MS Jutlandia, picture taken from MS Korea in 1963
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History | |
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Denmark | |
Name: | MS Jutlandia |
Ordered: | 1934 |
Builder: | East Asiatic Company, Nakskov Shipyard, Denmark |
Yard number: | 60 |
Launched: | 11 August 1934 |
Completed: | 1934 |
Status: | Scrapped |
General characteristics | |
Tonnage: | 8,457 gross register tons (GRT); 5,204 NRT |
Length: |
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Beam: | 61 ft (19 m) |
Draught: | 36 ft (11 m) |
Propulsion: | 2 Burmeister & Wain 5-cylinder diesel motors type: 545-WF-120 Twin screw, 7,850 ihp (5,850 kW), 6,500 bhp |
Speed: | 15 knots (cruising); 17.1 knots (trial) |
Capacity: |
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Crew: | 70, including 1 doctor |
MS Jutlandia (lat.: Jutland) was contracted by and built for the East Asiatic Company (EAC) in 1934, as a combined passenger and cargo ship at EAC's Nakskov Shipyard, Denmark. Following an extended operational life in which she also served as a hospital ship and a royal yacht, she was finally decommissioned in 1965.
Jutlandia was contracted by EAC in 1934, to replace older ships on the then regular service between Copenhagen and Bangkok. She operated on this route from November 1934, until January 1940, and again from 1954 to the end of 1964. Jutlandia was the only ship in the EAC fleet to be designed with a Maierform bow. She is the second of so far three ships of the same name.
Passengers were accommodated in nine single and twenty-nine double staterooms with all double staterooms provided with a private bath. The dining room could seat seventy with smoking room, ladies lounge, bar and foredeck swimming pool also provided for passenger use. A dining and play room were provided for children. Passenger spaces were ventilated by chilled or heated air. Cargo holds provided 539,570 cubic feet (15,278.9 m3) capacity.
When World War II broke out in September 1939, the ship had just arrived at Rotterdam en route for Copenhagen. As Denmark was not yet part to the war, she completed this and one further voyage to Bangkok, finally returning to Copenhagen in January 1940.
Following her arrival in Copenhagen, Jutlandia was placed at the disposal of the Danish Government. She was sent to Argentina to collect a consignment of grain, returning to Copenhagen on 31 March 1940. On 1 April, she was sent to Nakskov Shipyard for routine overhaul. Jutlandia was in dry-dock when Germany attacked and occupied Denmark on 9 April 1940. Due to a shortage of diesel oil, Germany did not seize the Jutlandia. Instead, she was laid up at the Slotø island in a small inlet close to the shipyard, together with two other motorships from the EAC fleet, the MS Java and MS Falstria, manned only by a skeleton crew for maintenance.
Here she remained until the end of the War, despite an allied air raid on 3 May 1945. During the attack the Java was sunk, while Falstria suffered some flooding and a fire. Jutlandia got off with some bullet holes and a minor fire in a cargo hold.