Difference between revisions of "SS Dongola"
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| image = [[File:SS_Dongala.jpg]] | | image = [[File:SS_Dongala.jpg]] | ||
| caption = | | caption = | ||
− | | image2 = | + | | image2 = [[File:SS_Dongala_1.jpg]] |
| caption2 = | | caption2 = | ||
| shipname = SS Dongala | | shipname = SS Dongala | ||
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| shipbuilder = Barclay, Curie & Co. | | shipbuilder = Barclay, Curie & Co. | ||
| shipyardnumber = | | shipyardnumber = | ||
− | | shiplaunched = | + | | shiplaunched = 14 Sep 1904 |
− | | shipcompleted = 1905 | + | | shipcompleted = November 1905 |
− | | shipinservice = | + | | shipinservice = 15 Nov 1905 |
| shipoutofservice = 1926 | | shipoutofservice = 1926 | ||
| shipinservice2 = | | shipinservice2 = | ||
| shipoutofservice2 = | | shipoutofservice2 = | ||
| shipreclassified = | | shipreclassified = | ||
− | | shipID = | + | | shipID = HDTL |
| shipfate = Sold for scrap 1926 | | shipfate = Sold for scrap 1926 | ||
| shiptype = Ocean liner | | shiptype = Ocean liner | ||
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| shipbeam = 56.25 feet (17.15 metres) | | shipbeam = 56.25 feet (17.15 metres) | ||
| shipdepth = 27.75 feet (8.49 metres) | | shipdepth = 27.75 feet (8.49 metres) | ||
− | | shippropulsion = | + | | shippropulsion = twin screw |
− | | shipspeed = 15.5 knots | + | | shipspeed = 15.5 knots (28.71 km/h) |
| shipcapacity = 150 1st class, and 100 2nd class passengers | | shipcapacity = 150 1st class, and 100 2nd class passengers | ||
}} | }} | ||
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==Remarks== | ==Remarks== | ||
− | Owned by Peninsular & Orient Steam Navigation Company. During the war she was a British Hospital ship, staffed by nurses including some Australian and New Zealand nurses. Dongola served in the Dardanelles campaign | + | Owned by Peninsular & Orient Steam Navigation Company, ''Dongala'' had been designed as a seasonal troop ship and was frst used for that purpose in July 1906, and remained a troopship until the outbreak of WW1. During the war she was a British Hospital ship, staffed by nurses including some Australian and New Zealand nurses. ''Dongola'' served in the Dardanelles campaign including visits to Anzac, Suvla and Cape Helles in 1915, before taking patients to Alexandria in Egypt and to Malta. Used later as a Troopship as per the photo, returning troops from the Middle East to Australia. |
− | + | In 1919 she was engaged in transferring personnel from England to Russia and bringing back refugees from the Russian civil war. handed back to her owners in October 1920 she was refitted for her civilian use on the London - Bombay route, On 20 May 1922 she was involved in a severe collision with a Japanese ship the ''Kumana Maru''. Damaged she was beached before being towed to a dry dock for repairs. n 1926 she was sold for scrap. | |
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===Off Gallipoli acting as a Hospital Ship=== | ===Off Gallipoli acting as a Hospital Ship=== | ||
− | *[[William Hart]] | + | *[[William John (Bill) Hart]] 4 - 19 May 1915 |
===England to Fremantle 24 July - 17 August 1919=== | ===England to Fremantle 24 July - 17 August 1919=== |
Latest revision as of 19:27, 1 November 2023
Contents
Remarks
Owned by Peninsular & Orient Steam Navigation Company, Dongala had been designed as a seasonal troop ship and was frst used for that purpose in July 1906, and remained a troopship until the outbreak of WW1. During the war she was a British Hospital ship, staffed by nurses including some Australian and New Zealand nurses. Dongola served in the Dardanelles campaign including visits to Anzac, Suvla and Cape Helles in 1915, before taking patients to Alexandria in Egypt and to Malta. Used later as a Troopship as per the photo, returning troops from the Middle East to Australia.
In 1919 she was engaged in transferring personnel from England to Russia and bringing back refugees from the Russian civil war. handed back to her owners in October 1920 she was refitted for her civilian use on the London - Bombay route, On 20 May 1922 she was involved in a severe collision with a Japanese ship the Kumana Maru. Damaged she was beached before being towed to a dry dock for repairs. n 1926 she was sold for scrap.
Soldiers carried
Off Gallipoli acting as a Hospital Ship
- William John (Bill) Hart 4 - 19 May 1915