SS Virginian
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SS ''Drottningholm'' was one of the earliest
steam turbine A steam turbine is a machine that extracts thermal energy from pressurized steam and uses it to do mechanical work on a rotating output shaft. Its modern manifestation was invented by Charles Parsons in 1884. Fabrication of a modern steam turbin ...
ocean liner An ocean liner is a passenger ship primarily used as a form of transportation across seas or oceans. Ocean liners may also carry cargo or mail, and may sometimes be used for other purposes (such as for pleasure cruises or as hospital ships). Ca ...
s. She was designed as a transatlantic liner and mail ship for
Allan Line The Allan Shipping Line was started in 1819, by Alexander Allan (ship-owner), Captain Alexander Allan of Saltcoats, Ayrshire, trading and transporting between Scotland and Montreal, a route which quickly became synonymous with the Allan Line. By th ...
, built in Scotland, and launched in 1904 as RMS ''Virginian''. Her
sister ship A sister ship is a ship of the same class or of virtually identical design to another ship. Such vessels share a nearly identical hull and superstructure layout, similar size, and roughly comparable features and equipment. They often share a ...
, , was built in Ireland, launched four months earlier, and was the World's first turbine-powered liner. In the First World War ''Virginian'' spent a few months as a troopship and was then converted into an
armed merchant cruiser An armed merchantman is a merchant ship equipped with guns, usually for defensive purposes, either by design or after the fact. In the days of sail, piracy and privateers, many merchantmen would be routinely armed, especially those engaging in lo ...
(AMC). In August 1917 a U-boat damaged her with a torpedo. In 1920 she was sold to the
Swedish American Line Swedish American Line ( sv, Svenska Amerika Linien, abbr. SAL) was a Swedish passenger shipping line. It was founded in December 1914 under the name Rederiaktiebolaget Sverige-Nordamerika and began ocean liner service from Gothenburg to New Y ...
and remnamed ''Drottningholm''. As a neutral passenger ship during the Second World War she performed notable service repatriating thousands of civilians of various countries on both sides of the war. In 1948 ''Drottningholm'' was then sold to a company in the Italian Home Lines group, who changed her name to ''Brasil''. In 1951 Home Lines chartered her to Hamburg America Line, and the line her name changed again, this time to ''Homeland''. ''Homeland'' was scrapped in Italy in 1955.


Background

The World's first steam turbine merchant ship, , was launched in 1901. She was a technological and commercial success, but was only a excursion steamship making short-sea trips in and around the Firth of Clyde, and her running costs – and hence passenger fares – were higher than those of her competitors with conventional reciprocating engines. However, in October 1903 Allan Line announced that it had ordered a pair of new liners, that they would be turbine-powered, and that they would have the same three- screw arrangement as ''King Edward''. And on 28 January 1904, seven months before ''Victorian'' was launched, the Government of Canada announced it had awarded Allan Line a transatlantic mail contract. The Canadian contract required a regular scheduled service with four ships. Allan Line allocated the new ''Victorian'' and ''Virginian'', which were still being built, and its existing liners ''Bavarian'' and ''Tunisian''. The subsidy would be $5,000 per trip for ''Bavarian'' and ''Tunisian'', and $10,000 per trip for each of the new turbine ships.


Design and building

Allan Line ordered both ''Victorian'' and ''Virginian'' from
Workman, Clark and Company Workman, Clark and Company was a shipbuilding company based in Belfast. History The business was established by Frank Workman and George Clark in Belfast in 1879 and incorporated Workman, Clark and Company Limited in 1880. By 1895 it was the UK ...
in Belfast. But Workman, Clark did not find enough labour to build both ships in time, so the order for ''Virginian'' was transferred to Alexander Stephen and Sons at Linthouse on the River Clyde. ''Virginian'' was launched on 25 August 1904, four months after ''Victorian''. But ''Victorian'' completion was then delayed by performance problems with her turbines. Both sisters were completed in March 1905. As built, ''Virginian'' had three Parsons Marine Steam Turbine Company, Parsons turbines. A high-pressure turbine drove her middle screw. Its exhaust steam was fed to a pair of low-pressure turbines that drove her port and starboard screws. The three turbines combined gave her a total power output of 12,000 Horsepower#Indicated horsepower, IHP. ''Virginian'' was long, her beam was and her depth was . She had berths for 1,912 passengers: 426 in first class, 286 in second class and 1,000 in third class. Her holds had of Reefer ship, refrigerated space for perishable cargo. As built, her tonnages were and .


