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Wyreema

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Wyreema
Wyreema docked at Townsville, 1923
History
NamesakeMaori: Meeting Place of Three Rivers
OwnerAustralian United Steam Navigation Company (A.U.S.N.)
BuilderA. Stephen & Sons, Glasgow, Scotland
Completed1908[1]
FateBroken up 1958, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
General characteristics
Tonnage6,388 GT,[1] 3,362 NT
Length400 ft (120 m)
Beam54 ft (16 m)
Installed powerTriple expansion steam
PropulsionTwin screw
Speed16 knots (30 km/h; 18 mph)

Wyreema was an Australian steamship named after the town of Wyreema, Queensland.

She was a passenger liner that was hired to transport Australian Army Nursing Service nurses to Europe during World War I.[2] However, with the end of the war, she was recalled from South Africa. Nurses from the ship were then volunteers at the Woodman Point Quarantine Station in Western Australia, nursing soldiers who were Spanish flu victims who landed from the ship Boonah.

She is reported to have "run down" and sunk SS Currajong in Sydney Harbour in 1910.[3][4]

In 1926, she was sold to Brazil and was renamed Dom Pedro I.

References

  1. ^ a b "Lloyd's Register: Underwriters, Volume 2".
  2. ^ "Sister Rosa O'Kane Grave, Woodman Point". The Gardens – Family History. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
  3. ^ "The Wrecks of Sydney: SS Currajong". Blue Beyond. Archived from the original on 5 October 2008.
  4. ^ "TSS Currajong". Michael McFadyen's Scuba Diving. Retrieved 12 July 2013.

Media related to Wyreema (ship, 1908) at Wikimedia Commons