RMS Orama (1911)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- 1911: Anderson, Green & Company
- 1914:
Royal Navy
| History | |
|---|---|
| United Kingdom | |
| Name | Orama |
| Namesake | Oorama Hill, South Australia |
| Owner | Orient Steam Navigation Company |
| Operator |
|
| Port of registry | |
| Route | Tilbury – Gibraltar – Suez Canal – Colombo – Fremantle – Brisbane |
| Builder | John Brown & Company, Clydebank |
| Yard number | 403 |
| Launched | 27 June 1911 |
| Commissioned | as HMS Orama, 12 September 1914 |
| Maiden voyage | 10 November – 25 December 1911 |
| Identification |
|
| Fate | Sunk, 19 October 1917 |
| General characteristics | |
| Type | Ocean liner |
| Tonnage | 12,927 GRT, 8,179 NRT |
| Length | 551.0 ft (167.9 m) |
| Beam | 64.2 ft (19.6 m) |
| Depth | 39.0 ft (11.9 m) |
| Installed power | 14,000 ihp (10,000 kW) |
| Propulsion |
|
| Speed | 18 knots (33 km/h; 21 mph) |
| Capacity |
|
| Crew | (as AMC): 367 |
| Armament |
|
RMS Orama was a British steam ocean liner and Royal Mail Ship. She was launched in 1911 for the Orient Steam Navigation Company. When new, she was the largest liner sailing between Great Britain and Australia.
In 1914 the British Admiralty requisitioned her and had her converted into an armed merchant cruiser (AMC). In 1915 she took part in the brief Battle of Más a Tierra off Chile. In 1917 a U-boat sank her in the Southwest Approaches.
She was the first of two Orient Line ships called Orama. The second was a 19,777-gross register ton (GRT) turbine steamship that was launched in 1924 in England, converted into a troop ship in the Second World War and sunk by a German cruiser in the Norwegian campaign in 1940.[1]
The name Orama comes from a hill in the County of Lytton, South Australia, which was originally "Oorama" and was shortened to "Orama".[2][3]
The Tilbury – Brisbane route
Orient Line ran a fortnightly liner service between Tilbury and Brisbane via Gibraltar, Toulon, Naples, the Suez Canal, Colombo, Fremantle, Adelaide, Melbourne and Sydney. Additionally ships called at Taranto when outbound from Tilbury to Brisbane and at Plymouth when returning from Brisbane to Tilbury.[4]
Until 1909 the Orient Line's largest and newest ship on the route was the 9,028-gross register ton (GRT) RMS Orontes, which was launched in 1902. In 1909 Orient Line upgraded its service with five new twin-screw sister ships, each of slightly more than 12,000 GRT, with twin screws driven by quadruple-expansion steam engines. Orsova and Otway were launched in 1908 and Osterley, Otranto and Orvieto were launched in 1909. This was followed by the Federal Australian Government in 1910 renewing the contract for the Orient Line to carry mail between Australia and the UK.[4]
Orient Line intended Orama to replace the 6,814 GRT RMS Ophir, which had been launched in 1891,[5] and place in reserve the 6,116 GRT RMS Ormuz, which had been launched in 1886.[6]
"Combination" machinery
In 1908 there had been a significant advance in the propulsion of large steamships. William Denny and Brothers launched the refrigerated cargo liner Otaki and Harland & Wolff launched the 14,892 GRT White Star Line transatlantic liner Laurentic, each of which had three screws and a combination of triple-expansion steam engines and a Parsons low-pressure steam turbine. The reciprocating engines drove their port and starboard propellers, whilst excess steam from the low-pressure cylinders then powered a single turbine, which provided power the centre propeller.

Laurentic had a sister ship, Megantic, whose propulsion was by quadruple-expansion engines alone. Laurentic proved faster and more powerful than Megantic, and more economical when running at the same speed. Several shipping lines responded by ordering new liners with "combination machinery" similar to Laurentic's. Most notable were the three giant Olympic-class transatlantic liners that Harland and Wolff built for White Star Line from 1910 onward.
Ships with both types of engine were occasionally called "recipro-turbine steamers".[7] However, the more usual term was "combination machinery".
When Orient Line ordered a sixth ship, Orama, to join the five sisters built in 1908 and 1909, it therefore specified that she should have three propellers and combination machinery,[8] with a pair of four-cylinder triple-expansion engines plus a low-pressure turbine.[9] It also specified that she should be similar to the other five but 25 ft (7.6 m) longer, which made her tonnage almost 13,000 GRT.
Building

