TSS Hibernia (1899)

Career
Name: 1899-1914: TSS Hibernia
1914-1915: HMS Tara
Owner: 1899-1915: London and North Western Railway
Operator: 1896-1915: London and North Western Railway
Port of registry: United Kingdom
Route: 1900-1914: HolyheadDublin
Builder: William Denny and Brothers, Dumbarton
Yard number: 618
Launched: 10 October 1899
Out of service: 5 November 1915
Fate: Sunk
General characteristics
Class and type:[[<p class="error wikibase-error">Failed to render property ship class: Property not found for label 'ship class' and language 'en'</p>]] Imported from Wikidata (?)
Tonnage:1,862 gross register tons (GRT)
Length:329 ft (100 m)
Beam:39 ft (12 m)

TSS Hibernia was a twin screw steamer passenger vessel operated by the London and North Western Railway from 1900 to 1914.[1] She was renamed HMS Tara on requisition by the Admiralty in 1914, and sunk in action in November 1915.

History

She was built by William Denny and Brothers of Dumbarton for the London and North Western Railway in 1899 and introduced into service in 1900.

In 1914 she was requisitioned by the Admiralty as an Armed boarding steamer and renamed HMS Tara.

She was torpedoed by U-35 in Sollum Bay, Mediterranean Sea on 5 November 1915. The crew were saved by the U Boat and handed over to Senussi tribesmen as prisoners. On 14 March 1916 they were being held at Bir Hakeim along with the crew of HMT Moorina, a horse transport. They were rescued by the Duke of Westminster's armoured car brigade, part of the Western Frontier Force. The captain of Tara at this time was Capt. R. Gwatkin-Williams, R.N.[2]

The story of Tara '​s crew is told by Captain Gwatkin-Williams in his book Prisoners of the Red Desert, Being a Full and True History of the Men of the Tara. The POWs were not held in a traditional POW camp, but rather at a desert oasis guarded by a few Turks and Arabs. Although only loosely guarded their escape was prevented by the surrounding desert and their general lack of food and water. Near the end of their captivity, inspired by their hopeless situation, Captain Gwatkin-Williams did attempt escape. After walking through the desert for two days he blundered into an Arab camp while walking at night and was recaptured and returned to Bir Hakeim. Captain Gwatkin-Williams estimates the prisoners were only a few days from death due to starvation when they were rescued by the Duke of Westminster.[3]

After accidentally finding a letter from Captain Gwatkin-Williams to a Turkish officer stating the desperation of the situation a Bir Hakeim the Duke set off to find the POWs. With a guide who had been to Bir Hakeim some 30 years previously as a boy he set off across the desert estimating that he was about 70 miles away. Passing the 70 mile estimate and running low on fuel he kept going as long as there was any hope, finding the camp after traversing 115 miles.[3]

References

  1. Railway and Other Steamers, Duckworth. 1962
  2. Steel Chariots in the Desert. S.C. Rolls, 1937. Leonaur Books. pp. 38-53
  3. 3.0 3.1 Gwatkin-Williams, Captain R.S.; Prisoners of the Red Desert, Being a Full and True History of the Men of the Tara. Thornton Butterworth, LTD, London. Circa 1921.