RMS ''Virginian''

''Virginian'' began her maiden voyage from Port of Liverpool, Liverpool on 6 April 1905, a fortnight after ''Victorian''. She called at Moville in Ireland the next day and reached Halifax, Nova Scotia on the morning of 14 April. Two months later ''Virginian'' set a westbound record, leaving Moville at 1400 hrs on 9 June and reaching Cape Race at 2100 hrs on 13 June. This was despite having to slow down for a bank of fog. The speed at which steam turbines run efficiently is several times faster than the speed at which marine propellers work efficiently. But the turbines in ''Victorian'' and ''Virginian'', like those in ''King Edward'', drove the propellers directly, without Gear train, reduction gearing. As a result ''Virginian'' suffered cavitation, which not only impedes propulsion but also damages propellers. ''Virginian'' also tended to roll (ship), roll violently in heavy seas.


''Titanic'' sinking

By 1912 ''Virginian'' was equipped for wireless telegraphy, operating on the 300 and 600 metre wavelengths. Her Maritime call sign, call sign was MGN. When RMS ''Titanic'' sank on 15 April 1912, ''Virginian'' was about north of her, steaming in the opposite direction. At 2310 hrs (0040 hrs ship's time) the Marconi Company radio station at Cape Race relayed ''Titanic''s distress messages to ''Virginian'', whose Master mariner, Master, Captain Gambell changed course to try to reach ''Titanic''. ''Virginian'' also received ''Titanic''s distress signals. The last signal ''Virginian'' received from ''Titanic'' was at 0027 hrs (0157 hrs by ship's time), and "these signals were blurred and ended abruptly". reached the position of the sinking and rescued 705 survivors. There was a false report that ''Virginian'' rescued some passengers and transferred them to ''Carpathia''. In fact ''Virginian'' did not arrive in time to assist. There was also a false report that ''Virginian'' had taken ''Titanic'' in tow, that all of ''Titanic''s passengers were safe, and that Herbert Haddock, Master of , was the source of the report. Haddock, however, dismissed the report as "a flagrant invention". Captain Gambell said ''Virginian'' passed where ''Titanic'' sank "at a distance of six or seven miles", but could get no closer as "The ice was closely packed... and there would have been great danger in going nearer. No boats, packages or wreckage were to be seen." Gambell said ''Virginian'' steamed toward ''Titanic'', until at 1000 hrs ''Carpathia'' signalled ''Virginian'' "Turn back. Everything O. K. Have 800 on board. Return to your northern track".


Substitute for ''Empress of Ireland''

On 29 May 1914 CP Ships, Canadian Pacific lost the liner in a collision with the collier , and 1,024 people were killed. Canadian Pacific Chartering (shipping), chartered ''Virginian'' from Allan Line to replace her. The charter was cut short by the First World War, which began on 28 July.


First World War

From August 1914 the UK Government used ''Virginian'' as a troop ship. Then in December the British Admiralty requisitioned her and had her converted into an armed merchant cruiser (AMC). Initially her armament was eight QF 4.7-inch Mk I – IV naval gun, 4.7-inch QF guns and her pennant number was M 72. She was commissioned as HMS ''Virginian'' on 10 December 1914. ''Virginian'' joined the 10th Cruiser Squadron, with which she was on the Northern Patrol from December 1914 until the end of June 1917. She patrolled mostly around the Faroe Islands and the northern part of the Western Approaches. In 1915 she occasionally patrolled the Norwegian Sea and the east and south coasts of Iceland. By October 1915 two of ''Virginian''s 4.7-inch guns were replaced with QF 6-pounder Hotchkiss#United Kingdom service, six-pounder guns. On 16 June 1916 ''Virginian'' arrived in Canada Dock in Liverpool to have her remaining 4.7-inch guns were replaced with six BL 6-inch Mk VII naval gun, BL 6-inch and QF 6-inch naval guns. She was there for just over two months, until 18 August, and the Admiralty became concerned that the conversion took an inordinately long time. By October 1916 ''Virginian''s armament also included depth charges.


