TSS Atalanta (1907)
History | |
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Name: |
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Port of registry: | |
Ordered: | January 1907 |
Builder: | Gourlay Brothers, Dundee |
Laid down: | 29 January 1907 |
Launched: | 26 April 1907[1] |
Fate: | Unknown |
General characteristics | |
Tonnage: | 550 gross register tons (GRT) |
Length: | 170 feet (52 m) |
Beam: | 32 feet (9.8 m) |
Draught: | 16.5 feet (5.0 m) |
TSS Atalanta was a passenger vessel built for the London and South Western Railway in 1907.[2]
History
She was built by Gourlay Brothers in Dundee for the London and South Western Railway. She was launched on 26 April 1907[3] by Miss Drummond, daughter of Mr Drummond, chief engineer of the Highland Railway Company, in the presence of her father and Mr. Douglas Drummond, chief engineer of the London and South Western Railway Company; Mr Drummond, jun. She was employed as a tender until 1910 when she was sold to the Great Western Railway. In 1913 she was in collision with a submerged rock near Bolt Head in Devon, when she was on an excursion trip from Plymouth to Torquay.[4]
During the First World War she was hired by the Admiralty and used as a rescue tug around the Isles of Scilly. She was renamed Atalanta III.
She returned to Plymouth after the war but was laid up out of use until sold to the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company in 1923[5] who purchased her as a tender for Bermuda.[6]
References
- ↑ "Important Dundee Launch". Dundee Courier. Dundee. 27 April 1907. Retrieved 13 October 2015 – via British Newspaper Archive. (subscription required (help)).
- ↑ Duckworth, Christian Leslie Dyce; Langmuir, Graham Easton (1968). Railway and other Steamers. Prescot, Lancashire: T. Stephenson and Sons,.
- ↑ "Important Dundee Launch". Dundee Courier. Dundee. 27 April 1907. Retrieved 13 October 2015 – via British Newspaper Archive. (subscription required (help)).
- ↑ "Excursion Mishap". Cheltenham Chronicle. Cheltenham. 12 July 1913. Retrieved 13 October 2015 – via British Newspaper Archive. (subscription required (help)).
- ↑ Kittridge, Alan (1993). Plymouth – Ocean Liner Port of Call. Truro: Twelveheads Press. ISBN 0-906294-30-4.
- ↑ "The Atalanta". Western Morning News. England. 18 May 1923. Retrieved 13 October 2015 – via British Newspaper Archive. (subscription required (help)).