SS Corcovado

Corcovado
History
Name
  • 1908: Corcovado
  • 1917: Sueh
  • 1919: Corcovado
  • 1920: Guglielmo Peirce
  • 1927: Maria Cristina
  • 1930: Mouzinho
Namesake1908: Corcovado
Owner
Operator
Port of registry
Route
BuilderF Krupp Germaniawerft, Kiel
Yard number133
Launched21 December 1907
Completed1 April 1908
Identification
  • 1908: code letters RPVG
  • call sign DRC
  • 1920: code letters NTCG
  • 1930: code letters LDBJ
  • 1934: call sign CSDW
Fatescrapped 1954
General characteristics
Typecargo liner
Tonnage7,976 GRT, 4,951 NRT
Length448.3 ft (136.6 m)
Beam55.2 ft (16.8 m)
Draught25 ft 11 in (7.90 m)
Depth28.1 ft (8.6 m)
Decks2
Installed power592 NHP, 4,000 ihp
Propulsion
Speed13+12 knots (25 km/h)
Capacity
  • passengers:
  • 1908: 140 × 1st class, 110 × 2nd class, 1,100 × steerage
  • 1928: 56 × 1st class, 943 × steerage
Crew136
Sensors and
processing systems
Notessister ship: Ypiranga

SS Corcovado was a cargo liner that was launched in Germany in 1907 for the Hamburg America Line (HAPAG). In 1917 she was transferred to the Ottoman government and renamed Sueh. In 1919 the Ottomans surrendered her to France, and her name reverted to Corcovado. In 1920 the Società Sicula Americana bought her and renamed her Guglielmo Peirce. In 1927 Lloyd Sabaudo bought her and renamed her Maria Cristina. In 1930 the Companhia Colonial de Navegação (CCN) bought her and renamed her Mouzinho. She was scrapped in Italy in 1954.

In her HAPAG career Corcovado served various transatlantic routes between Europe and both South and North America. In the First World War she was the barracks ship Sueh in Turkey and a troopship in the Black Sea. As Guglielmo Peirce she took European emigrants from Italy to both South and North America. As Maria Cristina she took European emigrants from Italy to Australia.

The longest part of her career was with CCN as Mouzinho. Her regular route linked Portugal with its colonies in Africa. In 1941 she made two voyages from Portugal to the US, on which she carried a total of 1,346 refugees, many of them Jewish, who had escaped from German-occupied Europe.