Over years, in my early youth, the QUEEN ELIZABETH was shaping my mind for the perfect ocean liner, despite having made my first experiences with a liner onboard the HANSEATIC (1), ex EMPRESS OF SCOTLAND, ex EMPRESS OF JAPAN.
When leaning at the rail of HANSEATIC entering the port, my eyes where every where and I wished to by a camera, I took all in. And when seeing the QUEEN ELIZABETH with my own eyes, the nice behaving young boy turned into a tomboy, that my grandmére was no longer able to tame ... I did draw quite a lot of looks, back then.
I found, while on research, this article and thought it interesting publishing in my blog:
I (John Shepard) joined the CUNARD LINE in March 1962 as an Assistant Purser and sailed the QUEEN ELIZABETH throughout that year, before transferring to the Liverpool-based CARINTHIA in November, where I remained as Crew Purser for the next five years.
The QUEEN ELIZABETH of 1938 never visited the port of Liverpool, but on her stern were the words QUEEN ELIZABETH and LIVERPOOL. That is quite sufficient to ensure her a place in the story of Liverpool shipping
Over forty years ago, in 1972, the world´s largest liner, the rms QUEEN ELIZABETH, was lying on her side in HongKong barbour, a burnt-out hulk. This is the story of the ship from the planning stages of the late 1920s, her war operations, her amazingly successful passenger service of the late 1940s and 1950s, and her demise in the mid 1960s.The QUEEN ELIZABETH of 1938/40 is the last ever ocean liner ever built in history. Any other ship, build for passenger transport, today cruising, is not a liner any more. Even the so called last liner ever QUEEN MARY 2 is only a cruise ship in the disguise of a liner.
QUEEN ELIZABETH was a vast improvement in design, and some of her improvements had been caused by the rival from across the channel, NORMANDIE. But the new QUEEN did lack the modernity of NORMANDIE. The new QUEEN´s interior was the same as in praised QUEEN MARY of 1936, a modest mix of English Country House Art Deco. HM Queen Mary commented after a visit of her namesake "Not as bad as I thought." ... She might have comment similar about QUEEN ELIZABETH´s interior.
by Earl of Cruise 
John Shepard did upload videos on Youtube about QUEEN ELIZABETH, I (Earl of Cruise) created a direct link to these and other, further, videos on Youtube
CUNARD LINE - QUEEN ELIZABETH of 1938, Part 1 (28:59 min.)
CUNARD LINE - QUEEN ELIZABETH of 1938, Part 2 (27:22 min.)
Arrivals & Departures - QUEEN ELIZABETH Southampton 1950 (19:34 min.)
The `QUEEN ELIZABETH´ Leaving Southampton 1951, British Pathé (2:47 min.)
CUNARD liner (QUEEN ELIZABETH) to the USA, 1950s Archive Film 91621 (14:48 min.)
rms QUEEN ELIZABETH at the port of Southampton with original commentary (20:41 min.)
Launching of ocean liner QUEEN ELIZABETH CUNARD WHITE STAR LINES 78894 (17:23 min.)
CUNARD Steamship Co. rms QUEEN ELIZABETH ocean liner promotional film (20:54 min.)
CUNARD LINE - QUEEN ELIZABETH of 1938, Part 1 (28:59 min.)
CUNARD LINE - QUEEN ELIZABETH of 1938, Part 2 (27:22 min.)
Arrivals & Departures - QUEEN ELIZABETH Southampton 1950 (19:34 min.)
The `QUEEN ELIZABETH´ Leaving Southampton 1951, British Pathé (2:47 min.)
CUNARD liner (QUEEN ELIZABETH) to the USA, 1950s Archive Film 91621 (14:48 min.)
rms QUEEN ELIZABETH at the port of Southampton with original commentary (20:41 min.)
Launching of ocean liner QUEEN ELIZABETH CUNARD WHITE STAR LINES 78894 (17:23 min.)
CUNARD Steamship Co. rms QUEEN ELIZABETH ocean liner promotional film (20:54 min.)
"The
 great solid block that is the headquarters of the Cunard Steamship 
Company stands on the Liverpool waterfront, beaten by the wind and the 
rain, bleached by the sun, facing the grey-brown waters of the River 
Mersey. This is, indeed, the very heart of a shipping city, where, 
standing in the windows of that building, one can see the ships of all 
nations passing by in procession at tide-time, almost as mundanely as 
the trams whose terminus is at the water's edge. Ferry boats fuss across
 the river, dodging between these ships, almost like children running 
across a busy road."
Today the former CUNARD headquarter is known as one of the Three Graces at the waterfront of Liverpool and a major tourist attraction.
Today the former CUNARD headquarter is known as one of the Three Graces at the waterfront of Liverpool and a major tourist attraction.
by Earl of Cruise
CUNARD building at Liverpool´s Pier Head
When
 the above lines were written in the mid 1920s, the CUNARD LINE was 
operating its Southampton - New York express service with the MAURETANIA
 (1907), the AQUITANIA (1914) and the BERENGARIA (1913), ex IMPERATOR of HAMBURG AMERIKA LINIE. The Company had
 replaced a number of its smaller ships, but there were no large 
replacements for the express service at the planning stage.
QUEEN ELIZABETH approaching her berth at Pier 90 in the North River at New York in the late 1940s -  courtesy from an original painting by Robert Lloyd
It
 was not until 1926 that Cunard began thinking about the replacements 
for the express steamers. The COMPAGNIE GÉNÉRALE TRANSATALNTIQUE (named also as TRANSAT, CGT or French Line) brought out the 
ILE DE FRANCE in that year (inaugurated in 1927), and it was known that it was planning to 
build a superliner (which would be the NORMANDIE). The Italians put the 
largest motor ship in the world, the AUGUSTUS, into service, and the 
White Star Line had laid down a new liner at Belfast. This would have 
been the OCEANIC, whose keel was laid at Harland & Wolff's yard in 
1928. Because of the world depression, construction work had not gone 
very far before it was suspended.
Following
 the First World War, Germany was building up her passenger fleet from 
'scratch' in an era of new developments. In 1928 the Germans launched 
the BREMEN and the EUROPA. 
This was a direct reaction from the success, the new liner COLUMBUS did achieve on the North Atlantic. It was the missing, amoung the international travellers, of the special "German Service" that pre WWI had often been rediculed, somehow, but was desperately missed in the first years after the Great War. This "German Service" on board the NORDDEUTSCHER LLOYD and HAMBURG AMERIKA LINIE ships was the result of their inner German rivalry, and at least the driving force and competition to the ships and service of Cie. Gén. TRANSATLANTIQUE.
Both lines, the TRANSAT and the LLOYD did start with smaller vessels, but to achieve the the goal for a two ship express service, the vessels grew, because of the needed speed.
Holding the Blue Riband record crossing for 22 years, was an easy task, regarding the fact that there was WWI raging for four years, 1914 to 1918, and that peace travel only really did start in 1919/20. And after the Great War, all lines on the North Atlantic had to rebuild and/or modernise their fleets. The costs for such a thoroughbred at sea had been tremendous and cost reducing and cost efficiency was a new task with all lines in the years after 1907.
It happend further, that the USA, in the very early 1920s, dramatically changed its immigration policy to a rigid protectionism.
And the two LLOYD greyhounds started the new run for the Blue Riband, and were the first real ships of state, which became famous in the 1930s and beamed well into the early 1960s.
This was a direct reaction from the success, the new liner COLUMBUS did achieve on the North Atlantic. It was the missing, amoung the international travellers, of the special "German Service" that pre WWI had often been rediculed, somehow, but was desperately missed in the first years after the Great War. This "German Service" on board the NORDDEUTSCHER LLOYD and HAMBURG AMERIKA LINIE ships was the result of their inner German rivalry, and at least the driving force and competition to the ships and service of Cie. Gén. TRANSATLANTIQUE.
Both lines, the TRANSAT and the LLOYD did start with smaller vessels, but to achieve the the goal for a two ship express service, the vessels grew, because of the needed speed.
by Earl of Cruise
On her maiden voyage the BREMEN crossed from 
Cherbourg to the Ambrose Channel Light Vessel off New York at an average
 speed of 27.91 knots, smashing completely the MAURETANIA's proud record
 of twenty years standing.Holding the Blue Riband record crossing for 22 years, was an easy task, regarding the fact that there was WWI raging for four years, 1914 to 1918, and that peace travel only really did start in 1919/20. And after the Great War, all lines on the North Atlantic had to rebuild and/or modernise their fleets. The costs for such a thoroughbred at sea had been tremendous and cost reducing and cost efficiency was a new task with all lines in the years after 1907.
It happend further, that the USA, in the very early 1920s, dramatically changed its immigration policy to a rigid protectionism.
And the two LLOYD greyhounds started the new run for the Blue Riband, and were the first real ships of state, which became famous in the 1930s and beamed well into the early 1960s.
by Earl of Cruise 
On her maiden voyage in 1928, the German liner BREMEN captured the Blue Riband of the North Atlantic, crossing from Bishop Rock to the Ambrose Channel Light vessel off New New York at 27.91 kts - colouring by Daryl LeBlanc, own collection
EUROPA´s triumphant first exist out of Hamburg, after her successful rebuilding after the fire at her builder BLOHM&VOSS 
EUROPA also capture on her maiden voyage in 1930 the Blue Riband
EUROPA also capture on her maiden voyage in 1930 the Blue Riband
It was against this background that the Cunard Company began the design 
stage for two new ships. They would follow the natural progression of 
developments then taking place in marine engineering and in naval 
architecture. Great steps forward were being made in both these fields. 
For the first time it seemed possible that two ships could be built 
which would be able to maintain a weekly express service between 
Southampton and New York, doing the work previously done by three ships.
The
 trend of development in the design of Atlantic liners since the coming 
of steam had been towards larger and faster ships; the larger ships 
being more comfortable as they were less affected by the elements, 
whilst the increased speed shortened the trip.
The seize of the ships enabled too more comfort and luxuries for the passengers on board.
The seize of the ships enabled too more comfort and luxuries for the passengers on board.
by Earl of Cruise 
QUEEN MARY photographed in mid-Atlantic from QUEEN ELIZABETH´s bridge
Experience
 had shown that once converted to oil burning, these ships could turn 
round in port in eighteen hours when necessary. It was reasoned, 
therefore, that if the passage time could be reduced to five days, it 
would be possible for two ships on a fortnightly service to do the work 
of three.
The
 distance to be covered in a year would be about 145,000 nautical miles.
 So it was clear that the ships must be fast, strongly built to face 
North Atlantic weather, and have a sufficient reserve of power to make 
up any time lost through bad weather. The ships would have to run 
without repairs for eleven months of the year. Reliable boilers would 
have to be chosen as there would be no opportunity for boiler cleaning 
in port.
The
 speed required for the 112-hour passage on the various tracks used 
across the Atlantic according to the season would be between 27.61 and 
28.94 knots.
QUEEN ELIZABETH off the Battery area of Manhattan as she sails up the Hudson, the North River, to her berth at Pier 90
If
 oil were adopted as the best type of fuel, Cunard would always have to 
bear in mind the possibility of oil shortages, and back in 1926 it had 
been seriously suggested that the new ships might be generally arranged 
so that in the case of such an emergency arising it would be possible to
 convert them to coal burning.
The
 original design for the engines was for single-reduction geared 
turbines, the brainchild of Sir Charles Parsons, in which a reduction 
gear box is placed between the turbine and the propeller shaft for the 
purpose of allowing both the turbines and the propellers to run at 
speeds of revolution suitable for maximum efficiency; high speeds of 
revolution are required for turbine efficiency and low speeds for 
propeller efficiency.
The
 size of the two proposed superliners was not dictated in any way by a 
desire on the part of Cunard to have 'Big Ships' for their own sake. It 
was controlled simply by the necessity to provide sufficient passenger 
accommodation and propulsion to operate a two-ship weekly express 
service across the North Atlantic. Within that context, as Sir Percy 
Bates, the chairman of the Cunard Steamship Company, never tired of 
explaining: "The two new vessels represent the smallest and slowest 
ships which can fulfill these conditions and accomplish such a regular 
service."
Sir Percy Bates understated here, as he was well aware about the facts TRANSAT had been setting with NORMANDIE, and he and his board of directors had been more than anxoius to get a rival to NORMANDIE in the line. But the first attempt to rival CGT superliner was in fact a blown up, modest modernised AQUITANIA ...
After the success of NORMANDIE within its targeted travelling clientele, Cie. Gén. TRANSATLANTIQUE started in the late 1930s planing a running mate for their Vaisseau de Lumière, a `Super´ NORMANDIE, the intended BRETAGNE ...
