RMS Queen Elizabeth
RMS Queen Elizabeth at Cherbourg, France, in 1966
| |
History | |
---|---|
United Kingdom | |
Name |
|
Namesake | HM Queen Elizabeth, consort of King George VI, The Queen Mother |
Owner |
|
Port of registry | Liverpool (1940–1968) Nassau (1970–1972) |
Route | Transatlantic |
Ordered | 6 October 1936 |
Builder |
|
Yard number | Hull 552 |
Way number | 4 |
Laid down | 4 December 1936[1] |
Launched | 27 September 1938 |
Christened | 27 September 1938 |
Maiden voyage | 16 October 1946[2][3] |
Identification | Radio Callsign GBSS |
Fate | Caught fire and capsized, wreck partially dismantled, vessel's remains covered over on seabed in Hong Kong Harbour in 1975 |
General characteristics | |
Type | Ocean liner |
Tonnage | 83,673 GRT |
Displacement | 83,000+ tons |
Length | 1,031 ft (314.2 m) |
Beam | 118 ft (36.0 m) |
Height | 233 ft (71.0 m) |
Draught | 38 ft (11.6 m) |
Installed power | 12 × Yarrow boilers |
Propulsion | |
Speed | 28.5 kn (52.8 km/h; 32.8 mph) (service) |
Capacity | 2,283 passengers |
Crew | 1,000+ crew |
The RMS Queen Elizabeth was an ocean liner operated by Cunard Line. With Queen Mary she provided weekly luxury liner service between Southampton in the United Kingdom and New York City in the United States, via Cherbourg in France.
While being constructed in the mid-1930s by John Brown and Company at Clydebank, Scotland, the build was known as Hull 552.[5] Launched on 27 September 1938, she was named in honour of Queen Elizabeth, then Queen Consort to King George VI, who became the Queen Mother in 1952. With a design that improved upon that of Queen Mary, Queen Elizabeth was a slightly larger ship, the largest passenger liner ever built at that time and for 56 years thereafter. She also has the distinction of being the largest-ever riveted ship by gross tonnage. She first entered service in February 1940 as a troopship in World War II, and it was not until October 1946 that she served in her intended role as an ocean liner.
With the decline in the popularity of the transatlantic route, both ships were replaced by the smaller, more economical Queen Elizabeth 2 in 1969. Queen Mary was retired from service on 9 December 1967, and was sold to the city of Long Beach, California. Queen Elizabeth was sold to a succession of buyers, most of whom had unsuccessful plans for her. Finally Queen Elizabeth was sold to Hong Kong businessman Tung Chao Yung, who intended to convert her into a floating university cruise ship called Seawise University. In 1972, while undergoing refurbishment in Hong Kong harbour, fire broke out aboard under unexplained circumstances and the ship was capsized by the water used to fight the fire. In 1973, the wreck was deemed an obstruction to shipping in the area, and so was partially scrapped where she lay.[6]
Building and design
On the day RMS Queen Mary sailed on her maiden voyage, Cunard's chairman, Sir Percy Bates, informed his ship designers that it was time to start designing the planned second ship.[7] The official contract between Cunard and government financiers was signed on 6 October 1936.[8]
The new ship improved upon the design of Queen Mary[9] with sufficient changes, including a reduction in the number of boilers to twelve instead of Queen Mary's twenty-four, that the designers could discard one funnel and increase deck, cargo and passenger space. The two funnels were self-supporting and braced internally to give a cleaner looking appearance. With the forward well deck omitted, a more refined hull shape was achieved, and a sharper, raked bow was added for a third bow-anchor point.[9] She was to be eleven feet longer and of 4,000 tons greater displacement than her older sister ship, Queen Mary.[10][8]
Queen Elizabeth was built on slipway four at John Brown & Company in Clydebank, Scotland, Great Britain. During her construction she was more commonly known by her shipyard number, Hull 552.[11] The interiors were designed by a team of artists headed by the architect George Grey Wornum.[12] Cunard's plan was for the ship to be launched in September 1938, with fitting out intended to be complete for the ship to enter service in the spring of 1940.[8] The Queen herself performed the launching ceremony on 27 September 1938.[9] Supposedly, the liner started to slide into the water before Elizabeth could officially launch her, and acting sharply, she managed to smash a bottle of Australian red over the liner's bow just before it slid out of reach.[13] The ship was then sent for fitting out.[8][9] It was announced that on 23 August 1939 the King and Queen were to visit the ship and tour the engine room and that 24 April 1940 was to be the proposed date of her maiden voyage. Due to the outbreak of World War II, these two events were postponed and Cunard's plans were shattered.[8]
Queen Elizabeth sat at the fitting-out dock at the shipyard in her Cunard colours until 2 November 1939, when the Ministry of Shipping issued special licences to declare her seaworthy. On 29 December her engines were tested for the first time, running from 0900 to 1600 with the propellers disconnected to monitor her oil and steam operating temperatures and pressures. Two months later Cunard received a letter from Winston Churchill,[14] then First Lord of the Admiralty, ordering the ship to leave Clydeside as soon as possible and "to keep away from the British Isles as long as the order was in force".[citation needed]
