MS Excelsior Neptune

Feliks Dzerzhinskiy and Krasin at shipyard in Wismar in 1958
Career
Name: Feliks Dzerzhinskiy (19581988)
Excelsior Neptune (19881993)
Owner: 19581970: Black Sea Shipping Company
19701988: Far East Shipping Company
19881991: Excelsior Third Marine Tpt. Inc.
19911993: Excelsior SG Co. Ltd.[1]
Operator: 19581970: Black Sea Shipping Company
19701988: Far East Shipping Company
Port of registry: 19581970: Odessa,  Soviet Union
19701988: Vladivostok,  Soviet Union[2]
19881991: Panama City,  Panama
19911993: San Lorenzo,  Honduras
Builder: VEB Mathias-Thesen Werft, Wismar, East Germany
Yard number: 102[1]
Completed: 1958
Acquired: 1958
In service: 1958
Out of service: 1993[1]
Identification: Call sign: HQEV2
IMO number: 5113436[1]
Fate: sank at shipyard, wrecked in tow off Canton in January 1993[3]
General characteristics
Class and type:Mikhail Kalinin-class ocean liner
Tonnage:4,871 GRT[4][2]
1,358 DWT[4]
Length:122.15 m (400.75 ft)[4][2]
Beam:16.00 m (52.49 ft)[4]
Height:7.60 m (24.93 ft)[4]
Draught:5.21 m (17.09 ft)16.00 m (52.49 ft)[4]
Installed power:2 × MAN-DMR K6Z57/80 diesels,
6,192 kW (8,304 hp)
Propulsion:2 propellers
Speed:17.0 knots (31.5 km/h; 19.6 mph)[4]
Capacity:333 passengers
Crew:134[5]

MS Excelsior Neptune (originally, the Feliks Dzerzhinskiy) was an ocean liner owned by the Soviet Union's Black Sea Shipping Company. She was built in 1958 by VEB Mathias-Thesen Werft, Wismar, East Germany, as one of the Mikhail Kalinin series of ships. It was named after Felix Dzerzhinsky, a Soviet statesman and founder of the Soviet secret police (Cheka).

The Feliks Dzerzhinskiy entered regular service with the Black Sea Shipping between Odessa and Alexandria in 1958, and after 1970 she was used by the Far East Shipping between Vladivostok and Kamchatka, and from Nakhodka to Yokohama and Hong Kong. In the late 1970s she was also used by the CTC Line for Pacific Ocean cruises out of Fremantle and Sydney.[6]

In 1988 she was renamed Excelsior Neptune, and was sold to Chinese interests in 1992. It was planned to rebuild her as a cruise ship, along with her sister ship Excelsior Mercury (formerly the Mariya Ulyanova), but she sank in January 1993 while being towed from Hong Kong to Guangzhou.[7]

See also

References

External links

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