch armor belt with as much as 12 inches of armor on the CT and turrets and capable of 21 knots, these two Brazilian battleships were the opening salvo in a Latin American dreadnought race that saw Argentina and Chile order a pair of even larger and more heavily armed ships from U.S. yards (the Rivadavia-class) and Armstrong (Almirante Latorre-class), respectively.

By WWII, the race had petered out and the once-mighty floating war engines were vestigial sea monsters of another era. Tame dragons kept around to impress the neighbors in the next kingdom. 

Chile had only received one of her battlewagons, Latorre, after it had served in the RN as HMS Canada during the Great War, seeing action at Jutland. After 1933, the old vet was in mothballs although she was brought back out for neutrality patrols during WWII.

As for Argentina, her two battleships, Rivadavia and Moreno, last refit in 1924, were also in and out of mothballs and only occasionally used for the occasional state visit and retained, much like Latorre, to enforce a sense of armed neutrality in WWII.

With that, only the two Brazilian ships saw WWII service with the Allies, although of the sort of limited flavor depicted in the above image. Two days after Brazil declared war on German on 21 August 1942, São Paulo was moved to Recife while Minas Geraes was sent to Salvador, with both fulfilling a harbor defense role.

Battleship São Paulo a Brazilian naval base circa 1942.

When it comes to their fates, Minas Geraes was scrapped in Italy in 1954, Moreno in Japan in 1957, Rivadavia in Italy in 1959, and Latorre in Japan into 1961– with elements of her used in the restoration of Togo’s Vickers-built flagship, Mikasa.

But what of São Paulo? The mighty Brazilian battleship vanished at sea in November 1951 with an eight-man caretaker crew aboard her while being towed to the breakers in Europe.

After a six week search, she was declared lost and has never been found.

I’d like to believe that she is an armored Flying Dutchman of sorts, still roaming the waves of the Atlantic, an everlasting crew of steel ship sailors lost in those waters from the Falklands to the Barents Sea running gunnery drills and holding court for Poseidon.

Russian Ghost Ship Wanders Atlantic

This bad boy has been adrift since February and is believed (hoped)– sunk somewhere in the Atlantic.

Lyubov Orlova

Here is an old picture of the Lyubov Orlova  as she sat  in Neko Harbor, Antarctica around 2000.

This 4300-ton (GT) Yugoslavian made cruise ship is something of a Flying Dutchman these days on the Atlantic. Named after the first recognized star of Soviet cinema, famous theater actress and a gifted singer, she was built-in 1975 for the Cold War Soviet Far East Shipping Company based in Vladivostok. After the fall of the Soviet Union she continued taking tourists on cruises in the polar regions (she had a strengthened hull) until she was sold in 1999. Since then she has been registered in the Cook Islands and has gone downhill. After running aground in 2006 she was by 2012 a derelict in St Johns Newfoundland, with her company in arrears.

Her sister ship, MV Clipper Adventurer, is also known to have a storied reputation. On 27 August 2010, ran aground of a supposedly uncharted rock in the waters of Nunavut’s Coronation Gulf during a cruise. It was later found that the rock was indeed a known hazard and had already been properly reported by the Canadian Hydrographic Service.

Sold to creditors she was being towed to the Dominican Republic for breaking up, valued at about $800,000 in reclaimable metals…but on 24 January 2013 she broke her tow ropes. After being chased around by her towboat off the coast of Canada and finally regained her. The ship not being worth the money being poured into her recovery, the tow boat cut the line on February 7th in International waters some 250-miles from North America.

Since then Orlova has wandered the Atlantic. Three weeks later a spy satellite from the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, spotted her some 1300 miles off the coast of Ireland. At the end of February she was 700 miles from the coast of Kerry, having traveled halfway across the Atlantic on her own.

The Flying Dutchman is a legendary ghost ship that can never make port, doomed to sail the oceans forever.

The Flying Dutchman is a legendary ghost ship that can never make port, doomed to sail the oceans forever. Perhaps she has a new 

In March her EPIRB went off. Now these distress beacons only sound if they are submerged so the popular thinking is that she went to Davy Jones, but who knows. However there were sightings of her adrift as late as March 12  –– more than a week after her
EPRIB went off, which leads to the speculation that some passing boarder/ghost/rat may have just kicked the beacon over the side. Her last known position was 49°49.12N 36°15.44W where the 37-year old ship was still very much afloat, with no crew, no lights, no nothing.

Current thinking could put her anywhere from arctic Norway to North Africa…..the wordpress

blog where is lova is tracking her as we speak

deckplan

Specs
Tonnage:     4,251 GT
Length:     295 ft (90 m)
Beam:     53 ft (16 m)
Draught:     15 ft (4.6 m)
Ice class:     L3
Installed power: Diesel engines; 5,280 bhp (combined)
Propulsion:     Two shafts
Speed:     11 knots (20 km/h; 13 mph)
Capacity:     110 passengers
Crew:     70 (maximum)