SS Columbia (1902 ocean liner), a Scottish passenger/cargo vessel originally named HMS Columbella and subsequently named Moreas, scrapped in Venice 1929
SS Columbia (1907), a passenger/cargo vessel built by New York Shipbuilding, Camden, NJ as Dorothy Alexander, then President then Columbia for Alaska Steamship Co; World War II WSA troop transport serving Alaska
SS Columbia (1908), a passenger/cargo vessel built by Russell & Co Port Glasgow
SS Columbia (1913), originally Katoomba, Australian liner & troop ship in WW I & II, renamed Columbia in 1949 for Greek Lines, scrapped 1959.
SS Columbia (1914), a British ocean liner renamed Belgic in 1917, then Belgenland again in 1923, before becoming the American ship Columbia in 1935, scrapped 1936
SS Columbia (1920), a Canadian steam tugboat serving Lower Arrow Lake until 1948
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 Columbia (1902 ocean liner), a Scottish passenger/cargo vessel originally named HMS Columbella and subsequently named Moreas, scrapped in Venice 1929
SS Columbia (1907), a passenger/cargo vessel built by New York Shipbuilding, Camden, NJ as Dorothy Alexander, then President then Columbia for Alaska Steamship Co; World War II WSA troop transport serving Alaska
SS Columbia (1908), a passenger/cargo vessel built by Russell & Co Port Glasgow
SS Columbia (1913), originally Katoomba, Australian liner & troop ship in WW I & II, renamed Columbia in 1949 for Greek Lines, scrapped 1959.
SS Columbia (1914), a British ocean liner renamed Belgic in 1917, then Belgenland again in 1923, before becoming the American ship Columbia in 1935, scrapped 1936
SS Columbia (1920), a Canadian steam tugboat serving Lower Arrow Lake until 1948
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.