Trisha Shetty (Editor)

TSS Roebuck (1925)

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Yard number
  
1204

Out of service
  
1965

Launched
  
24 March 1925

Beam
  
10 m

Completed
  
April 1925

Fate
  
Scrapped

Length
  
61 m

Builder
  
Swan Hunter

Name
  
1925-1940 TSS Roebuck 1940-1945 TSS Roebuck II 1945-1965 TSS Roebuck

Operator
  
1925-1948 Great Western Railway 1948-1965 British Railways

TSS Roebuck was a cargo vessel built for the Great Western Railway in 1925.

History

TSS Roebuck was built by Swan Hunter and Wigham Richardson as one of a pair of new cargo vessels, the other being Sambur, and launched on 24 March 1925. She was put to work on freight services between the Channel Islands and Weymouth.

In May 1940 she took part in the Dunkirk evacuation, making one trip to the beachhead and evacuating 600 men, including many injured. Then in June she was sent with her sister ship Sambur to Saint-Valery-en-Caux to assist in the evacuation of the 51st Highland Division. However, by the time they arrived the Germans were already in control of the port and both ships were damaged by gunfire. In October 1940 she was requisitioned by the Admiralty for use as a barrage balloon vessel in the Thames and around northern France and renamed Roebuck II. She returned to railway service after the war and resumed operation at Weymouth and in 1948 was taken over by British Railways.

In November 1964 she was disguised as the Norwegian SS Galtesund for a film, The Heroes of Telemark.

She continued in service until 27 February 1965, and was scrapped later the same year.

References

TSS Roebuck (1925) Wikipedia