RMS MAURETANIA

Sporting a white painted hull, his magnificent Cunard speed queen is

portrayed departing New York in the early 1930's for a cruise.

 

Built by Swan, Hunter & Wigham in Newcastle, England in 1907 for Cunard Line's Liverpool-New York Service. Reigning as the worlds fastest liner from 1907 to 1929, she was 790 feet long, 88 feet wide, and powered by steam turbines, quadruple screw. More conservative than the Lusitania, Mauretania was still exquisitely decorated. Her Verandah Café, with glazed roof and open air, was surrounded by evergreens and flowering plants, while her first class smoke room was elegant with its walnut, sycamore, and mahogany woodwork. In Cunard's determination to attract an overall higher level of traveler, great attention had been given to upgrading the second-class accommodations. Here the capacious public rooms were well decorated and the second class smoke room sported handsome mahogany panels.

Commissioned into World War I, she carried more than 10,000 troops through three voyages to the battlefront. It was during one of these passages that she narrowly escaped the fate of her sister, the Lusitania. Due to the rapid response of Captain Daniel Dow and Mauretania's sharp maneuverability, she was able to dodge an oncoming torpedo and withdraw rapidly from the area. In 1915, her hull painted white, striped green, and funnels buff, she served as a hospital ship. Then, in 1916, painted in camouflage squares and bands of blue and grey, she transported over 6,000 Canadian troops to Halifax. Later, after the United States joined the war, she was to transport thousands of American troops to Europe. In 1934, after a series of mishaps, reconstructions, and bold resurgences, the Mauretania was at last removed from service. In the end, her masts cut down and white hull streaked with rust, she left Southampton surrounded by mournful crowds and headed towards the Firth of Forth, towards the breaker's yard, where her engines were stopped for the last time, and the scrapping process initialized.

Litho size is 22" x 28"

Signed by Artist

$60.00

CLICK HERE TO ORDER

IMAGES

Old Sailing Ships

Yachts and Sailing Vessels

Ocean Liners

Modern Warships

Cruise Ships

 
POINTS OF INTEREST

Ship Models

Original Paintings

Old Aviation Prints

Archived Artwork

About the Artist

 
INFORMATION

Contact

Order and Shipping Info

About The Artwork

List of Lithographic Prints

Links of Historic Interest