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Hamburg America Line

The Hamburg-Amerikanische Packetfahrt-Aktien-Gesellschaft (HAPAG), known in English as the Hamburg America Line, was a transatlantic shipping enterprise established in Hamburg, in 1847. Among those involved in its development were prominent citizens such as Albert Ballin (director general), Adolph Godeffroy, Ferdinand Laeisz, Carl Woermann, August Bolten, and others, and its main financial backers were Berenberg Bank and H. J. Merck & Co. It soon developed into the largest German, and at times the world's largest, shipping company, serving the market created by German immigration to the United States and later, immigration from Eastern Europe. On 1 September 1970, after 123 years of independent existence, HAPAG merged with the Bremen-based North German Lloyd to form Hapag-Lloyd AG.

Hamburg America Line
HAPAG flag
Native name
Hamburg-Amerikanische Paketfahrt-Aktien-Gesellschaft
Industryshipping
Founded1847
FounderAlbert Ballin (Director General), Adolph Godeffroy, Ferdinand Laeisz, Carl Woermann, and August Bolten
Defunct1 September 1970
FateMerged with Norddeutscher Lloyd
SuccessorHapag-Lloyd
Headquarters
Hamburg
,
Germany
"Twin Screw Express Steamers" 1899 ad
1899 ad in The Mail and Express (New York City)

History

Ports served

 
Postcard of the view from the water of the Hamburg-American Steamship Lines docks in Hoboken, New Jersey, in about 1910
 
Postcard from the Hamburg-American Line steamship König Friedrich August, issued 1911
 
Advertisement for the Hamburg-American Line (1930)

In the early years, the Hamburg America Line exclusively connected European ports with North American ports, such as Hoboken, New Jersey, or New Orleans, Louisiana. With time, however, the company established lines to all continents. The company built a large ocean liner terminal at Cuxhaven, Germany, in 1900. Connected directly to Hamburg by a dedicated railway line and station, the HAPAG Terminal at Cuxhaven served as the major departure point for German and European immigrants to North America until 1969 when ocean liner travel ceased. Today it serves as a museum and cruise ship terminal.[1]

 
Poster by Otto Arpke (1931)

Atlas Service

The Atlas Service sailed from New York to Jamaica, Haiti, Colombia, Central America.[2] The service was described as a way to "escape the rigors of Northern winters" through taking a Caribbean cruise and was promoted to tourists.[2] The ships Altai, Sarnia, Sibiria, Alleghany, Alene, Adirondack, Valdivia, and Graecia provided this service in 1906.[2]

Notable journeys

In 1858, its liner Austria sank, killing 449 people. In 1891, the cruise of the Augusta Victoria in the Mediterranean and the Near East from 22 January to 22 March, with 241 passengers including Albert Ballin and wife, is often stated to have been the first passenger cruise. Christian Wilhelm Allers published an illustrated account of it as "Bakschisch". In 1897, its steamer Arcadia was wrecked on the rocks off Newfoundland.[3] In 1900, 1901 and 1903 its liner Deutschland won the Blue Riband taking the prize from the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse. In 1906 Prinzessin Victoria Luise ran aground off the coast of Jamaica. No people died by the grounding; however, the ship's captain committed suicide after getting all the passengers safely off the ship.[4] In 1912, its liner SS Amerika was the first ship to warn Titanic of icebergs.

HAPAG's general director, Albert Ballin, believed that safety, size, comfort and luxury would always win out over speed. Thus he conceived the three largest liners yet to be built, named Imperator, Vaterland and Bismarck.

First World War

The Imperator and the Vaterland were briefly in service before the First World War. In 1914, the Vaterland was caught in port at Hoboken, New Jersey at the outbreak of World War I and interned by the United States. She was seized, renamed Leviathan after the declaration of war on Germany in 1917, and served for the duration and beyond as a troopship. In 1917, its liner Allemannia was "torpedoed by German submarine near Alicante"; two people were lost.[5]

Postwar reparations

After the war, the Vaterland/Leviathan was retained by the Americans as war reparations. In 1919 Vaterland's sister ships – Imperator and the unfinished Bismarck – were handed over to the allies as war reparations to Britain. They were sold to the Cunard Line and White Star Line respectively, and renamed Berengaria and Majestic. A ship chain in Mountain Lakes, New Jersey is identified by the historic society as belonging to either the Vaterland or Imperator. It was acquired in 1921, likely during refurbishments, and now lines a portion of the Boulevard.

In 1939, the HAPAG liner St. Louis was unable to find a port in Cuba, the United States, or Canada willing to accept the more than 950 Jewish refugees on board and had to return to Europe. On 9 April 1940, when German warships attacked Kristiansand, Norway, during Operation Weserübung (the opening assault of the Norwegian Campaign), the HAPAG freighter Seattle sailed into the crossfire between the warships and Norwegian coastal artillery. She was holed and sunk, and her crew briefly became prisoners of war.

Later years

The Hamburg America Line lost almost the entirety of its fleet twice, as a result of World Wars I and II. In 1970, the company merged with its longstanding rival, Norddeutscher Lloyd of Bremen, to establish the present-day company Hapag-Lloyd.

