"ranwhenparked" (ranwhenparked)
11/06/2020 at 21:43 • Filed to: None | 7 | 7 |
Some ships spend
their entire careers under a single owner, under the same name, and
same national flag, others seem to have trouble finding a niche and
end up spending their lives passed around over and over again,
adopting numerous new identities and undergoing constant rebuilding
and refitting to suit the needs of their new owners. Few have ever
been passed around as much, or rebuilt as frequently, as the USS
General W.P. Richardson
.
General W.P.
Richardson
started life in 1944 as one of 10 identical P2-S2-E2
troop transport vessels designed by the US Maritime Commission and
built for the US Navy by Federal Shipbuilding and Drydock Company in
Kearny, New Jersey between 1943-1945. As built, they measured 17,951
gross tons and 623 feet long, with 18,000hp steam turbines giving a
range of 15,000 nautical miles at 19 knots. They were capable of
carrying 4,800 troops, and their unusually attractive external
appearance – with a raked bow, symmetrical twin funnels, and
gracefully curved and terraced superstructure – hinted at their
intended postwar purpose, all were designed for easy conversion to
civilian ocean liners, optimized for service on South American
routes. An additional 8 smaller variants were built by Bethlehem
Steel Corporation in Alameda, California as the P2-SE1-E1 class
between 1944-1945, with 2 more unfinished hulls sold to American
President Lines and completed as passenger-cargo combination liners
in 1947.
USS General W.P. Richardson docks in New York with returning troops, June 7th, 1945 (the concept of social distancing was still 74 years away from being invented)
Postwar, the
planned conversion to civilian liners never really materialized –
the US shipping industry never expanded enough to require the
capacity, and the US government was reluctant to sell them overseas,
so, for the most part, they remained in military service through
Vietnam with occasional lay-ups during times of reduced demand, with
the last one being retired in 1971 (though one would be used as a
barracks ship in Bremerton, Washington at least into the late 1980s).
LaGuardia, American Export Lines 1949-1951
The lone exception
was
General W.P. Richardson
. In an effort to stimulate
interest from private shipping companies, the US Maritime
Administration chartered her to American Export Lines in 1949 and
provided funding for a rebuild into a transatlantic ocean liner for
New York-Haifa, Israel service (via Gibraltar and Genoa). Renamed
LaGuardia
, the conversion work was performed at Ingalls
Shipbuilding Corporation in Pascagoula, Mississippi. Upon completion,
she carried 157 First Class and 452 Tourist Class passengers and
measured 18,000 gross tons.
LaGuardia
entered service with
American Export in Summer, 1949, and remained in the fleet through
December, 1951, when she was returned to the Maritime Administration.
By then, American Export’s new sister ships
Independence
and
Constitution
had been delivered, and
LaGuardia
had
proved more expensive to operate than anticipated. A brief return to
troop transport service for the Korean War followed, after which the
ship was laid up in 1952.
Leilani, 1957-1959
But, the Maritime Administration would not give up on the goal of proving the P2 hull’s viability as a civilian liner. In early 1957, she was sold outright to the newly formed Hawaiian Steamship Company (a subsidiary of the Textron Corporation) and renamed Leilani for service from San Francisco-Honolulu. The new venture was not successful, Hawaiian Steamship collapsed in bankruptcy in the Spring of 1959 and Leilani was seized by the Maritime Administration and auctioned off for nonpayment of debts. In 1960, the ship was acquired by American President Lines, renamed President Roosevelt , and underwent her most extensive rebuilding yet with reshaped funnels, dramatically enlarged superstructure, and sleek, Mid Century Modern interiors with Japanese influences appropriate for her new San Francisco-Yokohama transpacific service, which began in April, 1962 after nearly 2 years of rebuilding work in the shipyard. President Roosevelt remained in this role for 8 years, until increasing competition from airlines forced APL to put the ship up for sale in 1970.
President Roosevelt, 1962-1970
1961 APL magazine ad, highlighting the “new” President Roosevelt
The
buyer was Chandris Lines of Greece, who specialized in buying older,
yet solidly built, liners at fire sale prices and expertly
refurbishing them for either cruise ship service, or low budget
immigration liner service from Europe-Australia under contract to the
Australian government. Under Chandris’ ownership, she was renamed
Atlantis
and underwent an even more comprehensive
reconstruction at Chandris’ own yard in Perama, Greece, between
1970-1971 at a cost of $8.5 million, about 4 times what Chandris had
paid for her. Upon completion,
Atlantis
looked hardly
recognizable with an expanded and totally refaced superstructure
making her look at least 20 years younger, with only the twin funnels
and classic cruiser stern betraying her 1940s vintage.
Atlantis
was used in Caribbean cruises for the US market from 1971-1972, at
which point high operating costs pushed Chandris to sell her to
US-based Eastern Steamship Lines, a storied 19
th
century
shipping line with Vanderbilt connections that became a pioneer in
the leisure cruise market after WWII.
Chandris Cruises postcard of Atlantis, 1971-1972
Under Eastern Steamship, she
was renamed again as
Emerald Seas
, and enjoyed the longest
period of stability of her career, surviving with Eastern, and its
successor company, Admiral Cruises, until 1992. By then, Admiral had
been acquired by Royal Caribbean and there was no place for an old
WWII-era converted troop transport in their modern fleet. During a
brief lay-up in 1992, she actually changed hands several times
through a couple different holding companies, being renamed
T
errifica, Fantastica, Funtastica,
and
Sun Fiesta
,
until finally acquired by Festival Cruises of Greece and renamed
Sapphire Seas
for continued service, cruising primarily from
California to Mexico in the 1992-1994 period.
