The Germans were running rampant in
1940. They’d destroyed Rotterdam. London, it seemed, was next. An ambitious
plan to evacuate 210,000 British children to Canada, New Zealand and
Australia began, including a group of ninety children sailing to Canada on
September 13. They never made it, and the Children’s Overseas Reception Board
was disbanded.
The City of Benares was an
11,000-ton ship of Ellerman’s City Line. In peacetime, it ran a route to India.
Indians made up the crew, dressed in turbans, sashes, and shoes that curled up
at the toe. They bowed to the ninety young refugees, called them Little Madam
and Little Sir.
Said one evacuee, “They looked after us
just wonderfully well. We were in seventh heaven. We felt we’d stepped into
the Arabian Nights.” They received an immediate tour of the ship.
Girls roomed on one side of the ship; boys on the other. An amazing array of
food unavailable or rationed at home awaited them. They feasted on ham, not
Spam. And chocolate, hardly ever seen in England. Fresh fruit―apples, bananas,
grapes, oranges, pears―were theirs for the asking.
The City of Benares led
nineteen ships in convoy OB 213, sailing at the head of the center column. The
other ships were smaller and slower. They did not zigzag. After four days,
their naval escort turned back to accompany an inbound convoy. That night, the
convoy was spotted by German submarine U-48.
The children had been put to bed early.
They were traveling in a force eight gale that caused the ship to pitch and
roll. Just after midnight, a violent explosion rocked the ship worse than the
storm. They’d been torpedoed.
People struggled in the steeply listing
ship to reach the boat deck. Launching the lifeboats was difficult in the
stormy weather. The lifeboats swung against the ship, overturned in the sea,
and were overcrowded. The other ships did not stop to help, scattering instead,
as standard procedure to avoid becoming another victim. The City of
Benares sank in 30 minutes.
Late the next day, the HMS Hurricane
arrived and picked up survivors. Of 407 people on board, 260 died. Out of
134 passengers, 77 were child evacuees. Only 13 child evacuees survived the
sinking.
Two weeks earlier, another evacuation
ship had been torpedoed. All of the 320 children aboard had been rescued by
other ships. With the loss of the City of Benares, the
government canceled the program.
After the war, the commander of U-48
was tried for war crimes in the sinking. Kapitänleutnant Heinrich Bleichrodt denied any prior
knowledge of the presence of children, and refused to apologize for the
sinking, stating his actions were within the bounds of military policy. His
argument was accepted. Several of his crewmen expressed their shock and regret
when it became known that the ship they’d sunk had been carrying children. They
reaffirmed there was no way that the submarine could have known who was on
board.
Fascinating history, but tragic. I don't know if I could have put my kids on a ship all by themselves and sent them away.
ReplyDeleteOh my, a sad historical event. Thank you for sharing. I doubt if I could allow children to travel alone then or even today with all that is going on in our society.
ReplyDeleteSo sad.... praying for peace!
ReplyDeleteSuch a terrible part of history! I can't imagine the grief!! Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDelete