Showing posts with label FRANCE (Passenger ship). Show all posts
Showing posts with label FRANCE (Passenger ship). Show all posts

Wednesday, May 23, 2018

Toda a beleza imponente do FRANCE

O paquete FRANCE de 1962 surgiu na altura em que eu despertava para o mundo fascinante dos grandes (e pequenos) navios e era então a última palavra em termos de arrojo da construção naval.
Um dos maiores navios de passageiros da segunda metade do século XX, um navio de prestígio com as cores da França celebradas nas águas do Atlântico Norte, no que seria a fase final de uma época. Teve uma carreira fulgurante e curta, só navegou de 1962 a 1974, quando o Governo Francês lhe cortou o subsídio operacional.
Vi-o diversas vezes na sua forma e nome originais, a primeira das quais em Fevereiro de 1964 em Lisboa, quando da sua primeira escala, atracado ao Cais da Rocha. Um gigante feito de harmonia e bom gosto, o que hoje em muitos casos não se poderá dizer da geração actual de gigantes dos mares construídos para passageiros.
A história do FRANCE e depois a vida deste aristocrata dos mares como NORWAY está disponível no meu livro publicado na série Liner Books, e que recomendo.
Texto e imagens /Text and images copyright L.M.Correia. Favor não piratear. Respeite o meu trabalho, se descarregar imagens para uso pessoal sugere-se que contribua para a manutenção deste espaço fazendo um donativo via Paypal, sugerindo-se €1,00 por imagem retirada. Utilização comercial ou para fins lucrativos não permitida (ver coluna ao lado) / No piracy, please. If photos are downloaded for personal use we suggest that a small contribution via Paypal (€1,00 per image or more). Photos downloaded for commercial or other profit making uses are not allowed. For other posts and images, check our archive at the right column of the main page. Click on the photos to see them enlarged. Thanks for your visit and comments. Luís Miguel Correia

Saturday, July 01, 2017

Paquete FRANCE de 1962

Um dos mais notáveis navios de passageiros do século XX, o paquete FRANCE (1962-1974) povoou o meu imaginário de criança habituada a navios e ao ambiente portuário em Lisboa e nas Ilhas. Em 1962, quando entrou ao serviço, o FRANCE era o expoente máximo da construção naval e um símbolo do renascimento da França após a tragédia de 1940. Este cartaz, editado pela French Line / Cie Gle Transatlantique, de Paris, ainda na década de 1950, mostrava já o perfil inicial do FRANCE, então em fase de projecto, destinado a substituir os navios ILE DE FRANCE e LIBERTÉ, o que efectivamente aconteceu com enorme brilho e sucesso, ainda que de curta duração, pois a aviação conquistou tudo, no Atlântico Norte e mais tarde noutras rotas de longo curso, tornando estes navios modernos obsoletos antes do tempo e geradores de enormes prejuízos. A carreira do "Paquebot FRANCE" na linha Le Havre - New York durou 12 escassos anos e terminou de forma inglória em Setembro de 1974 com a tripulação amotinada.
Como muito boas almas por esse mundo, o FRANCE teria uma segunda oportunidade de glória, ao ser adquirido em 1979 por um armador norueguês que o transformou no navio de cruzeiros NORWAY, o primeiro gigante das Caraíbas, percursor de toda a actual geração de superpaquetes gigantes.
Texto e imagens /Text and images copyright L.M.Correia. Favor não piratear. Respeite o meu trabalho, se descarregar imagens para uso pessoal sugere-se que contribua para a manutenção deste espaço fazendo um donativo via Paypal, sugerindo-se €1,00 por imagem retirada. Utilização comercial ou para fins lucrativos não permitida (ver coluna ao lado) / No piracy, please. If photos are downloaded for personal use we suggest that a small contribution via Paypal (€1,00 per image or more). Photos downloaded for commercial or other profit making uses are not allowed. For other posts and images, check our archive at the right column of the main page. Click on the photos to see them enlarged. Thanks for your visit and comments. Luís Miguel Correia

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Recordando o FRANCE e a raiva que o seu abate provocou localmente