Orient Line ordered Orama from John Brown & Company of Clydebank, who had built Orsova. Lady Anderson, wife of Orient Line director Sir Kenneth Anderson,[7] launched Orama on 27 June 1911.[10] John Brown & Co completed the ship later that year.
Orama's low-pressure turbine was 11 ft (3.4 m) in diameter, and set aft of her twin reciprocating engines. For slow-speed manoeuvering, or going astern, her low-pressure turbine could be cut out by valves diverting the exhaust steam from her reciprocating engines straight to her condensers.[11]
Orama had nine-single-ended boilers, which was one less than Orsova and her sisters.[11] They supplied steam at 215 lbf/in2 to the high-pressure cylinders of her reciprocating engines.[12]
On her sea trials Orama achieved 18+1⁄2 knots (34.3 km/h) over the nautical measured mile in the Firth of Clyde, and on a 56-hour run she sustained 18+1⁄2 knots (34.3 km/h) for 18 hours. Despite being larger than her five sisters, and having one fewer boilers, Orama achieved similar performance and required less coal.[11]

Orama had berths for 1,305 passengers: 293 first class, 145 second class and 867 third class.[13] Her first and second class saloons and cabins were on her upper decks. She had two third class promenade decks, on her bridge deck and shelter deck. Her third class smoking room and music room were also on her shelter deck. She had electric passenger lifts.[14]
Her public saloons were in historicist styles: Louis XVI for her first class lounge, music room and dining saloon; Dutch colonial for her first-class smoking room[13] and Adam style for her first class writing room and library. The first-class smoking room had a wooden floor of inlaid sycamore.[15]
Orama's domestic services were mechanised with equipment including an electric laundry, electric dishwasher, bread-slicing machine and labour-saving potato peeler.[15]
Orient Line registered Orama in Glasgow. Her UK official number was 132989 and her code letters were HTRP.[16]
Wireless telegraphy
In 1911 it was announced that Orama would have the most powerful wireless telegraphy equipment of any ship trading to Australia.[17] However, when the Marconi Company published its first edition of The Year Book of Wireless Telegraphy and Telephony in 1913, it did not list Orama as having wireless equipment. The 1914 edition did list Orama as being equipped with equipment to operate on the standard 300 and 600 metre wavelengths. Her call sign was MTW.[18]

Sister ship
In April 1913 Orient Line announced that it would order a sister ship for Orama, and had invited five UK shipbuilders to submit tenders.[19] This was RMS Ormonde, for which Orient Line awarded the contract to John Brown & Co.
She was laid down in 1913 but the First World War delayed her building for two years, and she was not launched until 1917. Ormonde was in fact 30 ft (9 m) longer than Orama, and thanks to the introduction of reduction gearing for turbines in about 1910–11, Ormonde was built not with combination machinery but with pure turbine propulsion.[20]
Civilian service
Maiden voyage
On 6 November 1911 John Brown & Co delivered Orama to Tilbury to be handed over to Orient Line. As she came in to moor she collided with a pier head and was slightly damaged.[21] This did not delay the start of her maiden voyage on 10 November, when she left Tilbury for Brisbane.[22] Her Master was Captain AJ Coad, RNR.[23] She was carrying a large amount of mail to reach Australia in time for Christmas.[24]

Her passengers included Havelock Wilson, President of the UK National Sailors' and Firemen's Union, which had won recognition from the Shipping Federation earlier that year.[25][26] He was on his way to the hot springs at Rotorua in New Zealand to treat his gout, and thereafter he planned to address trade union meetings in Australia before his return to the UK.[27]
In the Red Sea Orama passed the P&O liner RMS Medina, which was carrying King George V and Queen Mary to India for the 1911 Delhi Durbar.[23]
Orama was the largest mail ship yet to visit Australia,[28] and only the second liner with "combination" machinery to reach Australia. The first was Aberdeen Line's Demosthenes, which arrived in October 1911.[29]
The first Australian port Orama reached was Fremantle, where she arrived on 12 December. She arrived with 1,257 passengers, which at the time was said to be the largest number yet to have passed through the Suez Canal together on one ship.[30]

On the morning of 16 December Orama reached Adelaide.[23] Her mail was landed to be forwarded by train, including that for Victoria, New South Wales, Queensland and Tasmania as well as for South Australia. Her mail for Melbourne was a record 1,754 bags.[24] Orient Line held an afternoon reception aboard for about 450 invited guests, who were conveyed from Adelaide to Outer Harbor by special train.[23]
On 18 December Orama reached Hobsons Bay in Melbourne,[31] where another reception was held aboard.[32] On 21 December Orama reached Sydney, where The Sydney Morning Herald called her "an ocean greyhound".[33]
At Sydney Orama landed 820 passengers at Circular Quay.[34] It took five hours to discharge all their luggage, and passengers complained of difficulty in finding and retrieving their items in the luggage sheds. One customer complained "the whole of our effects are mixed up in a higgledy-piggledy fashion. I have been here the best part of my day trying to sort out my luggage, and it is not pleasant. I am tired, hot, dusty, thirsty, and exceedingly annoyed."[35]
The same passenger pointed out that at Tilbury, and to some extent at Melbourne, luggage was sorted in alphabetical order of passengers' surnames, and asked why the same was not done at Sydney. The Orient Line replied that it had laid out the luggage in rows "certainly set in order, though the order would not necessarily be alphabetical".[35]
On Christmas Day, 25 December, Orama reached Pinkenba in Brisbane.[36] There nine members of her crew jumped ship. One, a steward, was caught, tried at Brisbane Police Court and sentenced to 12 weeks' imprisonment with hard labour.[37]
1912 – 1914

