Deutsche Ost-Afrika Linie

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Deutsche Ost-Afrika Linie
IndustryShipping, transportation
Founded1890; 134 years ago (1890)
Defunct1934 Edit this on Wikidata
Headquarters
Area served
East Africa, Indian Ocean
ParentWoermann-Linie Edit this on Wikidata
DOAL ships in port in Zanzibar, 1901
Kurfürst, sister ship of Kronprinz
Ussukuma, launched in 1920

Deutsche Ost-Afrika Linie (German East Africa Line, or DOAL) was a shipping line, established in 1890 as an alternative to the existing shipping services to East Africa, including German East Africa (1891–1919), then dominated by United Kingdom shipping lines.

Founding[edit]

In 1888, the board of the trading firm Woermann-Linie made plans to set up a scheduled service to East Africa as the existing routes were dominated by British lines. The following year the Reichstag approved such a shipping line and in January 1890 the Chancellor began looking for a German shipping company to set up a line to Africa subsidized for over ten years with 900,000 marks a year. As no company was ready, the Reich announced the establishment of a shipping company.[1] On 19 April 1890 DOAL was founded with a capital of six million marks by a consortium of German banks and the Hamburg merchants Adolph Woermann, F. Laeisz, August Bolten, and Hansen & Co. C. Woermann took over the management with Adolph Woermann as Chairman of the Supervisory Board.[2] The line began operating on 23 July 1890 with two steamships bought from the Woermann line. Beginning in 1891, the service consisted of weekly departures from Hamburg via the Mediterranean to Bombay and Zanzibar.

Early years[edit]

The first years of operation were difficult due to the British takeover of Zanzibar in November 1890 and the loss of two ships in the first three years. By 1894 the routes were extended to South Africa, and profits were posted for the first time. In 1900 the government contract with annual subsidies of 1.35 million marks was extended by 15 years and the share capital increased to ten million marks. In 1901, a bond for five million marks was issued to build more ships.

In 1894 the company added a route from Hamburg to Durban in South Africa via the Cape and commissioned for this service Herzog (1896, 4,933 GRT) and Koenig. In 1895 DOAL introduced instead the new steamships on the route Hamburg – Suez – Dar es Salaam, and from 1898 also Durban was connected via Suez, no longer via Cape Town, in order to avoid a clash with the British. Only from 1901, when the Boer War was no longer a political obstacle, a new 'Rund-um-Afrika' (round Africa) route was operated by DOAL on the circuit Hamburg – Bremerhaven – Cape Town – Suez – Hamburg and in reverse direction. For this main line the Kronprinz and Kurfürst were introduced, steamships with a grey hull, white superstructure and a buff funnel, topped with an arrangement of black/white/red rings, pointing the national colours.

More difficult years followed until 1907, as new competitors appeared and the British lines increased competition. DOAL and Woermann Line then responded to an offer by Albert Ballin to form a joint venture with Hamburg America Line (HAPAG). HAPAG and Woermann took part in the operation of DOAL, and each allocated one or two ships for an extension of the line from South Africa to West Africa. Woermann Line was involved in the shared service and in 1908 the Hamburg-Bremen Africa Line also joined. The increased number of departures improved business.

After the death of Adolph Woermann in 1911, Eduard Woermann succeeded him. In 1914 the company's fleet consisted of 22 steamships, totalling about 110,000 GRT.

World War One and its aftermath[edit]

Deutsche Ost-Afrika-Linie share certificate, issued August 1932

The subsidy contract of 1900, which expired in 1915, was not extended as a result of the war. In 1916 Woermann sold Woermann Line and DOAL to a consortium made up of HAPAG, Norddeutscher Lloyd (NDL) and Hugo Stinnes.[2] The company lost all ships due to the First World War and the Versailles Treaty.

The Stinnes shares were taken over by HAPAG and NDL in 1921.[2]

In 1927 the Deutschen Afrika-Dienst-Vertrag of 1907 was continued for a further 20 years and in the following years the corporate structure stabilised. In 1928 the 9,552 GRT Watussi and Ubena were introduced as the first two-funnel turbine steamships of the company under the DOAL name, employed on the Rund-um-Afrika route.

A year after the Nazi Party was elected, German shipping was reorganized in 1934, in which the large shipping groups were divided. HAPAG and NDL had to surrender their shares in Woermann Line and DOAL to the German Reich. In 1936 two larger turbine steamships were launched: Pretoria and Windhuk, of 16,662 GRT each.

In 1942, during World War II, this line and the Woermann-Linie owned by the cigarette manufacturer Philipp Fürchtegott Reemtsma, were taken over by John T. Essberger of Nazi Germany.[1] Deutsche Afrika-Linien lost both fleets in post-war reparations.