O paquete FRANCE de 1962 foi um dos mais fantásticos navios de passageiros do século XX, símbolo do renascimento da França após a Segunda Guerra Mundial e obra prima da construção naval da década de 1950. Em 1974 após 12 anos de actividade foi retirado do serviço e imobilizado no Havre de onde saiu em 1979 depois de resgatado pela Norwegian Caribbean Lines. Os franceses nunca lidaram bem com a perda deste grande embaixador flutuante, em 1975 Michel Sardou lançou uma canção dedicada ao navio que vendeu um milhão de discos nos primeiros dias. Ouvir aqui...
Texto e imagens /Text and images copyright L.M.Correia. Favor não piratear. Respeite o meu trabalho / No piracy, please. For other posts and images, check our archive at the right column of the main page. Click on the photos to see them enlarged. Thanks for your visit and comments. Luís Miguel Correia

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

French Line S.S. FRANCE (1962-1974)




France's final great liner and flagship of the famous French Line, the transatlantic express passenger liner FRANCE of 1962 was one of the more outstanding liners of the twentieth century, she was built too late entering service in 1962 when the final era of Atlantic Liners was already written on the wall.
She was also used on cruises from French ports as well as from New York, but all ended in a very sad register, in September 1974, when the crew took over the ship outside Le Havre going on strike in a final effort to try to avoid her withdrawl from service the following November as the operating subsidy from the French Government was moved from the FRANCE to the Concorde airliner project.
FRANCE crew later surrendered and the ship was moved to a lay up berth far away in Le Havre for a period of five years.
In 1979 Knut Kloster of Norwegian Caribbean Lines purchased the FRANCE in Le Havre, she was towed to Bremerhaven and rebuilt into the tropical mega cruise ship NORWAY, introduced in the Caribbean weekly cruises service out of Miami in 1980. But the NORWAY success story is another chapter in the famous FRANCE illustrious history, when she paved the way to the new race of big cruise ships...
As the final French Line flagship, the FRANCE was really outstanding, here are some brochures from her early days...

Texto e imagens /Text and images copyright L.M.Correia. Favor não piratear. Respeite o meu trabalho / No piracy, please. For other posts and images, check our archive at the right column of the main page. Click on the photos to see them enlarged. Thanks for your visit and comments. Luís Miguel Correia

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Cruzeiro ao Mediterrâneo no FRANCE

Entrado ao serviço em 1962 como um dos últimos grandes paquetes de Estado, o FRANCE foi um dos navios mais prestigiados da década de 60 e um símbolo do ressurgimento económico, técnico e politico da França no período do pós-guerra. Concebido para suceder condignamente ao NORMANDIE de 1935 - perdido tragicamente em Nova Iorque durante a segunda guerra mundial - e substituir os paquetes ILE DE FRANCE e LIBERTÉ, o paquete FRANCE notabilizou-se pelos seus cruzeiros, como o que aparece anunciado na imprensa de Lisboa em Dezembro de 1964 (Diário de Lisboa de 28 -12-1964) com escala em Lisboa, entre muitos outros, como duas voltas ao mundo e um cruzeiro à ilha de Santa Helena tendo como tema a figura de Napoleão.
Ter tido a oportunidade, como tive, de ver o FRANCE em Lisboa, atracado ao cais da Rocha, produziu uma imagem inesquecível. Em Lisboa o FRANCE era agenciado pela Orey Antunes, então com instalações - secção de passagens - no Cais do Sodré, e numa das montras destacava-se uma maquete gigante do FRANCE, que aí se manteve durante décadas e ainda pertence ao acervo do Grupo Orey Antunes.
Enfim, parafraseando o anúncio, este cruzeiro ao Mediterrâneo terá sido certamente "uma bela oportunidade de viajar no FRANCE".
Os itinerários de alguns dos muitos paquetes que então frequentavam regularmente Lisboa possibilitavam o embarque em viagens redondas como se de cruzeiros se tratassem, caso dos paquetes AUGUSTUS e GIULIO CESARE, que ligavam Lisboa ao Mediterrâneo, visitando Barcelona, Cannes, Génova e Nápoles, circuito que se podia fazer de Lisboa a Lisboa por preços acessíveis...
Os gémeos AUGUSTUS e GIULIO CESARE foram os primeiros grandes paquetes construídos em Itália depois da guerra de 1940 a 1945 (a Itália só entrou no conflito em Junho de 1940, e de forma desastrada e com consequências trágicas para os paquetes italianos), e foram equipados com grandes motores Diesel construídos em 1939 para reequiparem os paquetes ROMA e AUGUSTOS de antes da guerra, que tinham programada para 1939-40 uma profunda modernização que nunca se chegou a concretizar. Já o par de gémeos construídos a seguir, o ANDREA DORIA e o CRISTOFORO COLOMBO, foram equipados com turbinas a vapor, então considerado o sistema de propulsão mais adequado para grandes navios de passageiros.
 Texto e imagens /Text and images copyright L.M.Correia. Favor não piratear. Respeite o meu trabalho / No piracy, please. For other posts and images, check our archive at the right column of the main page. Click on the photos to see them enlarged. Thanks for your visit and comments. Luís Miguel Correia

Thursday, October 09, 2014

O FRANCE português


Para quem gosta de navios, o nome FRANCE tem um significado mágico, trás-nos imediatamente à memória o grande paquete francês de 1962 que depois seria pioneiro do gigantismo nos cruzeiros com o nome NORWAY. 
Pois em Portugal temos o nosso FRANCE, não tão famoso, digamos que um FRANCE mais pequeno e à medida do nosso País. Tivemos a sorte de nos cruzarmos com o FRANCE português ao largo de Viana do Castelo na manhã de 2 de Outubro de 2014 e aqui fica o registo a testemunhar a pujança de Portugal no Mar como desígnio  realidade.

E já agora, há uns anos escrevi um livro dobre o paquete FRANCE de 1962, se fosse hoje teria incluido um capítulo sobre o nosso homónimo, mas na altura faltou esse conhecimento. Apesar de tudo dizem que é um bom livro, ainda temos exemplares para venda (pedidos pelo email m.s.funchal@gmail.com).
Texto e imagens /Text and images copyright L.M.Correia. Favor não piratear. Respeite o meu trabalho / No piracy, please. For other posts and images, check our archive at the right column of the main page. Click on the photos to see them enlarged. Thanks for your visit and comments. Luís Miguel Correia 

Monday, September 15, 2014

Bill Miller's Millergram is back...


The MILLERGRAM

by Bill Miller
September 15th 2014

​from aboard the Silver Whisper​




Note:  I plan to do a monthly version of the Millergram, but there's simply so much at the moment that a mid-month version is temporarily needed.   Soon, I'll cat
​ch up​...

