SS Copenhagen (1907)

TSS Copenhagen was a passenger vessel built for the Great Eastern Railway in 1907.[1]

History
United Kingdom
Name: TSS Copenhagen
Operator: Great Eastern Railway
Port of registry:
Route: Harwich to Hook of Holland
Builder: John Brown, Clydebank
Yard number: 384
Launched: 22 October 1907
Fate: Torpedoed and sunk, 5 March 1917
General characteristics
Tonnage: 2,570 gross register tons (GRT)
Length: 331.3 feet (101.0 m)
Beam: 43 feet (13 m)
Depth: 17.9 feet (5.5 m)
Speed: 22 knots

History

The ship was built by John Brown of Clydebank for the Great Eastern Railway as one of a contract for three new steamers and launched on 22 October 1907.[2] She was launched by Miss Ida Hamilton, daughter of the Chairman of the Great Eastern Railway Company.

She was placed on the Harwich to Hook of Holland route.[3]

On 5 March 1917 she was torpedoed and sunk in the North Sea 8 nautical miles (15 km) east of the Noord Hinder Lightship by SM UC-61 with the loss of six lives.[4]

gollark: That's literally smaller than the secret bee facility™, I think.
gollark: Wow, how big and good.
gollark: Didn't you demolish all the farms and stuff?
gollark: It might not even be an island.
gollark: It's so private I don't even know where it is.

References

  1. Duckworth, Christian Leslie Dyce; Langmuir, Graham Easton (1968). Railway and other Steamers. Prescot, Lancashire: T. Stephenson and Sons.
  2. "A New Railway Steamship. Launch from the Clydebank Yard". Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer. England. 23 October 1907. Retrieved 31 October 2015 via British Newspaper Archive.
  3. Haws, Duncan (1993). Merchant Fleets – Britain's Railway Steamers – Eastern and North Western Companies + Zeeland and Stena. Hereford: TCL Publications. ISBN 0 946378 22 3.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  4. "Copenhagen". Uboat.net. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
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