Suvarna Garge (Editor)

SS Train Ferry No. 2

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
TSS Train Ferry No. 2

Out of service
  
13 June 1940

Launched
  
12 September 1917

Yard number
  
922

Fate
  
Sunk

Length
  
107 m

Operator
  
1917-1924British Army War Office 1924-1934Great Eastern Railway as Great Eastern Train Ferry Company Limited 1934-1940London and North Eastern Railway 1940Royal Navy

Builder
  
Armstrong, Whitworth & Company Ltd, Low Walker

TSS Train Ferry No. 2 was a freight vessel built for the British Army War Office in 1917.

History

The ship was built by Armstrong, Whitworth & Company Ltd, Low Walker and launched in 1917. Along with her sister ships SS Train Ferry No. 1 and SS Train Ferry No. 3, they were the first vessels to offer regular transport between Britain and continental Europe for rail freight vehicles. They were ordered by the British Army to provide rail freight transport from Richborough harbour to the continent to sustain the war effort. They had four sets of rails along the train deck and used a link span to load when in harbour.

On 1 February 1919 she was involved in the rescue of British and American soldiers from the American transport Narrangansett which had gone ashore on Bembridge Point, Isle of Wight. In March 1922 she was sent to Ireland to expedite the transfer of surplus Army motor transport. She made several voyages from Cork and Dublin to Liverpool but was back at Plymouth in December.

After their use by the British Army ended in 1922, they were purchased by the Great Eastern Railway

The Great Eastern Railway was taken over by the London and North Eastern Railway company in 1923 with its interest in the Great Eastern Train Ferry Company. The new service was inaugurated on 24 April 1924 by Prince George, Duke of Kent. In November 1928 the journey from Zeebrugge to Harwich was delayed by a gale and took 23 hours rather than the usual 7 and a half.

In 1934, the Great Eastern Train Ferry Company was liquidated and she was bought by the London and North Eastern Railway.

In 1940 she was requisitioned by the Royal Navy and sunk on 13 June 1940 off Saint-Valery-en-Caux, Seine Maritime, France, at 49°56′N 00°56′E.

References

SS Train Ferry No. 2 Wikipedia