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SS Strathmore

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SS Strathmore
RMS Strathmore.jpg
courtesy South Australian Maritime Museum
SS Strathmore 1.jpg
History
Name SS Strathmore
Owner The Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company
Builder Vickers-Armstrongs Ltd, Barrow-in-Furness
Yard number 698
Launched 4 Apr 1935
Completed 18 Sep 1935
In service 27 Sep 1935
Out of service 1963
Fate scrapped 1969
General characteristics
Type Passenger Liner
Tonnage 23,428 tons
Length 195.09m (640.3ft)
Beam 25.08m (82.3ft)
Depth 14.50m (47.6ft)
Propulsion twin screw
Speed 20 knots (37.04 km/h)
Capacity 445 x 1st; 665 x Tourist class; 503 crew



Remarks

Built for Peninsula & Oriental Steam Navigation Co, London and used on the Australia - London express service. On 8 Sep 1936 she was caught between two Portuguese naval ships that had mutinied, and shore batteries. On 22 Apr 1937 she damaged her bow in Bombay, colliding with the pier. From 1940 - 45 she served as a troopship having been requisitioned by the Ministry of Shipping on 31 Mar 1940. On 24 Mar 1941 she was part of the largest every convoy that sailed from the UK to Suez with 80,000 troops. Post war she returned New Zealand troops to their home along with released Australian POWs returned to Tasmania.


Returned to her owners on 15 May 1948 she was reconditioned in 1949 and returned to her earlier service via Bombay. She collided with a Norwegian cargo ship the Baalbek off Gravesend. Originally a two class ship, in 1961 she was converted to a single class ship for direct service London - Australian ports. Withdrawn from service on 27 Oct 1963 she was sold for use on the Karachi - Mecca pilgrimage service, and as a hotel ship at Jeddah. Renamed in 1966 to Henrietta Latsi, on 18 Apr 1967 she was laid up at Eleusis in Greece. Broken up for scrap in Italy during 1969.

Soldiers carried

Melbourne to Fremantle 11 - 16 October 1945