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USA 1948, Remembering the four Chaplains from the SS Dorchester after meeting U-223

The SS Dorchester was a cruise/transport ship that was converted to a troopship for war service. In 1943 it was headed for Greenland with 900 aboard, twice the cruising complement. It met it’s fate from a torpedo delivered by German U boat U223. About a quarter of the people aboard were saved by nearby coast guard cutters. A horrible loss for the USA. To lessen the blow, The USA made a big deal of four Chaplains, each of a different sect, who voluntarily gave up their life vests and perished. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

The idea that the leadership is the last to leave a distressed ship was the standard of seamanship. Remember the 3rd class females on the Titanic more likely to survive than higher deck first class men. Apparently such thoughts were slipping as the government decided to reinforce the former standard with the wonderfully politically correct act by the four chaplains of different faiths on the Dorchester. Sometimes an old standard needs reinforcement, as was shown by the recent Italian cruise ship disaster. Interestingly, the stamp design had to be modified before coming out, The four chaplains had not been dead for the required 10 years before a stamp can be issued. Thus their names were removed. Another rule that has since dropped away.

Todays stamp is issue A403, a 3 cent stamp issued by the USA on May 28rh, 1948. It was a single stamp issue. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents whether used or unused.

The SS Dorchester was built in 1926 and operated as a cruise and transport ship along the eastern coast of the USA between Miami and Boston. There were 300 passengers and 90 crew with a small capability to carry some freight. In early 1942 the ship began it’s war service with most of the same crew and still in private ownership. In 1943 there was a convoy headed for Greenland with 2 other cargo ships and three escorting Coast Guard cutters. The early morning torpedo hit came without warning and killed power to the steam engine. Thus the ship was not able to communicate it’s distress to escorts or even blow the abandon ship whistle. The water was so cold that it killed more than drowning but two of the coast guard cutters managed to save 230 of the 904 on board. The escorts were not attacked by the submarine U-223. The four chaplains who gave up their life vests and parrished were Rabbi Alexander Goode, Father John Washington, and Protestant ministers George Fox and Clark Poling. The ship sank in 20 minutes bow first, the opposite of what the stamp imagines.

U995, the only surviving Type VII U boat, at a Naval Memorial near Keil, Germany

U-223 was a Type VII German U-Boat constructed at Keil in 1942. The Type VII was the most common type of U-boat. It’s 1943 patrols in the North Atlantic saw it participate in 8 Wolfpacks. A Wolfpack was a tactic of mass attack by multiple subs on a convoy. The Sub would often try to avoid return fire by escorts after the attack by hiding underwater directly under the survivors in the water. U-223 sunk three ships of comparable size to the Dorchester. In another encounter  nearby depth charges forced the damaged sub to the surface and then it was shelled by British destroyer HMS Hesperus. It barely escaped badly damaged. The sub then transferred to the Mediterranean based at Toulon in occupied France. On March 29th, 1944 it was caught by three British destroyers off Palermo and sunk. In it’s last battle it sunk the British destroyer HMS Laforey. 23 of the submarine’s crew of 50 had lost their lives. The sub commander during the North Atlantic battles was Captain Lieutenant  Karl-Jurg Wachter. See also, https://the-philatelist.com/2019/09/09/germany-1943-u-boat-wolfpacks-bring-the-war-across-the-sea/     .

A later famous person was scheduled to be on SS Dorchester but missed the boat. Beat author Jack Kerouac was a merchant seaman and radioman on the ship. Right before sailing he received a telegram offering for Kerouac to play football at Columbia University. Later in the war the US Navy dismissed him from service after 7 days for being of indifferent character and processing a schizoid personality. Leave the fighting to real men I guess. They wouldn’t make decent beat authors anyway.

Well my drink is empty and I will pour another for all those that died in the Battle of the Atlantic. Come again soon for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2020.