In the post-war years, HAPAG rebuilt its fleet and focused on cargo container transport. In 1970, the container shipping companies HAPAG and North German Lloyd (NGL) merged into Hapag-Lloyd AG to form one of the world's biggest container shipping companies. In 2008, Hapag-Lloyd was acquired by the City of Hamburg and a group of private investors, the Albert Ballin Consortium.[6]

Fleet List

Name(s) Entered HAPAG service Notes
Austria 1858 Caught fire and sank, 1 September 1858.
Teutonia 1858 Sold to Henry Flinn, 1877. Scrapped 1894 as Mentana.
Silesia 1869 Sold 1887. Wrecked 1899 and subsequently scrapped.
Suevia 1874 Sold to Schiaffino, Nyer & Siges and renamed Quatre Amis, 1896. Scrapped 1898.
Augusta Victoria 1889 Rebuilt 1897. Sold to Imperial Russian Navy, 1904, and converted into auxiliary cruiser Kuban. Scrapped 1907
Columbia 1889

(1899)

Sold to Spanish Navy, 1898, and converted to auxiliary cruiser Rapido. Sold back to HAPAG and reverted to Columbia, 1899. Sold to Imperial Russian Navy as auxiliary cruiser Terek, 1904. Scrapped 1907.
Scandia 1889 Sold to US Army Quartermaster Department, 1898, and renamed USAT Warren. Scrapped 1929.
Normannia 1890 Sold to Spanish Navy, 1898, and renamed Patriota. Scrapped as Compagnie Générale Transatlantique's L'Aquitaine, 1906.
Fürst Bismarck 1891 Sold to Imperial Russian Navy, 1904, and converted into auxiliary cruiser Don. Scrapped as Regia Marina's San Giusto, 1924
Georgia 1891 Sold to Housatonic Steamship Corporation and renamed Housatonic, 1915. Torpedoed and sunk 1917.
Stubbenhuk / Sicilia 1892 Built 1890 for Hansa Line. Acquired by HAPAG during merger with Hansa. Renamed Sicilia, 1894. Sold to Shinyei Kisen Goshi Kaisha and renamed Komagata Maru, 1913. Wrecked as Kabafuto Kisen KK's Heian Maru, 1926.
Persia 1894 Sold to British Transport Company and renamed Minnewaska, 1897. Scrapped as USAT Thomas, 1929.
Ceres / Suevia 1896 Renamed Suevia, 1898. Seized by United States Shipping Board, 1917, and renamed Wachusett. Scrapped 1924.
Valdivia 1896 Built 1886 as Tijuca for Hamburg Süd. Bought by HAPAG and renamed Valdivia, 1896. Sold to Peter R Hinsch of Hamburg and renamed Tom G Corpi. Scrapped as Flandre, 1927.
Pennsylvania 1897 Seized by United States Shipping Board, 1917, and renamed Nansemond. Scrapped 1924.
Arcadia 1897 Seized by United States Shipping Board, 1917. Sold to California Steamship Company, 1923. Scrapped 1927
Pretoria 1898 Surrendered to US government, 1919, then transferred to British government. Scrapped 1921.
Bulgaria 1898

(1913)

Sold to Unione Austriaca di Navigazione and renamed Canada, 1913. Returned to HAPAG and reverted to Bulgaria later that same year. Seized by United States Shipping Board, 1917, and renamed USAT Hercules and later USAT Philippines. Scrapped 1924.
Titania 1898 Built 1879 for Adamson & Ronaldson as Mercedes. Bought by HAPAG from Hamburg Pacific Dampfschiffs Linie. Sold 1898. Sunk as USS Marcellus, 1910.
Sibiria 1898 Built as Hertha for Kingsin Line, 1894. Sold to HAPAG, 1898. Sold to Atlantic Fruit Company, 1915. Wrecked 1916.
Graf Waldersee 1899 Laid down as Pavia, but renamed Graf Waldersee during construction. Surrendered to US government, 1919. Transferred to Britain later that year, and scrapped 1922.
Patricia 1899 Surrendered to US government, 1919. Transferred to Britain later that year, and scrapped 1921.
Hamburg 1899 Chartered by American Red Cross and renamed Red Cross, 1914. Seized by United States Shipping Board, 1917, and later renamed Powhatan. Scrapped as Dollar Line's President Fillmore, 1928.
Saxonia 1899 Seized by United States Shipping Board, 1917, and renamed Savannah. Scrapped as Orbis, 1954.
Kaiser Friedrich 1899 Built 1898 for North German Lloyd. Chartered by HAPAG, 1899. Bought by Compagnie de Navigation Sud-Atlantique, 1912. Sunk 1916.
Deutschland / Viktoria Luise / Hansa 1900 Renamed Viktoria Luise, 1910. Rebuilt and renamed Hansa, 1921. Scrapped 1925.
Kiautschou 1900 Traded to North German Lloyd, 1904. Caught fire as LASSCO's City of Honolulu, 1930, and subsequently scrapped.
Abessinia 1900 Seized during World War I. Wrecked 1921.
Prinzessin Victoria Luise 1901 Struck reef, 1906, and subsequently sank.
Athen 1901 Built 1893 for A. C. de Freitas & Co. Sold to HAPAG, 1901. Sold to Gätjens & Jarke, 1903. Sunk 1906.
Arabia 1901 Launched as Liddesdale for Mackil R. & Co., 1901. Purchased by HAPAG during construction. Seized by the British, 1919. Wrecked as Andrios, 1926.
Moltke 1902 Seized by Italian government, 1915. Transferred to Lloyd Sabaudo and renamed Pesaro, 1919. Scrapped 1925.
Prinz Eitel Friedrich 1902 Seized by United States Shipping Board, 1917, and renamed Otsego. Hulked or scrapped as Far Eastern Steamship Company's Dolinsk, 1955.
Blücher 1902 Seized by Brazilian government, 1917, and renamed Leopoldina. Sold to Compagnie Générale Transatlantique and renamed Suffren, 1923. Scrapped 1929.
Prinz Waldemar 1902 Struck reef and sank, 1907.
Prinz Sigismund 1903 Seized by United States Shipping Board, 1917, and renamed General W.C. Gorgas. Scrapped as Mikhail Lomonosov, 1958.
Prinz Adalbert 1903 Seized by Britain, 1914, and used as accommodation ship Prince and later Princetown. Torpedoed and sunk as Compagnie de Navigation Sud Atlantique's Alésia, 1917.
Prinz Joachim 1903 Seized by United States Shipping Board, 1917, and renamed Moccasin.
Odenwald 1904 Seized by United States Shipping Board, 1917, and renamed Newport News. Scrapped 1925.
Rhaetia 1905 Seized by United States Shipping Board, 1917, and renamed Black Hawk and later Black Arrow. Scrapped 1924.
Fürst Bismarck / Friedrichsruh 1905 Renamed Friedrichsruh, 1914. Surrendered to Britain, 1919. Sailed under French flag as Amboise. Scrapped 1935.
Karlsruhe 1905 Sold to Ernst Russ Reederei, 1935. Sunk by air attack, 1945.
Präsident 1905 Seized by United States Shipping Board, 1917, and renamed USS Kittery. Scrapped 1933
Amerika 1905 Seized by United States Shipping Board, 1917, and subsequently renamed America, then ceded to United States Mail Steamship Company and later United States Lines. Scrapped as USAT Edmund B. Alexander, 1957.
Kronprinzessin Cecilie 1906 Seized by British government, 1915, and renamed HMS Princess. Paid off 1917.
Kaiserin Auguste Victoria 1906 Surrendered to Britain, 1919. Ceded to Canadian Pacific Steamship Company and renamed Empress of Scotland, 1921. Scrapped 1930.
Pisa 1907

