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| caption2      = Lifeboat presented to the Australian War Memorial
 
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| shipname = HMHS Devanha
 
| shipname = HMHS Devanha

Revision as of 14:06, 16 October 2021

HMHS Devanha
HMS Devanha.jpg
HMS Devanha 1.jpg
Lifeboat presented to the Australian War Memorial
History
Name HMHS Devanha
Owner Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company
Builder Caird & Co, Greenock, Scotland
Yard number 308
Launched 16 December 1905
Completed 31 Jan 1906
In service 1906
Out of service 1925
Fate Broken up by Sakaguchi Sadakichi Shoten K.K., Osaka, 2 June 1928
General characteristics
Type passenger / cargo
Tonnage 8,092 tons
Length 470 ft (140 m)
Beam 56 ft 3 in (17.15 m)
Depth 27 ft 8 in (8.43 m)
Propulsion twin screw
Speed 15.5 knots (28.7 km/h)



Remarks

SS Devanha was built for the Peninsular & Oriental Steam Navigation Company (P&O) to be used on the India/China route.


On 22 Aug 1914 the Devanha was requisitioned as a Troopship, and on 30 Apr 1915 this alterations were made to allow her to serve as a hospital ship, before being paid off as a Hospital Ship and converted back to Troopship. All requisitioned vessels continued to be manned by their normal P&O staff of officers and their peacetime P&O crews.


On 25 Apr 1915 at 2pm The Devanha sailed from Mudros Harbour and proceeded to the Island of Imbros, anchoring off Kephalos Harbour. Devanha was A5 in the convoy, Berth 4 of the Echelon landing force for Gallipoli carrying the 12th Battalion. After the first wave of troops landed the Devanha steamed up the coast as a feint to draw enemy fire. That evening the vessel evacuated her first load of casualties and began service as a hospital ship. As a hospital ship HMHS Devanha transported sick and wounded troops from the battle field to hospital bases.


Originally hospital ships were ordered to take serious cases while transports were to take the lightly wounded, but the confusion which resulted after the initial landing - and the large numbers of casualties - meant this system soon fell into disarray. The HMHS Devanha and other hospital ships provided emergency treatment while evacuating the troops directly to Egypt, from where some would be sent to Malta and England. Devanha continued with these duties until the end of the campaign, and the P & O history notes that the vessel was the last hospital ship to leave the Dardanelles.


All requisitioned vessels continued to be manned by their normal P&O staff of officers and their peacetime P&O crews. A timber lifeboat from the P&O SS Devanha known as Troopship A3 at the time of the Gallipoli landing in 1915 is held in the AWM collection.


Soldiers carried

Alexandria to Lemnos Island 2 - 5 March 1915

Alexandria to Lemnos Island 1 - 4 April 1915

Mudros to Malta 12 -14 July 1915

Anzac Cove to Alexandria 7 - 9 August 1915