Beaverford was the first of a class of five cargo ships built for Canadian Pacific in 1927 and 1928. Her sister ships were Beaverdale, Beaverburn, Beaverhill and Beaverbrae. They Designed to carry 10,000 deadweight tons of cargo and 12 passengers. They were fitted with 80,000 cubic feet of insulated cargo space and 20,000 cubic feet of refrigerated cargo spaces for meat and fruit.[1]Barclay, Curle & Co of Glasgow launched Beaverford on 27 October 1927 and completed her on 21 January 1928.
The ship was fitted with Erith-Roe mechanical stokers, the first automatic stokers in the Merchant Navy of the UK.[2] They fed six corrugated furnaces with a combined grate area of 397 square feet (37 m2). These heated two single-ended boilers and four water-tube boilers with a combined heating surface of 17,796 square feet (1,653 m2). The boilers supplied steam at 250 lbf/in2 to six Parsonssteam turbines whose combined power output was rated at 1,574 NHP. The turbines drove twin screws via single-reduction gearing.[3] They were among the most efficient steam engines of their time.[citation needed]
Identification
Beaverford's United Kingdom official number was 149983. When completed she was given the code letters LBCS.[4] In 1934 code letters were superseded by radio call signs and Beaverford was given the call sign GNMB.[3]
Pre-war service
The "Beaver" ships maintained a fast cargo schedule between London and Montreal in the summer and London and Saint John, New Brunswick and Halifax, Nova Scotia in the winter.[citation needed] They were registered in London and had mostly British crews. Beaverford was adopted by Downhills Central School in Tottenham via the British Ships Adoption Society. School pupils toured the ship when it was in port and the ship's officers visited the school.[5] On 2 July 1938 Beaverford rescued 400 passengers from the Cunard liner Ascania, which had run aground in the Saint Lawrence River near Bic Island, Quebec.[6]
War service
With the onset of war, the fast and modern "Beaver" ships were requisitioned[citation needed] by the UK Admiralty to carry high-value stores. On 16 September 1939, just a fortnight into the war, Beaverford sailed in HX 1, the first convoy of the war to leave from Halifax. Early in 1940 she was fitted with two naval guns: a four-inch gun on her stern and a three-inch gun on her bow, to make her a defensively equipped merchant ship.[7] She remained owned by Canadian Pacific with a Merchant Navy crew, supplemented by two DEMS gunners.[8] By the autumn of 1940 she had made 16 crossings of the North Atlantic and had survived a U-Boat attack on convoy HX 55 in July 1940.[7]
Final voyage and loss
Beaverford sailed from Halifax, Nova Scotia on October 28, 1940, as part of Convoy HX 84. She was carrying refined aluminum and copper, maize, meats and cheese and a large cargo of ammunition in her holds along with a deck cargo of crated aircraft and timber. Beaverford had a crew of 77. Most were from Britain but three were Canadians including one of her two gunners. She was commanded by the 60-year-old Captain Hugh Pettigrew from Coatbridge, who had sailed with Canadian Pacific since 1910, was a veteran of naval actions at Gallipoli, and as a First Officer had survived the torpedoing of Medora by SM U-86 west-southwest of Mull of Galloway in 1918.[9]
On 5 November Convoy HX 84 was midway across the Atlantic when the German pocket battleship Admiral Scheer located and attacked it. The attack began at 17:15. The convoy's only escort, the armed merchant cruiserHMS Jervis Bay, ordered the convoy to scatter. In an engagement that won the commander of Jervis Bay a posthumous Victoria Cross, the escort steered directly towards Admiral Scheer. Hopelessly outgunned, Jervis Bay was set afire and sank 22 minutes later.[10]Admiral Scheer now began to attack the convoy, first sinking the freighter Maidan with all hands. The tanker San Demetrio was set on fire but did not sink. Admiral Scheer next sank the freighters Trewellard and Kenbane Head.
