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Difference between revisions of "SS Île de France"

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Disembarked at Bombay 6 Feb 1942 & transferred 9 Feb 1942 to [[SS Kosciusko]] or [[SS Madras City]]
 
Disembarked at Bombay 6 Feb 1942 & transferred 9 Feb 1942 to [[SS Kosciusko]] or [[SS Madras City]]
 
*[[Eric Anderson]] SS Madras City
 
*[[Eric Anderson]] SS Madras City
*[[Clarence Malarkey]]
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*[[Clarence Malarkey]] SS Madras City
*[[Francis Malarkey]]
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*[[Francis Malarkey]] SS Madras City
*[[Len Malarkey]]
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*[[Len Malarkey]] SS Madras City
*[[John William Pryor]]
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*[[John William Pryor]] SS Kosciusko
  
  

Revision as of 02:27, 21 April 2019

SS Île de France.jpg
History
Name SS Île de France
Builder/Built 1926 Saint-Nazaire
Type Ocean Liner
Displacement 44,356 tons
Speed 23 .5 knots


Remarks

Built for the "French Line" or CGT. The first liner ever to be decorated almost entirely with modern designs associated with the Art Deco style


Ironically, all of the ship's luxurious fittings were removed for its conversion into a prison ship during World War II. After the war, Île de France resumed transatlantic operations. In 1956, she played a key role in rescuing passengers from the SS Andrea Doria after the latter ship's fatal collision with the MS Stockholm off Nantucket. Scrapped in Osaka, Japan, 1959.


Soldiers carried

Fremantle to Port Tewfik 19 April - 14 May 1941

Kantara to Adelaide 30 January - 23 March 1942

Disembarked at Bombay 6 Feb 1942 & transferred 9 Feb 1942 to SS Kosciusko or SS Madras City


Disembarked from SS Kociusko in Fremantle and went AWOL