
Aquitania is thought to have been the most
beautiful of all the four-stackers. In fact, she even earned herself
the nickname as the "Ship Beautiful". Even today, her name
brings the image of the illustrious pre-World War I floating
palaces. She was long and slender, and had four funnels, which all
worked, which means that they were all used to disperse smoke and
exhausts, instead of any number of them being ventilators.
Furthermore, she had a pleasing counter stern.
Like
many other famous Cunard liners, Aquitania was ordered from the
John Brown and Company yards of Clydebank, Scotland. Her designs
were under strict Admiralty supervision, because even though World War I
was still a number of years off, the idea that the Aquitania would
be able to be converted for military use as an armed merchant cruiser had
high marks with the admiralty. Otherwise, the plans called for her
to be a well-decorated third partner to Lusitania and Mauretania.
However, there was no intention for Aquitania to be a contender for
the Blue Riband, but she was by no means a slow ship.
On April 21, 1913, Aquitania was launched.
In May 1914, she went on her trials, and made a full knot over what she
was expected to do. However, her commercial service was brief.
In August 1914, she was seized by the British government for use as an
armed merchant cruiser. However, after a serious collision, it was
determined that large ships were too risky in that role, and were better
suited as hospital ships and troop ships with military escorts.
Consequently
in the spring of 1915, she was converted into a trooper, and made voyages
to the Dardanelles, and then was converted into a hospital ship.
However, in 1916, she was returned to the trooping front, and then in
1917, she was laid up. In 1918, she was back on the high seas in
more military service, and then in June 1919, she ran a Cunard
"austerity service" between Southampton and New York.
In December 1919, the Aquitania docked at the
Armstrong Whitworth yards in Newcastle in order to be refitted for
post-war service. The major change was that she was converted from
coal to oil-burning. Other than that, all her original fittings and
art pieces were
brought out of storage and reinstalled. Sadly, though, as she was
being refitted, an engine room explosion killed one of her crew members.
When she returned to transatlantic service, she ended
up becoming the most popular liner on the North Atlantic for the next two
decades. She was not only favored with those in Hollywood, but also
royalty, government officials, investors, great athletes, and more.
Furthermore, she appealed to travelers that did not favor any particular
liner. During this time, her running mates were the Blue Riband
holder Mauretania, and the Cunard flagship Berengaria.
She was refitted in 1926.
During
the Great Depression, she was sent periodically on cruises to the
Mediterranean, particularly in the Depression's early years. She
also made on troop voyage to Palestine during this time. In 1933,
she was once again refitted, with a sound theater being one of the new
additions. She also ran aground twice in these years. The
first time was on Calshot Spit, and she was refloated in two and a half
hours. The second was off Southampton when returning from a
Mediterranean cruise during 60 mph winds, which kept her in place for
twenty-six hours.
In
1936, she was paired with the Queen Mary. The plan was to
keep her in service until 1940, when she would be replaced with the Queen
Elizabeth. Cunard planned to have the Aquitania scrapped
at this point. However, this was not to be the case. World War
II broke out, and Aquitania was converted into a troopship
again. She now had accommodation for 7,724 soldiers.
Her service in World War II was no less distinguished
than her service in World War I. In her eight years of further
military work, she sailed more than 500,000 miles, and carried 300,000
soldiers, to such places as Australia, the South Pacific, and the Indian
Ocean. She was the only pre-1914 liner to survive this duty.
In
1946-1948, she carried war brides, and was then returned to Cunard.
She was hastily refitted and painted in Cunard colors, and then made an
"austerity service" between Southampton and Halifax, for
immigrants, displaced people, and the last remaining troops. She
made twelve voyages of this nature in 1948, and thirteen in 1949.
She may have very well continued on for even longer, but mechanical and
structural problems began to appear. As a result, she was not given
an operating certificate beyond 1949. So on December 1, 1949, she
reached Southampton after her 443rd voyage and 35 years of service.
She also marked the end of an era as the last of the four-stacked liners.
She was sold to BISCO, Ltd., and reached Faslane,
Scotland on February 21, 1950. In Faslane, she was scrapped.

Aquitania Vital Statistics:
Gross tonnage: 45,647
Length: 901 feet
Width: 97 feet
Machinery: Steam turbines geared to quadruple screw
Speed: 23 knots
Capacity: 618 First, 614 Second, 1,998 Third (1914);
610 First, 950 Second, 640 Tourist (1926)
Built: John Brown and Company Limited, Clydebank,
Scotland, 1950
Demise: Scrapped in Faslane, Scotland, 1950
The Classic Liners of Long Ago © 2000-2007 Nick
Works, Inc.
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