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HMT Minnewaska

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HMT Minnewaska
HMT Minnewaska.jpg
File:.jpg
History
Name HMT Minnewaska
Owner Atlantic Transport Co.
Builder Harland & Wolff, Belfast
Yard number 397
Launched 12 Nov 1908
Completed 24 Apr 1909
In service 1 May 1909
Out of service 1918
Fate scrapped
General characteristics
Type passenger and cargo
Tonnage 14,317 tons
Length 600 ft 5 in (183.02m)
Beam 65 ft 7 in (19.98m)
Depth 39 ft 4 in (11.99m)
Propulsion twin screw
Speed 16 knots (29.63 km/h)
Capacity Accommodation for 326 x 1st class passengers, 1,800 troops, crew of 200



Remarks

Built for and owned by The Atlantic Transport Line, and operated on the Transatlantic route.

In January 1915 she was requisitioned to serve as a British Army troop transport. The Minnewaska (III) sailed from Avonmouth on Friday March 5, 1915, bound for Alexandria, which she reached early in the evening on Sunday, March 14. She sailed next for Gallipoli on April 18, with the headquarters of the 1st Australian division and many troops on board. A number of officer's horses were also shipped to the Gallipoli Peninsula but were not landed. The Minnewaska was involved in a minor collision with SS Derfflinger off Anzac Cove on April 28.


The Minnewaska, was defensively armed with a gun mounted on her stern, and made five voyages ferrying troops and artillery to the Dardanelles. She had some narrow escapes but on November 29, 1916, she finally struck a floating mine laid by U-Boat UC-23 in Suda Bay, Crete, en route to Saloniki. She was transporting 1,600 troops on this occasion and had a crew of 200. She took on a rapidly increasing list but Captain Gates decided to steam at full speed to the nearby shore and successfully ran her aground 50 yards west of Cape Deutero at the entrance to Suda Bay.


His actions saved many lives. It took about two hours to evacuate the ship and the men were rescued without loss by the trawler Danestone, the drifters Principal, Trustful and Deveronside, and the destroyer HMS Grampus. But her bottom had been torn away by the mine and the Minnewaska (III) had to be abandoned on the beach where she lay. In 1918 she was sold to shipbreakers for scrap and was broken up in situ. Parts of the wreck remain on site.


Soldiers carried

Alexandria to England 7 - 12 Apr 1916