LST 3041

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LST 3041 Hull was a ship built by Harland and Wolff in Belfast. She was launched October 31, 1944.

The crew joined her in Scotland and took part in shakedown trials in which they would run the ship ashore, and use the stern anchor to pull themselves off. In the summer of 1945, loaded with tanks and toops and a troop landing craft, she sailed to the Suez Canal. After unloading there she sailed through the Suez Canal to the take part in the invasion of Japan. She was also used to transport rice from Thailand to Singapore. It was during this period that she visited Bombay, where instead of having a tug pull her into the channel she won the tug of war and managed to capsize the tug.

After returning through the Suez she was refitted and the rivets in the bottom of the hull that had been worn by repeated landings were replaced in drydock. She finally returned to England in 1947 via Malta and Gibraltar.

In 1948 she was renamed the Empire Doric and chartered to F. Bustard & Sons, the Atlantic Steam Navigation Company. Where the LSTs became the forerunners of the modern roll on — roll off (RO-ROs) car ferries.

During the Suez crisis she was requisitioned back by the Royal Navy and sailed to Port Said where she offloaded centurions, and where she struck a sunken vessel. Thus she had to call in at Naples on the way home and was in drydock until early January 1957, so probably was the last ship back home. She remained in use until 1960 when she was scrapped in Glasgow.