Wentworth (ship)

The Wentworth was a British cargo steamer that was hit by a torpedo fired by German submarine U-358 while travelling as part of a convoy in the North Atlantic in 1943. Five crewmen died. The ship was so damaged that HMS Loosestrife attempted to scuttle it soon after.

Construction
The Wentworth was built by Richardson, Duck & Company of Stockton on Tees in 1919. She was originally named the War Phlox.

Sinking
In April 1943, the Wentworth, under the command of Reginald Gilbert Phillips, joined Convoy ONS 5 (outward, northbound, slow) from Britain to North America. The convoy was made up of 42 ships, of which 12 or 13 were sunk after the convoy came under sustained attack from German submarines hunting in packs. In the early morning of 5 May, the Wentworth was south of Greenland and east of Newfoundland when it was hit by a torpedo fired by submarine U-358, under the command of Rolf Manke. Manke had sunk the Bristol City not long before. The torpedo hit the Wentworth on its port side, creating a hole in the hull that allowed the sea into the engine and boiler rooms. Four men in the engine room died immediately and another later drowned. The order was given to abandon ship and most of the crew left in three lifeboats. Phillips and a few others remained until 03.50 when the ship began to break apart, after which they left in one of the remaining lifeboats. About two hours later, HMS Loosestrife arrived and the decision was taken to try to scuttle the Wentworth but that was unsuccessful. The ship was eventually sunk by gunfire from U-628. The survivors from both ships were picked up by the Loosestrife and landed at St Johns in Newfoundland.