Sir Percy Bates understated here, as he was well aware about the facts TRANSAT had been setting with NORMANDIE, and he and his board of directors had been more than anxoius to get a rival to NORMANDIE in the line. But the first attempt to rival CGT superliner was in fact a blown up, modest modernised AQUITANIA ...
After the success of NORMANDIE within its targeted travelling clientele, Cie. Gén. TRANSATLANTIQUE started in the late 1930s planing a running mate for their Vaisseau de Lumière, a `Super´ NORMANDIE, the intended BRETAGNE ...
by Earl of Cruise 
QUEEN ELIZABETH docking on the north side of CUNARD´s Pier 90 in the North River, Manhattan. The two-funneld MAURETANIA 2 and SYLVANIA are berthed at Pier 92. In the foreground are the UNITED STATES LINES AMERICA and UNITED STATES
On
 28th May 1930, the CUNARD Company told John Brown & Company of 
Clydebank that it had been selected as the builder of the first of the 
two new ships. The keel of Yard No. 534 was laid on 27th December 1930.
A
 major problem to be settled concerned the insurance of the liner while 
she was being built, together with the future full sea risks when she 
was operational. The normal insurance market would not be able to 
provide cover for anything like the whole cost. Therefore CUNARD 
approached the Government and asked them if they would bear the 
additional burden.
The
 outcome was the Cunard (Insurance) Act, passed in December 1930. This 
was designed so that the Government would assume responsibility of the 
risk of the ship's insurance value over and above the amount which the 
market could absorb. The value of '534' for insurance purposes during 
building was fixed at the full price payable by CUNARD, namely £4 
million. The market could only assume £2,700,000 of the risk.
This was not the only risk dangling above the project - in 1929 it happend, that the Stock Exchange in New York, after a long period of overheated trades, did crash dramatically. The USA, under Republican Presidency back then, withdraw all loans to European countries. Germany was the first economy to collapse, as the US loans guaranteed the reparation payments to the European allies, which had to pay equally depts to the US, cashed by the German payments.
Since 1929, to me, no Republican administration had ever shown any macroeconomic knowledge!
The UK left as a reaction to the crisis the gold standard for the Pound Sterling, but the economy did collapse. This depression is called now the Great Depression, which was the naming for the depression following the Vienna Stock Exchange crash in the 1870s, lasting till 1890 ...
This was not the only risk dangling above the project - in 1929 it happend, that the Stock Exchange in New York, after a long period of overheated trades, did crash dramatically. The USA, under Republican Presidency back then, withdraw all loans to European countries. Germany was the first economy to collapse, as the US loans guaranteed the reparation payments to the European allies, which had to pay equally depts to the US, cashed by the German payments.
Since 1929, to me, no Republican administration had ever shown any macroeconomic knowledge!
The UK left as a reaction to the crisis the gold standard for the Pound Sterling, but the economy did collapse. This depression is called now the Great Depression, which was the naming for the depression following the Vienna Stock Exchange crash in the 1870s, lasting till 1890 ...
by Earl of Cruise
QUEEN ELIZABETH on her speed trials in the Firth of Clyde
In
 May 1930, Cunard began to make tentative enquiries about the 
possibility of dry-docking facilities at Southampton for its two new 
superliners. It was pointed out to the SOUTHERN RAILWAY Company, the 
owners of Southampton Docks, that by 1933 a dry dock capable of taking a
 vessel 1,075 feet in length would be needed. The dock would have to be 
124 feet wide at its entrance and have a minimum depth of 40 feet. The 
railway company expressed the view that the projected dry dock could not
 be started for some eight to ten years and that it would take between 
four and five years to complete. Sir Percy Bates told the SOUTHERN RAILWAY that it was a question of 'no dry dock, no ship!'.
QUEEN ELIZABETH entering the King George V. Dry Dock at Southampton which was specially constructed for the QUEEN´s
Following
 this ultimatum the SOUTHERN RAILWAY decided to go ahead with the 
construction of a dry dock 1,200 feet in length, 135 feet wide and 48 
feet deep, with a wide area outside the entrance for the ship to swing. 
The dock could be emptied of its 180,000 tons of water in four hours. On
 26th July 1933, King George V and Queen Mary sailed into the new dock 
in the royal yacht VICTORIA AND ALBERT to perform the opening ceremony.
QUEEN ELIZABETH alongside the quay at Cherbourg
Across
 the Channel at Cherbourg the French authorities had proved much more 
amenable. They went ahead with plans for new quay accommodation and 
worked amicably with Cunard officials. Cherbourg was chosen as the 
French port for the new ships as it had deeper water and a larger 
harbour than Le Havre. From the passengers' point of view it had the 
disadvantage of being 100 miles further away from Paris than Le Havre.
In
 January 1931 agreement was reached with the New York Port Authority for
 a thousand-foot long pier at a rent of £48,000 a year.
QUEEN ELIZABETH at full speed in the North Atlantic
On Thursday 10th December 1931, the directors of the CUNARD STEAMSHIP Company gathered to look at the provisional figures for the year´s trading. For the first time for many years the company had not made a profit. The directors were faced with the almost unbelievable fact that the gross revenue of the comapny for the year was calculated to be nearly 
£ 2.5 million down on 1930.
The directors decided that work must stop on hull No. 534 - the QUEEN MARY - at noon on Friday 11th December 1931.
£ 2.5 million down on 1930.
The directors decided that work must stop on hull No. 534 - the QUEEN MARY - at noon on Friday 11th December 1931.
A painting by Captain Stephen J. Card of the two QUEEN´s passing in mid-Atlantic. As Sir Percy Bates was fond of saying: "These two new vessels represent the smallest and slowest ships which can economically maintain a two-ship weekly trans-Atlantic service."
Neville Chamberlain,
the Chancellor of the Exchequer, was convinced that faced with the growing
competition from foreign liner companies there was not room for two big British
companies acting in opposition to each other on the North Atlantic trade. He
wrote in his private diary: "My
own airm has always been to use '534' as a lever for bringing about a merger
between the CUNARD and WHITE STAR LINES, thus establishing one strong British
company in the North Atlantic trade."
This is showcasing me, that neither QUEEN MARY nor QUEEN ELIZABETH ever
had been built only out of economic reasons. But who cares at least? Both
QUEEN´s had been the reason of national pride, and had been on their own rights
incomparable.
by Earl of Cruise
It was Chamberlain's
firm belief that the British Government should guarantee a building loan to the
CUNARD Company on the condition that the two companies merged into one united
front against the foreign competition. The CUNARD policy of the two-ship
express service was thoroughly sound and at the same time economic. CUNARD's
finances were in a very strong state whilst those of WHITE STAR were very poor.
Chamberlain was also convinced of the tremendous importance from a prestige
point of view of new large British ships steaming into New York harbour.
WHITE STAR was since its purchase by IMM succed out of money and used
as an investors beneficating cash cow. In 1930 there wasn´t even any
significant cash flow in the cashier ...
by Earl of Cruise
 
It
 was proposed that the CUNARD STEAMSHIP COMPANY and the OCEANIC 
STEAMSHIP COMPANY (the WHITE STAR LINE) would both sell their North 
Atlantic fleets and assets, including '534', to a new company to be 
called CUNARD - WHITE STAR Limited. The Government then proposed to lend
 the new company £9.5 million which would be divided into three 
portions:
                    +     £3 million to complete '534'
                    +     £1.5 million working capital
                    +     £5 million for a furture sister ship - the QUEEN ELIZABETH
Neville
 Chamberlain now had the difficult task of steering the North Atlantic 
Shipping (Advances) Bill through the tortuous channels of Parliament. 
Eventually both the House of Commons and the House of Lords voted and 
the Bill was passed on 27th March 1934. One week later work resumed on 
'534'. The QUEEN MARY (as '534' became after all the secrecy) was 
launched nearly six months later on 26th September 1934.
Under
 the terms of the Cunard Insurance Act, CUNARD was obliged to start work
 on the second ship before the Act expired in 1936. From the outset the 
intention had been to operate a two-ship service on the North Atlantic. 
On 25th November 1935 Sir Percy Bates wrote to Swan Hunter; Vickers 
Armstrong; John Brown and Cammell Laird advising them that, although his
 Board had not reached any final decision, they might decide to build a 
vessel to run alongside the QUEEN MARY. With White Star now under 
Cunard's wing, Harland & Wolff at Belfast were also invited to 
tender, a position not previously open to them.
In
 writing to Cammell Laird, Sir Percy said that he was not entirely 
confident that it could deal with such a large ship and that in 
particular they might not be able to move the ship into their 
fitting-out basin. Harland & Wolff found itself in a peculiar 
situation. The wording of the Cunard Insurance Act specified 'the 
construction of two vessels in Great Britain', which precluded the 
Belfast yard from tendering as Belfast, although in the UK, was not in 
Great Britain.
QUEEN ELIZABETH sailing from Spouthampton
In May 1936 tenders
were opened from John Brown, Cammell Laird, Vickers Armstrong and Swan
Hunter.  The Clydebank yard was awarded the contract with a tender of
£4,293,000. The Cammell Laird tender had been £4,683,000. On 27th May the
Clydebank men were told they had the order.
Towards the end of
June 1936, in reply to a question in the House of Commons, the Chancellor
Neville Chamberlain said: "I have
received a request from the Cunard - White Star Company for authority to use
the sum available under the North Atlantic Shipping (Advances) Act for the
construction of a second ship ...  I have agreed in principle."
The £5 million was released on 28th July.
Early in July 1936
Stephen Piggot, the managing director of John Brown, wrote to Sir Percy Bates
saying that Yard No.535 had been reserved for the new ship. The QUEEN MARY had
been ship number 534. On 11th July Bates replied asking Piggot to "think of another good number".
The reason was the Chancellor of the Exchequer's apprehension at what might be
asked of him by his critics when making the announcement of the order in the
House, namely "that this tender
business was all a farce, and that the order was in Brown's pocket from the
start."
Sir Percy Bates stressed that the new QUEEN ELIZABETH "would be no slavish copy of her sister, the QUEEN MARY". In this photograph the QUEEN MARY is undertaking her speed and acceptance trials over the Arran Mile, in the Firth of Clyde
The contract was
signed on 6th October 1936 and the keel of ship number 552 was laid on 4th
December. Work on the QUEEN ELIZABETH proceeded rapidly and by February 1937
Colvilles were supplying steel to Clydebank for this ship at the rate of 500
tons a week.
CUNARD was determined
that the new ship would be based on the latest revolutionary developments that
had taken place in naval architecture and marine engineering. Sir Percy Bates
stressed that "she would be no
slavish copy of her sister". The QUEEN MARY's arch rival on the
North Atlantic - the French Line's superb NORMANDIE - was studied in detail.
NORMANDIE, the QUEEN MARY´s rival on the North Atlantic, seen here at anchor at Spithead
The NORMANDIE had one edge on the QUEEN MARY
in being aesthetically more pleasing through her revolutionary streamlining and
lack of visible deck 'clutter'. Costing almost twice as much as the MARY, the
French liner was also more lavish in her first-class apartments.
NORMANDIE was
meant to cater in first place first-class passengers which brought the utmost revenue
into the cashiers of the lines, in those days as today!
by Earl of Cruise 
Sir Percy Bates had
wisely waited for anticipated developments in boiler design to occur. As a
result only twelve boilers were needed for the QUEEN ELIZABETH, rather than the
twenty-four in the Mary. Just two funnels were needed on the new ship instead
of the three on the Mary and these were self-supporting, having their stays on
the inside of the stack. The prominent square ventilation cowls on the Mary
were also dispensed with on the new ship; fans of a newer design were installed
inside the ship.
Another obvious
difference between the two ships was the lack of a forward well deck on the new
QUEEN ELIZABETH. This had been included on the Mary to spend the force of any
heavy sea that might break over the bow before the water could damage the
superstructure. This anticipated event never occurred and was considered very
unlikely to occur, so the well space was plated in and used for additional
accommodation.
QUEEN ELIZABETH had a heavily raked bow
The QUEEN ELIZABETH's bow, unlike that of the
Mary, was heavily raked. This enabled a third anchor, the bower, to be carried
allowing the anchr to fall well clear of the stem. This rake also gave the
Elizabeth a longer overall length: 1,031 feet as against the 1,019 feet of the
QUEEN MARY.
This raked bow
made her appearance more modern and sleeker. The real reason, for the raked bow
was this bow anchor, not the other way round!
by Earl of Cruise 
The new ship was
constructed on No.4 slipway by using 5-ton derrick cranes and a 10-ton tower
crane. Heavy castings were erected by using derrick poles or sheer legs. Steam
locomotives delivered the steel plates, but lighter items were brought in by
horse-drawn lorries.
