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SS Imperator

SS Imperator was a German ocean liner built for the Hamburg America Line (Hamburg Amerikanische Paketfahrt Aktien Gesellschaft, or HAPAG), launched in 1912. At the time of her completion in June 1913, she was the largest passenger ship in the world by gross tonnage, surpassing the new White Star liner Olympic.

SS Imperator
History
Germany
NameSS Imperator
NamesakeLatin Imperator, "emperor"
OwnerHamburg - Amerika Linie
Port of registryHamburg
Builder
Laid down1910
Launched23 May 1912
Christened23 May 1912
CompletedJune 1913 at Hamburg, Germany
Maiden voyage11 June 1913, Cuxhaven to New York Via Southampton
FateSeized as war reparations. Used as a troop transport ship for the United States from May 1919. Handed over to the Cunard Line in September 1919, and renamed as RMS Berengaria. Sold for scrap in 1939; final demolition completed in or around 1946.
United States
NameUSS Imperator
Acquiredby the Navy 5 May 1919 at Brest, France
Commissioned5 May 1919 USS Imperator at Brest, France
Decommissioned24 November 1919 at New York City
IdentificationID-4080
FateCeded to the Cunard Line as a war prize and later renamed Berengaria
United Kingdom
NameRMS Berengaria
NamesakeBerengaria of Navarre
Owner
RouteSouthampton to New York via Cherbourg.
Acquired1919
HomeportLiverpool, UK
FateScrapped between 1939–1946
General characteristics
Class and typeImperator-class ocean liner
Tonnage52,117 GRT
Displacement53,000 tons[citation needed]
Length906 ft (276 m)
Beam98 ft 3 in (29.95 m)
Draught35 ft 2 in (10.72 m)
Decks11
Installed powerSteam generated at 265 psi by 46 watertube boilers of Vulcan Yarrow design, originally coal burning, later converted to oil fired in 1921.
Propulsion4 steam turbines AEG-Vulcan / Parsons direct drive on four shafts, total of 60,000 shp (45,000 kW)
Speed24 kn (44 km/h; 28 mph) max
Capacity
  • 4,234 passengers:
    • 908 first class
    • 592 second class
    • 962 third class
    • 1,772 steerage (fourth class)
Crew1,180

Imperator was the first of a trio of successively larger Hamburg American liners that included SS Vaterland (later the United States Liner Leviathan) and SS Bismarck (later the White Star Line Majestic) all of which were seized as war reparations.

Imperator served for 14 months on HAPAG's transatlantic route, until the outbreak of World War I, after which he remained in port in Hamburg. After the war, he was briefly commissioned into the United States Navy as USS Imperator (ID-4080) and employed as a transport, returning American troops from Europe. Following his service with the U.S. Navy, Imperator was handed over to Britain's Cunard Line as part of war reparations, due to the loss of the RMS Lusitania, where he sailed as the flagship RMS Berengaria for the last 20 years of his career. William H. Miller wrote that "despite his German heritage and the barely disguised Teutonic tone of his interiors, he was thought of in the 1920s and 30s as one of Britain's finest liners."[1]

Construction and early career

 
Closeup of the bronze figurehead before its removal
 
Imperator in Hamburg, 1913

The first plates of the keel were laid in 1910 at the Vulcan Shipyards in Hamburg, Germany and the ship made his maiden voyage in 1913. At 52,117 gross register tons, Imperator was the largest ship in the world until Vaterland sailed in May 1914.[2] After the sinking of the Titanic in April 1912, the shipyard added more lifeboats to Imperator to ensure there was more than enough room for all passengers and crew. In total, Imperator would carry 83 lifeboats capable of holding 5,500 people between them, 300 more than the ship's maximum capacity.[3][4]

Before his launch on 23 May 1912, Cunard announced that its new ship, RMS Aquitania, which was under construction at the time at the John Brown shipyards in Glasgow, would be longer by 1 foot (300 mm), causing dismay in Hamburg. Several weeks later, he was fitted with a figurehead, an imposing bronze eagle, increasing his length past that of Aquitania. The eagle was created by Professor Bruno Kruse of Berlin, and adorned his forepeak with a banner emblazoned with HAPAG's motto Mein Feld ist die Welt (My field is the world). The eagle's wings were torn off in an Atlantic storm during the 1914 season, after which the figurehead was removed and replaced with gold scroll-work similar to that on the stern.

