The Admiralty requisitioned her in both world wars as a troop ship. In 1915 she was renamed Archangel.
Building
St Petersburg was the third of three sister ships that John Brown & Company of Clydebank, Dumbartonshire built for the GER. She was preceded by Copenhagen, launched in 1907,[1] and Munich, launched in 1908.[2] Brown built St Petersburg as yard number 397.[3] A Miss Green launched her on 25 April 1910.[4] She was the daughter of Frederick Green, a GER director.
By 1913 St Petersburg's wireless telegraph call sign was PQP.[8] By 1914 it had been changed to GPK.[9]
In 1915 the Admiralty requisitioned St Petersburg as a cross-Channel troop ship, and renamed her Archangel.[3] After the First World War she was returned to the GER, which in 1923 was absorbed by the new LNER.
On 20 January 1925 she ran aground at the Hook of Holland. Three tugs brought her passengers ashore.[10]
By 1930 Archangel's call sign was GRNV.[11] By 1934 this had superseded her code letters.[12]
Just before midnight that night, three German Heinkel He 111 bomber aircraft attacked the two ships in the North Sea at position 57°55′N2°03′W / 57.917°N 2.050°W / 57.917; -2.050. One aircraft, flying at an altitude of 50 feet (15 m), dropped two bombs, one of which hit Archangel in her engine room and boiler room, caused a boiler explosion, and severed communication between the fore and aft of the ship. The same aircraft returned at an altitude of 500 feet (150 m) to strafeArchangel, as the other two He 111s engaged Blankney. Both ships returned fire, and Blankney circled Archangel at speed. The He 111 that attacked Archangel made three runs, and was then damaged and crashed into the sea. The other two aircraft then withdrew.[13]
Blankney launched her boats to rescue survivors, and went alongside Archangel to complete the evacuation. Blankney's surgeon came aboard to assist Archangel's medical officer. Blankney reached Aberdeen about 0800 hrs on 17 May. Casualties included 38 killed and 18 wounded in 182 battery; and three killed and 24 wounded in 196 battery; all suffering from burns. Archangel's Master, Captain AP Sutton, was badly wounded. Accounts differ as to the number of casualties in his crew.[13]
Also on 17 May, either Blankney or a tug (accounts differ) took Archangel in tow. The troop ship beached at Blackdog, just north of Aberdeen, and broke into four pieces.[13]
References
^"Copenhagen". Scottish Built Ships. Caledonian Maritime Research Trust. Retrieved 23 January 2024.
^"Munich". Scottish Built Ships. Caledonian Maritime Research Trust. Retrieved 23 January 2024.
^ ab"St Petersburg". Scottish Built Ships. Caledonian Maritime Research Trust. Retrieved 23 January 2024.