White Star Line
Partnership | |
Industry | Shipping, transportation |
Fate | merged with Cunard Line |
Successor | Cunard White Star Line |
Founded | 1845Liverpool, England | in
Defunct | 1934 |
Area served | Transatlantic |
Parent | Ismay, Imrie and Co. |
Website |
www |
The Oceanic Steam Navigation Company or White Star Line of Boston Packets, more commonly known as just White Star Line, was a prominent British shipping company. Founded in 1845, the line operated a fleet of clipper ships that sailed between Britain and Australia. Today it is most famous for their innovative vessel Oceanic of 1870, and the Olympic class ocean liners, including the ill-fated RMS Titanic.
In 1934, White Star merged with its chief rival, Cunard Line, which operated as Cunard-White Star Line until 1950. Cunard Line then operated as a separate entity until 2005 and is now part of Carnival Corporation & plc. As a lasting reminder of the White Star Line, modern Cunard ships use the term White Star Service to describe the level of customer care expected of the company.[1]
History
Early history
The first company bearing the name White Star Line was founded in Liverpool, England, by John Pilkington and Henry Wilson in 1845. It focused on the UK–Australia trade, which increased following the discovery of gold in Australia. The fleet initially consisted of the chartered sailing ships RMS Tayleur, Blue Jacket, White Star, Red Jacket, Ellen, Ben Nevis, Emma, Mermaid and Iowa. Tayleur, the largest ship of its day, wrecked on its maiden voyage to Australia at Lambay Island, near Ireland, a disaster that haunted the company for years.[2]
In 1863, the company acquired its first steamship, the Royal Standard.
The original White Star Line merged with two other small lines, The Black Ball Line and The Eagle Line, to form a conglomerate, the Liverpool, Melbourne and Oriental Steam Navigation Company Limited. This did not prosper and White Star broke away. White Star concentrated on Liverpool to New York services. Heavy investment in new ships was financed by borrowing, but the company's bank, the Royal Bank of Liverpool, failed in October 1867. White Star was left with an incredible debt of £527,000 (£41,675,946 as of 2016),[3] and was forced into bankruptcy.
The Oceanic Steam Navigation Company
On 18 January 1868, Thomas Ismay, a director of the National Line, purchased the house flag, trade name and goodwill of the bankrupt company for £1,000 (£80,358 as of 2016),[3] with the intention of operating large ships on the North Atlantic service between Liverpool and New York. Ismay established the company's headquarters at Albion House, Liverpool.
Ismay was approached by Gustav Christian Schwabe, a prominent Liverpool merchant, and his nephew, shipbuilder Gustav Wilhelm Wolff, during a game of billiards. Schwabe offered to finance the new line if Ismay had his ships built by Wolff's company, Harland and Wolff.[4] Ismay agreed, and a partnership with Harland and Wolff was established. The shipbuilders received their first orders on 30 July 1869. The agreement was that Harland and Wolff would build the ships at cost plus a fixed percentage and would not build any vessels for the White Star's rivals. In 1870 William Imrie joined the managing company. As the first ship was being commissioned, Ismay formed the Oceanic Steam Navigation Company to operate the steamers under construction.
White Star began with six ships of the Oceanic class: Oceanic (I), Atlantic, Baltic, and Republic, followed by the slightly larger Celtic and Adriatic. White Star began operating again in 1871 between New York and Liverpool (with a call at Queenstown).
It has long been customary for many shipping lines to have a common theme for the names of their ships. White Star gave their ships names ending in -ic, such as Titanic. The line also adopted a buff-coloured funnel with a black top as a distinguishing feature for their ships, as well as a distinctive house flag, a red broad pennant with two tails, bearing a white five-pointed star.