(Chartered 1903)

Built 1896 for Sloman Line. Chartered from Sloman in 1903 before being bought outright by HAPAG in 1907. Seized by United States Shipping Board, 1917, and renamed Ascutney. Scrapped 1924.
President Lincoln 1907 Seized by United States Shipping Board, 1917. Torpedoed and sunk, 1918.
President Grant 1907 Built 1903 as Servian for Wilson & Furness-Leyland Line. Purchased by HAPAG, 1907. Seized by United States Shipping Board, 1917. Renamed Republic, 1920. Transferred to United States Lines, 1924. Scrapped as USAT Republic, 1952.
Konig Wilhelm II 1907 Seized by United States Shipping Board, 1917, and renamed USS Madawaska. Scrapped as USS U.S. Grant, 1948.
Ypiranga 1908 Surrendered to Britain, 1919. Transferred to Anchor Line and renamed Assyria, 1921. Sank en route to scrappers as Colonial, 1950.
Cleveland 1909

(1926)

Seized by United States Shipping Board, 1917, and renamed USS Mobile. Sailed as King Alexander for Byron Steamship Company and as Cleveland for United American Lines before being transferred back to HAPAG in merger with UAL, 1926. Scrapped 1933.
Cincinnati 1909 Seized by United States Shipping Board, 1917, and renamed USS Covington. Torpedoed and sunk 1918.
Grunewald 1912 Sold to Panama Railroad Steamship Company before 1914.
Wasgenwald / Grunewald 1912

(1926)

Sold to Kerr Steamship Company and renamed Shoshone, 1917. Later sailed as USS Shoshone for US Navy and Manoa for Canada Steamship Lines. Bought back by HAPAG and renamed Grunewald, 1926. Scrapped 1933.
Imperator 1913 Surrendered to US government, 1919. Transferred to Cunard Line and renamed Berengaria, 1921. Sold for scrap, 1938.
Bohemia 1913 Built 1902 as Iowa for White Diamond Steamship Company. Bought from Furness Withy, 1913. Seized by United States Shipping Board, 1917, and renamed Artemis. Transferred to British government and renamed Empire Bittern, 1941. Scuttled as blockship, 1944.
Königin Luise 1913 Sunk 1914
Vaterland 1914 Seized by United States Shipping Board, 1917, and renamed Leviathan. Operated by United States Lines. Sold for scrap, 1937.
Vogtland n/a

(launched 1916)

Launched 1916. Seized by British Government before she could enter service, 1919. Transferred to New Zealand Shipping Company and renamed Cambridge, 1919. Sunk 1940.
Rhineland / Friesland 1920 Launched as Rhineland and renamed Friesland during fitting out. Ceded to British government, 1920. Transferred to Federal Steamship Navigation Company and renamed Hertford, 1922. Torpedoed and sunk, 1942.
Bismarck n/a

(launched 1914)

