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Built During The Hamidian Massacres, Sunk During The Genocide

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  • Built During The Hamidian Massacres, Sunk During The Genocide

    BUILT DURING THE HAMIDIAN MASSACRES, SUNK DURING THE GENOCIDE

    http://www.mirrorspectator.com/2013/03/20/built-during-the-hamidian-massacres-sunk-during-the-genocide/
    ARMENIA, COMMUNITY, HISTORY | MARCH 20, 2013 5:25 PM

    By Tigran Kalaydjian

    NICOSIA, Cyprus - The fact that SS Armenian once sailed the high
    seas and worked the cargo routes of the North Atlantic is news to
    most people, including Armenians.

    Built as a freighter, the SS Armenian was a valuable transportation
    vessel in the profitable cargo service that existed between Great
    Britain and North America at the turn of the 20th century. The exact
    location of its final resting place remained a mystery until 2008,
    when its wreck was discovered off the western coast of England and
    it was seen for the first time since World War I.

    For a ship born during the Hamidian massacres, it was perhaps
    inevitable that it would meet its doom in that darkest of years -
    1915 - at the same time as the people with whom she shared her name
    were being slaughtered.

    The SS Armenian was built in 1895 by Harland & Wolff, the Belfast
    shipyard that would later become famous for making the legendary trio
    Titanic, Olympic and Britannic. The vessel was 156 meters long and
    had a displacement of 8,825 tons.

    The ship was launched on November 25, 1895 as the SS Indian for
    Frederick Leyland & Co, but wasn't delivered until September of the
    following year, by which time it had been renamed the SS Armenian.

    With very little contact between Great Britain and a nation called
    Armenia, the clue behind the sudden name change lies in the events
    inundating the British press throughout 1895. During this time, the
    sultan and the ruling elite of the Ottoman Empire were diligently
    putting into action their final solution to the 'Armenian Question,'
    a solution which required the destruction of the empire's Armenian
    minority as a cohesive unit and its dispersal throughout the country.

    This policy involved forced assimilation, the settling of Turks in
    Armenian-populated regions, the incitement of Moslem fanatics and
    Kurdish militias to commit atrocities against unarmed Armenians and a
    plan of organized, indiscriminate killing of men, women and children
    by the sultan's military.

    Starting in the late summer of 1894, the massacres of Armenians had
    gradually grown in scale and reach, eventually encompassing several
    large provinces in the east of the empire.

    In October 1895, reports of the slaughter of hundreds of Armenian
    men in the town of Erzurum provoked shock and indignation across
    the world. Newspaper articles regularly depicted the sultan as a
    bloodthirsty tyrant, a butcher of women and children, and sympathy for
    the Armenians was widespread. Leading newspapers such as the Times,
    Morning Post, Daily News, New York Times and Le Petit Parisien
    published articles and editorials by prominent public figures
    condemning the Turkish crimes.

    Eyewitness accounts brought home the magnitude of the massacres,
    filling the public both in Europe and America with disgust and anger.

    One account sent by a Catholic prelate stationed in Western Armenia
    described a typical scene: "Over the whole province the work of
    destruction has been pursued, every town, every hamlet having been
    given over to pillage and murder. The inhabitants who have been
    spared have been stripped of everything of use or value. Those who
    fled from the doomed districts were pursued and cut down mercilessly,
    without regard to age or sex, by the barbarous Turks. The bodies of
    many children and young girls lie under the charred debris of the
    ruined homes."

    By 1896, close to 300,000 innocent lives had been lost throughout
    the Armenian highlands.

    In a speech delivered in Liverpool that year, former UK Prime Minister
    William Gladstone protested vehemently against the atrocities and
    called for resolute action by the European powers against the Turks.

    Against this background, there is little doubt that the unremitting
    suffering of the Armenians would have been ingrained in the
    consciousness of the wider British public.

    With the constant flow of news reports causing outrage and clamors
    for justice, it is understandable why the people behind the building
    of the SS Armenian would choose to rename the vessel. It may have
    been a small but significant gesture, an expression of solidarity
    with the Armenian people in their hour of torment and agony.

    Fitted out with stables to transport horses, the SS Armenian commenced
    its maiden voyage from Liverpool to Boston on September 28, 1896.

    Three years later the ship was contracted by the British authorities
    to serve as a transport in the Boer War, and in 1901, it was used to
    transport 963 Boer prisoners of war to Bermuda.

