The ship as Lenin
History
United Kingdom
NameHMS Alexander
BuilderArmstrong Whitworth, Low Walker
Yard number905
Laid downJune 1916
Launched23 December 1916
CompletedJune 1917
CommissionedSeptember 1917
Decommissioned1919
FateHanded over to White Russian forces, 1919
Soviet Union
Name
  • 1919: Lenin
  • 1957: Vladimir Ilich Lenin
NamesakeVladimir Lenin
Acquiredc.1919
Out of service1968
FateScrapped, 1977
General characteristics
TypeIcebreaker
Tonnage3,375 GRT, 1,330 NRT
Displacement5,600 tonnes
Length264.2 ft (80.5 m)
Beam64.1 ft (19.5 m)
Draught21.2 ft (6.5 m)
Installed power1,038 NHP
Propulsion

Lenin (Russian: Ленин) was a Russian icebreaker originally built in England for the Russian Empire. Launched in 1916, before going into service for Russia, the ship first served in the Royal Navy during the Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War. It was eventually acquired by the Soviet Union and served through World War II, and was scrapped in 1977.

Building

Armstrong Whitworth laid the ship down at Low Walker in June 1916 for the Russian Empire as yard number 905.[1] She was to be called St. Alexander Nevsky after the Russian statesman and military hero Alexander Nevsky.[2] The Russian naval architect and author Yevgeny Zamyatin supervised her building.[3] She was launched on 23 December 1916 and completed in June 1917.

The ship had three screws: two aft to propel her forward, and one in her bow to propel her in reverse. She had three Marine steam engine#Triple or multiple expansion engines: one to drive each screw. Her total power was rated at 1,038 NHP.[1]

Service history

By the time the ship was completed, the Russian Empire had ceased to exist following the February Revolution. In September 1917 the Royal Navy requisitioned and commissioned her as HMS Alexander. She served in the North Russia campaign, and was handed over to White Russian forces when the British withdrew in October 1919.[2]

Bill Seagroatt, a British engineer, serving aboard Lenin on the 1922 Kara Sea expedition

The ship must have been soon taken by the Bolsheviks, for in 1921 the Norwegian sailor and Arctic explorer Otto Sverdrup commanded the ship, now named Lenin, at the request of the Soviet government, when he mounted his fourth and last expedition in Arctic Siberian waters. He led a convoy of five cargo ships on an experimental run through the Kara Sea to the mouths of the Ob and Yenisei Rivers. The ships reached their destinations and returned safely. This was considered an important step in the development of the Kara Sea sector of the Northern Sea Route.[4]

In 1937 Lenin was trapped in ice. She and her convoy of five ships were forced to spend the winter in the Laptev Sea. They were finally rescued by the icebreaker Krasin in August 1938.[5]

In World War II Lenin took part in Arctic convoys.[2] In 1942 she was part of a convoy sighted at the Mona Islands in the Kara Sea by a Kriegsmarine Arado Ar 196 during Operation Wunderland. The heavy cruiser Admiral Scheer rushed to find her, but bad weather, fog, and ice saved Lenin.[6]

In October 1943 Lenin was damaged by torpedo in the Kara Sea. In 1946–47 she was repaired in the UK.[1]

Lenin continued in service in the Cold War.In 1957, when the nuclear-powered icebreaker Lenin was launched, the earlier ship was renamed Vladimir Ilich Lenin. The ship was hulked in 1968 and scrapped in 1977.[2]

In fiction

In his dystopian novel We, Zamyatin refers to the specifications of St. Alexander Nevsky in the names of some of his characters.[3]

The ship appears in Dziga Vertov's 1926 film A Sixth Part of the World.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 "St Alexandre Nevsky". Tyne Built Ships. Shipping and Shipbuilding Research Trust.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Requisitioned Auxiliary - Alexander". historicalrfa.org. 2012. Retrieved 16 June 2012.
  3. 1 2 Myers, Alan. "Zamyatin in Newcastle". Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 16 June 2012. (updates articles by Myers published in Slavonic and East European Review)
  4. Barr, William. "Arctic Profile : Otto Sverdrup (1854-1930)" (PDF). Arctic. Arctic Institute of North America. 37 (1): 72–73. doi:10.14430/arctic2169. Retrieved 16 June 2012.
  5. Barr, William (March 1980). "The Drift of Lenin's Convoy in the Laptev Sea, 1937-1938" (PDF). Arctic. 33 (1): 3–20. doi:10.14430/arctic2543. Retrieved 26 July 2008.
  6. "Operation Wunderland, August 1942". allworldwars.com. 2011. Retrieved 16 June 2012.
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