Trisha Shetty (Editor)

SS Belgravia (1881)

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Name
  
SS Belgravia

Port of registry
  
Liverpool

Completed
  
1882

Length
  
122 m

Beam
  
14 m

Owner
  
Anchor Line

Builder
  
D. & W. Henderson Ltd.

Launched
  
20 December 1881

Tonnage
  
4.533 million kg

Maiden voyage
  
Mar. 20, 1882 Glasgow - New York

SS Belgravia was a transatlantic liner that served in the 1880s and early 1890s. She was wrecked in 1896.

History

SS Belgravia was an ocean liner of the Anchor Line, built in Glasgow Scotland by D. & W. Henderson Ltd. and launched in December 1881. After fitting out, her maiden voyage from Glasgow to New York followed in March 1882. The vessel had a single funnel and was steam propelled by a single screw with auxiliary sails which were still common in the 1880s. Belgravia was primarily designed for the immigrant trade and had a capacity of around 1,600 passengers mostly in steerage.

Her career ended in 1896 when she ran aground on May 22 shortly after departing from Saint John, New Brunswick in heavy fog. Despite the efforts of several tugs the ship could not be moved from Saints Rest Beach, and was subsequently declared a total loss. Happily there was no loss of life. Her captain, William Laird, accepted responsibility for the accident and had his master's certificate suspended for three months.

References

SS Belgravia (1881) Wikipedia