Launched 1914. Surrendered to British government while incomplete. Handed over to White Star Line and renamed Majestic, 1922. Caught fire as HMS Caledonia, 1939, and subsequently scrapped.
Hagen 1921 Seized by South African Government, 1939. Transferred to UK and renamed Empire Success. Scuttled 1948.
Steigerwald 1921 Sold to Hamburg Süd and renamed Santa Fé, 1937. Sunk as Saint André, 1943.
Spreewald / Anubis 1922 Renamed Anubis, 1935. Reverted to Spreewald, 1940. Torpedoed and sunk in friendly fire incident, 1942.
Arcadia 1922 Sold to Kohlen-Import und Poseidon Schiffahrt and renamed Elbing, 1934. Wrecked as Francisco Morazan, 1960.
Ambria 1922 Sold to Deutsche Levant Linie, 1928. Scrapped as Malay, 1961.
Cattaro 1922 Sold to Bugsier Reederei & Bergungs AG, 1930, and renamed Finkenau. Wrecked as Frontier, 1957.
Thuringia / General San Martin 1922 Chartered by Hamburg Süd, 1934 before being sold outright to them, 1936. Scrapped as Empire Deben, 1955.
Albert Ballin / Hansa 1923 Renamed Hansa, 1935. Struck a mine and sank, 1945. Raised and refitted by Soviet Union as Sovetsky Soyuz around 1949. Scrapped as Tobolsk, 1982.
Deutschland 1924 Sunk by air attack, 1945. Wreck raised and scrapped, 1949.
Saarland 1924 Sold to Japanese Imperial Steamship Co., and renamed Teiyo Maru, 1940. Sunk 1943.
William O'Swald / Resolute 1926

(launched 1914)

Launched 1915 as HAPAG's William O'Swald. Sold incomplete to Koninklijke Rotterdamsche Lloyd and renamed Brabantia, 1916. Transferred to United American Lines and renamed Resolute, 1922. Re-acquired in merger with HAPAG, 1926. Sold to Italian Line and renamed Lombardia, 1935. Sunk by air raid, 1943, and subsequently scrapped.
Johann Heinrich Burchard / Reliance 1926

(launched 1915)

Launched 1915 as HAPAG's Johann Heinrich Burchard, then placed in lay-up. Sold to Koninklijke Hollandsche Lloyd and renamed Limburgia, 1916. Transferred to United American Lines and renamed Reliance, 1922. Re-acquired in merger with HAPAG, 1926. Damaged by fire, 1938, and subsequently scrapped.
Gera 1926 Launched 1923 for German Australian Line. Acquired by HAPAG, 1926. Seized by Britain and renamed Empire Indus. Sunk as Pan Ocean, 1958.
Hamburg 1926 Struck a mine and sunk, 1945. Raised by Soviets and converted to whaler Yuri Dolgoruki, 1950-1960. Scrapped 1977.
New York 1927 Sunk 1945.
Oceana 1927 Built 1913 as Sierra Salvada. Acquired from Società Servizi Marittimi by HAPAG, and renamed Oceana, 1927. Seized by British and renamed Empire Tarne, 1945. Scrapped as Sibir, 1963.
Kulmerland 1928 Scuttled 1944. Subsequently raised and scrapped.
Seattle 1928 Sunk 1940.
Palatia 1928 Sold to Soviet Union and renamed Khasan, 1940. Captured by Kriegsmarine and reverted to Palatia, 1941. Sunk by air attack, 1942.
Milwaukee 1929 Surrendered to Britain and renamed Empire Waveney, 1945. Caught fire, 1946, and subsequently scrapped.
St. Louis 1929 Damaged by air raid, 1944. Subsequently repaired and used as a hotel ship. Scrapped 1952.
Kurmark 1930 Requisitioned by Kriegsmarine and converted into auxiliary cruiser Orion. Sunk by air raid, 1945.
Neumark 1930 Requisitioned by Kriegsmarine and converted into auxiliary cruiser Widder. Wrecked as Fechenheim, 1955.
Potsdam n/a

(launched 1935)

Launched for HAPAG, 1935, before being sold to Norddeutscher Lloyd before completion. Scrapped as Pan-Islamic Steamship Company's Safina-E-Hujjaj, 1976.
Antilla 1939 Scuttled 1940.
Arauca 1939 Seized by United States Maritime Commission and contracted to South Atlantic Steamship Company as Sting, 1941. Delivered to US Navy and renamed Saturn, 1942. Scrapped 1972.
Orizaba 1939 Wrecked off Norway, 1940.
Vaterland n/a

(launched 1940)

Launched 1940, then laid up incomplete. Heavily damaged in air raid, 1943, and scrapped by 1948.
Cuxhaven 1943 Seized by United States, 1945. Sunk as Danish-flagged Inger Skou, 1952.
Millerntor 1943 Seized by British, 1945, and renamed Empire Lune. Scrapped as Sapho I, 1970.
Wilhelmshafen 1943 Seized by British, 1945, and renamed Empire Douglas. Scrapped as Korsun Shevtshenkovsky, 1972.
Homeland 1951 Built as Virginian, 1904. Chartered by HAPAG from Home Lines, 1951. Scrapped 1955.

See also

References

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2014-10-15.
  2. ^ a b c "Atlas Line Service - Hamburg-American Line - 1905 | GG Archives". www.gjenvick.com. GG Archives. Retrieved 2 June 2019.
  3. ^ "The Rescue by Rossmore". 26 May 1897.
  4. ^ "Daily Event for December 16".
  5. ^ "S/S Allemannia (3), Hamburg America Line". Norway-Heritage. Retrieved 21 May 2012.
  6. ^ . Hapag-Lloyd AG. Archived from the original on 1 August 2014.

