Gulfland burning off Jupiter 1943 Florida State Archives/Florida Memory |
By Jane Feehan
From 1942 to 1943, German U-boats sank more than 600 merchant ships off the U.S. East Coast. According to writer and Florida-during-World War II historian Eliot Kleinberg, 16 ships were sunk during the war off Florida between Cocoa Beach and Boca Raton.
The Florida maritime incident during the war that claimed the most lives, however, did not involve a U-boat.
Eighty-eight of 116 crewmen perished when two tankers collided off Jupiter Inlet October 20, 1943. The ships were running in opposite directions off Jupiter’s coastal bulge with lights out under war conditions. The Gulf Belle, emptied of cargo, and the Gulfland, heavy with a shipment of high octane fuel, ran into each other without warning; collision was followed by a fiery explosion seen from land.
Gulfland towed to Hobe Sound and sank Florida State Archives/Florida Memory |
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Sources:
Palm Beach Post, Oct. 24, 1943
Palm Beach Post, Apr. 23, 1944.
Tags: Maritime incident, Florida in WWII, Jupiter maritime incident, Jupiter history