The first substantial loss for the company came only four years after its founding, occurring in 1873 with the sinking of the SS Atlantic and the loss of 535 lives near Halifax, Nova Scotia. While en route to New York from Liverpool amidst a vicious storm, the Atlantic attempted to make port at Halifax when a concern arose that the ship would run out of coal before reaching New York. However, when attempting to enter Halifax, she ran aground on the rocks and sank in shallow waters. Despite being so close to shore, a majority of the victims of the disaster drowned. The crew were blamed for serious navigational errors by the Canadian Inquiry, although a British Board of Trade investigation cleared the company of all extreme wrongdoing.[5]
During the late nineteenth century, White Star operated many famous ships, such as Britannic (I), Germanic, Teutonic, and Majestic (I). Several of these ships took the Blue Riband, awarded to the fastest ship to make the Atlantic crossing.
In 1899 Thomas Ismay commissioned one of the most beautiful steam ships constructed during the nineteenth century, the Oceanic (II). She was the first ship to exceed the Great Eastern in length (although not tonnage). The building of this ship marked White Star Line's departure from competition in speed with its rivals. Thereafter White Star concentrated on comfort and economy of operation instead.
In the late nineteenth century, shipbuilders had discovered that when speed through water increased above about 20 knots (23 mph; 37 km/h), the required additional engine power increased in logarithmic proportion: that is, each additional increment of speed required a larger increase in engine power and fuel consumption. With the coal-fired reciprocating steam engines of the time, exceeding about 24 knots (28 mph; 44 km/h) required very high power and fuel consumption.
For this reason, the White Star Line committed to comfort and reliability rather than to speed. For example, White Star's Celtic cruised at 16 knots (18 mph; 30 km/h) with 14,000 horsepower, while Cunard's Mauretania made 24 knots (28 mph; 44 km/h) with 68,000 horsepower.
Between 1901 and 1907, White Star brought "The Big Four" (all around 24,000 tons) into service: Celtic, Cedric, Baltic, and Adriatic. These ships carried massive numbers of passengers: 400 passengers in First and Second Class, and over 2,000 in Third Class. In addition, they had extremely large cargo capacities, up to 17,000 tons of general cargo.
In 1902 White Star Line was absorbed into the International Mercantile Marine Co. (IMM), a large American shipping conglomerate. Bruce Ismay ceded control to IMM in the face of intense pressure from shareholders and J. P. Morgan, who threatened a rate war. IMM was dissolved in 1932.
The White Star Line and migration
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, millions of people emigrated from Europe to the United States and Canada. White Star was among the first shipping lines to have passenger ships with inexpensive accommodation for third-class passengers, in addition to places for higher paying first- and second-class. The Oceanic-class liners of 1870–1872 carried up to 1,000 third-class passengers, as did the vast majority of White Star's ships thereafter. The White Star Line's "Big Four", a quartet of revolutionary liners which had large passenger and freight capacities, had the largest carrying capacity for third-class passengers: Celtic of 1901, with capacity for 2,352 third-class passengers; Cedric of 1903 and Baltic of 1904 each had a third-class carrying capacity of 2,000; the fourth ship, Adriatic of 1907, had a third-class carrying capacity of 1,900.
White Star advertised extensively for emigrant passengers. When the Line began operations in 1870, the majority of their business in the emigration trade was centred on Great Britain, and Irish emigrants remained a chief source of income for much of the company's history. From the start, a great deal of their business also came from Scandinavia, with Norway and Sweden being the largest areas of success. As the years passed, the company expanded its services into continental Europe, eventually tapping into the massive streams of emigrants from Italy, from the Slavic regions of Central Europe under the control of the Austro-Hungarian empire, and nations such as Romania and Bulgaria in southeastern Europe struggling with slowed economic growth and overpopulation. Also included was Europe's massive population of Ashkenazi Jews from several areas of Eastern Europe generally known as the Pale of Settlement (a region within the Russian Empire designated under anti-Semitic governmental policies as the only area in which Jews were allowed to settle permanently, and which included primarily areas of far western Russia, the modern-day countries of Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Belarus, and the remnants of the former kingdom of Galicia, an historic ethnic region with a huge Jewish population, now divided between southeastern Poland and the western Ukraine). The Line eventually expanded their services of travel across all regions of Europe, spanning from the Iberian Peninsula to the Middle East. No exact figures are available, but White Star liners may have carried as many as two million emigrants to North America.