BALTIC PORTS: Boom times! Cruising in the Baltic has reached its highest levels. St Petersburg, as an example and with a giant new cruise terminal called the Marine Facade, had a record day last June – 7 liners were in port in a single day: AIDAbella, Brilliance of the Seas, Legend of the Seas, Mein Schiff 2, MSC Orchestra, Seven Seas Voyager & Thomson Spirit. Busy tour guides – these 7 ships brought almost 16,000 visitors to the historic city. Meanwhile, Stockholm had its busiest year ever – with 274 cruise calls delivering just short of a half-million passengers. 
COSTA: Hiccups! Incidents involving cruise ships are very much part of their operations. The Costa Deliziosa suffered a blackout for several hours last spring while docked at Valencia in Spain. The new, but unfinishedQuantum of the Seas had a fire in June while getting her finishing touches at the Meyer Werft Shipyard. There was $100,000 in damages. Later in June, Holland America's Westerdam had to abruptly return to Seattle following a boiler room fire. Her cruise lasted but 1 hour before she had to return to port. ... The 121,000-grt Celebrity Silhouette had some disrupted European itineraries over the summer. The 2,850-bed ship had engine problems. ... And Aida's AIDAdiva was said to have been "attacked" by rockets while in Israeli waters in July.
CRUISE & MARITIME VOYAGES: Switching places! While the 43-year-old Discovery (ex-Island Venture/Island Princess/Hyundai Pungak/Platinum) will be retired next winter, she's being replaced by an even older ship, the chartered, the 66-year old Azores (ex-Stockholm/Volkerfreundschaft/Volker/Fridtjof Nansen/Italia Prima/Valtur Prima/Athena). Her first cruise for UK-based Cruise & Maritime will be a month-long jaunt to the Caribbean, sailing from Avonmouth, and later a special trip farther north in search of Total Solar Eclipse on March 20th. ... The aged Discovery is, it is reported, will be going for scrap (and following her twin sister, the Pacific (ex-Sea Venture/Pacific Princess), which was demolished last year out in Turkey). (Note by LMC: although AZORES hull is in fact 66 years old, the present cruise ship is much more modern, she was rebuilt in 1994 and only parts of the original hull were retained).
CUNARD: Facelift! Even four-year-old ships need to keep pace. Last May, the 2,100-passenger Queen Elizabeth was off to Hamburg – but without passengers & destined for the Blohm & Voss Shipyard there. New single cabins were added, the shopping centre extended, all carpeting & mattresses replaced and 1,200 flat-screen televisions installed. ... The 2007-built Queen Victoria is having a big refit this winter and the ten-year-old Queen Mary 2might well be having one later in 2015.
NORWEGIAN CRUISE LINES: Growing, growing, growing! As the 3rd biggest and busiest cruise line, NCL is expanding into the luxury market. Earlier this month, they acquired Prestige Cruise Holidays, which owns both Oceania & Regent-Seven Seas. This comes to an additional 8 cruise ships, each in the six-star category, in NCL's existing fleet of 14 large, mass-market liners.
ROYAL CARIBBEAN: Busy at work! The keel for the third 225,000-grt plus Oasis Class ship was laid in May at the STX Shipyard in St Nazaire and so construction is well underway. Hugely successful, a fourth of the class has now been ordered. Similar to the earlier Oasis of the Seas & Allure of the Seas, this new ship will carry 6,200 passengers & 2,800 crew. The cost is high and might just be the greatest yet for a cruise ship: $1.5 billion! ...
Meanwhile, in a whispered rumor from a RCI staff member, "It would not be surprising to see one of these Oasis class ships – the biggest cruise liners ever – go into Chinese cruise service."
RUSSIA: Well, bygone Russians! Polish-built in 1982 but for the Odessa-based Black Sea Shipping Company, the 9,800-grt Konstantin Simonovrenamed Russian owned, but hoisted the Cypriot flag in 1996 as theFrancesca. Between 2001-09, she sailed for Israel's Mano Cruises as The Iris, running Eastern Mediterranean cruises out of Haifa. Next stop: she was sold to Finland's Katarina Cruises, becoming the Kristina Katarina. But they pulled out of cruising just last year and so the ship was chartered out – being used as an accommodation ship in the Shetlands as the Ocean Endeavour. For the summer of 2015, she's returning to cruising, for operators called Adventure Canada, for Canadian Arctic & coast of Greenland cruising. ... A twin sister, the Lev Tolstoy, has resumed cruising as well. She spent last summer operating for Turkey's Apex Tours, running 3 & 4 night cruises from Kusadasi in Turkey to the Greek isles. She too has had a varied career – becoming the Cyrprus-flag Palmira in 1996, then sailed as The Jasmine from 2001-06 and then, in 2008, as the EasyCruise Life for the short-lived, no-frills EasyCruise operation. Thought to be used by other Greek operators, nothing materialized in recent years. Now, as theEasyCruise Life, she's busy with this Turkish charter.
SAGA CRUISES: Expanding! Operating the Saga Sapphire and Saga Pearl II, UK-based Saga is said to be "seriously" looking for a 3rd liner. Rumor while misty have always included buying Holland America's 750-passenger Prinsendam (ex-Royal Viking Sun/Seabourn Sun).
TORONTO: Lunch at 1! About 20 years ago, during a visit to Toronto, we wandered down to the waterfront and had lunch aboard XX. Berthed at the foot of Young Street, the small, xx-tonner had been a cruise ship in its previous life – sailing as the Rijeka-registered Jadran for the long-gone Jadrolinija on Adriatic coastal itineraries. She was one of three sister ships. A Toronto businessman known as Captain John bought her in the xx and then brought her (through the St Lawrence Seaway) to Toronto for use as a moored restaurant. Financially ailing in more recent years, however, she was seized recently by local authorities, the owners owing $3 ½ million in unpaid taxes. The next step: the 1958-built ship has gone to the auction block and been sold for $33,000 to other local buyers, but who plan to scrap it.
SS UNITED STATES: Updated rumors, plans & schemes continue! In November, the super liner United States will have been laid up & idle for 45 years, far longer than most ship's sail. The 990-ft long ship itself is 62 years old, having been first commissioned back in 1952. While she remains silently moored at Philadelphia (for 18 years, since 1996), she has long been a ship of rumor, plans, revitalization projects. The very latest include moving the liner to Pier 7 in Brooklyn Heights, in fact just north of the Brooklyn-Red Hook Cruise Terminal. Brooklyn itself is busily redeveloping the former Port Authority freighter piers as parks, promenades, marinas, shops, restaurants & hotels. Plans and preliminary studies to bring the onetime Blue Ribbon champion to Brooklyn were said (according to some good sources) underway as of last summer. Earlier, in the late '90s, there were – among a boatload of ideas – ideas of bringing the ship to Pier 1 in Brooklyn and also of berthing her in the former Brooklyn Navy Yard (which would include moving her twin funnels, placing them on a barge and then towing her under the Brooklyn & Manhattan bridges – and afterward re-installing those mammoth funnels). Other current ideas for the 53,000-tonner include mooring her in Chester, Pennsylvania, near the former Sun Shipbuilding Shipyard, and making her over as a casino & complex of restaurants. On the reverse side, there were reports in 2013 that the liner would go for scrap – either in Philadelphia, at Chester or Bordentown in nearby New Jersey or, following a long tow, at Brownsville in Texas.