Convoy escort

From the beginning of July 1917 ''Virginian'' escorted transatlantic convoys. On 19 August 1917 ''Virginian'' left Liverpool escorting a convoy, which called at Lough Swilly on 20–21 August. U-boats attacked the convoy off the coast of County Donegal, Donegal. torpedoed Frederick Richards Leyland, Leyland Line's liner ''Devonian'' at 1152 hrs, and she sank at 1245 hrs about northeast of Tory Island. ''U-53'' also sank the Union Company, Union Steamship Company's cargo liner ''Roscommon''. At 1312 hrs ''Virginian'' sighted a periscope off her starboard bow and turned to engage the submarine. It was , which hit ''Virginian'' with a torpedo on her starboard quarter, killing three of her crew. The Magazine (artillery)#Naval magazines, magazines for her six-inch guns and part of her number five hold were flooded, but ''Virginian'' remained afloat. ''Virginian'' tried to return to Lough Swilly, but found it very difficult to steer. The destroyer tried to assist but failed. Nevertheless ''Virginian'' managed to reach Lough Swilly, and anchored at 2048 hrs. ''Virginian'' underwent temporary repairs, and then on 4–5 September 1917 returned to Liverpool, where she was dry docked from 7 September until 16 November and returned to sea on 4 December. In 1918 her pennant number was changed twice: to MI 95 in January and MI 52 in April. She continued to escort transatlantic convoys until just after the Armistice of 11 November 1918, Armistice. She reached Liverpool on 30 November 1918 and was decommissioned some time thereafter. Canadian Pacific had taken over Allan Line in 1917. The Admiralty released ''Virginian'' to her new owners, and in 1919 she was registered in Port of Montreal, Montreal.


''Drottningholm''

In 1920 Swedish America Line bought ''Virginian'', reportedly for the equivalent of $100,000, and renamed her ''Drottningholm'', after a small community near Stockholm that includes the Swedish royal family, royal Drottningholm Palace. Götaverken in Port of Gothenburg, Gothenburg refitted ''Drottningholm'', and particularly improved her third class accommodation. As refitted she had berths for 280 cabin class, 300 second class and 700 third class passengers. ''Drottningholm'' sailed from Gothenburg for the first time at the end of May, and arrived in New York City, New York for the first time on 9 June. She retained her notoriety for rolling, and her new name inspired the nickname "Rollingholm" or "Rollinghome". SAL had carried significant numbers of Swedish Americans, Swedish migrants to the USA, but in the 1920s new List of United States immigration laws, US immigration laws affected the transatlantic trade. In May 1921 the Federal Government implemented the Emergency Quota Act, and allotted Sweden a quota for 20,000 migrants a year. Barely two months later, on 15 July, immigration authorities in New York detained 78 of ''Drottningholm''s second-class passengers on arrival. After four hours a message from Washington, D.C. confirming that the quota for Sweden had not been fulfilled, and all 78 were allowed to land. In 1922 Götaverken re-engined ''Drottningholm'' with new Gustaf de Laval, A/B De Lavals Ångturbin turbines. They were less powerful than her original Parsons turbines, because SAL wanted better fuel economy, but she could still do . Götaverken also replaced her direct drive with single-reduction gearing, which at last solved her cavitation problem. At the same time Götaverken enlarged her superstructure by extending her bridge deck aft. ''Drottningholm'' returned to service in 1923. By 1930 ''Drottningholm''s tonnages were and . In 1934 her Swedish code letters KCMH were superseded by the Maritime call sign, call sign SJMA. On 8 January 1935 while ''Drottningholm'' was docking in fog at West 57th Street Pier in New York a steel cable fouled one of her propellers. Her return sailing was deferred from 12 to 15 January to allow time for her to be repaired in dry dock. In 1937 ''Drottningholm''s hull was repainted white.


Notable passengers

In 1925 Greta Garbo and Mauritz Stiller sailed to the USA on ''Drottingholm'', leaving Gothenburg on 26 June and arriving in New York 10 days later. On 30 December 1928 the newly-wed Folke Bernadotte, Count and Estelle Bernadotte, Countess House of Bernadotte, Bernadotte left New York for Gothenburg on ''Drottningholm''. The couple returned to the USA on ''Drottningholm'' in June 1933. In 1932 ''Drottningholm'' took Swedish athletes home from the 1932 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.


