RMS Etruria

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RMS Etruria
History
United Kingdom
NameEtruria
NamesakeEtruria
OwnerCunard SS Co
OperatorCunard SS Co
Port of registryLiverpool
RouteLiverpool – Queenstown – New York
Ordered1883
BuilderJohn Elder & Co, Glasgow
Yard number286
Launched20 September 1884
CompletedMarch 1885
Maiden voyage25 April 1885
Out of serviceAugust 1908
Identification
  • UK official number 91187
  • code letters JTPM
FateScrapped in Preston in 1910
NotesOne of the last steamships to be fitted with auxiliary sails.
General characteristics
TypeOcean liner
Tonnage1884: 7,129 GRT, 3,258 NRT
Length501.6 ft (152.9 m)
Beam57.2 ft (17.4 m)
Depth38.2 ft (11.6 m)
Decks5
Installed power1,559 NHP
Propulsion3-cylinder compound engine
Sail planbarquentine
Speed19.5 knots (36.1 km/h)
Capacity
  • 1885:
  • 550 First Class
  • 800 Second Class
  • 1892:
  • 500 First Class
  • 160 Second Class
  • 800 Third Class

RMS Etruria was a transatlantic ocean liner built by John Elder & Co of Glasgow, Scotland in 1884 for Cunard Line. Etruria and her sister ship Umbria were the last two Cunarders that were fitted with auxiliary sails.[1] Both ships were among the fastest and largest liners then in service. Etruria was completed in March 1885, twelve weeks after Umbria, and entered service on the Liverpool – New York route.

Etruria had two large funnels that gave the outward impression of great power. She had three large steel masts that were barquentine-rigged. Another innovation was that she was equipped with refrigeration machinery, but it was the single-screw propulsion that would bring the most publicity later in her career.

The ship epitomized the luxuries of Victorian style. The public rooms in First Class were full of ornately carved furniture and heavy velvet curtains hung in all the rooms, and they were cluttered with bric-a-brac that period fashion dictated. These rooms, and the First Class cabins, were situated on the Promenade, Upper, Saloon and Main Decks. There was also a Music Room, Smoke Room for gentlemen, and separate dining rooms for First and Second Class passengers. By the standard of the day, Second Class accommodation was moderate, but spacious and comfortable. RMS Etruria's accommodation consisted of 550 First Class, and 800 Second Class passengers. However late in 1892 this changed to 500 First Class, 160 Second Class, and 800 Third Class (Steerage) passengers.

North Atlantic service

Front cover of a passenger list for a voyage of RMS Etruria

Cunard registered Etruria at Liverpool. Her United Kingdom official number was 91187 and her code letters were JTPM.[2]

Just as Etruria was to start her regular service to New York from Liverpool at the beginning of 1885, a crisis involving Russia's threat to invade Afghanistan was coming to a head. This delayed Etruria's maiden voyage across the North Atlantic. On 26 March the Admiralty chartered Etruria and Umbria. With the dispute reaching a settlement, Etruria was released from Admiralty service within a few days, but her sister ship was retained for six months.

1891 Illustration of Etruria

On 25 April 1885 Etruria finally made her maiden voyage under the command of Captain McMicken.[1] She made the Atlantic crossing calling at Queenstown (now Cobh). On her second crossing, westbound from Liverpool to New York, she won the Blue Riband (see the table below) and flew the pennant for Cunard.

On 20 September 1885, she was outward bound from New York and in Lower New York Bay, at anchor due to dense fog. The 4,276-ton cargo ship Canada, owned by the National Steamship Company of Limerick, collided with Etruria, on her starboard side. Canada scraped alongside Etruria, ripping away a portion of her rigging, but there were no casualties.[1] Both ships continued on their voyages.

