Difference between revisions of "SS Port Lyttleton"
From Our Contribution
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Infobox ship | {{Infobox ship | ||
| image = [[File:SS_Port_Lyttleton.jpg]] | | image = [[File:SS_Port_Lyttleton.jpg]] | ||
− | | caption = | + | | caption = Courtesy QLD State Library 1 141603 |
− | | image2 = [[File:.jpg]] | + | | image2 = [[File:SS_Port_Lyttleton_1.jpg]] |
− | | caption2 = | + | | caption2 = From the AC Green collection |
| shipname = SS Port Lyttleton | | shipname = SS Port Lyttleton | ||
− | | shipowner = | + | | shipowner = Tyser Line Ltd |
| shipbuilder = Workman & Clark, Belfast | | shipbuilder = Workman & Clark, Belfast | ||
| shipyardnumber = | | shipyardnumber = | ||
Line 30: | Line 30: | ||
==Remarks== | ==Remarks== | ||
− | Built as the ''Niwaru'' for the Tyser Line Ltd, in 1914 she was taken over by the Commonwealth & Dominion Line, London, before being requisitioned in 1916 as a troop ship and renamed ''SS Port Lyttleton''. During January 1924 the ''Port Lyttelton'' ran aground on a sand bar at the mouth of the Tamar River, Tasmania. Made one trip as HMNZT 71 | + | Built as the ''Niwaru'' for the Tyser Line Ltd, in 1914 she was taken over by the Commonwealth & Dominion Line, London, before being requisitioned in 1916 as a troop ship and renamed ''SS Port Lyttleton''. During January 1924 the ''Port Lyttelton'' ran aground on a sand bar at the mouth of the Tamar River, Tasmania. Made one trip as HMNZT 71 departing New Zealand in December 1916, and then in June 1918 departed Sydney on a 'Single Charter' carryng 104 AIF personnel |
Scrapped in Italy in 1924 following a grounding off Tasmania. | Scrapped in Italy in 1924 following a grounding off Tasmania. |
Latest revision as of 02:28, 25 September 2023
Contents
Remarks
Built as the Niwaru for the Tyser Line Ltd, in 1914 she was taken over by the Commonwealth & Dominion Line, London, before being requisitioned in 1916 as a troop ship and renamed SS Port Lyttleton. During January 1924 the Port Lyttelton ran aground on a sand bar at the mouth of the Tamar River, Tasmania. Made one trip as HMNZT 71 departing New Zealand in December 1916, and then in June 1918 departed Sydney on a 'Single Charter' carryng 104 AIF personnel
Scrapped in Italy in 1924 following a grounding off Tasmania.