From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The collected remains of the Marine Sulphur Queen,
recovered February 1963. (U.S. Coast Guard) |
|
Career |
|
| Name: |
SS Esso New Haven |
| Yard number: |
407 |
| Launched: |
March 1944 |
|
Career |
|
| Name: |
SS Marine Sulphur Queen |
| Acquired: |
1960 |
| Fate: |
Went missing off Florida after 4 February 1963 |
|
General characteristics |
| Class and type: |
T2 tanker |
| Tonnage: |
7,240 GRT |
| Crew: |
39 |
SS Marine Sulphur Queen, T2 tanker ship converted to
carrying molten sulphur, noted for its disappearance in
1963 near the southern coast of Florida, taking the lives of 39 crewmen. The
loss of the ship was the subject of lengthy litigation between the
owner and families of the missing men.
History
The vessel, originally named SS Esso New Haven, was
built by Sun Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company, Chester, Pennsylvania, in March 1944, one of many
T2 tankers built to carry and transport oil. In 1960, she was
placed in dry dock by Bethlehem Steel Company, Sparrows Point, Maryland, and converted to carrying a cargo of
molten sulphur, and given a name change to Marine Sulphur
Queen. In order to carry out the planned function of carrying
molten sulphur, a continuous, independent tank 306 feet long, 30
feet 6 inches wide and 33 feet high was constructed out of the
original holds, necessitating the removal of all transverse
bulkheads in the original centerline tanks and modifying the
internal structure; this tank in turn was divided into four smaller
tanks internally. A void surrounded the tank on all sides, leaving
a 2-foot clearance on the sides and bottom, with three feet left
between the top and the ship's weather deck[1]. A steam system
was installed throughout to maintain the molten sulphur at roughly
255 °F (124 °C).
The ship's last voyage began on 2 February 1963 out of Beaumont,
Texas, with a cargo of sulphur weighing 15,260 tons. On 4 February,
near Florida, an ordinary radio message was sent by a crewman,
giving the position of the ship at 25°45' N, 86°W. The Marine
Sulphur Queen was listed as missing on 6 February. A search of
the Straits of Florida where the ship
was believed to have gone down was called off after 19 days, after
yielding life preservers and some debris, but no trace of the ship
or the 39 men aboard her. At the time of her 4 February position,
she was in rough, nearly-following seas of 16 feet, with northerly
winds of 25-46 knots. [2]
Investigation
A Coast Guard investigation concluded several
facts about the Marine Sulphur Queen which, by themselves,
should have prevented the ship from going to sea at all. The most
important were the incidents of fire beneath and along the sides of
the four large sulphur tanks; according to former crewmen these
fires were so common that ship's officers gave up sounding the fire
alarm. On one occasion the ship sailed into a New Jersey harbor,
off-loaded cargo, and sailed out with a fire still burning. When a
fire was actually put out, the sulphur would puddle and cake around
equipment, once shorting out a major electrical generator. Caked
sulphur was also found in spaces below the tanks, due to many
cracks in the structure.
The Coast Guard also noted that the T2 tanker class had a
characteristic "weak back", meaning the keel would split at a point
weakened by corrosion, usually around midships. Such a splitting
had happened on several T2 tankers, and many were discovered during
inspections to have hairline or larger fractures within the keel
and on major frames. Companies who owned T2 tankers were ordered to
pay attention to the keel when inspecting. Former crewmen also
testified that corrosion was everywhere, mentioning inoperable
temperature gauges, a ruptured steam coil, and worn packing around
the screws. It was recorded that Marine Sulphur Queen was
scheduled for a drydock inspection in January, 1963, but it was
postponed by the owners, who had complained that cargo deliveries
were behind and they needed their ships to catch up. One new
crewman, on reporting to the ship just before it sailed for the
last time, turned to his wife and pronounced it "a floating garbage
can." [3]
In the closing of the inquiry, it came as no surprise that the
Coast Guard had this to say:
- 1. In view of the vast search operations conducted and the
debris found and identified as coming from the MARINE SULPHUR
QUEEN, the ship and her entire crew of 39 men are presumed to be
lost.
- 2. Concurring with the Board, the vessel apparently was lost on
4 February 1963 on its approach to, or in the vicinity of, the
Straits of Florida.
- 3. Further concurring with the Board, in the absence of
survivors or physical remains of the ship, the exact cause of the
loss of the MARINE SULPHUR QUEEN cannot be determined.
- 4. The Board considered many possibilities which may have
caused the loss of the ship and rightly declined to assign any
order of probability to these causes. In its conclusions the Board
commented on the following possible causes:
-
- a. An explosion may have occurred in the cargo tanks.