The double bottom of QUEEN ELIZABETH
The bow section of QUEEN ELIZABETH in ribs
Construction works on QUEEN ELIZABETH partly still in ribs
To ensure that good
progress was maintained during construction, the General and Shipyard Managers
met all the departmental head foremen at the gangway every Friday. This 'Glee
Party', as it was known, then toured the vessel deck by deck. Any problems that
were encountered were resolved by the foremen concerned by sending in extra men
to assist temporarily with the work that had fallen behind and bring the
construction work back to its timetable. A skilled craftsman working on the
QUEEN ELIZABETH earned just £3.2s.0d for a 47-hour work.
As an indication of
the worsening European situation, the keel of the Royal Navy's newest
battleship, HMS DUKE OF YORK, was laid on 5th May 1937 on the slipway adjoining
the QUEEN ELIZABETH.
A Germany ruled by mindless nationalists, under Hitler´s Nazi party,
was threatening its neighbors to be occupied. An oversetimating Italian
dictator wanted to recreate the old Roman Empire around the Mediterranean. An
Emperial Japan, believing the world is weak and has to be healed by its nation
threw war over China and East Asia. All three in competition amoung themselves
as the most cruel and inhuman society on earth. 
And each other country was in the grip of the Great Depression and did
seak its salvation in nationalistic protection and navel (belly bottom)
contemplation.
by Earl of Cruise
The view from the top of the shipyard crane over QUEEN ELIZABETH, her bridge and foredeck
As a triumphant fanfare to the launch of the
QUEEN ELIZABETH, the MARY captured the Blue Riband in August 1938 with a
speed of 31.69 knots, a record that would stand for fourteen years. Cunard
always refused to acknowledge the recently introduced Hales Trophy as a
tangible symbol of the achievement.
A speed rivalry
between the two QUEEN´s was avoided. One reason was the trophy won by QUEEN
MARY. The other was the costs for such a race on the North Atlantic. But only
looking at the figures of both vessels ... the QUEEN ELIZABETH had an advantage
on QUEEN MARY ... And NORMANDIE still had reserves ...
by Earl of Cruise 
QUEEN ELIZABETH almost ready for launching
QUEEN ELIZABETH towers over the tenements of Clydebank 
Four years and one day after the launch of
the QUEEN MARY, on Tuesday 27th September 1938, Queen Elizabeth, who was Queen
Mary's daughter-in-law, consort of her son King George VI, stood at the head of
the same slipway on which the QUEEN MARY had been built. She was there to
launch the second of Cunard's superliners - the QUEEN ELIZABETH.
The speach HM
Queen Elizabeth, accompanied by HRH the Crown Princess Elizabeth and her sister
HRH Princess Margret, did held, was an appeal to the peace in the world and
free spirits.
by Earl of Cruise
King George VI had
remained in London at the request of the Prime Minister. War seemed very much
to be a likelihood on that September day, but the King had sent a message which
Queen Elizabeth incorporated into her speech. However, the launching ceremony,
which was being broadcast to the nation by radio, did not go without incident.
As the moment arrived for the launch, the QUEEN ELIZABETH was
delicately balanced on her slipway and for many hours previously, because of
the removal of most of the supporting timbers, an almost imperceptible movement
had already taken place. The new liner had a weight on the slipway of 39,400
tons. After the formal speeches had been completed there was a pause as high
tide and slack water were awaited. Suddenly there was a crash of breaking
timbers and No.552, on her own volition, started on her un-named journey
towards the Clyde.
HM Queen Elizabeth launches the QUEEN ELIZABETH
HM Queen Elizabethwith HRH Princess Elizabeth and HRH Princess Margret, accompanied by Sie Percy Bates, the CUNARD chairman, on the launching plattfrom
At around this time the Queen's microphone
failed but with  great presence of mind, Her Majesty quietly and almost
unheard by those around her said: "I name this ship QUEEN ELIZABETH and
wish success to all who sail in her." Then, with the same pair of gold
scissors that Queen Mary had used to perform the launching ceremony of her
namesake, she cut the red, white and blue ribbon which released the bottle of
Empire wine to break, just in time, against the new ship's accelerating bow.
Almost like an
omen to the events comming ... when QUEEN ELIZABETH had to slip in total
secrecy into the North Atlantic, for her escape into the USA, to become a major
contribution in the efforts of WWII.
by Earl of Cruise 
Archive British Pathe film footage of the launch can be viewed:
QUEEN ELIZABETH enters the waters of River Clyde (top and below)
the crowds at JOHN BROWN´s shipyard at the launch of QUEEN ELIZABETH
QUEEN ELIZABETH is towed round to the fitting-out basin at JOHN BROWN´s shipyard, following her successful launch
The QUEEN ELIZABETH
was the culmination of Sir Percy Bates' own initiative; the fulfilment of a
long-cherished dream held by many shipowners; that a weekly trans-Atlantic
ferry service should be maintained by two ships rather than by three, or even
four (sometimes mismatched) vessels that had previously - and expensively -
been required.
After her launch the
QUEEN ELIZABETH was towed round to the fitting-out berth where she would remain
for the next sixteen months. A barrier was then constructed around the hull to
shut her off from the river and to prevent the Clyde-borne silt building up
around and under the hull. For almosr five years John Brown & Company had
carried on a correspondence with the Clyde Navigation Trust dealing with the
safe navigation of the liner on her one and only journey to the open sea. This
would involve a great deal of dredging and the removal of rock outcrops that
might hazard the ship's safe progress. The river was also widened in places,
especially at Dalmuir where the QUEEN MARY had grounded for many anxious
seconds as she proceeded to the Tail of the Bank.
QUEEN ELIZABETH at the fitting-out berth at JOHN BROWN´s shipyard
As 1939 wore on, men
and materials were taken away from the liner as Admiralty work took priority,
and the pace of work on board slowed down.
When considering the
comfort of those on board, CUNARD had decided against the installation of
stabilisers. 'The Times' in its special CUNARD - WHITE STAR Supplement of 27th
September 1938, the date of the ELIZABETH's launch, said that: "no practicable installation of this type
[gyro stabilisers] could possibly be of the slightest use in vessels the size
of the QUEEN MARY and QUEEN ELIZABETH ...  to date the safest and easiest
crossings are secured by sheer size, coupled with good form design, bilge keels
of practicable dimensions and careful experienced seamanship. The stability of
the QUEEN MARY has proved ample at all times to make the ship as safe and
comfortable as it is possible for any vessel to be when passing through an
Atlantic storm." The truth was rather different, as the QUEEN MARY
had a long, ponderous roll not only in a heavy beam sea which was only cured by
the installation of two sets of Denny-Brown stabilisers in the late 1950s.
On 22nd August 1939
it was announced that the maiden voyage of the QUEEN ELIZABETH was scheduled to
leave Southampton on 24th April 1940. However, war was declared just twelve
days later - 2nd September ... 
QUEEN ELIZABETH leaving Clydebank on 26th February 1940
Undoubtedly the
incomplete QUEEN ELIZABETH was the greatest dilemma facing John Brown's on the
outbreak of war. The ship sat like a giant beacon in the middle of Clydebank,
visible for miles around. There was now no hope of her entering service as the
jewel of the British merchant marine. During the first weekend of the war her
newly erected forward funnel, resplendent in CUNARD red and black, was hastily
overpainted in grey. At first it was proposed that work on the Elizabeth would
gradually be brought to a standstill as men transferred to warship work. Sir
Percy Bates, dismayed at this prospect, wrote to the Chief of Naval Staff, Rear
Admiral Burrough, for a decision on the ship's future.
Questions were soon
asked in Parliament as to what possible use the two CUNARD leviathans could be
in wartime. Suggestions ranged from laying up the Elizabeth in a sheltered
Scottish loch to selling her to the Americans. The two ships' real potential
had yet to be appreciated. Churchill, as First Lord of the Admiralty, expressed
his fears for the safety of the QUEEN ELIZABETH and felt that she would fall
victim to Nazi bombers in her exposed site at Clydebank. On 6th February 1940
he ordered that the liner should leave the Clyde at the earliest possible date
and 'remain away from the British Isles for as long as this order remains in
force'. This would also free the fitting-out berth which was urgently needed
for the DUKE OF YORK.
QUEEN ELIZABETH leaving the fitting-out berth at JOHN BRWON´s shipyard, bound for the Tail of the Bank off Greenock
The QUEEN MARY had
left Southampton on 30th August 1939 on a liner voyage to New York with 2,328
passengers and remained there after her safe arrival, lying alongside CUNARD's
Pier 90.
At her side, at Pier
88, her rival the NORMANDIE. 
The Clyde Navigation
Trust indicated that the dredged channel in the Clyde would not be ready before
the end of February 1940. In that year there would be only two days on which a
high enough tide would be available to move the QUEEN ELIZABETH. The first day
was Monday 26th February and just after noon, escorted by six tugs, the new
ship left the fitting-out basin at Clydebank and proceeded down the River Clyde
to an anchorage at the Tail of the Bank. It took about an hour to manoeuvre the
ship's head downstream towards the sea and gradually a crowd of several hundred
gathered to watch the QUEEN ELIZABETH slip quietly, almost furtively, by. To
many, her appearance must have come as a bit of a surprise for no longer was
she in pristine CUNARD paintwork of black hull and white superstructure, but
she had been completely repainted in dull uniform Admiralty grey.
QUEEN ELIZABETH slips away from JOHN BROWN´s shipyard at Clydebank on 26th February 1940
The QUEEN ELIZABETH
had also been fitted with four miles of rubber coated copper cable would around
her enormous hull. This was known as a 'degaussing' coil. It was named after Dr
Gauss, a nineteenth century expert on magnetism, whose theories had enabled the
Germans to produce their new lethal magnetic mines. The object of fitting the
coil, one of the first to be so fitted, was hopefully to render the ship immune
from magnetic mines by neutralising the ship's magnetic field.
The following
afternoon, Tuesday 27th February, the QUEEN ELIZABETH was officially handed
over to CUNARD - WHITE STAR at 3.pm as she lay at anchor at the Tail of the
Bank - untested and untried. Over the next three days the ship took on eighteen
of her twenty-six lifeboats. These had been floated down the Clyde in order to
reduce the liner's weight and thus reduce her draught during that short critical
journey.
Just over 400 crew,
mostly from the AQUITANIA, had joined the QUEEN ELIZABETH at Clydebank, under
the command of Captain Jack Townley, signing Articles for a short coastwise
voyage which would ostensibly terminate at Southampton where a hurriedly
prepared dry-docking plan had been received by the port authority.
QUEEN ELIZABETH at the anchorage at the Tail off Gourock in the Firth of Clyde
At a boat drill on
27th February the assembled crew were told of Churchill's order that the ship
was to leave British waters. This meant that the crew had to re-sign on
foreign-going Articles. They demanded £50 per man danger money-cum-bonus, but
were given £30 plus £5 per month extra pay. Those crew members who, for family
or other reasons, declined to sign the new articles were taken off the QUEEN
ELIZABETH, sworn to secrecy and subsequently spent many hours, virtually
interned, on board the Southampton tender ROMSEY in a nearby loch. Not until
the ELIZABETH had sailed on 2nd March 1940 was it considered safe to release
them.
Steam was raised on
all boilers on 1st March. The King's Messenger was awaited as he would bring
the order to sail. He arrived at seven in the morning on Saturday 2nd March
1940 with sealed orders which were only to be opened when the QUEEN ELIZABETH
was out at sea. The new ship weighed her bower anchor half an hour later and
with a mean draught of 37 feet 9 inches slipped through the anti-submarine boom
that stretched across the Clyde between the Gantock Rocks and the Cloch
Lighthouse at 8.15am. Over a two-hour period engine revolutions were increased
from 100 (17 knots) to 154 (26 knots). When a speed of 25 knots had been
reached and maintained for one hour, the escorting warships were informed that
the 'engine trials' had been satisfactory and that there was no objection to
their standing down. At eleven o'clock that evening Captain Townley opened his
sealed orders and the ELIZABETH's destination was at last known - New York.
QUEEN ELIZABETH at speed on her "secret" dash to New York
Captain Duncan
Cameron, the Southampton pilot, was still on board. Cunard had insisted that he
sail with the ship on her supposed coastal voyage as part of a ruse to throw
enemy agents off the scent as to her actual destination.