    After the war, in March 1903, the ship's management was taken over
    by the White Star Line - the same company that would come to operate
    the RMS Titanic just a few years later - and it resumed its cargo
    service between Liverpool and New York.

    In 1910, it was repainted in the distinctive Leyland insignia -
    a pink funnel with a black top.

    The Armenian completed its peacetime assignment in March 1914, before
    being briefly laid up prior to its deployment as a horse transport
    during World War I. Although not fitted as a passenger vessel, it
    was used to transport the Grenadier Guards, an infantry regiment of
    the British armed forces, to Belgium on the October 7, 1914.

    The SS Armenian began its final voyage in June 1915 with 175 men
    onboard. It was chartered to carry a cargo of 1,422 mules from the
    US to Bristol, England. The animals were intended as replacements
    for the horses that had been lost in the fighting in France.

    At around 6:30 p.m. on June 28, while heading northeast off Trevose
    Head, Cornwall, a watchman on the Armenian sighted a German submarine.

    In what proved to be an erroneous decision, Captain James Trickey
    ordered the ship ahead full-steam in an attempt to outrun the U-boat,
    which turned out to be the U-24. The captain was signaled to stop
    and surrender after two shots were fired across the ship's bow, but
    he refused. The U-boat's commander, Rudolf Schneider, then opened
    fire with the deck gun, scoring several hits on the Armenian, one
    shot taking out the Marconi room.

    After more than a dozen men lay dead or injured on the deck, Trickey
    finally agreed to surrender. Much to his surprise, he and the crew
    were treated well by the Germans from that point on. With several
    lifeboats damaged from the shelling, they were allowed to take the
    remaining boats and make for the Cornish coast. The Armenian was then
    sunk by two torpedoes fired into its stern. It went down in minutes.

    The survivors were picked up the following day by the Belgian steam
    trawler President Stevens. Four of the injured died before they could
    be rescued.

    29 men lost their lives, including 19 Americans. The Armenian needed
    hands to tend to the mules, so many of the 175 men onboard were
    muleteers who had been hired at Newport News, Virginia, before
    sailing. Of the 29 fatalities, 12 were muleteers who refused to
    abandon the animals and preferred to go down with the ship. Most of
    the victims were African Americans.

    Following the sinking of the RMS Lusitania 52 days earlier, in which
    more than 100 Americans lost their lives, the sinking of the Armenian
    caused a second crisis between Germany and the US, as the majority of
    the men who died were again American. Much was made in the press of
    this fact, with both the British and French papers doing their best
    to fan the flames of anti-German sentiment in the US, with the hope
    of drawing America into the war.

    While the propaganda war raged in the newspapers, President Woodrow
    Wilson considered the Armenian incident before making any official
    pronouncements, preferring to wait until the investigation was over.

    His procrastination proved expedient. The ship was undeniably
    engaged in the transportation of contraband to England - work animals
    destined for the Allied armies fighting in France - and this made it
    a legitimate target according to most experts.

    Even though the accepted rules of engagement regarding the sinking
    of merchant ships in wartime required a 'stop and search' approach,
    it was established that not all U-boat commanders obeyed these rules.

    However, the investigation found that Rudolf Schneider had indeed
    tried to stop the ship before opening fire with the deck gun. It
    is likely that had Trickey complied with the order to stop, the SS
    Armenian would have been spared.

    The furor caused by the sinking of the Armenian eventually abated
    because of the circumstances surrounding the event, and the US did
    not declare war on Germany until April 1917.

    In 2002, amateur divers claimed they had discovered the wreck of the
    SS Armenian, but their claim was proven incorrect (the wreck was of
    the auxiliary cruiser HMS Patia.)

    The SS Armenian was finally located and identified by wreck hunter
    and archaeologist Innes McCartney in 2008. The discovery was featured
    on the History Channel in an episode of Deep Wreck Mysteries titled,
    "Search for the Bone Wreck."

    The ship sits upright in 95 meters of water, 45 miles from the reported
    location given by the British crew at the time of the sinking. A
    mass of animal bones was found inside the ship, a testament to the
    hundreds of animals whose deaths were but a minor statistic in a
    global conflagration that claimed millions of lives and provided ideal
    cover for the commission of one of mankind's greatest ever crimes -
    the Armenian Genocide.

    (Tigran Kalaydjian is the author of Sentinel of Truth: Gourgen Yanikian
    and the Struggle Against the Denial of the Armenian Genocide [2012.])

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