Östanå II was delivered by, on Södermalm in Stockholm, as a sister ship to the slightly earlier Östanå I. She was delivered to her owners, Ångfartygs AB Östanå, in September 1908. In 1913, she was sold to Waxholms Nya Ångfartygs AB, better known as Waxholmsbolaget, who placed her in service on the route between Stockholm and Bergshamra. In 1940 she was moved to the route from Stockholm to Arholma, and in 1946 she was moved again to the route from Stockholm to .[1] [2] On the 18 August 1951, the Östanå II went aground on a trip from Svartlöga to Stockholm and started to take on water. All the passengers and crew were safely evacuated, and three days later the vessel was salvaged. However she was not repaired, and the following year she was sold for scrap, and taken in tow for a journey to a scrapyard in Newcastle upon Tyne in England. Whilst crossing the North Sea the tow was lost, but the Östanå II was then taken in tow by the Scottish steamship Quentin and taken to the River Tyne, where she was sold to CW Dorkin & Co of Gateshead and finally scrapped.[1] [3]