Girish Mahajan (Editor)

SS Sankt Erik

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Port of registry
  
Sweden

Out of service
  
1977

Address
  
115 21 Stockholm, Sweden

Yard number
  
361

Refit
  
1958

Completed
  
March 1915

SS Sankt Erik

Name
  
Isbrytaren II (1915–1959) Sankt Erik (1959–present)

Owner
  
Stockholms Hamnstyrelse

Builders
  
Finnboda Shipyard, Stockholm

Similar
  
Lightship Finngrundet, Roann, Forceful, Luna, L A Dunton

SS Sankt Erik is an icebreaker and museum ship attached to the Vasa Museum in Stockholm, Sweden.

She was launched in 1915 as Isbrytaren II ("Ice breaker II") and was a conventionally-built Baltic icebreaker with a strengthened bow shaped to be lifted up onto the ice to crush it and a forward-facing screw to push water and crushed ice along the side of the hull. She also has heeling tanks which can be filled and emptied with seawater in turn to rock the ship to widen the channel. Her reciprocating steam engines are the most powerful functioning ones in Sweden.

She was the country's first large icebreaker, and was owned and used by the City of Stockholm to keep the channels around it clear of ice. She was also sometimes used outside the Stockholm area by the Swedish government since it had contributed towards her cost.

She was renamed in 1958 during an extensive refit, which saw her converted from coal to oil, the bridge was enclosed to protect the deck crew from the weather, and radar and radio fitted.

References

SS Sankt Erik Wikipedia


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