On 27 December 1911 Orama began her first return voyage from Brisbane to Tilbury.[36] At Sydney on 4 January she hosted an informal reception whose guests were businessmen of the city.[28]
At Melbourne on 9 January she hosted a luncheon whose guests included the Cabinet ministers King O'Malley, George Pearce and Josiah Thomas and the Lord Mayor of Melbourne as well as businessmen of Victoria. Addressing guests, Orient Line's general manager David Anderson rejected the idea of bunkering steamships with oil instead of coal, claiming that it would be dangerous and the smell would be objectionable to passengers.[38] Barely 18 months later his objections were overtaken by the successful introduction of the Union Steam Ship Co of New Zealand's transpacific liner RMS Niagara.
Orama's passengers included significant numbers of migrants to Australia.[39][40] In May 1912 her stability in a gale and heavy sea off Fremantle led Captain Coad to declare Orama "a magnificent seaboat".[41]

In 1912 Orama was due to be dry docked in London, but Orient Line cancelled this due to a labour dispute. Instead in August she was dry docked in Woolwich Dock in Sydney for cleaning, painting and work on her middle screw. At the time she was the largest ship yet dry docked in Australia.[42]
In December 1912 in Sydney three of Orama's crew were accused of assaulting one or two of their shipmates, because the latter had been part of a non-union crew that had sailed her to Australia on her previous trip. A magistrate at Water Police Court agreed that an assault had been committed, but found insufficient evidence to convict the accused.[43]
Archbishop Mannix, who would become the leading figure in the Australian Catholic Church, first arrived in Australia on the Orama on Easter Saturday 1913.[44]
In November 1913 Orama lost one blade of her middle screw as she rounded Cape Leeuwin on the coast of Western Australia. A few days later, on 24 November, after taking aboard a pilot to take her up the Brisbane River, Orama ran aground at Bulimba Point.[45] About 12 hours later she was refloated on the evening tide,[46] towed by two tugs and a dredger.[47]
On 26 November Orama left Brisbane. A few hours later she ran aground again, this time in Moreton Bay after passing the Moreton Bay Pile Light.[48] Three tugs stood by to assist, but she refloated on the flood tide without their aid.[49]

Orama continued to Sydney, where on 28 November she was dry docked at Woolwich Dock both to replace her damaged middle screw and to see whether grounding in the Brisbane River had damaged her hull.[50] A Lloyd's marine surveyor inspected her hull, her screw was replaced and she left Woolwich Dock on 29 November.[51]
The shipping inspector at Brisbane investigated the groundings of 24 and 26 November, concluded that pilot error caused both groundings, and submitted his findings to the Marine Board. On the Board's recommendation, the Treasurer severely censured the pilots in each case.[52]
Some of Orama's passengers organised together to keep themselves entertained on the six-week voyage between Tilbury and Australia. On one voyage at the beginning of 1914 they elected a sports committee, complete with chairman, secretary and treasurer, which organised sports and games for every day of the voyage. One member of the committee also acted as master of ceremonies for several concerts, dances and card parties during the voyage. A prominent war correspondent gave a talk on "The Recent Balkan Campaign".[53]
Passengers on the same voyage held a debate on "The Future of the British Dominions". It was introduced by three professors: AJ Grant, TH Laby and a "Professor Robertson of California", and concluded with unanimous agreement "that the Empire must be maintained whatever the cost".[53]

In 1914 the third class fare between Tilbury and Australia on Orama was £20 in either direction.[40] Orama was popular. In April 1914 she sailed from Adelaide with 1,200 passengers, reportedly the largest number of passengers yet to have left Australia for Europe together on one ship. They were matched by such a crowd on the quayside wishing them farewell that "It was an almost impossible task to even approximately estimate the number of people present".[54]
Orama's passengers on that occasion included the Antarctic explorer Douglas Mawson, his new bride Francisca,[54] and John King Davis, captain of the Antarctic exploration ship SY Aurora.[55]
Final civilian voyage
On 28 July 1914, the First World War began, Orama left Fremantle for Tilbury.[56] She was due to call at Colombo on 6 August,[57] and while she was at sea Orient Line announced she would be held there.[56]
On the evening of 5 August, before reaching Colombo, Orama's passengers staged a concert. It concluded with UK and Empire passengers singing God Save the King and French passengers singing La Marseillaise. Her passengers included Australian Postmaster-General Agar Wynne, who changed his plans and disembarked at Colombo to return to Australia.[58]

From Colombo Orama sailed with all lights blacked out, and the battleship HMS Swiftsure sailed ahead of her to Aden. Orama changed course every night to reduce the risk of a German cruiser finding her. "A large four-funnel British warship" met Orama early on 12 August and escorted her through the Gulf of Aden.[58]
Orama reached Plymouth and Tilbury on time on 29 and 30 August.[59] It was her final civilian voyage.