During his initial sea trials, the ship ran aground on the Elbe river due to insufficient dredging and flash fire in the engine room which resulted in eight crewmen being taken to hospital. During his official trials, he suffered overheating of the turbines and some stability issues were discovered. The trials were therefore abandoned and the builders were called in to carry out emergency work. Coincidentally, 1913 was the silver jubilee year for the Kaiser, so he was going to be treated to an overnight cruise on the North Sea before the ship would make its maiden voyage. The overnight cruise was canceled; it was eventually carried out in July of that year.

Imperator left on his maiden voyage on Wednesday, 11 June 1913, with Commodore Hans Ruser in command and Hamburg-Amerika appointing four other captains for the journey to make sure that everything went smoothly. On the way, he stopped at Southampton and Cherbourg before proceeding across the Atlantic to New York, arriving on 19 June 1913. On board were 4,986 people, consisting of 859 first-class passengers, 647 second-class passengers, 648 third-class passengers, 1,495 in steerage, and 1,332 crew.[5] The ship returned to Europe from Hoboken, New Jersey, on 25 June 1913.[6]

 
Detail of the figurehead after its wings were damaged

On his first arrival, the harbor pilot assigned to bring him into the Ambrose channel, Captain George Seeth, noted that the ship listed from side to side when the helm changed the ship's direction. He was soon nicknamed "Limperator".

In October 1913, Imperator returned to the Vulkan shipyard to facilitate drastic work to improve handling and stability, as it had been discovered that his center of gravity was too high (see metacentric height). To correct the problem, the marble bathroom suites in first class were removed and heavy furniture was replaced with lightweight wicker cane. The ship's funnels were reduced in height by 9.8 ft (3 m). Finally, 2,000 tons of cement was poured into the ship's double bottom as ballast. This work cost £200,000, which had to be borne by the shipyard as part of their five-year warranty to the shipowners. At the same time, an advanced fire sprinkler system was fitted throughout the ship, as several fires had occurred on board since the vessel had entered service.

During the 1914 refit of Imperator, Commodore Ruser handed over command of the ship to Captain Theo Kier and left to take command of the new larger flagship Vaterland, which was nearing completion. Imperator returned to service on 11 March, arriving in New York five days later on the 19th.

The SS Imperator was often referred to in masculine form because Kaiser Wilhelm thought that Imperator was a male name.

Interiors

The architect and designer Charles Mewès were responsible for the interior design of the Imperator and his sister ships.[7] One German critic commented on the prevalence of French-style décor on the new ship:

Louis XVI seems to be the real Imperator...judging by the decorative effects with which the world's biggest liner is embellished...the ladies saloon in Colonial, the smoking room in Flemish, the swimming pool in Pompeiian, the wintergarten in Louis XVI, the parlor in Louis XVI. - Louis XVI everywhere. Where is there any manifestation of present-day German style...the company, of course, must cater to the international public, especially Americans."[8]

One contemporary review noted how the ship's "great size...has enabled his designers to allow unusual space for passenger accommodation."[9] This was echoed in The Master, Mate, and Pilot, which stated that "taking advantage of his great dimensions, the ships' public cabins, and staterooms have been made so large as to avoid any suggestion of crowding."[10] Space-saving devices like berths and folding washbasins were eliminated in the First-Class staterooms on Imperator, all of which had free-standing beds and marble-topped washstands with hot and cold running water. Almost all First-Class cabins were "outside" cabins, meaning they had portholes or windows for natural light and ventilation. Over 200 cabins were reserved for single occupancy, and 150 had en-suite bathrooms.[9] The two "Imperial" suites had 12 rooms each, including a breakfast room, private veranda, sitting room, and servants' quarters.[11]

The main First-Class dining room was on F Deck and there were two restaurants on B Deck. The main dining room could accommodate 700 diners at tables for between 2 and 8 people. The Ritz-Carlton restaurant, which was joined with a winter garden/palm court in the Directoire style, was managed by staff from the Carlton Hotel in London. There was also a Grill Room at the aft end of B Deck, a tea garden, and a Veranda café.[12] Other First-Class public rooms included a 72-foot-long lounge/ballroom, several ladies sitting rooms, and a smoking room. The Tudor style smoking room was decorated with brick from a demolished Tudor-era cottage in England.[9][13] The lounge, or "Social Hall", as it was called, was hung with Gobelins tapestries and included a stage for theatrical performances to be held. In the evening the carpet could be removed for dancing.[11][12] Off the entrance halls were amenities like a bookshop, florist, pharmacy, doctor's office, and the offices of the purser, chief steward, and baggage master.[14]

