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Chandris Line

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A promotional poster from the 1960s.

Chandris Line was a Greece-based shipping company founded in 1960 by Anthony Chandris to operate ocean liners between Greece and Australia.[1] Initially the company also traded under the names Greek Australian Line, National Greek Australian Line and Europe-Australia Line.[2] Following a period of expansion, in 1974 Chandris Line merged with Chandris Cruises[1]—a separate company founded in 1960 by Anthony Chandris' brother Dimitri Chandris to operate cruises in the Mediterranean[3]—to form Chandris Line Chandris Cruises. After 1977 the company concentrated solely on cruising and was rebranded Chandris Cruises.[1] In 1985 Chandris Cruises acquired Fantasy Cruises, and subsequently their North American operations were rebranded as Chandris Fantasy Cruises.[4] The company ceased trading in 1996.[5] All of the company's ships had a chi, a letter of the Greek alphabet, on their funnels. The chi acted as a logo for both Chandris and their subsidiary and ultimate successor, Celebrity Cruises.

History

1960–1974

Chandris Line

In 1959 Anthony J. Chandris, son of the Greek freight shipping company owner John D. Chandris, decided to establish a new passenger shipping company to carry migrants from Europe to Australia.[6] Together with his brother Dimitri Chandris, Anthony Chandris had previously been involved in Charlton Steam Shipping Company's failed migrant service in the 1940s,[7] but now wanted to attempt entering the migrant trade again. In October 1959 Anthony Chandris purchased RMS Bloemfontein Castle from Union-Castle Line for £1.5 million as the first ship of the new Chandris Line. Following delivery to Chandris Line on 19 November 1959 the Bloemfontein Castle was renamed Patris and rebuilt with increased passenger capacity for migrant service.[2][6] Anthony Chandris made two contracts to increase the profitability of the ship: with the Intergovernmental Committee on European Migration to carry assisted migrants from Europe to Australia; and with the Greek Government to carry mail from Greece to Australia. As a result, the Patris gained the right to use the Royal Hellenic Mail Ship (RHMS) ship prefix, therefore becoming known as RHMS Patris. Following rebuilding the Patris first departed Piraeus with Captain Zannis X.Xenios, on 14 December 1959, arriving in Fremantle, Australia on 2 January 1960 and her final Australian destination, Sydney on 9 January 1959.[6][8] Initially the Patris’s operator was marketed as Greek-Australian Line, later National Greek-Australian Line.[2]

A chi, which was branded onto the funnels of all Chandris ships.

The Patris proved highly popular on the Greece—Australia service, and in 1960 Chandris Line began looking for a second ship.[9] In November 1960 Chandris Line chartered the SS Bretagne (1951) from Societe Generale de Transports Maritimes. During the northern hemisphere summer seasons of 1961 and 1962 the ship was chartered to Caribbean Cruise Line for cruises out of New York City, spending the rest of the year in liner service between the United Kingdom and Australia. In April 1962 the Bretagne was renamed RHMS Brittany, but she was destroyed by a fire while in drydock in April 1963.[2][8][10] The Brittany's UK-Australia version was marketed as Europe-Australia Line.[2]

In September 1963 Chandris Line acquired the Matson Line ship SS Lurline (1932) as a replacement for the Brittany. Renamed RHMS Ellinis, the ship entered service with Chandris Line on the United Kingdom—Mediterranean—Australia -route in December 1963.[2][11] A second United States -built liner joined the Chandris Line fleet in November 1964 when SS America was purchased from the United States Lines. Following rebuilding she entered service with Chandris Line in August 1965 as RHMS Australis, joining Ellinis on the UK-Australia service.[2][12] The Australis particularly proved to be an extremely popular ship on the run from United Kingdom to Australia, usually operating at full capacity.[9] Chandris Line expanded further in 1965 when they acquired National Hellenic American Line and their sole ship, SS Queen Frederica, from Home Lines. Although the Queen Frederica was a relatively old ship, Anthony Chandris considered her to be well suited for the North American cruise market. During the summer months she was used for cruising out of New York, while during the winters she was used in Piraeus—New York and Piraeus—Australia liner services.[13] For some time the Queen Frederica was marketed as a Chandris Lines/National Hellenic American Line ship.[14] The Queen Frederica's cruise service from New York proved short, as new legislation came in effect in the US at the end of 1967, aimed at improving safety standards on cruise ships. Bringing the Queen Frederica in-line with the new requirements would have been extremely costly, and as a result she was withdrawn from the North American cruise service in September 1967. As a replacement Chandris Line acquired the former Union-Castle liner RMS Kenya Castle, which was renamed RHMS Amerikanis and entered cruise service for Chandris Line in August 1968.[15]

In 1970 Matson Line offered another of their ships—the second 1932-built Lurline, originally named Matsonia and a sister ship to the Ellinis—for sale in 1970, Chandris Line were quick to purchase the ship.[9] Given a large-scale refit in which particular attention was given to dual usage of the ship in both liner and cruise services, the former Lurline emerged in February 1971 as RHMS Britanis, joining Ellinis and Australis on the UK—Australia liner service.[9]

Patris, which had served without interruption on the Greece—Australia service from 1959, was assigned to a new service in 1972 due to declining passenger numbers, offering a much-shortedned liner service from Singapore to Australia, alongside occasional cruises from Australian ports.[9] A similar fate befell Ellinis in 1973, when she was taken off the declining UK-Australia liner service and reassigned for cruising on European waters.[9]

