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Starting in 1996,
Alexa Internet has been donating their crawl data to the Internet Archive. Flowing in every day, these data are added to the
Wayback Machine after an embargo period.
Starting in 1996,
Alexa Internet has been donating their crawl data to the Internet Archive. Flowing in every day, these data are added to the
Wayback Machine after an embargo period.
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20150611113934/http://www.thegreatoceanliners.com:80/adriatic2.html
 |
Adriatic
(II)
1907 - 1934 |
he
White Star Line had started their project in building four large vessels
for the North Atlantic passenger trade route in 1901, when they completed
the 21,000-tonner Celtic. The Celtic would have been a lone
vessel if not Thomas Henry Ismay had died in 1899. The Celtic had
been ordered by him, but after his death, his son Joseph Bruce Ismay decided
that the Celtic should have three sisters, making the Celtic
into a quartet. The second of the sisters appeared in 1903, and she was
named Cedric. Having a net tonnage 71 tons more than Celtic,
she took the title of being the largest ship in the world from her sister.
In 1904, the third vessel came. She was the Baltic, and with a length
that surpassed the 705-feet Oceanic�s, the Baltic became
the first vessel in the world that could claim to be both the longest and
largest since the Great Eastern.
The fourth
vessel was ordered already in 1903. Why the ship did not appear until 1907,
can be thought of as a mystery. Several unlikely theories about the slow
progress� reasons have come up during the years, but the real reason of
the affair is probably that White Star felt that they were in no hurry
in completing their latest ship. One of the reasons of the �no hurry�-policy
was certainly that
 |
| Because of her somewhat
more powerful engines, the Adriatic could maintain a service speed
slightly higher than her three siblings could. |
Bruce Ismay knew that the Cunard
Line was constructing two 32,000-tonners, namely the Lusitania and
the Mauretania. The really interesting thing for the White Star
Line was now to surpass Cunard�s new leviathans.
The new
ship customarily continued the White Star Line�s name-policy and was given
the -ic ending name Adriatic. The work on the Adriatic and
Cunard�s Mauretania went on rather simultaneously in 1906, and on
September 20, the same year both vessels were launched. It is extraordinary
that both the White Star Line�s and the Cunard Line�s largest vessels were
launched the same day.
The Adriatic
was the last of the Big Four-class, but differed in some respects from the
others. The major difference was that the Adriatic was fitted with
an indoor swimming pool and a Turkish bath. She was the very first vessel
in the world that had such a thing on board. Some other things that made
her different from her sisters was that she had derrick posts between the
bridge and the foremast, and that both sets of island boats aft were on
two tier decks.
In 1907,
the Adriatic was completed, and on May 8, she set out on her maiden
voyage between Liverpool and New York. During the voyage, White Star changed
their main home port to Southampton, and when the Adriatic returned
from her maiden voyage, she did not return to Liverpool, but to Southampton.
On June 5, the Adriatic replaced the Celtic on the Southampton-New
York service since the Celtic had been chartered by the Americans
for a short while. On her Southampton-New York route, the Adriatic�s
running mates became the Teutonic, the Majestic and the Oceanic.
In June
1911, the fight back from White Star towards Cunard came. The 45,000-tonner
Olympic began to serve the company. The new vessel exceeded the
Cunard-duo from 1907 in tonnage, not in speed, but since the Olympic
would have a service speed of 21 knots she was the fastest in her company.
Being the flag ship in the White Star Line, the Olympic replaced
the Adriatic who was returned to her somewhat unfinished Liverpool-New
York service.
In 1912,
the White Star Line had completed the second of the Olympic-class
liners; the Titanic. The Titanic set out on her maiden voyage
in April, but sank with a terrible loss of life, after having encountered
ice, before reaching New York. The Adriatic was in New York shortly
after the disaster had occurred, and Bruce Ismay, who had been on the Titanic
and survived, returned to England on board her. The results of the disaster
were many. One was that no ship was ever again called �unsinkable�, as
for example the Adriatic had been. Another was that every ship was
fitted with an adequate number of lifeboats on board. The Adriatic
returned to service shortly after a minor overhaul concerning additional
lifeboats.
By the
start of the First World War in 1914, the Adriatic was still on
the Liverpool route. She was decided to remain in passenger service just
as the Lusitania. In 1917 and a year since, the Adriatic
operated under the Liner Requisition Scheme. Sometimes she carried oil
in her double bottom, in order to use every possible space for cargo.
After
the war, in 1919, the Adriatic was reconditioned, and among other
things her forward promenade deck was glassed in, because of water entering
the promenade areas in rough weather. The same year a music band consisting
of five members calling themselves the �Original Dixieland Jazzband� arrived
at Liverpool on board the Adriatic. That was the first time that
Jazz music came to Britain; no one liked their style very much but ever
since, the Jazz reputation has bettered in the U.K. In September, the Adriatic
 |
| This photo of the Adriatic
was taken from another liner at the neighbouring pier in New York harbour. |
resumed her Southampton-New
York service, only to go back to the Liverpool run in 1922, where all of
her sisters were based. At Liverpool, five people were killed by a reserve
coal bunker explosion, in August. One year later the Adriatic�s
route changed somewhat when a call at Boston was introduced.
Almost
all other large liners that had been coal-fired before had by now been
converted into oil burning ships. The Adriatic was never given the
opportunity, but in spite of her somewhat slower coal-burning appearance,
she made her fastest crossing ever in seven days and six minutes in 1925.
The next year, the Adriatic was considered having reached an age
that would not make her profitable during winter time, and she was sent
off cruising during the off-season. In 1928, the vessel was converted into
a Cabin-class ship. She made her first sailing as such on April 28, and
during the off-seasons she made cruisings to the Mediterranean. In 1929,
all work during the winter months was suspended for the Adriatic.
In the future she would only serve in the summer. The regular transatlantic
service was also reduced for the ship and from 1933, the only service the
Adriatic could stand for was summer cruising from Liverpool.
The Depression
had hit hard on both the White Star Line and the Cunard Line. In 1934,
the old rivals were forced by the Government to merge. The Adriatic
was the only ship of the Big Four still alive by then and she was only
used for some cruisings in 1934, before she was sold for £48,000
to Japanese scrappers situated in Osaka. The Adriatic left Liverpool
for her last time on December 19. Some three months later she was in the
hands of the Japanese scrappers who would take the former White Star Line�s
once largest ship in for final demolition.
| The Adriatic - Specifications: |
|
|
| Length: |
729 feet (222.7 m) |
| Beam: |
75.6 feet (23.1 m) |
| Tonnage: |
24,541 gross tons |
| Engines: |
Steam quadruple expansion
engines, powering two propellers. |
| Service speed: |
17 knots |
| Passengers: |
2,875 people |