Girish Mahajan (Editor)

SS Rushen Castle

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Namesake
  
Rushen Castle

Length
  
96 m

Launched
  
1898

SS Rushen Castle httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Name
  
Rushen Castle formerly Duke of Cornwall

Owner
  
1898-1923 London and North Western Railway 1923-1928 London, Midland and Scottish Railway 1928-1947 Isle of Man Steam Packet Company

Operator
  
1898-1923 London and North Western Railway 1923-1928 London, Midland and Scottish Railway 1928-1947 Isle of Man Steam Packet Company

Port of registry
  
Douglas, Isle of Man (previously Lancaster, United Kingdom).

Route
  
1898-1911 Fleetwood - Derry 1923-1928Heysham - Douglas 1928-1946Douglas - Various.

Builder
  
Vickers Shipbuilding and Engineering

The packet steamer SS Rushen Castle was operated by the Isle of Man Steam Packet Company from her purchase in 1928 until she was sold for breaking in 1947.

Contents

Origins

Originally named Duke of Cornwall the vessel was operated by the London and North Western Railway from 1898 to 1923, from where she passed into the ownership of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway in the 1923 grouping of railway companies, and was subsequently sold to the Isle of Man Steam Packet company in 1928 when she was renamed Rushen Castle.

Dimensions

Constructed in the yards of Vickers Sons, and Maxim Ltd at Barrow-in-Furness in 1898, Duke of Cornwall had a tonnage of 1,724 GRT.

Length 315'; beam 37'1"; depth 16'6". The Duke of Cornwall had accommodation for 1,052 passengers and a crew of 52.

Duke of Cornwall was a steel twin-screw vessel powered by two triple-expansion reciprocating engines, and produced 5,520 i.h.p. This gave the ship an operating speed of 17.5 knots.

London and North Western Railway & L.M.S. Railway Service

In 1898 Duke of Cornwall entered service from her home port, Fleetwood, operating to Derry and Belfast for the London and North Western Railway.

Following the Railways Act of 1921, Duke of Cornwall was subsequently employed on the service from Heysham - Douglas on behalf of the newly formed London, Midland and Scottish Railway.

Isle of Man Steam Packet Company Service

Purchased by the Isle of Man Steam Packet Company in 1928, the vessel was renamed Rushen Castle, and entered service to the numerous ports then served by the company.

Smaller than her immediate contemporaries, Rushen Castle was used on winter service and stayed with the Steam Packet Company during the Second World War, being one of the ships which maintained the vital lifeline, first to Liverpool until the end of 1940, and then to her former home, Fleetwood.


During the war Rushen Castle established what is arguably the longest modern passage between Liverpool and Douglas. On Saturday 27 January 1940 she sailed for Douglas at 10:45, and was instructed by radio to make for Peel as an easterly gale had blown up and made Douglas untenable. Being wartime the message named the captain but not the ship, and by mistake said "go to the West," which would have indicated Peel to Captain Bridson. The captain duly tried to get into Douglas but was then signaled to make for Peel. By the time the ship got to Peel the wind had veered and berthing at Peel was not possible. Eventually the Rushen Castle did get in at Peel - at 10:00hrs on Tuesday 30 January, after being at sea for 71 hours. The Earl of Granville, Lieutenant Governor of the Island at the time was one of the passengers.

Post-war Service and Disposal

Rushen Castle re-opened the normal Douglas - Liverpool service on 6 April 1946. However, with the return from war service of several of her sisters, Rushen Castle was withdrawn from service, and laid up in Douglas prior to her disposal.

In January 1947 Rushen Castle was taken under tow to the Belgian port of Ghent, for scrapping.

References

SS Rushen Castle Wikipedia