Eastern Steamship Lines postcard, ca. 1972-1986
!!!CAPTION ERROR: MAY BE MULTI-LINE OR CONTAIN LINK!!!Sapphire Seas, Festival Cruises ca. 1992-1994
In October, 1994,
Festival pulled her from service and laid her up in Greece, where she
sat for nearly 4 years. In the spring of 1998, she was chartered out
as a hotel ship in Lisbon, Portugal for the World’s Fair under the
name
Ocean Explorer I,
after which she returned to lay-up in
Greece, though there was a brief charter to a British travel agency
for a few Mediterranean cruises in 1999.
Ocean Explorer I, World Cruise Company, 2000-2001
Ocean Explorer I’s route with World Cruise Company, 2000-2001
In
2000, she returned to regular service with the Canadian-based World
Cruise Company, operating a unique program of continuous
around-the-world cruises via Cape Horn and Suez, with passengers able to
purchase segments of the trip and embark/disembark in any port en
route, or stay on board for the entire 130 day circumnavigation. High
operating costs caused the bankruptcy of World Cruise in 2001,
causing
Ocean Explorer I
to return to lay-up until sold for
scrap and demolished in Alang, India in December, 2004 under the delivery name
Explorer
, pretty well
exactly 60 years to the date since her initial delivery to the US
Navy in 1944.
Explorer in Eleusis Bay, Greece shortly before setting out on final voyage to the scrapyard in Alang, India, 2004
Amazingly, the former General W.P. Richardson/LaGuardia/Leilani/President Roosevelt/Atlantis/ Emerald Seas/Fantastica/Terrifica/Funtastica/Sun Fiesta/Sapphire Seas/Ocean Explorer I was not not the last of the P2 transports afloat. General Nelson M. Walker (ex Admiral H.T. Mayo ) was scrapped in Texas in 2005, and the last two survivors, General Edwin D. Patrick (ex Admiral C.F. Hughes ) and General John Pope , were demolished in 2010, all after many decades of inactivity in the strategic reserve fleet.
gmporschenut also a fan of hondas
> ranwhenparked
11/06/2020 at 22:55 | 1 |
“ renamed President Roosevelt.... Mid Century Modern interiors with Japanese influences appropriate for her new San Francisco-Yokohama transpacific service”
Better than T ruman, but probably not the greatest name.
ranwhenparked
> gmporschenut also a fan of hondas
11/06/2020 at 23:15 | 0 |
True, but they didn’t specify
which
President Roosevelt.
Oh, what the hell, they almost certainly meant FDR.
gmporschenut also a fan of hondas
> ranwhenparked
11/07/2020 at 00:23 | 1 |
even Teddy has some hatred in Japan.
“ Roosevelt earned the Nobel Peace Prize for his effort. George E. Mowry concludes that Roosevelt handled the arbitration well, doing an “excellent job of balancing Russian and Japanese power in the Orient, where the supremacy of either constituted a threat to growing America.” [81] As Japan had won every battle on land and sea and as the Japanese people did not understand that the costs of the war had pushed their nation to the verge of bankruptcy, the Japanese public was enraged by the Treaty of Portsmouth as many Japanese had expected the war to end with Russia ceding the Russian Far East to Japan and for Russia to pay an indemnity. [82] The United States was widely blamed in Japan for the Treaty of Portsmouth with Roosevelt having allegedly “cheated” Japan out of its rightful claims at the peace conference. On 5 September 1905 the Hibiya incendiary incident as the anti-American riots were euphemistically described erupted in Tokyo, and lasted for three days, forcing the government to declare martial law. [82] ”
!!!error: Indecipherable SUB-paragraph formatting!!!
The U.S held strength in the Asian region from aggravating European imperialist encroachment. To Japan, this represented a developing threat to the autonomy of the region. U.S.–Japanese relations would recover a bit in the early 20th century, but by the early 1920s, few in Japan believed that the United States meant anything positive for the future of Asia. [84] By the 1930s, the U.S. presence in Asian affairs, along with the instability in China and the collapse of the Western economic order, Japan would act aggressively with respect to China, setting the precedent that would ultimately culminate in the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere . Some scholars suggest that Japan’s road to World War II had begun not upon winning the Russo-Japanese War, but when it lost the peace. [91] [ clarification needed ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russo-Japanese_War#Peace_and_aftermath
ranwhenparked
> gmporschenut also a fan of hondas
11/07/2020 at 00:33 | 0 |
Yes, but a lot had changed in 60 years. A couple of atomic bombs, military occupation, ceasing to exist as a sovereign state in international affairs for several years, an entirely new constitution written by the American military in partnership with liberal politicians that completely abolished the nobility and sidelined and marginalized the conservatives and militarists, removing them from power forever, plus a new and growing fascination with American pop culture. They kind of got over things pretty quick. Having Communist China and North Korea rise up on their doorstep probably helped, as did the fact that Josef Stalin was pissed over not getting more Japanese territory after the war.
Rusty Vandura - www.tinyurl.com/keepoppo
> ranwhenparked
11/07/2020 at 10:47 | 0 |
Rusty Vandura - www.tinyurl.com/keepoppo
> ranwhenparked
11/07/2020 at 10:47 | 0 |
Chariotoflove
> ranwhenparked
11/07/2020 at 12:36 | 1 |
I love this series. Thanks for putting in the significant work required.