SS Saltmarshe
SS Saltmarshe was a freight vessel built for the Wetherall Steamship Company Limited in 1907.[1]
History | |
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Name: | 1907-1931:SS Saltmarshe |
Operator: |
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Port of registry: |
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Builder: | William Pickersgill and Company, Sunderland |
Launched: | 9 May 1907 |
Out of service: | December 1931 |
Fate: | Scrapped |
General characteristics | |
Tonnage: | 930 gross register tons (GRT) |
Length: | 215 feet (66 m) |
Beam: | 32.3 feet (9.8 m) |
Draught: | 12.7 feet (3.9 m) |
History
She was built by William Pickersgill and Company in Sunderland for the Wetherall Steamship Company Limited and launched on 9 May 1907.[2] She was purchased in the same year by the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway.[3]
In 1922 the ship was transferred to the London and North Western Railway and in 1923 to the London, Midland and Scottish Railway.
She was sent for scrapping in December 1931.
gollark: Presumably the idea is to just remove/backdoor the encryption stuff which is easily used and accessible to consumers (encrypted messaging, full disk encryption on phones), which is not going to stop anyone who is doing evilness but will definitely allow widespread surveillance on most people.
gollark: They obviously can't actually stop people from using encryption in general. Encryption is very widely distributed maths and code. Even if all the code ceased to exist you could reconstruct working stuff from even just the Wikipedia pages.
gollark: And the many times the UK and other places have insisted that end to end encryption is bad because something something terrorism think of the children everything will be awful if we can't spy on all messages ever.
gollark: There was that fun time when the UK Home Secretary talked about "getting people who understand the necessary hashtags" talking when yet again demanding an impossible magic backdoor.
gollark: I was going to write a blog post on my highly active™ website about this but it turns out that writing is hard and other people did it better.
References
- Duckworth, Christian Leslie Dyce; Langmuir, Graham Easton (1968). Railway and other Steamers. Prescot, Lancashire: T. Stephenson and Sons.
- "New Steamer for Goole". Hull Daily Mail. England. 7 June 1907. Retrieved 24 October 2015 – via British Newspaper Archive.
- "L. and Y. New Steamer". Hull Daily Mail. England. 26 September 1907. Retrieved 24 October 2015 – via British Newspaper Archive.
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