SS Rochambeau
Leaving St.Nazaire in the dock | |
History | |
---|---|
France | |
Name: | Rochambeau |
Namesake: | Count of Rochambeau |
Owner: | CGT |
Ordered: | 1908 |
Builder: | Chantiers & Ateliers de St Nazaire |
Decommissioned: | 1934 |
Struck: | 1936 |
Homeport: | Le Havre |
Fate: | scrapped 1936 |
General characteristics | |
Tonnage: | 12,678 GRT |
Length: | 598 ft (182 m) |
Beam: | 63 ft 4 in (19.30 m) |
Capacity: | 2,028 |
SS Rochambeau was a French Transatlantic ocean liner.
Career
She was named after the Count of Rochambeau, a French nobleman and soldier who participated in the American Revolutionary War. The second of a "à classe unique" ("unique class") of liners commissioned by the Compagnie générale transatlantique. Entering service in 1911, she was a larger version of SS Chicago which had entered service in 1908.
Between 1915 and 1918, she was part of a regular service between Bordeaux and New York City, the company's flagship SS France having been requested as a hospital ship during World War I. Refitted in 1926, she was scrapped in Dunkirk in 1934.
See also
References
- Translated from the equivalent French article
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