SS Koningin der Nederlanden was a Dutch passengersteamship. She was built in 1911 for Stoomvaart Maatschappij Nederland (SMN, or "Netherland Line"), which ran scheduled passenger and mail services between Amsterdam and Java.
Koningin der Nederlanden means "Queen of the Netherlands". It refers to Queen Wilhelmina, who reigned from 1890 until 1948.
Building
Between 1909 and 1911 the Nederlandsche Scheepsbouw Maatschappij in Amsterdam built a pair of ships for SMN. The first was laid down on 15 July 1909 as yard number 105, and launched on 1 June 1910 as Prinses Juliana.[1] Her sister ship was laid down on 1 July 1910 as yard number 108, launched on 15 March 1911 as Koningin der Nederlanden, and completed on 12 July 1911. On 12 July she made her sea trials, on which she achieved a top speed of 15 knots (28 km/h).[2]
Koningin der Nederlanden's lengths were 473.0 ft (144.2 m) overall and 455.2 ft (138.7 m) registered. Her beam was 55.2 ft (16.8 m) and her depth was 33.8 ft (10.3 m). Her tonnages were 8,176 GRT, 4,983 NRT,[3] and 6,650 DWT. She had berths for 308 passengers: 136 in first class, 94 in second class, 38 in third class, and 40 in steerage. The combined capacity of her holds was 285,000 cu ft (8,100 m3) of grain, or 253,000 cu ft (7,200 m3) of baled cargo.[2]
On 6 August 1918 the ship was detached from the NOTS to the Cruiser and Transport Force. She embarked more than 2,200 troops of the American Expeditionary Forces to take to France. She made two more trips carrying troops from Norfolk to France. On the third trip she reached Brest on 9 November, two days before the Armistice with Germany. She then made five trips from France to US ports, in which she repatriated a total of more than 10,000 troops. On one trip she landed elements of the 88th Infantry Division at Newport News, Virginia on 4 June 1919. The US Navy decommissioned her on 7 November and returned her to her owners.[9]
Later career
In 1919 SMN had the ship refitted at Amsterdam from a troop ship back to a civilian liner.[2] In 1921 Isaac Israëls sailed on her to the Dutch East Indies. In 1924 the ship's after deck was enclosed.[10]
By 1927 the ship was equipped with wireless direction finding.[11] As built, she had three double-ended and two single-ended boilers, with a total heating surface of 16,316 square feet (1,516 m2). They were heated by a total of 24 corrugated furnaces, with a combined had a grate area of 391 square feet (36 m2).[3] However, in 1926 or 1927 this was increased to three double-ended and three single-ended boilers, with a total heating surface to 18,536 square feet (1,722 m2). Her corrugated furnaces were increased to 27, with a total grate area of 443 square feet (41 m2). These increased raised her power to 1,192 NHP.[11]
By January 1928, Koningin der Nederlanden's route between Amsterdam and Batavia was via Southampton, Algiers, Genoa, the Suez Canal, Colombo, Sabang, Belawan and Singapore. By May 1929, regular ports of call had been reduced to Amsterdam, Southampton, Algiers, and Genoa.[6]
On 26 May 1930, Koninklijke Nederlandse Stoomboot-Maatschappij bought Prinses Juliana from SMN, and renamed her Costa Rica. In August 1930 KNSM planned to buy her sister ship Koningin der Nederlanden and rename her San Salvador.[10] However, by 5 August 1931 she was laid up at Amsterdam, and needed a boiler inspection before she could return to service.[12] On 2 November she was still laid up at Amsterdam.[13] The results of an inspection were unsatisfactory, so KNSM cancelled the purchase.[2]
On 15 February 1932 SMN sold the ship to Frank Rijsdijk's Industriëele Ondernemingen of Hendrik-Ido-Ambacht for scrap. On 21 February she made her final voyage to Rotterdam to be broken up.[2]