External links

  • Fleet information (in German)
  • Historic photos of Hoboken and Hamburg America Line ports
  • Passenger Lists from the Hamburg-Amerika Linie GG Archives
  • Hamburg-Amerika Line ships This collection contains 16 photographs depicting ship interior and exterior views of Hamburg-Amerika Line's luxury passenger ships Augusta Victoria, Columbia and Normannia by Louis Koch, Bremen
  • Documents and clippings about Hamburg America Line in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
  • Hamburg-American Line History and Ephemera GG Archives

hamburg, america, line, confused, with, hamburg, atlantic, line, hamburg, amerikanische, packetfahrt, aktien, gesellschaft, hapag, known, english, transatlantic, shipping, enterprise, established, hamburg, 1847, among, those, involved, development, were, promi. Not to be confused with Hamburg Atlantic Line The Hamburg Amerikanische Packetfahrt Aktien Gesellschaft HAPAG known in English as the Hamburg America Line was a transatlantic shipping enterprise established in Hamburg in 1847 Among those involved in its development were prominent citizens such as Albert Ballin director general Adolph Godeffroy Ferdinand Laeisz Carl Woermann August Bolten and others and its main financial backers were Berenberg Bank and H J Merck amp Co It soon developed into the largest German and at times the world s largest shipping company serving the market created by German immigration to the United States and later immigration from Eastern Europe On 1 September 1970 after 123 years of independent existence HAPAG merged with the Bremen based North German Lloyd to form Hapag Lloyd AG Hamburg America LineHAPAG flagNative nameHamburg Amerikanische Paketfahrt Aktien GesellschaftIndustryshippingFounded1847FounderAlbert Ballin Director General Adolph Godeffroy Ferdinand Laeisz Carl Woermann and August BoltenDefunct1 September 1970FateMerged with Norddeutscher LloydSuccessorHapag LloydHeadquartersHamburg Germany Twin Screw Express Steamers 1899 ad 1899 ad in The Mail and Express New York City Contents 1 History 1 1 Ports served 1 2 Atlas Service 1 3 Notable journeys 2 First World War 3 Postwar reparations 3 1 Later years 4 Fleet List 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditPorts served Edit Postcard of the view from the water of the Hamburg American Steamship Lines docks in Hoboken New Jersey in about 1910 Postcard from the Hamburg American Line steamship Konig Friedrich August issued 1911 Advertisement for the Hamburg American Line 1930 In the early years the Hamburg America Line exclusively connected European ports with North American ports such as Hoboken New Jersey or New Orleans Louisiana With time however the company established lines to all continents The company built a large ocean liner terminal at Cuxhaven Germany in 1900 Connected directly to Hamburg by a dedicated railway line and station the HAPAG Terminal at Cuxhaven served as the major departure point for German and European immigrants to North America until 1969 when ocean liner travel ceased Today it serves as a museum and cruise ship terminal 1 Poster by Otto Arpke 1931 Atlas Service Edit The Atlas Service sailed from New York to Jamaica Haiti Colombia Central America 2 The service was described as a way to escape the rigors of Northern winters through taking a Caribbean cruise and was promoted to tourists 2 The ships Altai Sarnia Sibiria Alleghany Alene Adirondack Valdivia and Graecia provided this service in 1906 2 Notable journeys Edit In 1858 its liner Austria sank killing 449 people In 1891 the cruise of the Augusta Victoria in the Mediterranean and the Near East from 22 January to 22 March with 241 passengers including Albert Ballin and wife is often stated to have been the first passenger cruise Christian Wilhelm Allers published an illustrated account of it as Bakschisch In 1897 its steamer Arcadia was wrecked on the rocks off Newfoundland 3 In 1900 1901 and 1903 its liner Deutschland won the Blue Riband taking the prize from the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse In 1906 Prinzessin Victoria Luise ran aground off the coast of Jamaica No people died by the grounding however the ship s captain committed suicide after getting all the passengers safely off the ship 4 In 1912 its liner SS Amerika was the first ship to warn Titanic of icebergs HAPAG s general director Albert Ballin believed that safety size comfort and luxury would always win out over speed Thus he conceived the three largest liners yet to be built named Imperator Vaterland and Bismarck First World War EditThe Imperator and the Vaterland were briefly in service before the First World War In 1914 the Vaterland was caught in port at Hoboken New Jersey at the outbreak of World War I and interned by the United States She was seized renamed Leviathan after the declaration of war on Germany in 1917 and served for the duration and beyond as a troopship In 1917 its liner Allemannia was torpedoed by German submarine near Alicante two people were lost 5 Postwar reparations EditAfter the war the Vaterland Leviathan was retained