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Pennland


Vessel Type Passenger liner
Year Launched 1920
Cargo Type Passenger
Country of build Belfast, Ireland

Launched in 1920, the passenger liner Pennland had an extensive history including a short service in the Holland America Line fleet, before its final service as a British troopship during the Second World War.

The build

The Pennland was built in Belfast by Harland & Wolff, with construction beginning in November 1913. The passenger liner had a grt of 16,322 and was designed to carry up to 2,100 passengers. The 575ft (175.4m) long triple-screw ship had a service speed of 16 knots and was powered by two-triple expansion engines and an exhaust steam turbine.

Ownership

The Pennland was originally ordered for the American Line with the name Pittsburgh, as part of a series of ships intended to dominate transatlantic services under the ownership of the New York-based International Mercantile Marine Company (IMM).

Liverpool firm Frederick Leyland & Co took over in January 1925, after changing travel routes and operating by another IMM subsidiary - the Belgium-based Red Star Line.

The Pittsburgh became the Pennland in 1935, after the company ran into financial problems and was sold by IMM to the German owner Arnold Bernstein.

In June 1939, the Pennland was sold to Holland America Line and put under the Dutch flag.

The Pennland was soon taken over by the Dutch government while in New York in May 1940, and was then chartered to the British Ministry of Transport to operate as a troopship under Dutch control.

Deployments

Rather than joining the America Line, the Pittsburgh entered service in 1922 with a maiden voyage from Liverpool to Philadelphia and Boston under the UK flag, and in the colours of the IMM’s British subsidiary White Star Line.

In April 1923, the ship was struck by a huge wave in the Atlantic which wrecked the wheelhouses and chart room, flooded several cabins, and injured the master and several crew.

The Pittsburgh was then switched to run the route linking Antwerp, Southampton, Cherbourg and New York, operated by the Red Star Line.

Renamed the Pennland in early 1926, the ship ran Red Star’s Antwerp-New York service until 1935, when it was then sold to Arnold Bernstein. After a refit in Kiel and a switch to the German flag in early 1935, the Pennland continued to operate between Antwerp and New York and stayed on the routed after being sold to Holland America Line.

In May 1940, after being fitted out in Liverpool for its new role as a troopship, it undertook a series of trooping voyages across the Atlantic and around Africa. The Pennland also transported German and Italian prisoners of war.

Pennland Fact File

Claim to fame

In November 1922, the Pittsburgh rescued the 45-crew of the Italian ship Monte Grappa, which was sinking in the Atlantic.

The most notable period of the Pennland’s service was its time as a British troopship during the Second World War. Under Dutch control, in early 1941 the Pennland was attacked by German aircraft while helping evacuate troops from Greece.

Four crew members were killed and chief officer Pieter van Beelen took command after the master, Captain Johan van Dulken, was injured. The crew abandoned ship and were picked up by the British destroyer HMS Griffin, which then shelled and sank the Pennland.

Captain van Dulken was awarded the British Distinguished Service Cross in December 1941 and the Dutch Bronze Cross in the following year. Chief officer van Beelen and the ship’s purser, Albert la Grange, received the Dutch Cross of Merit in recognition of their calmness and bravery under fire.


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