Winston Churchill

In November 1895 Winston Churchill, then 20 years old and a lieutenant in the 4th Hussars, secured a few weeks' leave to visit Cuba, in order to observe the Cuban War of Independence against Spain. He traveled via Liverpool and New York on Etruria, reaching New York harbor on 9 November. Three days later he traveled on to Cuba. Churchill returned to Britain on 21 December 1895, again aboard Etruria.[3]

Ceres and Milfield

On 8 August 1896 Etruria sank the floating steam elevator[clarification needed] Ceres ( United States) in a collision in New York Bay.[4]

On 10 December 1897 Etruria rescued the crew of the steamship Milfield which was foundering in heavy seas about 140 miles west of Fastnet Rock.[5]

Propeller shaft failures

On 6 January 1900, Etruria left Liverpool, and one week later she arrived in New York. On the 13th engineers were inspecting the ship, and on examination of the propeller shaft, they found cracks that were not there when the ship left Liverpool. Her sister ship had suffered a failure of her propeller shaft at sea in 1893, and to avoid the same fate Etruria was confined to her pier until a replacement shaft was shipped over from Britain. After the new shaft was fitted in New York, she departed on 17 February for the homeward bound service. In 1900 Etruria remained on the North Atlantic service while Umbria was requisitioned to carry troops to and from South Africa during the Boer War. By July 1900 both sisters were back on the North Atlantic service.

Etruria under steam and sail

In 1901 Etruria and her running mate were equipped for wireless telegraphy. On 22 February 1902, Etruria left New York and was due to arrive in Queenstown on 1 March. On 26 February she radioed Umbria to pass on messages to one of her passengers. However, that evening her propeller shaft fractured, leaving her drifting. She tried without success to radio Umbria again to report her predicament. In that era, wireless sets on many ships were not manned 24 hours a day. Eventually she attracted the attention of the Leyland Line ship William Cliff by firing distress rockets. William Cliff stood alongside in an hour and stayed with her during the night while attempts were made to repair her. Etruria then made sail and William Cliff took her in tow; the ships headed for Horta, in the Azores, which were 500 miles to the south-east of her stricken position.[1]

She arrived in the Azores on Sunday, 9 March, and on the 15th her passengers and mail were transferred onto the steamship Elbe, which had been chartered for the task on the 10th. It was summer 1902 before Etruria was repaired and back in service, but in October, after a particularly rough Atlantic crossing, her propeller shaft again showed serious cracks and she was taken out of service and waited in New York for yet another new shaft to be sent over and installed. It was 1 November before she set sail for home again; 1902 had been a very bad year for the ship.

More misfortune

On 28 February 1903, Etruria was leaving New York when she ran aground on sand and mud in the entrance to Gedney Channel. After she was refloated later the same day there was no damage found and she set off on her voyage to Liverpool.

On 10 October 1903, Etruria was only four hours out of New York when at 2:30 pm the ship was struck by a rogue wave. The wave was reported to be at least 50 feet (15 meters) high, and struck the ship on the port side. The wave carried away part of the fore bridge and smashed the guardrail stanchions. A number of first-class passengers were sitting in deck chairs close to the bridge, and they caught the full force of the water. One passenger, a Canadian, was fatally injured, and several other passengers were hurt.[1]

In January 1907 two of Etruria's crew were killed as they tried to secure the lashings of the starboard anchor in very rough weather, during a westbound crossing.

The end of Etruria's career

The two 23-year-old vessels were now reaching the point where technical progress had overtaken them. RMS Lusitania and RMS Mauretania were under construction, and due to enter service in late 1907.

On Wednesday 26 August 1908, RMS Etruria was moving astern from her pier in Liverpool to anchor opposite the Princes' Landing Stage, where her passengers would embark. A hopper barge crossing the Mersey came too close to Etruria and was violently rammed by her. Etruria's rudder and propeller were thrust deep into the hopper, almost severing it in two. However, being impaled on Etruria's propeller prevented the hopper from sinking. Both vessels drifted helplessly in the Mersey, and the hopper was violently crushed against the landing stage. This not only spelt the end for the hopper, but finished the career of Etruria as well. Her propeller, rudder and steering gear were seriously damaged, forcing the cancellation of her sailing to New York.[1] Etruria's passengers were put up in hotels and then caught Umbria later in the week. Etruria was taken into dock, where temporary repairs were made.

