SS Djemnah

History
France
Name: Djemnah
Owner: Messageries Maritimes
Builder: Messageries Maritimes, La Ciotat
Launched: 1875
Fate: Sunk on 14 July 1918
General characteristics
Type: Passenger steamer
Tonnage: 3,716 GRT
Length: 125 m (410 ft 1 in)
Beam: 12.1 m (39 ft 8 in)
Speed: 14 knots (26 km/h; 16 mph)
Capacity: 1,385 passengers

SS Djemnah was a French cargo-passenger ship, launched in 1875, that was sunk in the Mediterranean by the German submarine UB-105 during the First World War.

The ship

The Djemnah was built in La Ciotat in 1875 for the shipping company Messageries Maritimes.

Displacing 5,400 tonnes, the ship was 125 metres long, with a beam of 12.1 metres. Her top speed was 14 knots. The ship could carry 1385 passengers (83 in First Class, 42 in Second, 60 in Third and 1,200 below decks). The ship was used as a line ship to the Far East and to the Southern Indian Ocean.

On 6 July 1918, the ship left from Marseilles for Madagascar, with a crew of 153, 601 passengers and 530 tons of cargo. On 14 July the ship was 69 nautical miles north from the Libyan coast when she was torpedoed at 21.32 by the German submarine UB-105 under command of Wilhelm Marschall. The ship sank in two minutes, taking with her 436 people, including the captain. 110 survivors were picked up by the trawler Presidency and 218 by the British escort HMS Mallow.

Coordinates: 33°12′00″N 23°55′00″E / 33.2000°N 23.9167°E / 33.2000; 23.9167

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