Ourang Medan
April 15, 2009 by Medan Indonesia
Filed under Information, Medan History
Ourang Medan = Orang Medan?
If you were searching about on Medan, you may come across the term Ourang Medan. Some will thought it is just a mispelling from the word Orang Medan (Orang=People). Which is partly right, but there is more to this term and the term comes with a very interesting legend shortly after the world war in 1948. We thought it should be interesting for everyone to be aware of this legend and you will know how to explain when someone talks about Ourang Medan. Here’s what we found in Wikipedia:
Ourang Medan was actually a Dutch Cargo ship with full name “The S.S. Ourang Medan”, which, according to various authors, became a shipwreck in Indonesian waters after its entire crew had died under suspicious circumstances. Skepticism exists about the truthfulness of the entire story, suggesting perhaps that the ship may never have actually even existed, but has become something of a mythical legend.

photo by DocBudie
The Ship
The earliest known reference to the ship and the incident is in the May 1952 issue of the Proceedings of the Merchant Marine Council, published by the United States Coast Guard. The word Ourang (also written Orang) is Malay or Indonesian for “man” or “person”, whereas Medan is the largest city on the Indonesian island of Sumatra, giving an approximate translation of “Man from Medan”. Accounts of the ship’s accident have appeared in various books and magazines, mainly on Forteana. Their factual accuracy and even the ship’s existence, however, are unconfirmed, and details of the vessel’s construction and history, if any, remain unknown. Searches for official registration and/or accident investigation records have proven unsuccessful.
Possible Accident
According to the story, at some point in or around June 1947 (Gaddis and others list the approximate date as early February 1948), two American vessels navigating the Strait of Malacca, the City of Baltimore and the Silver Star, among others, picked up distress messages from Dutch merchant ship Ourang Medan. A radio operator aboard the troubled vessel reported the deaths of the ship’s captain as well as all of its officers, and possibly the entire crew, before sending out further garbled messages and finally declaring himself in dying condition with the words “I die”. When the Silver Star crew located and boarded the apparently undamaged Ourang Medan in a rescue attempt, the ship was found littered with corpses (including the carcass of a dog) in what appeared to be terrified postures, with no survivors and no visible signs of injuries on the dead bodies. A fire then broke out in the ship’s cargo hold, forcing the boarding parties to evacuate the Dutch freighter, thus preventing any further investigation. Soon after, the Ourang Medan was observed to explode and sink.
Theories
i. Unsecured Cargo of Hazardous Materials
Bainton and others hypothesize that the Ourang Medan might have been involved in smuggling operations of chemical substances such as a combination of potassium cyanide and nitroglycerin or even wartime stocks of nerve agents. According to these theories, sea water would have entered the ship’s hold, reacting with the cargo to release toxic gases, which then caused the crew to succumb to asphyxia and/or poisoning. Later, the sea water would have reacted with the nitroglycerin, causing the reported fire and explosion.
ii. Carbon Monoxide Poisoning
Gaddis puts forward the theory that an undetected smoldering fire or malfunction in the ship’s boiler system might have been responsible for the shipwreck. Escaping carbon monoxide would have caused the deaths of all aboard, with the fire slowly getting out of control, leading to the vessel’s ultimate destruction.
iii. Paranormal Phenomena
The story has appeared in various magazines and books on Forteana, beginning with a 1953 article in Fate Magazine. Authors such as Jessup speculate that the crew might have been attacked by UFOs or paranormal forces prior to their deaths. Circumstantial evidence cited by these sources includes the apparent absence of a natural cause of death, the reportedly terrified expressions on the faces of the deceased, and rumors that some of the dead were “pointing” towards an unknown enemy.
iv. Skepticism
Several authors note their inability to find any mention of the case in Lloyd’s Shipping Register. Furthermore, no registration records for a ship by the name of Ourang Medan could be located in various countries, including the Netherlands. While Bainton states that the identity of the Silver Star, which was reported to have been involved in the failed rescue attempt, has been established with some certainty, the lack of information on the sunken ship itself has given rise to suspicion about the origins and credibility of the account. Bainton and others have put forward the possibility that accounts of, among others, the date, location, names of the ships involved, and circumstances of the accident might have been inaccurate or exaggerated, or that the story might be completely fictitious.
source: Wikipedia

























































oh… i see
tq
I don’t think there is enough evendince to prove that the Ourang Medan is real.
