John Nordlander
John Leonard Nordlander was a Swedish sea captain and Commander commissioned by the shipping line Swedish American Line, crossing the Atlantic Ocean 532 times.
During World War II, while serving as Master of, Captain Nordlander was responsible for rescuing thousands of victims of war uniquely through hostile waters in collaboration with the Red Cross and effectively with the Allied powers, with approval of the Swedish royal family.
Biography
John Nordlander was born in 1894 in Härnösand, Västernorrland County, Sweden, to a family of seafarers, and was educated there as a captain.Initially serving in the Swedish Navy and aboard international sailing ships, Nordlander was first educated as a First Officer in Härnösand and then as a Captain at the Marine Officer's School of Gothenburg.
Nordlander died in 1961 in Gothenburg and was buried there at Östra kyrkogården.
Swedish American Line
Nordlander was commissioned by the Swedish American Line in 1920 and subsequently served as naval officer on all its ships on transatlantic cruises as well as in other directions, including the West Indies. Ships that Nordlander commanded include:- , as John Ericsson
- MS Stockholm, later renamed MV Astoria
- Flagship 1953–1954, 1955–1957
World War II
Nordlander served throughout World War II.US ship requisition in New York
In 1942 after the USA entered World War II,, commanded by Nordlander, was seized at New York City, compulsorily purchased by the United States government for the War Shipping Administration, converted into a troop ship and registered under the US flag.Allied prisoner exchanges and rescue missions
After the purchase of his former ship, Nordlander was appointed Master of 1942–1948, carrying out several prisoner transport missions, totalling thousands of displaced victims and prisoners of war, notably in collaboration with the Red Cross. Under signs such as "Freigeleit – Protected, Drottningholm Sweden", she was one of the few ships that sailed hostile waters with all lights shining at night.In 1942 Drottningholms sides were marked "Diplomat – Drottningholm Sverige" when carrying disabled prisoners of war, victims of Nazi concentration camps and diplomats from Liverpool, United Kingdom, to North America.
In September 1944 she was deployed by the International [Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement|Red Cross] to transport prisoners of war and civilians being repatriated from Nazi Germany to the United Kingdom via Sweden.
Another voyage in April 1945 docked in Liverpool that included 212 ex-interned Channel Islanders. One of the voyages is indicated to have safely relocated 1,362 individuals at once.
In popular culture
In tribute to the vessel under Nordlander's command, a short illustrated movie, The S.S. Drottningholm, was produced by Molly DeVries about her ancestors, the Jewish-American concert pianist Walter Hautzig and writer Esther Hautzig. The two belonged to and met among the thousands of passengers on rescue missions aboard Drottningholm, and later got married.Distinctions
- Sweden: Knight 1st Class of the Order of Vasa
- Denmark: Knight of the Order of the Dannebrog
- Finland: Order of the Lion of Finland
- United Kingdom: Sea Gallantry Medal in Silver for Saving Life at Sea by Queen Elizabeth II for the rescue mission of Argobeam
- United States: World War II Victory Medal
- Sweden: Emmery Medal of the Royal Patriotic Society
- Delaware: Medal of Delaware
- Sweden: Medal of Merit Plaque of the Swedish Sea Rescue Society
- Sweden: Medal of Merit of the Red Cross in Sweden, conferred by King Gustaf V for his "humanitarian efforts during SS Drottningholm's transports during wartime"
- Cuba: Order of Merit and Honour of the Cuban Red Cross
Videos
- , Steven Spielberg Jewish Film Archive, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
- , Getty Images
- , Steven Spielberg Jewish Film Archive, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
- , Liverpool, Merseyside, United Kingdom
- aboard , Filmarkivet, Swedish Film Institute
- , a short illustrated movie by Molly DeVries about Jewish-American concert pianist Walter Hautzig and writer Esther Hautzig, who met at a rescue mission aboard SS Drottningholm and later eventually married
Images
- , Library of Congress
Category:1961 deaths
Category:People from Härnösand
Category:20th-century Swedish people
Category:Swedish sailors
Category:Swedish sea captains
Category:Swedish people of World War II
Category:Red Cross personnel
Category:Knights First Class of the Order of Vasa
Category:Knights of the Order of the Dannebrog
Category:Recipients of [the Sea Gallantry Medal]