SS Michael E was a 7,628 GRTcargo ship that was built in 1941. She was the first British catapult aircraft merchant ship (CAM ship): a merchant ship fitted with a rocket catapult to launch a single Hawker Hurricane fighter aircraft to defend a convoy against long-range German bombers. She was sunk on her maiden voyage by a German submarine.
She had six corrugated furnaces feeding two 225 lbf/in2 (1,550 kPa; 15.8 kgf/cm2) single-ended boilers with a combined heating surface of 5,940 square feet (552 m2).[2] The boilers fed a 443 nominal horsepowertriple-expansion steam engine that had cylinders of 24 inches (61 cm), 39 inches (99 cm) and 68 inches (170 cm) diameter by 48 inches (120 cm) stroke.[2] The engine was built by David Rowan & Co Ltd, Glasgow.[2]
History
Michael E was owned by the Bury Hill Shipping Co Ltd.[2] a company owned by the Nicholas Eustathiou shipping concerns. She was placed under the management of Counties Ship Management Ltd of London, an offshoot of the Rethymnis & Kulukundis shipbroking company.[4] She was named after Michael Eustathiou, a member of the Nicholas Eustathiou family that had a major shareholding in her.[4] Her Code Letters were BCKB, her UK Official Number was 163168 and she was registered in London.[2]
On 28 May 1941 Michael E sailed in ballast on her maiden voyage from Belfast, Northern Ireland bound for Halifax, Nova Scotia with convoy OB 327.[3] The convoy was dispersed on 1 June and at 20:43 hours on 2 June Michael E was in the North Atlantic several hundred miles southwest of Cape Clear when U-108 fired two torpedoes at her.[3] One missed but the other struck her in the stern killing a crew member and two DEMS gunners, and at 22:21 hours she sank by the stern.[3] On 3 June the Dutch cargo ship Alcinous rescued Michael E's master, 44 crew, two gunners and 12 Royal Air Force personnel.[3]
Replacement ship
In September 1941 William Hamilton & Co completed a second CAM ship of the same class for CSM. She was launched as Primrose Hill and effectively replaced Michael E. Primrose Hill survived until October 1942 when a German-operated submarine sank her by torpedo and shellfire.
Sedgwick, Stanley; Kinnaird, Mark; O'Donoghue, K.J. (1993) [1992]. London & Overseas Freighters, 1948–92: A Short History. Kendal: World Ship Society. ISBN0-905617-68-1.
Sedgwick, Stanley; Sprake, R.F. (1977). London & Overseas Freighters Limited 1949–1977. Kendal: World Ship Society. ISBN0905617037.
Slader, John (1988). The Red Duster at War. London: William Kimber & Co Ltd. pp. 143–144. ISBN0-7183-0679-1.