HMS Arpha

History
Name
  • SS Canterbury (1900–26)
  • SY Arpha (1926–38)
  • SS Arpha (1938–39)
  • HMS Arpha (1939–46)
  • SS Coriano (1946–55)
Owner
  • South Eastern and Chatham Railway (1901–22)
  • Southern Railway (1923–26)
  • W E Guinness (1926–38)
  • Crete Shipping Co Ltd (1938)
  • Sark Motorships Ltd (1938–39)
  • Royal Navy (1939–46)
  • W J Brown (1946)
  • Shell Company of Venezuela (1946–47)
  • Caribbean Petroleum Co (1947–49)
  • Shell Caribbean Petroleum Co (1949–51)
  • J M Perez Hernandez (1951–55)
Operator
  • South Eastern and Chatham Railway (1901–22)
  • Southern Railway (1923–26)
  • W E Guinness (1926–38)
  • Crete Shipping Co Ltd (1938)
  • Sark Motorships Ltd (1938–39)
  • Royal Navy (1939–46)
  • Worms & Co (1946)
  • Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co Ltd (1946–47)
  • Caribbean Petroleum Co (1947–49)
  • Shell Caribbean Petroleum Co (1949–51)
  • J M Perez Hernandez (1951–55)
Port of registry
  • United Kingdom London (1901–26)
  • United Kingdom Cowes (1926–38)
  • United Kingdom Guernsey (1938–39)
  • United Kingdom Guernsey (1939–46)
  • United Kingdom London (1946–47)
  • Venezuela Maracaibo (1947–55)
RouteDover–Calais (1901–26)
BuilderW Denny, Dumbarton
Yard number640
Launched6 December 1900
CompletedJanuary 1901
Out of serviceOctober 1955
Identification
FateScrapped 1955
General characteristics
Type
  • Passenger ferry (1901–26)
  • Steam yacht (1926–38)
  • Passenger ferry (1938–39)
  • Armed boarding vessel (1939–46)
  • Passenger ferry (1946–55)
Tonnage
  • 561 GRT (1901–26), 602 (1926–55)
  • 225 NRT (1901–26), 233 (1926–55)
Length195.4 ft (59.6 m)
Beam28.0 ft (8.5 m)
Depth14.2 ft (4.3 m)
Decks1
Installed power2 × triple expansion steam engines
PropulsionTwin screws
Speed14 knots (26 km/h)

Arpha was a 602 GRT passenger ferry built in 1900 as Canterbury for the South Eastern and Chatham Railway. She passed to the Southern Railway on 1 January 1923. She was sold to W E Guinness in 1926 and renamed Arpha. In 1938 she was sold to Sark Motorships Ltd, only to be requisitioned by the Royal Navy in 1939. Postwar, she was sold to Compania Shell de Venezuela and renamed Coriano. After a further change of ownership she was scrapped in 1955.