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SS Dresden (1896)

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Out of service
  
21 January 1918

Launched
  
1897

Tonnage
  
1,830 GRT

Builder
  
Earle's Shipbuilding

Name
  
SS Dresden (1897-1915) HMS Louvain (1915-18)

Owner
  
Great Eastern Railway (1897-1915) Royal Navy (1915-18)

Port of registry
  
Harwich (1897-1915) Royal Navy (1915-18)

Route
  
Harwich - Hook of Holland (1897-1915)

The SS Dresden was an English passenger ship which operated, as such, from 1897 to 1915. She is known as the place of the 1913 disappearance of German engineer Rudolf Diesel, inventor of the Diesel engine. The ship was built in 1897 by the Earle Company at Hull for the Great Eastern Railway. She operated on the North Sea route between Harwich and the Hook of Holland. She was renamed HMS Louvain in 1915 and was used by the Royal Navy in World War I. until her loss in 1918.

Contents

Diesel's Disappearance

On 29 September 1913 Rudolf Diesel, German engineer who invented the Diesel engine, boarded the Dresden at Antwerp, Belgium on his way to a meeting in London. He retired to his cabin about 22:00 with a request to be called at 06:15 in the morning, but he was not seen alive again. Later a Dutch ship found a body floating in the sea and from the items and clothes recovered the remains were identified as Diesel's.

Royal Navy

In 1915 Dresden was taken over by the admiralty as an armed boarding steamer and renamed HMS Louvain. On 21 January 1918, she was torpedoed by the Imperial German Navy submarine SM UC-22 in the Aegean Sea with the loss of seven officers and 217 men. There were only 16 survivors.

References

SS Dresden (1896) Wikipedia