Mouzinho
CCN renamed the ship Mouzinho and registered her in Luanda in Angola. Her code letters were LDBJ. By 1934 her wireless call sign was CSDW, and this had superseded her code letters.
The change of ownership reunited Mouzinho with her sister ship, the former Ypiranga, which CCN had bought from Anchor Line in 1929 and renamed Colonial. CCN put both sisters on the same route, which was between Lisbon in Portugal and Beira in Moçambique. Ports of call en route were Funchal, São Tomé, Sazaire, Luanda, Porto Amboim, Lobito, Moçâmedes, Lourenço Marques (now Maputo), and the Island of Mozambique.[27]
In the Second World War Portugal was neutral. In 1940 Mouzinho maintained her peacetime route.[27] In May 1941 she took nearly 1,000 Portuguese troops to garrison Cape Verde.[28]
On 10 June 1941 Mouzinho left Lisbon carrying 721 refugees from Europe to the USA. Dormitories with bunk beds had been improvised in her cargo holds. On 21 June she reached Pier 8 on Staten Island, New York,[29] where a team of 30 American Red Cross volunteers met the refugees as they disambarked.[30]
The refugees included 101 children brought by the United States Committee for the Care of European Children (USCOM); a group of eight orphaned children from Germany and Austria whose parents had died in Nazi concentration camps; and ten children who were travelling individually. Nine of the 119 children were sent to Ellis Island, in most cases because of illness.[30] Some of the adult refugees were also held on Ellis Island.[31]
USCOM had rescued the children in cooperation with the Œuvre de secours aux enfants (OSE) in Vichy France; the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC); HIAS; and the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC).[32] The JDC paid their fares. They were rescued from Austria, Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Germany, Poland, and Romania. The OSE had gathered them in Marseille, and the AFSC and JDC had helped to get them by train to Lisbon. Many of the children left behind parents in the Gurs internment camp in France.[30][33]
Mouzinho's adult refugees included 26 Christian women missionaries who had survived the sinking of SS Zamzam in the South Atlantic by the GERMAN AUXILIARY CRUISER Atlantis two months previously. Many of Mouzinho's refugees were Jewish. They included the artist Marc Chagall and his wife Bella Rosenfeld;[34] Robert Serebrenik, Grand Rabbi of Luxembourg; Maximilian Weinberger, former head of the Rothschild Hospital in Vienna; the German actor and theatre director Ewald Schindler and his wife; and the banker Martin Aufhäuser.[35]
Three days after the ship left Lisbon, a Polish refugee aboard gave birth to a baby boy. She was travelling with her husband, who had served in the Polish Army in France. Three stowaways were found aboard. They were surrendered to the US Immigration and Naturalization Service on arrival in New York.[30]
On 31 May 1941 a German U-boat sank the Clan Line motor ship Clan MacDougall north of Cape Verde. On 1 June the Portuguese ship Tarrafal found 85 survivors in four lifeboats 10 nmi off Santo Antão, Cape Verde. Tarrafal rescued them and landed them on São Vicente. On 25 July Mouzinho called at São Vicente, where she embarked some of the survivors to take them to Bathurst (now Banjul) in Gambia. Other survivors remained on São Vicente until 21 August, when they embarked on her sister ship Colonial to go to Cape Town in South Africa.[36]
On 20 August 1941[37] Mouzinho left Lisbon carrying another 625 refugees,[38] including 45 children.[33] She arrived off New York on 1 September,[38] which was Labor Day, so she had to wait until the next day to dock at Pier 8 on Staten Island.[39]
By August 1942 Mouzinho had returned to serving Portugal's colonies in Africa. On 8 August she was in Lourenço Marques, where two former US consuls from Saigon in French Indochina (now Ho Chi Minh City in Vietnam) and Osaka in Japan embarked on her to take up new posts in West Africa.[40]
On 27 August 1942 a U-boat sank another Clan Line ship, SS Clan Macwhirter (1918). On 31 August the Portuguese Navy aviso NRP Pedro Nunes rescued 67 survivors and landed them at Funchal on Madeira. From there the survivors were taken to Lisbon, where they arrived by the beginning of October. 50 of the crew were lascars, and Mouzinho repatriated them to India.[41]
On 29 September 1942 a U-boat sank the British steamship Baron Ogilvy off the coast of Liberia. On the afternoon of 5 October Mouzinho, steaming from Funchal to the island of São Tomé, found 32 survivors in one lifeboat. She landed them at Cape Town on 21 October.[42][43]
Mouzinho was scrapped in 1954 at Savona in Italy.