She did not cross the Atlantic again and, after spending time laid up at Birkenhead, she was finally sold for £16,750 in October 1909.[1] On 10 October 1910, the Mersey tug Black Cock towed Etruria to her final destination of Preston, Lancashire, where she was scrapped.[1] Her sale for scrap was announced in mid November 1909.[6] In January 1911 it was reported that over the past two years Thos. W. Ward alone had broken up five Cunarders: Lucania, Etruria, Aleppo, Saragosssa and Cherbourg and had five P & O boats in their yards during 1910.[7]

Popular culture

Etruria is the ocean liner in the opening sequences of Thomas Edison's produced, Edwin S. Porter directed, 1904 film The European Rest Cure.[8]

Prices of passage aboard Etruria, May 1895
From Pier 40, North River, foot of Clarkson Street, City of New York
Every Saturday, New York – Queenstown – Liverpool
1st Class 1st Class 1st Class 1st Class Return 1st Class Return 1st Class Return 2nd Class Cabin 2nd Class Cabin 2nd Class Cabin Return 2nd Class Cabin Return Under 1 Year old
$75 $90 $175 $125 $150 $315 $40 $45 $75 $85 Free outward

The Blue Riband

Records of RMS Umbria & RMS Etruria
The Blue Riband of the North Atlantic
Westbound
Steamship Date Line From To Nautical Miles Days/Hours/Minutes Knots
RMS Etruria 1885 (16/8- 22/8) Cunard Queenstown Sandy Hook 2801 6/5/31 18.73
RMS Umbria 1887 (29/5-4/6) Cunard Queenstown Sandy Hook 2848 6/4/12 19.22
RMS Etruria 1888 (27/5-2/6) Cunard Queenstown Sandy Hook 2854 6/1/55 19.56
Eastbound
Steamship Date Line From To Nautical Miles Days/Hours/Minute Knots
Etruria 1885 (1/8-7/8) Cunard Sandy Hook Queenstown 2822 6/9/0 18.44
Etruria 1888 (7/7-14/7) Cunard Sandy Hook Queenstown 2981 6/4/50 19.36

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Frame, Chris. "Early Cunarders of Particular Interest". Chris' Cunard Page. Archived from the original on 30 January 2010. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
  2. ^ Mercantile Navy List. London. 1887. p. 66. Retrieved 1 September 2022 – via Crew List Index Project.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. ^ "Safe Arrival of the Etruria - Interview with Lieut. Winston Churshill". North Star. No. 4658. Darlington. 23 December 1895. p. 3. Retrieved 23 June 2023 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  4. ^ "Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general Steamboat-inspection Service, Year ending June 30, 1897". Washington: Government Printing Office. 1897. p. 22. Retrieved 20 March 2020 – via Haithi Trust.
  5. ^ "The Fleets of the Mail Lines: The Cunard Line". The Marine Engineer. Vol. XIX. 1 January 1898. pp. 363–364.
  6. ^ Launch Of A Liner. The Times, Monday, 15 Nov 1909; pg. 6; Issue 39117
  7. ^ A review of Lloyd's Register, The Times, Wednesday, 11 Jan 1911; pg. 21; Issue 39479
  8. ^ Edison Company; The European Rest Cure, c.1904(youtube) Retrieved 19 March 2017

