Archimedes (ship)

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Several ships have been named Archimedes for Archimedes:

  • Archimedes (1797) was a sailing ship launched at Sunderland. She traded between England and the Baltic until the British government chartered her as a transport c. 1809. She was lost in December 1811 while coming back from the Baltic.
  • SS Archimedes was a steamship built in Britain in 1839, and the world's first steamship to be driven by a screw propeller.
  • SS Archimedes (1859), of 1,086 GRT, was built by Palmer Bros.& Co., Newcastle upon Tyne. In 1867 and 1868 she laid telegraph cables between Denmark and Norway and Denmark and England.
  • Archimedes (1911 ship), of 6,869 GRT was built for the Den Line, who gave her the name Den of Airlie. The next year the Liverpool, Brazil & River Plate Steam Navigation purchased her and named her Archimedes. The Admiralty requisitioned her during WWI and she served as a supply ship from 1914-1919. In 1932 Ben Line Steamers purchased her and renamed her Benmacdhui. She hit a mine in 1941 and sank of Spurn Head.

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