SS War Toronto was a small freighter built in Toronto, in 1918, by Toronto Dry Dock & Ship Building Company Limited.[1][3] She was one of 72 cargo vessels built under the authority of Canada's Imperial Munitions Board for wartime service in the First World War, and one of the 46 vessels with hulls built of wood.[4] She had a carrying capacity of 2,500 deadweight tons. Toronto Shipbuilding also constructed a sister wood-hull ship at the same time, the SS War Ontario.

SS War Toronto
Launching in 1918[1]
History
NameWar Toronto
OwnerShipping Controller
OperatorHansen Brothers & Company, Ltd, Cardiff
BuilderToronto Dry Dock & Ship Building Co. Ltd., Toronto
Yard number2
Launched26 October 1918
Out of service19 November 1919
IdentificationOfficial number 143388
FateBurnt on 20 November 1919
General characteristics
Tonnage2,328 GRT
Length261 feet (80 m)
Beam43.5 feet (13.3 m)
Draught19.6 feet (6.0 m)
Installed power1,000 horsepower (750 kW) steam engine (manufactured at Canadian Bridge Company Limited, Walkerville, Ontario)[2]
Propulsiontriple expansion engine, single shaft, 1 screw
Speed11 knots

The Montreal Gazette profiled the War Toronto on her first visit to Montreal, on 13 April 1919.[5] They described her as the last of 46 vessels built by order for the Imperial Munitions Board. On her voyage across the Atlantic to her owners, she carried lumber to Cardiff, Wales. She was delivered to the Shipping Controller on 23 April 1919, who assigned her to be managed by Hansen Brothers & Company, Ltd. She was employed carrying coal in civilian service. She ran aground off Agger, Jutland, on 19 September 1919 while on a voyage from the River Tyne to Sweden. Refloated, she was towed to Thisted for repairs, but was destroyed in a fire, while undergoing repairs on 20 November 1919.

References

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  1. ^ a b "War Toronto: Registry and Rig Information".
  2. ^ a subsidiary of Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation
  3. ^ "SS War Toronto (+1919)". wrecksite.eu. 2013-05-07. On September 19th, 1919, the wooden cargo ship WAR TORONTO, on voyage from Tyne to Sweden with a cargo of coal, was wrecked off Agger, west coast of Jutland. She was refloated, but then destroyed in a fire on November 19th, 1919.
  4. ^ Douglas E. Delaney; Nikolas Gardner, eds. (2017). Turning Point 1917: The British Empire at War. UBC Press. p. 65. ISBN 9780774834025.
  5. ^ "S.S. War Toronto arrived in Port: Last of 46 vessels constructed for the Imperial Munitions Board was inspected". Montreal Gazette. 1919-04-30. Retrieved 2015-12-15.