In June 1947, the Dutch freighter S.S. Ourang Medan was traveling along the straits of Malacca,
when the ship suddenly sent out a chilling distress signal.
This first message was followed by a series of indecipherable Morse code sequences, until
finally, a last ominous transmission:
Ourang Medan's grim SOS was picked up by British and Dutch listening posts around Sumatra and
Malaysia, who worked together to determined where the signal was coming from and alerted
nearby ships.
American merchant ship Silver Star was first to reach Ourang Medan.
They waived and shouted at the vessel to check for signs of life above deck.
But there was no answer.
Only eerie silence.
The US ship decided to send out a rescue team to board the ship to look for survivors.
But what they found was a blood-curdling nightmare.
The entire Dutch crew was a ghastly pile of corpses – eyes wide open in horror, mouths
frozen in an eternal scream, arms stretched out as if saying stop, as if saying no more.
Inside, they found the captain with the same twisted expression on his face as that of
his men, dead on the bridge of the ship.
Now nothing more than a dead captain, leading a dead ship.
His once strapping officers are now cold corpses straggled on the wheelhouse and chartroom floor.
Even the ship's dog wasn't spared a horrific death.
But the most harrowing is finding the radio operator, fingertips still on the telegraph
where he sent his dying message.
After seeing the chilling devastation on board, the Silver Star made the decision to tow the
Ourang Medan to port.
But it wouldn't make it to shore, as thick clouds of smoke started rising from the lower
decks and interrupted the rescue.
The crew barely had time to sever the line and move to safety, before the Ourang Medan
exploded.
The blast was apparently so big that the ship "lifted herself from the water and swiftly
sank," taking with it all the answers to its mysterious end to the bottom of the sea.
Or so the story of the Ourang Medan goes.
Some details may differ slightly in each version of the story.
Like it happened in February 1948 instead of June 1947.
Or that the waters that day were choppy instead of calm.
And that the crew weren't just dead, but they were decomposing at a faster rate.
While in some versions, the details are, well, too detailed.
Like one of the two American ships that heard the distress signal was named The City of Baltimore.
That the smoke from the lower deck before the explosion came exactly from the Number 4 hold.
Or that the poor canine aboard was actually a small terrier.
But whichever version of the story you've heard (or told), the basic plot points remain
the same - Ourang Medan's entire crew met a gruesome and inexplicable death, and then
very conveniently blew up and sank to the bottom of the ocean, leaving us all with an
unsolved nautical mystery.
So what really happened to the Ourang Medan?
Theory #1: It was a cover up.
The most commonly pointed out loophole in the tale of the Ourang Medan is the vessel's
lack of paper trail.
The Lloyd's Shipping registers doesn't have any mention of the ship.
It's not in the The Dictionary of Disasters at Sea that covers the years 1824-1962.
There's no trace of it in the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich.
Nothing in the Dutch Shipping records in Amsterdam.
The Maritime Authority in Singapore also don't have the ill-fated ship in any of their records.
In other words, the Ourang Medan was a ghost ship, even before it gained notoriety as one.
Because there's no tangible proof that it even existed.
But as espousers of this legend would explain, it's because the Ourang Medan is part of a
transnational government cover-up involving the Netherlands, Japan, Germany, China, the
United States, and possibly many others.
They believe that the ship was deliberately expunged from all maritime records because
it was being used to smuggle a secret cargo of lethal nerve gas to Japan.
Saying the Ourang Medan's voyage is linked to Army Unit 731 founded by Japanese bacteriologist
Shirō Ishii, whose main objective was to bring back a weapon of the chemical, gas,
or biological variety, that could win the war in their favour.
But as the Geneva Protocol of 1925 prohibited the use of all chemical and biological weapons
in war, the only way a large shipment of poisonous gas could make it across the other side of
the world without raising any suspicion from authorities is by loading it as inconspicuous
cargo, in an old, beat up Dutch freighter.
This theory also provides a convenient and somewhat plausible explanation for the grisly
death of the Ourang Medan's crew.
With that much hazardous chemicals on board, a gas leak would've certainly led to the immediate
death of everyone in the ship.
However, it wouldn't explain why the rescue crew from Silver Star wasn't affected by the
poisonous gas when they boarded the ship.
Or why, like the Ourang Medan, there's no mention of the Silver Star in the Lloyd's register.
Theory #2: It was carbon monoxide poisoning.
American author and inventor of the term Bermuda Triangle, Vincent Gaddis, speculates that
it was carbon monoxide poisoning that led to the mysterious deaths of the Ourang Medan crew.
According to his theory, burning fuel from a malfunctioning boiler system produced carbon
monoxide fumes that poisoned the crew.
When breathed in carbon monoxide enters the bloodstream and prevents red blood cells from
carrying oxygen around the body.
At high levels, carbon monoxide can cause dizziness, vomiting, seizures, lost of consciousness,
and even death.
The trouble with this theory is that Ourang Medan is not an enclosed space.
Fumes could've simply escaped into the atmosphere, and lives of the crew working the upper decks
of the ship would've been spared.
Theory #3: It was pirates.
What's a story about a ghost ship without pirates, right?
There are theories claiming that pirates invaded the Ourang Medan and killed everyone on board,
which although doesn't explain some accounts saying that there were no visible wounds in
the victims' bodies, it does fit with the Strait of Malacca's long history with piracy
as far back as the 14th century.
Because of its geography - narrow and dotted with many islets - it makes it ideal for a
surprise attack towards ships using it as trade route to China and Europe.
Theory #4: Ghosts
One of the most repeated, but arguably, also the most inconsequential detail in the story
of the Ourang Medan is the extreme chill the rescue team felt as soon as they entered the
hull of the ship, despite it being 110°F outside.
Inexplicable drop in temperature plus the frightened expressions on the crew's faces
set in a vast unforgiving sea, equals ghosts did it.
There aren't many supporters of this theory, but what's a ghost ship story without a ghosts-did-it theory?
Theory #5: Aliens
You might think that the alien theory is the most far-fetched, the most uncreative, the
most cop out theory explaining the phenomena of the Ourang Medan, but it's actually a very
popular theory, with entire books dedicated to it.
The story of the Ourang Medan has all the elements of a good mystery - inexplicable
deaths, unknown assailants, world powers, war, pirates, ghosts, and multiple highly-plausible
conspiracy theories.
Which is probably why it still fascinates us until this day,
Even the CIA released a document in 1959 saying, that the Ourang
Medan holds the key to many of the sea's unsolved mysteries, including that of sightings of
huge fiery spheres that come from the sky and descend into the sea.
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