Arosa Kulm

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Arosa_Kulm an entity of type: Thing

SS Arosa Kulm was a passenger ship which was launched at Hog Island, Pennsylvania in 1919 and completed in 1920.Arosa Kulm started as the U.S. Army Transport Cantigny, a 7,555-gross register ton troopship with a speed of 17 knots (31 km/h; 20 mph) and was sold in 1923/1924 to commercial transatlantic freight and passenger transport as American Banker. In 1940 the ship was transferred to a Belgian shipping company as Ville d'Anvers together with seven other idle American ships and was the only one of the eight ships to survive World War II to re-enter passenger service in 1946 with 200 berths as City of Athens. In 1947 as Protea and refitted with berths for over 965 persons. the accommodations were probably the worst of any ship of that time. In 1952 the accommodations were adjusted to 900 rdf:langString
rdf:langString Arosa Kulm
rdf:langString USAT Cantigny
rdf:langString * American Banker (1924)
rdf:langString * Arosa Kulm (1952)
rdf:langString * City of Athens (1946)
rdf:langString * Protea (1947)
rdf:langString * Ville d'Anvers (1940)
xsd:integer 31820402
xsd:integer 1091601324
xsd:integer 1920
rdf:langString InternetArchiveBot
rdf:langString May 2019
rdf:langString yes
rdf:langString as troopship
rdf:langString United States
rdf:langString Broken up at Bruges, 1959
rdf:langString Sold in 1923/1924 for commercial service
xsd:date 1919-10-27
rdf:langString USAT Cantigny
rdf:langString * American Banker * Ville d'Anvers * City of Athens * Protea * Arosa Kulm
rdf:langString SS Arosa Kulm was a passenger ship which was launched at Hog Island, Pennsylvania in 1919 and completed in 1920.Arosa Kulm started as the U.S. Army Transport Cantigny, a 7,555-gross register ton troopship with a speed of 17 knots (31 km/h; 20 mph) and was sold in 1923/1924 to commercial transatlantic freight and passenger transport as American Banker. In 1940 the ship was transferred to a Belgian shipping company as Ville d'Anvers together with seven other idle American ships and was the only one of the eight ships to survive World War II to re-enter passenger service in 1946 with 200 berths as City of Athens. In 1947 as Protea and refitted with berths for over 965 persons. the accommodations were probably the worst of any ship of that time. In 1952 the accommodations were adjusted to 900 and she was renamed Arosa Kulm after being sold to Panama's Arosa Line. Australia was visited four times by Arosa Kulm. In addition to serving immigrants, Arosa Kulm was chartered by American Field Service, an exchange organization bringing numerous exchange students between Europe and the U.S. Arosa Kulm was scrapped at Bruges in Belgium in 1959.
rdf:langString title
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4946
xsd:date 1919-10-27
xsd:string Broken upatBruges, 1959
xsd:string Sold in 1923/1924 for commercial service
xsd:double 31.484

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