Imperator introduced a two-deck-high, Pompeiian-style swimming pool for its First-Class passengers. It was inspired by a similar swimming pool built in 1907 at the Royal Automobile Club in London.[15] Connected to the pool were Turkish baths, steam baths, electric baths, massage and hairdressing rooms. The gymnasium was "the largest and most luxurious that has ever been fitted up on a passenger steamer...", according to The Marine Engineering and Naval Architect.[9] For the first time on an ocean liner, Second-Class had its own gymnasium as well. Second-Class passengers also had their own smoking room, reading and writing rooms, dining room, and music room.[9]

World War I and U.S. Navy service

In August 1914, as World War I began, he was laid up at Hamburg and remained inactive for more than four years, falling into dilapidation. Following the Armistice of 11 November 1918, Imperator was taken over by the Allied Food Shipping and Finance Agreement, and allocated to the United States for temporary use as a transport alongside Vaterland, which was now renamed SS Leviathan and bringing American service personnel home from France.[16]

 
USS Imperator (ID-4080) off Manhattan, New York City.
 
List of nurses returning from Brest aboard USS Imperator

He was commissioned as the USS Imperator (ID-4080) in early May 1919. After embarking 2,100 American troops and 1,100 passengers, Imperator departed Brest, France on 15 May 1919, arriving at New York City one week later. Operating with the Cruiser and Transport Force from 3 June to 10 August, he made three cruises from New York to Brest, returning over 25,000 troops, nurses, and civilians to the United States.

While en route to New York City on 17 June, Imperator assisted the French cruiser Jeanne d'Arc, which had broken down in the Atlantic Ocean. The then president-elect of Brazil Epitácio Pessoa was on board Jeanne d'Arc and Imperator received him and his party for transport to the United States, arriving there several days later.[17]

Decommissioned at Hoboken, New Jersey in early 1919, Imperator was transferred to the British Shipping Controller on 20 September, and it was decided that Cunard would operate him. Captain Charles A. Smith and a full crew were sent out to New York on Carmania the new operators and the official handover from the American Board of shipping to Cunard took place on 24 November. Imperator was then transferred to Cunard's pier 54 for Cunard service.

Cunard service as Berengaria

 
RMS Berengaria
 
Berengaria underway after conversion from coal to oil burning boilers, 1921.

The ship arrived at Southampton on Sunday 10 December 1919 and then proceeded to Liverpool for what was planned to be a quick overhaul (he was scheduled to leave on his first voyage for the new owners on 10 January 1920). Upon inspection, the ship was found to be in poor condition. During dry-docking on 6 January, it was found that the ship's rudder had a piece missing and the propellers were suffering from erosion on their leading edges. These issues were attended to while the ship was refurbished with items borrowed from the Cunard vessels Transylvania and Carmania.[18]

Due to the extent of the work that had to be carried out, Imperator remained at Liverpool until 21 February and during this time the company's annual dinner was held on board before the ship returned to service on the North Atlantic.[18] On 2 March 1920, the ship left New York, taking nine days to reach Southampton. During the voyage, Imperator developed a severe list that was found to be caused by a faulty ash ejector. Cunard decided that the ship was in need of a major overhaul and she was withdrawn from service.[18]

Sir Arthur Rostron of the RMS Titanic passenger rescue fame and former captain of Carpathia took command of Imperator in July 1920. The following year both Imperator and Aquitania were sent to Armstrong Whitworth shipyards to be converted from coal firing to oil.[18]

The ship was renamed after the English queen Berengaria of Navarre, wife of Richard the Lionheart, in February 1921. Many Cunard ships had been named for parts of the Roman Empire and had names that ended in "ia". Like several other Cunard ships, RMS Berengaria kept the "ia" ending to his name but was not named after a province of the ancient world.

In September 1925, a security alert at sea was triggered when the Cunard company offices in New York received a message stating there was a bomb aboard Berengaria; the vessel was then 1,200 miles out from New York, bound for Southampton. The ship was searched although the passengers and most crew were not informed about the reason. A fire drill was held just before the supposed time of detonation, so passengers could be placed close to their lifeboat stations without arousing suspicion. The bomb threat failed to materialize.[19]

On 11 May 1932, Berengaria ran aground in the Solent. She was refloated an hour later.[20]

In May 1934, Berengaria was again in the headlines when she ran aground on mud banks at Calshot on the Solent. She was pulled free by four tugs from Southampton. The vessel suffered no damage and the incident did not affect her sailing schedule.[18][21]

Despite her German heritage, Berengaria served as flagship of the Cunard fleet until replaced by her sister ship, RMS Majestic (also German: ex-SS Bismarck), in 1934 after the merger of Cunard with White Star Line.[21] In later years, Berengaria was used for discounted Prohibition-dodging cruises, which earned her jocular nicknames like Bargainaria and Boringaria.[22]

Toward the end of her service life, the ship suffered several electrical fires caused by aging wiring, and Cunard-White Star opted to retire her in 1938. She was sold to Sir John Jarvis, who had also purchased Olympic, to provide work for unemployed shipbuilders in Jarrow, County Durham.[21] Berengaria sailed for the River Tyne under the command of Captain George Gibbons to be scrapped down to the waterline. Due to the size of the vessel and the outbreak of the Second World War, the final demolition took place only in 1946.

