SS Cymric
<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
![]() SS Cymric
|
|
History | |
---|---|
![]() ![]() |
|
Name: | SS Cymric |
Owner: | White Star Line |
Builder: | Harland and Wolff, Belfast |
Yard number: | 316 |
Launched: | 12 October 1897 |
Completed: | 5 February 1898 |
Maiden voyage: | 29 April 1898 |
Fate: | Torpedoed by German U-boat U-20 on 8 May 1916. |
General characteristics | |
Tonnage: | 12,552 gross register tons (GRT) |
Length: | Lua error in Module:Convert at line 272: attempt to index local 'cat' (a nil value). |
Beam: | 64 ft 3 in (19.58 m) |
Speed: | 15 knots |
Capacity: |
|
SS Cymric was a steamship of the White Star Line built by Harland and Wolff in Belfast and launched on 12 October 1897. She had originally been designed as a combination passenger liner and livestock carrier, with accommodations for only First Class passengers. During the stages of her design layout, it became clearer to the designers at Harland and Wolff that combining passengers and livestock had become rather unpopular, so the spaces designated for cattle were reconfigured into Third Class accommodations. She departed Liverpool on her maiden voyage on 29 April 1898, arriving in New York City on 9 May 1898. She spent the first five years of her career on the White Star Line's main passenger service route between Liverpool and New York, until 1903 when she was transferred to the less traveled Liverpool-Boston route, which she sailed on for nine years before being returned to the Liverpool route in 1912.
War service
During both the Boer War and the First World War she was pressed into service as a troop and cargo transport. In 1914, Cymric transported British soldiers to France.[1]
In August 1915, under the command of Captain Frank E. Beadnell, Cymric delivered 17,000 tons of ammunition from New York to Liverpool, one of the biggest shipment of such kind from the United States since the start of the war.[2] She continued to shuttle between the Atlantic coast of the United States and Great Britain carrying cargo and passengers until her last voyage in April 1916.
On 29 April 1916, Cymric finished her loading in New York and sailed for Liverpool with 112 people on board including 5 or 6 passengers (sources vary) with captain Beadnell in command. On 8 May 1916, she was torpedoed three times 140 miles west-north-west off Fastnet Rock, Ireland by Walther Schwieger's U-20, which had sunk RMS Lusitania a year earlier.[3] Torpedo explosion in the port side of her engine room instantly killed 4 crew members. Cymric sank the next day, altogether five lives were lost as one sailor had fell into the sea during evacuation and drowned.[4] Since all who died were British citizens, there were no international repurcassions. While the general location of her sinking is known, Cymric's wreck has not been located.[5]
Between 1914 and 1918 about 50 large oceangoing passenger steamships converted to war purposes as floating hospitals and troop transports were sunk in the Atlantic by the German navy,[6] and SS Cymric came to be the thirty-seventh in the list.[7]
References
<templatestyles src="Reflist/styles.css" />
Cite error: Invalid <references>
tag; parameter "group" is allowed only.
<references />
, or <references group="..." />
External links
![]() |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cymric (ship, 1897). |
- Description of Cymric
- Sinking of Cymric
- Cymric Photo Gallery, Maritimequest
- ↑ Westlake, Ray. British Battalions in France and Belgium, 1914. London: Leo Cooper, 1997, p. 34.
- ↑ The New York Times, September 27, 1915.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ SS Cymric, White Star History
- ↑ The Sinking of the Lusitania at 100: Passenger Ships in World War I, US Naval Institute, May 7, 2015
- ↑ Nolan, Liam, and John E. Nolan. Secret Victory: Ireland and the War at Sea, 1914-1918. Cork: Mercier Press, 2009, p. 144.
- Pages with reference errors
- Commons category link is locally defined
- Ships of the White Star Line
- Ships built in Belfast
- Passenger ships of the United Kingdom
- Steamships of the United Kingdom
- World War I shipwrecks in the English Channel
- Ships sunk by German submarines in World War I
- Maritime incidents in 1916
- 1897 ships
- Ships built by Harland and Wolff