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TS Pretoria

TS Pretoria was a ship that had a long and varied career as first a German cargo liner, then a U-boat depot ship, hospital ship, British troop ship, Muslim pilgrim ship and finally an Indonesian naval accommodation ship.

History
Name
  • TS Pretoria (1936–45)
  • TS Empire Doon (1945–49)
  • TS Empire Orwell (1949-59)
  • TS Gunung Djati (1959–73)
  • MV Gunung Djati (1973–80)
  • KRI Tanjung Pandan (1980–84)[1][2]
Namesake
Owner
Operator
Port of registry
BuilderBlohm & Voss, Hamburg, Germany[1]
Yard number506
Launched16 July 1936
Completed1936
Maiden voyage19 December 1936
Out of service1984
Refit
  • 1945 (as troop ship)
  • 1950 (as troop ship)
  • 1958–59 (as pilgrim ship)
  • 1975 (as pilgrim ship)
Identification
  • Code Letters DJSG (1936–45)
  • Pennant Number 971 (1980–84)
  • IMO number: 5138395
Capturedas prize ship in May 1945
FateScrapped in 1987
General characteristics
Type
  • Ocean liner (1936–39)
  • Depot ship (1939–40)
  • Hospital ship (1940–45)
  • Troop ship (1945–58)
  • Pilgrim ship (1958–80)
  • Troop ship (1980–81)
  • Naval accommodation ship (1981–84)
Tonnage
  • 17,362 GRT (1936–58)
  • 17,891 GRT (1959–87)
Length547 ft 8 in (166.93 m)
Beam72 ft 5 in (22.07 m)
Draught26 ft (7.9 m)
Depth31 ft 5 in (9.58 m)
Installed power14,000 SHP
Propulsion
  • 6 steam turbines, twin screw(1936–73)
  • Diesel engine (1973–84)
Speed18 knots (33 km/h)
Capacity
  • 152 1st class and 338 tourist class passengers (1936–39)
  • 2,500 patients (1945)
  • 1,491 troops (1950–58)
  • 106 1st class and 2,000 pilgrim class passengers (1959–75)
Complement
  • 300 (1936–39)
  • 260 (1945)

Description

The ship was 547 ft 8 in (166.93 m) long, with a beam of 72 ft 5 in (22.07 m). She had a depth of 31 ft 5 in (9.58 m),[3] with a draught of 26 ft (7.9 m).[4] As built, she was assessed at 17,362 GRT.[5] Following her 1958 refit, she was assessed as 17,891 GRT.[6]

As built, the ship was powered by six steam turbines,[4] rated at a total of 14,000 shp.[7] These were fed by a number of small, high-pressure Benson boilers.[6] The turbines drove twin screw propellers and could propel the ship at 18 knots (33 km/h).[7] In 1949, the Benson boilers were replaced by convention boilers, made by Foster Wheeler, operating at 500 pounds per square inch (34 bar).[6] In 1973, she was re-engined, being fitted with a diesel engine.[1]

As built, the ship had accommodation for 152 first class and 338 second class passengers.[8] In 1949, she was converted to a troopship, with accommodation for 1,491 troops.[9] In 1959, she was refitted to carry 106 first class and 2,000 pilgrim class passengers.[1]

History

Pre-war

Pretoria was built as yard number 536 by Blohm & Voss, Hamburg, Germany.[10] She was launched on 16 July 1936.[5] She was one of a pair of sister ships completed that year for Deutsche Ost-Afrika Linie, the other being TS Windhuk.[7] The Code Letters DJSG were allocated.[3]

Pretoria began her maiden voyage from Hamburg on 19 December 1936.[1] Her destination was Lourenço Marques, Mozambique via Southampton, United Kingdom;[11] Lisbon, Portugal; Casablanca, Morocco;[12] Cape Town, South Africa.[11] On 24 December, having departed from Southampton with 470 passengers and 300 crew on board, she ran aground on the East Lepe Bank in the Solent. Although five tugs attempted to free her, she remained aground. After 900 tons of water had been discharged overboard and 400 tons of fuel oil had been transferred to a tanker, she was freed with the aid of seven tugs on 26 December, losing her port anchor in the process. Pretoria returned to Southampton for inspection, resuming her voyage the next day. As a result of the delays incurred, the calls at Lisbon and Casablanca were omitted.[12] Deutsche Ost-Afrika Linie operated her mainly between Hamburg, South-West Africa and South Africa.

