Sir Harvey Adamson | |
History | |
---|---|
United Kingdom | |
Name | Sir Harvey Adamson |
Namesake | Harvey Adamson |
Owner | British India SN Co |
Port of registry | Glasgow |
Route | Rangoon – Tavoy – Mergui |
Builder | A. & J. Inglis, Glasgow |
Cost | £40,200 |
Yard number | 306 |
Launched | 1 October 1914 |
Completed | 27 November 1914 |
Identification |
|
Fate | missing without trace, 1947 |
General characteristics | |
Type | coastal passenger ship |
Tonnage | 1,030 GRT, 528 NRT, 691 DWT |
Length | 219.7 ft (67.0 m) |
Beam | 35.1 ft (10.7 m) |
Draught | 11 ft 7 in (3.53 m) |
Depth | 11.3 ft (3.4 m) |
Decks | 1 |
Installed power | 155 NHP, 700 IHP |
Propulsion |
|
Speed | 12 knots (22 km/h) |
Capacity | 500 passengers: 12 1st class, 12 2nd class, 476 deck class |
Crew | 64 |
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.
A. & J. Inglis built the ship at Pointhouse, Glasgow, as yard number 306. She was launched on 1 October 1914 and completed in 27 November. [1] She was named after Sir Harvey Adamson, who was lieutenant governor of Burma from 1910 until 1915. [2] She cost £40,200. [3]
The ship's registered length was 219.7 ft (67.0 m), her beam was 35.1 ft (10.7 m), her depth was 11.3 ft (3.4 m), and her draught was 11 ft 7 in (3.53 m). Her tonnages were 1,030 GRT, 528 NRT, [4] and 691 DWT. [3] She had capacity for 500 passengers: 12 in first class, 12 in second class, and 476 on deck. [2]
The ship had twin screws, each driven by a three-cylinder triple-expansion engine. The combined power of her twin engines was rated at 155 NHP [4] or 700 IHP, and gave her a speed of 12 knots (22 km/h). [2]
BI registered the ship in Glasgow. Her UK official number was 136336 and her code letters were JHGC. [4] By 1918 she was equipped for wireless telegraphy, and her call sign was MUK. [5] By 1930 her this was superseded by the four-letter call sign GRYK, [6] which in 1934 superseded her code letters. [7]
Sir Harvey Adamson's regular route was along the coast of Tenasserim (now Tanintharyi Region and Mon State). She ran between Rangoon (now Yangon) in the north and Mergui (now Myeik) in the south, via Tavoy (now Dawei).
In September 1915 she was requisitioned for First World War service. Sources differ as to whether she served as a patrol vessel, [2] or a troop ship for the Indian Expeditionary Forces. [3] According to one source, in 1916 she was relieved by a warship and reverted to her commercial service. [2] According to another, in May 1917 she became subject to the Liner Requisition Scheme, and towed inland waterway craft from Bombay to Basra for service on the Tigris–Euphrates river system in the Mesopotamian campaign. [3]
In March 1940 Sir Harvey Adamson served under the Liner Division. [3] In December 1941 Japan invaded Burma. In January 1942 she was requisitioned as a personnel and military store ship for the evacuation of Mergui (Myeik). [3] In May 1942, just before Burma fell, Sir Harvey Adamson evacuated refugees from Akyab (now Sittwe) in western Burma to India. [2] From February 1943 the Royal Air Force used her as a storage ship for high-octane fuel. [2] [3]
In 1945 the Japanese occupation of Burma ended, and in 1946 Sir Harvey Adamson returned to her commercial service. [2] Lloyd's Register inspected her in December 1946, and renewed her 100A1 rating for six months. [8]
On 17 April 1947 Sir Harvey Adamson left Rangoon carrying 64 crew and 205 passengers. At 1610 hrs the next day she radioed that she would be late reaching Tavoy (Dawei), due to a south-easterly galeand heavy rain. At 1830 hrs she radioed that her position was 13°13′N97°36′E / 13.217°N 97.600°E . [2] Nothing was heard from her thereafter, and an extensive search found neither survivors nor identifiable wreckage. On 5 May she was declared lost. [3]
A Court of Inquiry was held. On 29 June 1947 it surmised that the ship had sought shelter among the Middle Moscos Islands, and had struck one of the Second World War mines known to remain in that area. However, in the absence of any evidence, this conclusion remains conjecture. [3]
HMS Cheshire was a passenger ship that was built in Scotland in 1927 and scrapped in Wales in 1957. She belonged to Bibby Line, which ran passenger and cargo services between Rangoon in Burma and various ports in Great Britain, via the Suez Canal and Gibraltar. The Admiralty requisitioned her in 1939 and had her converted into an armed merchant cruiser (AMC). She was converted into a troopship in 1943, and returned to civilian service in 1948.