Long shrouded in mystery…a lost ship!
I remember this story as a young boy reading a cheap paperback account of the mystery of the SS Ourang Medan. We must analyse this story at a comfortable distance, to understand it, and avoid emotive descriptions of it that evoke paranormal causes. The known facts include but are not limited to the following:
A distress call was sent by the stricken freight ship to which two other ships responded. The distress call ended suddenly. When found, the crew was in a variety of distressed poses staring fixedly. The dog died suddenly on the deck in a strange position. The rescue crew had to leave suddenly because of an explosion which sunk the ship. The ship’s identity is not in any registry. Hard facts and records are hard to come by. The sinking has two dates…strangely…June 1947 and February 1948.
The area the ship was in was the Strait of Macassar in Borneo. The area was a dutch colony in the throes of a colonial war that included the communists against Holland which was a NATO ally. The area had been under Japanese control until 1945.
The Japanese had a long history of Chem-Bio War (CBW) weapons development and had used both chemicals and bio agents against China during the war. A dutch admiralty report gotten with some difficulty over the web shows that particular area suffered mine infestation and heavy military activity in 1948.
Another ship, the MV Soegio, formerly the British transport ministry ship Empire Betsy exploded and sank in the Straits of Macassar in February 1948 at a known location. The ship was leased to a vague Dutch oil company which is untraceable except for its name. Macassar is a name that could easily be confused with many others in the area.
Britain was a dutch ally and was faced with colonial struggles of its own after WW2. Communist lead movements allied with independence forces threatened the dying British Empire in 1948. Independence was a Cold War issue in the context of communism.
Possible Conclusions and Open Questions:
Was the MV Soegio in fact the real SS Ourang Medan? The name Ourang Medan is is fact a generic description and likely a fake name. The false identity would serve many purposes: it would hide the bureaucratic paper trail of death claims and goods insurance proceeds from the eyes of the media by shifting attention to a ship that could not be traced.
False cover stories “plausible deniability” is a common practice with the CIA who frequently used the bogus “Atlas Steamship Company” to hide clandestine shipments from media attention and later “Air America.” The small Dutch oil (chemical company?) didn’t seem to be in business very long…why was that? Why two dates for an objective event? A CBW accident would lead to legal proceedings related to illegal CBW warfare against dutch colonials which would be rich fodder for the Soviets.
Has anybody gone to the wreck site? Of course not, since the story is vague enough to deny any specific location information. The wreck of the MV Soegio may be an interesting place as I suggested to “Treasure Quest” who told me that a wreck had to have economic value to offset the cost of a TV show.
What do the records of the MV Soegio show? Were there many British government employees on the ship as “contractors” of the oil company? Have the records of the MV Soegio disappeared as so many others have? Was the explosion that sank the MV Soegio a mine or an emergency charge set to go off in an accident to cover up any illegal CBW weapons? Is there any record or recollection of CBW war in colonial Indonesia?
The Oraung Medan- a fictitious ship created to cover up a failed black ops operation. The Oraung Medan- a cover story released to a popular adventure magazine 1953 to create a distraction curiously close in time to a now untraceable Coast Guard report on the same ship. Is Roswell a similar story planted to cover secret aircraft developments -i.e. the saucer-like “Flying Flapjack”- and focus attention away from the government activities near New Mexico? What better way than using the paranormal to focus attention to other worlds rather than the secrets of this one.
Globosapiens
zebuman3764@yahoo.com
A lost ship……!!!
just read this one as an article on news paper today itself. Its really strange. I really appreciate Globosapiens’s approach for the same…….