Everything about Cunard Line totally explained
Cunard Line (between 1934 and 1949
Cunard White Star Line) is a
British shipping company, operator of the
ocean liners
RMS Queen Elizabeth 2 (
QE2) and
RMS Queen Mary 2 (
QM2), and
cruise ship MS Queen Victoria (
QV).
Cunard Line's 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.
History
In 1838 shipping magnate
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 founded in London in 1839 by
Scot James Macqueen.
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, 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, 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 Cunard's principal competitor, the
White Star Line, owners of the ill-fated
RMS Titanic and the
HMHS Britannic.
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.
For more than a century and a half, Cunard dominated the 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.
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's controlled by
Princess Cruises in California.
Current Fleet
On April 22, 2008, it was announced that the three ships would meet for the last time at their home port of
Southampton,
UK. According to
BBC News, The Cunard fleet of Queens would be together in Southampton for one last time, prior to the retirement of the QE2 in November.
Future Ships
MS Queen Elizabeth - expected to enter service in 2010.
Former Ships
The company operated many liners and cruise ships, some of them world-famous, including:
RMS Alaunia - launched 9 June 1913, sunk by mine 19 October 1916
RMS Albania - bought 1911, sold 1912
RMS Albania - launched 17 April 1920, sold 1930
RMS Antonia - launched 1921, sold to the Admiralty 1942
RMS Aquitania - launched 1913, scrapped 1950. One of a small number of ocean liners to serve in both World Wars.
RMS Ascania - bought 1911, sunk 1918
RMS Ascania - launched 1923, maiden voyage 1925, sold for scrap 1956
RMS Aurania - entered service 1924, sold to the Admiralty 1942
RMS Berengaria - originally SS Imperator of HAPAG, entered service for Cunard 1922, sold for scrap 1938
RMS Britannia - first transatlantic passenger service in 1840
RMS Britannic - launched on 6 August 1929, scrapped in 1960
RMS Campania - launched 1892, won Blue Riband, sold 1914
RMS Carinthia - launched 1925, sunk by U-boat in 1940
RMS Carinthia - launched 1955, sold in 1968
RMS Carmania - launched 1905, sold for scrap 1932
RMS Caronia - the "Green Goddess", entered service 1949, sold in 1968
RMS Carpathia - entered service 1903, rescued RMS Titanic survivors in 1912
MS Cunard Adventurer - entered service 1971, sold 1977
MS Cunard Ambassador - entered service 1972, burnt 1974, subsequently sold
MS Cunard Countess - entered service 1975, sold 1996
MS Cunard Princess - entered service 1976, sold 1995
RMS Etruria - built 1884, sold for scrap 1910
RMS Franconia
RMS Ivernia - launched 1955, renamed Franconia 1963, sold to Russia and renamed "Fedor Shalyapin" 1973
RMS Laconia - entered service 1912, sunk by U-boat in 1917
RMS Laconia - entered service 1922, sunk by U-boat in 1942
RMS Lancastria - entered service 1922 as the Tyrrhenia, sunk by bombing in 1940
RMS Lucania - entered service in 1893, scrapped in 1909 after being damaged in a fire
RMS Lusitania - entered service 1907, sunk by U-boat in 1915
RMS Majestic - entered service 1922, scrapped in 1944
RMS Mauretania - entered service 1907, scrapped in 1935
RMS Mauretania - entered service 1939, scrapped in 1965
SS Orduna - entered service 1914, scrapped 1951
RMS Parthia
RMS Queen Elizabeth - entered service 1940, retired 1968
RMS Queen Mary - entered service 1936, retired 1967
MS Royal Viking Sun - entered service for Cunard 1994, transferred to Seabourn Cruise Line 1999
MS Sagafjord - entered service for Cunard 1983, sold 1997
RMS Samaria
RMS Saxonia - launched 1954, renamed Carmania 1963, sold to Russia and renamed "Leonid Sobinov" 1973
RMS Scythia
SS Servia
RMS Sylvania - last Cunard ship built exclusively for transatlantic crossings. Entered service 1957, laid up 1968
RMS Umbria - launched 1884, Liverpool to New York service
SS Unicorn - entered service for Cunard 1840
MS Vistafjord - entered service for Cunard 1983, renamed MS Caronia 1997, sold 2004
Firsts
Some of the "firsts" accomplished by Cunard include:
First scheduled transatlantic passenger service (RMS Britannia, 1840)
First passenger ship with electric lighting (SS Servia, 1881) - though this is disputed
First liner with two propellers (RMS Campania, 1893)
First passenger ship with private bathroom facilities in cabins (RMS Campania, 1893)
First passenger ship with purpose-built single-berth cabins ((RMS Campania, 1893)
First gymnasium and health centre aboard a ship (RMS Franconia, 1911)
First planetarium at sea (RMS Queen Mary 2, 2004)
Largest passenger ship (until 1911) (RMS Mauretania, 1907)
Largest passenger ship (until 1996) (RMS Queen Elizabeth, 1940)
Largest passenger ship (until 2006) (RMS Queen Mary 2, 2004)
Last operating ocean liner with purpose-built single-berth cabins (RMS Queen Elizabeth 2, 1967)
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.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Cunard Line'.
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