Walmer Castle
Ship Number
342
Vessel Type
Passenger Ship
Built
Belfast
Yard
South Yard
Slip Number
6
Launch Date
July 6, 1901
Delivered
February 20, 1902
Owner
Union-Castle Mail Steamship Co.
Weight
12545 grt
BP Length
570 feet
Breadth
64 feet
No. of Screws
Twin
Speed (approx)
17.5 knots
Propulsion
quadruple expansion constructed in Belfast
Official No.
114839
Registered
London
Fate
Scrapped
 Walmer Castle

She was laid down as the Celt for the Union Line in 1900 but after the merger was launched as the Walmer Castle and slightly modified to become the second of six elegant steamships for the Southampton - Cape Town service.
 
In early 1910 one of her distinguished passengers was Lord Gladstone who was travelling to South Africa to become the first Governor General and in the April Rudyard Kipling returned to the UK on her, one of the twenty voyages he made with Union-Castle. During 1914 - 1916 she remained on the mail run and in December 1916 a passage time of 49 days from Tilbury to Cape Town was the longest ever undertaken by a mailship. She was quarantined at Plymouth for 21 days before joining a convoy for Freetown where she stayed for 7 days. Shortly after sailing for the Cape she was ordered back as the German Raider Moewe was operating in the area ,further delaying her passage.
 
In April 1917 she was requisitioned by the Government under the Liner Requisition Scheme for use as a troopship, trooping initially from South Africa and then in the North Atlantic appropriately camouflaged with dazzle paint. During 1919 she made two voyages between Liverpool and New York for Cunard before returning to the mail run.
 
She was replaced by the Winchester Castle in 1930, making her last sailing in the October before being laid up at Netley as a reserve steamer.
 
She was sold for £13,500 in 1932 and broken up at Blyth by Hughes Bolckow in February of the same year