Commemorated: | |||
1. Memorial: | Halifax Naval Memorial | Panel 20. NS | |
2. Memorial: | Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Toronto | Marker ON | |
Awards & Titles: |
Service Life:
Campaigns:
- The Second World War 1939-1945, World-wide.
Unit / Ship / Est.: SS Victolite II |
Action : SS Victolite II, Sinking of |
"On her final voyage the Victolite set out from Halifax on Thursday the 5th of February 1942 bound for Las Piedras, Venezuela. She had just completed a laden passage from Caripito, Venezuela (for cargo) and Trinidad (for bunkers, or engine fuel), between the 21st of January and the first day of February, and was heading back down south without any cargo, but rather with just ballast water in her tanks. Captain Peter McLean Smith, aged 45, was the Master of the Victolite at the time. He was responsible for a total complement of 47 men, of whom two were Gunners manning the ship's defensive weaponry, usually consisting of a large 4-inch artillery gun, possibly with a smaller 12-pound gun and a number of mounted and hand-held machine guns. All of the crew were Canadian nationals, with the exception of two men (one British, and one Norwegian). There were six teenagers aboard. By the afternoon of Tuesday the tenth of February Captain Smith and his men had made it to a point 260 nautical miles north-northwest of Bermuda, 400 miles east of Cape Hatteras, 400 miles southeast of New York, and 325 miles south-southeast of Nantucket. This position is 42 miles southeast of the Caryn Seamount. At that time and in that place the hapless tanker sailed across the sites of the German submarine U-564 under the command of the aggressive veteran skipper then-Kapitaenleutnant Reinhard Suhren."
Detail :
Died at Sea: 11 February 1942, Atlantic Ocean, off Bermuda
Commemorated: Halifax Navel Memorial, Panel 20, and
Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Toronto, Ontario
Master Peter McLean Smith, Canadian Mercantile Marine, Imperial Oil, Toronto, Ontario. At 03.28 hours on 11 February, 1942, the unescorted tanker “Victolite II” (Victoria) was torpedoed by U-564 and sunk by gunfire north-northwest of Bermuda. He was married to Josephine Agnes Smith. He was lost at sea and is commemorated on Panel 20 of the Halifax Navel Memorial and with a marker at Mount Pleasant Cemetery in Toronto Ontario.
Masonic :
Type | Lodge Name and No. | Province/District : |
---|---|---|
Mother : | Royal Standard No. 398 E.C. | Montreal & Halifax |
Initiated | Passed | Raised |
22nd March 1935 | 22nd January 1936 | 22nd January 1936 |
In Royal Standard Lodge, he was:
Initiated in an Emergent Meeting on 22 March 1935;
Passed on 7 January 1936; and
Raised on 7 January 1936.
Source :
The project globally acknowledges the following as sources of information for research across the whole database:
- The Commonwealth War Graves Commission
- The (UK) National Archives
- Ancestry.co.uk - Genealogy, Family Trees & Family History online
- ugle.org.uk - The records of the United Grand Lodge of England including the Library and Museum of Freemasonry
Additional Source:
- Founder Researchers : Paul Masters & Mike McCarthy
- Researcher : Bruce Littley
Researcher : Stephen Smith - Royal Standard Lodge