SS Scharnhorst (1904)
History | |
---|---|
Name: | Scharnhorst |
Owner: | Norddeutscher Lloyd |
Route: | Bremen - Australia |
Ordered: | 1902 |
Builder: | Joh. C. Tecklenborg, Geestemünde |
Yard number: | 181 |
Laid down: | 1902 |
Launched: | 1904 |
Fate: | 1919 seized by France, 1920 transferred to French Line and renamed La Bourdonnais. |
Status: | broken up in 1934 |
General characteristics | |
Class and type: | General class |
Tonnage: | 8,022 tons |
Displacement: | 13,500 tons |
Length: | 137 m |
Beam: | 17 m |
Draught: | 11 m |
Propulsion: | 2 triple-expansion steam engines, 6,000 shp |
Speed: | 14 knots |
Capacity: |
|
Crew: | 170 |
The SS Scharnhorst was a German passenger liner and mail ship launched in 1904. The ship was laid down at the Joh. C. Tecklenborg shipyard in Geestemünde, Germany, for the Norddeutscher Lloyd shipping company.
Scharnhorst belonged to a class of eleven steamers known as the Generals-class. Her sisterships were the steamships Zieten, Roon, Seydlitz, Gneisenau, Bülow, York, Kleist, Goeben, Lützow and Derfflinger, all built for the German Imperial Mail Service to Australia and the Far East. Occasionally these ships were run on the North Atlantic service of the Lloyd.
On 19 December 1908, Scharnhorst arrived in New York harbor, after having been delayed by inclement weather. Two passengers died on the trip, one killed by a wave that smashed him into the railing. Both passengers were buried the next day.[1]
When the First World War started she had made 19 round trips to Australia, seven to the Far East and five to the USA. She was the only ship of her class to be in Germany in 1914 and was used for some time in 1917 and 1918 as a troop transport in the Baltic Sea.
1919 she was seized by France and used from 1921 to 1931 in French service as La Bourdonnais. In 1934 the ship was broken up in Genoa.
References
- ↑ "The New York Times" (PDF). December 20, 1908. Retrieved January 24, 2008.
Literature
- Edwin Drechsel: Norddeutscher Lloyd Bremen, 1857–1970; History, Fleet, Ship Mails, vol. 1. Vancouver: Cordillera, 1995
External links
- SCHARNHORST (1904)/LA BOURDONNAIS [1921, at Palmer List of Merchant Vessels]
- Paquebot La Bourdonnais