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Steam Ship Narrangansett Steam Ship Narrangansett
First Name: A Last Name: OLLEY
Date of Death: 16/03/1917 Lived/Born In: Wapping
Rank: Trimmer Unit: Steam Ship Narragansett
Memorial Site: Tower Hill Memorial

Current Information:

Age-25

1, Prusom Street, Wapping

 

In February 1917, the German navy introduced their ‘sink on sight’ policy whereby their submarines attacked all merchant shipping without warning. By doing this they hoped to starve Britain and the Allies of vital supplies and force them to sue for peace. At first it was very successful and hundreds of ships were were sunk in the opening months of the campaign and at one point Britain was reduced  to just six weeks' supply of wheat. But there were dangers for Germany. Many of the ships sunk were American and this was one of the main factors why the United States entered the war in April 1917. Eventually the threat of the U-boats was weakened by the introduction of a convoy system, but not before many ships had been sunk and many lives lost.

One of the victims of this ‘sink on sight’ policy was the Steam Ship Narragansett, a 10,000 ton tanker belonging to the Anglo-American Oil Company, which was sunk by a torpedo fired by the German submarine U-44 on 16th March, 1917, off the south-west coast of Ireland. At the time she was en route from New York to London with a cargo of lubricating oil and forty six members of her crew lost their lives. One of these was A Olley.

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