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RMS Empress of Britain (1930)

RMS Empress of Britain was a steam turbine ocean liner built between 1928 and 1931 by John Brown shipyard in Scotland, owned by the Canadian Pacific Railway Company and operated by Canadian Pacific Steamship Company. She was the second of three Canadian Pacific ships named Empress of Britain,[1] which provided scheduled trans-Atlantic passenger service from spring to autumn between Canada and Europe from 1931 until 1939.

Empress of Britain in 1931
History
United Kingdom
NameEmpress of Britain
OwnerCanadian Pacific Railway Co
Operator Canadian Pacific SS Ltd
Port of registry London
RouteSouthamptonQuebec (Cruising in winter)
BuilderJohn Brown & Company, Clydebank
Yard number530
Laid down28 November 1928
Launched11 June 1930
Completed5 April 1931
In service27 May 1931
Identification
FateSunk by torpedo by U-32, 28 October 1940.
General characteristics
TypeOcean liner
Tonnage
Length760 ft 6 in (231.80 m) overall
Beam97.8 ft (29.8 m)
Draught32 ft 8+14 in (10.0 m)
Installed power
Propulsion
Speed24 kn (44 km/h; 28 mph)
Capacity465 1st class, 260 tourist class, 470 3rd class (700 one class when cruising)
Crew740

In her time Empress of Britain was the largest, fastest and most luxurious ship between the United Kingdom and Canada, and the largest ship in the Canadian Pacific fleet. She was torpedoed on 28 October 1940 by U-32 and sank. At 42,348 GRT she was the largest liner lost in the Second World War and the largest ship sunk by a U-boat.[2]

Design and building

 
Side elevation plans of Empress of Britain
 
First Class lounge in 1931

Work began on Empress of Britain on 28 November 1928 when the plates of her keel were laid at John Brown & Co, Clydebank, Scotland.[3] She was launched on 11 June 1930 by the Prince of Wales. This was the first time that launching ceremonies in Britain were broadcast by radio to Canada and the United States.[4]

The ship had nine water-tube boilers with a combined heating surface of 106,393 sq ft (9,884.2 m2).[5] Eight were Yarrow boilers, but as an experiment she was also the first to be fitted with a Johnson boiler.[6] Her boilers supplied steam at 425 lbf/in2 to 12 steam turbines, which drove her four propeller shafts by single reduction gearing and developed a combined power output of 12,753 NHP.[5]

Empress of Britain's UK official number was 162582. Until 1933 her code letters were LHCB.[5] Her call sign was GMBJ.[7]

The ship began sea trials on 11 April 1931 where she recorded 25.5 kn (47.2 km/h), and left Southampton on her maiden voyage to Quebec on 27 May 1931.[8]

As the ship would sail a more northerly trans-Atlantic route where there was sometimes ice in the waters off Newfoundland, Empress of Britain was ordered with outer steel plating double the thickness at the stem and for 150 ft (46 m) back at either side, up to the waterline.[3] Her sea trials showed her to be "the world's most economical steamship for fuel consumption per horsepower-hour for her day."[9]

Her primary role was to entice passengers between England and Quebec instead of the more popular SouthamptonNew York route. The ship was designed to carry 1,195 passengers (465 first class, 260 tourist class and 470 third class).[4]

She was the first passenger liner designed specifically to become a cruise ship in winter when the St. Lawrence River was frozen.[10] Empress of Britain was annually converted into an all-first-class, luxury cruise ship, carrying 700 passengers.[11]

For the latter role her size was kept small enough to use the Panama and Suez canals, though at 760.8 ft (231.9 m) and 42,348 GRT, she was still large. When passing through Panama, there were only 7.5 in (190 mm) between the ship and the canal lock wall.[12] She was powered by 12 steam turbines driving four propellers: the two inboard took two-thirds of the power, the outboard one-third.[9] For cruising two engines were shut down and the two outboard propellers removed since speed was less important on a cruise. With four propellers, her speed during trials was 25.271 kn (46.802 km/h), although her service speed was claimed to be 24 kn (44 km/h),[13][14] making her the fastest ship from England to Canada. Running on inner propellers, her speed was measured during trials at 22.595 kn (41.846 km/h).[15] The efficiency of this arrangement became clear in service – in transatlantic service, she consumed 356 tons of oil a day, while on her 1932 cruise, consumption fell to 179.[16]

To serve as a beacon at night during emergencies her three funnels were illuminated by powerful floodlights. From the air the funnels could be spotted 50 miles away and ships could see the illuminated funnels at 30 miles distance.[17]

Peacetime commercial service

After sea trials, the ship headed for Southampton to prepare for her maiden voyage to Quebec City. Canadian Pacific posters proclaimed the ship the "Five Day Atlantic Giantess", "Canada's Challenger" and "The World's Wondership".[18]

The night before her maiden voyage, the Prince of Wales decided to go to Southampton to bid bon voyage. His inspection of the ship caused a short delay but at 1:12pm on Wednesday, 27 May 1931 Empress of Britain left Southampton for Quebec.[19] Once at sea, the Toronto newspaper The Globe ran an editorial on what the ship meant to Canadians.

