Casgliadau Arlein
Amgueddfa Cymru
Chwilio Uwch
S.S. GLENLEA, glass negative
Port broadside view of S.S. GLENLEA, waterman's boat and tug, Penarth Head, c.1936.
GLENLEA (4252 gt). Built 1930 by J. Priestman & Co., Sunderland, and owned by John Morrison & Son, Newcastle-upon-Tyne. Sunk 7 November 1942 by U-566 after losing Convoy ON-142 while en route from Cardiff to Durban with 5000 tons of coal, 1000 tons of generals and a deck cargo of trucks. Out of her crewlist of 49, the master was taken prisoner by the U-boat, four were rescued after 21 days in a lifeboat and forty four died. Complement: 49 (44 dead and 5 survivors). Convoy: ON-142 (straggler) Route: Cardiff - Belfast Lough (28 Oct) - Durban - Suez Cargo: 5000 tons of coal, 1000 tons of general cargo and trucks as deck cargo Notes on loss: At 14.36 hours on 7 November, 1942, the unescorted Glenlea (Master John Russell Nicol), a straggler from convoy ON-142, was torpedoed and sunk by U-566 north of the Azores. The master was taken prisoner by the U-boat, landed at Brest and taken to the POW camp Milag Nord. Three crewmen and one gunner were rescued after 21 days in a lifeboat by the Norwegian merchant Thorstrand and landed at New York. 39 crew members and five gunners were lost.