On 20 May 1937, Pretoria was involved in a collision with the British tanker Hekla during foggy weather in the North Sea (53°29′N 4°49′E / 53.483°N 4.817°E / 53.483; 4.817). Hekla was badly damaged amidships and jettisoned some of her cargo. Pretoria stood by whilst tugs were sent from Bremen, Germany to Hekla's aid.[13]

World War II

In November 1939, Pretoria was requisitioned by the Kriegsmarine and used as a U-boat depot ship. Initially based at Kiel, Schleswig-Holstein, she served the 1st U-boat Flotilla, based at Neustadt, Hamburg, from January 1940. In December she was transferred to 21st U-boat Flotilla, based at Pillau, East Prussia. In 1945,[6] she was converted to a hospital ship.[5] Pretoria assisted in the evacuation of German civilians from the Eastern Territories towards the end of the war.[8] In May 1945 she was in Copenhagen when Denmark was liberated, and UK forces captured her as a prize of war.[1]

Post-war civil service

Pretoria was passed to the Ministry of War Transport (MoWT) converted to a troop ship at Newcastle upon Tyne. She was renamed Empire Doon. The MoWT placed her under the management of the Orient Steam Navigation Company.[1] Empire Doon suffered boiler trouble in Port Said, Egypt, was towed back to Falmouth, Cornwall by the Admiralty tug Bustler.[14] She was then laid up off Southend on Sea. Essex,[5] Empire Doon was moved to Southampton, Hampshire in May 1947.[15] In 1949,[1] she was reboilered by J.I. Thorneycroft & Co of Southampton,[5] and converted to a troopship,[15] at a cost of £2,000,000. Trials were undertaken in November 1949, but had to be curtailed due to engine problems. Her maiden voyage as a troopship, scheduled for 10 December,[16] was postponed. Sea trials resumed on 29 December.[17]

The refit of Empire Doon was completed in January 1950 and she was renamed Empire Orwell to conform with the Ministry of Transport policy of ship names being prefixed "Empire" and Orient Line policy of using names beginning with "O".[1] She had capacity for 1,491 troops in three classes.[9] Empire Orwell departed on her maiden voyage as a troopship on 17 January 1950 bound for Tobruk, Libya and Port Said, Egypt.[18] She served as a troopship in the 1956 Suez Crisis: landing troops in Cyprus and evacuating troops from the Suez Canal Zone.[citation needed]

In April 1958, Empire Orwell was damaged during storms in the Atlantic Ocean. She was towed into Lisbon, Portugal by a German tug.[19] There were complaints about conditions on board Empire Orwell when she was returning troops from the Far East to the United Kingdom in 1958. The issue was raised in Parliament by Horace King, MP. In reply, Alfred Barnes, the Minister of Transport, stated that complaints about messing arrangements encountered in the early part of the voyage were swiftly resolved. Complaints that soldiers below the rank of sergeant were generally unable to visit their families were stated to be a matter of military discipline.[20] Later that year, she was chartered to the Pan-Islamic Steam Ship Co of Karachi, Pakistan who used her to carry Muslim pilgrims.[1] Alfred Holt & Co bought her in November of that year and renamed her Gunung Djati after the 16th century Javanese Wali Sanga Sunan Gunungjati. She was placed her under the management of Ocean Steam Ship Co, Liverpool, Lancashire.[1] Gunung Djati was refitted by Barclay Curle & Co Ltd in Glasgow, Scotland.[1] The refit increased her displacement to 17,851 GRT. She was fitted with a mosque and was fitted with indicator which would point towards Mecca.[6] On 7 March 1959, she sailed for Djakarta, Indonesia. She could carry 106 first class passengers and 2,000 pilgrim class passengers.[1]

