RMS Britannia

Cunard ocean liner

RMS Britannia at harbour.
History
United Kingdom
NameRMS Britannia
NamesakeBritannia
OwnerBritish and North American Royal Mail Steam Packet Company
BuilderRobert Duncan & Company, Greenock, Scotland
Launched5 February 1840
Maiden voyage4 July 1840
Out of serviceSold to the Reichsflotte in March 1849
German Empire Navy War EnsignGerman Confederation
NameSMS Barbarossa
AcquiredMarch 1849
Out of serviceTransferred to the Prussian Navy in June 1852
Prussian War EnsignPrussia
NameSMS Barbarossa
AcquiredJune 1852
FateSunk as a target ship in July 1880
General characteristics
Class and typeBritannia-class steamship
Tons burthen1,154
Length207 ft (63 m)
Beam34 ft (10 m)
Draught16.8 ft (5.1 m)
Propulsion
  • Paddle wheels
  • Two-cylinder side-lever engine
  • 740 ihp
  • Three masts
Speed8.5 knots (15.7 km/h)
Range640 tons coal
Capacity115 passengers
Crew82

RMS Britannia was an ocean liner of the British and North American Royal Mail Steam Packet Company, later known as Cunard Steamship Company. She was launched on Wednesday 5 February 1840,[1] at the yard of Robert Duncan & Company in Greenock, Scotland. The ship and her Britannia-class sisters, Acadia, Caledonia, and Columbia, were the first ocean liners built by the company.

Description and service

Britannia was a large ship for the period, 207 feet (63 m) long and 34 feet (10.3 m) across the beam, with three masts and a wooden hull.[2] She had paddle wheels and her coal-powered[2] two-cylinder side-lever engine (from Robert Napier) had a power output of about 740 indicated horsepower with a coal consumption around 38 tons per day.[2] She was relatively fast for the time: her usual speed was about 8.5 knots (16 km/h),[2] but she could do better if the winds and currents were favourable. She had a tonnage, or carrying capacity, of 1,154 tons (by the Builder's Old Measurement). She was capable of carrying 115 passengers with a crew of 82.[3]

On her maiden voyage, starting on 4 July 1840, she made Halifax, Nova Scotia, from Liverpool, England, in 12 days and 10 hours, continuing on to Boston, Massachusetts. The Britannia transported numerous types of cargo alongside its passengers. The cargo included 600 tons of coal; mail due across the Atlantic; livestock for food and milk; and cats to control the rat population. There were 115 passengers, with 82 crew members on board.[4]

Her first homeward run from Halifax to Liverpool was made in just under 10 days at an average speed of about 11 knots (20 km/h), setting a new eastbound record which lasted until 1842.[5]

She was joined by her sister ship Acadia in August 1840, by Caledonia in October 1840 and by Columbia in January 1841, each constructed by a different shipbuilder.[2] All four ships could carry 115 passengers and 225 tons of cargo. The dining saloon was a long deck-house placed on the upper deck and there was also a 'ladies only' saloon. The fare to Halifax was 35 guineas (2,964 GPB in 2015)[6] which included wines and spirits as well as food.[7]

In January 1842 Charles Dickens and his wife travelled to the United States on Britannia. The weather was bad, he was seasick for most of the voyage and returned home on a sailing ship.[8][9]

The B & N.A. Royal Mail Steamship Britannia John Hewitt, Commander, leaving her dock at East Boston on 3 February 1844 on her voyage to Liverpool (through) a canal cut in the ice 7 miles long

As Barbarossa in German service

In March 1849 she was sold by Cunard to the revolutionary German confederation and was renamed SMS Barbarossa. She had nine guns fitted, and was the flagship of the Reichsflotte under Karl Rudolf Brommy in the Battle of Heligoland. In June 1852 she was transferred to the Prussian Navy and used as a barracks ship at Danzig. In May 1880 she was decommissioned from the Prussian Navy and in July 1880 she was sunk as a target ship.[8]

Film depiction of RMS Britannia

The funding and first crossing of Britannia were key plot elements in a Warner Brothers film released in 1941 as Atlantic Ferry in the U.K., and Sons of the Sea in the U.S.

References

  1. ^ https://www.chriscunard.com/history-fleet/cunard-fleet/1840-1900/britannia/ RMS Britannia on Chris' Cunard Page.
  2. ^ a b c d e Smith, Eugene Waldo (1947). Trans-Atlantic passenger ships, past and present. Boston: George H. Dean Company. p. 3. Retrieved 26 May 2018.
  3. ^ Lavery, Brian. "SHIP: The Epic Story of Maritime Adventure", p. 209. DK Publishing 2004.
  4. ^ "175 Anniversary Historical occasions in Halifax, Boston and New York". Cunard Line 175 Anniversary Crossing. Cunard Line. Retrieved 22 August 2015.
  5. ^ The Blue Riband of the North Atlantic
  6. ^ "Purchasing Power of British Pounds from 1270 to Present". Retrieved 22 August 2015.
  7. ^ Bernard Dumpleton, "The Story of the Paddle Steamer", 1973, The Uffington Press, ISBN 0-85475-057-6
  8. ^ a b MaritimeQuest- SS Britannia/Barbarossa. Retrieved 1 June 2014.
  9. ^ Dickens, Charles (1850). American Notes for General Circulation. Chapters 1, 2 and 16. Project Gutenberg. Retrieved 1 June 2014.

External links

  • Media related to Britannia (ship, 1840) at Wikimedia Commons
  • Britannia on thegreatoceanliners.com
  • SMS Barbarossa http://www.janmaat.de/m_dfbarbarossa.htm Archived 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  • Britannia on Chris' Cunard Page https://www.chriscunard.com/history-fleet/cunard-fleet/1840-1900/britannia/
Records
Preceded by
Great Western
Blue Riband (Eastbound record)
1840–1842
Succeeded by
Great Western
  • v
  • t
  • e
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
  • 1909  SS Thracia
  • 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.