TSS Maunganui explained
The
TSS Maunganui (later
S/S Cyrenia) was a passenger vessel built by
Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company,
Govan for the
Union Steamship Company of New Zealand and launched on 24 August 1911.
Career
Launched in 1911 to carry the Royal Mail and served on the San Francisco and Sydney runs. She was employed as a troopship during World War I and World War II. She was sold to Cia Naviera del Atlantica, Piraeus in 1948 and renamed Cyrenia. She was sold in 1949 to Hellenic Mediterranean Lines and undertook service from Genoa and Piraeus to Fremantle, Melbourne and Sydney, carrying Greek, Italian and Jewish refugees and migrants.[1] [2] [3]
Fate
On 1 November 1956 she left Melbourne for the last time, arriving in Savona, Italy, on 6 February 1957 for ship breaking.[4]
Cultural legacy
In Greece the S/S Cyrenia is prominent due to Nikos Kavvadias' poem "The Seven Dwarves on the S/S Cyrenia and Thanos Mikroutsikos' song mentioning the ship.[5] [6] Kavvadias was the ship's radio operator.
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: History - Time line . T. S. S. Maunganui 1911 - 1947, Cyrenia 1947 - 1957 . The New Zealand Maritime Record . 12 September 2018.
- Web site: Union Line ofNew Zealand: SS Maunganui 1911 -1947 / Hellenic Medterranian Lines TSS Cyrenia 1947 - 1957. . ssMaritime.com - with around 1,120 Classic Liners and Passenger-Cargo Ships online. . ssMaritime.com . 12 September 2018.
- Web site: JDC - Archives : S.S. Cyrenia. Joint Distribution Committee. 2020-04-22.
- Book: Plowman, Peter. Australian Migrant Ships 1946 - 1977. 2006. Rosenberg Publishing. 978-1-877058-40-0. 54. en.
- Νίκος Καββαδίας, Οι Εφτά Νάνοι στο s/s CYRENIA.
- Θάνος Μικρούτσικος, Οι Εφτά Νάνοι στο S/S CYRENIA