In 1962 the Indonesian government bought Gunung Djati, transferred her to the Indonesian flag and continued to operate her as a pilgrim ship.[1] In 1964 P.T. Maskapai Pelajaran "Sang Saka" of Djakarta bought her and continued to operate her in the same service.[1] She was sold to Perusahaan Pelajaran Arafat, Djakarta.[21] In 1973 her boilers and steam turbines were replaced with diesel engines and in 1975 she was refitted in Hong Kong.[1]

Indonesian naval service

In 1979,[21] the Indonesian Government bought Gunung Djati back, renamed her KRI Tanjung Pandan, with the pennant number 971.[1] She was used by the Indonesian Navy as a troopship until 1981, and then as an accommodation ship.[21] She had ceased to serve in this role by 1984.[1] Tanjung Pandan was sold in 1987 to Taiwan for scrapping.[5]

Replacement naval ship

In 2003 Indonesia commissioned an amphibious transport dock ship from Daesun Shipbuilding and Engineering of Pusan in Korea, which entered service as KRI Tanjung Dalpele. She has since been converted to a hospital ship and renamed KRI Dr Soeharso (990).

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Merchant Navy Association. "Alfred Holt & Co the Blue Funnel Line". The Red Duster. Merchant Navy Association. Archived from the original on 14 January 2013. Retrieved 17 July 2010.
  2. ^ "Pernah Digunakan Kriegsmarine Dan Kapal Angkut Haji, Inilah Sejarah KRI Tanjung Pandan 971". indomiliter.com (in Indonesian). 18 March 2019. Retrieved 29 April 2021.
  3. ^ a b "LLOYD'S REGISTER, NAVIRES A VAPEUR ET A MOTEURS" (PDF). Plimsoll Ship Data. Retrieved 15 July 2011.
  4. ^ a b E.C. Talbot-Booth (1942) [1936]. Ships and the Sea (Seventh ed.). London: Sampson Low, Marston & Co. Ltd. p. 420.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Mitchell, W.H.; Sawyer, L.A. (1995). The Empire Ships. London, New York, Hamburg, Hong Kong: Lloyd's of London Press Ltd. p. not cited. ISBN 1-85044-275-4.
  6. ^ a b c d e "Ships of the Hadj". Merchant Navy Officers. Retrieved 17 May 2011.
  7. ^ a b c Harnack, Edwin P (1938) [1903]. All About Ships & Shipping (7th ed.). London: Faber and Faber. p. 462.
  8. ^ a b . The Ships List. Archived from the original on 15 December 2009. Retrieved 17 May 2011.
  9. ^ a b "The Latest in Troopships". The Times. No. 51585. London. 10 January 1950. col G, p. 2.
  10. ^ "Liste der Newbauten Werft Blohm & Voss" (in German). Lostliners. Retrieved 17 May 2011.
  11. ^ a b "Advertisement". The Times. No. 47456. London. 18 August 1936. col B, p. 2.
  12. ^ a b "German Liner Aground". The Times. No. 47567. London. 28 December 1936. col D, p. 7.
  13. ^ "Casualty Reports". The Times. No. 47690. London. 21 May 1937. col F, p. 7.
  14. ^ "Letter to Chris Tyrer". PNC. Retrieved 17 May 2011.
  15. ^ a b "Model Troopship". The Times. No. 51494. London. 23 September 1949. col G, p. 2.
  16. ^ "Troopship returns to port". The Times. No. 51550. London. 28 November 1949. col B, p. 4.
  17. ^ "Troopship's Trials". The Times. No. 51576. London. 30 December 1949. col F, p. 4.
  18. ^ "New Standards in Trooping". The Times. No. 51591. London. 17 January 1950. col B, p. 3.
  19. ^ "Telegrams in Brief". The Times. No. 54118. London. 7 April 1958. col G, p. 5.
  20. ^ "Troopship "Empire Orwell" (Conditions)". Hansard. Retrieved 17 May 2011.
  21. ^ a b c "EMPIRE - D". Mariners. Retrieved 17 May 2011.

