RMS Pretoria Castle (1947) explained
Pretoria Castle (later
S.A. Oranje) was an ocean liner operated by the
Union-Castle Line in service between Britain and South Africa during the mid 20th century.She was built by Harland and Wolff of
Belfast at a cost of £2.5 million, and was launched on 19 August 1947, with her christening performed by the wife of South African Prime Minister
Jan Smuts.
[1] [2] [3] She made her maiden voyage in July 1948.
[2] In 1953, she was present for the fleet review as part of the
Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II.
[1] She was refit twice in the mid-1960s, with modifications externally to her masts and internally with the addition of air conditioning and added private bathrooms.
[2] [3] In January 1966, she was sold to South African shipping company
Safmarine via its British subsidiary and renamed
S.A. Oranje, though she continued in Union Castle service and was manned by that company's crew until 1969, when Safmarine took full control and she was registered in South Africa.
[3] She made her last revenue run in September 1975 after fuel oil prices rose sharply in the preceding years, and sailed for scrapping in Taiwan in November.
[3] [1] Pretoria Castle measured 28,705 gross register tons, and was 747feet long with a beam of 84feet.[1] She was powered by steam turbines, which drove twin propellers that gave her a service speed of 22kn.[1] She had a passenger capacity of 755 - 214 in first class and 541 in tourist class - and a crew of 400.[1] [2]
Notes and References
- Book: Picture History of British Ocean Liners 1900 to the Present . Dover Publications . Miller Jr., William H. . 2001 . Mineola, NY . 68 . 0-486-41532-5 .
- Web site: Union-Castle Line . Shipping: Yesterday & Today . 9 August 2016 . 3 December 2017 . Middlemiss, Norman.
- Book: Union-Castle Liners: From Great Britain to Africa 1946-1977 . Amberley Publishing . Miller Jr., William H. . 2013 . 9781445624303.