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The Children’s Ship

SS City of Benares and a Voyage from Hope to Tragedy

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The Children’s Ship

By: Cyril Marlen
Narrated by: Tom Briggs
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About this listen

The SS City of Benares was born in the optimism of the interwar years. Launched in 1936 for the Ellerman Line, she embodied reliability, elegance, and the promise of safe passage between Britain and its empire. With her sleek twin funnels and polished interiors, she seemed destined to carry families, officials, and traders eastward in comfort. Yet within only four years, her name would be etched into the darkest chapter of Britain’s wartime history—not for her design or her service in peacetime, but for the lives of the children she carried on her final voyage.

In September 1940, as the Blitz thundered overhead and Britain fought for survival against Nazi Germany, families across the nation faced a terrible choice. Keep their children in bomb-scarred cities under the shadow of the Luftwaffe, or send them thousands of miles overseas in search of safety. The government’s Children’s Overseas Reception Board, known as CORB, offered what seemed like salvation: evacuation across the seas to Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa. Parents signed forms with trembling hands, torn between dread of separation and the desperate hope of protection. It was a scheme built on courage, necessity, and trust.

Into this atmosphere of fear and resolve stepped the City of Benares. Requisitioned, repainted, and fitted for wartime service, she joined a convoy bound for the Atlantic, her decks carrying more than 400 souls—among them dozens of children chosen for evacuation under CORB. For their parents watching from Liverpool’s docks, the ship seemed a floating guardian. Once the Benares reached the far shore, they believed, safety would be assured. Few could imagine how quickly hope would collapse into horror.

On the night of 17 September 1940, in heavy seas and cold Atlantic darkness, a German U-boat sighted the convoy. A single torpedo struck the City of Benares with devastating precision. Within minutes, water surged through her hull, lights failed, and chaos reigned. Children were hurried from their bunks, lifeboats were swung out in the gale, and the crew fought desperately to save lives. Some boats launched, others capsized, and in the freezing waves survival became a matter of chance and endurance.

For those who endured the night adrift—children, escorts, and crew alike—the ordeal was almost beyond human strength. Cold, hunger, and terror gnawed at them hour after hour, as ships of the convoy pressed onward under orders not to stop. Rescue eventually came, but by then too many lives had been lost. Of the children evacuated aboard the Benares, the majority never saw land again.

The sinking of the City of Benares shocked Britain and the wider world. Newspapers carried harrowing accounts of young lives cut short, of families shattered, of the cruel gamble of wartime seas. Public anger was fierce, aimed not only at the enemy submarine commanders but also at the government scheme that had entrusted children to a war zone. The CORB programme was abruptly halted, and no further official overseas evacuations were attempted.

Yet from tragedy came lessons and legacies. Survivors told their stories—some of courage, some of unimaginable loss. The ship’s crew, many of whom risked everything to save the children, were remembered for their devotion. Families left behind carried grief but also determination that their sacrifice should not be forgotten. And historians have since seen in the story of the City of Benares not only a maritime disaster but also a window into the fears, hopes, and resilience of wartime Britain.

©2025 Deep Vision Media t/a Zentara UK (P)2025 Deep Vision Media t/a Zentara UK
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