Furness Bermuda Line

Last updated
Furness Bermuda Line
TypePassenger Shipping
Founded1919
Defunct1966
Headquarters
New York City, NY
Area served
New YorkBermuda
Parent Furness, Withy

Furness Bermuda Line was a UK shipping line that operated in the 20th century. It was part of Furness, Withy and ran passenger liners between New York and the British Overseas Territory of Bermuda from 1919 to 1966.

Contents

Origins

The Quebec Steam Ship Company had served Bermuda since 1874. Canada Steamship Lines took over the company in 1913 and sold it in 1919 to Furness, Withy, who renamed it the Furness Bermuda Line. At first the route had only one ship, [1] the 5,530  GRT Bermudian, [2] which Sir James Laing & Sons had built in 1904 and which Furness, Withy renamed Fort Hamilton. [3]

RMS Fort Hamilton, Furness Bermuda first ship Rms fort hamilton.jpg
RMS Fort Hamilton, Furness Bermuda first ship
Wandilla, which Furness, Withy renamed Fort St. George SS Wandilla3.jpg
Wandilla, which Furness, Withy renamed Fort St. George

In 1921 Furness, Withy bought a pair of ships from the Adelaide Steamship Company: the 7,785  GRT Wandilla and 7,784  GRT Willochra. [2] They were quadruple-expansion steamships that William Beardmore and Company in Glasgow had built in 1912 [4] and 1913. [2]

Furness, Withy had Willochra fitted out with berths for 400 first class passengers and renamed her Fort St. George. It had Wandilla modified to carry 380 first class and 50 second class passengers, replaced her cargo holds with tanks to supply Bermuda with fresh water, and renamed her RMS Fort Victoria.

At the same time Furness, Withy invested in tourist development such as hotels on Bermuda. [1]

Growing trade

RMS Fort Victoria, which was sunk in a collision in 1929 SS Willochra.jpg
RMS Fort Victoria, which was sunk in a collision in 1929

Furness, Withy had competition from the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company, which had long served Bermuda. After the First World War enough tourists from North America wanted to sail to Bermuda for RMSP to employ prestigious "A-series" liners such as the 10,537  GRT Araguaya, 11,073  GRT Avon and 12,015  GRT Arcadian on the route. However, in 1926 RMSP withdrew its service between the US, Bermuda and West Indies. [5]

Furness, Withy sold Fort Hamilton [6] and ordered a 19,086  GRT passenger liner for the route. Normally it would take 27 months to build a ship of such size, [7] but Workman, Clark and Company in Belfast completed the motor ship Bermuda in December 1927, [8] just 16 months after laying her keel. She had berths for 691 passengers, could sail between New York and Hamilton in about 40 hours, [9] and was an immediate success. [7]

Bermuda, Furness Bermuda Line's first purpose-built ship Ms bermuda furness.jpg
Bermuda, Furness Bermuda Line's first purpose-built ship

The Great Depression that began in 1929 caused a worldwide slump in shipping. Most types of cargo and passenger traffic sharply declined. Many hundreds of ships were laid up, and thousands of officers and tens of thousands of seamen were laid off. [10] Most of Furness, Withy's cargo and passenger services were affected. But bookings from the US to Bermuda, many of them for one-week short holidays, remained buoyant. [11] Furness, Withy ordered a second large ship in order to offer two sailings each week: one on Saturday and the other midweek. [7]

However, before the new ship could be completed, Furness, Withy suffered two setbacks. In December 1929 Fort Victoria was sunk when the 5,946  GRT Algonquin collided with her in fog in Ambrose Channel off New York. [2] Then in June 1931, Bermuda's passenger accommodation was gutted by fire in Hamilton Harbour. Bermuda's hull and main engines survived, so she was returned to Workman, Clark to be repaired. [11]

But in the shipping slump, even modern passenger liners were laid up and readily available. Furness, Withy was able to charter ships including Cunard Line's RMS Franconia and Holland America Line Veendam to maintain its Bermuda service. [11] [12]

The "Millionaires' Ships"