As a means of competing with Cunard (which had faster ships), White Star gave their third-class facilities modest luxuries. These included division of steerage passengers into two areas of each vessel. In those days, most shipping lines (Cunard, Hamburg-Amerika, and North German Lloyd among them) housed their third-class passengers in large open-berthed dormitories usually located at the forward end of the vessel; but the White Star Line strictly kept to the policy of dividing their third-class accommodations into two areas on each ship. Quarters for single men, usually found in old-fashioned open-berth dormitories, were located in the forward areas of the vessel; these quarters differed greatly from those found on ships of other lines as they were much less crowded. Single women, married couples and families were berthed in private two-, four-, and six-berth cabins in the after areas of the vessel.
The reasons are best explained in a secret investigation conducted by the U.S. Immigration Bureau.[6] During the years when immigration to the United States was at its peak, American agent Anna Herkner disguised herself as a Bohemian immigrant and made three trans-Atlantic crossings on ships of three different lines to carry out an investigation of the conditions of steerage in secret. Although the actual report omits the names of the vessels she travelled on, records at Ellis Island reveal which ships she had included in her study: in 1905, she made a westbound crossing in steerage aboard the North German Lloyd line's Friedrich Der Grosse, followed in 1907 by the Hamburg Amerika Line's Pennsylvania, and finally, in 1909, she sailed aboard the White Star Line's Cedric. Her report contrast "old-type" and "new-type steerage", recommending that the government should bring about transition to the latter. While aboard Friedrich Der Grosse and the Pennsylvania she witnessed stewards sexually assaulting female steerage passengers, a severe lack of medical care, and scarcely tolerable food provided to steerage passengers. Aboard Cedric, however, Herkner was surprised at how well she was treated and how well passengers were provided for. In her report, she described her cabin, which she shared with three other women, as private, comfortable, and clean. She noted that each cabin had a bell by which a steward could be summoned, features such as mirrors, hooks to hang clothing on, and private wash basins. The food was of better quality, and the open deck space allotted to steerage passengers was far greater than in the "old-type" steerage on the other two ships.[7]
Third-class accommodations on the White Star Line included dining rooms with linens and silverware – and menu cards which had postcards on the back, so that emigrants could write to relatives back home and suggest that they, too, travel with White Star. Additionally, each ship also had a reading room and smoke room allotted to passengers in steerage.
Olympic class ships
The Cunard Line was the chief competitor to White Star. In response to Cunard's Lusitania and Mauretania, White Star ordered the Olympic class liners: Olympic, Titanic, and Britannic (II). While Cunard was famed for the speed of their ships, the Olympic class were to be the biggest and most luxurious ships in the world. The Olympic was the only ship of this class that was profitable for White Star. Titanic sank on her maiden voyage, while Britannic was requisitioned by the British government before she was fully fitted, and used as a hospital ship during World War I. Britannic hit an underwater mine, in the Kea Channel off the Greek island of Kea, and sank on the morning of 21 November 1916.
Interwar years
In 1922 the White Star Line gained Majestic and Homeric; two former German liners which had been ceded to Britain as war reparations, ostensibly as a replacement for the war losses of the Britannic and Oceanic. Majestic was then the world's largest liner and became the company's flagship. The two former German liners operated successfully alongside Olympic for an express service on the Southampton-New York route until the Great Depression reduced demand after 1930.
