| HM 
                Troopship Dorsetshire was a Bibby Line ship built in 1920 by Harland 
                & Wolff at Belfast with a tonnage of 7450grt, a length of 
                450ft 4in, a beam of 57ft 4in and a service speed of 12 knots. 
                One of a pair she was designed with higher than normal 'tween 
                deck clearance so that she could be converted into a troopship 
                if required. When launched on 22nd April 1920 she was the largest 
                motorship at the time and was completed as a tin ore carrying 
                cargo ship. In 1927 the 5 year trooping contract was renewed and 
                to cater for the increased demand the cargo ships Dorsetshire, 
                and here sister ship Shropshire, were converted into permanent 
                troopships by Vickers at Barrow in Furness as a result of which 
                her tonnage was increased to 9345grt. During this period troopships 
                retained their company livery. She had accommodation for 112 1st, 
                58 2nd, 108 families in 3rd and 1,450 troops. In September 1939 
                she was converted into HM Hospital Ship No. 23 with beds for 493 
                patients and accommodation for 59 medical staff. On 31st January 
                1941, during a voyage to Tobruk to evacuate troops, she was, despite 
                her markings, attacked outside Sollum in Libya. Although the enemy 
                had been advised that she was a Geneva Convention ship she was 
                attacked again on 1st February. On 12th July 1943 she was bombed 
                and received superficial damage when 13 miles from Cape Passero 
                while supporting the Allied invasion of Sicily which had commenced 
                on the 9th July. She was decommissioned on 8th March 1948 and 
                rebuilt by Harland & Wolff to accommodate tourists, returning 
                to Bibby Line in November 1949. On 11th December 1949 she sailed 
                from Liverpool bound for Australia with 550 passengers and back 
                in Bibby Line livery after 21 years. When the citizens at Adelaide 
                wished to send food parcels back to Britain they were refused 
                because of the cost of becoming a 'cargo' ship made the transit 
                of the Suez Canal too expensive. With her sister she was used 
                to repatriate Dutch civilians from Indonesia. During 1952 she 
                was used as a hostel ship for workmen building the Little Aden 
                oil refinery and on 12th May 1953 sailed from Liverpool with troops 
                bound for Korea. She was laid up in the following August and broken 
                up in 1954.  |