HMHS St Denis, by Alfred Jensen | |
History | |
---|---|
Name |
|
Namesake | 1908: Munich |
Owner |
|
Operator |
|
Port of registry | 1908: Harwich |
Route | Harwich – Antwerp |
Builder | John Brown & Co, Clydebank |
Yard number | 384 |
Launched | 26 August 1908 |
Completed | 1908 |
Identification |
|
Fate | Scrapped 1950 |
General characteristics | |
Type | passenger ferry |
Tonnage | 2,410 GRT, 1,029 NRT |
Length | 331.0 ft (100.9 m) |
Beam | 43.2 ft (13.2 m) |
Depth | 17.8 ft (5.4 m) |
Decks | 2 |
Installed power | 1,325 NHP |
Propulsion |
|
Sensors and processing systems | by 1910: submarine signalling |
Notes | sister ships: Copenhagen, St Petersburg |
SS Munich was a North Sea passenger ferry that was built in Scotland in 1908 for the Great Eastern Railway (GER). In the 1923 railway grouping she passed to the new London and North Eastern Railway (LNER). She was scrapped in England in 1950.
In 1914 she was requisitioned as a hospital ship and renamed St. Denis. Early in the Second World War St Denis was requisitioned as a troop ship. In 1940 the Kriegsmarine captured her and renamed her Skorpion, and then Barbara. She returned to Allied control in 1945.
Munich was the second of three sister ships that John Brown & Company of Clydebank, Dumbartonshire built for the GER. She was preceded by Copenhagen, launched in 1907, [1] and followed by St Petersburg, launched in 1910. [2] Brown built Munich as yard number 384. A Miss Lawson launched her on 26 August 1908. [3] She was the daughter of Sir Arthur Tredgold Lawson, Baronet, who was a GER director.
Munich's registered length was 331.0 ft (100.9 m), her beam was 43.2 ft (13.2 m) and her depth was 17.8 ft (5.4 m). Her tonnages were 2,410 GRT and 1,029 NRT. [4] She had three steam turbines and three screws. Each turbine drove its respective screw by direct drive. The combined power of her three turbines was rated at 1,325 NHP. [5]
This section includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations .(January 2024) |
The GER registered Munich at Harwich. Her United Kingdom official number was 123938 and her code letters were HNJM. [6] Her regular route was between Harwich and Antwerp. [7]
By 1910 Munich was equipped with submarine signalling and wireless telegraphy. [4] By 1913 her call sign was PQM. [8] By 1914 this had been changed to GPJ. [9]
In 1914 the Admiralty requisitioned Munich, had her converted into a hospital ship, and renamed her St. Denis. [10] After the First World War she was returned to the GER, which in 1923 was absorbed by the new LNER. In 1932 the LNER relegated her to secondary services.[ citation needed ]
By 1930 St. Denis' call sign was GRNT. [11] By 1934 this had superseded her code letters. [5]
Early in the Second World War St Denis was requisitioned as a troop ship. [10] The German invasion of the Netherlands in May 1940 caught her in Amsterdam, so she was scuttled.[ citation needed ] The Kriegsmarine had her raised, renamed her Skorpion, and started to have her converted into a minelayer. [10] The conversion was discontinued, and she was renamed Barbara and used as an accommodation ship.[ citation needed ]
In 1945 the Allies found Barbara at Kiel, providing accommodation for Kiel University. [12] In 1950 she was towed to Sunderland, where she arrived on 2 March to be scrapped by Thomas Young and Sons. [7] [10]
SS Newfoundland was a wooden-hulled brigantine and steamship that was built in 1872 and wrecked in 1916. She was a cargo ship, and for part of her career she was a sealing ship. In 1916 she was renamed Samuel Blandford.
SS Chenab was a steamship that was built in England in 1911 and scrapped in Scotland in 1953. For nearly two decades she was part of Nourse Line, which carried Girmityas from India to colonies in the Caribbean and the Pacific. In 1914 she was requisitioned for service in the First World War.
Alexander Sibiryakov was a steamship that was built in Scotland in 1909 as Bellaventure, and was originally a seal hunting ship in Newfoundland. In 1917 the Russian government bought her to be an icebreaker. She served the RSFSR and Soviet Union until 1942, when she was sunk by enemy action. The ship gave notable service in the Russian Arctic during the 1930s.
