steam turbines double reduction unit and two propellers
Speed
18.5 knots
Capacity
450 1st class
200 2nd class
1,780 3rd class (emigrants' rooms)
Crew
400 total
Conte Verde was an Italian ocean liner active in the early 20th century.
The name was chosen in honor of Amadeus VI, Count of Savoy, the so-called “Green Count.” She was launched in 1923 at the shipyard of William Beardmore and Company in Dalmuir, Scotland. Her yard number was 612.[1] The ship was a transatlantic liner of 18,761 GRT,[2] ordered by the Italian shipping company Lloyd Sabaudo Line in Genoa. The first-class accommodations had a capacity of 450 passengers, second class was 200 passengers and third class (emigrants rooms) was 1,780 passengers. In addition, 400 crew members were on board. The ship was composed of 10 decks.[3][4][5] The interiors of public rooms were designed in luxurious Italian classical styles.[6][7] Her sister ship was the SS Conte Rosso.
After acquisition by Italian Line in 1932, she became a part of Lloyd Triestino (also chartered by Italian Line) for service between Trieste and Shanghai via Suez, Bombay, Colombo, Singapore and Hong Kong in 24 days. [2] For this transfer, she was thoroughly refitted. The first-, second- and third-class accommodations were reduced in capacity to 250, 170 and 220 passengers, respectively, to create wider spaces.
On 1 September 1937, she collided with NYK’s Asama Maru in an extraordinarily large typhoon in Hong Kong. She had run aground off the shores of Cape Collinson, and the Asama Maru was at the northernmost part of Chai Wan Bay. The work of refloating the Conte Verde required one month, and the Asama Maru took half a year.
From 1938 to 1940, the four Lloyd Triestino ships brought a number of Jewish refugees from Germany and Austria to Shanghai. Nazi persecution intensified especially after Kristallnacht on 9 November 1938. Then the number of the refugees increased dramatically as the ships became their lifeboats. Ultimately, 17,000 Jewish refugees came to Shanghai on the Lloyd Triestino’s ships.[12][13][14] The refugee route via the ships was closed on 10 June 1940, when Italy joined the war. The liners’ operation was suspended indefinitely, and the Conte Verde was confined to Shanghai.
Exchange ship
In December 1941, Japan declared war on the Allies. In May 1942, Japan and the US agreed to exchange interned diplomats and other citizens, chartering three ships—Conte Verde (known as Teikyo Maru while chartered), Asama Maru and Gripsholm—for this purpose. The Conte Verde and Asama Maru were sent by Japan, and the Gripsholm by the US. They met at Lourenco Marques, exchanged the internees and returned.
The Conte Verde and Asama Maru were moored at Yokohama while waiting for the second exchange voyage, but negotiations between Japan and the US collapsed. The Conte Verde left Yokohama on September and returned to Shanghai.
Sinking
Due to the Italian Armistice in 1943, Conte Verde was scuttled in Shanghai by her Italian crew to prevent seizure by Japanese forces,[15] preventing ships from entering or leaving a Japanese naval yard where ships were being repaired, until it was raised July 1944.[16] She was then bombed and sunk by a B-24 of the 373rd Bomb Squadron on 8 August before being raised and repaired once more, renamed Kotobuki Maru, converted into a troopship, and towed to Maizuru, a port town in the north of Kyoto Prefecture in June 1945, before being beached by damage from an aircraft raid on 25 July, and was finally scrapped in 1949.[17][18][19]
^“The Propelling Machinery of the Twin-Screw Atlantic Liners ‘Conte Rosso’ and ‘Conte Verde’.” The Shipbuilder (Shipbuilder Press, London), September 1922, pp. 117-127.
^“The Italian Liner ‘Conte Verde’.” Shipbuilding and Shipping Record (London), 13 September 1923, pp. 325-335.
^Kyoto popular front : Anti-Fascist movement at a café in Kyoto during the 1930s. Kyoto: Hokuto Shobo Books. 2012. pp. 40–50. ISBN9784894672239.
^Brinnin, John Malcolm. “The Decoration of Ocean Liners: Rules and Exceptions.” The Journal of Decorative and Propaganda Arts, Vol. 15, Transportation Theme Issue, Winter-Spring, 1990.
^Maraini, Dacaia. Ein Schiff nach Kobe: Das japanische Tagebuch meiner Mutter. Translated from the Italian by Eva-Maria Wager. München: Pieper Verlag GmbH, 2003.