Bibliography

External links

Records
Preceded by
Oregon
Blue Riband (Eastbound record)
1885–89
Succeeded by
City of Paris
Blue Riband (Westbound record)
1885–87
Succeeded by
Umbria
Preceded by
Umbria
Blue Riband (Westbound record)
1888–89
Succeeded by
City of Paris
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Current fleet
  • 2004  RMS Queen Mary 2
  • 2007  MS Queen Victoria
  • 2010  MS Queen Elizabeth
  • 2024  MS Queen Anne
Former ships
1840–1994
  • 1840  RMS Unicorn
  • 1840  RMS Britannia
  • 1848  SS Satellite
  • 1853  SS Arabia
  • 1856  RMS Persia
  • 1862  RMS Scotia
  • 1863  RMS Hecla
  • 1865  SS Java
  • 1867  SS Russia
  • 1870  SS Abyssinia
  • 1870  SS Parthia
  • 1874  SS Bothnia
  • 1878  SS Aleppo
  • 1879  SS Gallia
  • 1881  SS Servia
  • 1881  SS Catalonia
  • 1882  RMS Aurania
  • 1884  SS Oregon
  • 1884  RMS Umbria
  • 1885  RMS Etruria
  • 1892  RMS Campania
  • 1893  RMS Lucania
  • 1898  SS Ultonia
  • 1899  SS Ivernia
  • 1899  RMS Saxonia
  • 1903  RMS Carpathia
  • 1903  RMS Pannonia
  • 1904  RMS Slavonia
  • 1905  RMS Carmania
  • 1905  RMS Caronia
  • 1907  RMS Lusitania
  • 1907  RMS Mauretania
  • 1910  RMS Franconia
  • 1911  RMS Albania
  • 1912  RMS Laconia
  • 1913  RMS Andania
  • 1913  RMS Alaunia
  • 1914  RMS Aquitania
  • 1914  SS Orduña
  • 1916  SS Royal George
  • 1917  RMS Aurania
  • 1920  SS Albania
  • 1921  RMS Berengaria
  • 1921  RMS Scythia
  • 1922  RMS Samaria
  • 1922  RMS Laconia
  • 1922  RMS Andania
  • 1922  RMS Antonia
  • 1922  RMS Lancastria
  • 1921  RMS Ausonia
  • 1922  RMS Franconia
  • 1924  RMS Aurania
  • 1925  SS Letitia
  • 1925  RMS Ascania
  • 1925  RMS Alaunia
  • 1925  RMS Carinthia
  • 1934  RMS Majestic
  • 1934  RMS Olympic
  • 1934  MV Georgic
  • 1934  MV Britannic
  • 1934  SS Laurentic
  • 1936  RMS Queen Mary
  • 1939  RMS Mauretania
  • 1940  RMS Queen Elizabeth
  • 1945  SS Valacia (Empire Camp)
  • 1947  RMS Media
  • 1947  RMS Parthia
  • 1949  RMS Caronia
  • 1954  RMS Saxonia
  • 1955  RMS Ivernia
  • 1956  RMS Carinthia
  • 1957  RMS Sylvania
  • 1969  MS Queen Elizabeth 2
  • 1970  SS Atlantic Causeway
  • 1970  SS Atlantic Conveyor
  • 1971  MV Cunard Adventurer
  • 1972  MV Cunard Ambassador
  • 1975  MS Cunard Countess
  • 1976  MS Cunard Princess
  • 1983  MS Sagafjord
  • 1983  MS Caronia
  • 1986  MS Sea Goddess I
  • 1986  MS Sea Goddess II
  • 1993  MS Cunard Crown Jewel
  • 1993  MS Cunard Crown Dynasty
  • 1994  MS Royal Viking Sun
For MoWT
  • 1940  SS Pasteur
  • 1941  SS Empire Barracuda
  • 1940  MV Empire Audacity
  • 1943  SS Empire Battleaxe
  • 1943  SS Empire Broadsword
  • 1945  MV Empire Ettrick
Years indicate year of entry into Cunard service.
  • v
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Shipwrecks
  • 3 Jan: Mary Celeste
  • 15 Jan: Admiral Moorsom
  • 15 Feb: Yuyuen
  • 5 Mar: Tonquin
  • 8 May: Mary E. Fish
  • 2 Jun: SMS Augusta
  • 10 Jun: Kreml
  • 24 Jun: City of Tokio
  • 18 Aug: Jarvis Lord
  • September (unknown date): Sweepstakes
  • 6 Nov: Mary and Catherine