Second World War
At the start of World War II, it was decided that Queen Elizabeth was so vital to the war effort that she must not have her movements tracked by German spies operating in the Clydebank area. Therefore, an elaborate ruse was fabricated involving her sailing to Southampton to complete her fitting out.[14] Another factor prompting Queen Elizabeth's departure was the necessity to clear the fitting out berth at the shipyard for the battleship HMS Duke of York,[14] which was in need of its final fitting-out. Only the berth at John Brown could accommodate the King George V-class battleship's needs.
One major factor that limited the ship's secret departure date was that there were only two spring tides that year that would see the water level high enough for Queen Elizabeth to leave the Clydebank shipyard,[14] and German intelligence were aware of this fact. A minimal crew of four hundred were assigned for the trip; most were transferred from Aquitania for a short coastal voyage to Southampton.[14] Parts were shipped to Southampton, and preparations were made to move the ship into the King George V graving dock when she arrived.[14] The names of Brown's shipyard employees were booked to local hotels in Southampton to give a false trail of information and Captain John Townley was appointed as her first master. Townley had previously commanded Aquitania on one voyage, and several of Cunard's smaller vessels before that. Townley and his hastily signed on crew of four hundred Cunard personnel were told by a company representative before they left to pack for a voyage where they could be away from home for up to six months.[15]
By the beginning of March 1940, Queen Elizabeth was ready for her secret voyage. The Cunard colours were painted over with battleship grey, and on the morning of 3 March, the QE quietly left her moorings in the Clyde and proceeded out of the river to sail further down the coast, where she was met by the King's Messenger,[14] who presented sealed orders directly to the captain. While waiting for the Messenger, the ship was refuelled; adjustments to the ship's compass and some final testing of equipment were also carried out before she sailed to her secret destination.[citation needed]
Captain Townley discovered that he was to take the ship directly to New York in the then neutral United States without stopping, or even slowing to drop off the Southampton harbour pilot who had embarked on at Clydebank, and to maintain strict radio silence. Later that day, at the time when she was due to arrive at Southampton, the city was bombed by the Luftwaffe.[14] Queen Elizabeth zigzagged across the Atlantic to elude German u-boats and took six days to reach New York at an average speed of 26 knots. In New York she found herself moored alongside both Queen Mary and the French Line's Normandie, the only time all three of the world's largest ocean liners were ever berthed together.[14] Captain Townley received two telegrams on his arrival, one from his wife congratulating him and the other from Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth thanking him for the vessel's safe delivery. The ship was then secured so that no one could board her without prior permission, including port officials.[14]
Queen Elizabeth left the port of New York on 13 November 1940 for Singapore to receive her troopship conversion.[8] After two stops to refuel and replenish her stores in Trinidad and Cape Town, she arrived in Singapore's Naval Docks where she was fitted with anti-aircraft guns, and her hull repainted grey.[citation needed]
As a troopship, Queen Elizabeth left Singapore on February 11, February 23, 1942 Queen Elizabeth secretly arrived in Esquimalt, British Columbia, Canada. She underwent refit work in drydock adding accommodation, armaments and three hundred naval ratings quickly painted the hull.[16] In mid March carrying 8,000 American soldiers, the Queen Elizabeth began a 7,700-mile voyage from San Francisco to Sydney, Australia.[17] Initially she carried Australian troops to theatres of operation in Asia and Africa.[18] After 1942, the two Queens were relocated to the North Atlantic for the transportation of American troops to Europe.[18]
Queen Elizabeth and Queen Mary were both used as troop transports during the war. Their high speeds allowed them to outrun hazards, principally German U-boats, usually allowing them to travel outside a convoy.[15] During her war service as a troopship Queen Elizabeth carried more than 750,000 troops, and she also sailed some 500,000 miles (800,000 km).[8]
Liner
Following the end of the Second World War, Queen Elizabeth was refitted and furnished as an ocean liner[8] while her running mate Queen Mary remained in her wartime role and grey appearance except for her funnels, which were repainted in the company's colours. For another year, her sibling did military service, returning troops and G.I. brides to the United States while Queen Elizabeth was overhauled at the Firth of Clyde Drydock, in Greenock, by the John Brown Shipyard.