In 1927 the White Star Line was purchased by the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company (RMSPC), making RMSPC the largest shipping group in the world.[8][9]
In 1928 a new Oceanic (III) was proposed and her keel was laid down that year at Harland and Wolff. The thousand foot long liner was to have been a motor ship propelled by the new diesel-electric propulsion system, but the ship was never completed due to financial issues. Oceanic's keel was dismantled and the steel was used in two new smaller motor ships: Britannic (III) and Georgic. Both of these ships entered service by 1932; they were the last liners White Star had built.
RMSPC ran into financial trouble, and was liquidated in 1932. A new company, Royal Mail Lines Limited, took over the ships of RMSPC and their subordinate lines including White Star.[10]
Cunard merger
In 1933 White Star and Cunard were both in serious financial difficulties because of the Great Depression, falling passenger numbers and the advanced age of their fleets. Work was halted on Cunard's new giant, Hull 534 (later the Queen Mary) in 1931 to save money. In 1933 the British government agreed to provide assistance to the two competitors on the condition that they merge their North Atlantic operations. The agreement was completed on 30 December 1933.
The merger took place on 10 May 1934, creating Cunard-White Star Limited. White Star contributed ten ships to the new company while Cunard contributed 15 ships. Because of this, and since Hull 534 was Cunard's ship, 62% of the company was owned by Cunard's shareholders and 38% of the company was owned for the benefit of White Star's creditors. White Star's Australia and New Zealand services were not involved in the merger, but were separately disposed of to Shaw, Savill & Albion later in 1934. A year after this merger, Olympic, the last of her class, was removed from service. She was scrapped in 1937.
In 1947 Cunard acquired the 38% of Cunard White Star they did not already own, and on 31 December 1949 they acquired Cunard White Star's assets and operations, and reverted to using the name "Cunard" on January 1, 1950. From the time of the 1934 merger, the house flags of both lines had been flown on all their ships, with each ship flying the flag of its original owner above the other, but from 1950, even Georgic[11] and Britannic,[12] the last surviving White Star liners, flew the Cunard house flag above the White Star burgee until they were each withdrawn from service, in 1956 and 1961 respectively. Just as the retiring of Cunard Line's RMS Aquitania in 1949 marked the end of an era, so the retirement of the Britannic and therefore the last vestiges of the famous White Star Line was similarly noted world-wide.[13] All other ships flew the Cunard flag over the White Star flag until 1968. This was most likely because Nomadic remained in service with Cunard until this year, and was sent to the breakers' yard, only to be bought for use as a floating restaurant. After this, all remnants of White Star Line were dissolved.
White Star Line today
The White Star Line's Head Offices still exist in Liverpool, standing in James Street within sight of the more grandiose headquarters of their rivals, the Cunard Building. The building has a plaque commemorating the fact that the building was the head office of the White Star Line. J. Bruce Ismay, the chairman of the line who sailed on Titanic, had his office in the building. The White Star Line's London offices, named Oceanic House, still exist today. They are just a street off Trafalgar Square, and one can still see the name on the building over the entrances. The Southampton offices still exist, now known as Canute Chambers, they are situated in Canute Road.
The French passenger tender Nomadic, the last surviving vessel of the White Star Line, was purchased by the Northern Ireland Department for Social Development in January 2006. She has since been returned to Belfast, where she has been fully restored to her original and elegant 1912 appearance under the auspices of the Nomadic Preservation Society along with the assistance of her original builders, Harland and Wolff. She is intended to serve as the centerpiece of a museum dedicated to the history of Atlantic steam, the White Star Line, and its most famous ship, the Titanic. The historic Nomadic was opened ceremoniously to the public on 6 January, 2013.
Cunard Line itself has, since 1995, introduced White Star Service as the brand of services on their ships RMS Queen Mary 2, MS Queen Victoria and the MS Queen Elizabeth. The company has also created the White Star Academy, an in-house programme for preparing new crew members for Cunard ships.[14]
The White Star flag is raised on all Cunard ships and on the Nomadic in Belfast, Northern Ireland every 15 April in memory of the Titanic disaster.