Ships of the Deutsche Ost-Afrika Linie up until 1914[edit]

Name Shipyard GRT Length
[m]
Passengers Launch/
Enter Service
Notes
Kronprinz Blohm+Voss
Nr. 140
5645 125.3 188 10.04.1900
30.06.1900
Between-deck accommodation for 116 men. Interned in Lourenco Marques at the outbreak of war in 1914. Was confiscated by the Portuguese. Renamed Quelimane and used as a hospital ship from October 1916 until the end of 1917. Returned to passenger service for Companhia de Transportes do Estado until 1927 when it was scrapped[3]
Kurfürst Reiherstiegwerft
Nr. 407
5654 125.2 270 9.07.1901
13.10.1901
Whilst homebound ran aground on the Portuguese coast and sank on 6 May 1904[3]
Bürgermeister Flensburger SG
Nr. 210
5945 125.3 250 27.02.1902
19.06.1902
Passed in 1919 to France: renamed Macoris Broken up in 1935[4]
Prinzregent Blohm & Voss
Nr. 164
6341 126.8 175 10.01.1903
6.04.1903
Between-deck accommodation for 120 men. Passed in 1919 to France: renamed Cordoba Broken up in 1932[4]
Feldmarschall Reiherstiegwerft
Nr. 410
6142 126.7 268 21.02.1903
24.06.1903
Between-deck accommodation for 120 men. On 17 August 1915 came under fire from HMS Hyacinth and was damaged, repaired by the British and put into service as Field Marshall, in 1922 sold to China, sunk in 1947[5]
Admiral Blohm & Voss
Nr. 178
6341 126.8 264 25.06.1905
23.09.1905
Between-deck accommodation for 106 men, in 1914 the ship was in Lourenco Marques and sought protection, confiscated in 1916 by Portugal: renamed Lourenco Marques, scrapped in 1950 [6]
Prinzessin Blohm & Voss
Nr. 182
6387 126.8 298 23.12.1905
20.04.1906
Passed to Britain in 1919 then to France in 1921: Renamed General Voyron, scrapped in 1934[6]
General Blohm & Voss
Nr. 203
8063 136.9 283 13.07.1910
25.02.1911
Between-deck accommodation for 70 men. Undertook war service in Smyrna, Constantinople as an accommodation and sick-bay ship for the Turkish war effort. Seized in 1918 in Odessa by France; renamed Azay le Rideau. Scrapped in 1937[7]
Tabora Blohm & Voss
Nr. 211
8022 136.9 316 18.04.1912
29.06.1912
Renamed HS Tabora suspected of masquerading as hospital ship. Sunk by British ship HMS Vengeance in Dar es Salaam harbour on 23 March 1916,[8]
Kigoma Reiherstiegwerft
Nr. 451
8156 137.0 310 30.01.1914
28.04.1914
Passed to British in 1919 then to France in 1921: renamed Algeria, in 1922 was purchased by HAPAG, renamed Toledo, returned to Africa service in 1927, scrapped in 1934[9]

Ships of the Deutsche Ost-Afrika Linie after 1914[edit]

Name Shipyard GRT Length
[m]
Passengers Launch/
Enter Service
Notes
Ussukuma Blohm+Voss
Nr. 389
7834 127.6 264 20.12.1920
08.07.1921
At outbreak on WW2 was at Lorenço Marques. Commandeered by Abwehr, crossed Atlantic to Argentina. After engagement with HMS Ajax was scuttled by crew on 5 December 1939 off Necochea
Pretoria Blohm+Voss
Nr. 506
16662 175.8 490 1936 Kriegsmarine submarine tender from 1939 to 1945. Seized by the UK. Empire Doon until 1949, then Empire Orwell. Bought by Indonesia. Gunung Djati until 1980, then Tanjung Pandan. Scrapped 1984.
Windhuk Blohm+Voss
Nr. 507
16662 175.8 490 1936 In 1939 disguised as Santos Maru and entered Santos. Interned until 1942, when Brazil entered war with Allies, the crew sabotaged all the machinery. Repaired and served as USS Lejeune from 1943. Scrapped in Portland 1966

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Rübner, Hartmut: Konzentration und Krise der deutschen Schiffahrt. Maritime Wirtschaft im Kaiserreich, in der Weimarer Republik und im Nationalsozialismus, Hauschild Verlag, Bremen, 2005
  2. ^ a b c Mathies, Otto: Hamburgs Reederei 1814 – 1914. Friederichsen Verlag, Hamburg, 1924
  3. ^ a b Kludas, Arnold: Die Schiffe der deutschen Afrika-Linien 1880 bis 1945. Verlag Gerhard Stalling, 1975, ISBN 3-7979-1867-4
  4. ^ a b Kludas: Schiffe der Afrika-Linien, p. 48.
  5. ^ Kludas: Afrika-Linien, p. 50.
  6. ^ a b Kludas: Afrika-Linien, p. 57
  7. ^ Kludas: Afrika-Linien, p. 65
  8. ^ Kludas: Afrika-Linien, p. 65f.
  9. ^ Kludas: Afrika-Linien, p. 66.

External links[edit]