SS Stirling Castle was built by J.Elder & Co in Glasgow in 1882 and entered service with Thomas Skinner & Co., London in the tea trade from China. At 418.6 ft with a 50 ft beam, she measured 4,826 tons gross and 2,951 tons nett. She had a compound engine of 1500 horsepower and boilers which operated at 100 pounds per square inch (690 kPa).
On trials, she achieved 18.41 knots (34.10 km/h; 21.19 mph) and, in 1883, on a racing homeward passage loaded with tea, achieved an average speed of 16.5 knots (30.6 km/h; 19.0 mph). She held a long-standing record from the Tungshu Lightship to London with a time of 27 days and 4 hours.[a] The cost of this was a very large coal consumption, variously reported at 150 and 180 tons per day. Her normal complement of firemen was 52, but on her record-breaking run she used 111 firemen - an indication of the massive amount of coal that was shovelled into the 36 furnaces that heated her boilers. Despite the higher freights[b] that she could achieve with this speed, she was uneconomic to operate and was sold later in 1883.[1]: 128–129. 178
Her new owner was an Italian company, La Veloce and she was re-fitted with accommodation for passengers and renamed SS Nord America. She also kept the name SS Stirling Castle.
Her first voyage from Genoa to South America under Italian flag began on 13 November 1883. In 1884, she was named SS Nord America only.
She was chartered by the British government in 1885 to carry troops to Suakin, Sudan and in 1899 the Russian government chartered her to carry troops between Odessa and Vladivostok in connection with the Boxer Rebellion.
Between 5 May 1901 and 25 March 1908, she made 58 round trips between Palermo, Naples and New York.
Beginning in 1909, she was used solely as a cargo steamer, and on 5 December 1910 carrying a shipment of horses from Buenos Aires, she ran aground off Morocco. She was re-floated and towed to Genoa, laid up and scrapped in 1911.
Notes
^For comparison, the fastest service between Singapore and Europe in the early 1950s was one day less than this record-breaking run of 1883 from Wusong, China.
^Reported as £8 per ton on the record-breaking voyage. This compares with £6 per ton on her maiden voyage in 1882, a rate that was £2 higher than achieved by any others that year.
References
^MacGregor, David R. (1986). The China bird : the history of Captain Killick, and the firm he founded, Killick Martin & Company (2nd rev. ed.). London: Conway Maritime Press. ISBN0-85177-381-8.
Bibliography
Bonsor, N.R.P. North Atlantic Seaway, vol.3. pp. 1264–1271.
Bonsor, N.R.P. South Atlantic Seaway. pp. 278–279.