Gallery

References

  1. ^ William H. Miller (2001). Picture History of British Ocean Liners: 1900 to the Present. Dover Publications. p. 26.
  2. ^ "Imperator". AtlanticLiners.com. 2009. Retrieved 11 January 2009.
  3. ^ Thomas Kepler (2021). The Ile de France and the Golden Age of Transatlantic Travel. Lyons Press. p. 74.
  4. ^ "Some Facts Regarding Size of Marine Marvel, Imperator". Railway and Marine News. 1913. pp. 20–21.
  5. ^ "Big Ship, Nearing New York, Behaves Admirably on Trip". The New York Times via Marconi Wireless. 16 September 1913. Retrieved 17 November 2009. Never before were there so many persons on one ship as are on the Imperator. The exact number is 4,986, consisting of 859 first-class passengers, 647 second-class, 648 third-class, 1,495 in steerage, and 1,332 in the crew.
  6. ^ "Imperator Starts Return Trip To-day. Begins First Voyage to the Eastward with More Than 1,000 in Cabins". The New York Times. 15 June 1913. Retrieved 17 November 2009. The new Hamburg-American liner Imperator, the world's biggest transatlantic steamship, will sail on his first eastward voyage across the Atlantic at 11 o'clock this morning. The great liner when he backs out from his Hoboken berth into the river will have on board more than 1,000 cabin passengers, of whom over 600 will be in the first cabin.
  7. ^ James Stevens Curl (2006). A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture. Oxford University Press. p. 484.
  8. ^ Rotka, William (2018). "Building Luxurious Ocean Liners for the Transatlantic Elite in the Early Twentieth Century", Yearbook of Transnational History. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press; pg. 120.
  9. ^ a b c d e "The Marine Engineer & Naval Architect". July 1913. pp. 467–468.
  10. ^ "S.S. "Imperator" The World's Largest Ship". The Master, Mate, and Pilot. June 1913. p. 65.
  11. ^ a b "S.S. "Imperator" The World's Largest Ship". The Master, Mate, and Pilot. June 1913. pp. 65–66.
  12. ^ a b "The Hamburg-Amerika Liner "Imperator"". Engineering: An Illustrated Weekly Journal. 20 June 1913. pp. 827–828.
  13. ^ "Some Facts Regarding Size of Marine Marvel, Imperator". Railway and Marine News. 1913. p. 19.
  14. ^ "The Marine Engineer & Naval Architect". July 1913. p. 467.
  15. ^ William H. Miller (2001). Picture History of British Ocean Liners: 1900 to the Present. Dover Publications. p. 28.
  16. ^ "USS Imperator". Naval Historical Center.
  17. ^ "PESSOA TRANSFERS TO TRANSPORT AT SEA; Imperator Takes Brazil's President from Disabled French Cruiser in Midocean". The New York Times. 19 June 1919. Retrieved 9 February 2023.
  18. ^ a b c d e . Ocean-Liners.com. 2009. Archived from the original on 31 January 2009. Retrieved 11 January 2009.
  19. ^ "Bomb hoax on the liner Berengaria". The Manchester Guardian. 25 September 1925. Retrieved 10 October 2011.
  20. ^ "The Berengaria aground". The Times. No. 46131. London. 12 May 1932. col C, p. 11.
  21. ^ a b c "Berengaria". Chris' Cunard Page. Retrieved 17 February 2010.
  22. ^ Layton, J. Kent (2013). "Imperator/Berengaria". The Edwardian Superliners: A Trio of Trios (2nd ed.). Amberley.