“Canadian enterprise has issued a new challenge in the world of shipping by the completion and sailing of the Empress of Britain from England for Quebec. This giant Canadian Pacific liner of 42,500 tons sets a new standard for the Canadian route. Its luxurious equipment includes one entire deck for sport and recreation, another for public rooms, including a ballroom, with decorations by world-famous artists. There are apartments instead of cabins, and each is equipped with a radio receiving set for the entertainment of passengers. . . . In the later years of the last century, … there was long agitation for a ‘fast Atlantic service’. Time has brought the answer. Despite the current depression, Canada has a new ship which will reach far for traffic during the St. Lawrence season, and when winter comes will go on world cruises, carrying passengers who will ask and receive almost the last word in comfort and luxury in ocean travel. The first journey of the new Empress is a historic event in the record of Canadian advancement.”[20]

 
Advertisement for Empress of Britain's 1931–32 "World Cruise"

Empress of Britain made nine round-trips in 1931 between Southampton and Quebec, carrying 4,891 passengers westbound and 4,696 eastbound. To begin her winter cruise, she made a westbound trans-Atlantic trip to New York, carrying 378. On 3 December 1931, she sailed on a 128-day round-the-world cruise,[21] to the Mediterranean, North Africa and the Holy Land, through the Suez Canal and into the Red Sea, then to India, Ceylon, Southeast Asia and the Dutch East Indies, on to China, Hong Kong and Japan, then across the Pacific to Hawaii and California before traversing the Panama Canal back to New York.[22] The ship then made a one-way Atlantic crossing from New York to Southampton, where she entered dry dock for maintenance and reinstallation of her outer propellers. Until 1939, this schedule was duplicated with minor adjustments each year except 1933.[4]

 
Empress of Britain entering drydock in Southampton after colliding with a cargo boat, 20 July 1935. RMS Olympic is seen laid up on the left.
 
1933 poster by Kenneth Shoesmith

Her captain from 1934 to 1937 was Ronald Niel Stuart, VC, a First World War veteran entitled to fly the Blue Ensign.

Canadian Pacific hoped to convince Midwesterners from Canada and the United States to travel by train to Quebec City as opposed to New York City. This gave an extra day and a half of smooth sailing in the shorter, sheltered St Lawrence River transatlantic route, which Canadian Pacific advertised as "39 per cent less ocean".[23] While initially successful, the novelty wore off, and Empress of Britain proved to be one of the least profitable liners from the 1930s.[4]

Captain WG Busk-Wood was Master of Empress of Britain when the ship visited Sydney from 2–4 April, and Melbourne on 6 April 1938. She was the largest liner to have visited Australia. A crowd of 250,000 turned out to welcome the liner in Melbourne and the event was reported in The Argus newspaper Thursday 7 April 1938.

In June 1939 Empress of Britain sailed from Halifax to Conception Bay, St Johns, Newfoundland and then eastbound to Southampton with her smallest passenger list. 40 passengers were on board: King George VI, Queen Elizabeth and 13 ladies and lords in waiting, 22 household staff, plus a photographer and two reporters.[24] The royal couple and their entourage were comfortably settled in a string of suites.[4] After this voyage, Empress of Britain returned to regular transatlantic service, but through summer 1939, war loomed.

On 2 September 1939, one day before the United Kingdom declared war (seven days before Canada entered the war), Empress of Britain sailed on her last voyage for Canadian Pacific, with the largest passenger list in her history. Filled beyond capacity, and with temporary berths in the squash court and other spaces, Empress of Britain zig-zagged across the Atlantic, arriving in Quebec on 8 September 1939.[25]

War service

 
Empress of Britain arriving at Greenock with Canadian troops aboard. (HMS Hood is visible in the background.)