Chandris Cruises

1974–1996: Chandris Cruises

With the number of liner passengers between Europe and Australia dwindling, the Britanis was taken off liner service and rerouted to full-time cruising in 1975. During the same year the north Australian city of Darwin had been almost completely destroyed in a storm, and Patris found employment as a temporary accommodation ship for the residents of the destroyed city. This occupation lasted for only a year, after which a radically new use was found for the ship: she was converted into a ro-ro car/passenger ferry and used on services linking Ancona in Italy to Patras and Piraeus in Greece. In 1979 Patris was sold to Karageorgis Lines who retained her in the same service.[9]

The Chandris liner service to Australia was closed down in late 1977 when Australis arrived in Australia as the last ship carrying government-sponsored migrant. From there on all migrant transport was handled by airplanes.[9]

Ellinis was taken out of service in 1980 and laid up at Perama Bay. She remained laid up for several years, being used as a source of spare parts for her sister ship Britanis.[9] In 1988 Chandris founded a subsidiary, Celebrity Cruises, transferring the ex Italian liner Galileo to this new line. Celebrity prospered, with four newbuilt cruise ships entering service for them during the remaining Chandris years.[16] Soon the popularity of Chandris grew tremendously low, with more focused needed on Celebrity, so it was decided to dissolve all other assets. After almost 37 years, Chandris Lines begin to stop all operations in 1996, this plan ending with the phasing out of their Fantasy Cruises branch and layup of the Britanis in 1998.[17] To this date only one Chandris ship, the cruise ferry The Azur, has not been scrapped.

Ships

Ship Built In service Tonnage Status as of 2010 Image
Patris 1950 1959–1979 16,259 GRT Scrapped in Pakistan 1987.
Bretagne
Brittany
1952 1961–1962
1962–1963
16,335 GRT Destroyed by fire in Greece, 1963.
Ellinis 1932 1963–1980 24,351 GRT Scrapped in Taiwan 1987.
Regina 1939 1964–1979 10,603 GRT Scrapped, 1985.
Carina II 1930 1964–1972 4,055 GRT Laid up 1972, scrapped 1977.
Fiesta 1946 1964–197? 3,659 GRT Laid up mid 1970s, scrapped 1981.
Fantasia 1935 1964–1976 4,325 GRT Destroyed in fire, 1976.
Australis
Italis
1940 1965–1977
1979
26,485 GRT Grounded at Fuerteventura, 1994, while en route to hotel service in Thailand. Subsequently, destroyed.
Queen Frederica 1927 1965–1973 17,232 GRT Scrapped 1978.
Amerikanis 1952 1968–1980, 1984–1996 17,041 GRT Scrapped in India 2001.
Fiorita 1950 1970–1977 5,092 GRT Laid up, was chartered numerous times before she capsized in 1987.
Romanza 1939 1970–1991 10,480 GRT Sold 1991, destroyed in a fire and subsequently sank, 1997.
Atlantis 1944 1970–1972 20,175 GRT Sold 1972, scrapped 2005.
Radiosa 1947 1970–1982 1,149 GRT Laid up 1982, scrapped 1988.
Regina Magna 1939 1972–1977 23,801 GRT Became accommodation ship 1977, sank en route to scrappers 1980.
Britanis 1932 1971–1996 18,644 GRT Sold for scrap 1998, sank under tow in 2000.
The Victoria 1936 1975–1994 15,002 GRT Sold to Louis Cruise Lines, broken up in 2004.
SS Bon Vivant 1951 1973–1978 7,764 GRT Sold 1978, scrapped in 1997
Galileo 1963 1983–1988 27,888 GRT Transferred to Celebrity Cruises 1990, sold to Sun Cruises 1997, sank as the Sun Vista, May 1999.
The Azur 1971 1987–1994 14,717 GRT Sold to Festival Cruises, now operating as the Royal Iris.

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c Plowman (2006–1). pp. 5–6.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Maber. pp. 297–299.
  3. ^ Plowman (2006–1). p. 126.
  4. ^ Plowman (2006–1). p. 187.
  5. ^ Plowman (2006–1). p. 214.
  6. ^ a b c Plowman (2006–1). pp. 16–27.
  7. ^ Plowman (2006–1). pp. 10–15.
  8. ^ a b NineMSN
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i Miller. pp. 181–184.
  10. ^ Plowman (2006–1). pp. 30–40.
  11. ^ Plowman (2006–2). p. 134.
  12. ^ Plowman (2006–2). p. 138.
  13. ^ Plowman (2006–1). pp. 69–72.
  14. ^ Boyle
  15. ^ Plowman (2006–1). pp. 74–79.
  16. ^ "Celebrity Cruises Ship Postcards". simplonpc.co.uk.
  17. ^ http://www.oceanlinermuseum.co.uk/Monterey Archived 2015-11-24 at the Wayback Machine 1932 History.html

References

  • Boyle, Ian. "Malolo". Simplon Postcards. Retrieved 2008-10-20.
  • Maber, John M. (1967). North Star to Southern Cross: The story of the Australasian Seaways. Prescot: T. Stephenson & Sons Ltd.
  • Miller, William H. (1986). The Last Blue Water Liners. London: Conway Maritime Press. ISBN 0-85177-400-8.
  • "Cruising: Celebrity Cruises". NineMSN. 2006-02-08. Archived from the original on 2007-12-24. Retrieved 2008-10-20.
  • Plowman, Peter (2006) [1]. The Chandris Liners and Celebrity Cruises. Rosenberg Publishing. ISBN 1-877058-47-5.
  • Plowman, Peter (2006) [2]. Australian Migrant Ships 1946-1977. Hong Kong: Rosenberg Publishing. ISBN 1-877058-40-8.