External links

  • Photo of Pretoria
  • Photo of Empire Orwell
  • Photo of Empire Orwell
  • Photo of Gunung Djati
  • British Pathé newsreel of Empire Orwell returning troops from Korea
  • Painting of Gunung Djati

pretoria, other, ships, named, pretoria, pretoria, ship, that, long, varied, career, first, german, cargo, liner, then, boat, depot, ship, hospital, ship, british, troop, ship, muslim, pilgrim, ship, finally, indonesian, naval, accommodation, ship, historyname. For other ships named Pretoria see SS Pretoria TS Pretoria was a ship that had a long and varied career as first a German cargo liner then a U boat depot ship hospital ship British troop ship Muslim pilgrim ship and finally an Indonesian naval accommodation ship HistoryNameTS Pretoria 1936 45 TS Empire Doon 1945 49 TS Empire Orwell 1949 59 TS Gunung Djati 1959 73 MV Gunung Djati 1973 80 KRI Tanjung Pandan 1980 84 1 2 NamesakePretoria South Africa 1936 45 River Orwell 1949 59 Sunan Gunungjati a 16th century Javanese Wali Sanga 1959 80 Tanjung Pandan Bangka Belitung Islands Indonesia 1980 1984 OwnerDeutsche Ost Afrika Linie 1936 39 Kriegsmarine 1939 45 Ministry of War Transport 1945 Ministry of Transport 1945 59 Alfred Holt amp Co 1959 62 Indonesian Government 1962 64 P T Maskapai Pelajaran Sang Saka 1964 65 Perusahaan Pelajaran Arafat 1965 79 Indonesian Navy 1979 84 OperatorDeutsche Ost Afrika Linie 1936 39 Kriegsmarine 1939 45 Orient Steam Navigation Company 1945 59 Ocean Steam Ship Co 1959 62 Pan Islamic Steam Ship Co 1962 79 Indonesian Navy 1979 84 Port of registryBremen Germany 1936 39 Kriegsmarine 1939 45 London UK 1945 62 Indonesia 1962 80 Indonesian Navy 1980 84 BuilderBlohm amp Voss Hamburg Germany 1 Yard number506Launched16 July 1936Completed1936Maiden voyage19 December 1936Out of service1984Refit1945 as troop ship 1950 as troop ship 1958 59 as pilgrim ship 1975 as pilgrim ship IdentificationCode Letters DJSG 1936 45 Pennant Number 971 1980 84 IMO number 5138395Capturedas prize ship in May 1945FateScrapped in 1987General characteristicsTypeOcean liner 1936 39 Depot ship 1939 40 Hospital ship 1940 45 Troop ship 1945 58 Pilgrim ship 1958 80 Troop ship 1980 81 Naval accommodation ship 1981 84 Tonnage17 362 GRT 1936 58 17 891 GRT 1959 87 Length547 ft 8 in 166 93 m Beam72 ft 5 in 22 07 m Draught26 ft 7 9 m Depth31 ft 5 in 9 58 m Installed power14 000 SHPPropulsion6 steam turbines twin screw 1936 73 Diesel engine 1973 84 Speed18 knots 33 km h Capacity152 1st class and 338 tourist class passengers 1936 39 2 500 patients 1945 1 491 troops 1950 58 106 1st class and 2 000 pilgrim class passengers 1959 75 Complement300 1936 39 260 1945 Contents 1 Description 2 History 2 1 Pre war 2 2 World War II 3 Post war civil service 3 1 Indonesian naval service 3 1 1 Replacement naval ship 4 References 5 External linksDescription EditThe ship was 547 ft 8 in 166 93 m long with a beam of 72 ft 5 in 22 07 m She had a depth of 31 ft 5 in 9 58 m 3 with a draught of 26 ft 7 9 m 4 As built she was assessed at 17 362 GRT 5 Following her 1958 refit she was assessed as 17 891 GRT 6 As built the ship was powered by six steam turbines 4 rated at a total of 14 000 shp 7 These were fed by a number of small high pressure Benson boilers 6 The turbines drove twin screw propellers and could propel the ship at 18 knots 33 km h 7 In 1949 the Benson boilers were replaced by convention boilers made by Foster Wheeler operating at 500 pounds per square inch 34 bar 6 In 1973 she was re engined being fitted with a diesel engine 1 As built the ship had accommodation for 152 first class and 338 second class passengers 8 In 1949 she was converted to a troopship with accommodation for 1 491 troops 9 In 1959 she was refitted to carry 106 first class and 2 000 pilgrim class passengers 1 History EditPre war Edit Pretoria was built as yard number 536 by Blohm amp Voss Hamburg Germany 10 She was launched on 16 July 1936 5 She was one of a pair of sister ships completed that year for Deutsche