stuart rowles Posted 14 October , 2019 Share Posted 14 October , 2019 Does anyone have any high-res pictures of this ship they are willing to share GALWAY CASTLE was built in 1911 by Harland & Wolff at Belfast with a tonnage of 7988grt, a length of 452ft 4in, a beam of 54ft 4in and a service speed of 13 knots. Similar to the Grantully Castle she was the last ship to be delivered before the company was taken over by Royal Mail. In August 1914 she was requisitioned as a troop ship for deployment in the German West Africa campaign against Windhoek. After the German colony was taken over by General Botha in 1915 she reverted to commercial service as the only remaining Union-Castle vessel. On 3rd August 1916 she was attacked by a German bomber near the Gull lightship but the bomb, although scoring a direct hit, failed to explode. She went aground on the Orient Bank at East London on 12th October 1917 but was refloated five days later without any damage. At 07.30 hrs on 12th September 1918 when two days out from Plymouth, she was torpedoed by U-82 and broke her back. At the time she was carrying 400 South African walking wounded, 346 passengers and 204 crew members. So severe was the damage that it was thought that she would sink immediately and it was apparent that U-82 was lining up for another attack. In the rush to abandon ship several lifeboats were swamped by the heavy seas and many finished up in the sea. However, the U-boat did not mount a further attack and the Galway Castle continued to wallow for three days. Destroyers were summoned by radio to rescue survivors who were taken back to Plymouth where it was ascertained that 143 persons had perished. HMS Spitfire remained in attendance and took off the skeleton crew before she finally sank Harry Nelson Rowles was one of the South African soldiers to perish. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
michaeldr Posted 14 October , 2019 Share Posted 14 October , 2019 You may have seen this already https://uboat.net/wwi/ships_hit/2359.html Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
stuart rowles Posted 14 October , 2019 Author Share Posted 14 October , 2019 Thanks for replying but all the pictures on that site are extremely low resolution. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MerchantOldSalt Posted 14 October , 2019 Share Posted 14 October , 2019 Best I can do! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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