Jump to content

HMSArgenta

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

History
United States
NameSSArgenta
BuilderNational Shipbuilding Company,Orange, Texas
Yard number245
Laid downJuly 1917
LaunchedMay 1919
In service1919
Out of service1921 (cargo)
FateSold, 1922
United Kingdom
NameHMSArgenta
Acquired1922
Out of service1925
FateScrapped 1925
General characteristics
TypeCargo ship/Prison ship
Tonnage3,500grt

HMSArgenta(originally the American cargo shipSSArgenta) was aprison shipof the BritishRoyal Navy.

Construction

[edit]

The two deck steamer waslaid downin July 1917 by the National Shipbuilding Company ofOrange, Texasas Hull No. 245. Shortages of materials meant thatshewas wooden-hulled, with a steelkeelson,stem and stern posts of oak, and timbers largely of yellow pine. This was due to shortages of metals. SSArgentawas launched in May 1919.

Cargo ship

[edit]

Argenta's career as a cargo ship was short. As early as November 1919, there were some signs of leakage, and the ship was out of service from late 1921. Condemned and declaredunseaworthyin May 1922, she was then sold for use as aprison ship(a prisonhulk) by the British Royal Navy.

Prison ship

[edit]

During the 1920s, the vessel was used by the British government as a military base and prison ship for holdingIrish Republicansas part of Britain'sinternmentstrategy following the events ofBloody Sunday in 1920.[1]In the spring of 1922 theIrish Republican Army(IRA) launched an offensive in Northern Ireland (seeThe Troubles in Northern Ireland (1920–1922)) resulting in the internment of many Irish Republicans on the Argenta.[2]

Dawson Bates,the1st Northern Ireland Minister for Home Affairsintroduced the1922 Special Powers Act.Internment was introduced and by May 1922 up to 700 Irish Republicans had been arrested.[3]By February 1923, 263 men interned on the Argenta, which was moored inBelfast LoughnearCarrickfergus.[4]This location was supplemented with internments at other land based sites, such asLarneworkhouse,Belfast PrisonandDerry Gaol.The ship and the workhouses held 542 menwithout trialat the highest internment population level (June 1923).[5]

Conditions on theArgentawere "unbelievable", according to Denise Kleinrichert who wrote the hidden history of the 1920s' "floatinggulag"inRepublican Internment and the Prison ShipArgenta,1922.Cloistered below decks in cages which each held 50internees,the prisoners were forced to use broken toilets, which overflowed frequently into their communal area. Deprived of tables, the already weakened men ate off the floor, frequently succumbing to disease and illness as a result. Internees suffered routine beatings from guards and health issues from the conditions on board the ship. Six men were discharged from the ship with medical conditions and two died soon afterwards.[6]There were severalhunger strikes,including a major strike involving upwards of 200 men in the winter of 1923 (see1923 Irish hunger strikes).[5]

In November 1923 IRA leaderSeamus Woodswas arrested and charged with the assassination of a member of the new Northern Parliament (W.J. Twaddell- May 22, 1922) and held on theArgenta.Although Woods was acquitted of the Twaddell murder charge he continued to be held and was the last prisoner to be released from the ship (17 April 1924). Woods was then served with a prohibition order which excluded him from Northern Ireland.[7]Another notable internee wasCahir Healy,an Irish politician who campaigned against the inclusion of Counties Tyrone and Fermanagh into Northern Ireland as they had Irish nationalist majorities. Healy spent 18 months on the Argenta, starting in July 1922. Healy is quoted on the reasons for his arrest and internment, "All my life, I have been a man of peace. It is not, therefore, because they feared that I would disturb the peace of Northern Ireland that they dragged me away from my wife and family, but for political reasons. I have been engaged in preparing the case for the inclusion of these areas (Fermanagh and Tyrone) in the Free State. To get me out of the way, local politicians urged my arrest".[8]

In 2011 a rare and unusual autograph book from theArgenta,with a large number of signatures of prisoners, almost all with Northern Ireland addresses, mostly late 1922, was auctioned by Mealys Rare Books Limited. Signatures include Mícheál mac Eochaidh, W. Quillan, Packie Murphy, J.P. Kearns, Michael Carraher, Charlie Magee, Peter Rafferty, Mick McIlhatton, Frankie Corr, Owen (Montague) Teague (Patrilineality;County Tyrone,Northern Ireland,) John Grimes, John Bell, Joseph McKenny, Michael O'Neill, Liam Ua Donngaile, Art Mac Partolon (quoting Shakespeare), F.G. Duffy, Jim Rooney, Seosamh O Cianain and Patrick Gormley.

An inscription from the book reads

When you are on some lonely road,
Waiting some friends to see,
Let your thoughts turn towards the Argenta,
And sometimes think of me.. Frankie Corr

As a result of author Denise Kleinrichert's lobbying efforts, the files of all the internees — most of them named in an appendix to her book — are now available for viewing at thePublic Record Office of Northern Ireland(PRONI).

See also

[edit]

HMS Al Rawdah (1941)

References

[edit]
  1. ^Hopkinson, Michael (2004).The Irish War of Independence.ISBN978-0-7171-3741-1.
  2. ^McCluskey, Fergal (2014),The Irish Revolution, 1912–1923 Tyrone,Four Courts Press, Dublin, pg 124, ISBN 978-1-84682-299-5
  3. ^Ferriter, Diarmaid, (2004),The Transformation of Ireland,The Overlook Press, New York, pg. 278, ISBN 1-58567-882-1
  4. ^McGuffin, John (1973),Internment!,Anvil Books Ltd, Tralee, Ireland, pg 65.
  5. ^abKleinrichert, Denise (2001).Republican internment and the prison ship Argenta 1922.Irish Academic Press.ISBN978-0-7165-2683-4.
  6. ^McGuffin, pg 67.
  7. ^Thorne Kathleen, (2014)Echoes of Their Footsteps, The Irish Civil War 1922–1924,Vol II, Generation Organization, Newberg, OR, pg 257, ISBN 978-0-692-245-13-2
  8. ^Phoenix, Eamon & Parkinson, Alan (2010), Conflicts in the North of Ireland, 1900–2000, Four Courts Press, Dublin, pp. 140–141, ISBN 978-1-84682-189-9

Further reading

[edit]
  • Kleinrichert, Denise (2001).Republican internment and the prison ship Argenta 1922.Irish Academic Press.ISBN978-0-7165-2683-4.
[edit]