QUEEN ELIZABETH passing the Statue of Liberty, New York, on 7th March 1940 on the the completition of her successful "secret" dash across the North Atlantic
QUEEN ELIZABETH arrives at New York on 7th March 1940
The unannounced arrival of QUEEN ELIZABETH at Ambrose Light, caused quite a hectic in New York amoung the port officials. All of a sudden there was this grey ghost in front of Ambrose ... This created her war nickname "The Grey Ghost".
by Earl of Cruise
QUEEN ELIZABETH approaching the north side of Pier 90 at New York. In the centre, on the south side of Pier 90, is QUEEN MARY, and across the dock from her, on the north side of Pier 88, is NORMANDIE
Top to bottom: MAURETANIA 2, NORMANDIE, QUEEN MARY and QUEEN ELIZABETH together on 10th March 1940
Five days, nine hours
and 3,127 nautical miles after leaving the Tail of the Bank, the QUEEN
ELIZABETH passed the Ambrose Channel Light Vessel off New York and picked up
her pilot. She docked on the north side of Pier 90 at 5.pm on the afternoon of
Thursday, 7th March 1940. Both Queen Elizabeth and Churchill sent messages of
congratulation to Captain Townley. The QUEEN MARY was berthed on the south side
of Pier 90, and on the north side of Pier 88 lay the French Line's NORMANDIE.
The world's three largest liners were together for the first and, as events
were to prove, the last time.
For just fourteen days between 7th and 21st March 1940, the world´s three largest liners, up to that date the biggest man made constructions ever, were together at New York. they are: left to right: NORMANDIE, QUEEN MARY and QUEEN ELIZABETH
A fortnight later, on
21st March 1940, the QUEEN MARY slipped quietly away: her work as a troop
transport was about to begin.
The majority of the
QUEEN ELIZABETH's crew left for home on CUNARD's SCYTHIA, leaving just 143 men
to form a skeleton crew. On the orders of the neutral American government, in
accordance with the Geneva Convention, only maintenance or construction work of
a non-beligerent nature could be carried out on the liners moored along the New
York waterfront. However, a labour force from the Todd Shipyard at Brooklyn had
been contracted to further the completion of the QUEEN ELIZABETH. Wooden decks
had to caulked and electric cables connected.
Towards the end of
1940 additional seamen arrived on board the QUEEN ELIZABETH, having travelled
from Halifax, N.S. The ship's company was brought up to 465 and at 3.30pm on
13th November 1940 the Elizabeth, heavily laden with fuel and water, slipped
away from New York and headed south.
The QUEEN ELIZABETH
had now been in the water for over two years since her launch on 27th September
1938. She urgently needed to be drydocked to have the remains of her launch
gear removed from her bottom plates which would then have to be cleaned and
painted. There were only five dry docks in the world which could accommodate
the Elizabeth. The King George V Dock at Southampton, specially built for the
'Queens' was unusable because it was within range of Nazi bombers; the use of
the American dock at Bayonne, New Jersey, was denied because of U.S.
neutrality; the Esquimault dock on the west coast of Canada was just too far
away, and the French dock at St Nazaire, built for the NORMANDIE, was out of
the question.
This left only
Singapore and the QUEEN ELIZABETH would have to make two stops to take on fuel
and water on her voyage from New York. She had been designed for five-day
transatlantic passages, not for long voyages. The first stop was at Trinidad
where she rendezvoused with a tanker five miles off Port of Spain. After that
she sailed to the British naval base at Simonstown, to the south of Cape Town.
The QUEEN ELIZABETH
arrived at Singapore three weeks after leaving New York for a seven-week
conversion into a troopship with accommodation for 5,000 troops. Whilst in
Singapore many of the crew frequented a pub called the 'Pig and Whistle'. The name of this establishment so caught their
fancy that the crew bars on all Cunard liners were subsequently named in its
honour.
QUEEN ELIZABETH at anchor in Sydney Harbour, waiting to embark 5.000 troops on a northbound convoy to Suez
After
 leaving Singapore the QUEEN ELIZABETH headed for Sydney. More than a 
year after the two QUEENs had last met in New York, they sailed in 
company for the very first time in April 1941. The ELIZABETH carried 5,600 Australian troops to bolster the defences of Egypt against
 the enemy's incursions into North Africa. Although the QUEENs could 
easily manage 27 or 28 knots, they were reduced to the convoy's common 
speed of around 20 knots. On the return southbound voyages the ships 
carried Allied wounded, internees or enemy prisoners-of-war, stopping 
off at Ceylon.
The first meeting of the two QUEEN´s at sea - off Sydney Heads in 1941
Security
 was paramount at all times, but one particular breach was recalled by 
Dr Maguire, the surgeon on the QUEEN ELIZABETH. It occurred one day out 
of Ceylon and Dr Maguire remembered waking suddenly because the engines 
were slowing down. He went on deck and saw three great ships - the two 
'Queens' and the ILE DE FRANCE stationary. They were huge sitting 
targets in a hostile ocean. The cruiser HMAS CANBERRA had lowered a 
pinnace which was cruising calmly around collecting bags of mail from 
each. Dr Maguire recalled that the cruiser HMAS SYDNEY had been sunk by 
the German KORMORAN without a single survivor only a few days before, 
not far from the present position. Dr Maguire said that he never did 
find out just who was responsible for that risky mid-ocean mail 
collecting. It was certainly the last time that the two 'Queens' ever 
stopped at sea in war time.
QUEEN ELIZABETH (centre) and the QUEEN MARY (left) sail through the Bass Strait in convoy
With
 Japan and the United States entering the war after the debacle of Pearl
 Harbor on 7th December 1941, the QUEEN ELIZABETH was laid up at Sydney 
for seven weeks. The Pacific was too dangerous for her with both German 
and Japanese submarines on the prowl. The Australians also needed what 
was left of their depleted army for their country's own defence in case 
of Japanese invasion.
It
 was eventually decided to send the QUEEN ELIZABETH to Canada for 
drydocking at Esquimalt. The Singapore facility was no longer 
available, after the surrender to Japan. A large amount of tropical growth that was fouling the 
liner's bottom plates needed to be removed: it was estimated that the 
growth reduced her speed by two knots or more. Two stops would be 
required for refuelling and watering. The first was New Zealand and the 
second was Nuku Hiva in the Marquesas Group of islands.
The QUEEN ELIZABETH in dry dock at Esquimalt, Vancouver Island, BC. (top and below)
After
 Esquimalt the QUEEN ELIZABETH sailed for San Francisco, and, on 
arrival, briefly ran aground near the Golden Gate Bridge. During a 
conference on board, the U.S. military was told how many men had been 
transported on each Sydney - Suez voyage. The Americans were 
characteristically amazed and within five days had removed the 
Australian hammocks and bunks, and in their place had fitted fold-down 
'Standee' beds, made of tubular steel and easy to clean canvas webbing. 
These were installed two, three and five to a tier in every available 
space and the QUEEN ELIZABETH left San Francisco in a small convoy bound
 for Sydney with eight thousand troops on board which were needed to 
bolster Australia's depleted forces until some of her own troops could 
be recalled from the Middle East.
Cabins designed for two passengers were equipped with "Strandee" bunks and accomodated up to eight G.I.´s
After
 disembarking the U.S. troops at Sydney on 6th April 1942, the QUEEN 
ELIZABETH remained in port for thirteen days before sailing for 
Fremantle on 19th April. From there she sailed to Simonstown, Cape Town,
 where German prisoners of war boarded, heading for internment in the 
United States. After a call at Rio de Janeiro, the 
ELIZABETH 
finally arrived in New York to begin what became known as the 'G.I. 
Shuttle', her first such voyage leaving New York for the Clyde on 5th 
June 1942.
A
 week after her arrival at Gourock, the QUEEN ELIZABETH sailed for Suez 
on 17th June, via Freetown and Simonstown, with reinforcements for the 
British Eighth Army to help stem Rommel's advance towards the Canal. She
 was back in New York on 19th August to begin her regular G.I. Shuttle 
work in earnest.
"The voyage, while short, will be extremely difficult for all." With just enough room for a man to sqeeze into his Standee, with the man above him, practically resting on top of him.
The
 QUEEN ELIZABETH was now equipped to carry 15,000 troops although the 
numbers were reduced to 12,000 in the winter months. The troops would 
board the Elizabeth at Pier 90 at New York during the late 
evening hours under cover of darkness after being transported to the 
pier by either ferry or bus. On boarding, each G.I. was given a coloured
 disc or card (red, white or blue) and this indicated the section of the
 ship in which he must remain during the voyage. Another essential rule 
was that each man, regardless of rank, should wear or carry his lifebelt
 when outside his cabin at all times.
Boat drill was carried out on departure from New York 
The
 safety of the troops during these solo high-speed dashes across the 
Atlantic was not considered to be paramount in the minds of those at the
 top. Some 10,000 men could, perhaps, be carried in safety according to 
the lifeboat and liferaft capacity of the ship, but it was considered 
that the extra 5,000 men who were carried in summer and not provided for
 in the life-saving equipment were worth the risk, based on the Elizabeth's existing records of speed and reliability.
Whilst on the G.I. Shuttle, there were six sittings for each of two meals each day in the QUEEN ELIZABETH´s first class restaurant
For
 the two meals a day that were provided there were six sittings, each of
 forty-five minutes. Breakfast was from 6.30am until 11.am; and dinner 
from 3.pm to 7.30pm. Sir James Bisset was in command of the QUEEN 
ELIZABETH for many of these 'shuttle' voyages. Following his retirement,
 Sir James was in great demand as a lecturer and one day was telling 
some schoolchildren of the days when 2,000 lbs of bacon and 32,000 eggs 
were cooked for breakfast every day. When he asked for questions, one 
boy shot up his arm and asked: "How big were the frying pans?" !!!
In
 November 1942, the QUEEN ELIZABETH was involved in an incident that 
still remains the subject of much speculation. The U.704, under the 
command of Kapitan Horst Kessler, was wallowing in a Force 8 gale off 
the west coast of Ireland before returning south to its base in France. 
Early in the afternoon of 9th November a large, two-funnelled steamer 
was sighted, some six to seven miles away. The submarine dived and the 
captain identified the ship as the QUEEN ELIZABETH. Four torpedoes were 
fired and the U-Boat followed their course. One detonation was heard. 
Apparently the torpedo had exploded well away from the ship. Captain 
Bisset said, after the war, that an explosion was heard, "and we increased to 31 knots without any trouble."
The
 steamer observed by Kessler had been travelling at speed. She then 
stopped for a few minutes before proceeding on her way. Kessler always 
maintained that the ship was the QUEEN ELIZABETH. All the Cunard records
 from that period have apparently been lost.
Commodore James Bisset with Sir Winston Churchil on the QUEEN ELIZABETH
However,
 to stop the QUEEN ELIZABETH would take considerable time. The 
superheated steam needed to be cooled to normal working temperature 
before slowing the ship could even be considered. This would take at 
least an hour plus many miles, and this would not have allowed her to 
stop within Kessler's observation.
Altogether
 the QUEEN ELIZABETH made 35 round voyages across the North Atlantic on 
the 'G.I. Shuttle'. During this time, and for a while after, she was 
under American control through a lend-lease agreement. She did, however,
 remain all the while under Cunard management with British officers and 
crew. Throughout the 'G.I. Shuttle' the two Queens were never 
in the same port at the same time, and the schedules avoided either ship
 lying at anchor at Gourock during the period of full moon.
QUEEN ELIZABETH at anchor at the Tail of the Bank off Gourock in the Firth of Clyde, the UK terminal port for the G.I. Shuttle
Of
 all the arguments used in the United States to support the demand for 
subsidies for American merchant shipping, none has been advanced with 
greater potency than that America had to rely on foreign ships in the 
Second World War, and could not afford to do so again. This argument was
 buttressed by the statement that the British Government charged the 
United States for transporting American troops in the QUEEN MARY and the
 QUEEN ELIZABETH. Sums amounting to $100 million were freely bandied 
about in the coumns of newspapers as the cost of carrying G.I.s to and 
from the theatres of war. Denials of this speculation by British 
shipping representatives were not accepted. It can be appreciated that 
the jibe that Great Britain charged $100 a head to take soldiers to the 
battlefields of Europe was calculated to be extremely hurtful to 
Anglo-American friendship.
In
 an lighter vein, it should not be forgotten that it was a G.I. being 
transported, not for $100, in the QUEEN ELIZABETH who, in a burst of 
enthusiasm, said to one of the officers: "Say, why can't you British build a ship like this?" !!!
Some things havn´t changed ... till today ... Knowledge and education is a great problem, especially when intelectuals are regarded as the evil!
Some things havn´t changed ... till today ... Knowledge and education is a great problem, especially when intelectuals are regarded as the evil!
by Earl of Cruise 
QUEEN ELIZABETH approaching her wartime anchorage at the Tail of the Bank
Between
 April 1941 and March 1945 the QUEEN ELIZABETH steamed 492,635 miles and
 carried 811,324 'passengers'. The highest number that she carried on 
any one voyage was 15,932 passengers and crew, but the record for the 
highest number ever carried in one ship goes to the QUEEN MARY with 
16,683.