Fleet events
- On 21 January 1854 Tayleur wrecked off Lambay Island, with the loss of 380 lives, out of 652 on board.
- In 1873 Atlantic was wrecked near Halifax, costing 535 lives.[15]
- In 1893 Naronic vanished on the Atlantic ocean with 74 crew after departing Liverpool for New York. Wreckage found included deck spars and at least two lifeboats, but no trace of her crew. Her wreck has never been found.
- In 1907 Suevic ran aground off the southwest coast of England, but in the largest rescue of its kind, all 456 passengers and 141 crewmembers were rescued. The ship was later deliberately broken in two, with the stern half being rebuilt with a new bow.
- In 1909 the Republic foundered off the New England coast after a collision with the Italian liner Florida. Four lives were lost in the collision and the ship remained afloat for over 39 hours before foundering. The remainder of the passengers were rescued.
- In September 1911 Olympic was involved in a collision with the warship HMS Hawke in the Solent, badly damaging both ships.
- On 14–15 April 1912 Titanic was lost after colliding with an iceberg, taking 1,502 passengers and crew with her.
- The first White Star ship lost during World War I was Arabic, torpedoed off the Old Head of Kinsale Ireland on 19 August 1915 killing 44.
- In 1915 the Ionic was narrowly missed by a German torpedo in the Mediterranean Sea. No lives were lost.
- On 28 June 1915 the Armenian, a vessel built for the Leyland Line but leased to the White Star Line, was sunk by a torpedo fired by SM U-24 20 miles off the coast of Cornwall, carrying a cargo of 1,400 mules. 29 crew and all the mules were lost.
- On 3 May 1915 the former Germanic (then in service as a Turkish troop transport) was torpedoed by the British submarine HMS E14. The ship survived the attack with no fatalities.
- In May 1916 Ceramic was narrowly missed by two torpedoes from unidentified U-boat in Mediterranean Sea.
- In 1916 the Cymric was torpedoed three times and sunk off the southern coast of Ireland by U-20, noted as the same submarine responsible for the tragic sinking of the Lusitania the year before. Five lives were lost and the ship stayed afloat for almost three days before foundering.
- On 21 November 1916, the second sister ship of Titanic, HMHS Britannic, was lost after striking a mine laid by U-73[16] in the Kea Channel of the Aegean Sea off the coast of Greece. It sank in 57 minutes with the loss of 30 lives and was the largest vessel sunk in the war.
- On 25 January 1917 Laurentic struck two mines laid by U-80 and sank with a loss of 354 lives.
- In May 1917 Afric was torpedoed and sunk by UC-66, in English Channel, killing 22 crew members.
- In June 1917 Ceramic was narrowly missed by one torpedo from unidentified U-boat in English Channel.
- In August 1917 Delphic was torpedoed 135 miles off Bishop Rock by German U-boat UC-72 and sank with the loss of five lives.
- On 12 May 1918, Olympic rammed and sank the U-boat U-103 which had tried, and failed, to torpedo it. The torpedo actually struck Olympic but failed to detonate. However, several bow plates on Olympic were dented from the collision with the U-boat. Later, while Olympic was in Dry Dock, a large circular-shaped dent was found in the side of her hull, appearing to be the same size as the head of the standard torpedoes used by the German U-Boats.
- On 19–20 July 1918 Justicia (owned by the British Government and managed by White Star) was torpedoed twice by U-46 but she remained afloat. Later in the same day, she was torpedoed two more times by U-46 and again managed to stay afloat. The next morning, as she was towed by HMS Sonia, she was torpedoed two more times by U-124 and finally sank, killing 16 crew members.
- In September 1918 Persic was torpedoed by U-87 off of the Isles of Scilly, but was able to limp off and outrun the sub. She was towed in and repaired, resuming service.