- b. A complete failure of the vessel's hull girder may have
caused it to break in two
- c. The vessel may have capsized in synchronous rolling
- d. A steam explosion may have occurred as the result of a rapid
filling of the void space with water.
- The record contains ample evidence to support the Board's
suppositions. [4]
The Coast Guard also recommended that no remaining T2 tanker be
converted into a sulphur carrier without taking into consideration
the structure of the ship as originally built. "First, the
acceptability of any conversion must be considered on its
individual merits, having regard for the existing condition of the
vessel and the proposed cargo, route, and service. Secondly, the
objection to the conversion of an existing T2 or another tanker of
comparable age is associated with the probable condition of the
vessel, particularly the cargo portion, due to age, as much as it
is due to design considerations." [5]
Litigation
The loss of the ship was subject of a lawsuit filed within weeks
of the sinking by relatives of the crew members seeking 2.5 million
dollars in damages under two specific federal acts (the Jones Act,
46 U.S.C. § 688; and the Death on the High Seas Act, 46 U.S.C. §
761), based upon maritime laws regarding the unseaworthiness of a
vessel. Marine Sulphur Transport Corporation (the owners of the
ship), and Marine Transport Lines, Inc. (demise charterer)
petitioned for exoneration or at least a limitation of liability.
The amount of damages sought would grow to $20 million by 1969.
The United States Court of Appeals (2nd Circuit) concluded
that:
-
- the ship was not structurally sound as a result of the sulphur
tank conversion;
-
- the tank was centered too narrowly within the ship resulting in
a high center of gravity, which meant that during a roll in heavy
seas, it would take longer to recover.
-
- the ship was not properly inspected nor maintained by the
owners;
In its 25 April 1972 ruling the court denied the exoneration of
the owners and found them liable in regard to the unseaworthiness
of the ship. It awarded damages to the crew relatives, but denied
them punitive damages; the reason for it, as stated in the Coast
Guard report, was that no one knew how the ship was lost, and in
the absence of the remains of the vessel, they could go no
further:
- The wrongful death claimants therefore sustained their
burden of proving unseaworthiness and there remained only the issue
of whether or not one or more of the conditions of unseaworthiness
or some other agency caused the disaster. The court found in
explicit terms that "no one knows how the ship was lost." The
resolution of the question of liability will, under the
circumstances, be determined by the allocation of the burden of
proof on the causation issue, the existence of a rebuttable
presumption and whether or not that presumption has been met.
[6]
Precedent
Nearly 20 years prior to the loss of the Marine Sulphur
Queen, the United States General Accounting Office published a
report titled TO INQUIRE INTO THE DESIGN METHODS OF
CONSTRUCTION OF WELDED STEEL MERCHANT VESSELS, 15 July 1946,
which was essentially a report of concern over civilian merchant
ships, specifically T2 tankers, fracturing amidships at the keel.
Even during World War II, the federal government was concerned over
the large number of merchant ship casualties not resulting from
combat, and investigation centered on possible shoddy
construction.
A sister ship, SS Sylvia L. Ossa, went down in heavy
seas east of Bermuda on 15 October 1976; all that was recovered was
debris and a lifeboat in which the quick-release mechanism was
still intact.
Bermuda Triangle
connection
The loss of the ship and crew with no trace other than bits of
debris placed it on the list of incidents in the Bermuda
Triangle. Writers of the subject have placed this ship in every
work, sometimes agreeing with the Coast Guard report, other times
coming up with their own theories. Vincent Gaddis was the first
writer to coin the name Bermuda Triangle in his article
for Argosy Magazine
in the February 1964 issue, and Marine Sulphur Queen was
the first Triangle "victim" he mentioned, barely a year after the
ship sank:
"With a crew of thirty-nine, the tanker Marine Sulphur Queen
began its final voyage on 2 February 1963, from Beaumont, Texas,
with a cargo of molten sulphur. Its destination was Norfolk,
Virginia, but it actually sailed into the unknown..." [7]
Gaddis himself gave no theory as to the sinking, and ignored the
many physical and personnel discrepancies cited by the Coast Guard.
What he did was to reduce the loss of the ship to sailing "into the
unknown", as did many writers after him. The effect was to leave an
aura of mystery, and as such, many theories, some very outlandish,
has been postulated to explain the disappearance of the ship.
In another case of adding to the mystery, the Sci-Fi
Channel posted a summary of its program "The Bermuda Triangle:
Startling New Secrets" on its website [8], which states
that all that was recovered was a lifeboat. The Coast Guard has
listed what was recovered and identified for its report, as well as
assembling the items for public display during the inquiry, which
was photographed. A lifeboat was not among the debris, nor was one
recovered.