After V.E. Day it fell to the Queens
 to transport back to the United States many of the hundreds of 
thousands of the G.I.s they had brought to Europe, and, in the case of 
the QUEEN MARY, to transport 25,000 American servicemen's 'War Brides' 
and their children to their new home country. And so, on 24th June 1945,
 the QUEEN ELIZABETH left Gourock with her first load of returning 
G.I.s. Their welcome in New York was, to say the least, tumultous. The 
QUEEN ELIZABETH left Gourock for the last time as a troopship on 7th 
August 1945, flying flags which spelled out: 'Many thanks. Gourock farewell'.
QUEEN ELIZABETH´s after decks packed with US Troops on a G.I. Shuttle crossing
A
 fortnight later, on Monday 20th August 1945, the QUEEN ELIZABETH 
arrived in Southampton for the first time - four and a half years late. 
During the turnround in New York on her second G.I. Shuttle voyage from 
Southampton, Commodore James Bisset had the ELIZABETH's wartime
 grey funnels repainted in CUNARD's red and black. The result brightened
 up the ship considerably after the years of drabness. From 22nd October
 1945 it was the QUEEN ELIZABETH's job to repatriate thousands of 
Canadian soldiers. Four days later she arrived at Halifax, Nova Scotia, 
with 12,517 passengers and 864 crew. However, Commodore Bisset was not 
happy with the location of the quay alongside which the ELIZABETH
 was berthed and considered it too exposed should a strong south-east 
wind blow up; the resulting swell would cause the ship to range back and
 forth, possibly breaking her moorings. In spite of the understandable 
Canadian protestations that they wanted their soldiers to step directly 
on to Canadian soil, Commodore Bisset recommended that future 
repatriations should be to either New York or Boston.
QUEEN ELIZABETH leaves Southampton with over 15,000 returning G.I.´s in August 1945
QUEEN ELIZABETH´s triumphant arrival at New York
On
 6th March 1946, when the QUEEN ELIZABETH arrived back in Southampton, 
the Ministry of War Transport announced that the ship would be the first
 ocean-going passenger steamer to be released from His Majesty's 
Government service. To a post-war Britain she was to become what the 'MARY'
 had represented to the country during the Great Depression of the 30s - a national 
symbol of recovery from adversity. For the QUEEN ELIZABETH the war was 
over. Sir Percy Bates said that he liked to think that the Queens had,
 by their troop carrying capacities, shortened the war by a whole year. 
So much for the cynics who, in the early days of the war, had prophesied
 that the Queens would lie uselessly alongside their safe pier in New York for the duration of the war!
It
 was agreed that the QUEEN ELIZABETH should spend twelve weeks on the 
Clyde, at her old wartime anchorage, plus ten weeks at Berth 101 in 
Southampton and in the King George V dry dock. Half her crew was paid 
off and went on leave, whilst around 400 remained with the ship for 
maintenance, fire watch and to sail the ship on the coastwise voyage to 
the Clyde.
The
 QUEEN ELIZABETH left Southampton on 30th March 1946 and arrived and 
anchored off Greenock the following day. It was out of the question for 
the ELIZABETH to sail up to John Brown's shipyard at Clydebank,
 so it was planned to ferry men and equipment out to the liner as she 
lay at anchor off the Tail of the Bank. At the end of her time at 
Gourock one thousand Clydebankers, 'Bankies', sailed south with the ship
 to alleviate the acute shortage of local skilled labour at Southampton.
QUEEN ELIZABETH at anchor at the Tail of the Bank in the Firth of Clyde as JOHN BROWN´s workmen transform her from a troopship to passenger liner in April 1946
Many
 of the QUEEN ELIZABETH's fittings had been placed ashore in New York, 
Sydney and Singapore when she was converted into a troopship and all 
these globally scattered items had to be returned to Southampton for 
refurbishment, assembly, sorting and fitting. Works of art were also 
renovated by the original artists.
On
 7th August 1946 the QUEEN ELIZABETH entered the King George V dry dock 
where her 140-ton rudder was inspected. Her propellers were removed and 
cleaned and the underwater hull cleaned and painted. The anchors were 
examined and each link of her anchor chains painted. In total the 
reconversion work cost £1 million.
QUEEN ELIZABETH entering the King George V. Dry DOCK at Southampton
The
 QUEEN ELIZABETH was ready for her trials in early October and sailed 
for the Clyde on the sixth of the month. The maiden voyage had been 
arranged to depart from Southampton on 16th October 1946. Sir Percy 
Bates told Commodore Bisset: "We do not expect you to attempt to 
make speed records either on the trials or on the maiden voyage. The 
QUEEN MARY still holds the Blue Riband with her 1938 eastbound crossing 
at 31.69 knots, and that is quite good enough."
QUEEN ELIZABETH making almost 30 kts on her sea trials over the Arran Mile on 7th October 1946
HM Queen
 Elizabeth and her daughters Princess Elizabeth and Princess Margaret 
joined the QUEEN ELIZABETH for the trials on 7th October. They were 
ferried out to the liner on the Clyde steamer QUEEN MARY II. At 11.15am 
the QUEEN ELIZABETH weighed anchor and was abeam the Cumbraes an hour 
later. At 3.pm the liner commenced her northward run over the Arran 
measured mile and covered the course in 2 minutes 1.3 seconds which gave
 an average speed of 29.71 knots. A southbound run produced a speed of 
29.75 knots. At 3.50pm the Cumbraes were once again abeam and the QUEEN 
ELIZABETH anchored at the Tail of the Bank at 5.pm.
Commodore James Bisset gives advice to HM Queen Elizabeth as she takes the wheel of QUEEN ELIZABETH
The
 following day, 8th October, four hundred guests of the CUNARD Company 
boarded the QUEEN ELIZABETH for the return passage to Southampton. The ELIZABETH sailed at 8.pm. The following morning a small coastal collier 
was seen in the Irish Sea wallowing along at 6 knots. The small vessel's
 skipper hoisted a flag signal: "What ship is that?" As 
required by law, Commodore Bisset obligingly raised the CUNARDer's 
recognition flags 'G B S S'. The QUEEN ELIZABETH docked at Southampton 
at 11.am on 10th October.
In
 all, 2,228 passengers had booked passage on the QUEEN ELIZABETH's 
maiden voyage. Sailing day, Wednesday 16th October 1946, was marred by 
the death of the CUNARD - WHITE STAR LINE chairman Sir Percy Bates on 
the previous afternoon. Promptly at 2.pm the liner pulled away from the 
quayside. 
There was no call at Cherbourg; the ship was fully booked from Southampton and much work still needed to be done to make the harbour at the French port safe again.
There was no call at Cherbourg; the ship was fully booked from Southampton and much work still needed to be done to make the harbour at the French port safe again.
Promptly at 2p.m. on 16th October 1946, QUEEN ELIZABETH leaves Southampton on her first commercial voyage
The
 QUEEN ELIZABETH encountered a severe storm on 18th October, the day on 
which Commodore Bisset had arranged a memorial service for Sir Percy 
Bates.
Because
 of a strike by New York tugboat men there was a possibility that the 
QUEEN ELIZABETH would be diverted to Halifax. However, because of the 
prestigious nature of the Elizabeth's maiden arrival at New 
York as a commercial passenger liner, Commodore Bisset decided to press 
on and dock the ship at Pier 90 without the aid of tugs if necessary. 
The QUEEN ELIZABETH passed the Ambrose Channel Light Vessel off New York
 just before dawn on 21st October after a passage of 4 days, 16 hours 
and 18 minutes at an average speed of 27.99 knots.
QUEEN ELIZABETH berthed alongside the Ocean Terminal at Southampton, taking on bunkers for the next voyage - © photo by John Shepherd 
On
 14th April 1947 the QUEEN ELIZABETH was homeward bound and after 
leaving Cherbourg encountered thick fog in the Channel. CUNARD's 
appropriated pilot, Captain Bowyer, was not available as he was 
'fogbound' on another vessel. And so rota pilot F.G. Dawson boarded the ELIZABETH off the Nab Tower. He had no experience of handling ships as large as the QUEEN´s
 and off Calshot at the entrance to Southampton Water the QUEEN 
ELIZABETH ran aground. Her master, Captain Ford, had attempted to avert 
the incident by ordering 'half-astern' on the starboard engines, but it 
was too late. Her propellers thrashed the shallow water into billowing 
clouds of yellow and black as sand and mud were churned up from the sea 
bed. On the bridge there was the faint sensation of a slight, lurching 
jolt which some on board never even felt. Captain Ford then stopped the 
engines to avoid sucking silt into the underwater inlets. The QUEEN 
ELIZABETH was embedded in mud to a point just below the bridge. By 
coincidence she had grounded in almost the same geographical spot as the
 AQUITANIA, ten years previously almost to the day.
Staff Purser Brent Jenkins (left)
A
 signal for assistance was sent and - within the hour - the company, 
port and salvage officials were on board and in conference with Captain 
Ford. The tender ROMSEY which had brought the officials out to the 
stricken ship made a solo attempt at pulling the liner off the mud, but 
the towline parted under the unequal strain. By six o'clock the next 
morning, thirteen tugs had arrived from Southampton, Portsmouth Dockyard
 and Poole. Only a little fuel remained after the transatlantic 
crossing, but a barge moved alongside to take it off as necessary. The 
salvage attempt at the first suitable high tide failed and the 
ELIZABETH had to wait until 17th April when at 8.40pm she was finally pulled off 
the mud. There was still thick fog in Southampton Water and the QUEEN 
ELIZABETH returned to Cowes Roads to anchor overnight. The following 
morning, 18th April 1947, she steamed into Southampton - fifty hours 
late!
Other
 than silt found in some inlets, there was very little evidence of the 
grounding. Internally the condensers and oil cooler inlets were cleared 
of shells and gravel.
The starboard side of the boat deck on the QUEEN ELIZABETH - © photo by John Shepherd
The
 QUEEN MARY's post-war refit was completed in the summer of 1947 and on 
1st August she joined her larger sister in the long-delayed two-ship 
Atlantic express ferry service for which they had both been built.
Sir Percy Bates´ dream of a weekly trans-Atlantic service operated by just two express steamers became a reality in August 1947
During
 almost two decades following the end of the Second World War, young men
 in Britain were 'called up' for two years of National Service in the 
armed forces. An alternative was serving in the Merchant Navy, and the 
prospect of earning £2 a week in the forces, or being well paid in the 
merchant service proved to be a one-sided choice for many youngsters.
Looking forward from the First-Class Sports Deck on QUEEN ELIZABETH - © photo by John Shepherd
The
 QUEEN ELIZABETH never enjoyed the same affection that the Cunard men 
held for the QUEEN MARY, being described as the 'colder' of the two 
ships. She was nonetheless a popular ship. The loyalty that she was 
given by her crew, the lifeblood of any ship, was reflected in the 
service given to her passengers who patronised the ship in vast numbers 
time and time again. The popularity of the two QUEEN´s meant 
enormous profits for the CUNARD LINE and the two ships repaid their 
original investments many times over. They became an establishment, a 
familiar sight to those who saw them arriving and departing, and a way 
of life to the crew who sailed them. All this seemingly had no end, but 
this complacency would be destroyed completely in the 1960s.
The two QUEEN´s offered the only regular fast two ship crossing on the North Atlantic. Any other line was only with one or two different and much slower vessel on the way. E.g. the LLOYD with BREMEN and first BERLIN, then EUROPA. Even TRANSAT had to use different, and slower ships, the LIBERTÉ and ÎLE DE FRANCE. They hold their market share with service and quality of food. Except Italy with its sisters ANDREA DORIA and CHRISTOPHERO COLOMBO, later MICHELANGELO and RAFFAELLO, but that was the Sunny Lane or Lido Route to Europe.
The two QUEEN´s offered the only regular fast two ship crossing on the North Atlantic. Any other line was only with one or two different and much slower vessel on the way. E.g. the LLOYD with BREMEN and first BERLIN, then EUROPA. Even TRANSAT had to use different, and slower ships, the LIBERTÉ and ÎLE DE FRANCE. They hold their market share with service and quality of food. Except Italy with its sisters ANDREA DORIA and CHRISTOPHERO COLOMBO, later MICHELANGELO and RAFFAELLO, but that was the Sunny Lane or Lido Route to Europe.
by Earl of Cruise 
The view ahead on a sunny day in the North Atlantic - © photo by John Shepherd
On
 28th July 1948 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth, accompanied by their
 younger daughter Princess Margaret Rose, were received on board the 
QUEEN ELIZABETH, the flagship of Britain's merchant fleet. The purpose 
of the visit was to enable Queen Elizabeth to present the ship with her 
personal standard, to be framed and hung in the first-class restaurant. 
