SS Milazzo in port, 1916
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History | |
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Name | Milazzo |
Namesake | Milazzo, Sicily |
Owner | Navigazione Generale Italiana[1] |
Port of registry | Genoa |
Builder | Fiat-San Giorgio, Muggiano[1] |
Completed | June 1916[1] |
Maiden voyage | Genoa – New York, 11 June – 1 July 1916 |
Fate | Sunk by U-14 (Austria-Hungary) on 29 August 1917[1] |
Notes | sister ship of Volturno |
General characteristics | |
Type | bulk carrier |
Tonnage | 11,477 GRT[1] |
Displacement | 20,400 long tons (20,700 t)[2] |
Length | 157.7 m (517 ft 5 in) (pp)[1] |
Beam | 20.1 m (65 ft 11 in)[1] |
Draft | 6.2 m (20 ft 4 in)[2] |
Depth of hold | [3] |
Propulsion | 1 x quadruple-expansion steam engine, 4,000 hp (3,000 kW) |
Speed | 11 knots (20 km/h) |
SS Milazzo was an Italian bulk carrier built in 1916 and sunk during World War I. When she entered service, Milazzo was reported as the largest collier and also the largest cargo ship in the world.[3] She was designed with a unique railcar and elevator system that helped to automate the discharge of cargo. SS Volturno was her sister ship.
Milazzo, built for and operated by Navigazione Generale Italiana, sailed to New York on her maiden voyage in June 1916. In October, on her second eastbound voyage, the ship put in at the Azores with three of her cargo holds ablaze; her New York agent attributed the fires to sabotage. On 29 August 1917, Milazzo was sunk by the Austro-Hungarian Navy submarine U-14 under the command of Georg Ritter von Trapp, later more notable as the patriarch of the family featured in The Sound of Music.