From War to Peace: The Conversion of Naval Vessels After Two World Wars
By Nick Robins
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Nick Robins
NICK ROBINS, a geologist by profession, is acknowledged for setting maritime history within the bigger social and political picture. His books describe the evolution of a variety of ship types ranging from tugs and tenders to excursion steamers and cargo vessels. His last book, The Coming of the Comet, was published by Seaforth in 2012.
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From War to Peace - Nick Robins
PREFACE
Large numbers of redundant minor warships were put up for sale after both world wars. Many were sold at scrap value while others attained a premium from buyers intending to convert them to merchant ships. Convoy escorts and minesweepers were popular targets for conversion into cargo and passenger vessels, as whale catchers and to fill a host of other roles. There were only a few conversions of vessels larger than frigates although some bigger ships were converted, notably German destroyers after the Great War.
Conversions from war to peace include a number of surprises and ingenious solutions to create cruise ships and emigrant ships, luxury yachts and houseboats. Other conversions are more obvious, with less structural modification, and include Landing Ships, Tank and Landing Craft, Tank, also fleet tugs, motor fishing vessels, motor launches and smaller vessels. Conversions took place all around the world and focussed on British, American, Canadian and German warships after the two world wars. At other times redundant naval ships were bought for conversion for a variety of purposes, one of the first being the sale of the entire navy of the German Confederation in the 1850s, of which most vessels were bought commercially, five by a single British owner to develop the near-Continental cargo and passenger trades.
A great deal of help in preparing this book has been received from a number of sources. Ian Ramsey has underpinned the chapter on the process of conversion and the constraints of naval architecture and Ian has also peer-reviewed the manuscript and provided valuable comments. Julian Mannering also provided valuable guidance on the contents and structure of the book. The author is also grateful to Richard Danielson for discussion regarding the fate of the numerous Fairmile launches in British waters and for providing photographs to accompany the text. David Whiteside is thanked for sourcing a number of images from the World Ship Society Photo Archive and Linda Gowans is also thanked for photographic material. All photographs are credited as appropriate, those without acknowledgement in the caption are either from the author’s collection or the source is unknown.
Dr Nick Robins
Crowmarsh, Oxfordshire
1
BEAT THEIR SWORDS INTO PLOUGHSHARES
And many people shall go and say, Come ye, and let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob; and He will teach us of His ways, and we will walk in His paths: for out of Zion shall go forth the law, and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem. And He shall judge among the nations, and shall rebuke many people: and they shall beat their swords into ploughshares, and their spears into pruning hooks: nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more.
Isaiah 2:3–4
In time of war it is normal for merchant vessels to be requisitioned and converted for active service. Roles have included armed merchant cruisers, Catapult Aircraft Merchant ships, anti-aircraft ships, minesweepers, guard and inspection ships, landing ships and many others. Some never saw commercial service under their owner’s house flag. For example, the small excursion turbine steamer St Seiriol undertook builder’s trials and was immediately requisitioned for use as a troop transport in March 1915 and as minesweeper FY573 in December the same year. She was sunk by a mine in 1918. Others, such as the Belfast Steamship Company’s Ulster Queen, which became a cruiser complete with 4in armour plating to protect her hull in the Second World War, were unrecognisable in their new naval roles. Stories of many of these conversions and the naval activities of the ships themselves have been well documented and, for the most part, are well known.
The North Wales passenger excursion steamer St Seiriol (1914) was requisitioned almost as soon as this photo was taken during her builder’s trials, and was lost on minesweeping duties off Harwich in 1918. She never served her owners. (Liverpool & North Wales Steamship Company Limited)
The conversion of redundant naval vessels for merchant service is less widely understood. This is partly because these were far less in number and partly because many of the conversions for civilian life were so comprehensive that few observers recognised their antecedents.
There was one occasion during the Second World War when five naval vessels were converted into merchant ships under the Red Ensign as part of a daring exploit to provide essential hardware for the war effort. In 1943 there was grave concern that Britain was running out of ball bearings. Neutral Sweden had supplied Britain in peacetime and was willing to supply them again, provided that Britain came to collect the goods. Germany, which now occupied neighbouring Norway and Denmark, would, of course, do its best to frustrate any such trade. Sweden made it clear that any naval ships or personnel entering a Swedish port would be interned, and the only possible option was to use merchant ships. As a consequence, Ellerman’s Wilson Line, Hull, was approached to manage a fleet of five motor gunboats which would be specially adapted and would fly the Red Ensign.