Upon arrival, the ship was repainted grey and then laid up awaiting orders. On 25 November 1939, Empress of Britain was requisitioned as a troop transport. First, she did four transatlantic trips taking troops from Canada to England. Then she was sent to Wellington, New Zealand, returning to Scotland in June 1940 as part of the "million dollar convoy" of seven luxury liners — Andes, Aquitania, Empress of Britain, Empress of Canada, Empress of Japan, Mauretania and Queen Mary.[26]

In August 1940 Empress of Britain transported troops to Suez via Cape Town, returning with 224 military personnel and civilians, plus a crew of 419.[27]

Sinking

 
"Attack on the transport Empress of Britain 42,000 Gross Register Tons. Front Line Intelligence Newssheet of the Luftwaffe No. 26, Sheet 213."

At around 9:20 am on 26 October 1940, travelling about 70 miles northwest of Ireland along the west coast, Empress of Britain was spotted by a German Focke-Wulf Fw 200C Condor long-range bomber, commanded by Oberleutnant Bernhard Jope. Jope's bomber strafed Empress of Britain three times and struck her twice with 250 kg (550 lb) bombs.

Only after Jope returned to base in northern France was it discovered which ship he had attacked. A telex was sent to German Supreme Headquarters. Realising the significance, a reconnaissance plane went to verify; and the German news agency reported that Empress of Britain had been sunk:

"The Empress of Britain was successfully attacked by German bombers on Saturday morning within the waters of Northern Ireland. The ship was badly hit and began to sink at once. The crew took to their boats."

Despite the ferocity of Jope's attack and the fires, there were few casualties. Bombs started a fire that began to overwhelm the ship. At 9:50 am, Captain Sapworth gave the order to abandon ship. The fire was concentrated in the midsection, causing passengers to head for the bow and stern, and hampering launching of the lifeboats. Most of the 416 crew, 2 gunners, and 205 passengers were picked up by the destroyers HMS Echo and ORP Burza, and the anti-submarine trawler HMS Cape Arcona. A skeleton crew remained aboard.

The fire left the ship unable to move under her own power, but she was not sinking and the hull appeared intact despite a slight list. At 9:30 am on 27 October, a party from HMS Broke went on board and attached tow ropes. The oceangoing tugs HMS Marauder and HMS Thames had arrived and took the hulk under tow. Escorted by Broke and HMS Sardonyx, and with cover from Short Sunderland flying boats during daylight, the salvage convoy made for land at 4 kn (7.4 km/h).

The German submarine U-32, commanded by Hans Jenisch, had been told and headed in that direction. He had to dive due to the flying boats, but that night, using hydrophones (passive sonar), located the ships and closed in on them. The destroyers were zigzagging in escort; U-32 placed herself between them and Empress of Britain, from where she fired two torpedoes. The first detonated prematurely; the second, however, hit, causing a massive explosion. Crews of the destroyers speculated this was caused by the fires aboard the liner reaching her fuel tanks. Jenisch manoeuvred U-32 and fired a third torpedo, which hit the ship just aft of the earlier one. The ship began to fill with water and list heavily.

The tugs slipped the tow lines and at 2:05 am on 28 October, Empress of Britain sank northwest of Bloody Foreland, County Donegal, Ireland at 55°16′N 09°50′W / 55.267°N 9.833°W / 55.267; -9.833.[28]

Gold and salvage

It was suspected that she had been carrying gold. The British Empire was shipping gold to North America to improve its credit and pay its debt (bills for supplies). South Africa was a gold producer, and Empress of Britain had recently berthed in Cape Town. Most of the consignments of gold were transported from Cape Town to Sydney, Australia, and from there to America; there were not enough suitable ships and the gold was frequently held up in Sydney. It is possible that, as a result of this delay, Empress of Britain was taking gold from Cape Town to England, from where it could be moved across the Atlantic.[29]

On 8 January 1949, the Daily Mail reported that a salvage attempt was to be made in the summer of that year. There were no follow-ups, and the story contained errors. In 1985, a potential salvager received a letter from the Department of Transport Shipping Policy Unit saying the gold on board had been recovered.[30]

In 1995, salvagers found the Empress of Britain upside-down in 500 ft (150 m) of water. Using saturation diving, they found that the fire had destroyed most of the decks, leaving a largely empty shell rising from the sea floor. The bullion room, however, was still intact. Inside was a skeleton but no gold. It is suspected the gold was unloaded when the Empress of Britain was on fire and its passengers evacuated. The body inside the bullion room may have been that of someone involved in salvage.[31]

In popular culture

In 1990, Robert Seamer wrote The Floating Inferno: The Story of the Loss of the Empress of Britain. He was on the ship when she was torpedoed and sunk. The 1989 novel The White Empress by Lyn Andrews is set on board Empress of Britain. The 2018 novel Empress by Brian McPhee was inspired by the ship, and features a fictionalised account of the skeleton in the bullion room. The 1993 novel 'Closed Circle' by Robert Goddard partly takes place on board 'Empress of Britain'.[32]