Furness Bermuda promotion poster for Queen of Bermuda Furness bermuda hamilton.jpg
Furness Bermuda promotion poster for Queen of Bermuda

Monarch of Bermuda was launched in March 1931 and completed that November. At 22,424  GRT was larger and more luxurious than Bermuda, with berths for 830 first class and 30 second class passengers. [11] Vickers-Armstrongs built Monarch of Bermuda at its Walker shipyard. [13] She was a turbine steamer, and was Furness, Withy's first ship to have turbo-electric transmission. She was swifter than Bermuda, easily exceeding 19 knots (35 km/h) on her sea trials. [11]

In November 1931 Bermuda's rebuild at Belfast was nearly complete when she suffered a second fire that caused more serious damage than the first. [7] Between them the two fires caused damage estimated to cost her underwriters £1.25 million. [14] Workman, Clark bought the wreck [9] and Furness, Withy ordered a turbo-electric sister ship for Monarch of Bermuda. [11]

In the meantime Furness, Withy temporarily achieved its aim of a two-ship service by chartering modern cabin liners from Canadian Pacific: the 20,021  GRT Duchess of York for several trips in 1931 and 1932 [15] and the 20,123  GRT Duchess of Bedford in the early months of 1933. The latter maintained the service alongside Monarch of Bermuda until Queen of Bermuda was completed. [16]

Queen of Bermuda StateLibQld 1 173687 Queen of Bermuda (ship).jpg
Queen of Bermuda

Vickers-Armstrongs built the 22,575  GRT Queen of Bermuda at its Barrow-in-Furness shipyard, launching her in September 1932 and completing her in February 1933. [17]

Queen of Bermuda looked like Monarch of Bermuda but had slightly larger cabins and only 731 berths. [11] They were nicknamed the "Millionaires' Ships". [18]

The pair competed with each other on speed. Eventually Queen of Bermuda took the record with a passage from New York to Hamilton in 32 hours, 48 minutes, which meant that her speed averaged 20.33 knots (37.65 km/h). [18]

In 1935 Furness, Withy sold Fort St. George to Lloyd Triestino, who renamed her Cesarea. [2] In 1938, to meet the high demand of the Bermuda service, Furness charted White Star Line's Georgic to operate in tandem with the Monarch of Bermuda and Queen of Bermuda. [19]

Second World War

HMS Queen of Bermuda in WWII HMS Queen of Bermuda FL17829.jpg
HMS Queen of Bermuda in WWII

In the Second World War Monarch of Bermuda was converted into a troop ship and the Admiralty requisitioned Queen of Bermuda as an armed merchant cruiser. Queen of Bermuda was released from the Royal Navy in 1943 and spent the next few years as a troop ship. [20]

Both ships survived the war, but for a while afterwards the Ministry of Transport continued to use both ships as military and government transports. Furness, Withy made do with two small ships on the route between New York and Bermuda. [21]

Eventually the UK Government released Monarch of Bermuda and Furness, Withy started having her converted back into a luxury liner to return to her former route. But in March 1947 [22] while being refitted she was damaged by fire, so Furness, Withy sold her to the UK Government. [1] The UK Government then released Queen of Bermuda. Her refit took 18 months, cost more than her original building and was not completed until February 1949. [22]

Post War Voyages & Fleet

Promotion poster for Ocean Monarch passing Queen of Bermuda Queen of bermuda ocean monarch.Jpeg
Promotion poster for Ocean Monarch passing Queen of Bermuda
Queen of Bermuda in Hamilton Harbour, Bermuda in the early 1950s The Queen of Bermuda in Bermuda, late 1952 or very early 1953.jpg
Queen of Bermuda in Hamilton Harbour, Bermuda in the early 1950s

The Queen of Bermuda returned to the New York-Bermuda service after the war. To replace the Monarch of Bermuda, Furness, Withy ordered a smaller ship. the 13,834  GRT Ocean Monarch, completed by Vickers-Armstrongs at Walker in 1951.