Beaverford had fled south, but Admiral Scheer caught her up and illuminated her with starshell. Beaverford transmitted a final wireless message: "It is our turn now. So long. The captain and crew of SS Beaverford".[10]
Admiral Scheer fired 83 shells at Beaverford. 71 were from its 150 mm guns, with 16 hitting the freighter, and 12 were from the cruiser's 280 mm main guns, with three hits. The shelling was observed and recorded in the log aboard the freighter Fresno City, ten miles off and also fleeing south. Beaverford was badly damaged, but the cargo of timber on her deck kept her afloat, and to save ammunition Admiral Scheer's commander, KzSTheodor Krancke, ordered that she be finished off with a torpedo. The torpedo hit the fore part of Beaverford, lifting her bow and detonating the ammunition in her hold. The ship blew apart and the stern was last seen sliding into the ocean. All aboard were killed.
It was now completely dark, but Admiral Scheer went on to find and sink one more ship, Fresno City, from which the attack on Beaverford had been observed an hour before. Admiral Scheer sank six of the 38 ships from the convoy.
Recognition
In 1944 an article supposedly based on accounts from one of the other ships in Convoy HX 84 was written by Norman Mackintosh, published in the magazine Canada's Weekly and republished in the Evening Standard in London which praised the sacrifice of Beaverford: "For more than four hours she was afloat, followed by the raider, firing and fighting to the last. Using the big reserve of engine power for speed, and superb seamanship for steering and manoeuvering to baffle and evade the enemy's aim, for all that time she held her own, hit by shells but firing back and delaying the raider hour by hour while the rest of the convoy made their escape."[10][11]
However, given that the convoy ships were scattering in all directions, it is unlikely that anyone on another ship could have reliably seen all of this. The story is also contradicted by the account Admiral Scheer's captain wrote after the war.[12] Krancke paid generous tribute to the courage of Jervis Bay, and of a small burning freighter that fired back just before she sank (this must have been Kenbane Head). But he did not mention any battle with Beaverford, which he records only as a ship carrying a deck cargo of timber that Admiral Scheer caught up with as it fled at speed far to the south of the main action. When finally caught, Beaverford proved hard to sink by gunfire, and was therefore torpedoed to save ammunition.
The sinking of Beaverford was witnessed from Fresno City, also fleeing south. Her captain's log recorded: "The Beaverford, bearing 110 degrees East South East was attacked and set on fire, distant about 10 miles". There is no mention of any fight or any return fire from Beaverford, and far from being a four or five hour battle, Beaverford was attacked only 50 minutes after Kenbane Head and about an hour before Scheer caught up with Fresno City. There was no time for any such battle.
Some writers complain that Beaverford received no official recognition for its role in the battle, but that may be because the story only emerged years later, and is unsupported by credible evidence.
Memorials
Tower Hill Memorial, the UK Merchant Navy monument in London, records the names of all 77 members of Beaverford's crew who were killed when she was sunk. The names of the three Canadians in her crew, Clifford Carter, Laughlin Elwood Stewart, William Lane Thibideau, are inscribed on the Sailors' Memorial at Point Pleasant Park in Halifax, Nova Scotia which overlooks the harbour mouth whence Beaverford made her final departure in 1940.[5]
In a special service on 20 May 1944 a painting and memorial plaque were installed at Downhills Central School, which had adopted Beaverford.[5] The plaque read "SS Beaverford, our ship, lost with all hands in action 5th November 1940". The school was closed in 1964 as part of school amalgamations and both the painting and the memorial plaque disappeared. The plaque later turned up in a junk shop.[13]
Captain Pettigrew's widow, HG Pettigrew, was welcomed in Halifax when she immigrated in 1948 and her late husband was lauded as the man "who took over the task of covering the convoy against the German pocket battleship... and gained five hours for the convoy before Beaverford was sank with all hands."[14]
In 1946 Canadian Pacific perpetuated Beaverford's name in the postwar restoration of its fleet when it acquired a replacement ship, Empire Kitchener, which it renamed Beaverford. Under that name she sailed until CP sold her in 1962.[15]
References
^Canadian Pacific Facts and Figures. Canadian Pacific Railway. 1937. p. 206.
Edwards, Bernard (2013). Convoy Will Scatter: The Full Story of Jervis Bay and Convoy HX84. Barnsley: Pen and Sword Books. pp. 11–12, 82–83. ISBN978-1781593769.