MV Royal Daffodil (1939)

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Name: MV Royal Daffodil
Owner: General Steam Navigation Co. Ltd.
Operator: General Steam Navigation Co. Ltd
Port of registry: London
Builder: William Denny and Sons, Dumbarton.
Launched: 24 January 1939[1]
Completed: May 1939[2]
In service: 1939
Out of service: 1967
Identification: Official Number 167210
Code Letters GSGL
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Fate: scrapped 1967
General characteristics
Tonnage: 2,060 GRT
Length: 299 feet 7 inches (91.31 m)[2]
Beam: 50 feet 1 inch (15.27 m)[2]
Propulsion: 2 x SCSA diesel engines (Wm Denny & Bros Ltd, Dumbarton) 841 horsepower (627 kW), Twin screws[2]
Speed: 21 knots (39 km/h)
Capacity: 2,073 passengers

MV Royal Daffodil was built in 1939 and scrapped in 1967. In the late 50s and early to mid 60s she was used for "no passport" trips to France, which enabled people to drink outside normal licensing hours as these did not apply at sea.

History

Royal Daffodil was launched in 1939, and quickly requisitioned for war service. Initially she was used for the evacuation of children from South East England to East Anglia.[3][4] She was one of the ships that took part in Operation Dynamo, the Dunkirk evacuation in 1940. She rescued 9.500 men in seven trips. On 2 June 1940, a bomb passed straight through her and exploded under her. The explosion caused a hole in the starboard side, and the Master ordered everyone to port side, which raised the hole out of the water and enabled a temporary patch to be applied. Royal Daffodil made it safely to Ramsgate and disembarked the evacuees. Later she was sailed to Deptford under her own power and repaired.[5][6] As well as the bomb, Royal Daffodil also survived machine gun and torpedo attacks.[7]

After the war, Royal Daffodil was refitted, and was used on sailings from Gravesend or Tilbury to France, also calling at Southend and Deal after a few seasons on this route. From 1955, she was used on sailings to France with live musical entertainment provided by top stars of the day. These included Gene Vincent in 1962 and Jerry Lee Lewis in 1963. Unfortunately these trips proved to be unprofitable and in 1966 Royal Daffodil made her last crossing. She was sold for scrap in the Netherlands in 1967, making the journey to the scrapyard under her own power.[5]

Official number and code letters

Official Numbers were a forerunner to IMO Numbers.

Royal Daffodil had the UK Official Number 167210 and used the Code Letters GSGL.[2] Royal Daffodil was allocated the IMO number 5530130 towards the end of her life.[1]

References