- In October 1917 RMS Celtic ran up on a mine laid by U-88 near Cobh, Ireland, killing 17. She was repaired and put back into military service. In June 1918, she was torpedoed by UB-77 in the Irish Sea, killing seven. Once again, she was able to escape the sub and limp into port with her own steam. She was repaired and once again put back into service, serving through the remainder of the war without incident.
- On 15 May 1934, while steaming in a fog, Olympic rammed the Lightship Nantucket, sinking it and killing seven of the crew.
- In November 1940 Laurentic was torpedoed and sunk by U-99 off Northern Ireland with the loss of 49 lives.
Notable captains
- Commodore Sir Bertram Fox Hayes KCMG DSO RD RNR – Commodore, White Star Line
- Captain Digby Murray, Commodore, best known as captain of Republic and Atlantic. [17]
- Captain J. B. Ranson OBE of Baltic.
- Captain Edward J. Smith RD RNR of Titanic.
- Captain Charles Bartlett CB CBE RD RNR of Britannic, one of the sister ships of Titanic.
- Captain Herbert J. Haddock CB RNR of the Oceanic, Olympic, and — for a few days before her departure — Titanic.
- Captain Eustace R. White has commanded Bovic, Baltic, Belgic, Nomadic, Homeric, Olympic, and Majestic. One of the first Commanders to talk over ship to shore radio from mid-Atlantic.
- Captain Miles has commanded Arabic, Afric, Celtic.
Fleet
1853–1899
Ship | Built | White Star service | GRT | Notes | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Red Jacket | 1853 | 1853–1878 | 2,305 | ||
White Star[18] | 1854 | 1854-1867 | 2,340 | ||
Blue Jacket | 1854 | 1854–1869 | 1,790 | ||
Tayleur | 1854 | 1854 | 4,000 | Sank on her maiden voyage. | |
Oceanic | 1870 | 1870–1895 | 3,707 | ||
Atlantic | 1871 | 1871–1873 | 3,707 | ||
Baltic | 1871 | 1871–1889 | 2,122 | ||
Tropic | 1871 | 1871–1873 | 2,122 | ||
Asiatic | 1871 | 1871–1903 | 2,122 | ||
Republic | 1872 | 1872–1910 | 3,984 | ||
Adriatic | 1872 | 1872–1899 | 3,888 | ||
Celtic | 1872 | 1872–1898 | 1,867 | ||
Traffic | 1872 | 1872–1896 | 155 | Tender | |
Belgic | 1873 | 1873–1888 | 2,652 | ||
Gaelic | 1873 | 1873–1896 | 2,685 | ||
Britannic | 1874 | 1874–1903 | 5,004 | ||
Germanic | 1875 | 1875–1903 | 5,008 | ||
Arabic | 1881 | 1881–1915 | 4,368 | ||
Coptic | 1881 | 1883–1908 | 4,448 | ||
Doric | 1883 | 1883–1911 | 4,784 | ||
Ionic | 1883 | 1883–1900 | 4,753 | ||
Belgic | 1885 | 1885–1899 | 4,212 | ||
Gaelic | 1885 | 1885–1905 | 4,206 | ||
Cufic | 1885 | 1885–1896 | 4,639 | ||
Runic | 1889 | 1889–1895 | 5,043 | ||
Teutonic | 1889 | 1889–1921 | 9,984 | ||
1890–1899
Ship | Built | White Star service | GRT | Notes | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Majestic | 1890 | 1890–1914 | 9,965 | ||
Nomadic | 1891 | 1891–1903 | 5,749 | ||
Tauric | 1891 | 1891–1929 | 5,728 | ||
Magnetic | 1891 | 1891–1935 | 619 | ||
Naronic | 1892 | 1892–1893 | 6,594 | ||
Bovic | 1892 | 1892–1921 | 6,583 | ||
Gothic | 1893 | 1893–1906 | 7,755 | ||
Cevic | 1894 | 1894–1914 | 8,301 | ||
Pontic | 1894 | 1894–1930 | 394 | ||