Ost Afrika Linie the other being TS Windhuk 7 The Code Letters DJSG were allocated 3 Pretoria began her maiden voyage from Hamburg on 19 December 1936 1 Her destination was Lourenco Marques Mozambique via Southampton United Kingdom 11 Lisbon Portugal Casablanca Morocco 12 Cape Town South Africa 11 On 24 December having departed from Southampton with 470 passengers and 300 crew on board she ran aground on the East Lepe Bank in the Solent Although five tugs attempted to free her she remained aground After 900 tons of water had been discharged overboard and 400 tons of fuel oil had been transferred to a tanker she was freed with the aid of seven tugs on 26 December losing her port anchor in the process Pretoria returned to Southampton for inspection resuming her voyage the next day As a result of the delays incurred the calls at Lisbon and Casablanca were omitted 12 Deutsche Ost Afrika Linie operated her mainly between Hamburg South West Africa and South Africa On 20 May 1937 Pretoria was involved in a collision with the British tanker Hekla during foggy weather in the North Sea 53 29 N 4 49 E 53 483 N 4 817 E 53 483 4 817 Hekla was badly damaged amidships and jettisoned some of her cargo Pretoria stood by whilst tugs were sent from Bremen Germany to Hekla s aid 13 World War II Edit In November 1939 Pretoria was requisitioned by the Kriegsmarine and used as a U boat depot ship Initially based at Kiel Schleswig Holstein she served the 1st U boat Flotilla based at Neustadt Hamburg from January 1940 In December she was transferred to 21st U boat Flotilla based at Pillau East Prussia In 1945 6 she was converted to a hospital ship 5 Pretoria assisted in the evacuation of German civilians from the Eastern Territories towards the end of the war 8 In May 1945 she was in Copenhagen when Denmark was liberated and UK forces captured her as a prize of war 1 Post war civil service EditPretoria was passed to the Ministry of War Transport MoWT converted to a troop ship at Newcastle upon Tyne She was renamed Empire Doon The MoWT placed her under the management of the Orient Steam Navigation Company 1 Empire Doon suffered boiler trouble in Port Said Egypt was towed back to Falmouth Cornwall by the Admiralty tug Bustler 14 She was then laid up off Southend on Sea Essex 5 Empire Doon was moved to Southampton Hampshire in May 1947 15 In 1949 1 she was reboilered by J I Thorneycroft amp Co of Southampton 5 and converted to a troopship 15 at a cost of 2 000 000 Trials were undertaken in November 1949 but had to be curtailed due to engine problems Her maiden voyage as a troopship scheduled for 10 December 16 was postponed Sea trials resumed on 29 December 17 The refit of Empire Doon was completed in January 1950 and she was renamed Empire Orwell to conform with the Ministry of Transport policy of ship names being prefixed Empire and Orient Line policy of using names beginning with O 1 She had capacity for 1 491 troops in three classes 9 Empire Orwell departed on her maiden voyage as a troopship on 17 January 1950 bound for Tobruk Libya and Port Said Egypt 18 She served as a troopship in the 1956 Suez Crisis landing troops in Cyprus and evacuating troops from the Suez Canal Zone citation needed In April 1958 Empire Orwell was damaged during storms in the Atlantic Ocean She was towed into Lisbon Portugal by a German tug 19 There were complaints about conditions on board Empire Orwell when she was returning troops from the Far East to the United Kingdom in 1958 The issue was raised in Parliament by Horace King MP In reply Alfred Barnes the Minister of Transport stated that complaints about messing arrangements encountered in the early part of the voyage were swiftly resolved Complaints that soldiers below the rank of sergeant were generally unable to visit their families were stated to be a matter of military discipline 20 Later that year she was chartered to the Pan Islamic Steam Ship Co of Karachi Pakistan who used her to carry Muslim