SS Drottningholm

Career
Name: RMS Virginian
1920: Drottningholm
1948: Brasil
1951: Homeland
Owner: 1904: Allan Line
1920: Swedish American Line
Route:

1905-1914: Liverpool - Montreal

1920-1948: Gothenburg - New York
Builder: Alexander Stephen and Sons, Glasgow
Launched: 22 December 1904[1]
Maiden voyage: 6 April 1905[1]
Fate: Feb 1955: scrapped at Trieste
General characteristics
Type: Passenger liner and cargo
Tonnage: 10,757 gross register tons (GRT)[1]
Length: 538 ft (164 m)
Beam: 60.3 ft (18.4 m)
Depth: 38 ft (12 m)
Propulsion: Steam Turbine
Speed: 18 kn
Capacity: 1712 passengers

RMS Virginian was a steam turbine powered transatlantic ocean liner, launched in 1904 for the Allan Line. She operated from 1920 to 1948 for the Swedish American Line as SS Drottningholm.

Career

Built in 1905 by Alexander Stephen and Sons in Glasgow for the Allan Line of Canada. Commissioned as SS Virginian, she served the Allan Line, as a sistership to RMS Victorian from 1905 until 1920. In 1912, she was one of several ships in wireless radio communication with RMS Titanic, giving iceberg warnings, and at one point erroneous wireless messages had Virginian towing Titanic to Halifax, Nova Scotia. During World War I she served as a troop transport ship for Canada.

In 1920, she was sold to the Swedish American Line and renamed SS Drottningholm, serving Sweden until 1948.[1]

From 1948-1955 she sailed for the Home Lines of Italy, first as SS Brasil and from 1951 as SS Homeland.

Footnotes

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