SS Königin Luise (1896)

For other ships with the same name, see SS Königin Luise.
Königin Luise arriving in Fremantle, 1919
History
Germany
Name: Königin Luise
Namesake: Queen Louise of Prussia
Owner: Norddeutscher Lloyd
Builder:
Yard number: 232
Launched: 17 October 1896
Fate: Handed to Great Britain as war reparations April 10, 1919
History
United Kingdom
Name: Königin Luise
Owner: UK Shipping Controller
Operator: Orient Steam Navigation Company London
Acquired: 1919
Fate: sold to Orient Steam Navigation Company London
History
United Kingdom
Name: Omar
Owner: Orient Steam Navigation Company London
Operator: Orient Steam Navigation Company London
Acquired: Jan 1921
Fate: Sold to Byron SS Co, London July 1924
History
United Kingdom
Name: Edison
Owner: Byron SS Co London
Operator: Byron SS Co London
Acquired: July 1924
Fate: scrapped in Italy 1935
General characteristics
Class and type: Barbarossa-class ocean liner
Tonnage: 11,103 GRT
Length:

523.1 ft (159.4 m) p/p

552 ft (168 m) o/a
Beam: 60.1 ft (18.3 m)
Depth: 34.9 ft (10.6 m)
Installed power: 846 NHP, 8,000 hp or 6,000 kW
Propulsion: two quadruple-expansion steam engines, twin screws
Speed: 15 knots (28 km/h)
Complement: 231

SS Königin Luise was a Barbarossa-class ocean liner built in 1896 by Vulcan Shipbuilding Corp. of Stettin, Germany, for the North German Lloyd line of Bremen.

In World War I, Königin Luise was one of only two ships of the class to avoid being interned in neutral ports, spending the war in German ports.

After World War I Königin Luise was allocated as war reparations to the United Kingdom, sold to the Orient Steam Navigation Company in 1921 and renamed Omar. She was sold again in 1924 to the Byron SS Co of London and operated on the Piraeus – New York service until scrapped in 1935.[1]

Königin Luise

Königin Luise was built by AG Vulcan for the North German Lloyd (NDL) line and completed 17 March 1896.

Along with her sister ships Friedrich der Grosse, Barbarossa and Bremen, the Königin Luise worked Australian, Far East, and North Atlantic routes for NDL. On Australian and Far East voyages she used the Suez Canal, and was one of the largest ships regularly using the canal.

At the outbreak of World War I Königin Luise was in port in Germany, thus avoiding internment, and due to the Royal Navy blockade, she was laid up.

Following the Armistice, she was allocated as war reparations to the UK, and was surrendered to the UK Shipping Controller on 10 April 1919. She was allocated to the Orient Steam Navigation Company.

In mid 1919, she departed from Devonport, England, carrying Australian troops returning home, including Victoria Cross winner James Park Woods.[2] On 20 October 1919, British troops embarked her (now described as HT Konigin Luise) in India to travel to England. On 8 September 1920, during her first London – Australia voyage, she collided at Lisbon with the British steamship Loughborough, which sank.

Omar

In January 1921 the ship was sold to the Orient Steam Navigation Company, which renamed her Omar.

Edison

The ship was again sold in July 1924 to Byron SS Co. of London, and renamed Edison. She worked the Piraeus – New York route until being scrapped in 1935 in Italy.

References

  1. Arnold Kludas. Great Passenger Ships of the World Vol 1 1858-1912. Patrick Stephens Ltd. p. 18. ISBN 0-85059-174-0.
  2. Jarrett, Ian (21 April 2014). "Tale of two ships". The West Australian. Retrieved 31 December 2015.

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