Further reading

  • The Hamburg-American Company's New 50,000-Ton Liner (International Marine Engineering feature article, August 1912, pp. 301–305, with launch photos & engineering details.)
  • Ocean Liners, by Oliver le Goff
  • The Beautiful and Damned, by F. Scott Fitzgerald
  • Imperator/Berengaria, by Les Streater

External links

  • S.S. Imperator at Flickr via Library of Congress
  • S.S. Imperator (German Passenger Liner, 1913) – Served as USS Imperator (ID # 4080) in 1919. – Later the British passenger liner Berengaria
  • USS Imperator (ID # 4080), 1919–1919.
  • Photo gallery of Imperator at NavSource Naval History
  • Imperator / Berengaria Home at Atlantic Liners.
  • The Ultimate Imperator
  • Chris' Cunard Page
  • Final sailing to Sir John Jarvis's scrapyard; Jarow

imperator, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, march, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, german, . This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message SS Imperator was a German ocean liner built for the Hamburg America Line Hamburg Amerikanische Paketfahrt Aktien Gesellschaft or HAPAG launched in 1912 At the time of her completion in June 1913 she was the largest passenger ship in the world by gross tonnage surpassing the new White Star liner Olympic SS ImperatorHistoryGermanyNameSS ImperatorNamesakeLatin Imperator emperor OwnerHamburg Amerika LiniePort of registryHamburgBuilderAG Vulcan Hamburg GermanyLaid down1910Launched23 May 1912Christened23 May 1912CompletedJune 1913 at Hamburg GermanyMaiden voyage11 June 1913 Cuxhaven to New York Via SouthamptonFateSeized as war reparations Used as a troop transport ship for the United States from May 1919 Handed over to the Cunard Line in September 1919 and renamed as RMS Berengaria Sold for scrap in 1939 final demolition completed in or around 1946 United StatesNameUSS ImperatorAcquiredby the Navy 5 May 1919 at Brest FranceCommissioned5 May 1919 USS Imperator at Brest FranceDecommissioned24 November 1919 at New York CityIdentificationID 4080FateCeded to the Cunard Line as a war prize and later renamed BerengariaUnited KingdomNameRMS BerengariaNamesakeBerengaria of NavarreOwner1919 1934 Cunard Line 1934 1938 Cunard White Star LineRouteSouthampton to New York via Cherbourg Acquired1919HomeportLiverpool UKFateScrapped between 1939 1946General characteristicsClass and typeImperator class ocean linerTonnage52 117 GRTDisplacement53 000 tons citation needed Length906 ft 276 m Beam98 ft 3 in 29 95 m Draught35 ft 2 in 10 72 m Decks11Installed powerSteam generated at 265 psi by 46 watertube boilers of Vulcan Yarrow design originally coal burning later converted to oil fired in 1921 Propulsion4 steam turbines AEG Vulcan Parsons direct drive on four shafts total of 60 000 shp 45 000 kW Speed24 kn 44 km h 28 mph maxCapacity4 234 passengers 908 first class 592 second class 962 third class 1 772 steerage fourth class Crew1 180Imperator was the first of a trio of successively larger Hamburg American liners that included SS Vaterland later the United States Liner Leviathan and SS Bismarck later the White Star Line Majestic all of which were seized as war reparations Imperator served for 14 months on HAPAG s transatlantic route until the outbreak of World War I after which he remained in port in Hamburg After the war he was briefly commissioned into the United States Navy as USS Imperator ID 4080 and employed as a transport returning American troops from Europe Following his service with the U S Navy Imperator was handed over to Britain s Cunard Line as part of war reparations due to the loss of the RMS Lusitania where he sailed as the flagship RMS Berengaria for the last 20 years of his career William H Miller wrote that despite his German heritage and the barely disguised Teutonic tone of his interiors he was thought of in the 1920s and 30s as one of Britain s finest liners 1 Contents 1 Construction and early career 1 1 Interiors 2 World War I and U S Navy service 3 Cunard service as Berengaria 4 Gallery 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksConstruction and early career Edit Closeup of the bronze figurehead before its removal Imperator in Hamburg 1913 The first plates of the keel were laid in 1910 at the Vulcan Shipyards in Hamburg Germany and the ship made his maiden voyage in 1913 At 52 117 gross register tons Imperator was the largest ship in the world until Vaterland sailed in May 1914 2 After the sinking of the Titanic in April 1912 the shipyard added more lifeboats to Imperator to ensure there was more than enough room for all passengers and crew In total Imperator would carry 83 lifeboats capable of holding 5 500 people between them 300 more than the ship s maximum capacity 3 4 Before his launch on 23 May 1912 Cunard announced that its new ship RMS Aquitania which was under construction at the time at the John Brown shipyards in Glasgow would be longer by 1 foot 300 mm causing dismay in Hamburg Several weeks later he was fitted with a figurehead an imposing bronze eagle increasing his length past that of Aquitania The eagle was created by Professor Bruno Kruse of Berlin and adorned his forepeak with a banner emblazoned with HAPAG s motto Mein Feld ist die Welt My