pilgrims 1 Alfred Holt amp Co bought her in November of that year and renamed her Gunung Djati after the 16th century Javanese Wali Sanga Sunan Gunungjati She was placed her under the management of Ocean Steam Ship Co Liverpool Lancashire 1 Gunung Djati was refitted by Barclay Curle amp Co Ltd in Glasgow Scotland 1 The refit increased her displacement to 17 851 GRT She was fitted with a mosque and was fitted with indicator which would point towards Mecca 6 On 7 March 1959 she sailed for Djakarta Indonesia She could carry 106 first class passengers and 2 000 pilgrim class passengers 1 In 1962 the Indonesian government bought Gunung Djati transferred her to the Indonesian flag and continued to operate her as a pilgrim ship 1 In 1964 P T Maskapai Pelajaran Sang Saka of Djakarta bought her and continued to operate her in the same service 1 She was sold to Perusahaan Pelajaran Arafat Djakarta 21 In 1973 her boilers and steam turbines were replaced with diesel engines and in 1975 she was refitted in Hong Kong 1 Indonesian naval service Edit In 1979 21 the Indonesian Government bought Gunung Djati back renamed her KRI Tanjung Pandan with the pennant number 971 1 She was used by the Indonesian Navy as a troopship until 1981 and then as an accommodation ship 21 She had ceased to serve in this role by 1984 1 Tanjung Pandan was sold in 1987 to Taiwan for scrapping 5 Replacement naval ship Edit In 2003 Indonesia commissioned an amphibious transport dock ship from Daesun Shipbuilding and Engineering of Pusan in Korea which entered service as KRI Tanjung Dalpele She has since been converted to a hospital ship and renamed KRI Dr Soeharso 990 References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Merchant Navy Association Alfred Holt amp Co the Blue Funnel Line The Red Duster Merchant Navy Association Archived from the original on 14 January 2013 Retrieved 17 July 2010 Pernah Digunakan Kriegsmarine Dan Kapal Angkut Haji Inilah Sejarah KRI Tanjung Pandan 971 indomiliter com in Indonesian 18 March 2019 Retrieved 29 April 2021 a b LLOYD S REGISTER NAVIRES A VAPEUR ET A MOTEURS PDF Plimsoll Ship Data Retrieved 15 July 2011 a b E C Talbot Booth 1942 1936 Ships and the Sea Seventh ed London Sampson Low Marston amp Co Ltd p 420 a b c d e f Mitchell W H Sawyer L A 1995 The Empire Ships London New York Hamburg Hong Kong Lloyd s of London Press Ltd p not cited ISBN 1 85044 275 4 a b c d e Ships of the Hadj Merchant Navy Officers Retrieved 17 May 2011 a b c Harnack Edwin P 1938 1903 All About Ships amp Shipping 7th ed London Faber and Faber p 462 a b SHIP DESCRIPTIONS P Q The Ships List Archived from the original on 15 December 2009 Retrieved 17 May 2011 a b The Latest in Troopships The Times No 51585 London 10 January 1950 col G p 2 Liste der Newbauten Werft Blohm amp Voss in German Lostliners Retrieved 17 May 2011 a b Advertisement The Times No 47456 London 18 August 1936 col B p 2 a b German Liner Aground The Times No 47567 London 28 December 1936 col D p 7 Casualty Reports The Times No 47690 London 21 May 1937 col F p 7 Letter to Chris Tyrer PNC Retrieved 17 May 2011 a b Model Troopship The Times No 51494 London 23 September 1949 col G p 2 Troopship returns to port The Times No 51550 London 28 November 1949 col B p 4 Troopship s Trials The Times No 51576 London 30 December 1949 col F p 4 New Standards in Trooping The Times No 51591 London 17 January 1950 col B p 3 Telegrams in Brief The Times No 54118 London 7 April 1958 col G p 5 Troopship Empire Orwell Conditions Hansard Retrieved 17 May 2011 a b c EMPIRE D Mariners Retrieved 17 May 2011 External links EditPhoto of Pretoria Photo of Empire Orwell Photo of Empire Orwell Photo of Gunung Djati British Pathe newsreel of Empire Orwell returning troops from Korea Painting of Gunung Djati Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title TS Pretoria amp oldid 1124988088, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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