(Redirected from Dunedin Star)'''MV Dunedin Star''' was a
Blue Star Line ship that ran aground on the
Skeleton Coast of
Namibia on
November 29,
1942, while carrying passengers and cargo from
Liverpool to
Saldanha Bay,
South Africa,
Aden and
Egypt. She was carrying munitions and supplies as part of the Allies
World War II effort but had fare-paying passengers as well
Shipwreck
''Dunedin Star'' was a 530 foot long refrigerated cargo liner built by the
Cammell Laird company of
Birkenhead,
England, and was launched in
1935. Her grounding became famous because of the perilous conditions facing the survivors after they landed on the desolate Namibian shore. The coastline is completely inhospitable, being guarded on one side by the fierce surf and on the other by the almost completely barren
Namib Desert that runs almost the entire length of the coast and varies in width from 50–160km.
The crew managed to send an
SOS distress call that was intercepted onshore at
Walvis Bay.
A rescue tug, the ''Sir Charles Elliott'', ran on to rocks before reaching the stranded ship and two of her crew members lost their lives while trying to swim ashore.
A
Ventura bomber dropped supplies on to the beach but crashed into the ocean on the way back to Walvis Bay. The crew not only survived the crash but managed to swim ashore and later find their way to the overland rescue convoy as well. The airmen, together with the original survivors, eventually reached
Windhoek on Christmas Eve, twenty-six days after the original disaster.
Some of the cargo was salvaged in 1951
[1], and some is still visible to this day on the beach about 80km south of the
Kunene river mouth.
Reference
★ Schoeman, Amy (1998).
Naturally Intimate.
Travel Africa Magazine.
Further reading
★ Jeff Dawson - ''Dead Reckoning: The Dunedin Star Disaster'' (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2005) ISBN 0-297-84879-8
★ John H. Marsh - ''Skeleton Coast'' (1950)
See also
★
List of shipwrecks
External links
★
Blue Star Lines page on the Dunedin Star
★
''Skeleton Coast'' online book