But the prime reason for the day's visit was for the Queen to unveil a 
portrait of herself. Originally  vetoing the idea of allowing her 
portrait to be hung in the ship when the liner was launched, Queen 
Elizabeth had now relented. Her brother, the Hon. David Bowes-Lyon, had 
recently been appointed to the Board of Cunard and had arranged for Sir 
Oswald Birley to paint the portrait which was hung in the first-class 
main lounge.
Queen Elizabeth and King George VI are recieved on board QUEEN ELIZABETH by Captain Ford on 28th July 1948
King George VI., Queen Elizabeth and Captain Ford with senior officers on the starboad bridge wing of QUEEN ELIZABETH
On
 1st January 1950 the Cunard Steamship Company took over its 
wholly-owned subsidiary, CUNARD - WHITE STAR. This cumbersome 
organisation had involved double-accounting and separate staffing. The 
only signs of  WHITE STAR which remained were the buff funnels of the 
BRITANNIC and the GEORGIC.
Looking astern over the Cabin-Class Sports Deck - © photo by John Shepherd
The QUEEN´s
 experienced many difficulties when navigating the Solent due to yacht 
manoeuvres. On August Bank Holiday, 1950, a yacht cruised across the 
fairway in the track of the QUEEN ELIZABETH. There was no one on deck, 
but when the yacht was hailed an old lady appeared from below. On being 
told that she should not leave the yacht's helm unattended, she shouted 
that she had gone below to boil some milk! The lady then tied her yacht 
up to a buoy, a forbidden practice carrying a heavy fine, and two days 
later Southampton Harbour Board received a letter from the lady alleging
 her yacht had been 'interfered with' by the QUEEN ELIZABETH.
Lady Assistant Pursers were introduced on the CUNARD liners after the WWII. Photographed on QUEEN ELIZABETH sometime in the late 1940s, are (left to right): Elizabeth Sayers, Margaret Morton, Phyllis Davis and Mary Marchant
On another occasion the Elizabeth
 had to go full astern because a yacht crossed her path, and as a result
 the liner's stern touched a mud bank. There was a great rumpus and the 
yacht owner was traced. The offender turned out to be a retired 
rear-admiral with a D.S.O.
QUEEN ELIZABETH leaving her berth at Pier 90, New York - © photo by John Shepherd
The scene on the port wing of QUEEN ELIZABETH´s bridge as the ship swings in the Hudson River before heading down river, across New York Bay and out to sea
On
 8th September 1951 the QUEEN ELIZABETH left Southampton on her 100th 
round voyage to New York since she entered passenger service in October 
1946. During the five years she had carried 300,000 passengers.
QUEEN ELIZABETH alongside the Gare Maritime at cherbourg
The Duke and Duchess of Windsor were regular passengers on QUEEN ELIZABETH between York and Cherbourgh
The first hint of competition from the airlines came in October 1951 and this resulted in speeding up the turn-round of the 'Queens' in 1952. Additional competition in the form of the new UNITED STATES would also be a factor from mid 1952. In 1951 the 'Queens' 
 sailed from Southampton every 15 or 17 days, but the 1952 schedules 
show each liner sailing every fourteen days, enabling fifteen round 
voyages to be made between May and October compared with just eleven in 
1951. This limited the turn-round at both Southampton and New York to 
just 36 hours which by current standards sounds very leisurely indeed!
Friends of passengers wave "farewell" at the end of Pier 90 - © photo by John Shepherd
In
 June 1952 the QUEEN ELIZABETH was recording some very fast passages, 
just prior to the entry into service of the UNITED STATES on 4th July. 
In mid Atlantic on 6th June she steamed 700 miles at an average of 30.43
 knots, her fastest day's run since entering passenger service after the
 war. The crossing from New York to Cherbourg - 3,195 miles - was made 
in 4 days 13 hours and 6 minutes at an average speed of 29.29 knots. On 
her next voyage, the week before the maiden voyage of the UNITED STATES,
 the QUEEN ELIZABETH averaged 31.09 knots for one day's run. This should
 be seen in the context of the QUEEN MARY's record of 31.69 knots when 
she took the Blue Riband of the Atlantic in September 1938.
As I commented above, the QUEEN ELIZABETH had the technical possibilities and resources to compete with QUEEN MARY at least. CUNARD refused to the competition, similar as the LLOYD did with BREMEN and EUROPA. It was a matter of costs and marketing gains.
As I commented above, the QUEEN ELIZABETH had the technical possibilities and resources to compete with QUEEN MARY at least. CUNARD refused to the competition, similar as the LLOYD did with BREMEN and EUROPA. It was a matter of costs and marketing gains.
by Earl of Cruise 
© photo by John Shepherd
From the mid 1940s until the mid 1950s both the QUEEN´s were
 given a short summer overhaul at Southampton. For instance, the QUEEN 
ELIZABETH was out of service from 21st July to 30th July 1952 and this 
included six days in the King George V dry dock. The summer overhauls 
were routine and no special work was done.
Winter conditions in the North Atlantic - © photo by John Shepherd
The
 Hales Trophy, awarded for the Atlantic speed record, left Southampton 
on 8th November 1952 on board the new holder, the UNITED STATES, which 
crossed from New York to Bishop Rock at 35.59 knots on her maiden 
voyage. The QUEEN MARY gained the Blue Riband for the fastest crossing 
of the Atlantic from the NORMANDIE in 1938, but the CUNARD LINE always 
refused to accept the trophy. It remained in the NORMANDIE until the 
outbreak of war, after which it was returned to the Hanley jewellers who
 made it.
UNITED STATES took the BLUE RIBAND on her maiden Voyage
It
 is said that ship repairers always complain that shipowners never give 
them long enough to complete annual overhauls. Be that as it may, John 
Thorneycroft's staff at Southampton were set a formidable task with the 
QUEEN ELIZABETH's overhaul in January 1953. In addition to the normal 
painting, scaling, underwater inspection, removal of propellers, drawing
 of tailshafts and so forth; 157 tourist-class cabins were given 
air-conditioning and provision was also made to carry more fuel.
QUEEN ELIZABETH in the King George V. Dry Dock at Southampton for anual overhaul
By
 converting water tanks, an additional 1,000 tons of fuel, or about one 
day's comsumption, could be carried. Contrary to newspaper reports, this
 additional oil would not enable the world's largest liner to make the 
round trip without refuelling, but Cunard would be able to save some 
money if the current price of fuel oil was cheaper in England than the 
United States, or vice-versa. The tourist-class cabins on D-Deck were 
always very warm despite every effort to provide adequate ventilation, 
and air-conditioning was urgently required. Perhaps the advent of the 
fully air-conditioned UNITED STATES prompted Cunard to take this 
measure.
The First-Class Main Lounge on QUEEN ELIZABETH
During
 her 1953 overhaul, two fires broke out on board the QUEEN ELIZABETH in 
dry dock. The first, on 28th January in cabin main-deck 93, was 
extinguished by Southampton Fire Brigade and the second fire, just 
twenty-four hours later, was discovered in a C-deck cabin. Both fires 
were considered suspicious and detectives questioned 2,000 Thorneycroft 
workmen and some 400 crew. Coincidentally, just one week later, the 
EMPRESS OF CANADA was burnt out in Gladstone Dock at Liverpool.
QUEEN ELIZABETH dominates a cricket match during her summer overhaul in the King George V. Dry Dock
Queen
 Elizabeth's 'cherished wish' that she might someday sail in the liner 
was fulfilled in October 1954 when, by now Queen Mother, she embarked at
 the beginning of a tour to the United States and Canada.
The Verandah Grill on QUEEN ELIZABETH, exclusively for the use of First-Class passengers
In
 early 1955 the QUEEN ELIZABETH was taken out of service for an extended
 overhaul from 20th January until the end of March. She was to be fitted
 with Denny-Brown stabilisers whilst in the King George V dry dock. The 
installation would be the largest of its kind in a passenger liner and 
consisted of two sets of stabilising machinery situated in separate 
compartments. There were four fins, two on either side of the ship. Each
 fin had an outreach of 12 feet 6 inches and was 7 feet 3 inches wide. 
The two sets operated independently so that for a moderate roll only one
 set needed to be used.
On
 27th March 1955 the QUEEN ELIZABETH sailed down the Channel as far as 
the Lizard to test the new stabilisers. The weather was moderate and 
only slight natural rolling occurred so the liner was force-rolled and 
the stabilisers immediately became effective.
QUEEN ELIZABETH in dry dock having her stabilizers installed
The
 unreliability of statistics - or should it be said the ability to 
interpret them in several ways - is illustrated in the case of the 
UNITED STATES and the QUEEN ELIZABETH. The American liner made 44 
Atlantic crossings and carried 70,104 passengers in 1955. This, it is 
stated, is the largest number carried in any transatlantic ship during 
the year and gives an average of 1,593 passengers in each sailing. These
 are undeniable facts. But the QUEEN ELIZABETH made only 38 crossings 
and yet carried 66,000 passengers, giving a average of 1,752. The fewer 
crossings were due to the ELIZABETH's extended overhaul during 
which stabilisers were fitted, and if she had made her usual 44 
crossings then the results might have been very different.
A similar situation with the statement about NORMANDIE - she never earned money, as NORMANDIE had never as many bookings as QUEEN MARY. First - NORMANDIE carried more first-class passengers then QUEEN MARY could accomodate, and this first class was occupied at an average of 90% throughout four years of sailing. Seconed - NORMANDIE was built to service at first a first class clientele with the outmost of luxury which had been ever installed in any vessel. Third - NORMANDIE sailed only 139 times on the North Atlantic, less than QUEEN MARY did, due to technical maintenance and service additions for the passengers.
A similar situation with the statement about NORMANDIE - she never earned money, as NORMANDIE had never as many bookings as QUEEN MARY. First - NORMANDIE carried more first-class passengers then QUEEN MARY could accomodate, and this first class was occupied at an average of 90% throughout four years of sailing. Seconed - NORMANDIE was built to service at first a first class clientele with the outmost of luxury which had been ever installed in any vessel. Third - NORMANDIE sailed only 139 times on the North Atlantic, less than QUEEN MARY did, due to technical maintenance and service additions for the passengers.
by Earl of Cruise  
On
 a particularly rough crossing in April 1955, during which there were 
gusts of wind to 70mph and a heavy swell of up to 50 feet, nearly 100 
passengers and members of the QUEEN ELIZABETH's crew were hurt. Despite 
the effectiveness of the new stabilisers to minimise rolling, nothing 
could be done to reduce the pitching.
Typical winter conditions in the North Atlantic for which the two QUEEN´s and other North Atlantic liners had been built to withstand 
In
 January 1957 the Cunard Line announced that it had carried 275,500 
passengers across the Atlantic in 1956, an increase of 16,500 over its 
1955 carryings. However the year 1957 proved to be the irreversible 
turning point when an equal number of people were transported by air as 
were carried by sea.
On
 26th October 1958 the first American commercial jet took off for Paris 
and a whole new era was born. With flight time cut from fourteen or twelve to less 
than seven hours, the lure was irresistible. By 1960 the jets had 70% of
 the transatlantic business.
Despite the advent of jet airliners, shortening the hours and making air travel more secure, a number of shipping lines ordered or rebuild new liners for the North Atlantic trade in just 1958. Amoung them HAMBURG ATLANTIC LINIE with their HANSEATIC, ex EMPRESS OF SCOTTLAND, ex EMPRESS OF JAPAN, NORDDEUTSCHER LLOYD with a new BREMEN, ex PASTEUR. CANADIAN PACIFIC with EMPRESS OF BRITAIN and EMPRESS OF ENGLAND, of 1956 and 1957. And oredered the EMPRESS OF CANADA for delievery in 1961. The same year saw the launch of FRANCE. And in 1959 ROTTERDAM, of HOLLAND AMERICA LINE, set sail for her inaugural crossing to New York. SVENSKA AMERIKA LINIEN inaugurated its new and bigger GRIPSHOLM in 1957 and from Norway sailed the BERGENSFJORD since 1956 for NORWEGIAN AMERICA LINE.
The CUNARD board was not that alone in being convinced traffic would stay with the liners ...
Despite the advent of jet airliners, shortening the hours and making air travel more secure, a number of shipping lines ordered or rebuild new liners for the North Atlantic trade in just 1958. Amoung them HAMBURG ATLANTIC LINIE with their HANSEATIC, ex EMPRESS OF SCOTTLAND, ex EMPRESS OF JAPAN, NORDDEUTSCHER LLOYD with a new BREMEN, ex PASTEUR. CANADIAN PACIFIC with EMPRESS OF BRITAIN and EMPRESS OF ENGLAND, of 1956 and 1957. And oredered the EMPRESS OF CANADA for delievery in 1961. The same year saw the launch of FRANCE. And in 1959 ROTTERDAM, of HOLLAND AMERICA LINE, set sail for her inaugural crossing to New York. SVENSKA AMERIKA LINIEN inaugurated its new and bigger GRIPSHOLM in 1957 and from Norway sailed the BERGENSFJORD since 1956 for NORWEGIAN AMERICA LINE.
