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Difference between revisions of "RMS Orontes"

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===Cape Town to Fremantle 19 April to 4 May 1918===
 
===Cape Town to Fremantle 19 April to 4 May 1918===
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* [[Leonard Henry (Lennie) Buckingham MM]]
 
* [[James Lang]]
 
* [[James Lang]]
  
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===England to Fremantle 20 December 1918 - 25 January 1919===
 
===England to Fremantle 20 December 1918 - 25 January 1919===
 
* [[Walter Hayward]]
 
* [[Walter Hayward]]
 
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==

Revision as of 19:40, 20 February 2022

RMS Orontes
SS Orontes.jpg
SS Orontes 1.jpg
State Library of Victoria
History
Name RMS Orontes
Owner Orient Steam Navigation Co. Ltd., Glasgow
Builder Fairfield Shipbuilding & Engineering Co. Ltd., Govan
Yard number 418
Launched 10 May 1902
Completed September 1902
In service 24 Oct 1902
Out of service 1925
Fate Broken up
General characteristics
Type passenger / refrigerated cargo
Tonnage 9,028 tons
Length 513.7 ft (156.6 m)
Beam 58.2 ft (17.7 m)
Depth 34.4 ft (10.5 m)
Propulsion twin screw
Speed 18 knots (33.34 km/h)
Capacity 200 x 1st; 200 x 2nd; 600 x3rd class



Remarks

Built for the Orient Steam Navigation Company to be used taking mail and passengers from London via the Suez Canal and Melbourne to Sydney. As a civilian ship she could carry 200 first clasds, 200 second class, and 600 third class passengers. After the First World War began, Orontes remained in service on her regular route until October 1916, after which she was requisitioned by the British Admiralty, converted to a troop ship and gaining the technical name of HMAT Orontes she made two trips between Britain to Australian before being used on the African route.


Released back to commercial use in Aug 1917 so that she could use hre refrigerated space to carry dairy produce and meat from Australia to the UK. She was released to resume her Australia service in 1919, calling at Gibraltar, Toulon, Port Said, Colombo, Femantle, Adelaide, Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane, before being laid up in the Thames in 1921.


In 1922 she was sold to the British World Trade Expeditions, Ltd withthe intention of naming her British Trade. However, this venture fell through and she was repossesed by her owners, before being sold in 1925 for scrap to Thomas W Ward of Inverkeithing.



Soldiers carried

Cape Town to Fremantle 19 April to 4 May 1918

Sydney to Liverpool 5 June - 11 August 1918

England to Fremantle 20 December 1918 - 25 January 1919

Notes

She is not listed as one of the 74 ships taken over by Australia's Commonwealth Government for use as troopships during WWI, but is on a list of a further 39 Royal Mail vessels chartered by the Commonwealth on an occasional basis for that purpose.