SS Ellesmere (1906) explained

-- commercial vessels -->
Ship Name:Ellesmere
Ship Owner:Watson Steamship Co.
Ship Registry: Manchester
Ship Builder:Anderson Rodger and Company, Port Glasgow, Scotland
Ship Launched:18 October 1906
Ship Completed:22 November 1906
Ship Identification:Official number

119600

Ship Fate:Sunk by submarine, 7 July 1915
Ship Type:Freighter
Ship Power:
  • 173 nhp
Ship Propulsion:1 screw propeller; 1 triple-expansion steam engine
Ship Speed:10.5kn

SS Ellesmere was a small freighter built during the First World War. Completed in 1915, she was intended for the West African trade. The ship was sunk by the German submarine SM U-20 in July 1915.

Description

Ellesmere had an overall length of 244.6feet, with a beam of 36feet and a draught of 15.95feet. The ship was assessed at and . She had a vertical triple-expansion steam engine driving a single screw propeller. The engine was rated at a total of 173 nominal horsepower and produced 1090ihp. This gave her a maximum speed of 10.5kn.[1]

Construction and career

Ellesmere, named after Ellesmere, a lake near Ellesmere, Shropshire,[2] was laid down as yard number 266 by Anderson Rodger and Company at its shipyard in Port Glasgow, Scotland, for the Watson Steamship Co. The ship was launched on 18 October 1906 and completed on 22 November. She was enroute to Manchester from Valencia, Spain, with a cargo of fruit when she was torpedoed and sunk by U-20 west of Smalls Lighthouse on 7 July 1915.[1]

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Fenton, p. S645
  2. Fenton, p. S651