The CUNARD board was not that alone in being convinced traffic would stay with the liners ...
by Earl Of Cruise
QUEEN ELIZABETH alongside the Ocean Terminal at Southampton as the QUEEN MARY passes her, outward bound for New York
At
 the CUNARD STEAMSHIP Company's Annual General Meeting held on 28th May 
1959, the Chairman Colonel Denis Bates speculated on how the world would
 be travelling in the future. The route between America and Europe had 
characteristics very different from others, said Colonel Bates. It is 
comparatively short - a long weekend by the express steamers or six and a
 half hours by air. Some two thirds of Cunard's passengers crossed the 
Atlantic on holiday: hence the company's slogan 'Getting there is half the fun'.
 The next largest category comprised business travel and if current 
medical opinion was correct there was a danger that modern airspeed had 
outstepped the capacity of man to adapt himself to its stress. Air 
travel increased across the Atlantic by 26% in 1958, whilst sea 
carryings reduced by just four and a half per cent. Colonel Bates 
declared that CUNARD philosophy had always been that air and sea travel 
are complementary rather than competitive on the North Atlantic. There 
was great complacency in the CUNARD boardroom: people would always 
prefer to cross the ocean by liner, and preferably by CUNARD!
The forward Oberservation Lounge on QUEEN ELIZABETH
Cunard's
 attempts to introduce economies on the QUEEN ELIZABETH in the late 
1950s met with fierce opposition from passengers. Artificial flowers 
were tried with the result that the company was inundated with 
complaints and Cunard rapidly re-introduced fresh flowers at a cost (in 
the late 1950s) of £850 per voyage.
In
 September 1959 an announcement was made to the effect that an 
independent committee of three, headed by Lord Chandos, had been set up 
to examine the Cunard Company's proposals for replacing the QUEEN´s.
The
 QUEEN ELIZABETH had an unexpected stowaway in 1959. A parakeet flew in 
through an open porthole at New York and quickly became the mascot of 
the ship's officers who bought him a fancy cage and named him Joey. 
After several crossings with Joey on board, the crew began to grumble 
that the weather seemed to have taken a turn for the worse. They blamed 
it all on Joey and reports finally got back to the Commodore who ruled 
that Joey must go!
The
 year 1960 proved to be another good one for CUNARD. The Company's 
liners carried 207,563 passengers or 23.95% of the combined total of 
passengers carried by all transatlantic shipping lines in 1960. The 
continuing popularity of the QUEEN´s was shown by the fact 
that they carried 110,800 passengers between them in 1960. In 1961 
Cunard liners were to make 207 sailings to and from New York.
The general assumption that the replacements for the QUEEN´s would
 be built at Clydebank touched a nerve with Dr Dennis Rebbeck, deputy 
managing director of Harland & Wolff, Belfast. He said that it had 
become a source of irritation to him and his colleagues on the board. "Public memory is notoriously short," said Dr Rebbeck, "It
 has apparently been forgotten that in 1927 we laid the keel of a 1,000 
foot passenger liner for the WHITE STAR LINE. Though it was started it 
was never finished, due to the economic blizzard in the late 1920s."  
The Promenade Deck Main Square on QUEEN ELIZABETH
In
 late 1961 CUNARD installed fruit machines, popularly known as one-armed
 bandits, on the QUEEN ELIZABETH and was immediately criticised for 
resorting to such a revenue-producing device on a luxury liner of this 
class. The experiment lasted three voyages before the bandits were given
 a dishonourable discharge.
The 'Cassandra' column in the 'Daily Mirror' on 29th November 1961 was uncharacteristically enthusiastic about the QUEEN ELIZABETH. It read: "She
 is the last agency of truly comfortable and agreeable travel the world 
will ever know, since she will never be replaced on any comparable scale
 of sumptuousness."
The
 CUNARD LINE carried 177,547 passengers across the North Atlantic in 
1961, 30,000 below the previous year's total. During the year there were
 24 fewer westbound sailings and 22 fewer eastbound sailings than in 
1960. The passenger carrying business was now losing money: £1.9 million
 in 1962, £1.6 million in 1963 and £3 million in 1965. However the QUEEN
 ELIZABETH still carried a full complement on occasions: over 2,000 
passengers were on board on one eastbound sailing in June, 1963.
The First-Class Restaurant on QUEEN ELIZABETH
The summer overhauls for the QUEEN´s
 were abandoned in 1962 which meant that the two liners would both be 
available at the height of the tourist season, instead of being 'off 
duty' for a week to ten days. The QUEEN ELIZABETH was reported as being 
in excellent shape with her engines in tip-top condition. Cunard faced 
formidable competiion in the shape of the brand new liner FRANCE and the
 UNITED STATES operating a weekly integrated transatlantic service.
In
 May 1962 the CUNARD LINE announced that, for the first time ever, the 
QUEEN ELIZABETH would be going cruising. Three five-day cruises between 
New York and Nassau, Bahamas were planned for February and early March 
1963, after which the liner would return to Atlantic service. The 
minimum rate for each cruise would be $185 or £66. The passage time to 
Nassau would be 39 hours each way, giving passengers almost two full 
days there. Although the QUEEN ELIZABETH could carry 2,200 passengers, 
the number would be limited to about 1,200 whilst cruising.
In
 July 1962 Sir John Brocklebank, the chairman of the CUNARD STEAMSHIP 
Company, said that the QUEEN ELIZABETH still had many years to go and 
mechanically could be kept competitive for the foreseeable future. The 
CUNARD Board had decided, therefore, in view of the changing pattern of 
the passenger business, much of which could be attributed to political 
anxiety, that it would be foolish at this juncture to embark on a new 
capital ship. Sir John went on to say that he believed 1962 would show 
an improvement over 1961, but it was impossible to say how much at that 
stage.
CUNARD´s QUEEN ELIZABETH cruise broshure to Nassau, Bahamas
QUEEN ELIZABETH at anchor off Nassau, Bahamas
Three
 years later it was announced that the QUEEN ELIZABETH would return to 
the Clyde in December 1965 for extensive improvements by her builders, 
John Brown & Company. The work would include the installation of 
full air conditioning, the fitting of private showers and toilets in 
much of the cabin class and tourist class accommodation, and the 
creation of a lido at the after end of the promenade deck, incorporating
 an outdoor heated swimming pool. The QUEEN ELIZABETH arrived back in 
the Clyde on 4th December 1965 and entered the Firth of Clyde dry dock 
at Greenock on 9th December. She remained there until 11th March 1966 
undergoing the £1.75 million refit and returned to Southampton with 
about 400 workmen on board who were completing the modernisation of 
cabins. The QUEEN ELIZABETH was back in service on the North Atlantic on
 26th March 1966, but with 150 cabins still not completed, she carried 
Harland & Wolff workmen with her to finish the job.
QUEEN ELIZABETH in the Firth of Clyde, Inchgreen, dry dock at Greenock in February 1966
QUEEN ELIZABETH passing the Cloch Lighthouse on her departure from Clyde on 12th March 1966
The QUEEN ELIZABETH departing from the river of her birth, and her wartime home port, for the very last time on 12th March 1966
It
 was not only the declining fortunes of CUNARD's passenger business 
which threatened the fleet of which the QUEEN ELIZABETH was still the 
flagship. Labour disputes at sea and ashore also menaced the liner's 
schedule and on such occasions she was used as a massive pawn in various
 disputes involving tugmen, dockers, longshoremen or the crew. 
In November 1948 a series of strikes dragged on for sixteen days, and on 2nd December the QUEEN ELIZABETH had sailed on the same tide as the QUEEN MARY and the AQUITANIA, a unique event in the history of all three vessels.
In November 1948 a series of strikes dragged on for sixteen days, and on 2nd December the QUEEN ELIZABETH had sailed on the same tide as the QUEEN MARY and the AQUITANIA, a unique event in the history of all three vessels.
A group of purser´s staff in the Tourist Purser´s cabin on QUEEN ELIZABETH in October 1963
Of
 all the strikes and disputes that hit the QUEEN ELIZABETH, the most 
catastrophic was the 42-day seamen's strike of May and June 1966. This 
was the catalyst, but not the only cause, of the withdrawal of the two QUEEN´s.
 On 16th May 1966, just six weeks after completing her overhaul on the 
Clyde, the QUEEN ELIZABETH became the first major casualty of the strike
 and was laid up at Southampton. The 1966 strike cost CUNARD an 
estimated £3.75 million in lost revenue and brought the total operating 
loss for the year to over £6 million. Sir Basil Smallpiece, Cunard's 
chairman since November 1965 when he succeeded Sir John Brocklebank, 
decided that the time had finally come for drastic, long-delayed surgery
 on the CUNARD passenger fleet. Not only that, but the company 
headquarters was transferred from Liverpool to Southampton.
The
 QUEEN ELIZABETH was not successful as a cruise ship. Winter cruises 
from New York to the West Indies were poorly patronised and one was 
cancelled and replaced with an unscheduled Atlantic crossing. This also 
suffered from low bookings and became known as the 'Ghost Ship Voyage'.
 A thirty-seven day cruise from New York to the Mediterranean sailed on 
21st February 1967 and was plagued by bad weather and many ports had to 
be omitted from the itinerary.
The starbord side of the promanade deck, looking aft
On
 8th May 1967, the axe finally fell and it was announced that the QUEEN 
ELIZABETH would be withdrawn a year earlier than originally planned - in
 the Autumn of 1968 after a final summer on the Western Ocean. Sir Basil
 Smallpiece said: "Although the QUEEN MARY's retirement at the end 
of 1967 had long been forecast, it had been hoped that the results of 
the QUEEN ELIZABETH's cruise programme last winter would confirm the 
viability of the Company's plan to keep her in service when the 'Q.4' [launched as the QUEEN ELIZABETH 2] comes
 along in 1969. In the event the results have been very far from 
satisfactory, The Board's decision to withdraw the QUEEN ELIZABETH is 
part of the unrelenting process of facing realities in its determination
 to put the Company on to a paying basis."
Like
 a Greek tragedy the tale of woe gathered force. Recently introduced 
legislation by the International Maritime Commission also influenced the
 board's decision. The Americans demanded that the QUEEN ELIZABETH be 
brought up to the new standards of fire protection which would have to 
include the fitting of additional fire sprinklers and the boxing-in of 
stairways that could otherwise act as deadly draught tunnels in the 
event of fire. The work, Cunard estimated, would cost £750,000. However,
 U.S. legislators had another surprise up their sleeve. When CUNARD 
requested that the Americans send over an inspector to approve the 
improvement work as it progressed, the authorities declined. The 
Americans wanted the work to be completed and then for the 'ELIZABETH' to
 sail over to New York for inspection prior to approval and 
certification. This would mean an expensive 'light' voyage to New York 
and, if the inspection failed, an equally expensive 'light' return trip 
back to the U.K. The prospect to Cunard was just too daunting, and 
contributed greatly to the decision to dispose of the QUEEN ELIZABETH.
© photo by John Shepherd
As soon as the decision to retire the 'ELIZABETH'
 was made public, her cruises and Western Ocean crossings became popular
 with those who had travelled on and had loved the ship over the kength 
of her career. For the first time in several years the QUEEN ELIZABETH 
began to show a profit.
The
 QUEEN MARY and the QUEEN ELIZABETH met for the last time when they were
 both at sea. Just after midnight on 25th September 1967 the two QUEEN´s
 passed each other in mid-Atlantic, the QUEEN MARY making her final 
eastbound transatlantic crossing. Within a few short minutes the plans, 
hopes and successes of three decades came to an end as syrens boomed out
 across the water, the whole poignant scene witnessed by just a few 
passengers braving the night wind.
The
 QUEEN MARY found a buyer in the form of the City of Long Beach, 
California and she left Southampton on 31st October 1967 carrying 1,000 
passengers on what was billed as 'The Last Great Cruise', involving a 
passage around Cape Horn. The whole affair turned into a spectacular 
fiasco as the 'MARY' was undercrewed and had to cross the 
equator twice without the benefit of air-conditioning. To economise on 
fuel, the QUEEN MARY was using just two of her four propellers. Cunard 
had warned the new buyers against carrying passengers and would have 
nothing to do with the bookings, but nevertheless carried the blame in 
the eyes of the disgruntled passengers.
