When launched on 21 March 1905 in a ceremony attended by the Ministers of Public Works and Commerce along with the First Secretary of Marine, La Provence was the largest ship in the French merchant marine and the largest built in France.[1]
La Provence
La Provence was 191 metres (626ft 8in)long overall with a 19.8-metre (65ft 0in)beam and, at design draught of 8.15 metres (26ft 9in), limited for the relatively shallow harbor of Le Havre from which the ship was to operate, displaced 19,190 metric tons (18,890 long tons) or 18,870gross register tons(GRT).[1][2] A proposal to power the ship with steam turbines was rejected and two conventional triple expansion steam engines chosen instead driving two screws with 30,000 indicated horsepower (22,000kW) for an expected speed of 23 knots (43km/h; 26mph).[1][4] Four steam driven dynamos supplied electric power.[5] The ship was designed with accommodation for 397 first class, 205 second class and 900 third class passengers served by 435 crew members for a total of 1,937 persons.[2]
The ship operated on the Le Havre—New York route, making one crossing in six days and four hours for an average of 21.63 knots (40.06km/h; 24.89mph).[6]
Contemporary reports from Paris indicated nearly 4,000 persons aboard and 3,130 lives lost.[11] Modern accounts of losses revise those numbers downward to about 1,700 troops aboard and under 1,000 lost.[9] The wartime reports from Paris for losses in this one sinking are quite close to the total, 3,180, for three troop ships sunk in connection with the Salonika troop movements: Provence II, Gallia (October 1916) and Amiral Magon (January 1917).[12]
M. Bokanowski, a French Deputy, who is one of the survivors of the French auxiliary cruiser Provence, which was torpedoed and sunk in the Mediterranean, narrates that a battalion of the Third Colonial Infantry was aboard. There was no lamentation, and there was no panic, though the ship was sinking rapidly and the boilers exploding.
Captain Vesco, he states, remained on the bridge, calmly giving orders, and finally cried, "Adieu, mes enfants." The men clustered on the foredeck, and replied, "Vive la France." Then the Provence made a sudden plunge, and the foredeck rose perpendicularly above the water.
A British patrol and a French torpedo boat picked up the survivors after they had been 18 hours in the water. Many died or went mad before the rescue ships arrived.
Ramakers, L. (1905). "New Passenger Steamer La Provence". Marine Engineering. 10 (August 1905). New York: Marine Engineering, Inc. Retrieved 28 January 2015.