by the Americans as war reparations In 1919 Vaterland s sister ships Imperator and the unfinished Bismarck were handed over to the allies as war reparations to Britain They were sold to the Cunard Line and White Star Line respectively and renamed Berengaria and Majestic A ship chain in Mountain Lakes New Jersey is identified by the historic society as belonging to either the Vaterland or Imperator It was acquired in 1921 likely during refurbishments and now lines a portion of the Boulevard In 1939 the HAPAG liner St Louis was unable to find a port in Cuba the United States or Canada willing to accept the more than 950 Jewish refugees on board and had to return to Europe On 9 April 1940 when German warships attacked Kristiansand Norway during Operation Weserubung the opening assault of the Norwegian Campaign the HAPAG freighter Seattle sailed into the crossfire between the warships and Norwegian coastal artillery She was holed and sunk and her crew briefly became prisoners of war Later years Edit The Hamburg America Line lost almost the entirety of its fleet twice as a result of World Wars I and II In 1970 the company merged with its longstanding rival Norddeutscher Lloyd of Bremen to establish the present day company Hapag Lloyd In the post war years HAPAG rebuilt its fleet and focused on cargo container transport In 1970 the container shipping companies HAPAG and North German Lloyd NGL merged into Hapag Lloyd AG to form one of the world s biggest container shipping companies In 2008 Hapag Lloyd was acquired by the City of Hamburg and a group of private investors the Albert Ballin Consortium 6 Fleet List EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2022 Name s Entered HAPAG service NotesAustria 1858 Caught fire and sank 1 September 1858 Teutonia 1858 Sold to Henry Flinn 1877 Scrapped 1894 as Mentana Silesia 1869 Sold 1887 Wrecked 1899 and subsequently scrapped Suevia 1874 Sold to Schiaffino Nyer amp Siges and renamed Quatre Amis 1896 Scrapped 1898 Augusta Victoria 1889 Rebuilt 1897 Sold to Imperial Russian Navy 1904 and converted into auxiliary cruiser Kuban Scrapped 1907Columbia 1889 1899 Sold to Spanish Navy 1898 and converted to auxiliary cruiser Rapido Sold back to HAPAG and reverted to Columbia 1899 Sold to Imperial Russian Navy as auxiliary cruiser Terek 1904 Scrapped 1907 Scandia 1889 Sold to US Army Quartermaster Department 1898 and renamed USAT Warren Scrapped 1929 Normannia 1890 Sold to Spanish Navy 1898 and renamed Patriota Scrapped as Compagnie Generale Transatlantique s L Aquitaine 1906 Furst Bismarck 1891 Sold to Imperial Russian Navy 1904 and converted into auxiliary cruiser Don Scrapped as Regia Marina s San Giusto 1924Georgia 1891 Sold to Housatonic Steamship Corporation and renamed Housatonic 1915 Torpedoed and sunk 1917 Stubbenhuk Sicilia 1892 Built 1890 for Hansa Line Acquired by HAPAG during merger with Hansa Renamed Sicilia 1894 Sold to Shinyei Kisen Goshi Kaisha and renamed Komagata Maru 1913 Wrecked as Kabafuto Kisen KK s Heian Maru 1926 Persia 1894 Sold to British Transport Company and renamed Minnewaska 1897 Scrapped as USAT Thomas 1929 Ceres Suevia 1896 Renamed Suevia 1898 Seized by United States Shipping Board 1917 and renamed Wachusett Scrapped 1924 Valdivia 1896 Built 1886 as Tijuca for Hamburg Sud Bought by HAPAG and renamed Valdivia 1896 Sold to Peter R Hinsch of Hamburg and renamed Tom G Corpi Scrapped as Flandre 1927 Pennsylvania 1897 Seized by United States Shipping Board 1917 and renamed Nansemond Scrapped 1924 Arcadia 1897 Seized by United States Shipping Board 1917 Sold to California Steamship Company 1923 Scrapped 1927Pretoria 1898 Surrendered to US government 1919 then transferred to British government Scrapped 1921 Bulgaria 1898 1913 Sold to Unione Austriaca di Navigazione and renamed Canada 1913 Returned to HAPAG and reverted to Bulgaria later that same year Seized by United States Shipping Board 1917 and renamed USAT Hercules and later USAT Philippines Scrapped 1924 Titania 1898 Built 1879 for Adamson amp Ronaldson as Mercedes Bought by HAPAG from Hamburg Pacific Dampfschiffs Linie Sold 1898 Sunk as USS Marcellus 1910 Sibiria 1898 Built as Hertha for Kingsin Line 1894 Sold to HAPAG 1898 Sold to Atlantic Fruit Company 1915 Wrecked 1916 Graf Waldersee 1899 Laid down as Pavia but renamed Graf Waldersee during construction Surrendered to US government 1919 Transferred to Britain later that year and scrapped 1922 Patricia 1899 Surrendered to US government 1919 Transferred to Britain later that year and scrapped 1921 Hamburg 1899 Chartered by American Red Cross and renamed Red Cross 1914 Seized by United States Shipping Board 1917 and later renamed Powhatan Scrapped as Dollar Line s President Fillmore 1928 Saxonia 1899 Seized by United States Shipping Board 1917 and renamed Savannah Scrapped as Orbis 1954 Kaiser Friedrich 1899 Built 1898 for North German Lloyd Chartered by HAPAG 1899 Bought by Compagnie de Navigation Sud Atlantique 1912 Sunk 1916 Deutschland Viktoria Luise Hansa 1900 Renamed Viktoria Luise 1910 Rebuilt and renamed Hansa 1921 Scrapped 1925 Kiautschou 1900 