As it was an omen for the future to come for QUEEN MARY as a hotel in Long Beach, with a long tradition of bancrucies of hotle companies, a vast number of intakes into the structure of the vessel, and a bad sample for all efforts in the future for other vessels to become a hotel, event center, museum and must-to-be-at location. Such as the saving of ts HAMBURG or ms KUNGSHOLM.
QUEEN MARY was over years/decades neglected and got into a state of detoriating.
As it was an omen for the future to come for QUEEN MARY as a hotel in Long Beach, with a long tradition of bancrucies of hotle companies, a vast number of intakes into the structure of the vessel, and a bad sample for all efforts in the future for other vessels to become a hotel, event center, museum and must-to-be-at location. Such as the saving of ts HAMBURG or ms KUNGSHOLM.
QUEEN MARY was over years/decades neglected and got into a state of detoriating.
by Earl of Cruise
The wheelhouse on QUEEN ELIZABETH
Scrapping
 seemed to provide the obvious, almost humane, answer to dealing with 
the problem of the QUEEN ELIZABETH. However, over the winter of 1967/68,
 Cunard received several serious enquiries from potential buyers. The 
Japanese wanted her for a marine science museum in time for the 1970 
Tokyo World Fair. Honolulu was interested as were the Australians. 
Evangelist Billy Graham offered £2.1 million for her to become a 
floating bible school, and the United States Institute of Technology 
wanted her to become a floating university. On 5th April 1968 Cunard 
announced its decision. For $7.75 the QUEEN ELIZABETH was sold to a 
group of Philadelphia businessmen.
The
 original intention was to moor the QUEEN ELIZABETH off Hog island in 
the Delaware River. Two months later the purchasers realised that the 
river was not deep enough. Additionally, the proposed site was adjacent 
to Philadelphia International Airport wit its deafening aircraft noise 
every few minutes, and finally a nearby oil refinery would waft odours 
over the ship. An alternative site was found at Fort Lauderdale in 
Florida.
The
 QUEEN ELIZABETH's final season on the Atlantic was uneventful other 
than for the enthusiasm expressed by her regular passengers who wanted 
to sail in her just one last time. The Elizabeth's final round voyage to New York left Southampton on 23rd October 1968.
The
 liner's new owners were by now in financial difficulty and CUNARD
stepped in to moderate a worsening situation by more or less taking over
 the new venture. The Company injected $1 million into a new company 
called 'The Elizabeth (Cunard) Corporation' and held an 85% share. 
Cunard hoped that its continuing involvement with the QUEEN ELIZABETH 
would reap worthwhile benefits in the years to come. The Philadelphia 
businessmen still held a small interest in the new company and would 
lease the ship from Cunard for $2 million a year.
QUEEN ELIZABETH sailing in her glory days into New York harbor
Following
 her arrival at New York on 28th October 1968, the QUEEN ELIZABETH was 
feted and honoured with both private and official functions being held 
on board. New York Mayor John Lindsay boarded the QUEEN ELIZABETH on 
sailing day 30th October to bid an official 'farewell'. He presented the
 ship with a plaque from the Department of Defense to commemorate the 
liner's remarkable war service.
A
 'Farewell Dinner' was held at sea on Sunday 3rd November and the 
following day the QUEEN ELIZABETH arrived back at Southampton for the 
last time, coming to the end of the career for which she had been 
designed. She had crossed the North Atlantic Ocean 896 times in 
peacetime, and had carried 2,300,000 passengers, steaming 3,472,675 
nautical miles in the process, On 6th November 1968 Queen Elizabeth the 
Queen Mother visited the ship for the very last time. It was just over 
thirty years since she had launched the ship at Clydebank.
QUEEN ELIZABETH making her final arrival at Southampton at the end of her "Farewell Cruise" on 15th November 1968
On
 8th November the QUEEN ELIZABETH sailed on a 'Farewell Cruise' to Las 
Palmas and Gibraltar, and was back at Southampton on 15th November. That
 evening the crew was paid off and just 193 were retained to take the ELIZABETH on her delivery voyage to Fort Lauderdale.
Commodore Geoffrey Marr, the last master on QUEEN ELIZABETH
In
 the early morning fog of 28th November 1968, the QUEEN ELIZABETH left 
Southampton for the last time. Other than for Southampton's Albion Band,
 the quayside was almost bereft of well-wishers. Commodore Geoffrey Marr
 compared the departure to the farewell given to the Elizabeth at New York. He described it as "...a
 British understatement with a vengeance, as though the British world of
 ships and shiplovers looked the other way until she had gone."
The QUEEN ELIZABETH slips away from Southampton for the last time in the early morning fog of 28th November 1968
The
 other ships that were in Southampton that unhappy morning saluted the 
QUEEN ELIZABETH as she passed but received no acknowledgement to their 
respectful signals. A temporary electrical fault had developed with the Elizabeth's whistle control gear and she left Southampton in a silence that only added to the almost furtive feeling of the departure.
After
 a ghost-like voyage across the Atlantic the QUEEN ELIZABETH arrived off
 the Florida coast on Saturday 7th December 1968. Dredging had not been 
completed at Port Everglades so Commodore Marr was instructed to cruise 
the Elizabeth slowly down the coast to 'show the flag'. At 11.15am the 
following day the QUEEN ELIZABETH was safely berthed at Port Everglades 
and the final, often fatal, order on the bridge telegraph was rung to 
the engine room: 'Finished with Engines'.
QUEEN ELIZABETH entering the habor at Port Everglades on 9th December 1968
The
 ELIZABETH (the prefix 'QUEEN' was dropped at CUNARDs request) was 
opened to the public on 14th February 1969. Some 30 Cunard staff had 
been retained, mostly engineers to assist in running the boilers and 
generators.
Public
 interest in the ELIZABETH quickly waned and by June 1969 the liner was 
again up for sale. In July the ship was sold for $8.64 million to a 
company called Queen Inc. In September 1969 a hurricane warning caused 
the then almost deserted ship to be partially scuttled to prevent her 
tearing away from her berth. By the end of the year Queen Inc. was 
bankrupt with debts of $12 million.
A
 bid of $3.2 million (£1.3 million at 1969 rates of exchange) was made 
by the Island Navigation Company of Hong Kong. This was a subsidiary of 
the giant ORIENT OVERSEAS LINE which would be the ship's actual owner 
and operator. This shipping empire was owned by a Mr C.Y. Tung and 
contained much well looked after second hand tonnage within its fleet. 
Mr Tung's plan, he liked to be called 'C Y', was based on an idea first 
proposed by U Thant, the Secretary General of the United Nations, that a
 ship be used for educational purposes whilst spreading goodwill and 
understanding amongst nations and between different cultures.
Mr
 Tung proposed to name his ship the SEAWISE UNIVERSITY. She would carry 
1,800 students plus 800 cruise passengers on world-wide voyages. But 
first the ship had to be moved from Port Everglades to Hong Kong. It was
 decided to steam her all the way and a Chinese crew was flown to 
Florida, along with workers from Mr Tung's own shipyard. In addition the
 QUEEN ELIZABETH's last master (Commodore Geoffrey Marr) and chief 
engineer (Mr Ted Philip) received invitations to come out of retirement 
and rejoin their old ship for the voyage.
The ELIZABETH just before she sailed from Port Everglades
Engines
 were checked and boilers tested, but only six of the twelve boilers 
were considered functional for the long passage. During two years of 
near neglect, deterioration had rapidly set in, especially in the 
fragile boiler tubes. In the event 600 tubes had to be changed and 
approval obtained from classification societies. It was on 3rd February 
1971 that the first engine trials were carried out and sailing day was 
set for Wedmesday 10th February. The SEAWISE UNIVERSITY was 
comparatively underpowered and manned by an inexperienced crew. Before 
the ship had even left her berth, one of the six operational boilers 
developed leaks in its tubes and was declared inoperable. In the 
entrance channel to the harbour at Port Everglades a second boiler blew 
and the SEAWISE UNIVERSITY now had just four boilers functioning out of a
 possible twelve. The liner did not now have enough power to manoeuvre, 
should the need arise, but she did have enough momentum - plus the aid 
of tugs - to carry her through the harbour entrance.
A
 serious fire broke out in No.4 boiler room on 13th February and was 
fortunately brought under control. However another of the still 
operational boilers was badly damaged: she was now down to just three. 
Captain Marr decided to signal for tugs. The salvage tug RESCUE arrived 
on 16th February as the SEAWISE UNIVERSITY continued her southward drift
 through the Windward Passage into the Caribbean. Plans to tow the liner
 to Jamaica or Curacao were abandoned and the small Dutch island of 
Aruba, off the northern Venezuelan coast, was chosen. The RESCUE could 
not handle the ship on her own and so a second tug was summoned. After 
anchoring off Aruba the SEAWISE UNIVERSITY drifted, dragging her anchor,
 out to deep water. With the aid of two local tugs the liner finally put
 down two anchors some six miles off Oranjestad, Aruba.
SEAWISE UNIVERSITY, ex ELIZABETH, ex QUEEN ELIZABETH at Cape Town on 14th June 1971, on passge to HongKong - the slow boat to China
Mr
 C.Y. Tung personally visited his ship. More men, boiler tubes and other
 equipment were flown to Aruba and after satisfactory repairs the 
SEAWISE UNIVERSITY sailed to Curacao for fresh water and fuel oil. Speed
 varied between 7 and 11 knots, with the higher speed using 300 tons of 
oil per day. On 14th June 1971 the liner reached Cape Town and on 7th 
July called at Singapore. Eight days later the 'slow boat to China' 
arrived at Hong Kong.
SEAWISE UNIVERSITY, ex ELIZABETH, ex QUEEN ELIZABETH finally arrives at HongKong on 15th July 1971
Over
 the next few months Mr C.Y. Tung's great ship was reconditioned and 
converted into the ship of his dreams. The new fire regulations (that 
CUNARD had not been able to afford) were incorporated, bringing the ship
 into line with the stringent standards required by the United States. 
Two thousand men were ferried out daily to work on the SEAWISE 
UNIVERSITY as she lay at anchor off Hong Kong. By New Year's Day 1972 
the liner floated resplendent in her new livery of white hull and orange
 funnels, with the legend 'Orient Overseas Line' emblazoned along each 
side of her hull. All twelve boilers had been reconditioned and her four
 engines thoroughly overhauled. All that required to be done was 
drydocking in Japan.
On
 Sunday 9th January 1972, three fires started simultaneously on board. 
All these quickly spread, fanned carried by the ample supply of air 
coming into the ship through the open shell doors. It was an hour before
 fire fighting tugs arrived at the scene, and after four hours of futile
 effort the liner was left to burn herself out. By midnight on 9th 
January the fire had burnt through five decks and the SEAWISE UNIVERSITY
 had developed a starboard list of 17 degrees, the start of a slow and 
unstoppable capsize.
SEAWISE UNIVERSITY, ex QUEEN ELIZABETH burning in the port of HongKong 
A Court of Inquiry found that arson was the cause of the fires.
The SEAWISE UNIVERSITY, ex QUEEN ELIZABETH, came with the James Bond film to new "fame". In `The Man With The Golden Gun´ the former liner was a secrect headquarter for the MI5 and M
A
 year later, in January 1973, the old QUEEN ELIZABETH still lay in the 
harbour at Hong Kong, a burnt out hulk lying on her starboard side. Oil 
was gradually seeping from her ruptured fuel tanks and an inflated boom 
was floated round the hulk to contain it. Over 3,000 tons had to be 
pumped out eventually at a cost of £140,000 to Mr Tung. In December 1974
 the decision was taken to scrap the remains of the QUEEN ELIZABETH. The
 hull was cut into sections of up to 250 tons each and, in all, some 
45,000 tons of metal were lifted from the wreck. The remainder, lying on
 the harbour bed, was blown up as the wreck was a hazard to navigation.
With
 the passage of time the area of Hong Kong harbour where the SEAWISE 
UNIVERSITY (ex CUNARD - WHITE STAR liner QUEEN ELIZABETH) lay has been 
filled in and a new airport built on the reclaimed land.
John Sheperd


Amazing post, would you mind checking mine? haute her girl hope you will love it.
ReplyDelete"...her cruises and Western Ocean crossings became popular with those who had travelled on and had loved the ship over the length of her career. For the first time in several years the QUEEN ELIZABETH began to show a profit."
ReplyDeleteThis is not backed up by evidence. Her average passengers per crossing in 1968 was 1032; in 1967 it was 1084; and in 1966 she averaged 1056 per trip.
Wonderful story - sad ending to a wonderful career - I knew the ships well / GBSS and GBTT - I happened to be in Hong Kong when this great lady was lost for all time. It was a horrific experience. But I thank the author of this great historical work, the pictures and the stories probably unkown to so many.
ReplyDelete