2 x 5 cylinder SCDA oil engines (Bremer Vulkan) 975 hp (727 kW)
Speed
15 knots (28 km/h)
Capacity
129,000 cubic feet (3,700 m3) refrigerated cargo space
Pelikan was a 3,264 ton German refrigeratedcargo ship built in 1934. In 1945, during the Second World War, the United Kingdom seized her and renamed her Empire Alde. She changed names twice more: back to Pelikan in 1946, and to Pacuare in 1947. She was scrapped in 1959/60.
History
Pelikan was built by Bremer Vulkan Schiff- und Maschinenbau, Bremen as yard number 712 and launched in 1934, being completed in January 1935. She was owned by the Afrikanische Frucht-Cie AG[1] and managed by F Laeisz, Hamburg. In 1940, ownership passed to the Kriegsmarine (German navy)[2] although Lloyds Register continued to show Pelikan as a merchant ship.[3] In May 1945 Pelikan was seized at Brunsbüttel, and ownership passed to the Ministry of War Transport; she was renamed Empire Alde,[2] under the management of the Southern Railway[4] and later Kaye, Sons & Co. In 1946 Empire Alde was sold to Elders & Fyffes Ltd, regaining her original name of Pelikan before being renamed Pacuare in 1947. She served until 1959,[2] when she was sent to Troon for scrapping, arriving on 22 September.[1]
Official number and code letters
Official Numbers were a forerunner to IMO Numbers.
Pelikan used the Code Letters DJNP until 1945.[5]Empire Alde, Pelican and Pacuare used the UK Official Number 181664 from 1945-59[6]