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SS Celtic

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SS Celtic
RMS Celtic.jpg
SS Celtic 1.jpg
Stranded on rocks near Cohn
History
Name SS Celtic
Owner The Oceanic Steam Navigation Company (White Star Line)
Builder Harland & Wolff, Belfast
Yard number 335
Launched 4 Apr 1901
Completed 11 Jul 1901
In service 25 Jul 1901
Out of service December 1928
Fate Ran aground on 10 Dec 1928, scrapped on site
General characteristics
Type Ocean Liner
Tonnage 20,904 tons
Length 701 ft (214 m)
Beam 75 ft (23 m)
Propulsion twin screw
Speed 16 knots (29.63 km/h)



Remarks

Built for the White Star Line and used on the trans Atlantic route before being converted into a troop ship in January 1916 when she was used to carry soldiers to Egypt. She returned to the transatlantic route in March 1916. In 1917, Celtic struck a mine off the Isle of Man. Seventeen people on board were killed, but the Celtic survived. A number of passengers were rescued by the London and North Western Railway ship Slieve Bawn. Celtic was towed to Peel Bay and repaired in Belfast. In March 1918, U-Boat UB-77 torpedoed Celtic in the Irish Sea. Six people on board were killed, but again Celtic remained afloat. Eventually the damaged vessel was towed to Liverpool and repaired again.


Returned to peacetime activity, she was to be involved in two collisions with other ships, in 1925 she accidentally rammed Hampshire Coast in the Mersey and on 29 Jan 1927, in thick fog she was rammed by Anaconda off Fire Island. On 10 Dec 1928 she became stranded on the Cow and Calf rocks, adjacent to Roches Point at the entry to Cobn, southern Ireland when trying to board a pilot in bad weather. Unable to be moved she was eventually dismantled for scrap.

Soldiers carried

Liverpool to USA 31 July - ? August 1919