See also

References

  1. ^ The first RMS Empress of Britain (1906) and the third Empress of Britain (1955) were also built for Canadian Pacific.
  2. ^ Steamer, Robert. (1990). The Floating Inferno: The Story of the Loss of the Empress of Britain, (abstract); sunk by U-boat
  3. ^ a b Turner, Gordon. (1992). Empress of Britain, p. 15.
  4. ^ a b c d e Miller, William H (1981). The Great Luxury Liners, 1927-1954, p. 41
  5. ^ a b c "Steamers & Motorships". Lloyd's Register of Shipping (PDF). Vol. II. London: Lloyd's Register of Shipping. 1931. EMP. Retrieved 15 October 2020 – via Southampton City Council.
  6. ^ Smith, Edgar C (2013) [1937]. A Short History of Naval and Marine Engineering. pp. 313–315. ISBN 978-1107672932.
  7. ^ Mercantile Navy List. London. 1933. p. 175. Retrieved 24 July 2022.
  8. ^ Musk, George. (1981). Canadian Pacific: The Story of the Famous Shipping Line, pp. 184–186.
  9. ^ a b Musk, p. 186.
  10. ^ Coleman, Terry. (1977). The Liners: A History of the North Atlantic Crossing, p. 139.
  11. ^ Miller, William H. (1985). The Fabulous Interiors of the Great Ocean Liners in Historic Photographs, p. 72.
  12. ^ Musk, p. 187.
  13. ^ Harnack, Edwin P (1938) [1903]. All About Ships & Shipping (7th ed.). London: Faber and Faber. p. 380.
  14. ^ Talbot-Booth, EC (1936). Ships and the Sea (Third ed.). London: Sampson Low, Marston & Co Ltd. p. 380.
  15. ^ Turner, p. 49.
  16. ^ Turner, p. 95.
  17. ^ "Funnels on Ship Illuminated as Beacon for Planes" Popular Mechanics, July 1931
  18. ^ Choco, Mark H. et al. (1988). Canadian Pacific Posters, pp. 44, 46–47.
  19. ^ Turner, p. 53.
  20. ^ "Canada's New Empress," The Globe (Toronto). 28 May 1931, page 4.
  21. ^ Turner, pp. 193-194.
  22. ^ McAuley, Rob et al. (1997). The Liners: A Voyage of Discovery, p. 76.
  23. ^ Musk, p. 184.
  24. ^ Turner, p. 175.
  25. ^ Musk, p. 190; Turner, pp. 175–177.
  26. ^ Musk, p. 140.
  27. ^ Turner, pp. 175–183.
  28. ^ Naval Museum of Manitoba:
  29. ^ Pickford, pp. 119–120
  30. ^ Pickford, p. 120
  31. ^ Pickford, p. 111
  32. ^ Bantam Press 1993

Further reading

  • Choco, Mark H, and Jones, David L. (1988). Canadian Pacific Posters, 1883-1963. Montreal: Meridian Press. ISBN 978-2-920417-37-3
  • Coleman, Terry. (1977). The Liners: A History of the North Atlantic Crossing. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons.] ISBN 978-0-399-11958-3; OCLC 3423273
  • Harvey, Clive. (2004). RMS Empress Of Britain: Britain's Finest Liner. Stroud (England): Tempus Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7524-3169-7; OCLC 56462669
  • McAuley, Rob and Miller, William. (1997). The Liners: A Voyage of Discovery. Osceola, Wisconsin: Motorbooks International Publishers & Wholesalers. ISBN 978-0-7603-0465-5; OCLC 38144342
  • Miller, William H. (1985). The Fabulous Interiors of the Great Ocean Liners in Historic Photographs.. New York: Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-24756-4; OCLC 10697284
  • __________. (1981). The Great Luxury Liners, 1927–1954: a Photographic Record. New York: Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-24056-5; OCLC 59207408
  • Mitchell, WH and Sawyer, LA. (1967) Cruising Ships New York: Doubleday
  • Musk, George. (1981). Canadian Pacific: The Story of the Famous Shipping Line. Newton Abbot: David & Charles. ISBN 978-0-7153-7968-4
  • Pickford, Nigel. (1999). Lost Treasure Ships of the Twentieth Century, Washington, D.C.: National Geographic. ISBN 978-0-7922-7472-8; OCLC 40964695
  • Seamer, Robert. (1990). The Floating Inferno: The Story of the Loss of the Empress of Britain. Wellingborough: Stephens. ISBN 978-1-85260-324-3; OCLC 59892514
  • Turner, Gordon. (1992). Empress of Britain: Canadian Pacific's Greatest Ship. Toronto: Stoddart. ISBN 978-1-55046-052-0.
  • Watson-Smyth, Kate. "Salvage team dives for £1bn wartime treasure," The Independent (London). 9 November 1998.

