RMS Majestic (1889)

History
Name: RMS Majestic
Namesake: Majestic (Big and impressive)
Owner: White Star Line
Operator: White Star Line
Port of registry: Liverpool, United Kingdom United Kingdom
Builder: Harland and Wolff yards in Belfast
Yard number: 209
Launched: 29 June 1889
Christened: not christened
Completed: 22 March 1890
Maiden voyage: 2 April 1890
Fate: Scrapped; began on 5 May 1914
General characteristics
Class and type: Teutonic class ocean liner
Tonnage: 9,965 gross tons
Length: 582 feet (177.8 m)
Beam: 57.7 feet (17.6 m)
Propulsion: Two triple expansion engines powering two propellers.
Speed: 20 knots (37 km/h; 23 mph) (design service speed)
Capacity:
  • 1,490 Passengers:
  • 300 First Class
  • 190 Second Class
  • 1,000 Third Class

RMS Majestic was a steamship built in 1890 for and operated by the White Star Line.

History

A product of Harland and Wolff, the Majestic was launched on 29 June 1889. The ship spent the next nine months being fitted out for delivery to White Star in March, 1890. White Star had sought to fund the construction of both the Majestic and Teutonic. Through the British government, a proposal which was accepted, with the stipulation that the Royal Navy would have access to the two liners in a time of war.

On 2 April 1890, Majestic left on her maiden voyage from Liverpool to New York City. There was a strong desire in the White Star management to regain the coveted Blue Riband, the award for the fastest crossing of the Atlantic. The maiden voyage did not produce a time good enough to win the Blue Riband away from City of Paris, but on a west-bound voyage between 30 July and 5 August 1891, she achieved that goal, with an average speed of 20.1 knots. Unfortunately, the Majestic held the honour for a mere two weeks, as the Teutonic completed a crossing on 19 August with a speed of 20.35 knots (the City of Paris then won it back a year later).

In 1895, the Majestic was assigned a new captain named Edward Smith, later notable as the captain of the Titanic. Smith served as Majestic's captain for nine years. When the Boer War started in 1899, Smith and the Majestic were called upon to transport troops to Cape Colony. Two trips were made to South Africa, one in December, 1899 and one in February, 1900, both without incident.

In 1902–1903, the ship underwent a refit, which included new boilers (and consequently taller twin funnels), after which she returned to the Liverpool-New York run. Smith left as captain in 1904 to take on the new Baltic, then the largest ship in the world. In 1905, the Majestic suffered a fire in her bunker, but the damage was not significant. In 1907, White Star's main terminal was moved from Liverpool to Southampton and, on 26 June, the Majestic sailed from these new facilities for the first time.

When the Olympic entered service in 1911, Teutonic was removed from the New York run and put on Canadian service with the Dominion Line. Likewise when Titanic came on the scene in 1912, Majestic was retired from White Star's New York service and designated as a reserve ship, biding her time at Birkenhead's Bidston Dock. When the Titanic met her fate in April, 1912, Majestic was pressed back into service, filling the hole in the transatlantic schedule.

On 17 October 1913, she came to the rescue of the French schooner Garonne, which had wrecked. 14 January 1914 saw the Majestic leave for her last Atlantic crossing. Soon after, she was sold for £26,700 for scrap to the Thos W Ward yard at Morecambe. Before scrapping of the ship commenced the scrapping company opened the ship for public tours, and some of the still-beautiful interior panelling was saved and used in the offices of the Ward company.

See also

Records
Preceded by
City of Paris
Holder of the Blue Riband (Westbound)
1891
Succeeded by
Teutonic

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Majestic (ship, 1890).
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/12/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.