Five boats of the so-called Camper & Nicholson type were selected for conversion. They were 117ft long by just over 20ft breadth, and their three Paxman engines provided a speed of up to 28 knots. As gunboats they were equipped with one 6-pounder Hotchkiss gun, one 2-pounder pom-pom, four machine guns and a pair of depth charges and they carried a crew of twenty-one men. They were named after famous whalers in their commercial guise: Hopewell ex-MGB504, Nonsuch ex-MGB505, Gay Viking ex-MGB506, Gay Corsair ex MGB507 and Master Standfast ex-MGB508. They retained the two pom-poms and the machine guns, and were provided with hold space to accommodate 45 tons of steel with a small derrick serving the hatch. They could make between 20 and 23 knots – slower than their naval counterparts because the propellers had to be modified to suit the draft and trim of the loaded boat. In the saloon of each hung a large picture of Winston Churchill, and in the captain’s cabin was a picture of Sir Francis Drake, a master of derring-do.
The former Motor Gun Boat Gay Viking (1943), flying the Red Ensign, was one of five similar boats that brought much needed ball bearings to Britain from neutral Sweden in the winter of 1943/44.
Manned by volunteer crews from the Wilson line, the five boats attempted to make a trial run to the Swedish coast; this had to be abandoned off the Skagerrak due to bad weather and the boats returned home. The crew of each boat comprised twenty men; all were badly shaken by the ride, suffering strained arms and severe bruising; they could do little but hang on in the small deck house.
Two interned cargo ships were used as warehouses by the Swedish ball-bearing manufacturers. The ships lay alongside at Bröfjord, near the port of Lysekil, which is roughly midway between Oslo to the north and Gothenburg to the south. In due course, the Ellerman boats sailed singly to Lyeskil then went alongside the ball-bearing store ships and loaded their cargo, before returning to Lyeskil to await suitable weather for the dash home. German officials in the port reported on their every move. Given a dark night and poor weather the boats would make a run for open water.
James Taylor wrote in his book Ellermans: a Wealth of Shipping:
This daring scheme, confined as it was by the requirements of weather and conducted in the most amazingly public fashion, succeeded far beyond expectation. Subject to weather conditions the sorties continued through the winter and spring of 1943-1944 and were responsible for bringing to Britain’s war effort cargo after cargo of valuable war material …
The only major casualty resulting from enemy action involved Master Standfast commanded by Captain C W R Holdsworth. On 5th November 1943 the former MGB was lying in foggy water awaiting the pilot to take her into Lysekil. Suddenly they were surprised by a ship, apparently Swedish, but quickly revealed as German. Ordered to heave-to, Captain Holdsworth chose to attempt a getaway to the safety of Swedish waters. The German warship opened fire and raked the boat, wounding several. She was boarded and the crew taken prisoner. Sadly, the gallant Captain Holdsworth died from his wounds a few days later.
The only other loss resulted from a collision between Hopewell and Gay Viking. This took place on 5th February, off Chistiansand. Hopewell was badly holed below the water line, so seriously that her crew were compelled to blow her up with explosives kept for such an emergency. The two crews retuned to Lysekil in Gay Viking which was also seriously damaged. There repairs were carried out and she made a successful final dash to Britain.
During spring 1944 the three remaining vessels were converted back into MGBs and rearmed. Gay Corsair was renamed MGB2007 and was lost to enemy action. Nonsuch became MGB2005 and Gay Viking MGB2006 – both survived the war.
The boom periods for the purchase of surplus naval hardware followed the end of major hostilities, for example from 1919 through the 1920s, and in the late 1940s. This was due to two reasons. The first was that many shipowners had lost vessels during the two wars and urgently needed to rebuild their fleets. The second was financial escalation; the price of a new ship was always significantly higher at the end of hostilities than it was at the start, simply due to competition for resources and the inevitable increase in prices for materials to build ships in a commodity-scarce post-war environment.
The Ascot class paddle minesweeper HMS Atherstone (1916) became the passenger excursion steamer Queen of Kent in 1928. She is seen alongside at Calais waiting for the return of her passengers.
In most countries, Britain and the United States included, all naval assets are owned and administered by the state or nation. Advertisements in the press describing redundant naval ships for disposal ultimately require a successful bidder or fixed-price buyer to pay the state, although in many cases there was an agency prescribed to administer the deal and the subsequent financial transaction. After the Second World War, numerous British fleet tugs and Landing Craft, Tank were chartered to commercial operators, the ‘agency’ in this case being the Ministry of War Transport until April 1946, and thereafter the Ministry of Transport. The United States Maritime Commission or Foreign Liquidation Commission handled most sales of redundant vessels from the United States Navy, respectively lying in home waters or overseas, while in Canada it was the War Assets Corporation.
