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==Remarks==
 
==Remarks==
Built for the British Steam Navigation Company, Glasgow & London.  Carried only 17 passengers, primarily used for Indian and Australian services.
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Built for the British Steam Navigation Company, Glasgow & London.  Carried only 17 passengers, primarily used for Indian and Australian services.  
 
 
 
Initially used as an Ambulance transport, she was converted at Cockatoo Island Drydock in May 1915 to transport 136 troops and 180 horses. Between 1915 and 1916 she made four trips from Australia carrying troops.
 
Initially used as an Ambulance transport, she was converted at Cockatoo Island Drydock in May 1915 to transport 136 troops and 180 horses. Between 1915 and 1916 she made four trips from Australia carrying troops.
  
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==Soldiers carried==
 
==Soldiers carried==
  
==Fremantle to Plymouth 20 September - 15 November 1916==
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===Fremantle to Plymouth 20 September - 15 November 1916===
 
*[[Jim Anderson]]
 
*[[Jim Anderson]]
 
*[[James Edward Grabham]]
 
*[[James Edward Grabham]]

Revision as of 03:02, 1 July 2019

HMAT A66 Uganda.jpg
Shipwrecked Mariners Society
History
Name HMAT A66 Uganda
Builder/Built Alexander Stephen & Sons, Glasgow
Type passenger / carg steamship
Displacement 5,355 tons
Speed 10 knots


Remarks

Built for the British Steam Navigation Company, Glasgow & London. Carried only 17 passengers, primarily used for Indian and Australian services. Initially used as an Ambulance transport, she was converted at Cockatoo Island Drydock in May 1915 to transport 136 troops and 180 horses. Between 1915 and 1916 she made four trips from Australia carrying troops.


On 17 Jun 1916, off Marseilles she was attacked by an enemy submarine, and was hit several times by shellfire. The Uganda fired back, and it is thought her sixth shell hit the submarine which submerged. Management of the ship was transferred to the British Admiralty on 4 Dec 1916.


On 29 May 1918 she was again attacked, this time by torpedoes, off Majorca, 150 km north of Algiers by U-Boat UB49. The Uganda sank two days later, without loss of life.

Soldiers carried

Fremantle to Plymouth 20 September - 15 November 1916