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Lost Ship SS Waratah
Lost Ship SS Waratah by P. J. Smith
Lost Ship SS Waratah


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Author: P. J. Smith
Published Date: 01 Nov 2009
Publisher: The History Press Ltd
Language: English
Format: Paperback::192 pages
ISBN10: 075245157X
ISBN13: 9780752451572
Publication City/Country: Stroud, United Kingdom
Imprint: none
File Name: Lost Ship SS Waratah.pdf
Dimension: 160x 230x 20mm::310g
Download Link: Lost Ship SS Waratah
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Lost Ship SS Waratah epub. The SS Waratah was a 500 foot steamer sometimes referred to as making this one of the best-known examples of a ship lost entirely without trace. The Waratah was a British cargo-passenger vessel, built by Barclay Curle The Lost Ship "SS Waratah" by P. J. Smith, 9780752451572, available at Book Depository with free delivery worldwide. C. G. Phillips, chief officer of the SS Clan MacIntyre - the last ship to see and signal the SS Waratah recounting a passing "ghost ship". Searching for the 'Titanic' of the South, b&w illustrations from photographs, paintings, portraits & drawings, reproductions of documents, bibliography, 192 pp, Téléchargement gratuit d'ebooks The Lost Ship SS Waratah: Searching for the Titanic of the South PDF 075245157X by P.J. Smith. P.J. Smith. In 1909, the SS S.S."Waratah", Port Adelaide [B 22782] Photograph The ship was lost without traceon the return voyage somewhere between Durban and Cape Town, Ghost ship. In July 1909, the steamer ship, SS Waratah which was en route from Durban to Cape Town, unexplainable disappeared with 211 passengers and crew aboard. The Waratah left Durban on 26 July with 211 passengers and crew. On 27 July she passed the steamer Clan McIntyre. As it turned out, the wreck was confirmed to be the SS Khedive, sunk by German U-Boats during the Second World War. Further searches were conducted through 1991, 1995, and 1997, without success. In 1999, great excitement in the tabloids claimed that the Waratah had The disappearance of a ship usually implies all hands lost. The SS Waratah was a steamship built by Barclay Curle & Co in Whiteinch, Glasgow. It got its The Lost Ship SS Waratah. Searching for the Titanic of the South. Smith, P. J. Edition number: 1. Publisher: History Press (SC). Date of Publication: 1 November Have you read this book? We'd like to know what you think about it - write a review about Lost Ship "SS Waratah" book by P. J. Smith and you'll earn 50c in The SS Waratah was a 500 foot steamer sometimes referred to as "Australia's Titanic", disappeared off South Africa late in July 1909, with the loss of all 211 persons on board no bodies, lifeboats, wreckage, or shipboard items of any kind were ever found, making this one of the best-known examples of a ship lost entirely without trace. 1909: S.S.Waratah, flagship of the Blue Anchor Line, leaves Durban harbour on 26 July for Cape Town, where she is expected to arrive on 29 July.On the next day she signals the ship Clan Macintyre in passing but then, in what becomes one of the enduring mysteries of the sea, she vanishes together with 92 passengers, 119 crew and 6500 tons of cargo. The SS Waratah was a large passenger freighter of over 9,000 tons completed in 1908 and belonging to the Blue Anchor Line. Her maiden voyage in 1909 was from London to Sydney via South Africa during which her master Captain J. F. Ilberry voiced certain misgivings about this new ship's performance but failed to put those thoughts on a formal footing and have the ship properly inspected. The SS Waratah plowed through the waves on a voyage from Durban to The hold of his boat was filled with fresh fish, no nets had been torn or lost, and the Fishpond New Zealand, The Lost Ship "SS Waratah": Searching for the Titanic of the South by Penny Dar-SmithBuy.Books online: The Lost Ship "SS Waratah": The Waratah was one of the most baffling mysteries of the sea. In July of 1909, the 500 foot steamer, on her return maiden voyage from Australia to Capetown, went missing with over 200 passengers and crew somewhere in the Indian ocean off the rugged eastern coast of South Africa. SS Waratah was a passenger and cargo steamship built in 1908 for the Blue Anchor Line to operate between Europe and Australia. In July 1909, on only her second voyage, the ship, en route from Durban to Cape Town, disappeared with 211 passengers and crew aboard. No trace of the ship was ever found.





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