External links

  • www.oceanlinermuseum.co.uk: History of RMS Empress of Britain
  • IWM Interview with survivor Bertram Fryer

Coordinates: 55°16′N 9°50′W / 55.267°N 9.833°W / 55.267; -9.833

empress, britain, 1930, other, ships, with, same, name, empress, britain, empress, britain, steam, turbine, ocean, liner, built, between, 1928, 1931, john, brown, shipyard, scotland, owned, canadian, pacific, railway, company, operated, canadian, pacific, stea. For other ships with the same name see Empress of Britain RMS Empress of Britain was a steam turbine ocean liner built between 1928 and 1931 by John Brown shipyard in Scotland owned by the Canadian Pacific Railway Company and operated by Canadian Pacific Steamship Company She was the second of three Canadian Pacific ships named Empress of Britain 1 which provided scheduled trans Atlantic passenger service from spring to autumn between Canada and Europe from 1931 until 1939 Empress of Britain in 1931HistoryUnited KingdomNameEmpress of BritainOwnerCanadian Pacific Railway CoOperatorCanadian Pacific SS LtdPort of registryLondonRouteSouthampton Quebec Cruising in winter BuilderJohn Brown amp Company ClydebankYard number530Laid down28 November 1928Launched11 June 1930Completed5 April 1931In service27 May 1931IdentificationUK official number 162582 Code letters KLMF until 1933 Call sign GMBJ 1930 onward FateSunk by torpedo by U 32 28 October 1940 General characteristicsTypeOcean linerTonnage42 348 gross register tons GRT 22 545 net register tons NRT as built 22 385 NRT by 1939 Length760 ft 6 in 231 80 m overallBeam97 8 ft 29 8 m Draught32 ft 8 1 4 in 10 0 m Installed power12 753 NHP 62 500 shpPropulsion8 Yarrow amp 1 Johnson boiler 12 Parsons steam turbines single reduction geared four propellersSpeed24 kn 44 km h 28 mph Capacity465 1st class 260 tourist class 470 3rd class 700 one class when cruising Crew740In her time Empress of Britain was the largest fastest and most luxurious ship between the United Kingdom and Canada and the largest ship in the Canadian Pacific fleet She was torpedoed on 28 October 1940 by U 32 and sank At 42 348 GRT she was the largest liner lost in the Second World War and the largest ship sunk by a U boat 2 Contents 1 Design and building 2 Peacetime commercial service 3 War service 3 1 Sinking 4 Gold and salvage 5 In popular culture 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksDesign and building Edit Side elevation plans of Empress of Britain First Class lounge in 1931 Work began on Empress of Britain on 28 November 1928 when the plates of her keel were laid at John Brown amp Co Clydebank Scotland 3 She was launched on 11 June 1930 by the Prince of Wales This was the first time that launching ceremonies in Britain were broadcast by radio to Canada and the United States 4 The ship had nine water tube boilers with a combined heating surface of 106 393 sq ft 9 884 2 m2 5 Eight were Yarrow boilers but as an experiment she was also the first to be fitted with a Johnson boiler 6 Her boilers supplied steam at 425 lbf in2 to 12 steam turbines which drove her four propeller shafts by single reduction gearing and developed a combined power output of 12 753 NHP 5 Empress of Britain s UK official number was 162582 Until 1933 her code letters were LHCB 5 Her call sign was GMBJ 7 The ship began sea trials on 11 April 1931 where she recorded 25 5 kn 47 2 km h and left Southampton on her maiden voyage to Quebec on 27 May 1931 8 As the ship would sail a more northerly trans Atlantic route where there was sometimes ice in the waters off Newfoundland Empress of Britain was ordered with outer steel plating double the thickness at the stem and for 150 ft 46 m back at either side up to the waterline 3 Her sea trials showed her to be the world s most economical steamship for fuel consumption per horsepower hour for her day 9 Her primary role was to entice passengers between England and Quebec instead of the more popular Southampton New York route The ship was designed to carry 1 195 passengers 465 first class 260 tourist class and 470 third class 4 She was the first passenger liner designed specifically to become a cruise ship in winter when the St Lawrence River was frozen 10 Empress of Britain was annually converted into an all first class luxury cruise ship carrying 700 passengers 11 For the latter role her size was kept small enough to use the Panama and Suez canals though at 760 8 ft 231 9 m and 42 348 GRT she was still large When passing through Panama there were only 7 5 in 190 mm between the ship and the canal lock wall 12 She was powered by 12 steam turbines driving four propellers the two inboard took two thirds of the power the outboard one third 9 For cruising two engines were shut down and the two outboard propellers removed since speed was less important on a cruise With four