- SS Zeeland (1901)
SS "Zeeland" was a British and Belgian
ocean liner of theInternational Mercantile Marine Co. (IMM). She was asister ship to and "Zeeland" atJohn Brown & Company ofClydebank inScotland , and two others, and , were to be built atWilliam Cramp and Sons in Philadelphia,Pennsylvania .Bonsor, p. 840.] After being launched on24 November 1900 , "Zeeland" made hermaiden voyage from Antwerp to New York on13 April 1901 , sailing under the British flag.Bonsor, p. 855.]"Zeeland" began regular service on the Antwerp–New York route sailing opposite of "Vaderland", and when they were completed in 1902, "Kroonland" and "Finland". In April 1910, "Zeeland" was chartered to the
White Star Line for service betweenLiverpool and Boston, where she remained until September 1911. The following month, "Zeeland" was returned to the Antwerp–New York service for Red Star. In July 1912 the liner was reflagged as a Belgian ship; she remained on the same route, and continued sailing for the Red Star Line.World War I
After the August 1914 outbreak of
World War I , "Zeeland" was reflagged as a British ship, and sailed from Liverpool to New York in September. Shifting to the White Star-Dominion Line, "Zeeland" first sailed from Liverpool to Quebec andMontreal in November, and from Liverpool to Halifax and Portland in December and January 1915. In early 1915, "Zeeland", though her name was Flemish, was renamed to the less German-sounding SS "Northland". Sailing for theInternational Navigation Company , the liner continued on the Liverpool–Halifax–Portland service through June before returning to the Liverpool–Quebec–Montreal route.After a period when she was taken up as a British troop ship, under the name HMT "Northland", the liner returned for service under the White Star-Dominion Line in August 1916. In April 1917, "Northland" began Liverpool–Halifax service, eventually making seven roundtrips on that route.
Late career
In February 1919, SS "Northland" began sailing from Liverpool to Philadelphia for the
American Line through June 1919. After a refurbishment, the liner was returned to her former name, "Zeeland"; to the Red Star Line; and to Antwerp–New York service (with intermediate stops inSouthampton ) in August 1920. In April 1923, "Zeeland" was converted to cabin- and third-class passenger service only. "Zeeland" began her last Red Star voyage on8 October 1926 . Transferred to theAtlantic Transport Line in 1927, the liner was renamed SS "Minnesota" and began tourist service betweenLondon and New York in April. After making her last voyage in September 1929, "Minnesota" was sold and scrapped atInverkeithing in 1930.Notes
References
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