In October 1961 the Queen of Bermuda was sent to Harland and Wolff in Belfast for a refit, to modernize the ship. The bow was reshaped, and all three funnels were removed, replaced with one funnel amidships. [19] This gave the ship the distinction of being the only ocean liner to have sailed with one, two and three funnels.

The two ships continued to serve the island until late 1966, when Furness, Withy ceased its Bermuda service. [1] The Queen of Bermuda was sold for scrap, while the Ocean Monarch was laid up until 1967, when she was sold to Navigation Maritime Bulgare and renamed Varna.

Fleet

Furness Bermuda Passenger Fleet

[23] Ship NameYear CompletedYears in Service for LineShipyardStatusNotes
Rms fort hamilton.jpg Fort Hamilton19041920-1926Sir James Laing & Sons Ltd., Deptford, England [24] Scrapped 1934
  • Built for Quebec Steam Ship Company as the Bermudian
  • Sold to Cosulich Line in 1926
FortVictoria Furness.png Fort St. George 19121921-1935 William Beardmore & Co Ltd, Dalmuir, West Dunbartonshire, Scotland Bombed and sank 1942
SS Willochra.jpg Fort Victoria 19131921-1929 William Beardmore & Co Ltd, Dalmuir, West Dunbartonshire, Scotland Sank 1929
Ms bermuda furness.jpg Bermuda 19281928–1931 Workman, Clark and Company, Belfast, Northern Ireland Burned, towed & wrecked/ partially scrapped 1933 [25]
  • First purpose-built ship for the line
StateLibQld 1 173687 Queen of Bermuda (ship).jpg Monarch of Bermuda 19311931–39 Vickers-Armstrongs, Walker, Newcastle upon Tyne, England Scrapped 1966
The Queen of Bermuda in Bermuda, late 1952 or very early 1953.jpg Queen of Bermuda 19331933–39, 1943–66 Vickers-Armstrongs, Walker, Newcastle upon Tyne, England Scrapped 1966
  • sister ship to Monarch of Bermuda
S.S. Fort Amherst.jpg Fort Townshend19361939, 1945-1950Blythswood Shipbuilding, Glasgow, Scotland [26] Scrapped 1984
  • Built for Furness, Withy Red Cross Line
  • sister ship to Fort Amherst
S.S. Fort Amherst.jpg Fort Amherst19361945-1952Blythswood Shipbuilding, Glasgow, Scotland [27] Scrapped 1964
  • Built for Furness, Withy Red Cross Line
  • sister ship to Fort Townshend
Oceanmonarch bermuda.jpg Ocean Monarch 19511951–67 Vickers-Armstrongs, Walker, Newcastle upon Tyne, England Burned, sank 1981
  • Last ship built for the line

Furness Bermuda tenders

Ship NameYear CompletedYears in Service for LineShipyardStatusNotes
Bermudian19151923-1947Admiralty whaler, Adty No 878. Smiths Dock Company, South Bank, UK [28] Scrapped 1958
  • Built as HMS Arctic Whale, purchased by Furness in 1923 for service to St. George Hotel [29]
  • Sold to Bermuda Transportation Co, Hamilton
HMS Castle Harbour.jpg Castle Harbour

(originally Mid-Ocean)

19291929-1939Blythswood Shipbuilding Co. Ltd, Glasgow, Scotland Sunk by torpedo in WWII off Tobago 1942 [30]
  • Purpose-built for Furness Bermuda Line for service to St George Hotel & Mid Ocean Club, and later Castle Harbour Hotel
After a fire put Bermuda out of service, Furness, Withy chartered ships including Cunard Line's Franconia SS Franconia, Cunard White Star Line ship, ca. 1930.jpg
After a fire put Bermuda out of service, Furness, Withy chartered ships including Cunard Line's Franconia

Chartered Fleet

Furness Bermuda Line Hotels

Bermudiana Hotel, Built 1924 Bermudiana hotel.jpg
Bermudiana Hotel, Built 1924

Furness, Withy bought and built several hotels in Bermuda, using the tenders Bermudian and Castle Harbour to ferry passengers to hotels outside of the main harbor in Hamilton. Furness sold all its hotels in 1958. [19]

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