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RMS Carnarvon Castle

StateLibQld 1 127151 Carnarvon Castle (ship).jpg
History
Name: Carnarvon Castle
Owner: Union-Castle Line
Builder: Harland and Wolff, Belfast
Yard number: 595
Launched: 14 January 1926
Completed: 26 June 1926
Commissioned: 9 October 1939
Decommissioned: December 1943
Fate: Scrapped in 1963
General characteristics
Tonnage:
Length:
  • As built: 656 ft (199.95 m)
  • after 1937: 686 ft (209.09 m)
Beam: 73 ft 6 in (22.40 m)
Installed power: 3,364 nhp
Propulsion:
  • As built:
  • Twin Screw
  • 2 Stroke Double Acting engine
  • Burmeister and Wain 2 x 8 cylinders
  • After 1938 refit:
  • 2 × 10 cylinder 2 stroke double acting diesels
  • 26,000 bhp (19,000 kW)
Speed:
  • Cruising: 16 kn (30 km/h; 18 mph)
  • Max: 18 kn (33 km/h; 21 mph)
Capacity:
  • As built:
  • 310 first class passengers
  • 275 second class passengers
  • 266 third class passengers
  • After 1938 refit:
  • 266 first class passengers
  • 245 second class passengers
  • 188 third class passengers
  • After 1947 refit
  • 607 in cabins
  • 671 in dormitories
  • After 1949 refit:
  • 216 first class passengers
  • 401 tourist passengers
Crew: 350
Armament:
  • As armed merchant cruiser
  • 8 × 6-inch guns
  • 2 x 3-inch anti-aircraft guns
  • machine guns

MV Carnarvon Castle was an ocean liner of the Union-Castle Line. She was briefly requisitioned for service as an auxiliary cruiser by the Royal Navy during the Second World War.

Carnarvon Castle was built by Harland and Wolff, Belfast and launched on 14 January 1926. She was completed on 26 June 1926 and entered service for the Union-Castle Line. She was named after Caernarfon Castle. She was the first of the Union-Castle mail ships to exceed 20,000 tons, and was the first motor ship to be used on the sailings between Britain and the Cape of Good Hope. She had two squat funnels, the forward-most of which was a dummy. She served on the route until 1936, when a revised contract to carry the mails required a speed of at least 19 kn (35 km/h; 22 mph), which would result in a voyage to the Cape lasting no more than 13 and a half days. Carnarvon Castle required a refit and was reworked by her original builders between 1937 and 1938. Her engines were replaced, a single funnel replaced the original two, and her passenger capacity was altered. After undergoing sea trials on 26 June 1938, she returned to her original route on 8 July, setting a new record for the passage to the Cape of 12 days, 13 hours, 38 minutes. The record stood until 1954.

Carnarvon Castle was at Cape Town at the outbreak of the Second World War, and was requisitioned by the Royal Navy on 8 September 1939. She sailed to the naval base at Simonstown and was converted to an armed merchant cruiser. Commissioned as HMS Carnarvon Castle on 9 October, she sailed into the South Atlantic. On 5 December she encountered the German auxiliary cruiser Thor and had a five-hour running battle with her. She suffered heavily in the battle, sustaining 27 hits causing 4 dead and 27 wounded. Thor was apparently undamaged in the encounter. Carnarvon Castle put into Montevideo for repairs, and was repaired with steel plate reportedly salvaged from the German cruiser Admiral Graf Spee.


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