Ryusei Maru was a cargo steamship that was built in England in 1911 and sunk off the coast of Bali in 1944. She was launched as Bra-Kar for Fred. Olsen & Co. of Norway. In 1916 she changed owners and was renamed Havø. In 1935 she changed owners again and was renamed Mabuhay II.
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 Potsdam was a steam ocean liner that was launched in Germany in 1899 for Holland America Line. In 1915 Swedish American Line acquired her and renamed her Stockholm.
SS Montrose was a British merchant steamship that was built in 1897 and wrecked in 1914. She was built as a cargo liner for Elder, Dempster & Company. In 1903 the Canadian Pacific Railway bought her and had her converted into a passenger liner.
USS Zeelandia was an ocean liner that was built in Scotland in 1910 and scrapped in the Netherlands in 1936. She was the largest ship in the Koninklijke Hollandsche Lloyd (KHL) fleet from 1910 until the liners Gelria and Tubantia were completed in 1913 and 1914. She was USS Zeelandia from April 1918 until October 1919, when she was a United States Navy troopship.
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 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.
USS Munwood (ID-4460) was a cargo steamship that was built in Scotland in 1914 and was part of the United States Merchant Marine until 1928. From 1918 to 1919 she served in the United States Navy. In 1928 Yugoslav interests bought her and renamed her Vila. In 1935 she sank as the result of a collision in the Adriatic Sea.
SS Polar Chief was a merchant steamship that was built in England in 1897 and scrapped in Scotland in 1952. In her 55-year career she had previously been called Montcalm, RFA Crenella, Crenella, Rey Alfonso, Anglo-Norse and Empire Chief. Early in the First World War she spent eight months pretending to be the battleship HMS Audacious.
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.
HMS Agamemnon was originally the Blue Funnel Line refrigerated cargo ship Agamemnon. She was built in 1929, traded between the UK and the Far East, and was scrapped in 1963. During the Second World War she was converted into an auxiliary minelayer in 1940, and then into an amenities ship in 1943.
TSS City of Belfast was a passenger steamship that was built in England in 1893, renamed Nicolaos Togias in 1925, renamed Kephallinia in 1933 and sank in 1941. She was owned and registered in Britain until 1925, when she passed to Greek owners.
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.
SS Copenhagen was a North Sea passenger ferry that was built in Scotland in 1907. She was the Great Eastern Railway (GER)'s first turbine steamship. In 1916 she was requisitioned as an ambulance ship. A U-boat sank her in 1917 with the loss of six lives.
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.
Vasari was a 1908 steam ocean liner that was built in England, operated by the British Lamport and Holt Line and used on its service between New York and the River Plate.
SS Byron was a transatlantic ocean liner that was built in England in 1914 and scrapped in Italy in 1937. She was launched as Vasilefs Constantinos, named after Constantine I of Greece. In 1919 she was renamed Megali Hellas, the Greek name for the Ancient Greek settlements in Sicily and southern Italy. In 1923 she was renamed Byron, in recognition of the role of Lord Byron (1788–1824) in the Greek War of Independence (1821–29).
SS Frankenwald was a passenger and cargo steamship that was launched in England in 1908 for Hamburg America Line. In 1919 France seized her as part of Germany's World War I reparations. In 1920 the Compagnie de Navigation Paquet bought her and renamed her Tadla. A Turkish shipowner bought her in 1934 and renamed her Tari. She passed through a succession of Turkish owners, and was scrapped in 1967.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)