Hi Spidge,
Yes I have seen the film but it was long ago - excellent if I remember rightly. One of the few films that recognised the heroism of the Merchant Navy at war. To be honest I can't think of another one.
SAN DEMETRIO official number 166623 built in 1938 for Eagle Oil Shipping Company. The incident that the film captures is the 1940 attack on convoy HX 84 in 1940. SAN DEMETRIO was attacked and set on fire by the german pocket battleship ADMIRAL SCHEER. SAN DEMETRIO's master, Captain Waite, believed that the fire could set off the aviation fuel at any moment so he gave the order to abandon ship. Despite the ship remaining under fire from the
SCHEER, the crew escaped in two lifeboats.
SCHEER then turned her attention to other ships of the rapidly scattering convoy.
The crew later boarded the vessel and succeded in getting her home.
MV San Demetrio - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tanker SAN DEMETRIO was torpedoed and sunk later in the war (17.3.1942) by U-404 (von Bulow), part of 'Operation Paukenschlag' (Drumbeat), the third wave of twelve U-boats, in the Atlantic NW of Cape Charles, Virginia, in position 37.03N 73.50W while sailing independently on a voyage from Baltimore 14.3.1942 to the UK via Halifax NS, with a cargo of 4000 tons of alcohol and 7000 tons of motor spirit. The Master, Capt Conrad Vidot, 26 crew and 5 gunners were rescued after 2 days by US ship BETA and landed at Norfolk, Virginia. 16 crew and 3 gunners were lost. Capt C. Vidot was awarded the Lloyd's War Medal for bravery at sea.
Regards
Hugh