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Revision as of 23:23, 11 April 2022

SS Nieuw Amsterdam
History
NameNieuw Amsterdam
OwnerHolland America Line
Port of registryRotterdam
RouteRotterdam, New York
BuilderHarland and Wolff, Belfast
Yard number366
Laid down21 January 1904
Launched28 September 1905
Completed22 February 1906
Maiden voyage7 April 1906
In service6 March 1906
Out of service27 October 1931
IdentificationRadio call sign "MHB"
FateScrapped February 1932
General characteristics
Tonnage16,913 GRT
Length187,68 m (615 ft)
Beam20,88 m (68 ft)
Draught10,8 m (35.6 ft)
PropulsionTwin screw: 2 quadruple 4 cyl. steam engines: 10,800 ipk
Speed16 kn (29.632 km/h)
Capacity1st class: 442, 2nd class: 246, 3rd class: 1078, steerage class: 1284
Crew305

SS Nieuw Amsterdam was a ship built in Belfast by Harland and Wolff. It was launched in 1905 and on April 7, 1906, made its first voyage to New York from Rotterdam.[1]

The Nieuw Amsterdam was fitted with sails, but they were never deployed; it was the first quadruple expansion powered ship of the Holland America Line. In 1914, the ship brought almost 1,700 United States citizens back from Europe at the outbreak of World War I. In 1917 she took 2,300 Dutch seamen from the United States back to Holland. The ship was renovated in 1918 and overhauled in 1925 to a "cabin/tourist configuration". It became the first ship to bring immigrants to the large new Canadian immigration terminal Pier 21 at Halifax, Nova Scotia, on March 8, 1928, and made 31 voyages to Pier 21 with Dutch immigrants before its retirement.[2] The last transatlantic passenger trip was made from Rotterdam on October 2, 1931, for New York. Nieuw Amsterdam arrived in Japan in February 1932 where it was scrapped.[1]

References

The music room
SS Nieuw Amsterdam