Trisha Shetty (Editor)

MV Fenella (1951)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Fenella 1973 Vasso M

Cost
  
£163,783

Launched
  
6 August 1951

Port of registry
  
Douglas, Isle of Man

Maiden voyage
  
1951

Length
  
64 m

MV Fenella (1951) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Owner
  
1951-1973 Isle of Man Steam Packet Company

Operator
  
1951-1973 IoMSPCo 1973-1978 E. Mastichiades, Piraeus, Greece

Builder
  
Ailsa Shipbuilding Company

MV Fenella (III) No. 165289 was a cargo vessel operated by the Isle of Man Steam Packet Company, and the third ship in the Company's history to bear the name. Fenella was built by Ailsa Shipbuilding Company at Troon in 1951, and was the Company's first motor ship and first modern cargo vessel.

Contents

Dimensions

Fenella had a tonnage of 1,019 GRT, a length of 210'; beam 37'; depth 16'6" and with a designed service speed of 12 knots. Her purchase cost was £163,783. She had a 7-cylinder British Polar engine of 1,185 indicated horsepower. When the vessel was high and dry in port at low water, the diesel generators were cooled by circulating water from the ballast tanks as though they were radiators.

Service life

In 1951 the Steam Packet started to modernize its cargo fleet and chose the Ailsa Shipbuilding Company at Troon to build its first motor ship. Fenella carried cars, cattle and general cargo.

Disposal and loss

In the early 1970s containerization resulted in a marked upsurge in freight business. In 1973 alone, there was a 31 per cent rise in cargo. It was first expected that the Peveril operating alongside Ramsey would be able to meet this demand, and the company made the decision to sell the Fenella at the beginning of 1973.

Fenella was sold to Greek owners, E. Mastichiades of Piraeus and renamed Vasso M. On 2 February 1977, after some years plying in the Mediterranean, she caught fire and sank two nautical miles off Borolos Light House, Damietta when on route from Alexandria to Jeddah with a cargo of medical cotton and rice.

References

MV Fenella (1951) Wikipedia