The ship was launched as Howick Hall, and kept that name when she served in the US Army and US Navy. She was renamed Dovenden in 1929, Ircania in 1935 and Raceland in 1941. Her name was Raceland when she was sunk in 1942.
Building and first owner
William Hamilton and Company built the ship in Port Glasgow on the River Clyde, launching her on 1 October 1920 and completing her later that month.[1] Her registered length was 400.8 ft (122.2 m), her beam was 51.5 ft (15.7 m) and her depth was 27.0 ft (8.2 m). Her tonnages were 4,923 GRT and 3,094 NRT.[2]
She had a single screw, driven by three-cylinder triple-expansion steam engine that was rated at 507 NHP[2] and gave her a speed of 10 knots (19 km/h). Among cargo steamships she was unusual in having two funnels (smokestacks).[1] Her derricks could lift up to 35 tons,[3] which was unusually heavy for a ship of that era.
Howick Hall made two voyages for the Naval Overseas Transportation Service. After being commissioned, she loaded cargo at Baltimore, steamed to New York and joined a convoy across the Atlantic. On 30 September she reached Saint-Nazaire, France, where she discharged her cargo. She got back to Baltimore on 31 October.
After the Armistice of 11 November 1918 she loaded cargo at Newport News, Virginia. On 25 December 1918 she left Newport News and crossed the Atlantic to Le Verdon-sur-Mer, where she discharged her cargo. She then bunkered at Bassens, and on 3 February 1919 left to return to the US. En route one of her crew developed spinal meningitis, so on 21 February she stopped at Bermuda, where she and her crew were quarantined. She left Bermuda on 25 February and continued to Newport News.
From Newport News she continued to Baltimore, arriving on 5 March 1919. On 13 March she was decommissioned and returned to her owners.
On 13 May 1926 Howick Hall and the motortankerGulf of Venezuela collided in the Ambrose Channel. Howick Hall grounded on Roamer's Reef, but was only slightly damaged, and was refloated the same day.[7]
Dovenden
Howick Hall remained in US merchant service until October 1929, when the Exeter Shipping Co bought her, renamed her Dovenden and registered her in London. She kept her UK official number, but she was given the new code letters LFKH and four-letter call sign GQWN.[8] The Great Depression caused a World slump in shipping, and she spent most of 1930 laid up. That October she went to Rotterdam, where she remained laid up for most of the next two years.[9]
In 1932 she changed owners twice, passing first to the McAllum Steamship Co and then Lambert Brothers. In 1935 she again changed hands twice. That January, Halford Constant bought her for £7,500. Later that year he sold her to an Italian company, Ditta Luigi Pittaluga Vapori.[9]
Raceland may have detached from SC 69 before it reached Liverpool, as she proceeded to Loch Ewe on the west coast of Scotland to join Convoy PQ 13. On 10 March 1942, PQ 13 left Loch Ewe for Murmansk.[17]Raceland had a crew of 45 men, made up of 12 nationalities. On 28 March, German aircraft attacked PQ 13 south of Bear Island. Raceland was sunk at position 72°40′N020°20′E / 72.667°N 20.333°E / 72.667; 20.333. Her crew launched all four of her lifeboats, and all 45 men safely abandoned ship.[18]
On 29 March a storm sank the two smaller lifeboats, killing their occupants. This left 15 men in Lifeboat Number 1, commanded by Raceland's Chief Officer, Otto Hatlestad, and 18 in Lifeboat Number 2, commanded by Raceland's Second Officer, Johan Johansen.[18]
After six days Hatlestad's boat reached Sørøya in the north of German-occupied Norway, but by then six of the men in her had died. A seventh died after reaching land. The survivors were taken to the Norwegian mainland and hospitalised. Three of the survivors were Norwegian. Two, including Hatlestad, gave a propaganda interview for a pro-German radio broadcast. Hatlestad later returned to sea, working for the Germans.[19]
After 11 days Johansen's boat reached SørSandfjord, also in northern Norway. By then 13 of the men in her had died: variously from hypothermia, salt poisoning from drinking seawater, or suicide. The five survivors were suffering from frostbite, and most had to have digits or limbs amputated. The German authorities interned survivors in different camps, including two in Marlag und Milag Nord and one in Obermaßfeld.[20]
Lloyd's Register of Shipping(PDF). Vol. II–Steamers and Motorships of 300 tons gross and over. London: Lloyd's Register of Shipping. 1942 – via Southampton City Council.
The Marconi Press Agency Ltd (1918). The Year Book of Wireless Telegraphy and Telephony. London: The Wireless Press, Ltd.
Yarnall, Paul R. "Howick Hall (ID 1303)". NavSource Online: Identification Numbered Vessel Photo Archive. – This source claims that the ship had two engines and two shafts. Every entry about the ship in Lloyd's Register contradicts this.