Traded to North German Lloyd 1904 Caught fire as LASSCO s City of Honolulu 1930 and subsequently scrapped Abessinia 1900 Seized during World War I Wrecked 1921 Prinzessin Victoria Luise 1901 Struck reef 1906 and subsequently sank Athen 1901 Built 1893 for A C de Freitas amp Co Sold to HAPAG 1901 Sold to Gatjens amp Jarke 1903 Sunk 1906 Arabia 1901 Launched as Liddesdale for Mackil R amp Co 1901 Purchased by HAPAG during construction Seized by the British 1919 Wrecked as Andrios 1926 Moltke 1902 Seized by Italian government 1915 Transferred to Lloyd Sabaudo and renamed Pesaro 1919 Scrapped 1925 Prinz Eitel Friedrich 1902 Seized by United States Shipping Board 1917 and renamed Otsego Hulked or scrapped as Far Eastern Steamship Company s Dolinsk 1955 Blucher 1902 Seized by Brazilian government 1917 and renamed Leopoldina Sold to Compagnie Generale Transatlantique and renamed Suffren 1923 Scrapped 1929 Prinz Waldemar 1902 Struck reef and sank 1907 Prinz Sigismund 1903 Seized by United States Shipping Board 1917 and renamed General W C Gorgas Scrapped as Mikhail Lomonosov 1958 Prinz Adalbert 1903 Seized by Britain 1914 and used as accommodation ship Prince and later Princetown Torpedoed and sunk as Compagnie de Navigation Sud Atlantique s Alesia 1917 Prinz Joachim 1903 Seized by United States Shipping Board 1917 and renamed Moccasin Odenwald 1904 Seized by United States Shipping Board 1917 and renamed Newport News Scrapped 1925 Rhaetia 1905 Seized by United States Shipping Board 1917 and renamed Black Hawk and later Black Arrow Scrapped 1924 Furst Bismarck Friedrichsruh 1905 Renamed Friedrichsruh 1914 Surrendered to Britain 1919 Sailed under French flag as Amboise Scrapped 1935 Karlsruhe 1905 Sold to Ernst Russ Reederei 1935 Sunk by air attack 1945 Prasident 1905 Seized by United States Shipping Board 1917 and renamed USS Kittery Scrapped 1933Amerika 1905 Seized by United States Shipping Board 1917 and subsequently renamed America then ceded to United States Mail Steamship Company and later United States Lines Scrapped as USAT Edmund B Alexander 1957 Kronprinzessin Cecilie 1906 Seized by British government 1915 and renamed HMS Princess Paid off 1917 Kaiserin Auguste Victoria 1906 Surrendered to Britain 1919 Ceded to Canadian Pacific Steamship Company and renamed Empress of Scotland 1921 Scrapped 1930 Pisa 1907 Chartered 1903 Built 1896 for Sloman Line Chartered from Sloman in 1903 before being bought outright by HAPAG in 1907 Seized by United States Shipping Board 1917 and renamed Ascutney Scrapped 1924 President Lincoln 1907 Seized by United States Shipping Board 1917 Torpedoed and sunk 1918 President Grant 1907 Built 1903 as Servian for Wilson amp Furness Leyland Line Purchased by HAPAG 1907 Seized by United States Shipping Board 1917 Renamed Republic 1920 Transferred to United States Lines 1924 Scrapped as USAT Republic 1952 Konig Wilhelm II 1907 Seized by United States Shipping Board 1917 and renamed USS Madawaska Scrapped as USS U S Grant 1948 Ypiranga 1908 Surrendered to Britain 1919 Transferred to Anchor Line and renamed Assyria 1921 Sank en route to scrappers as Colonial 1950 Cleveland 1909 1926 Seized by United States Shipping Board 1917 and renamed USS Mobile Sailed as King Alexander for Byron Steamship Company and as Cleveland for United American Lines before being transferred back to HAPAG in merger with UAL 1926 Scrapped 1933 Cincinnati 1909 Seized by United States Shipping Board 1917 and renamed USS Covington Torpedoed and sunk 1918 Grunewald 1912 Sold to Panama Railroad Steamship Company before 1914 Wasgenwald Grunewald 1912 1926 Sold to Kerr Steamship Company and renamed Shoshone 1917 Later sailed as USS Shoshone for US Navy and Manoa for Canada Steamship Lines Bought back by HAPAG and renamed Grunewald 1926 Scrapped 1933 Imperator 1913 Surrendered to US government 1919 Transferred to Cunard Line and renamed Berengaria 1921 Sold for scrap 1938 Bohemia 1913 Built 1902 as Iowa for White Diamond Steamship Company Bought from Furness Withy 1913 Seized by United States Shipping Board 1917 and renamed Artemis Transferred to British government and renamed Empire Bittern 1941 Scuttled as blockship 1944 Konigin Luise 1913 Sunk 1914Vaterland 1914 Seized by United States Shipping Board 1917 and renamed Leviathan Operated by United States Lines Sold for scrap 1937 Vogtland n a launched 1916 Launched 1916 Seized by British Government before she could enter service 1919 Transferred to New Zealand Shipping Company and renamed Cambridge 1919 Sunk 1940 Rhineland Friesland 1920 Launched as Rhineland and renamed Friesland during fitting out Ceded to British government 1920 Transferred to Federal Steamship Navigation Company and renamed Hertford 1922 Torpedoed and sunk 1942 Bismarck n a launched 1914 Launched 1914 Surrendered to British government while incomplete Handed over to White Star Line and renamed Majestic 1922 Caught fire as HMS Caledonia 1939 and subsequently scrapped Hagen 1921 Seized by South African Government 1939 Transferred to UK and renamed Empire Success Scuttled 1948 Steigerwald 1921 Sold to Hamburg Sud and