The Southern Cross
by Published on 6th January 2016 12:33 AM
The Southern Cross
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by Brian Probetts (Site Admin) Published on 5th January 2016 12:44 PM
How passenger ships have grown and the passenger ship business expanded!
Sixty years ago, in the winter of 1955, workers at the Harland & Wolff shipyard at Belfast were adding the finishing touches to the 20,000-ton Southern Cross, the innovative flagship of Britain's Shaw Shaw Line.
The new liner had aroused and intrigued the press, the shjipping industry and ocean travelers across the globe.
In many ways, the 20-knot, twin-screw vessel would be a "ship for tomorrow".
She would be the first major liner to have her engines and therefore her funnel placed aft -- and creating a design style that became increasingly popular.
She was also one of the first all-one class, all-tourist class passenger ships (meaning a passenger in a top-deck suite would share, say, the public areas used by migrants in an inside six-berth down on D Deck).
Indeed, it was the beginning of a new social age at sea! The 604-ft long Southern Cross was also the first passenger liner of size and note that carried no cargo (other than passengers' baggage) whatsoever and so earned her keep exclusively from passenger fares.
She was also designed for a unique service: continuous 76-night around-the-world voyages out of Southampton.
The Southern Cross went on to a long and varied career -- later becoming the Calypso, then Azure Seas and finally Ocean Breeze -- before meeting the scrappers in faraway Bangladesh in 2003.
Photo: As the Ocean Breeze, the former Southern Cross is seen above at Nassau and moored alongside the far newer and larger, 102,000-ton Carnival Triumph, a new generation, 3,500-passenger ship that is in fact five times the size of the older liner. Times on the high seas had changed!
PS: If you have any stories to share about the Southern Cross and her long career, kindly forward them on. We enjoy hearing from others.
Brian Probetts (site admin)
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