
SS Gallia - Wikipedia
SS Gallia was a transatlantic ocean liner of the Compagnie de Navigation Sud-Atlantique built in 1913. Gallia was the Roman name for the province of Gaul. In the First World War Gallia was …
SS Gallia (1879) - Wikipedia
RMS Gallia was built in 1878 for the Cunard Line, entering service in 1879. In service until 1899, the vessel ran aground off the coast of Quebec, Canada and was not repaired. The ship was …
Gallia, Cunard Line - Norway Heritage
Gallia, Cunard Line steamship, history and description, built 1878 at Glasgow by J. & G. Thomson & Co.
Gallia, Allan Line - Norway Heritage
This old engraving was printed in "The Graphic" in 1879. It shows sailors at work on deck of the Cunard Line steamer Gallia while crossing the Atlantic ocean. On this picture you can clearly …
ISTG Vol 4 - SS Gallia - Immigrant Ships
Built in 1878 by J&G. Thomson, Glasgow for the Cunard SS Co., she was a 4,809 gross ton ship, length 430.1 ft x beam 44.6 ft., one funnel, three masts (barque rigged for sail),iron …
SS Gallia was carrying coal from Tyne to Savonia under the command of Stefano Baracchini with 26 Italian crew on board. On the afternoon of 24 October 1917 suddenly, and without warning, …
French liners in WW1 – slaughter in the Mediterranean
Oct 7, 2016 · October 4 th was the one-hundredth anniversary of the sinking of the SS Gallia, one of the worst maritime disasters of the First World War. What made it even more terrible was …
SS Gallia - Military Wiki | Fandom
SS Gallia was an Transatlantic ocean liner transformed to a troopship in 1915, torpedoed and sunk in the Mediterranean Sea on 4 October 1916 with great loss of life. The Gallia was built …
ISTG - SS Gallia - Immigrant Ships
SS Gallia 15 April 1879 Liverpool to New York If you find an ancestor on a ship on ISTG and would like to link your email address or home page, please contact the ISTG PRODUCTION …
The Sinking of SS Gallia - by Andrew Rickard
Sep 11, 2024 · The German submarine SM U-35 sank the French troopship Gallia on 4 October 1916, and more than 1,000 men died — a loss of life comparable to that of the Lusitania. U …