SS Fort Mercer

SS Fort Mercer was a Type T2-SE-A1 tanker built by Sun Shipbuilding & Drydock Co., at Chester, Pennsylvania in October 1945. SS Fort Mercer (hull number 534), was built under a Maritime Commission contract and launched on October 2, 1945. With World War II ending on August 15, 1945, Fort Mercer did not serve in the war. Fort Mercer was owned and operated by the Trinidad Corporation of New York.

Loss and aftermath
On February 18, 1952, Fort Mercer, full of kerosene and fuel oil, first cracked and then broke in two in a gale, 30 mi east of Chatham, Massachusetts. Captain Frederick Paetzel radioed out for help, reporting 68 ft waves were hitting the ship. When she broke in two, nine officers and crew were on the bow section and 34 crewmen were on the stern section, with the radio and engine still working. The United States Coast Guard vessels USCGC Eastwind (WAGB-279) and USCGC Unimak (WAVP-379) that were near Nantucket, Massachusetts about 120 mi away headed to the two Fort Mercer sections. A Coast Guard PBY aircraft out of Coast Guard Air Station Salem was sent to look for the ship, but did not find it. The Coast Guard vessels USCGC Yakutat (WAVP-380) and USCGC Acushnet (WMEC-167), using liferafts and surfboats rescued four men from the bow. Only five members of Fort Mercer's 44 man crew were lost, all trapped in the sinking bow. Four other men that were aboard the bow, including the Captain, were rescued using a lifeboat and a life raft, both launched by Yakutat. Minutes after rescuing the last men, the bow capsized, and would later be sunk with plastic explosives.

The stern of Fort Mercer, which remained afloat, along with the remaining 35 men, was towed to Newport, Rhode Island, outfitted with a new bow and rechristened San Jacinto. The new ship was 41 ft longer and expanded from 26 tanks to 29 tanks. The ship again split in half in 1964 and again was rebuilt, renamed this time The Pasadena. The Pasadena was partially salvaged and mostly scrapped in 1983.

In the same storm that broke Fort Mercer in two, SS Pendleton, also a T2 tanker, broke up about 20 mi away. Daring rescues by the Coast Guard Lifeboat CG 36500 carried out of Pendleton's stern 32 survivors of 33. After grounding, Pendleton's bow was boarded a week later. Of the eight victims stranded on this section, only one frozen body was recovered.