SS Emperor of Halifax (originally Canadian Signaller, later Skjoldheim and Polyana), Canadian (later Norwegian) propeller, package freighter. Torpedoed by German submarine
U-103 in the
Atlantic Ocean on April 25, 1941.[4]
SS Emperor of Fredericton (originally Canadian Sower), Canadian (later Japanese) propeller, package freighter, Official No. 141487. Torpedoed by an American submarine near
Po-hai on February 10, 1945.[5]
SS Emperor of Montreal (originally Canadian Trader, later Gilda Scuderi), Canadian (later Italian and U.S.) propeller, package freighter, Official No. 141376. Lost in November 1928, while travelling from
Seattle, Washington, to
Kobe, Japan.[6]
SS Emperor of Port McNicoll (originally Canadian Adventurer, later Nootka), Canadian (later Peruvian) propeller, package freighter, Official No. 141486. Scrapped in
Peru in 1960.[7]
SS Emperor of Havana (originally Canadian Sailor, later Nichiyei Maru and Nitei Maru), Canadian (later Japanese) propeller, package freighter, Official No. 141377. Foundered in the
Yellow Sea on October 11, 1942.[8]
This article includes a
list of ships with the same or similar names. If an
internal link for a specific ship led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended ship article, if one exists.
SS Emperor of Halifax (originally Canadian Signaller, later Skjoldheim and Polyana), Canadian (later Norwegian) propeller, package freighter. Torpedoed by German submarine
U-103 in the
Atlantic Ocean on April 25, 1941.[4]
SS Emperor of Fredericton (originally Canadian Sower), Canadian (later Japanese) propeller, package freighter, Official No. 141487. Torpedoed by an American submarine near
Po-hai on February 10, 1945.[5]
SS Emperor of Montreal (originally Canadian Trader, later Gilda Scuderi), Canadian (later Italian and U.S.) propeller, package freighter, Official No. 141376. Lost in November 1928, while travelling from
Seattle, Washington, to
Kobe, Japan.[6]
SS Emperor of Port McNicoll (originally Canadian Adventurer, later Nootka), Canadian (later Peruvian) propeller, package freighter, Official No. 141486. Scrapped in
Peru in 1960.[7]
SS Emperor of Havana (originally Canadian Sailor, later Nichiyei Maru and Nitei Maru), Canadian (later Japanese) propeller, package freighter, Official No. 141377. Foundered in the
Yellow Sea on October 11, 1942.[8]
This article includes a
list of ships with the same or similar names. If an
internal link for a specific ship led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended ship article, if one exists.