SS Norse Lady was a cargo ship built by Wood, Skinner and Company of Newcastle upon Tyne to the United Kingdom's standard First World War "War C" design.[1] She traded from 1920 until 1958, in which time she had six successive owners and four different names. In 1958 she ran aground in eastern Indonesia, was captured and beached by rebels, and then set on fire by a naval bombardment.[1] She remained a wreck until 1966, when she was scrapped in Taiwan.
Owners and names
Wood, Skinner and Co laid her down in 1919 as War Glade,[1] a standard "War" name for ships built under the UK's First World War merchant shipbuilding scheme. However, she was completed in January 1920[1] as Norefos for Skibs Aksjeselskap Thor Thoresens Linje of Norway, who registered her in Kristiania.[1] In 1921 she was sold to Den Norske Amerikalinje Aksjeselskap ("Norwegian America Line") who renamed her Norefjord and added her to its Skandinaviske Øst-Afrika Linje ("Scandinavia East Africa Line") fleet. In 1949 she was sold to F.N. Nordbø of Haugesund, Norway who renamed her Ryvarden.[1] She was laid up in Haugesund in 1953 and sold to Rolf Wigands Rederi of Bergen in 1954.[1] Rolf Wigands sold her to Halvorsen Shipping Co of Bergen in 1956.[1] She kept the name Ryvarden until 1958, when Halvorsen sold her to Pan-Norse Steamship Co of Panama, who renamed her Norse Lady.[1]
Collisions
With Palembang, January 1942
On 8 January 1942 Norefjord was part of Convoy HX 169 from Nova Scotiaen route to Great Britain when she collided with the Dutch ship Palembang.[1] Both ships were damaged and returned to port[4] for repairs. Norefjord returned to service by sailing with Convoy HX 175 on 13 February but again she returned to port.[5] On 19 February Norefjord sailed with Convoy HX-176.[6] This time she successfully completed the voyage, reaching Liverpool, England on 6 March 1942.[6]
Alcoa Rambler had been proceeding seawards, down the fairway, heading south-southeast.[7]Rambler was laden with a cargo of explosives, was being escorted by a naval launch, and both Rambler and her escort were flying the warning flags required under local regulations.[7]Norefjord had been crossing the fairway on an easterly course.[7] It was daylight and the two ships sighted each other at a range of about 1,800 feet (550 m).[7] The basin was congested with other ships, a number of changes of course were required, and Norefjord had repeatedly changed her course further to port before the two ships collided.[7] The case between the owners of the two ships came to court in 1949 and its implications are now referred to in a guide to the International Regulations for Preventing Collisions at Sea.[8]
On 14 August 1958 Norse Lady was off Parigi, Central Sulawesi, Indonesia when she ran aground. On 16 August Permesta rebels captured her, refloated her and took her about 600 kilometres (320 nmi) east to Belang[1] in the rebels' heartland in Minahasa, North Sulawesi. The rebels beached Norse Lady at Belang, but the Indonesian Navy sighted her there on 18 August, shelled her on 22 August and she was burnt out.[1]
In March 1966 Hong Kong purchasers bought her wreck.[1] They sold her to Taiwanese shipbreakers who towed Norse Lady to Kaohsiung, Taiwan and scrapped her.[1]