Six years of war service had never permitted the formal sea trials to take place so they were now finally undertaken. Under the command of Commodore Sir James Bisset the ship travelled to the Isle of Arran and her trials were carried out. On board was the ship's namesake, Queen Elizabeth, and her two daughters, Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret.[8] During the trials, Queen Elizabeth took the wheel for a brief time and the two young princesses recorded the two measured runs with stopwatches that they had been given for the occasion. Bisset was under strict instructions from Sir Percy Bates, who was also aboard the trials, that all that was required from the ship was two measured runs of no more than thirty knots and that she was not permitted to attempt to attain a higher speed record than Queen Mary.[19] Queen Elizabeth's engines were capable of driving her to speeds of over 32 knots.[19] After her trials Queen Elizabeth finally entered passenger service, allowing Cunard White Star to launch the long planned two ship weekly service to New York.[20] Despite specifications similar to those of Queen Mary, Queen Elizabeth never held the Blue Riband, for Cunard White Star chairman Sir Percy Bates asked that the two ships not to try to compete against each other.[19]
The ship ran aground on a sandbank off Southampton on 14 April 1947 and was re-floated the following day.[8] In 1955, during an annual overhaul at Southampton, England, Queen Elizabeth was fitted with underwater fin stabilisers to smooth the ride in rough seas. Two fins were fitted on each side of the hull. The fins were retractable into the hull to save fuel in smooth seas and for docking.[21] On 29 July 1959, she was in a collision with the American freighter American Hunter in foggy conditions in New York Harbour and was holed above the waterline.[22]
Together with Queen Mary and in competition with the American liners SS United States and SS America, Queen Elizabeth dominated the transatlantic passenger trade until their fortunes began to decline with the advent of the faster and more economical jet airliner in the late 1950s.[15] As passenger numbers declined, the liners became uneconomic to operate in the face of rising fuel and labour costs. For a short time, Queen Elizabeth—now under the command of Commodore Geoffrey Trippleton Marr, attempted a dual role in order to become more profitable; when not plying her usual transatlantic route, which she now alternated in her sailings with the French Line's SS France, the ship cruised between New York and Nassau.[8] For this new tropical purpose, the ship received a major refit in 1965, with a new lido deck added to her aft section, enhanced air conditioning, and an outdoor swimming pool. With these improvements, Cunard intended to keep the ship in operation until at least the middle 1970s.[23] However, the strategy did not prove successful due to the high fuel costs plus the ships deep draught, which prevented her from entering various island ports, and the ships width which preventing her from using the Panama Canal.
Cunard retired Queen Mary in 1967 and Queen Elizabeth by 1969 and replaced them with a single, smaller ship, the more economical Queen Elizabeth 2.
Final years
In 1968, Queen Elizabeth was sold to a group of American businessmen from a company called The Queen Corporation (which was 85% owned by Cunard and 15% by them). The new company intended to operate the ship as a hotel and tourist attraction in Port Everglades, Florida, similar to the planned use of Queen Mary in Long Beach, California.[8] Elizabeth, as she was now called, actually opened to tourists before Queen Mary (which opened in 1971) but it was not to last. The climate of southern Florida was much harder on Queen Elizabeth than the climate of southern California was on Queen Mary. There was some talk of permanently flooding the bilge and allowing the Queen Elizabeth to safely rest on the bed of the Intracoastal Waterway in Ft. Lauderdale harbor (Port Everglades) and remain open, but instead the vessel was towed out of the harbor to Asia to become a floating university. Losing money and forced to close after being declared a fire hazard, this was due to the ship being sold at auction in 1970 to Hong Kong tycoon Tung Chao Yung.[8]
Tung, the head of the Orient Overseas Line, intended to convert the vessel into a university for the World Campus Afloat program (later reformed and renamed as Semester at Sea). Following the tradition of the Orient Overseas Line, the ship was renamed Seawise University,[8] as a play on Tung's initials (C.Y.'s).
