Word: zamzam
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1941-1941
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...picture scoops of World War II appears this week in LIFE : pictures of the sinking by a German raider of the Egyptian motor ship Zamzam with 138 Americans aboard (two dozen of them ambulance drivers bound for the British Army in the Middle East...
...Zamzam is the name of a sacred well in Mecca. In 1933 an Egyptian shipping company bought the 24-year-old, 8,229-ton British passenger steamer British Exhibitor, renamed her Zamzam, redesigned one of her holds into a mosque with accommodations for 600, and set her to carrying Mohammedan pilgrims from Suez to Jidda, the port of Mecca...
World War II had cut into the pilgrim business, and the Zamzam was signed over to foreign trade. Last March she set out from eastern U.S. ports for Alexandria, by the long route to South America and around the Cape of Good Hope. "Although Egypt is not at war," said the Zamzam's Captain William Gray Smith, before sailing from Jersey City, "she is considered a nonbelligerent ally of England and we could not take any chances...
...vessel on any sea laden with war materials for Britain's Armies takes her chances these days, and as the Zamzam pushed out into the South Atlantic her mosque was sacrilegiously jammed with fertilizer, trucks, automobiles and "machinery of various types." Her cabins were engaged by 202 passengers...
...press, the loss of the Zamzam would have been just another statistic but for a sensational fact. Of her 201 passengers, 138 were U.S. citizens-an ambulance corps headed for service with the British in Egypt, missionaries going to their posts in central Africa, newspapermen bound for actual and potential theaters of war. Among those aboard had been Michael Kirchwey Clark, son of the Nation's Editor Freda Kirchwey; John W. Ryan; Philip Faversham, actor son of the late Actor WTilliam Faversham; Charles John Vincent Murphy, a veteran of the 1934 Byrd Antarctic expedition and an editor of FORTUNE...