SS Formosa

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History
Civil Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg United Kingdom
NameFormosa
Owner Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company
Operator1851-1870, P&O Line. 1870-1876, China Navigation Co
Port of registryLondon, Civil Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg  UK
RouteSouthampton-Teneriffe-St Helena-Cape Town-Melbourne-Sydney; Sydney-Melbourne-Adelaide-King George's Sound-Galle-Singapore; Mumbai-Galle-Penang-Singapore-Hong Kong-Shanghai
Builder Smith & Rodger,Glasgow
Launched17 April 1852
Completed1852
Maiden voyage1852
Out of service1876
FateDisappeared from record after 1929
General characteristics
TypePassenger/cargo ocean liner
Tonnage676  GRT
Length211 ft (64 m)
Beam26 ft (7.9 m)
Draught29 ft (8.8 m)
Decks(passenger accessible)
Installed power180–200 hp (130–150 kW)
PropulsionDirect-acting steam steeple engines, single screw
Speed13 knots (24 km/h; 15 mph)
Capacity88 passengers (48 first class, 40 second class)
Notes [1]

SS Formosa was a British mail steamer belonging to the Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company (P & O). Originally ordered by another line as the Caledonia, P & O bought it before completion in 1852, as its third screw steamer (the others being Chusan and Shanghai), renaming it after the Chinese island of Formosa.

Contents

The ship employed cutting-edge technology for its time, featuring a steeple-type steam engine with high-pressure boilers and a screw propeller. [1]

Setting out from Southampton on 7 August 1852, Formosa made Sydney on 22 October, in 75 days and 6 hours (including 12 days' stoppage), the fastest on record, despite a strike on board. This record stood until the next August, when the General Screw Steam Shipping Company’s Argo made a time of 66 days. [1]

Necessary repairs to Formosa's drive assembly, accomplished (in the absence of dry dock facilities) by flooding the forward compartments and raising the stern out of the water, delaying the ship's departure for Singapore until 10 November. Any further delay might have caused the ship to miss the departure from Singapore of the China mail for London. Held up by storms, Captain William Parfitt headed from King George's Sound direct to Galle, just in time to intercept the paddle steamer Precursor on its way to Suez from Calcutta. On the last leg of its voyage to Singapore, the cross head of its engine broke. The Formosa finally made it to Singapore on 12 February. [1]

Thereafter, P & O used Formosa on the Mumbai-China run. In 1870, the ship was sold to the China Navigation Company, but did not sail for more than six years. The ship disappeared from the records after 1929. [1]

Timeline

Major events in the history of the Formosa.

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Moonesinghe, Vinod (2018). "Catching the China Mail". The Great Circle. 40 (1): 71–83. JSTOR   26783781 . Retrieved 2022-09-23.