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1930 1930–1960 Hotel & Museum in Yamashita Park, Naka-ku, Yokohama: Lydia: 1931 1931-1966 Museum ship in Le Barcarès, France [1] Built as the Moonta for Adelaide Steamship Co Ltd: Queen Mary: 1936 1936–1967 Hotel & MuseumShip in Long Beach, CA (reopening late 2022) WWII troopship 1940–1945; Blue Riband, sold 1967, now a stationary hotel ship
In 1965 Home Lines took delivery of their first purpose-built ship, Oceanic, which replaced the ageing Italia. [2] [12] Although marketed as "the largest ship ever designed for year round cruises", [13] the ship had in fact been originally designed as a two-class liner/cruise ship before Home Lines abandoned transatlantic crossings, and adapted to full-time cruising during construction. [14]
Migrant passenger ship working as part-time cruise ship 1958–73. Full-time cruise ship 1974–77. Scrapped following a fire, 1980. Fairstar: Sitmar Cruises: 1964: 21,619: Migrant passenger ship working as part-time cruise ship 1964–74, then full-time cruising. Allocated to P&O Australia fleet in 1988. Ended operation in 1997 and scrapped ...
Florida completed her final voyage to New York on 20 April 1911 and was sold later that year, with her sister-ship Virginia, to Società di Navigazione la Ligure Brasiliana and renamed Cavour. [3] Her new schedule brought her back to South America, first departing from Genoa on 15 January 1912 for Naples and Buenos Aires.
As a precondition (art.26) for the subsidised contract and to ensure that sufficient ships were in service to provide a reliable mail service, the company was required to build, in France, four passenger liners of a minimum displacement of 11,000 tonnes, able to maintain a minimum speed of 15 knots between Bordeaux and Lisbon, and 18 knots between Lisbon and Buenos Aires. with a minimum length ...
Argentina was a replacement for Moore-McCormack's SS Argentina (1929). Argentina and her sister ship, Brasil, used MARAD Design P2-S2-9a.Construction was subsidized by the United States Maritime Administration under title V, sections 501 and 504 of the Merchant Marine Act of 1936.