A 1977 episode of In Search Of discussed the
Marine Sulphur Queen incident.[1]
Crew
- James V. Fanning, Master - Beaumont, TX
- George E. Watson, Chief Mate - Galveston, TX
- Henry P. Hall, 2nd Mate - Beaumont, TX
- Frank J. Cunningham, 3rd Mate - Beaumont, TX
- George E. Sloat, Radio Officer - Baltimore, MD
- Leon B. Clauser, Chief Engineer - Beaumont, TX
- John L. Denton, 1st Asst. Engineer - Friendswood, TX
- A.R. Van Sickle, 2nd Asst. Engineer - Baltimore, MD
- E.W. Schneeberger, 3rd Asst. Engineer - Beaumont, TX
- Adam Martin, Jr., 3rd Asst. Engineer - Austin, TX
- Evans Phillips, Bosun - Tampa, FL
- Ceburn R. Cole, DM/AB - Lake Charles, LA
- Jack R. Schindler, AB - Seattle, WA
- Fred A. Bodden, AB - Philadelphia, PA
- Everett E. Arnold, AB - Memphis, TN
- Willie T. Manuel, AB - Ville Platte, LA
- James Mck. Bodden, AB - Tampa, FL
- Nelaton E. Devine, AB - Port Arthur, TX
- John N. Nieznajski, OS - Gary, IN
- Clarence McGuire, OS - Bronsen, TX
- James Phillips, OS - Port Arthur, TX
- Jesse I. Vicera, Pumpman - Linden, NJ
- Alejandro Valdez, Oiler - Port Arthur, TX
- John C. Ardoin, Oiler - Beaumont, TX
- John Elmer Grice, Oiler - Daytona Beach, FL
- Henry Clark, FWT - Jersey City, NJ
- Alphan Tate, FWT - Mamou, LA
- Leroy Courville, FWT - Groves, TX
- John Husch, Jr., Wiper - Akron, OH Memorial
- Aaron Heard, Wiper - Norfolk, VA
- Juan Santos, Wiper - Newark, NJ
- Charles L. Dorsey, Chief Steward - Bronx, NY
- Vincent Thompson, Chief Cook - Baltimore, MD
- Cornelius Smith, 2nd Cook & Baker - Port Arthur, TX
- Hugh D. Hunter, Galleyman - Chapel Hill, NC
- Walter Pleasant, Messman - Port Arthur, TX
- Wesley Fontenot, Messman - Mamou, LA
- Robert E. Harold, Utilityman - Norfolk, VA
- Leroy B. Green, Utilityman - Rahway, NJ
References
The following works on the Bermuda Triangle mention the
Marine Sulphur Queen:
- Bermuda Triangle article in Argosy Magazine, February
1964 [9]
- Into the Bermuda Triangle: Pursuing the Truth Behind the
World's Greatest Mystery, Gian J. Quasar
- The Bermuda Triangle, Charles Berlitz (ISBN
0-385-04114-4)
- The Bermuda Triangle Mystery Solved (1975). Lawrence
David Kusche (ISBN 0-87975-971-2)
- Limbo Of The Lost, John Wallace Spencer (ISBN
0-686-10658-X)
- The Evidence for the Bermuda Triangle, (1984), David
Group (ISBN 0-85030-413-X)
- The Devil's Triangle, (1974), Richard Winer (ISBN 0553106880);
- The Bermuda Triangle (1975) by Adi-Kent Thomas Jeffrey
(ISBN 0446599611)
Newspapers
- "Tanker Lost In Atlantic; 39 Aboard," Washington Post, 9
February 1963.
- "Debris Sighted In Plane Search For Tanker Missing Off
Florida," New York Times, 11 February 1963.
- "2.5 Million Is Asked In Sea Disaster," Washington Post, 19
February 1963.
- "Vanishing Of Ship Ruled A Mystery," New York Times, 14 April
1964.
- "Families Of 39 Lost At Sea Begin $20-Million Suit Here," New
York Times, 4 June 1969.
- "10-Year Rift Over Lost Ship Near End," New York Times, 4
February 1973.
- SS Sylvia L. Ossa
- "Ship And 37 Vanish In Bermuda Triangle On Voyage To U.S.," New
York Times, 18 October 1976.
- "Ship Missing In Bermuda Triangle Now Presumed To Be Lost At
Sea," New York Times, 19 October 1976.
- "Distress Signal Heard From American Sailor Missing For 17
Days," New York Times, 31 October 1976.
External
links
- Marine Sulphur Queen litigation [10]
- United States Coast Guard summary of findings [11]; * Official
report [12]
- Time Magazine article [13]
- Page containing newspaper transcripts [14]
- Diver's report on possible finding of the wreck in 2001 [15]
| Type T2-SE-A1 tankers |
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Coordinates: 25°45′N 86°00′W / 25.75°N
86°W / 25.75;
-86