Second World War

In the Second World War Sweden was neutral, and until December 1941 so was the USA. At first ''Drottningholm'' continued the service between Gothenburg and New York. By the end of January 1940 ''Drottningholm'' was the only SAL passenger liner still operating between Gothenburg and New York. On 3 February, 150 Finnish Americans, Finnish-American and Finnish Canadians, Finnish-Canadian Foreign support of Finland in the Winter War, volunteers to fight for Finland in the Winter War sailed on ''Drottningholm'' from New York. In March 1940 Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn from Occupation of Poland (1939–1945), German-occupied Poland reached New York aboard ''Drottningholm''. Later in the war the US, UK and French governments each chartered ''Drottningholm'' to repatriate civilian internees, prisoners of war (PoWs) and diplomats between the two belligerent sides. She also carried PoWs and civilians for the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, Red Cross. One source states that ''Drottningholm'' repatriated 14,093 people. Another says she made 14 voyages and repatriated about 18,160 people. Another states that between 1940 and 1946 she made 30 voyages and carried about 25,000 people. The discrepancy may be because in August 1945 ''Drottningholm'' reverted from charter trips to her regular commercial Gothenburg – New York route, but she continued to carry refugees from Europe to North America. In March 1942 the United States Department of State, US Department of State and United States Maritime Commission, US Maritime Commission chartered ''Drottningholm'' via an arrangement with Nazi Germany, Germany and the other Axis powers, facilitated by the Swiss and Swedish governments and with the cooperation of 15 Latin American republics who had also broken off diplomatic relations with the Axis. On her first eastbound voyage she left from New York on 7 May 1942 for Port of Lisbon, Lisbon carrying Bulgarian, German, Italian, Romanian nationals including ambassadors and diplomats. Her first westbound voyage was from Lisbon on 22 May, reaching New York on 1 June. Her passengers included the US diplomats Leland B. Morris and George F. Kennan. ''Drottningholm'' started her second eastbound crossing from Jersey City, New Jersey, Jersey City on 3 June 1942 carrying 985 Axis nationals, including diplomats. On 12 June she reached Lisbon, where she was held to await trains from Axis countries carrying people for repatriation to the Americas. By 21 June she had embarked either 941 or 949 passengers at Lisbon for repatriation to both North and South America. Many had been released from Nazi concentration camps. When ''Drottningholm'' reached New York on 30 June 1942, US immigration authorities and military and naval intelligence personnel came aboard and prevented her passengers from disembarking until they had searched the ship and questioned each of the passengers. They included 470 US citizens, 110 South American diplomats and nationals, and a group of Canadian women rescued from the Kingdom of Egypt, Egyptian liner , which the had sunk in April 1941. US officials released about 125 passengers on 2 July and allowed them ashore. First to be released was the reporter Ruth Mitchell, Ruth Knowles, who had escaped execution by the Gestapo after spending a year serving with the Chetniks resisting the World War II in Yugoslavia, German and Italian occupation of Yugoslavia. By 3 July nearly 700 passengers were still being held aboard. and by 8 July about 400 had been released, but 300 had been detained on Ellis Island until their cases were decided. At the end of June 1942 the Government of Nazi Germany, Nazi government withdrew its guarantee of safe passage for the ship, which prevented further exchanges. On 15 July ''Drottningholm'' left New York for Gothenburg carrying at least 800 Axis nationals. Most were German or Italian, plus a few Bulgarians and Romanians. ''Drottningholm'' continued to serve the UK and French governments as a repatriation ship. Her white hull was emblazoned on both sides with her name and "Sverige" ("Sweden") in huge capital letters, between them were stripes of blue and yellow, the colours of the Swedish flag, and above them was the word "Diplomat". As a neutral ship she was fully lit so that her markings could be easily seen. By 1945 the word "Diplomat" had been replaced with "Freigeleit – Protected". In October 1943 ''Drottningholm'' and arrived in the Firth of Forth carrying a total of about 4,000 Allied PoWs. They nicknamed ''Drottningholm'' "Trotting Home". On 15 or 16 March 1944 ''Drottningholm'' reached Jersey City from Lisbon with 662 passengers including 160 civilian internees from Ilag#Vittel, Vittel internment camp, 35 or 36 wounded US servicemen and a group of US diplomats from the former Vichy France, which Case Anton, Germany and Italy had occupied since November 1942. Internees released from Vittel included Mary Berg and her family. ''Drottningholm''s previous eastbound voyage had returned about 750 Germans to Europe. In summer 1944 the Swiss government facilitated an agreement between the German and UK governments to repatriate almost all of each other's interned civilian nationals. ''Drottningholm'' was chartered, and on 11 July reached Lisbon carrying 900 German nationals who had been interned in Union of South Africa, South Africa. She was then to await three trains carrying UK nationals from German-occupied Europe. 900 UK civilians and PoWs were brought by train under International Red Cross protection from German-occupied countries to Lisbon. However, by summer 1944 French Resistance#1944: The height of the Resistance, the French Resistance was at its height, sabotaging rail and road transport in France, and especially in the southwest toward the Spanish frontier. The trains had left Germany on 6 July but were struggling to cross France. By 16 July the trains still had not arrived, so the UK was threatening to return the German internees to South Africa on ''Drottningholm''. However, on 21 July trains carrying 414 UK and other evacuees from Germany reached Irun railway station, Irun on the Spanish frontier, where they changed to Spanish trains to continue toward Lisbon. On 4 August ''Drottningholm'' at last left Lisbon taking them to England. In September 1944 the Swedish Red Cross arranged an exchange of 2,345 Allies of World War II, Allied PoWs for a similar number of Germans. The Allied PoWs would be brought by sea and land to Gothenburg, where they would embark on ''Drottningholm'', and the UK Troopship, troop ship . When the Allied prisoners reached Gothenburg their number was reported to be 2,600. In March 1945 the UK and Germany agreed via Swiss and Swedish intermediaries to another exchange of civilian internees via ''Drottningholm''. On 15 March she left Gothenburg carrying UK internees, Argentinian and Turkish diplomats, Portuguese nationals and 212 released Channel Islands internees. She had landed the Channel Islands and UK nationals in Liverpool by 23 March and was then due to take the Argentinians and Portuguese to Lisbon and the Turks to Istanbul. On 11 April she arrived in Istanbul, carrying 137 Turkish Jews who had been released from Ravensbrück concentration camp, Ravensbrück and Bergen-Belsen concentration camps as part of a prisoner exchange. Turkish authorities temporarily refused entry to 119 of her passengers. On 3 May, the eve of the German surrender at Lüneburg Heath, German unconditional surrender, ''Drottningholm'' was in Lisbon where she was meant to embark 200 Germans to be repatriated. But 61 of them refused to go, and the Portuguese authorities were reported to be assessing them as civilian refugees.


