SS Nottingham (1891)

History
Name:
  • 1891-1915:SS Nottingham
  • 1915-1918:SS Notts
  • 1918-1935:SS Nottingham
Operator:
Port of registry: United Kingdom
Builder: Swan Hunter
Yard number: 164
Launched: 13 March 1891
Out of service: 1935
Fate: Scrapped
General characteristics
Tonnage: 1,033 gross register tons (GRT)
Length: 240.2 feet (73.2 m)
Beam: 32 feet (9.8 m)
Depth: 15.2 feet (4.6 m)

SS Nottingham was a passenger and freight vessel built for the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway in 1891.[1]

History

The ship was built by Swan Hunter in Wallsend and launched on 13 March 1891. She was placed on the Grimsby to Hamburg route with her sister ships SS Lutterworth and SS Staveley, but in 1897 she was transferred to the Grimsby to Rotterdam service.

In 1897 she was acquired by the Great Central Railway. On 11 December 1912 she went ashore in thick fog on Scrooby Sands. Despite the efforts of the tug, United Service, she could not be got off, so the 12 passengers were taken by United Service to Yarmouth, and landed them in the afternoon. She was refloated later that day.[2] A year later, on 26 December 1913, she was grounded again, this time on a mud bank near the Royal Dock in Grimsby.[3]

In 1915 she was requisitioned by the Admiralty as a naval supply vessel and became HMS Notts. After the war she was refurbished and returned to the Great Central Railway as SS Nottingham. In 1923 she was acquired by the London and North Eastern Railway who kept her in service until she was scrapped in 1935.

References

  1. Duckworth, Christian Leslie Dyce; Langmuir, Graham Easton (1968). Railway and other Steamers. Prescot, Lancashire: T. Stephenson and Sons.
  2. "Railway Steamer Ashore. Passengers and Baggage Landed by Tug". Aberdeen Journal. Scotland. 12 December 1912. Retrieved 6 November 2015 via British Newspaper Archive. (subscription required (help)).
  3. "Steamer Aground at Grimsby". Yorkshire Post. England. 26 December 1913. Retrieved 6 November 2015 via British Newspaper Archive. (subscription required (help)).
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