IMO 5074226
shipwreck in Greece
Vessel Wikidata
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The vessel designated IMO 5074226 is the MS Mediterranean Sky, originally built in 1953 as the TSMV City of York for Ellerman Lines. Constructed by Vickers-Armstrong at their shipyard in Barrow-in-Furness, England, she was a combination passenger liner measuring approximately 516 feet 5 inches (157.40 meters) in length with a maximum breadth of 71 feet 3 inches (21.72 meters). Her gross tonnage was 12,500 GRT, and she had a draught of 36 feet (10.97 meters). The ship was powered by two two-stroke cycle, six-cylinder diesel engines manufactured by R. & W. Hawthorn, Leslie and Company, complemented by two double-ended boilers. Equipped with modern navigational and safety equipment for her time—including a direction finder, echo sounding device, gyro-compass, radar, radio-telephone, and six lifeboats—the City of York served primarily on the London to South Africa route, making transits in approximately 15 days between London and Cape Town. Her service included notable events such as a fire in 1954, a voyage with Princess Marie Louise in 1955, and rescue operations like the 1958 incident involving the burning cargo ship Forresbank. She also experienced crew tragedies, including the disappearance of a crew member in 1956 and a crew member’s suicide in 1963. In 1966, her captain was promoted to commodore of Ellerman Lines, and the ship was slated for refurbishment and conversion into a cruise vessel, operating between Middlesbrough, Rotterdam, Hamburg, and London. In 1971, she was sold to Karageorgis Lines and renamed Mediterranean Sky. She was briefly used as a luxury cruise ship, and in 1987, served as a floating hotel during the America's Cup. Subsequently, she was employed in various roles, including transporting Soviet Jewish immigrants to Israel in the early 1990s and evacuating US troops from Somalia in 1994, marking her significance in maritime rescue and evacuation operations. By the late 1990s, she was decommissioned and laid up in Greece, where she remained abandoned for years. She capsized and sank in 2003 near Eleusis Bay, with her wreck becoming a visual landmark and environmental concern. Her wreckage has been subject to pollution risk assessments and vandalism, including graffiti and a fire in 2022, reflecting her long and varied maritime history.
This description has been generated using GPT-4.1-NANO based on the Vessel's wikidata information and then modified by ShipIndex.org staff.