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Difference between revisions of "HMHS Llandovery Castle"

From Our Contribution

(Remarks)
(Alexandria to Marseilles Acting as a troop ship 20 - 25 March 1916)
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==Alexandria to Marseilles Acting as a troop ship 20 - 25 March 1916==
 
==Alexandria to Marseilles Acting as a troop ship 20 - 25 March 1916==
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*[[Ivor Trehane Birtwistle]] Post WW1 men
 
*[[Aubrey Walter (Swazz) Mead]]
 
*[[Aubrey Walter (Swazz) Mead]]
*[[Ivor Trehane Birtwistle]] Post WW1 men
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*[[Charles Robert Merchant]]
  
 
[[Category:Ships]]
 
[[Category:Ships]]

Revision as of 02:55, 23 September 2017

HMHS Llandovery Castle.jpg
History
Name HMHS Llandovery Castle
Builder/Built 1914 Barclay Curle & Co, Glasgow
Type Passenger liner (twin screw)
Displacement 10,639 tons
Speed 15 knots


Remarks

Owned by the Union-Castle Line and designed to carry 429 passengers. As a hospital ship she could service 622 beds with 102 medical staff.

The sinking of the Llandovery Castle by U-Boat U-86 off southern Ireland on 27 June 1918 is considered one of the worst atrocities of the war. She was employed as a hospital ship and had her cross lights were on when she was torpedoed without warning by a German submarine.

Firing at a hospital ship was against international law and the standing orders of the Imperial German Navy. The captain of U-86, Helmut Brümmer-Patzig, sought to destroy the evidence of torpedoing the ship. When the crew took to the lifeboats, U-86 surfaced, ran down all but one of the lifeboats and machine-gunned many of the survivors.

Only 24 people survived out of the 258 people on board.

Soldiers carried

Alexandria to Marseilles Acting as a troop ship 20 - 25 March 1916