MS Marnix Van St Aldegonde

Netherland Line · 1930 · Ship Guide

Overview

MS Marnix Van St Aldegonde was a large Dutch passenger and cargo liner built for the Netherland Line’s long Amsterdam–Dutch East Indies service. She belonged to the interwar generation of modern motor liners that emphasized diesel propulsion, commercial versatility, and long-range imperial-route operation rather than North Atlantic speed competition. Her peacetime career linked the Netherlands with Southeast Asia, and her wartime life as a troopship brought her into Allied convoy service far from her original commercial world.

In collecting and interpretation, Marnix Van St Aldegonde is best divided into three main phases: peacetime Amsterdam–Dutch East Indies liner service, late prewar lay-up and regional repositioning, and wartime troopship service. Material from those phases should be distinguished carefully rather than treated as a single undifferentiated ship identity.

Key Facts

Operator
Stoomvaart Maatschappij Nederland (Netherland Line)
Common source styling
MS Marnix van Sint Aldegonde
Builder
Nederlandsche Scheepsbouw Maatschappij (NSM), Amsterdam
Yard number
195
Laid down
8 December 1928
Launched
21 December 1929
Completed
September 1930
Maiden voyage
7 October 1930
Maiden voyage route
Amsterdam – Dutch East Indies (Jakarta / Batavia service world)
Type
Passenger and cargo liner, later troopship
Gross tonnage
About 19,355 GRT
Length
About 580–609 ft depending on measurement standard used by the source
Beam
About 74 ft 10 in
Propulsion
Two two-stroke diesel engines driving twin screws
Power
About 14,000 bhp / 3,100 nhp
Speed
About 17 knots cruising; about 19 knots maximum
Passenger accommodation
About 720–775 passengers, with figures varying by source and class breakdown
Peacetime crew
About 361
Wartime troop capacity
About 2,924 troops in 1943 convoy service
Requisitioned as troopship
1941, at Singapore
Loss context
Torpedoed by German aircraft in the Mediterranean on 6 November 1943; sank under tow on 7 November 1943

Published dimensions and accommodation figures vary somewhat across technical summaries and service references. For cataloging purposes, preserve the exact wording used by the original source or artifact when possible, especially when distinguishing peacetime passenger service from wartime troop transport use.

Design & Construction Context

Marnix Van St Aldegonde belonged to the interwar Dutch motor-liner generation built for the long route between the Netherlands and the Dutch East Indies. This was a very different operating world from the North Atlantic express trade: the ship’s significance lies in long-distance colonial-route service, passenger and cargo flexibility, and modern diesel efficiency. She should therefore be understood primarily within the Amsterdam–Java imperial-route system rather than through Atlantic prestige comparisons.

She was also part of a broader Dutch fleet-renewal moment that included other substantial liners built to maintain commercial and passenger links with Southeast Asia. In curatorial terms, she represents the mature interwar Netherlands–East Indies liner world at or near its high point before wartime disruption.

Service History (Summary)

1928–1930: Built at Amsterdam by NSM, Marnix Van St Aldegonde was laid down in 1928, launched in December 1929, completed in September 1930, and began her maiden voyage the following month.

Peacetime liner service: In her original role she served the route between Amsterdam and the Dutch East Indies. This is the proper interpretive frame for passenger lists, brochures, menus, deck plans, luggage labels, and commercial photography tied to her civilian identity.

Late prewar shift: By 1940 she was operating out of Surabaya, reflecting the altered geography of Dutch shipping as European war conditions changed the position of ships in service. Material from this late prewar phase may differ in route emphasis from earlier Amsterdam-origin printed matter.

1941 wartime conversion: At Singapore in May 1941 she was requisitioned as a troopship. From that point onward, references to the vessel increasingly belong to a military transport framework rather than a civilian passenger one.

Wartime transport service: In troopship use she carried Australian and Allied forces between the Indian Ocean, the Middle East, and later the Mediterranean theater. She also carried Italian prisoners of war on at least one wartime movement.

1942–1943 Allied operations: After leaving the Indian Ocean service world, she was employed in major Allied troop movements linked to operations in North Africa, Sicily, and Italy. This later wartime phase is central to her surviving memory.

6 November 1943: While in convoy KMF 25 in the Mediterranean, she was attacked by German Dornier torpedo bombers and hit, flooding the engine room. All personnel were rescued from the ship.

7 November 1943: While under tow after the attack, she collided with another damaged vessel also being towed and then sank from progressive flooding. Her loss thus belongs to a compound wartime disaster rather than to a simple one-stage sinking narrative.

Interpretive Notes

This is a Dutch East Indies liner first: Marnix Van St Aldegonde should be understood chiefly within the Amsterdam–Java / Dutch East Indies service world, not through North Atlantic assumptions.

Passenger and troopship material belong to different interpretive worlds: commercial ephemera reflects peacetime colonial-route travel culture, while wartime records concern Allied logistics, convoy service, and ship loss.

Source spelling varies: many references use Marnix van Sint Aldegonde rather than “St Aldegonde.” For indexing and cataloging, this is worth cross-referencing so material is not split artificially.

Late-service geography matters: Amsterdam-origin artifacts, Surabaya references, Indian Ocean troopship records, and Mediterranean convoy material belong to quite different phases and should be dated with care.

The loss was operationally complex: because the ship survived the initial hit, was evacuated, taken in tow, and then sank later, accounts may describe the disaster slightly differently. Preserving exact source wording is therefore especially useful here.

Evidence-first ship guide

Sources (Selected)