field is the world The eagle s wings were torn off in an Atlantic storm during the 1914 season after which the figurehead was removed and replaced with gold scroll work similar to that on the stern During his initial sea trials the ship ran aground on the Elbe river due to insufficient dredging and flash fire in the engine room which resulted in eight crewmen being taken to hospital During his official trials he suffered overheating of the turbines and some stability issues were discovered The trials were therefore abandoned and the builders were called in to carry out emergency work Coincidentally 1913 was the silver jubilee year for the Kaiser so he was going to be treated to an overnight cruise on the North Sea before the ship would make its maiden voyage The overnight cruise was canceled it was eventually carried out in July of that year Imperator left on his maiden voyage on Wednesday 11 June 1913 with Commodore Hans Ruser in command and Hamburg Amerika appointing four other captains for the journey to make sure that everything went smoothly On the way he stopped at Southampton and Cherbourg before proceeding across the Atlantic to New York arriving on 19 June 1913 On board were 4 986 people consisting of 859 first class passengers 647 second class passengers 648 third class passengers 1 495 in steerage and 1 332 crew 5 The ship returned to Europe from Hoboken New Jersey on 25 June 1913 6 Detail of the figurehead after its wings were damaged On his first arrival the harbor pilot assigned to bring him into the Ambrose channel Captain George Seeth noted that the ship listed from side to side when the helm changed the ship s direction He was soon nicknamed Limperator In October 1913 Imperator returned to the Vulkan shipyard to facilitate drastic work to improve handling and stability as it had been discovered that his center of gravity was too high see metacentric height To correct the problem the marble bathroom suites in first class were removed and heavy furniture was replaced with lightweight wicker cane The ship s funnels were reduced in height by 9 8 ft 3 m Finally 2 000 tons of cement was poured into the ship s double bottom as ballast This work cost 200 000 which had to be borne by the shipyard as part of their five year warranty to the shipowners At the same time an advanced fire sprinkler system was fitted throughout the ship as several fires had occurred on board since the vessel had entered service During the 1914 refit of Imperator Commodore Ruser handed over command of the ship to Captain Theo Kier and left to take command of the new larger flagship Vaterland which was nearing completion Imperator returned to service on 11 March arriving in New York five days later on the 19th The SS Imperator was often referred to in masculine form because Kaiser Wilhelm thought that Imperator was a male name Interiors EditThe architect and designer Charles Mewes were responsible for the interior design of the Imperator and his sister ships 7 One German critic commented on the prevalence of French style decor on the new ship Louis XVI seems to be the real Imperator judging by the decorative effects with which the world s biggest liner is embellished the ladies saloon in Colonial the smoking room in Flemish the swimming pool in Pompeiian the wintergarten in Louis XVI the parlor in Louis XVI Louis XVI everywhere Where is there any manifestation of present day German style the company of course must cater to the international public especially Americans 8 One contemporary review noted how the ship s great size has enabled his designers to allow unusual space for passenger accommodation 9 This was echoed in The Master Mate and Pilot which stated that taking advantage of his great dimensions the ships public cabins and staterooms have been made so large as to avoid any suggestion of crowding 10 Space saving devices like berths and folding washbasins were eliminated in the First Class staterooms on Imperator all of which had free standing beds and marble topped washstands with hot and cold running water Almost all First Class cabins were outside cabins meaning they had portholes or windows for natural light and ventilation Over 200 cabins were reserved for single occupancy and 150 had en suite bathrooms 9 The two Imperial suites had 12 rooms each including a breakfast room private veranda sitting room and servants quarters 11 The main First Class dining room was on F Deck and there were two restaurants on B Deck The main dining room could accommodate 700 diners at tables for between 2 and 8 people The Ritz Carlton restaurant which was joined with a winter garden palm court in the Directoire style was managed by staff from the Carlton Hotel in London There was also a Grill Room at the aft end of B Deck a tea garden and a Veranda cafe 12 Other First Class public rooms included a 72 foot long lounge ballroom several ladies sitting rooms and a smoking room The Tudor style smoking room was decorated with brick from a demolished Tudor era cottage in England 9 13 The lounge or Social Hall as it was called was hung with Gobelins tapestries and included a stage for theatrical performances to be held In the evening the carpet could be removed for dancing 11 12 Off