Post-war service

''Drottningholm'' started a Gothenburg – Liverpool – New York service in late August 1945 and was expected to reach Gothenburg from New York by this route for the first time on 6 September. On 22 July 1946 ''Drottningholm'' completed her first radar-equipped voyage from Gothenburg to New York. That August ''Drottningholm'' and ''Gripsholm'' resumed a fortnightly direct service between Gothenburg and New York. On 16 September 1946 ''Drottningholm'' was in the middle of a New York labour dispute. 24 police officers encircled 10 National Maritime Union Picketing, pickets to separate them from International Longshoremen's Association men who crossed the picket line to work the ship. On 29 October 1946 SAL announced that at the end of the year it would sell ''Drottningholm'' and that her buyers would register her in Panama and operate her between Port of Genoa, Genoa and Argentina. However, the sale depended on ''Drottningholm''s replacement, the ''MV Astoria, Stockholm'', being completed and entering service in time. ''Stockholm'' had been launched on 6 September but did not enter service until February 1948, which delayed ''Drottningholm''s sale. The sale price was not disclosed, but was reported to be in the order of $1,000,000. By February 1948 ''Drottningholm'' was recorded as having made 220 transatlantic crossings for SAL, carried 192,735 transatlantic passengers and taken 12,882 people on cruises. She was also reported to have taken part in four rescues at sea, including two from Norwegian ships called ''Solglimt'' and ''Isefjell''. ''Drottningholm''s final westbound crossing for SAL took 11 days. She weathered three storms, was forced to Heaving to, heave to for 43 hours and was covered with ice when she reached New York two days late on 11 February 1948. Her Master, John Nordlander, called it the worst passage he had had in 350 Atlantic crossings. The ship left New York for her final eastbound crossing as ''Drottningholm'' on 13 February.


Home Lines

The company that bought ''Drottningholm'' in 1948, renamed her ''Brasil'' and Flag of convenience, registered her in Panama is variously reported to have been the Panamanian Navigation Company or South American Lines. It was associated with the Italian Home Lines, and SAL was a major shareholder. ''Brasil''s new route was between Genoa and Port of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro. In 1951 the ship was refitted in Italy with modern, more spacious accommodation for fewer passengers, and reduced tonnage. Her ownership was transferred to Mediterranean Lines, Hamburg America Line chartered her, renamed her ''Homeland'' and put her on a route between Hamburg and New York via Port of Southampton, Southampton and Halifax, NS. In 1952 the ship was transferred to the route between Genoa and New York via Port of Naples, Naples and Port of Barcelona, Barcelona. From 1953 she was owned directly by Home Lines. The ship served for half a century. When built she was a technological pioneer. In one world war she was a warship and survived being torpedoed. In another she was a peace ship and did notable humanitarian work. By the end of her career was the oldest liner in scheduled transatlantic service. In 1955 she was sold to the Società Italiana di Armamento (Sidarma), who scrapped her at Port of Trieste, Trieste. The liner was 50 years old by then and, other than the shore tender ''Nomadic'', was the last surviving ship in connection with the ''Titanic'' incident as well as the last former member of the Allan Line.


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