Of course, wartime standard merchant ships such as the ‘War’ merchant fleet of the First World War and the ‘Empire’, Liberty and ‘Victory’ ships of the Second, were also available and in great number. These, for the most part, satisfied the needs of the liner companies, the tanker owners and many coastal and towing roles but they did not satisfy niche roles. These could be filled by the purchase and conversion of surplus naval vessels, some such as fleet tugs, drifters, trawlers and whalers requiring little alteration for civilian duties. Others for use as passenger vessels required major reconfiguration and usually gave good service to their owners against modest financial outlay.
Sale of wartime-built standard merchant ships after both world wars moderated prices of secondhand tonnage, but only to a small extent. Conscious that putting vessels up for auction would attract declining offers as the market needs were increasingly met, the Ministry of Transport, post-war owners of these ships in the United Kingdom, and the United States Maritime Commission in America, sold them mostly at fixed prices. They were bought by British and American shipowners as well as counterparts from overseas to increase international merchant fleet tonnage such that normal trading could resume sooner than would otherwise have been possible. New ships were also ordered and built, but the lead time to completion was considerable.
Conversion of naval vessels was always a favourable option when the economy was growing and a merchant company needed new ships to keep up with demand for its services. Usually, such ships were a stopgap until purpose-built tonnage could be ordered and commissioned; such was the case with the trailer ferry Duchess of Holland when she was converted from a Landing Ship, Small that had been commissioned into the United States Navy in 1946, for use on the Great Yarmouth to Scheveningen service for Norfolk Line in 1970. Within two years she had served her purpose and was put up for sale, having been displaced by new purpose-built ships. An earlier example was the purchase in 1853 of six warships from the German Confederation (Deutscher Bund) by the General Steam Navigation Company of London, the purchase coinciding with a short-lived expansion in trade between the Thames and near-Continental ports.
Purchase of naval ships for conversion to merchant service was also attractive in those trades that had low financial margins. The passenger excursion trade was exactly that, with year-round expenditure which had to be balanced against seasonal income. There are numerous examples, including the two Ascot class paddle minesweepers from the Great War which became the popular Queen of Thanet and Queen of Kent in the fleet of the New Medway Steam Packet Company.
Naval vessels brought into commercial service include both small launches and much larger classes of fighting ship as well as everything in between. The largest were a pair of German cruisers, SMS Gefion and SMS Victoria Louise, which were converted into cargo ships after the Great War, although, for the most part, few ships larger than frigates were bought and converted for commercial use.
Key reasons against the conversion of warships to merchant vessels is the narrow beam of many of them and the sub-division of the hull into small watertight compartments. These factors limit the potential deadweight capacity of a merchant conversion. Bulkheads can be, and were, removed, but this often required some of the remaining bulkheads to be strengthened. Besides, warships are normally designed and built for speed and manoeuvrability with fuel-hungry boilers economically unsuitable for commercial operation.
Another issue was the reluctance of the Admiralty to allow inspection of its ships by potential buyers; purchase was something of a lottery, a bit like buying a house without a surveyor’s report. The preference for many buyers was to wait until ships had been sold and delivered to a shipbreaker’s yard where a comprehensive structural and engineering survey could take place and a fair price agreed for the ship. The price would always allow a profit for the shipbreaker who had bought the ship on a tonnage basis for recycling. Quite often ships were bought in pairs, or even larger bundles, from a single shipbreaker for conversion for civilian service.
There was a good number of conversions of warships to merchant service for passenger use; the Townsend Car Ferries Forde, after the Great War, and Halladale, after the Second World War, for example, are perhaps among the better-known. A number of conversions to passenger vessels were made successfully, the excursion ship Rochester Queen, later the Channel Islands ferry Commodore Queen, and later the roll-on roll-off passenger and car ferry Jersey Queen, for example, was one such following the Second World War. There were a number of conversions from Landing Ship, Tank to roll-on roll-off freight ferry; ships of the Atlantic Steam Navigation Company come to mind, many offering a number of passenger berths. Others were deployed by the Royal Army Service Corps under the Red Ensign. Perhaps the most bizarre conversion of this type of ship was that of the Type 1 Landing Ship, Tank HMS Bruiser into the twin-funnelled luxury Caribbean cruise ship Silverstar. Smaller landing craft were converted for use on estuarial services; Red Funnel’s Norris Castle is a good example of this type.