the entrance halls were amenities like a bookshop florist pharmacy doctor s office and the offices of the purser chief steward and baggage master 14 Imperator introduced a two deck high Pompeiian style swimming pool for its First Class passengers It was inspired by a similar swimming pool built in 1907 at the Royal Automobile Club in London 15 Connected to the pool were Turkish baths steam baths electric baths massage and hairdressing rooms The gymnasium was the largest and most luxurious that has ever been fitted up on a passenger steamer according to The Marine Engineering and Naval Architect 9 For the first time on an ocean liner Second Class had its own gymnasium as well Second Class passengers also had their own smoking room reading and writing rooms dining room and music room 9 World War I and U S Navy service EditIn August 1914 as World War I began he was laid up at Hamburg and remained inactive for more than four years falling into dilapidation Following the Armistice of 11 November 1918 Imperator was taken over by the Allied Food Shipping and Finance Agreement and allocated to the United States for temporary use as a transport alongside Vaterland which was now renamed SS Leviathan and bringing American service personnel home from France 16 USS Imperator ID 4080 off Manhattan New York City List of nurses returning from Brest aboard USS Imperator He was commissioned as the USS Imperator ID 4080 in early May 1919 After embarking 2 100 American troops and 1 100 passengers Imperator departed Brest France on 15 May 1919 arriving at New York City one week later Operating with the Cruiser and Transport Force from 3 June to 10 August he made three cruises from New York to Brest returning over 25 000 troops nurses and civilians to the United States While en route to New York City on 17 June Imperator assisted the French cruiser Jeanne d Arc which had broken down in the Atlantic Ocean The then president elect of Brazil Epitacio Pessoa was on board Jeanne d Arc and Imperator received him and his party for transport to the United States arriving there several days later 17 Decommissioned at Hoboken New Jersey in early 1919 Imperator was transferred to the British Shipping Controller on 20 September and it was decided that Cunard would operate him Captain Charles A Smith and a full crew were sent out to New York on Carmania the new operators and the official handover from the American Board of shipping to Cunard took place on 24 November Imperator was then transferred to Cunard s pier 54 for Cunard service Cunard service as Berengaria Edit RMS Berengaria Berengaria underway after conversion from coal to oil burning boilers 1921 The ship arrived at Southampton on Sunday 10 December 1919 and then proceeded to Liverpool for what was planned to be a quick overhaul he was scheduled to leave on his first voyage for the new owners on 10 January 1920 Upon inspection the ship was found to be in poor condition During dry docking on 6 January it was found that the ship s rudder had a piece missing and the propellers were suffering from erosion on their leading edges These issues were attended to while the ship was refurbished with items borrowed from the Cunard vessels Transylvania and Carmania 18 Due to the extent of the work that had to be carried out Imperator remained at Liverpool until 21 February and during this time the company s annual dinner was held on board before the ship returned to service on the North Atlantic 18 On 2 March 1920 the ship left New York taking nine days to reach Southampton During the voyage Imperator developed a severe list that was found to be caused by a faulty ash ejector Cunard decided that the ship was in need of a major overhaul and she was withdrawn from service 18 Sir Arthur Rostron of the RMS Titanic passenger rescue fame and former captain of Carpathia took command of Imperator in July 1920 The following year both Imperator and Aquitania were sent to Armstrong Whitworth shipyards to be converted from coal firing to oil 18 The ship was renamed after the English queen Berengaria of Navarre wife of Richard the Lionheart in February 1921 Many Cunard ships had been named for parts of the Roman Empire and had names that ended in ia Like several other Cunard ships RMS Berengaria kept the ia ending to his name but was not named after a province of the ancient world In September 1925 a security alert at sea was triggered when the Cunard company offices in New York received a message stating there was a bomb aboard Berengaria the vessel was then 1 200 miles out from New York bound for Southampton The ship was searched although the passengers and most crew were not informed about the reason A fire drill was held just before the supposed time of detonation so passengers could be placed close to their lifeboat stations without arousing suspicion The bomb threat failed to materialize 19 On 11 May 1932 Berengaria ran aground in the Solent She was refloated an hour later 20 In May 1934 Berengaria was again in the headlines when she ran aground on mud banks at Calshot on the Solent She was pulled free by four tugs from Southampton The vessel suffered no damage and the incident did not affect her sailing schedule 18 21 Despite her German