Sampo:
Europes first American-type
icebreaker
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The icebreaker Sampo and the passenger
steamer Arcturus arriving at Vasa on February 25,
1918, with Finnish white troops on board. Both vessels were flying
the independent Finlands first ensign a red flag
with the heraldic lion now used in the Finnish national coat of
arms.
ILLUSTRATION: HÅKAN SJÖSTRÖM
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More than a hundred years ago, experiences from Finlands
first icebreaker Murtaja showed that it was easier to go
stern-first in difficult ice conditions. When the building of the second
Finnish icebreaker was being prepared, both the European and the American
concepts were taken into consideration. On the Great Lakes, the Americans
used icebreakers with propellers both in the bow and the stern and their
performance had made a great impression on the Finns.
Sampo
was ordered in June 1897 from Armstrong, Whitworth & Co in Newcastle.
She was delivered in 1898 and arrived in Finland on October 29. Today,
it may seem a little bit odd that Finland, which is regarded as perhaps
the number one designer and builder of icebreakers in the world, ordered
an icebreaker from England! However, at that time England was building
many of the worlds most famous icebreakers. At the same time as
Sampo, the same shipyard also built the giant Arctic icebreaker
Yermak for Russia.
Compared
to the 10,000 bhp Yermak, Sampo was of quite
a modest size. Her displacement was 2,050 tons and her length was 61.6
m and beam 13.1 m. Two triple expansion steam engines, one at the bow
and one at the stern, developed 1,200 hp and 1,300 hp, respectively.
Sampo
immediately turned out to be of a very good design. When the older Murtaja
got stuck in the ice, Sampo could easily continue. Finlands
unprejudiced decision to introduce the American type in Europe became
a success. For the next eight decades, almost all large icebreakers
that were built for sea conditions in the northern Baltic were to be
equipped with propellers at the bow and at the stern.
Made history
On December 6, 1917, the Finnish parliament approved the senates
proclamation of independence. However, tragic events were to follow
in the wake of the Russian revolution a civil war became inevitable.
The red side, supported by the Russian Bolsheviks, tried to create a
socialistic state, while the goal for the white side, led by general
C.G. Mannerheim, was a Nordic democracy.
Sampo
was acquired by the Russian revolutionary navy in January 1918, but
a few weeks later she escaped to Sweden. On February 20, Sampo
met a small convoy in the Åland Sea, including the passenger steamer
Arcturus. She was carrying the main force of Finnish white
military troops who had been trained in Germany. Sampo and
Arcturus reached the port of Vasa on February 25. Hundreds
of cheering people met the small convoy on the ice.
Although
Sampo also saw another war only two decades later, she served
most of her long career in peace. Her time was running out when new
icebreakers were introduced in the 1950s, and she was in service for
the last time in the winter of 1960. Despite some efforts to preserve
Sampo as a museum, she was broken up.
// Pär-Henrik Sjöström
Sources:
Seppo Laurell, Höyrymurtajien aika
Jorma Pohjanpalo, 100 vuotta Suomen talvimerenkulkua
Visa Auvinen (red.), Leijonalippu merellä
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