SS Asiatic (sometimes operated as the RMS Asiatic) was a steamship operated by the White Star Line from 1871 to 1873, a sister ship to Tropic. Sold off after only two years, she was renamed SS Ambriz, and eventually was wrecked in 1903.
Ship history
Asiatic was built as a passenger-cargo ship during the transition from sail to steam power, so she was fitted with three fully rigged masts in addition to her two-cylinder compound steam engine manufactured by Laird Brothers of Birkenhead, England. In addition to cargo, she could carry up to 10 passengers. She was launched by Thomas Royden & Sons of Liverpool on 1 December 1871, and the White Star Line bought her prior to her launching. She was registered on November 4 1871, and completed in March 1872.[3] She operated first in the Calcutta, India, trade, but transferred to the South American route in July 1872. From February 1873, she sailed to South America for the White Star Line. None of these enterprises proved profitable, and following the loss of the Atlantic in April 1873, the ship was sold to the African Steamship Company to raise additional capital.[1]
Renamed Ambriz, she operated on the West African route from September 1873.[1] In November or December 1875, she rescued the crew of the British barqueEagle, which foundered in the Atlantic Ocean.[4]Ambriz grounded in the River Elbe on February 18 1880, and had her stern-post repaired. [5] She later struck a submerged rock in 1882, but was repaired and returned to service.[6] In December 1883, she was refitted and re-engined, and from 1894 she served on the Liverpool–New Orleanscotton route.
Ambriz was sold in 1895 to Hutton & Co. of Liverpool, but was sold again in 1896 to the Cie Française de Charbonnage et de la Batelage ("French Coaling & Shipping Company"), for which she served as a coaldepot ship, regularly sailing from her base at Madagascar to Europe to replenish her coal supply. She was wrecked off the coast of Madagascar in February 1903.[1]
References
^ abcdLeduc, Martin (2012). "White Star Liners"(PDF). Martin's Marine Engineering Page. Retrieved 31 October 2012.