The ship was now under Chinese ownership and it was decided to sail her to Hong Kong. This proved to be problematic as the ships engines and boilers were in poor condition after several years of neglect.
The now retired Commodore Marr and a former Chief Engineer of the ship were hired by Tung as advisors for the journey to Hong Kong.
Marr recommended that the Seawise University be towed to the New Territories but the Tung and his crew were convinced that they could sail the ship there using just the aft engines and boilers.
The planned several week trip turned into months as the crew battled with boiler issues and even a ship fire, a unplanned lengthy mid voyage stop over allowed the new owners to fly spare parts out to the ship to carry out repairs before resuming the course to Hong Kong Harbour.
Near the completion of the £5 million conversion, the vessel caught fire on 9 January 1972.[8] There is some suspicion that the fires were set deliberately, as several blazes broke out simultaneously throughout the ship.[24] The fact that C.Y. Tung had acquired the vessel for $3.5 million, and had insured it for $8 million, led some to speculate that the inferno was part of a fraud to collect on the insurance claim. Others speculated that the fires were the result of a conflict between Tung, a Chinese Nationalist, and Communist-dominated ship construction unions.[25]
The ship was completely destroyed by the fire, and the water sprayed on her by fireboats caused the burnt wreck to capsize and sink in Hong Kong's Victoria Harbour.[26] The vessel was finally declared a shipping hazard and dismantled for scrap between 1974 and 1975. Portions of the hull that were not salvaged were left at the bottom of the bay. The keel and boilers remained at the bottom of the harbour and the area was marked as "Foul" on local sea charts warning ships not to try to anchor there. It is estimated that around 40–50% of the wreck was still on the seabed. In the late 1990s, the final remains of the wreck were buried during land reclamation for the construction of Container Terminal 9.[27] Position of the wreck: 22°19.717′N 114°06.733′E / 22.328617°N 114.112217°E.[28]
After the fire, Tung had one of the liner's anchors and the metal letters "Q" and "E" from the name on the bow placed in front of the office building at Del Amo Fashion Center in Torrance, California, US, that was intended to be the headquarters of the Seawise University venture,[29][30] and are now on display with commemorative plaques in the lobby of Wall Street Plaza, 88 Pine Street, New York, US. Two of the ship's fire warning system brass plaques were recovered by a dredger and these are now on display at The Aberdeen Boat Club in Hong Kong within a display area about the ship. The charred remnants of her last ensign were cut from the flag pole and framed in 1972, and still adorn the wall of the officers' mess of marine police HQ in Hong Kong. Parker Pen Company produced a special edition of 5,000 pens made from material recovered from the wreck in a presentation box, today highly collectible.[31]
Following the demise of Queen Elizabeth, the largest passenger ship in active service became the 66,343 GT SS France, which was longer but with less tonnage than the ex Cunarder.
In fiction
In 1959, the ship made an appearance in the British satirical Eastmancolor comedy film The Mouse That Roared, starring Peter Sellers and Jean Seberg. While a troupe of invading men from "Grand Fenwick", a fictional European micro-nation, cross the Atlantic to 'war' with the United States, they meet and pass the far larger Queen Elizabeth, and learn that New York City is closed due to an air raid drill.[citation needed]
Ian Fleming set the climax to his 1956 James Bond novel Diamonds Are Forever on Queen Elizabeth. The 1971 film version starring Connery used the P&O liner SS Canberra for the sequence.[32]
The charred wreck was featured in the 1974 James Bond film The Man with the Golden Gun, as a covert headquarters for MI6.[33][34] Q's labs also are in the wreckage of this ship.
References
- ^ Pride of the North Atlantic, A Maritime Trilogy, David F. Hutchings. Waterfront 2003
- ^ John Shephard, The Cunard - White Star liner Queen Elizabeth
- ^ RMS Queen Elizabeth - Maiden Voyage after War - Cunard - Original footage, British Movietone News via youtube
- ^ "RMS Queen Elizabeth".
- ^ "Big Liners Steel Frame Work Rises as Workers Speed Up" Popular Mechanics, left-side pg 346. Hearst Magazines. September 1937.