A large number of seagoing Admiralty salvage tugs were converted for civilian duties, some with passenger certificates. These ships were sought after by salvage and towing companies around the world during the 1920s and from 1946 onwards. Ocean-going fleet tugs flew the White Ensign and crews were subject to naval discipline. Large numbers of these ships were built in both world wars but immediately became surplus to requirements at the end of hostilities. Sale of these ships to commercial operators was certainly a fillip to the salvage and towing industry worldwide although it slowed down the development of this class of ship in a market saturated with wartime-built vessels. Only one European company, Smit of Rotterdam, managed to break free from the ex-naval steamship mould and brought out innovative motor ships with state-ofthe-art equipment in the late 1930s. After the Second World War, however, the motor salvage tugs built for the Admiralty in 1944 and 1945 were at a premium, while the American-built diesel-electric salvage tugs on Lend-Lease to Britain during the war were also in great demand by commercial operators when they came onto the market or were made available for charter.
The former LCG(M)181 (1944) became the passenger excursion ship Rochester Queen in 1948, the Germanowned Hein Muck in 1955 and Commodore Queen in 1961. She was converted into the roll-on roll-off car and passenger ferry Jersey Queen in 1971. (Author)
One of the most visible class of conversions took place after the Second World War when many of the wooden-hulled Fairmile launches were bought commercially and set to many and varied uses. They were readily adapted for short ferry and excursion duties, as Geoffrey Hamer explained in Sea Breezes, July 1982:
The Fairmile B Type launches were built in the war mainly for patrol work and, of the 340 built in this country, at least 20 [actually more like 30] were subsequently converted for excursion work. Originally driven by petrol engines producing a top speed of 20 knots, they were reengined with diesels for economic and safety reasons, and most passenger versions could manage only about 12 knots. Most had Class V and VI certificates for between 200 and 250 passengers. With a promenade deck stretching 112ft from bow to stern, they were ideal for trips in fine weather but saloon space was poor – those below deck had no windows while stability requirements allowed only the tiniest of deck saloons. They were good sea boats but with a large complement of passengers on deck they tended to roll easily.
Golden Galleon (1942), built as Fairmile Type B Launch RML162, was used in the excursion trade at Great Yarmouth for over four decades. She is seen heading up the River Yare.
Over the years they appeared on excursion work from most South Coast resorts from Eastbourne to Falmouth and were also used from Great Yarmouth, Llandudno and Blackpool, on the Thames, the Firths of Clyde, Forth and Tay, and even on the Mersey Ferry service. Last summer [1981] only three were still operating with British passenger certificates – the Golden Galleon at Great Yarmouth, and the Western Lady III and Western Lady IV at Torbay.
At their age, maintenance costs are becoming prohibitive and they cannot be kept in service much longer.
A report in Superyacht Times, July 2019, described the immediate post-war situation and the attractive option of converting Fairmile launches into private yachts:
The large yacht market at this time had been decimated by the scrapping of older vessels and numerous war losses. The problem was that many shipyards had been badly affected during WWII and to build a new yacht of over 30 metres was simply a dream to aspire towards in the future. Admittedly there were several yachts of this size still in existence, but these were not available for purchase due to their owners being unwilling to sell them.
As many as 200 of these [Fairmile B Type launches] would be converted to private yachts and many others to passenger tour vessels. Some would be converted for private use with the minimum of alterations whilst others would undergo more sophisticated conversions to upgrade them to the luxury standards of the time … It was remarkable that so many of these converted yachts survived many years after their estimated life of around five years given their light construction. Of these 200 conversions, it is believed that less than 20 survive worldwide today [2019].
The various classes of fishing vessel and motor fishing vessel that provided valuable service in both world wars were of little value to the military in peacetime. Most of these small wooden-hulled vessels went to the fishing industry while others were used as survey and dive support vessels, one even becoming the David MacBrayne passenger ferry Loch Toscaig.
The breadth of the types of conversions of all kinds of naval ships is quite staggering and the roles adopted in merchant service have been numerous and richly diverse. The success of the conversions was not always guaranteed, and although many of the ships reaped profits for their new owners some failed at the first hurdle and were quietly sold at considerable loss.
There were a number of ships that came from overseas navies into British merchant service, notably from the United States Navy. Many surplus US vessels were also sold for merchant service under the American flag and the emerging flags of convenience such