Cayru

Shipwreck Cayru
Type:
shipwreck, freighter, Brazil
Built:
1919, American International Shipbuilding, Hog Island PA USA, as Scanmail
Specs:
( 390 x 54 ft ) 5152 gross tons, 83 passengers & crew
Sunk:
Sunday March 8, 1942
torpedoed by U-94 - 53 casualties
Depth:
125-140 ft

The exact location of the Cayru is unknown; the location plotted is one of several wrecks thought to be it. If found, the wreck may be identified by its steam turbine engines, which are distinctly different from piston steam engines.

Shipwreck Gulftrade New York Times
Shipwreck Cayru
U-94
Type VIIc U-boat U-94 at St Nazaire with Adm. Karl Donitz, sunk August 1942

At 02:25 hours on 9 Mar 1942, the unescorted Cayru (Master Torger Olsen) was torpedoed by U-94, broke in two, and sank 130 miles from New York. All hands onboard abandoned ship, but only the lifeboat with the master and 26 other men was found. The other lifeboats with 47 crew members and six passengers disappeared.


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pilot boat Sandy Hook
Sandy Hook

A harbor pilot is a person who takes control of a seagoing ship when it is entering or leaving port. He is expertly familiar with all the channels, shoals, currents, tides, and regulations of his particular port, and is essential to safely steer the ships in and out. It is an ancient and exclusive profession, often passed down from father to son*. In old days, the top two signal flags at right were used by ships entering and exiting a harbor to call for a pilot, while the bottom flag indicated "pilot on board."

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