propellers her speed during trials was 25 271 kn 46 802 km h although her service speed was claimed to be 24 kn 44 km h 13 14 making her the fastest ship from England to Canada Running on inner propellers her speed was measured during trials at 22 595 kn 41 846 km h 15 The efficiency of this arrangement became clear in service in transatlantic service she consumed 356 tons of oil a day while on her 1932 cruise consumption fell to 179 16 To serve as a beacon at night during emergencies her three funnels were illuminated by powerful floodlights From the air the funnels could be spotted 50 miles away and ships could see the illuminated funnels at 30 miles distance 17 Peacetime commercial service EditAfter sea trials the ship headed for Southampton to prepare for her maiden voyage to Quebec City Canadian Pacific posters proclaimed the ship the Five Day Atlantic Giantess Canada s Challenger and The World s Wondership 18 The night before her maiden voyage the Prince of Wales decided to go to Southampton to bid bon voyage His inspection of the ship caused a short delay but at 1 12pm on Wednesday 27 May 1931 Empress of Britain left Southampton for Quebec 19 Once at sea the Toronto newspaper The Globe ran an editorial on what the ship meant to Canadians Canadian enterprise has issued a new challenge in the world of shipping by the completion and sailing of the Empress of Britain from England for Quebec This giant Canadian Pacific liner of 42 500 tons sets a new standard for the Canadian route Its luxurious equipment includes one entire deck for sport and recreation another for public rooms including a ballroom with decorations by world famous artists There are apartments instead of cabins and each is equipped with a radio receiving set for the entertainment of passengers In the later years of the last century there was long agitation for a fast Atlantic service Time has brought the answer Despite the current depression Canada has a new ship which will reach far for traffic during the St Lawrence season and when winter comes will go on world cruises carrying passengers who will ask and receive almost the last word in comfort and luxury in ocean travel The first journey of the new Empress is a historic event in the record of Canadian advancement 20 Advertisement for Empress of Britain s 1931 32 World Cruise Empress of Britain made nine round trips in 1931 between Southampton and Quebec carrying 4 891 passengers westbound and 4 696 eastbound To begin her winter cruise she made a westbound trans Atlantic trip to New York carrying 378 On 3 December 1931 she sailed on a 128 day round the world cruise 21 to the Mediterranean North Africa and the Holy Land through the Suez Canal and into the Red Sea then to India Ceylon Southeast Asia and the Dutch East Indies on to China Hong Kong and Japan then across the Pacific to Hawaii and California before traversing the Panama Canal back to New York 22 The ship then made a one way Atlantic crossing from New York to Southampton where she entered dry dock for maintenance and reinstallation of her outer propellers Until 1939 this schedule was duplicated with minor adjustments each year except 1933 4 Empress of Britain entering drydock in Southampton after colliding with a cargo boat 20 July 1935 RMS Olympic is seen laid up on the left 1933 poster by Kenneth Shoesmith Her captain from 1934 to 1937 was Ronald Niel Stuart VC a First World War veteran entitled to fly the Blue Ensign Canadian Pacific hoped to convince Midwesterners from Canada and the United States to travel by train to Quebec City as opposed to New York City This gave an extra day and a half of smooth sailing in the shorter sheltered St Lawrence River transatlantic route which Canadian Pacific advertised as 39 per cent less ocean 23 While initially successful the novelty wore off and Empress of Britain proved to be one of the least profitable liners from the 1930s 4 Captain WG Busk Wood was Master of Empress of Britain when the ship visited Sydney from 2 4 April and Melbourne on 6 April 1938 She was the largest liner to have visited Australia A crowd of 250 000 turned out to welcome the liner in Melbourne and the event was reported in The Argus newspaper Thursday 7 April 1938 In June 1939 Empress of Britain sailed from Halifax to Conception Bay St Johns Newfoundland and then eastbound to Southampton with her smallest passenger list 40 passengers were on board King George VI Queen Elizabeth and 13 ladies and lords in waiting 22 household staff plus a photographer and two reporters 24 The royal couple and their entourage were comfortably settled in a string of suites 4 After this voyage Empress of Britain returned to regular transatlantic service but through summer 1939 war loomed On 2 September 1939 one day before the United Kingdom declared war seven days before Canada