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Victoria Louise

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Augusta Victoria , later Auguste Victoria , placed in service in 1889 and named for Empress Augusta Victoria , wife of German Emperor Wilhelm II , was the name ship of the Augusta Victoria series and the first of a new generation of luxury Hamburg America Line ocean liners . She was the first liner built in continental Europe with twin propellers and when first placed in service, the fastest liner in the Atlantic trade. In 1897, the ship was rebuilt and lengthened and in 1904 she was sold to the Imperial Russian Navy , which renamed her Kuban .

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34-524: Victoria Louise or Viktoria Luise may refer to: SS  Prinzessin Victoria Luise , a German cruise ship launched in 1897, that ran aground off the coast of Jamaica in 1906 SS  Victoria Luise , a German passenger liner originally named SS Deutschland ; renamed in 1910 SMS Victoria Louise , a German protected cruiser launched in 1897 and lead ship of her class LZ 11 Viktoria Luise ,

68-525: A Norddeutscher Regatta Verein regatta on the Elbe at Cuxhaven , where she hosted a dinner at which Wilhelm II gave a speech in which he praised Ballin as "a bold adventurer to make peaceful conquests, whose fruits our grandchildren will reap". The Kaiser also presented a portrait of himself to Ballin, bearing the dedication "to the farseeing and tireless pathbreaker for our German commerce and export". In February and March 1902 Prince Henry of Prussia visited

102-762: A quadruple-expansion engine . The combined power of her twin engines was rated at 391 NHP and gave her a speed of 16 knots (30 km/h). She had two funnels , painted buff. The after one may have been a dummy. After she was fitted out, Wilhelm II inspected the ship. He was said to be displeased that she was slightly longer than his imperial yacht Hohenzollern . HAPAG registered Prinzessin Victoria Luise at Hamburg. Her code letters were RLVT. On 5 January 1901 Prinzessin Victoria Luise left Hamburg on her maiden voyage. She called at Boulogne and Plymouth , and reached Hoboken, New Jersey on 17 January. Af first, her cruises were sometimes called "tours". On 26 January she left New York on her first tour, which

136-685: A 58-day "pleasure voyage" from Cuxhaven , Germany to the Mediterranean and Near East. The cruise included well-planned excursions ashore at ports of call en route. Ballin himself was a passenger. The voyage was a success, so similar ones were planned. Early cruises, called "excursions", were a success, but ocean liners were not ideal for the task. They had too few amenities aboard to occupy passengers on long voyages. They were multi-class ships, with large steerage accommodation unsuited to cruising. Divisions between first and second class divided and limited access to deck space. What deck space there

170-457: A cruise ship from Blohm+Voss in Hamburg . She was built as yard number 144, and launched on 29 June 1900 as Prinzessin Victoria Luise , named after Princess Victoria Louise of Prussia , the only daughter of Kaiser Wilhelm II. She was completed on 19 December that year. Prinzessin Victoria Luise was no bigger than an average ocean-going cargo ship of her era. Her registered length

204-480: A likeness of her namesake as a figurehead . Prinzessin Victoria Luise was a one-class ship. All of her 120 cabins were first class state rooms . Her public rooms included a ballroom , social hall, gymnasium , library , and smoking room . A luxurious art gallery surrounded her dining room . She even had a darkroom for amateur photographers. Ballin aimed to match the style and service of Europe's finest hotels. The ship had twin screws , each driven by

238-427: A milky way of pear-shaped prisms and naked light bulbs clutched by gilded cherubs, a reception court choked by palm trees and a dark and gothic smoking room." Ballin had her interior design work done by Johann Poppe , the designer at Hamburg America's rival line, North German Lloyd , whose ships already had a reputation for elegance. She was immediately successful, but she and her sister ship were an economic drain on

272-602: A pre-World War I German airship (see Deutsche Luftschiffahrts-AG#Airships ) Princess Viktoria Luise of Prussia Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Victoria Louise . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Victoria_Louise&oldid=1194678361 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Ship disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

306-471: A steel four bladed 18 ft (5.5 m) diameter propeller with 32 ft (9.8 m) pitch. Maximum power was about 25,000 ihp. Coal bunker capacity was 2,260 tons and consumption about 220 tons per day. Albert Ballin commissioned Augusta Victoria and her sister ship Columbia in 1887, soon after joining the Hamburg America Line as head of passenger service. Augusta Victoria ,

340-662: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Prinzessin Victoria Luise Prinzessin Victoria Luise was the World's first purpose-built cruise ship . She was built in Germany , and launched in 1900 for Hamburg America Line (HAPAG). Most of her cruises were from Hoboken, New Jersey to the Caribbean . She also cruised to

