Everything about Rms Oceanic 1870 totally explained
RMS Oceanic was the
White Star Line's first liner and an important turning point in passenger liner design.
She was built by
Harland and Wolff in
Belfast, and was launched on
27 August 1870, arriving in
Liverpool for her maiden voyage on
26 February 1871. Powered by a combination of steam and sail, she'd twelve
boilers generating steam at 65
pounds-force per square inch (450
kPa), powered a single
four cylinder compound steam engine, 2 x 78 inch (1.98 m) and 2 x 41 inch (1.04 m), with a
stroke of 60 inches (1.52 m). A single funnel exhausted smoke and four masts carried sail. The hull was constructed of iron and divided into eleven
watertight compartments.
Oceanic could carry 166 first class and 1,000 third class passengers, with a crew of 143. White Star had spared no expense in her construction, and the contemporary press described the ship as an "imperial yacht".
Oceanic left for her
maiden voyage from Liverpool on
2 March 1871 carrying only 64 passengers, under Captain
Sir Digby Murray. Not long after departing, she'd to return because of overheated
bearings. Her voyage restarted on the 16th of March. From that point onward,
Oceanic was a success for White Star.
Innovative features included positioning the first class passenger cabins amidships, away from the
vibration of engines and with the least ocean movement. Third class passengers were placed at the bow and stern of the ship. All first class could be seated at once in the first class dining saloon amidships.
Portholes in the ship were much larger than on contemporary liners, providing more light.
Running water was available for most if not all the first class cabins. There were also
electric bells to summon a steward.
Three
sister ships were constructed in rapid succession: the
Atlantic,
Baltic, and
Republic. All were of the same approximate dimensions with differences in
tonnages.
In January,
1872, the
Oceanic underwent a refit, during which a large
forecastle was added to help prevent the
front of the ship being during high seas. Two new boilers were added to increase
steam pressure and thus engine power, and the four masts were shortened.
Oceanic continued sailing with the White Star line on the Liverpool to New York route until
11 March 1875, when she was chartered to the
Occidental & Oriental Steamship Company, for service between
San Francisco,
Yokohama and
Hong Kong. White Star provided the officers, while the crew was Chinese. The ship itself remained in White Star
colours, but flew the O&O flag. During the repositioning voyage from Liverpool to Hong Kong, the
Oceanic set a speed record for that route. Later, she also set a speed record for Yokohama to San Francisco in December 1876, and then broke her own record over that route in November, 1889, with a time of 13 days, 14 hours and 5 minutes.
On
August 22,
1882, the
Oceanic collided with the coastal liner
City of Chester just outside of the
Golden Gate; the latter ship sank, killing 16 onboard.
In 1895, the
Oceanic was returned to White Star, who planned on putting her back into service. She was sent back to Harland and Wolff for re-engining, but when the ship was inspected closely, it was found to be uneconomical to perform all the work needed. Instead, she was sold for scrap, leaving Belfast for the last time on
February 10,
1896, under tow, for a scrapyard on the
River Thames.
Specifications
- Length: 420 feet, 4 inches (128.4 m)
- Beam: 40 feet, 10 inches (12.4 m)
- Tonnage: 3,707 tons
- Speed: 14.5 knots (service speed)
- Passenger capacity: 1,166
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