entered the war Empress of Britain sailed on her last voyage for Canadian Pacific with the largest passenger list in her history Filled beyond capacity and with temporary berths in the squash court and other spaces Empress of Britain zig zagged across the Atlantic arriving in Quebec on 8 September 1939 25 War service Edit Empress of Britain arriving at Greenock with Canadian troops aboard HMS Hood is visible in the background Upon arrival the ship was repainted grey and then laid up awaiting orders On 25 November 1939 Empress of Britain was requisitioned as a troop transport First she did four transatlantic trips taking troops from Canada to England Then she was sent to Wellington New Zealand returning to Scotland in June 1940 as part of the million dollar convoy of seven luxury liners Andes Aquitania Empress of Britain Empress of Canada Empress of Japan Mauretania and Queen Mary 26 In August 1940 Empress of Britain transported troops to Suez via Cape Town returning with 224 military personnel and civilians plus a crew of 419 27 Sinking Edit Attack on the transport Empress of Britain 42 000 Gross Register Tons Front Line Intelligence Newssheet of the Luftwaffe No 26 Sheet 213 At around 9 20 am on 26 October 1940 travelling about 70 miles northwest of Ireland along the west coast Empress of Britain was spotted by a German Focke Wulf Fw 200C Condor long range bomber commanded by Oberleutnant Bernhard Jope Jope s bomber strafed Empress of Britain three times and struck her twice with 250 kg 550 lb bombs Only after Jope returned to base in northern France was it discovered which ship he had attacked A telex was sent to German Supreme Headquarters Realising the significance a reconnaissance plane went to verify and the German news agency reported that Empress of Britain had been sunk The Empress of Britain was successfully attacked by German bombers on Saturday morning within the waters of Northern Ireland The ship was badly hit and began to sink at once The crew took to their boats Despite the ferocity of Jope s attack and the fires there were few casualties Bombs started a fire that began to overwhelm the ship At 9 50 am Captain Sapworth gave the order to abandon ship The fire was concentrated in the midsection causing passengers to head for the bow and stern and hampering launching of the lifeboats Most of the 416 crew 2 gunners and 205 passengers were picked up by the destroyers HMS Echo and ORP Burza and the anti submarine trawler HMS Cape Arcona A skeleton crew remained aboard The fire left the ship unable to move under her own power but she was not sinking and the hull appeared intact despite a slight list At 9 30 am on 27 October a party from HMS Broke went on board and attached tow ropes The oceangoing tugs HMS Marauder and HMS Thames had arrived and took the hulk under tow Escorted by Broke and HMS Sardonyx and with cover from Short Sunderland flying boats during daylight the salvage convoy made for land at 4 kn 7 4 km h The German submarine U 32 commanded by Hans Jenisch had been told and headed in that direction He had to dive due to the flying boats but that night using hydrophones passive sonar located the ships and closed in on them The destroyers were zigzagging in escort U 32 placed herself between them and Empress of Britain from where she fired two torpedoes The first detonated prematurely the second however hit causing a massive explosion Crews of the destroyers speculated this was caused by the fires aboard the liner reaching her fuel tanks Jenisch manoeuvred U 32 and fired a third torpedo which hit the ship just aft of the earlier one The ship began to fill with water and list heavily The tugs slipped the tow lines and at 2 05 am on 28 October Empress of Britain sank northwest of Bloody Foreland County Donegal Ireland at 55 16 N 09 50 W 55 267 N 9 833 W 55 267 9 833 28 Gold and salvage EditIt was suspected that she had been carrying gold The British Empire was shipping gold to North America to improve its credit and pay its debt bills for supplies South Africa was a gold producer and Empress of Britain had recently berthed in Cape Town Most of the consignments of gold were transported from Cape Town to Sydney Australia and from there to America there were not enough suitable ships and the gold was frequently held up in Sydney It is possible that as a result of this delay Empress of Britain was taking gold from Cape Town to England from where it could be moved across the Atlantic 29 On 8 January 1949 the Daily Mail reported that a salvage attempt was to be made in the summer of that year There were no follow ups and the story contained errors In 1985 a potential salvager received a letter from the Department of Transport Shipping Policy Unit saying the gold on board had been recovered 30 In 1995 salvagers found the Empress of Britain