Thanks for your feedback, guys! I greatly appreciate it!
Thanks to the enourmous Colombamike's database, I had some more spanish hulls
. But I will reserve them for the last (and sad) chapter of the Spanish Civil War.
After the failure of the July coup d´etat, it was clear that Spain had not the weaponry or the resources for a prolongued war, so the resuply of the arsenals via the sea lanes of communications will be of paramount importance since the de facto division of Spain in 2 separate blocks. In one side, the rebel forces or Nationals, with the support of the mercantile fleets of Italy and Germany, and roughly 1/6 of the spanish mercantile tonnage, and by the other side the Republicans, with most of the spanish mercantile tonnage, including most of the basque fleet, and many of the ships with homeports in the Levantine and Catalonian coast.
But with the huge support of the very important gold reserves (the third in the world), the Republicans were able to hire many seafarers of many nacionalities, and making buisness with Republican Spain was a highly profitable matter: for example, J.A. Billmeir begun his company with 2 small coasters steamers, ended the war with 34 vessels, excluding the captured and sunk ones. Sometimes, specially if weapons were smuggled, the profit was so high, that it paid the ship itself. And with a rebel fleet, less numerous, but much more active than the republican naval forces, making an effective blocade of the republican harbours, many times the foreigner seafarers were cosidered heroes by the besieged spanish population there.
Here is shown SS Stanhope. Tracking the fate of the vessel is rather difficult because the owner bougth and sold many ships in a short period, sometimes putting the same name to several hulls. This was a common practice with many ships involved in trading with the spanish republic. For example, the ship depicted here was purchased in 1935 from Tyne-Tees SS Co. and renamed Stanhope, but in 1937 she was sold to Northern Coasters Ltd, Newcastle renamed Northern Firth. In paralel, SS Corwen, was purchased in 1937 from Cory Colliers Ltd and renamed Stanhope! SS Stanhope was involved, in Biscay bay waters during 1937 in several incidents between the rebel fleet and the RN, because the formers claimed an international sea boundary of 6 miles, but the laters only recognized the 3 miles limit, and in consequence, gave protection to the british vessels well until they were under cover of the range of the republican coast artillery. This vessel was a lucky one, because she survived not only the spanish civil war, but also WWII.
Not so fortunate was SS Stangrove, one of the smallest vessels of JA Billmeir´s fleet (but hired by CAMPSA Gentibus at a cost of 1000 sterling pounds a month) which was captured by the National Navy when the war was almost ended in February 6th 1939. Stangrove was towed to Palma and the final day of that month, she was wrecked during a gale. Raised once again in 1941 she was renamed Castilla de Oro and with different names and owners she sailed until being paid off in 1971.
Another vessel bought by Billmeir was a mercantile vessel with a warrior background. SS Queen of the Bay was a former minehunter, and was used in the Liverpool-Blackpool route, but in 1937 she was hired by the Asturies government, but the war in the North ended before she was able to reach republican waters. In a bold movement, Billmeir bought the vessel and sold it to the republican government, and the translation voyage from Britain to Cartagena was with a british crew and under the red ensing.
The republicans renamed her as Comandante Verdia, and fitted the vessel as a fast link between the Levantine coast and either France or Catalonia, but she was bombed in 1938 during an italian air raid prior to her first sortie and sunk in her moring. After the war she was raised in 1941 and was used as an auxiliary training vessel named Virgen de la Caridad.
Credits: I owe a lot to Colombamike´s previous advices, and to Novice's drawings (during many years, he was almost the sole artist involved with nice vintage civilian vessels). Thanks to both of them. Cheers.