RMS Windsor Castle (1922)
Windsor Castle at Cape Town, South Africa. | |
Career (UK) | |
---|---|
Name: | SS Windsor Castle |
Owner: | Union-Castle Line |
Port of registry: | Southampton, United Kingdom |
Builder: | John Brown & Company, Clydebank, Scotland |
Launched: | 9 March 1921 |
Maiden voyage: | April 1922 |
Fate: | Sunk on 23 March 1943 by an enemy aircraft off Algiers, Algeria |
General characteristics | |
Tonnage: | 18,967 gross register tons (GRT), 19,141 gross register tons (GRT) after 1937 refit. |
Length: | 661 ft(201.9 m), lengthened to 686 ft (209.6 m) after 1937 refit. |
Beam: | 72.5 ft (22.2 m) |
Propulsion: | Steam turbines turning two propellers. |
Speed: | 17 knots. 20 knots after 1937 refit. |
Capacity: | 870, reduced to 604 during 1937 refit. |
The first RMS Windsor Castle, along with her sister, SS Arundel Castle, was an ocean liner laid down by the Union-Castle Line for service from the United Kingdom to South Africa. Originally laid down in 1916, their construction was held up by the First World War. They were not completed until 1922. They were the only four-stacked ocean liners built for a route other than the transatlantic. During the thirties, Windsor and Arundel were given refits to make them look more modern. This included reducing their funnels from four to two, and they both were given raked, more modern bows, which slightly increased their length.
Commissioned as a troop transport in the Second World War, the Windsor Castle was sunk by enemy aircraft in 1942 while in the Mediterranean Sea as part of convoy KMF-11, by a torpedo launched from a German aircraft. She was hit by the torpedo at 02:30 but did not sink until 17:25, 110 miles WNW of Algiers, Algeria. Only one crewman, Junior Engineer Officer William Ogilvie Mann, died. 2,699 troops and 289 crew were removed by the destroyers HMS Whaddon, HMS Eggesford, and HMS Douglas.
External links
Coordinates: 37°28′N 01°10′E / 37.467°N 1.167°E
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