374-729: The Mediterranean and the Black Sea , and in summer 1903 she made a series of cruises from Hamburg to Norway and the Baltic . Between September 1904 and January 1905 she made a pioneering round-the-World cruise from Hamburg to San Francisco . As a prestigious luxury ship, Prinzessin Victoria Luise also took part in events honoring Kaiser Wilhelm II , his brother Prince Henry of Prussia , and Cipriano Castro , President of Venezuela . Her career lasted only five years. In 1906 her Master mistook one lighthouse for another, set

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408-589: The Third Officer , Bruno Zache, commanded one of the ship's boats and took it to Plum Point. A continuous line of boats was formed from the ship to the shore, along which the crew passed each passenger from boat to boat to disembark them. Various hotels in Kingston then accommodated the passengers. The German cruiser SMS  Bremen and French training ship Duguay-Trouin came to assist Prinzessin Victoria Luise . Bremen tried to tow her off

442-649: The British-built City of New York and City of Paris of the Inman Line . ) In May 1889, her maiden voyage to New York broke a record, taking only seven days. In November 1889, Nellie Bly sailed to Southampton on the Augusta Victoria on the first leg of her 72-day race around the world. She was also the first luxury liner at Hamburg America, introducing the concept of the "floating hotel"; she had "a rococo stairhall, illuminated by

476-572: The Caribbean, along with the Prinz -class cargo liners Prinz Eitel Friedrich , Prinz Waldemar , Prinz August Wilhelm , and Prinz Joachim . Prinzessin Victoria Luise ' s route would be between Hoboken and Jamaica. The Prinz -class ships would work the route between Hoboken and Colón via Kingston . On 12 December 1906 Prinzessin Victoria Luise left Hoboken for Port Antonio and Kingston. Her Master, Captain H Brunswig,

510-743: The Near East from 22 January to 22 March 1891, with 241 passengers including the Ballins themselves, is often stated to have been the first ever cruise . Christian Wilhelm Allers published an illustrated account of it as Backschisch ( Baksheesh ). Some people claim the British Orient Line was the first to offer cruises since the late 1880s. However, those ships were principally for the transportation of passenger, goods and mail between two or more ports, such as between England and Australia, with leisure travel being an adjunct. In 1897,

544-557: The USA could join her via the company's scheduled transatlantic services from New York. Ports of call were to include Lisbon , Gibraltar , Genoa , Piraeus , Istanbul , Jaffa , and Port Said , whence she would pass through the Suez Canal . She would then continue via Bombay (now Mumbai ) and Calcutta . Passengers were offered the option to leave the ship at Bombay, make an 18-day overland tour of India , and rejoin her at Calcutta. She

578-615: The USA. On 11 March, as he left Hoboken aboard Deutschland to return home, the Hudson County Choristers sang to him from the deck of Prinzessin Victoria Luise . Edward VII and Queen Alexandra were due to be crowned in Westminster on 26 June 1902. HAPAG arranged for Prinzessin Victoria Luise to leave New York on 10 June to take passengers to England for the coronation, calling at Le Havre and Hamburg as well as London . However, Edward fell ill, and

612-536: The coronation was postponed until 9 August. In February and March 1903 Prinzessin Victoria Luise made a cruise that visited Bermuda as well as the Caribbean. That summer, HAPAG scheduled her to sail to North Cape and Spitzbergen (now Svalbard ) in Norway, and to the Baltic, leaving Hamburg on 6 June, 8 July and 28 July. In September 1903 HAPAG announced that she would make a four-and-a-half month cruise almost

646-472: The first to be put in service, was originally to have been called Normannia but was renamed for the Empress after Wilhelm II became Emperor. In the 1890s the line added the larger Normannia and SS  Fürst Bismarck to the series. Augusta Victoria was the first continental European liner with twin screws , which made her both faster and more reliable. (The two previous twin-screw liners were

680-416: The line because they required more coal than slower ships and could not carry much freight or many steerage passengers and were therefore profitable only in the summer season, and it was risky to operate them at all from Hamburg in very bad weather, when the Elbe was packed with ice. Off-season pleasure cruises were therefore started in 1891, and Augusta Victoria ' s cruise in the Mediterranean and

714-607: The original forward boiler compartment would be converted to staterooms. Her name was also changed to Auguste Victoria to correct an original inaccuracy; the Empress spelt her name with an e . While Augusta Victoria was under construction, the Emperor persuaded both Hamburg America and its rival Norddeutscher Lloyd to make their future liners convertible to auxiliary cruisers in time of war. Like all German fast liners built from then until 1914, she therefore had reinforced decks which could support gun platforms. In 1904 she and

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748-502: The rocks, but without success. On 18 December the Merritt & Chapman salvage tug Rescue left Norfolk, Virginia to try to rescue the ship. However, within days the sea, aided by a storm, had turned the ship broadside to the shore, she was listing sharply to port , and the water inside her hull was 16 feet (5 m) deep on that side. Her engines had been displaced, and her frame and keel plates were damaged. On 19 December she

