Difference between revisions of "HMHS Newhaven"
From Our Contribution
(→23 Nov 1916) |
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==List of soldiers carried== | ==List of soldiers carried== | ||
− | ==3 | + | ==3 August 1916== |
[[Aubrey Cecil Dawson]] | [[Aubrey Cecil Dawson]] | ||
− | ==12 | + | ==12 August 1916== |
[[Frederick Thornton Lindley]] | [[Frederick Thornton Lindley]] | ||
− | ==23 | + | ==?? August 1916== |
+ | [[Thomas Bird]] | ||
+ | ==23 November 1916== | ||
[[Robert Landen Rayner]] | [[Robert Landen Rayner]] | ||
− | ==6 | + | ==6 April 1918== |
[[William Percival Nairn]] | [[William Percival Nairn]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==11 April 1918== | ||
+ | [[Norman Leslie Skewes]] | ||
==to be discovered== | ==to be discovered== | ||
− | + | [[Charles Blunt]]<br />[[Albert George Bullock]] | |
[[Category:Ships]] | [[Category:Ships]] |
Revision as of 15:25, 25 April 2017
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History | |
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Name | HMHS Newhaven |
Builder/Built | 1911 Forges et Chaniers de la Mediteranee, Le Havre |
Type | Ferry (steam turbine) |
Contents
[hide]Remarks
During WW1, she was initially used by the French for use as an auxiliary cruiser, but later transferred to the British Flag for use as a Hospital Ship. She carried 3 Medical officers, 4 Nurses and 27 others, to service up 6 Officer patients, 19 in Cots and 138 in Berths. She served in this role from 7 May 1915 to 5 Mar 1919.
Recovered by her owners in 1919 she was, along with her sister the Rouen, the mainstay of the French side of the Newhaven-Dieppe cross channel service during the 1920's and 30's.
The Newhaven was taken over by the Germans in 1940 and used as a troop transport in the Baltic during World War II. Recovered in 1945, her refitting as a passenger vessel was considered too costly and she was sold for scrap in 1949.