- ^ "Classic Liners and Cruise Ships – Queen Elizabeth". Cruiseserver.net. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
- ^ RMS Queen Elizabeth from Victory to Valhalla. pp. 10
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Cunard Queen Elizabeth 1940 – 1972". Cunard.com. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
- ^ a b c d Maxtone-Graham, John. The Only Way to Cross. New York: Collier Books, 1972, p. 355
- ^ "Pathe newsreel from 1938 reporting on new ship build".
- ^ RMS Queen Elizabeth, The Beautiful Lady. Janette McCutcheon, The History Press Ltd (8 November 2001)
- ^ The Liverpool Post, 23 August 1937
- ^ Hutchings, David F. (2003) Pride of the North Atlantic. A Maritime Trilogy, Waterfront.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Maxtone-Graham 1972, p. 358–60
- ^ a b c Floating Palaces. (1996) A&E. TV Documentary. Narrated by Fritz Weaver
- ^ www.nauticapedia.ca/Articles/Queen_Elizabeth.php
- ^ The RMS Queen Elizabeth (1942) Zacha's Bay Window Gallery
- ^ a b "Rms. Queen Elizabeth". Ayrshire Scotland. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
- ^ a b c R.M.S. Queen Elizabeth
- ^ Maxtone-Graham 1972, p. 396
- ^ "Big Liner Sprouts Fins." Popular Science, June 1955, pp. 122–124.
- ^ "Liner Queen Elizabeth in Collision". The Times. No. 54526. London. 30 July 1959. col A, p. 6. template uses deprecated parameter(s) (help)
- ^ Maxtone-Graham 1972, p. 409
- ^ "Arson Suspected as Blaze Destroys Queen Elizabeth". News.google.com. 10 January 1972. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
- ^ "On This Day: The Queen Elizabeth Mysteriously Sinks in a Hong Kong Harbor". Findingdulcinea.com. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
- ^ "Queen Elizabeth". Chriscunard.com. Archived from the original on 20 April 2012. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ "Sea queen to lie below CT9". Retrieved 6 August 2011.
- ^ "Providing Sufficient Water Depth for Kwai Tsing Container Basin and its Approach Channel Environmental Impact Assessment Report — Appendix 9.3 UK Hydrographic Office Data" (PDF). Retrieved 6 August 2011.
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help)CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ Whitlow, Z. e (14 December 2010). "The Captain's Table: The Queen Elizabeth in Torrance".
- ^ "Modern Pens for Sale: The Parker 75 and 105 Limited Editions". Penhome.co.uk. Archived from the original on 8 March 2012. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
{{cite web}}
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- ^ "RMS Queen Elizabeth". Retrieved 5 March 2015.
- ^ Hann, Michael (3 October 2012). "My favourite Bond film: The Man with the Golden Gun". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 March 2015.
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Further reading
- Britton, Andrew (2013). RMS Queen Elizabeth. Classic Liners series. Stroud, Gloucestershire: The History Press. ISBN 9780752479514.
- Butler, D.A. (2002). Warrior Queens: The Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth in World War II (1st ed.). Mechanicsburg: Stackpole Books.
- Galbraith, R (1988). Destiny's Daughter: The Tragedy of RMS Queen Elizabeth. Vermont: Trafalgar Square.
- Maddocks, Melvin (1978). The Great Liners. Alexandria, Va.: Time-Life Books. ISBN 0809426641.
- Varisco, R (2013). RMS Queen Elizabeth: Cunard's Big Beautiful Ship of Life. Gold Coast: Blurb Books.
- Harvey, Clive, 2008, R.M.S Queen Elizabeth The Ultimate Ship, Carmania Press London, ISBN 978-0-95436668-1
External links
- Cunard Line White Star Line R.M.S. Queen Elizabeth
- The Great Ocean Liners: Queen Elizabeth
- RMS Queen Elizabeth story and picture
- Pathe newsreel of Queen Elizabeth being built
- Ships built on the River Clyde
- History of Hong Kong
- Ocean liners
- Passenger ships of the United Kingdom
- Ships of the Cunard Line
- Ship fires
- Ships of Scotland
- Shipwrecks in the South China Sea
- Steamships
- Maritime incidents in 1947
- Maritime incidents in 1968
- Maritime incidents in 1972
- Troop ships of the United Kingdom
- 1938 ships
- Troop ships
- Shipwrecks of Hong Kong