  • 7 Nov: Algoma
  • 8 Nov: Brooklyn
Other incidents
  • 28 Jan: HMS Castor
  • 24 Apr: Ambrose Light
  • 6 May: Bayard
  • 20 Sep: Etruria
  • 17 Oct: Camorta, Glenfruin
  • 4 Dec: Chester
  • 16 Dec: Red Jacket
  • v
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Shipwrecks and maritime incidents in 1903
Shipwrecks
  • 21 Jan: USS Leyden
  • 4 Feb: Espingole
  • 10 Feb: Madiana
  • February (unknown date): Ambriz
  • March (unknown date): Hougomont
  • 26 May: Huddersfield, Oakland
  • 9 Apr: Althea
  • 17 Jun: HMS Scorpion
  • 14 Jul: Monterey
  • 18 Jul: North Pacific
  • 2 Aug: Tennie and Laura
  • 23 Aug: Narara
  • 26 Sep: Harold
  • September (unknown date): Moonlight
  • 15 Oct: Marquette
  • 28 Nov: Petriana
  • 6 Dec: Warrington
  • 26 Dec: Kiowa
  • 31 Dec: USS Quiros
  • Unknown date: Loch Bredan, Vega
Other incidents
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Shipwrecks and maritime incidents in 1907
Shipwrecks
  • 11 Jan: Alice Gertrude, Welcome
  • 17 Jan: Prinz Waldemar
  • 21 Feb: Berlin
  • 24 Feb: Gjøa
  • 3 Mar: Dakota
  • 7 Mar: Dundonald
  • 12 Mar: Iéna
  • 17 Mar: Suevic
  • 18 Mar: Jebba
  • March (unknown date): Fairhaven
  • 1 Apr: Hereford
  • 16 Apr: Lucifer
  • 19 Apr: HMS Ariel
  • 1 May: Silverlip
  • 20 May: Chanzy, Izaro
  • 19 Jun: Gymnote
  • 21 Jul: Columbia
  • 29 Sep: Metamora
  • 11 Oct: Aagot, Cyprus
  • 13 Oct: Pedro Nunes
  • 17 Oct: Ina Mactavish
  • 21 Oct: Queen Cristina
  • 2 Dec: Mount Temple
  • 14 Dec: Thomas W. Lawson
  • 21 Dec: Cap Lopez
  • 27 Dec: Dei Gratia
Other incidents
  • 11 Jan: Turbinia
  • 19 Jan: Vaderland
  • January (unknown date): Etruria
  • 5 Feb: Winifredian
  • 11 Feb: HMS Albemarle, HMS Commonwealth
  • 20 Feb: Kléber
  • 5 Mar: Gymnote
  • 11 Mar: Devonian
  • 12 Mar: Patrie, Suffren
  • 3 May: Prinz August Wilhelm
  • 2 Jun: Grängesberg
  • 20 Jun: HMS Dryad, USLHT Maple
  • 21 Jul: San Pedro
  • 29 Aug: Standart
  • August (unknown date): HMS Commonwealth
  • 21 Oct: USS Franklin
  • 9 Nov: Favorite
  • 23 Dec: Mauretania
  • v
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  • e
Shipwrecks and maritime incidents in 1908
Shipwrecks
  • 5 Feb: Favorite
  • 14 Feb: Emily Reed
  • 18 Feb: HMS Hero
  • 17 Mar: USS Monongahela
  • 2 Apr: HMS Tiger
  • 25 Apr: HMS Gladiator
  • 27 Apr: HMS Gala
  • 30 Apr: Matsushima
  • 7 Jun: City of Medicine Hat
  • 18 Jul: Aeon
  • 26 Aug: Dunearn
  • 20 Sep: Star of Bengal
  • 27 Oct: Yarmouth
  • October (unknown date): Neustria
  • 14 Nov: Falls of Halladale
  • 25 Nov: Sardinia
  • 4 Dec: USS Yankee
  • 12 Dec: Ellen
  • 25 Dec: Advance
Other incidents
  • 19 Jan: Finland
  • February (unknown date): Magnus Mail
  • 23 Mar: Sangola
  • 2 Apr: HMS Berwick
  • 9 Apr: Eva
  • 25 Apr: Saint Paul
  • 27 Apr: HMS Attentive, HMS Ribble
  • 4 May: HMS Irresistible
  • 13 Jun: HMS Revenge, HMS Vengeance
  • 22 Jul: USS Mayflower
  • 26 Jul: Sierra Blanca
  • 12 Aug: Hebble
  • 26 Aug: Etruria
  • 23 Sep: USS Yankee
  • 27 Sep: Oleg
  • October (unknown date): Derwent
  • Unknown date: Mataafa