Georgic | 1895 | 1895–1916 | 10,077 | ||
Delphic | 1897 | 1897–1917 | 8,273 | ||
Cymric | 1898 | 1898–1916 | 13,096 | ||
Afric | 1898 | 1899–1917 | 11,948 | ||
Medic | 1899 | 1892–1921 | 11,973 | ||
Persic | 1899 | 1899–1935 | 11,973 | ||
Oceanic | 1899 | 1899–1914 | 17,272 | ||
1900–1909
Ship | Built | White Star service | GRT | Notes | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Runic | 1900 | 1900–1930 | 12,482 | ||
Suevic | 1900 | 1900–1928 | 12,531 | ||
Celtic | 1901 | 1901–1928 | 21,035 | ||
Athenic | 1902 | 1902–1928 | 12,345 | ||
Corinthic | 1902 | 1902–1931 | 12,367 | ||
Ionic | 1903 | 1903–1934 | 12,352 | ||
Cedric | 1903 | 1903–1931 | 21,073 | ||
Victorian | 1895 | 1903–1904 | 8,825 | ||
Armenian | 1895 | 1903–1915 | 8,825 | ||
Arabic | 1903 | 1903–1915 | 15,801 | ||
Romanic | 1898 | 1903–1912 | 11,394 | ||
Cretic | 1903 | 1903–1904 | 13,507 | ||
Republic | 1903 | 1903–1909 | 15,400 | ||
Canopic | 1900 | 1904–1925 | 12,268 | ||
Cufic | 1895 | 1904–1923 | 8,249 | ||
Baltic | 1904 | 1904–1933 | 23,876 | ||
Gallic | 1894 | 1907–1913 | 12,352 | ||
Adriatic | 1907 | 1907–1935 | 24,541 | ||
Laurentic | 1908 | 1908–1917 | 14,892 | ||
Megantic | 1909 | 1909–1933 | 14,878 | ||
1910–1919
Ship | Built | White Star service | GRT | Notes | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Zealandic | 1911 | 1911–1926 | 8,090 | ||
Nomadic | 1911 | 1911–1925 | 1,273 | Tender | |
Traffic | 1911 | 1911–1927 | 675 | Tender | |
Olympic | 1911 | 1911–1935 | 45,324 | ||
Belgic | 1913 | 1911–1913 | 9,748 | ||
Titanic | 1912 | 1912 | 46,328 | Sank on her maiden voyage in the Atlantic Ocean | |
Ceramic | 1912 | 1913–1934 | 18,400 | ||
Vaderland | 1910 | 1914–1917 | 11,899 | ||
Lapland | 1909 | 1914–1920 | 17,540 | ||
Britannic | 1914 | 1915–1916 | 48,158 | ||
Belgic | 1914 | 1917–1923 | 27,132 | ||
Justicia | 1914 | 1917–1918 | 32,234 | ||
Vedic | 1918 | 1918–1934 | 9,302 | ||
Bardic | 1918 | 1919–1925 | 9,332 |
1920–1949
Ship | Built | White Star service | GRT | Notes | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gallic | 1918 | 1920–1933 | 11,905 | ||
Mobile | 1909 | 1920–1920 | 16,960 | ||
Arabic | 1909 | 1920–1931 | 16,786 | ||
Homeric | 1913 | 1922–1935 | 35,000 | ||
Haverford | 1901 | 1921–1922 | 11,635 | ||
Poland | 1897 | 1922–1925 | 8,282 | ||
Majestic | 1914 | 1922–1936 | 56,551 | ||
Pittsburgh | 1922 | 1925–1926 | 16,322 | ||
Doric | 1923 | 1923–1935 | 16,484 | ||
Delphic | 1918 | 1925–1933 | 8,002 | ||
Albertic | 1920 | 1927–1934 | 18,940 | ||
Calgaric | 1918 | 1927–1934 | 16,063 | ||
Laurentic | 1927 | 1927–1940 | 18,724 | ||
Britannic | 1929 | 1929–1949 | 26,943 | ||
Georgic | 1932 | 1932–1949 | 27,759 |
See also
- List of White Star Line ships (Complete list)
- Black Star Line (shipping line founded as part of the Back-to-Africa movement, which derived its name from the White Star Line)
References
- ↑ "www.thecunarders.co.uk is coming soon!" (in Ukrainian). Thecunarders.co.uk. Retrieved 18 April 2013.