upside down in 500 ft 150 m of water Using saturation diving they found that the fire had destroyed most of the decks leaving a largely empty shell rising from the sea floor The bullion room however was still intact Inside was a skeleton but no gold It is suspected the gold was unloaded when the Empress of Britain was on fire and its passengers evacuated The body inside the bullion room may have been that of someone involved in salvage 31 In popular culture EditIn 1990 Robert Seamer wrote The Floating Inferno The Story of the Loss of the Empress of Britain He was on the ship when she was torpedoed and sunk The 1989 novel The White Empress by Lyn Andrews is set on board Empress of Britain The 2018 novel Empress by Brian McPhee was inspired by the ship and features a fictionalised account of the skeleton in the bullion room The 1993 novel Closed Circle by Robert Goddard partly takes place on board Empress of Britain 32 See also EditTreasure hunting marine CP ShipsReferences Edit The first RMS Empress of Britain 1906 and the third Empress of Britain 1955 were also built for Canadian Pacific Steamer Robert 1990 The Floating Inferno The Story of the Loss of the Empress of Britain abstract sunk by U boat a b Turner Gordon 1992 Empress of Britain p 15 a b c d e Miller William H 1981 The Great Luxury Liners 1927 1954 p 41 a b c Steamers amp Motorships Lloyd s Register of Shipping PDF Vol II London Lloyd s Register of Shipping 1931 EMP Retrieved 15 October 2020 via Southampton City Council Smith Edgar C 2013 1937 A Short History of Naval and Marine Engineering pp 313 315 ISBN 978 1107672932 Mercantile Navy List London 1933 p 175 Retrieved 24 July 2022 Musk George 1981 Canadian Pacific The Story of the Famous Shipping Line pp 184 186 a b Musk p 186 Coleman Terry 1977 The Liners A History of the North Atlantic Crossing p 139 Miller William H 1985 The Fabulous Interiors of the Great Ocean Liners in Historic Photographs p 72 Musk p 187 Harnack Edwin P 1938 1903 All About Ships amp Shipping 7th ed London Faber and Faber p 380 Talbot Booth EC 1936 Ships and the Sea Third ed London Sampson Low Marston amp Co Ltd p 380 Turner p 49 Turner p 95 Funnels on Ship Illuminated as Beacon for Planes Popular Mechanics July 1931 Choco Mark H et al 1988 Canadian Pacific Posters pp 44 46 47 Turner p 53 Canada s New Empress The Globe Toronto 28 May 1931 page 4 Turner pp 193 194 McAuley Rob et al 1997 The Liners A Voyage of Discovery p 76 Musk p 184 Turner p 175 Musk p 190 Turner pp 175 177 Musk p 140 Turner pp 175 183 Naval Museum of Manitoba Canadian owned British registered Merchant Ship Losses Pickford pp 119 120 Pickford p 120 Pickford p 111 Bantam Press 1993Further reading EditChoco Mark H and Jones David L 1988 Canadian Pacific Posters 1883 1963 Montreal Meridian Press ISBN 978 2 920417 37 3 Coleman Terry 1977 The Liners A History of the North Atlantic Crossing New York G P Putnam s Sons ISBN 978 0 399 11958 3 OCLC 3423273 Harvey Clive 2004 RMS Empress Of Britain Britain s Finest Liner Stroud England Tempus Publishing ISBN 978 0 7524 3169 7 OCLC 56462669 McAuley Rob and Miller William 1997 The Liners A Voyage of Discovery Osceola Wisconsin Motorbooks International Publishers amp Wholesalers ISBN 978 0 7603 0465 5 OCLC 38144342 Miller William H 1985 The Fabulous Interiors of the Great Ocean Liners in Historic Photographs New York Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 24756 4 OCLC 10697284 1981 The Great Luxury Liners 1927 1954 a Photographic Record New York Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 24056 5 OCLC 59207408 Mitchell WH and Sawyer LA 1967 Cruising Ships New York Doubleday Musk George 1981 Canadian Pacific The Story of the Famous Shipping Line Newton Abbot David amp Charles ISBN 978 0 7153 7968 4 Pickford Nigel 1999 Lost Treasure Ships of the Twentieth Century Washington D C National Geographic ISBN 978 0 7922 7472 8 OCLC 40964695 Seamer Robert 1990 The Floating Inferno The Story of the Loss of the Empress of Britain Wellingborough Stephens ISBN 978 1 85260 324 3 OCLC 59892514 Turner Gordon 1992 Empress of Britain Canadian Pacific s Greatest Ship Toronto Stoddart ISBN 978 1 55046 052 0 Watson Smyth Kate Salvage team dives for 1bn wartime treasure The Independent London 9 November 1998 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Empress of Britain ship 1930 Information about Empress of Britain www oceanlinermuseum co uk History of RMS Empress of Britain www oceanlinermuseum co uk Launch of RMS Empress of Britain June 1930 IWM Interview with survivor Bertram Fryer Coordinates 55 16 N 9 50 W 55 267 N 9 833 W 55 267 9 833 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title RMS Empress of Britain 1930 amp oldid 1140949207, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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