heritage Berengaria served as flagship of the Cunard fleet until replaced by her sister ship RMS Majestic also German ex SS Bismarck in 1934 after the merger of Cunard with White Star Line 21 In later years Berengaria was used for discounted Prohibition dodging cruises which earned her jocular nicknames like Bargainaria and Boringaria 22 Toward the end of her service life the ship suffered several electrical fires caused by aging wiring and Cunard White Star opted to retire her in 1938 She was sold to Sir John Jarvis who had also purchased Olympic to provide work for unemployed shipbuilders in Jarrow County Durham 21 Berengaria sailed for the River Tyne under the command of Captain George Gibbons to be scrapped down to the waterline Due to the size of the vessel and the outbreak of the Second World War the final demolition took place only in 1946 Gallery Edit The stern of the Imperator prior to launch First Class Main Staircase of Imperator USS Imperator ID 4080 at left and USS Leviathan ID 1326 at Hoboken New Jersey Imperator s turbines under construction at Vulcan Hamburg Note workmen center right for size comparison Advertisement by Hamburg American Line in American Homes and Gardens magazine 1913References Edit William H Miller 2001 Picture History of British Ocean Liners 1900 to the Present Dover Publications p 26 Imperator AtlanticLiners com 2009 Retrieved 11 January 2009 Thomas Kepler 2021 The Ile de France and the Golden Age of Transatlantic Travel Lyons Press p 74 Some Facts Regarding Size of Marine Marvel Imperator Railway and Marine News 1913 pp 20 21 Big Ship Nearing New York Behaves Admirably on Trip The New York Times via Marconi Wireless 16 September 1913 Retrieved 17 November 2009 Never before were there so many persons on one ship as are on the Imperator The exact number is 4 986 consisting of 859 first class passengers 647 second class 648 third class 1 495 in steerage and 1 332 in the crew Imperator Starts Return Trip To day Begins First Voyage to the Eastward with More Than 1 000 in Cabins The New York Times 15 June 1913 Retrieved 17 November 2009 The new Hamburg American liner Imperator the world s biggest transatlantic steamship will sail on his first eastward voyage across the Atlantic at 11 o clock this morning The great liner when he backs out from his Hoboken berth into the river will have on board more than 1 000 cabin passengers of whom over 600 will be in the first cabin James Stevens Curl 2006 A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture Oxford University Press p 484 Rotka William 2018 Building Luxurious Ocean Liners for the Transatlantic Elite in the Early Twentieth Century Yearbook of Transnational History Fairleigh Dickinson University Press pg 120 a b c d e The Marine Engineer amp Naval Architect July 1913 pp 467 468 S S Imperator The World s Largest Ship The Master Mate and Pilot June 1913 p 65 a b S S Imperator The World s Largest Ship The Master Mate and Pilot June 1913 pp 65 66 a b The Hamburg Amerika Liner Imperator Engineering An Illustrated Weekly Journal 20 June 1913 pp 827 828 Some Facts Regarding Size of Marine Marvel Imperator Railway and Marine News 1913 p 19 The Marine Engineer amp Naval Architect July 1913 p 467 William H Miller 2001 Picture History of British Ocean Liners 1900 to the Present Dover Publications p 28 USS Imperator Naval Historical Center PESSOA TRANSFERS TO TRANSPORT AT SEA Imperator Takes Brazil s President from Disabled French Cruiser in Midocean The New York Times 19 June 1919 Retrieved 9 February 2023 a b c d e SS Imperator RMS Berengaria Ocean Liners com 2009 Archived from the original on 31 January 2009 Retrieved 11 January 2009 Bomb hoax on the liner Berengaria The Manchester Guardian 25 September 1925 Retrieved 10 October 2011 The Berengaria aground The Times No 46131 London 12 May 1932 col C p 11 a b c Berengaria Chris Cunard Page Retrieved 17 February 2010 Layton J Kent 2013 Imperator Berengaria The Edwardian Superliners A Trio of Trios 2nd ed Amberley This article incorporates text from the public domainDictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships The entry can be found here Further reading EditThe Hamburg American Company s New 50 000 Ton Liner International Marine Engineering feature article August 1912 pp 301 305 with launch photos amp engineering details SS Imperator RMS Berengaria Atlantic Liners A Trio of Trios by J Kent Layton Ocean Liners by Oliver le Goff The Beautiful and Damned by F Scott Fitzgerald Imperator Berengaria by Les StreaterExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Imperator ship 1913 Hamburg S S Imperator at Flickr via Library of Congress S S Imperator German Passenger Liner 1913 Served as USS Imperator ID 4080 in 1919 Later the British passenger liner Berengaria USS Imperator ID 4080 1919 1919 Photo gallery of Imperator at NavSource Naval History Imperator Berengaria Home at Atlantic Liners Ship s page at ocean liners com The Ultimate Imperator Chris Cunard Page Final sailing to Sir John Jarvis s scrapyard Jarow Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title SS Imperator amp oldid 1150250766, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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