782-536: The safety of his passengers and crew, and try to save his ship. Afterward his duty is to testify to any inquiry into the shipwreck that his employers or the relevant government may convene. Brunswig did none of these things. On 24 May 1907 an admiralty court in Hamburg posthumously found Captain Brunswig to have been negligent, not only by mistaking one lighthouse for another, but also for maintaining full speed at

816-434: The ship grounded at about 21:30 hrs on an uncharted reef at position 17°55′40″N 76°51′10″W  /  17.92778°N 76.85278°W  / 17.92778; -76.85278 . Her engines were run full astern, but failed to free her. Captain Brunswig sent a boat ashore to report the accident, and then retired to his cabin and shot himself. The passengers, unaware of his suicide, stayed aboard overnight. The next morning

850-486: The ship underwent a comprehensive rebuilding at Harland & Wolff in Belfast arriving in the graving dock 19 December 1896. She was lengthened by 61 ft (18.6 m), her tonnage increased, and her speed increased by half a knot, and the middle of her three masts was removed. The new section was to be inserted between the second and third boiler compartments with an additional boiler inserted to total nine. Part of

884-440: The time. Also that year a submarine earthquake sank the wreck of the ship. In 1910 Deutschland was refitted as a cruise ship and renamed Victoria Luise (without the " Prinzessin ") to succeed her. SS Augusta Victoria (1888) The ship had eight double ended main coal fired boilers and an auxiliary boiler. The main boilers provided steam for the two inverted three cylinder triple expansion engines each driving

918-636: The whole way around the World, including a fortnight in Japan . She would start on 13 September 1904, sail eastbound, and end at San Francisco on 26 January 1905. On 12 April 1904 the ship left Hoboken on a cruise to the Mediterranean. In January 1904, in port in La Guaira, Prinzessin Victoria Luise hosted a reception at which HAPAG company officials entertained President Castro of Venezuela. That May HAPAG revised her round-the-World tour plan. She woud start from Hamburg on 25 September, and passengers from

952-750: The wrong course, and accidentally drove her onto a reef off Jamaica . He swiftly took his own life, leaving his officers to manage the safe rescue of the ship's passengers and crew. No other lives were lost. In 1886 Albert Ballin joined HAPAG as manager of its passenger department. Transatlantic passenger traffic was seasonal, as passengers preferred to avoid the weather of the North Atlantic in winter. This left some transatlantic liners under-employed in winter. In 1889 HAPAG's new flagship, Augusta Victoria , entered service. In January 1891 Ballin, despite criticism from his HAPAG fellow directors and from other steamship companies, sent Augusta Victoria on

986-424: Was 38 years old, and had been her commander for more than two years. On the night of 16 December, Brunswig tried to take the ship into Kingston, but he mistook Plumb Point Lighthouse for Port Royal Lighthouse. A recent volcanic eruption had changed the topography of the seabed, so that in places, actual depths differed from what was marked on the ship's nautical charts . Heading north at 14 knots (26 km/h)

1020-466: Was 407.5 ft (124.2 m), her beam was 47.2 ft (14.4 m), and her depth was 27.0 ft (8.2 m). Her tonnages were 4,409  GRT , 2,249  NRT , and 1,480  DWT . But she was styled to look like a luxury private steam yacht , with a white hull and raked clipper bow and bowsprit, instead of the black hull and straight stem that was then fashionable for most steamships . Her lifeboats were varnished mahogany . She had

1054-569: Was declared a total loss . Some of her fittings were salvaged, and the HAPAG ship Sarnia took them to Hoboken, along with most of her crew. HAPAG transferred the liner Kronprinzessin Cecilie to replace Prinzessin Victoria Luise on its Hoboken – Jamaica route. Among seafarers there was swift criticism of Brunswig's suicide. In a shipwreck, the Master's duty is to remain in command, ensure

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1088-593: Was to Port-au-Prince ; Santo Domingo ; San Juan ; St Thomas , in what were then the Danish West Indies ; Saint-Pierre ; Port of Spain ; La Guaira : Puerto Cabello ; Curaçao ; Kingston ; Santiago de Cuba ; Cienfuegos ; and Havana . She arrived back in Hoboken on 2 March. On 9 March she left Hoboken on a her second tour, which was to the Mediterranean and the Black Sea. On 18 June she attended

1122-520: Was to continue via Singapore , Manila , Hong Kong , Shanghai , Nagasaki , Kobe , and Yokohama . Her intended arrival in San Francisco was brought forward to 17 January 1905. She was to leave San Francisco on 24 January to make her return voyage. The ship would carry a band of musicians to entertain her 200 passengers. In June 1906 HAPAG announced that it would transfer Prinzessin Victoria Luise to its Atlas Service between Hoboken and

1156-404: Was was mostly sheltered, designed to protect passengers from North Atlantic weather. And some of the ports that tourists might like to visit could not accommodate liners as big as Augusta Victoria . Ballin saw that a ship designed specifically for cruising would be more suitable, and also that she could spend all year cruising. In 1899 HAPAG made Ballin its Managing Director. He soon ordered

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