In 1942 a Royal Navy submarine torpedoed Piemonte, but she was beached and refloated. On 1943 she was damaged in an Allied air raid and then scuttled. In 1949 she was raised and scrapped.
Barclay, Curle & Co had laid down one of the ships as Medora. CP renamed her Minnedosa. She was launched in Glasgow as yard number 518 and launched her on 17 October 1917.[3] She was then towed to Belfast where Harland & Wolff installed her engines. Her Harland & Wolff yard number was 464.[1]
Minnedosa had three screws. A pair of four-cylinder triple-expansion steam engines drove her port and starboard screws. Exhaust steam from their low-pressure cylinders powered a low-pressure steam turbine that drove her middle screw.[4] Between them the three engines gave her a top speed of 16+1⁄2 knots (30.6 km/h)[5] and cruising speed of 15 knots (28 km/h).[1]
Minnedosa's registered length was 520 ft (160 m), her beam was 67.2 ft (20.5 m) and her depth was 50.3 ft (15.3 m).[4] Her holds included 37,460 cubic feet (1,061 m3) of refrigerated space.[6] As built, her tonnages were 13,972 GRT and 8,521 NRT.[7]
Minnedosa was initially fitted out as a troop ship. CP took delivery of her on 21 November 1918.[1]
In 1927 CP put Minnedosa on its route between Britain, Quebec and Montreal. In 1931 she was laid up after having crossed the North Atlantic 129 times.[1] In 1935 CP sold Melita and Minnedosa to breakers in Italy.[11]
Italian service
The sale contract specified that the two ships must be broken up.[12] This clause was breached when the pair were passed to Flotte Riuniti Cosulich-Lloyd Sabaudo, who had them refitted as troop ships for the Italian Government.[13]Minnedosa was renamed Piemonte.[1][3][14] She carried troops in the Second Italo-Ethiopian War.[1] In 1936 she was transferred to Lloyd Triestino,[14] which in 1938 put her on its Far East service.[1]
On 17 November 1942 the submarine HMS Umbra torpedoed Piemonte off Capo Rasocolmo in the Mediterranean. She was beached to prevent her sinking, then refloated on 28 December and towed to Messina.[3] In May 1943 Allied aircraft bombed Piemonte in Messina, capsizing her in shallow water.[1] On 15 August she was scuttled in Messina.[3]
In 1949 Piedmont's wreck was raised. She was towed to La Spezia, where she arrived on 24 July to be scrapped.[3]