- ↑ Bourke, Edward J (2003). Bound for Australia. p. 18. ISBN 0-9523027-3-X.
- 1 2 UK CPI inflation numbers based on data available from Gregory Clark (2015), "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)" MeasuringWorth.
- ↑ Barczewski, Stephanie (2006). Titanic: A Night Remembered. Continuum International
Publishing Group. p. 213. ISBN 1-85285-500-2. Retrieved 27 March 2008. line feed character in
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at position 24 (help) - ↑ Greg Cochkanoff and Bob Chaulk, SS Atlantic: The White Star Line's First Disaster at Sea, (Goose Lane Editions, Frederiction, 2009) p. 99.
- ↑ "Steerage conditions, importation and harboring of women for immoral purposes, immigrant homes and aid societies, immigrant banks .. : United States. Immigration Commission (1907–1910)". Archive.org. 10 March 2001. Retrieved 18 April 2013.
- ↑ "Steerage conditions, importation and harboring of women for immoral purposes, immigrant homes and aid societies, immigrant banks .. : United States. Immigration Commission (1907–1910)". Archive.org. 10 March 2001. Retrieved 18 April 2013.
- ↑ "Fact file – PortCities Southampton". Plimsoll.org. Retrieved 17 July 2009.
- ↑ "The Royal Mail Story: The Kylsant years". Users.on.net. Retrieved 17 July 2009.
- ↑ "The Royal Mail Story: Royal Mail Lines, Ltd". Users.on.net. Retrieved 17 July 2009.
- ↑ "Georgic". Chris' Cunard Page. Retrieved 17 February 2010.
- ↑ "Britannic". Chris' Cunard Page. Retrieved 17 February 2010.
- ↑ Anderson, Roy (1964). White Star. Prescot, England: T. Stephenson & Sons Ltd. p. 181.
- ↑ "White Star Service – Cunard Cruise Line". Cunard.
- ↑ Greg Cochkanoff and Bob Chaulk, SS Atlantic: The White Star Line's First Disaster at Sea, (Goose Lane Editions, Frederiction, 2009) p. 163.
- ↑ "Hospital ship Britannic – Ships hit by U-boats – German and Austrian U-boats of World War One – Kaiserliche Marine". uboat.net.
- ↑ Love, Bob (2006), "Sixth Day", Destiny's Voyage: SS Atlantic, the Titanic of 1873, AuthorHouse, pp. 256–257, ISBN 1425930395
- ↑ Lloyds register 1860
Further reading
- The ship's list
- History of the White Star Line
- Red duster page on the White Star Line
- Brief company overview
- Info on the original financing deal
- Gardiner, Robin, History of the White Star Line, Ian Allan Publishing 2002. ISBN 0-7110-2809-5
- Oldham, Wilton J., The Ismay Line: The White Star Line, and the Ismay family story, The Journal of Commerce, Liverpool, 1961
- "A Nice Quiet Life" by Alfred H Burlinson, an engineer who served on the Olympic, the Megantic, and Britanic
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to White Star Line. |
- White Star Line on Titanic-Titanic.com
- Final Demise of White Star Line Vessels
- Brief history of the White Star Line – from TDTSC MN
- White Star Line discussion forum at TDTSC
- White Star Line Historical Documents, Brochures, Menus, passenger lists etc.
- White Star Line History website
- Cunard-White Star Line on Chris' Cunard page
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