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RMS Mooltan

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RMS Mooltan

Image:RMS Malojo in Colour.jpg
RMS Mooltan

Career Image:Civil Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg
Nationality British
Port London
Owner: Peninsular & Oriental Steam Navigation Company.
Service: London, India, China, Australia, mail and passenger service.
Ordered: 1918, Yard No 587
Builder: Messrs Harland & Wolff,Ltd,Belfast.
Launched: January 15th, 1923
Maiden voyage: October 5th, 1923
Fate: Scrapped, Sold to British Iron and Steel Corporation (Salvage) Ltd, she was broken up by Metal Industries Ltd at Faslane in Scotland.
General characteristics
Tonnage: 20,847 gross tons. 12,836 net tonnage. Deadweight 16,032 tons
Length: 600.5 feet
Beam: 73.5 feet
Depth 48.5 feet. Draught 34.10 feet
Propulsion: 2 Quadruple-expansion steam engines, producing 15,300 shaft horse power (13,300 ihp). Inverted direct acting, balanced to eliminate vibrations. Twin Screw. Boilers:6 D.E. and 2 S.E. Boilers with a steam pressure of 215lb. Fuel: Oil
Speed: 17.5 knots
Paintwork Black hull with white line, red boot-topping, upper works stone, funnels black.
Complement: 327 First Class, 329 Second Class, Crew: 423 made up of 10 officers, 94 seamen, 22 engineers, 82 firemen and 215 saloon crew.

The Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company placed the order for R.M.S. Mooltan with Harland and Wolff Ltd on the 29th of November 1918.On the same date, an order was placed for her sister ship RMS Maloja She was given the yard No. 587 and work began on her in the Belfast shipyard. She was launched on the 15th of January 1923. She was then put through her sea trials and was finally delivered on the 21st of September 1923. She was then the first P & O ship over 20,000 tons, but she had sacrificed speed for reliability and comfort. The Mooltan had broad decks and would have a reputation for magnificent steadiness, although because of her small rudder, handling would prove to be difficult.

Contents

[edit] MAIDEN VOYAGE

SS Mooltan set of on her maiden voyage on the 5th October 1923. She left Tilbury, London and via Suez canal arrived in Sydney, Australia on 21st December 1923, calling at Colombo,Ceylon,(Sri Lanka) and Melbourne on her way. She would make the voyage to Australia many times carrying many thousands of immigrants to a new life Australia. In 1929 SS Mooltan was refitted with new engines, namely, two British Thompson Houston exhaust-driven electric turbines and motors with the effect that her top speed was increased to 17 knots. The accommodation was also overhauled. In 1931 she was again in the yard. All the accommodation was again overhauled and improved. In 1933 she carried Douglas Jardine's MCC cricket test team back home to Britain after the controversial “Bodyline” Test Series (see link at the bottom of the page). In 1938 alterations were made to the ship which allowed her to carry chilled beef.

[edit] WARTIME REQUISITION

After the outbreak of the Second World War, Great Britain and her allies realised that they would need ships for troop and equipment movements. On the 6th of September 1939 SS Mooltan was requisitioned for service as an armed merchant cruiser and was converted for such a task. Part of the conversion was the removal of her second funnel, which was in any case a dummy used to ventilate the engine room below; this was done to improve the arc of her Anti-Aircraft Guns. Later on in the war the funnel was replaced but in a shorter form. As an armed merchant cruiser, SS Mooltan served in the South Atlantic based in Freetown, Sierra Leone, and she had the satisfaction of not losing a single merchant ship placed in her care. On the 31st of July the Mooltan was on the western approaches en route from Plymouth to Freetown when she was attacked by a German reconnaissance aircraft; she survived intact. On the 20th of January 1941 she was returned to P & O for conversion to a troopship. The work was carried out by R & H Green and Silley Weir Ltd in Tilbury, Essex. The work was then completed at Tyneside, Newcastle and by May 1941 she had been fully converted. In 1941 she carried troops out to the Middle East Campaign, and in May 1942 she took part in the North African landings at Oran,Algeria as part of Operation Torch.. She was returned to P & O after the war on the 16th of July 1947.

[edit] PEACETIME AND A RETURN TO NORMAL SERVICE

Between her return to P & O in 1947 and 1948, SS Mooltan was completely reconditioned so she could return to commercial use. On the 26th of August 1948 she was ready and returned to service, now she was 21,039 gross tons and she carried 1’030 tourist class passengers. Most of the outward traffic was ministry of transport emigration work, and carrying “Ten Pound Poms”to Australia under an assisted passage scheme established and operated by the Australian Government. The return trips were filled with P & O own passengers. In April 1949 the Mooltan arrived at Tilbery the day after one of her passengers had died of smallpox. For the next three day the SS Mooltan was placed under Quarantine for three days before any of her passengers or crew could disembark, but five more of the passengers died. On the 18th of November 1953 SS Mooltan sliped out of Brisbane, Australia on her last ever voyage. She arrived at Tilbury on the 7th January 1953 at the end of her last voyage. Her mainly Asian crew joined the brand new RMS Arcadia three weeks later. On the 23rd of January 1954 SS Mooltan was sold for the sum of £150,000 to British Iron and Steel Corporation (Salvage) Ltd and she was sent to Metal Industries Ltd at Faslane in Scotland where she was broken up.

[edit] SPECIFICATIONS

  • OWNERS: The Peninsular & Oriental Steam Navigation Co.
  • SERVICE: London, India, China, Australia mail and passenger service.
  • NATIONALTY AND PORT: British. Belfast.
  • BUILDERS: Messrs. Harland & Wolff, Ltd., Belfast, 1923. Yard No. 587
  • OFFICIAL NUMBERS: 145435. signal letters KPNG. call sign GFBC
  • TONNAGE: 20,847 Tonnes gross. 12,836 Net tonnage. Deadweight 16,032 tonnes
  • DIMENSIONS: 600.5 feet long between perpendiculars.Breath 73.5 feet. X Depth 48.5 feet. Draught 34.10 feet. 5 decks.
  • ENGINES: 2 Quadruple expansion 4 cylinder reciprocating steam engines. 15,300 shaft horse power Inverted direct acting, balanced to climate vibration. Twin screw. Normal speed of 17½ knots.
  • BOILERS: 6 D.E.and 2 S.E. boilers, 215lbs shaft horse power pr. Oil Fuel
  • PAINTWORK: Black hull with white line, red boot-topping, stone upper works, black funnels.
  • COMPLEMENT: 327 1ST class passengers, 320 2ND class passengers.

[edit] TECHNICAL DRAWINGS

[edit] LINKS

Body line Test series

The P & O Encyclopaedia

Harland & Wolff 1

Harland & Wolff 2Stavros1 18:46, 20 November 2006 (UTC)

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