Pictured: The hospital ship in question. In a dark coincidence, the ship’s name was Armenia.

Quoting David Williams’s In Titanic’s Shadow: The World’s Worst Merchant Ship Disasters:

Having earlier called at Sevastopol, the Armenia arrived at Yalta bound for Tuapse on 6 November 1941 on the first of this phase of mercy runs. There she embarked a huge number of people, variously put at from 5,500 to 10,000 but believed to have been actually of the order of 7,000. Crammed aboard her were wounded soldiers, civilian evacuees, the staff of the Central Black Sea navy hospital, along with the staff and patients from twenty-three other military and civil hospitals in the region. The order from Naval Command had been to take all medical personnel, injured and ill people from all of the hospitals in and around besieged Sevastopol.

One of the mysterious aspects of the Armenia case, which was to have a major influence on what was to transpire, was why the authorities insisted so many vulnerable people should be embarked on the Armenia alone when there were other hospital ships in the port. Given the desperate circumstances, with Odessa already fallen, Rostov close to being overrun and the whole of the Crimea threatened, every available ship was involved in getting the casualties out and, to bolster the defences, reinforcements in — but other hospital ships did have spare capacity.

When the Armenia was ready to sail, Russian Naval Command instructed her master to delay his departure until 19.00 hours at the earliest, when light was falling, or until escorts became available. For a reason that no one now can explain, Captain Plaushevsky ignored these orders. He did wait at Yalta through the night but the following morning, 7 November 1941, at 08.00 hours, he put to sea, bound for Tuapse in broad daylight and without a proper escort.

Less than four hours later, reports say at 11.25 hours, the Armenia was spotted off the coast near Gurzuf by Heinkel He 111H bombers of Kampfgeschwader 28, which immediately attacked. The planes had been armed for attacks on shipping and, besides dropping their bombs, they also carried torpedoes, which they unleashed at the Armenia. One hit the helpless ship at her forward end. With her bows and forepart blasted away completely, she sank almost immediately. A survivor, one of only eight picked up later by a naval escort vessel, timed the sinking at 11.29 hours, only four minutes after the assault had started. In such a brief interval, there was no opportunity to organise anything even remotely like a proper evacuation of the ship.

The [Axis] pilots had no excuse for their actions. They certainly could not have been mistaken about the Armenia’s function, for standing out brightly in the morning sunshine, her white hull and prominent red crosses would have been clearly seen: they chose deliberately to disregard the markings. An eyewitness who had watched the tragedy unfold from the shore later recalled:

Hardly had the boat reached the open sea, when a group of [Axis] planes attacked it. It goes without saying that the [Axis] pilots could see the big red crosses on the ship. Nevertheless, they started bombing the vessel. We could hear both bomb explosions and people’s screaming.

Maybe Captain Plaushevsky had taken his chances that fateful day because he felt sure the [Axis] would not attack a ship operating under the protection of the Red Cross, but sadly his judgement failed him.

The catastrophic loss of the Armenia was then, and remains to this day, the worst ever involving a Russian ship. For just over three years it was the world’s worst maritime disaster with an official figure of 5,000 casualties, although it is widely accepted that the actual number of dead was nearer to 7,000.

(Emphasis added.)


Click here for other events that happened today (November 7).

1937: The Imperial Japanese Army combined the Shanghai Expeditionary Force and the Japanese 10th Army to form the new Central China Area Army.
1938: The Fascists organized the Milizia Artiglieria Contraerea: anti‐aircraft and coastal artillery militia units, and coincidentally the Reich accepted Hans‐Joachim Marseille into flight training and gave him the rank of Flieger. Meanwhile in Paris, Herschel Grynszpan (a French Jew whose parents were recently expelled from Germany into Poland) murdered Fascist consular aide Ernst Vom Rath.
1939: The Belgian and Dutch Crowns stated their neutrality and offered to act as negotiators for peace, which Berlin, Paris, and London rejected. Coincidentally, Berlin postponed the decision for the western invasion (the next date of decision was to be 9 Nov 1939) while Hermann Göring met with Yankee journalists at the Soviet embassy in Berlin, mocking the quality and quantity of the U.S.‐built aircraft that would soon arrive in Britain. Finally, Blohm und Voss prematurely launched Herbert Norkus in Hamburg to make way for submarine construction around the same time that a double agent in Britain passed Fascist plans for the Western Offensive to the Czechoslovakian government‐in‐exile.
1941: During or around the time that the Empire of Japan’s Navy conducted a carrier exercise, the Allied merchant ship Nottingham, on her maiden voyage, spotted Axis submarine U‐74 in the North Atlantic and attempted to ram her, but U‐74 counterattacked at 2234 hours and sunk Nottingham. All sixty‐two aboard escaped in lifeboats, but they were never seen again. Close to this time, one hundred sixty RAF bombers assaulted Berlin and shot down twenty bombers, but the Germans reported minimal damage. Lastly, Emden arrived at Gotenhafen (a.k.a. Gdynia), Axis‐occupied Poland and disembarked Grand Admiral Erich Raeder.
1944: Axis captors hung Soviet spy Richard Sorge and thirty‐four of his associates.

  • @PolandIsAStateOfMind
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    86 months ago

    Huh i never even heard about that episode before, but the Wilhelm Gustloff sinking is mentioned every anniversary and often without it by mainstream media (not to mention the wehraboo crowd) despite Gustloff being legit target.

    • @Anatolianin
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      6 months ago

      I almost never hear about the nazi war crimes on the Eastern Front or the genocide of the USSR population in Western mainstream media, but I often hear about how the Red Army raped millions of women or destroyed cultural values during the liberation of Eastern Europe (not to mention holodomor, Katyn and other things).

      Even liberation is always put in quotation marks.

      • @PolandIsAStateOfMind
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        6 months ago

        Yeah. In Poland it is holy dogma to never even question. Hell the bubble is so complete they don’t even dare to mention names like Grover Furr even if just to try to discredit them. And polish “left” is fully complicit in it.

        Absolutely sickening considering every single Pole alive now is alive and is a Pole solely because Red Army liberated us.