Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

TSS Roebuck (1897)

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Maiden voyage
  
1 July 1897

Fate
  
Sunk

Length
  
85 m

Out of service
  
1915

Launched
  
6 March 1897

Draft
  
5.08 m

TSS Roebuck (1897)

Name
  
1897-1914 TSS Roebuck 1914-1915 HMS Roedean

Operator
  
1897-1915 Great Western Railway 1914-1915 Royal Navy

Builder
  
Naval Construction and Armaments Company, Barrow-in-Furness

TSS Roebuck was a passenger vessel built for the Great Western Railway in 1897.

History

This ship was one of a pair, the other being TSS Reindeer, built by the Naval Construction and Armaments Company in Barrow-in-Furness in 1897. She was launched on 6 March 1897 by Mrs Bryce, wife of Annan Bryce, director of the Naval Construction and Armaments Company. Her maiden voyage from Weymouth to Guernsey and Jersey was on 1 July 1897 which she completed in a record time of 3 hours 20 minutes.

On 26 January 1905 she caught fire while moored at Milford. The weight of water used to put out the fire caused her to sink but she was raised nine days later and returned to service in June.

She ran aground after leaving St Helier on 19 July 1911 during dense fog, refloated on 28 July and returned to service four months later. The master had his certificate suspended for three months.

In 1914 she was converted for minesweeping and renamed HMS Roedean. On 13 January 1915 she dragged her anchor at Scapa Flow and sank following a collision with HMS Imperieuse, the first railway ship to be lost on war service.

References

TSS Roebuck (1897) Wikipedia