SS Fürst Bismarck was a Hamburg America Line (HAPAG) ocean liner. She was launched in Scotland in 1905. In 1914 she was renamed Friedrichsruh. In 1919 the United Kingdom seized her as World War I reparations. In 1921 Messageries Maritimes acquired her and renamed her Amboise. She was scrapped in Italy in 1935.
SS Calgarian was an Allan Line steam turbine ocean liner that was built in 1914 and converted into a Royal Navy armed merchant cruiser. Until 1916 she served with the 9th Cruiser Squadron, patrolling off West Africa and then off the east coast of the United States. She spent the remainder of her career making transatlantic crossings between Canada and Britain.
USS Charlton Hall (ID-1359) was a cargo steamship that was built in Scotland in 1907 and served in the merchant fleets of the United Kingdom, United States and Greece. She served in the United States Navy in 1918. She was renamed Atlantis and then Anastasis in 1930. She was scrapped in China in 1934.
USS Craster Hall (ID-1486) was a cargo steamship that was built in Scotland in 1909 and served in the merchant fleets of first the United Kingdom and then the United States. From 1918 to 1919, she served in the United States Navy. In 1927, she was damaged in a collision off the coast of Peru, was beached to prevent her sinking, but was wrecked.
USS Santa Rosalia (ID-1503) was a cargo steamship that was built in Scotland in 1910 and served in the merchant fleets of the United Kingdom, United States and Greece. She served in the United States Navy in 1918–19. She was renamed Stefanos Costomenis in 1929 and sank in the North Atlantic in 1936.
The Queen was an English Channel passenger ferry that was built in 1903 and sunk in 1916. She was the South Eastern and Chatham Railway (SECR)'s first steam turbine ship.
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Ramón Alonso R. was a merchant steamship that was built in Scotland in 1898 and scrapped in Spain in 1959. Its original name was Montclair. It was renamed José Gallart in 1901, Balmes in 1911 and Ramón Alonso R. in 1929. Its first owner was the British Elder Dempster Lines, but it spent most of its career with a succession of Spanish owners. It was built as a transatlantic ocean liner with some cargo capacity, but in 1927 it was refitted as a cargo ship. In 1913, when it was called Balmes, the ship survived a serious cargo fire in mid-Atlantic.
HMAS Grantala was a passenger steamship that was built in England in 1903 as a coastal interstate liner for the Adelaide Steamship Company. In 1914 the Commonwealth government requisitioned her as a Royal Australian Navy hospital ship.
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SS St Petersburg was a North Sea passenger ferry that was built in Scotland in 1908 for the Great Eastern Railway (GER). In the 1923 railway grouping she passed to the new London and North Eastern Railway (LNER). She was sunk by enemy action in 1941.
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Rosalind was a steam cargo liner that was launched in England in 1890 for Dampfschiffs Rhederei zu Hamburg as Tosari. In 1891 Deutsche Ost-Afrika Linie (DOAL) bought her and renamed her Admiral. In 1902 the Bowring Brothers' New York, Newfoundland & Halifax Steamship Company bought her and renamed her Rosalind. In 1912 the St Laurence Shipping Company bought her and renamed her City of Sydney. She was wrecked off the coast of Nova Scotia in 1914.
SS Infanta Isabel de Borbon was a steam ocean liner and mail ship launched in 1912 in Scotland and operated by the Compañía Transatlántica Española (CTE). She and her sister ship Reina Victoria-Eugenia represented a significant modernisation of CTE's fleet of ageing and obsolescent ships.
SS Goentoer was a Dutch passenger and mail ship that was built for Rotterdamsche Lloyd in 1902 and scrapped in 1925. Her regular route was between Rotterdam and the Dutch East Indies. She was a UK troop ship from 1918 to 1919, after being seized under angary in Singapore.
SS Sir Harvey Adamson was a coastal passenger steamship that was built in Scotland in 1914 for the British India Steam Navigation Company (BI). She traded along the coast of Burma until 1947, shen she disappeared in a gale in the Andaman Sea. No survivor or identifiable wreckage was ever found.
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