Justicia in wartime grey
| |
History | |
---|---|
United Kingdom | |
Name |
|
Namesake | 1917: Lady Justice |
Owner | Oceanic Steam Navigation Co |
Operator | White Star Line |
Port of registry | Liverpool |
Builder | Harland & Wolff, Belfast |
Yard number | 436 |
Laid down | 1912 |
Launched | 9 July 1914 |
Completed | 7 April 1917 |
Identification |
|
Fate | Sunk by six torpedoes, 1918 |
General characteristics | |
Type | Troop ship |
Tonnage | 32,120 GRT, 19,699 NRT |
Length | 740.5 ft (225.7 m) |
Beam | 86.4 ft (26.3 m) |
Depth | 43.1 ft (13.1 m) |
Installed power | 2,903 NHP, 22,000 ihp |
Propulsion |
|
Speed | 17 knots (31 km/h) |
Troops | About 4,000 |
Crew | 600 |
Armament | Naval gun on poop deck |
SS Justicia was a British troop ship that was launched in Ireland in 1914 and sunk off County Donegal in 1918. She was designed and launched as the transatlantic liner Statendam, a new flagship for the Holland America Line (NASM), but the outbreak of First World War delayed her completion. In 1915 NASM agreed to let the United Kingdom acquire her and have her completed as a troop ship.
The ship was completed in 1917 and renamed Justicia, with the intention that Cunard Line would crew and operate her. However, Cunard was unable to raise a crew for her, so the Shipping Controller appointed White Star Line to manage her.
Justicia entered service in April 1917, carrying troops from North America to Europe. She escaped a U-boat attack in January 1918, but sank that July off the coast of Ireland after two U-boats hit her with a total of six torpedoes making her the second largest ship to sink in WW1 behind Britannic, and the largest to be sunk by a torpedo in the first world war. Britannic struck a mine rather than a torpedo.
The ship was 90 ft (27 m) longer and 9 ft (3 m) broader than NASM's then flagship, the 24,149 GRT Rotterdam, which Harland & Wolff had completed in 1908. Statendam would have been by far the largest NASM had yet owned. Only HAPAG's Imperator class, White Star Line's Olympic class and Cunard's Aquitania were larger. As it was, Justicia she became the second largest ship sunk by enemy action in the First World War. The only one larger than Justicia was the 48,148 GRT HMHS Britannic.[1]
Justicia shared the same combined propulsion system as several other H&W liners of her era including Laurentic and Belgenland.
Justicia's wreck is in the territorial waters of the Republic of Ireland and protected by Irish law.