Cunard Line

Cunard Line
Type Public (Owned by Carnival Corporation)
Founded 1838 as the British and North American Royal Mail Steam Packet Company
Headquarters London, Flag of the United Kingdom.svg United Kingdom and Santa Clarita, California,Flag of the United States.svg United States
Industry Transportation
Products Cruises
Website http://www.cunard.com/

Cunard Line is a British shipping company, operator of the ocean liners RMS Queen Mary 2 (QM2), and MS Queen Victoria (QV). Cunard Line, one of the world's oldest transatlantic shipping companies, originated in 1840 when The British and North American Royal Mail Steam-Packet Company was formed. In 1878 the firm became Cunard Steamship Company, Limited. After a 1934 merger with White Star, the company was known as Cunard White Star Line, but was renamed Cunard Line in 1950. The present-day headquarters are located in London, UK and the Valencia section of the city of Santa Clarita, California, USA in the same building as Princess Cruises head office.

Contents

History

In 1838 shipping magnate Sir Samuel Cunard, of Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, along with engineer Robert Napier and businessmen James Donaldson, Sir George Burns, and David MacIver formed the British and North American Royal Mail Steam Packet Company (BNARMSPC). Note that this company was distinct from the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company, later Royal Mail Lines, founded in London in 1839 by Scot James Macqueen.

A captain waves aboard a Cunard Line vessel in 1901.

BNARMSPC successfully bid for the rights to a transatlantic mail shipping contract between England and America - winning this entitled it to use the RMS (Royal Mail Ship) prefix on its vessels. The company later changed its name to Cunard Steamships Ltd.

In May 1840 the 648 gross ton coastal paddle steamer SS Unicorn, the company's first steamship, made the company's first transatlantic trip. Under the direction of Captain Douglas, she carried 24 passengers, including Edward Cunard (Samuel's son), on a trip lasting 14 days, at an average speed of 8 knots,[1] thereby meeting the contract requirement of a crossing in a fortnight. Regular passenger and cargo service by steamship was inaugurated by the paddle steamer Britannia, the first ship commissioned by the company. On 4 July 1840 she sailed from Liverpool to Halifax, arriving in 12 days,[2] then to Boston in 2 days 8 hours more.

Cunard faced many competitors from Britain, France, the United States and Germany, but survived them all. This was mainly due to a great focus on safety. Cunard ships were usually not the largest or the fastest but they earned a reputation for being the most reliable and the safest. The prosperous company eventually absorbed Canadian Northern Steamships Ltd and one of Cunard's principal competitors, the White Star Line, owners of the ill-fated RMS Titanic and the HMHS Britannic.[3]

Between 1914 and 1918 Cunard Line built its European headquarters in Liverpool. The grand neo-Classical Cunard Building was to be the third of Liverpool's 'Three Graces'. The headquarters were used by Cunard until the 1960s.

Lusitania at sea during her sea trials, 1907.

For more than a century and a half, Cunard dominated the north Atlantic passenger trade and was one of the world's most important companies, with the majority of their liners being built at John Brown's Shipyard, Clydebank, Scotland. Its ships played important roles in the development of the world economy, and also participated in all of Britain's major wars from Crimea to the Falklands War, when Cunard's container ship Atlantic Conveyor was sunk by an Exocet missile.

The line began to decline in the 1950s as speedy air travel began to replace ships as the main transporters of passengers and mail across the Atlantic. Cunard tried to address this by forming BOAC-Cunard Ltd in 1962 with the British Overseas Airways Corporation to operate scheduled air services to North America, the Caribbean and South America. It was dissolved in 1966. In 1971, Cunard Line was acquired by British shipping and industrial conglomerate Trafalgar House, which held the line until its takeover by Kvaerner in 1996. In 1983 Cunard took over the luxury cruise line Norwegian America Line, and in 1994 another luxury cruise company, Royal Viking Line.

For much of the late 20th century and the first few years of the 21st the line's only vessel making transatlantic crossings was the RMS Queen Elizabeth 2. From 2004 the "QE2's" service was limited to cruising (mostly from the UK) and the annual world cruise, while the transatlantic route was taken over by the new RMS Queen Mary 2, the first ocean liner to be built in 30 years and the largest passenger ship of any type. In 2006 she lost the record of the largest passenger ship to the cruise ship Freedom of the Seas, but QM2 remains the largest ocean liner ever built.

Cunard Line and Princess Cruises headquarters in Santa Clarita

In 1998, Cunard became one of a number of lines owned by Carnival Corporation, now Carnival Corporation & plc. On 1 January 2005 the business, assets and liabilities of Cunard Line Ltd were transferred to Carnival plc, ending the Cunard name as a business entity - the name still appears on the side of Queen Mary 2 and sails under the Cunard brand, but it is controlled by Princess Cruises in California.

Current fleet

Future ships

Former ships

Cunard White Line advertisement featuring the RMS Queen Mary

The company operated many liners and cruise ships, some of them world-famous, including:

Funnel

Traditionally, Cunard Line ships sport a red funnel with two or three narrow black bands and black top. However, between 1969 and 1983 most Cunard ships sported all-white funnels.

Milestones

Poster showing a cross-section of RMS Aquitania, launched in 1913.

Some of the milestones accomplished by Cunard include:

Commemoration

A statue on the waterfront of Halifax, Nova Scotia commemorates Samuel Cunard and the founding of the Cunard Line, as well as a special display on the Cunard Line in the Steamship Gallery of the city's Maritime Museum of the Atlantic.

References

  1. Ships of the Cunard Line; Dorman, Frank E.; Adlard Coles Limited; 1955
  2. Hopwood, Peter. "Cunard Company" in The Canadian Encyclopedia (Edmonton, AB: Hurtig Publishers, 1988), Volume 1, p.555
  3. Cunard White Star Line Merger, Titanic-Titanic.com
  4. QM2 Homepage
  5. Queen Victoria Homepage
  6. 6.0 6.1 Cunard Archives 1907-1930
  7. Cunard Archives Early Cunarders
  8. QE2 Homepage
  9. Cunard Archives 1934-1969 - The Last Great Atlantic Fleet
  10. 1 Air Division - RMS Scythia II - Assorted Sources
  11. Rosén, Bo; Benght Ohrelius, Eino Koivistoinen, Helge Heikkinen (1959) (in Finnish). Laivojen kirja. Porvoo: WSOY. pp. page 34. 
  12. 12.0 12.1 Ward, Douglas (2006). Complete Guide to Cruising & Cruise Ships. Singapore: Berlitz. pp. page 139. ISBN 981-246-739-4. 

External links