Yard number 212 Fate Scrapped in 1961 Length 61 m | Out of service 1953 Launched 13 January 1877 Beam 8.26 m | |
Name 1877–1914 SS Sheffield1914–1919 SS Selda1919–1926 SS Sheffield1926–1931 SS Huseyniye1931–1961 SS Seyyar Operator 1877–1897 Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway1897–1910 Great Central Railway1910–1911 Patriotic Steam Ship Company1911–1914 Joseph Constant, Grimsby1914–1919 Ottoman Navy1919–1926 Joseph Constant, Grimsby1926–1961 Various Turkish owners Builder John Elder and Company, Govan |
SS Sheffield was a passenger and cargo vessel built for the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway in 1877.
History
The ship was built by John Elder and Company of Govan and launched on 13 January 1877. She was designed for the passenger and cargo service between Grimsby and Hamburg and Antwerp.
On 14 May 1893 she was badly damaged in a collision with the Londoner, and was only kept afloat by her watertight compartments. The Londoner sank but the crew of 36 and 90 passengers were rescued by the Sheffield. Two of the first-class passengers were in their bunks near the point at which the Londoner was struck, and were firmly wedged in by the broken timber and ironwork, and it was only with extreme difficulty that they were rescued. The Ashton also came to the scene, and the passengers were transferred for landing them at North Shields.
In 1897 she passed to the Great Central Railway. In 1910 she was sold to the Patriotic Steam Ship Company, and in 1911 to Joseph Constant in Grimsby. Finding herself in the Mediterranean Sea in 1914, she was seized by the Ottoman Navy for the duration of the First World War and renamed Selda. She returned to Grimsby in 1919 and adopted her earlier name. In 1926 she was sold to owners in Turkey and was renamed Huseyniye in 1926 and Seyyar in 1931. She was withdrawn from service in 1953 and scrapped in 1961.