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RMS Alaunia (1925)

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Name
  
RMS Alaunia

Operator
  
Cunard Line

Completed
  
July 1925

Length
  
164 m

Beam
  
20 m

Owner
  
Cunard Line

Port of registry
  
Southampton

Launched
  
7 February 1925

Depth
  
13 m

Builder
  
John Brown & Company

RMS Alaunia (1925) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Route
  
Southampton - Quebec and Montreal

RMS Alaunia was an ocean liner built for the Cunard Line during the 1920s which served primarily on the Canadian route. She was requisitioned by the British Royal Navy during the Second World War and ultimately scrapped in 1957.

Contents

Background

Alaunia was built by John Brown & Company in Scotland to augment the transatlantic passenger fleet of the Cunard Line. The ship entered service in July 1925 and was primarily employed on the Canadian route running from Southampton to Quebec and Montreal during the warm weather months and Halifax during the winter. She was one of a number of so-called intermediate liners built with fuel economy in mind. Designed with a single stack and straight stem bow with four passenger decks, the ship was propelled by two screws powered by four double reduction geared steam turbine engines that gave her a service speed of fifteen knots. Safety features included twelve watertight compartments divided by eleven bulkheads and twenty-eight lifeboats.

Service

In August 1939 Alaunia was taken over by the Royal Navy for service as a troop transport and served in this capacity until 1944 when she was sold to the Royal Navy and refitted as a base repair ship at Gibraltar. Alaunia was sold for scrap to the British Iron and Steel Corporation and subsequently broken up at Blyth, England in 1957.

References

RMS Alaunia (1925) Wikipedia