renamed Santa Fe 1937 Sunk as Saint Andre 1943 Spreewald Anubis 1922 Renamed Anubis 1935 Reverted to Spreewald 1940 Torpedoed and sunk in friendly fire incident 1942 Arcadia 1922 Sold to Kohlen Import und Poseidon Schiffahrt and renamed Elbing 1934 Wrecked as Francisco Morazan 1960 Ambria 1922 Sold to Deutsche Levant Linie 1928 Scrapped as Malay 1961 Cattaro 1922 Sold to Bugsier Reederei amp Bergungs AG 1930 and renamed Finkenau Wrecked as Frontier 1957 Thuringia General San Martin 1922 Chartered by Hamburg Sud 1934 before being sold outright to them 1936 Scrapped as Empire Deben 1955 Albert Ballin Hansa 1923 Renamed Hansa 1935 Struck a mine and sank 1945 Raised and refitted by Soviet Union as Sovetsky Soyuz around 1949 Scrapped as Tobolsk 1982 Deutschland 1924 Sunk by air attack 1945 Wreck raised and scrapped 1949 Saarland 1924 Sold to Japanese Imperial Steamship Co and renamed Teiyo Maru 1940 Sunk 1943 William O Swald Resolute 1926 launched 1914 Launched 1915 as HAPAG s William O Swald Sold incomplete to Koninklijke Rotterdamsche Lloyd and renamed Brabantia 1916 Transferred to United American Lines and renamed Resolute 1922 Re acquired in merger with HAPAG 1926 Sold to Italian Line and renamed Lombardia 1935 Sunk by air raid 1943 and subsequently scrapped Johann Heinrich Burchard Reliance 1926 launched 1915 Launched 1915 as HAPAG s Johann Heinrich Burchard then placed in lay up Sold to Koninklijke Hollandsche Lloyd and renamed Limburgia 1916 Transferred to United American Lines and renamed Reliance 1922 Re acquired in merger with HAPAG 1926 Damaged by fire 1938 and subsequently scrapped Gera 1926 Launched 1923 for German Australian Line Acquired by HAPAG 1926 Seized by Britain and renamed Empire Indus Sunk as Pan Ocean 1958 Hamburg 1926 Struck a mine and sunk 1945 Raised by Soviets and converted to whaler Yuri Dolgoruki 1950 1960 Scrapped 1977 New York 1927 Sunk 1945 Oceana 1927 Built 1913 as Sierra Salvada Acquired from Societa Servizi Marittimi by HAPAG and renamed Oceana 1927 Seized by British and renamed Empire Tarne 1945 Scrapped as Sibir 1963 Kulmerland 1928 Scuttled 1944 Subsequently raised and scrapped Seattle 1928 Sunk 1940 Palatia 1928 Sold to Soviet Union and renamed Khasan 1940 Captured by Kriegsmarine and reverted to Palatia 1941 Sunk by air attack 1942 Milwaukee 1929 Surrendered to Britain and renamed Empire Waveney 1945 Caught fire 1946 and subsequently scrapped St Louis 1929 Damaged by air raid 1944 Subsequently repaired and used as a hotel ship Scrapped 1952 Kurmark 1930 Requisitioned by Kriegsmarine and converted into auxiliary cruiser Orion Sunk by air raid 1945 Neumark 1930 Requisitioned by Kriegsmarine and converted into auxiliary cruiser Widder Wrecked as Fechenheim 1955 Potsdam n a launched 1935 Launched for HAPAG 1935 before being sold to Norddeutscher Lloyd before completion Scrapped as Pan Islamic Steamship Company s Safina E Hujjaj 1976 Antilla 1939 Scuttled 1940 Arauca 1939 Seized by United States Maritime Commission and contracted to South Atlantic Steamship Company as Sting 1941 Delivered to US Navy and renamed Saturn 1942 Scrapped 1972 Orizaba 1939 Wrecked off Norway 1940 Vaterland n a launched 1940 Launched 1940 then laid up incomplete Heavily damaged in air raid 1943 and scrapped by 1948 Cuxhaven 1943 Seized by United States 1945 Sunk as Danish flagged Inger Skou 1952 Millerntor 1943 Seized by British 1945 and renamed Empire Lune Scrapped as Sapho I 1970 Wilhelmshafen 1943 Seized by British 1945 and renamed Empire Douglas Scrapped as Korsun Shevtshenkovsky 1972 Homeland 1951 Built as Virginian 1904 Chartered by HAPAG from Home Lines 1951 Scrapped 1955 See also EditHolland America Line Norwegian America Line Scandinavian America Line Swedish American Line SS Cleveland SS Hertford SS Imperator USS President LincolnReferences Edit Hapag Halle Museum Cuxhaven Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2014 10 15 a b c Atlas Line Service Hamburg American Line 1905 GG Archives www gjenvick com GG Archives Retrieved 2 June 2019 The Rescue by Rossmore 26 May 1897 Daily Event for December 16 S S Allemannia 3 Hamburg America Line Norway Heritage Retrieved 21 May 2012 About Us Hapag Lloyd AG Archived from the original on 1 August 2014 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hamburg Amerikanische Packetfahrt Actien Gesellschaft Fleet information in German The history of the Hamburg America Line Historic photos of Hoboken and Hamburg America Line ports Passenger Lists from the Hamburg Amerika Linie GG Archives Hamburg Amerika Line ships This collection contains 16 photographs depicting ship interior and exterior views of Hamburg Amerika Line s luxury passenger ships Augusta Victoria Columbia and Normannia by Louis Koch Bremen Documents and clippings about Hamburg America Line in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Hamburg American Line History and Ephemera GG Archives Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hamburg America Line amp oldid 1146859778, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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