​ Heard Along the Boat Deck: THE LATE, GREAT “NORWAY”

Cato Christensen was staff captain, between 1999 and 2001, of one of the greatest ocean liners of all time, the Norway. She was the world’s first mega-cruise liner, the longest passenger ship afloat for many years and was, of course, the illustrious France in her previous life. As Captain Christensen sat together in the warm, blue waters of the Eastern Caribbean, aboard the Crystal Symphony, we recalled the greatNorway. Her last remains had been chopped-up by scrappers out in India just the month before, in October 2008. The Norway had been around for 43 years, since her initial commissioning as the pride of the French merchant marine in late 1961.
“As the Norway, she still had this great ambience. It was very special. She had a different feeling than other ships,” recalled the Captain. “There was history, even great history, in the walls. Even in some of her public rooms, such as the Club International, there was a special tone. Simply, she was like no other ship.”
Built at St Nazaire in western France for the final years, the twilight, of the great and grand North Atlantic run, the ship as built as the France carried 2,000 passengers --- 500 in fancy, upper-deck first class and 1,500 in tourist class. She had vast public rooms, an array of luxurious penthouses & suites, a chapel and dog kennels complete with miniature New York City fire hydrants. While her food was often said to be beyond compare and coupled with the finest wine cellar at sea, even the dogs had menus while the dog biscuits were specially made. She sailed for about 9 months of the year on regular relays between Manhattan’s Pier 88, Southampton & Le Havre; for the rest, she cruised --- to the Caribbean, the Mediterranean, Carnival in Rio. In 1972 and ’74, she also made winter cruises around the world. But, as passengers declined, her operational costs rose and while the French Government pulled the plug on her operating subsidy, the France was decommissioned in October 1974. For almost 5 years, she sat idle, at a backwater berth near Le Havre, and just waited. She might even have been scrapped. But Norwegian Cruise Lines bought her in ’79, gave her a costly $150 million makeover as a cruise ship and then introduced her as the Norway in May 1990. Her new role: weekly 7-night cruises from Miami to sun-filled ports in the Eastern Caribbean. “The Norway was strong and solid, and built like very few other ships,” added Captain Christensen. “Her watertight doors, for example, could be individually operated and closed in 30 seconds. They were so advanced for a ship designed in the ‘50s and built in the early ’60. Although the forward engine room had been removed by NCL, she had her original steam turbines. But I think Kloster [then the owner of NCL] regretted not converting her to diesel during the big refit in ’79-80. She was, of course, quite a different ship to handle and to experience. She had delayed maneuvers. There were 45 second delays. It was always quite an experience to handle this 1035-foot long ship in, say, the Miami turning basin.”
“But she was a great ship to the end,” continued the Captain. “Of course, we needed extra staff in the engine room because of those steam turbines. The crew liked, but mostly loved her. They felt, quite rightfully, that she was a ship of history. They worked extra hard to make her work. We had one man continuously painting, for example, in the galley just to keep it looking spotless and fresh. About 85-90% of the crew always returned to her. Her US Public Health Scores were sometimes on the edge before her age and we’d always lose 2 points just because of that. Most of Deck 5 was still original, for example, and so were many of the suites. In the Captain’s office, there was still a button on the desk that connected directly to the pantry for instant service. As Vice Captain, my cabin had been the ‘dog house’ when the ship had a large kennel. The kennels themselves and that New York City fire hydrant were gone, however. By 2001, we still had great passenger loads and lots of repeater passengers. One guest came with his butler and had a big suite for 4-6 cruises at a time. But once the butler sent the chauffeur & the car off, but with all the luggage as well. So, the chauffeur had to fly to the first port of call, to St Thomas, with the luggage and the clothes.”
The Norway had a serious boiler explosion at her Miami berth in May 2003. Six crew members were killed and others seriously injured. “NCL lost almost all interest in her after the explosion,” concluded Captain Christensen. “Star Cruises, the new, Malaysian parent of NCL, lost interest as well. Everything actually changed with Star. The mood was different. There was no chance of seeing her getting expensive repairs and returning to service. Of course, now it is very sad that she has been scrapped. She should have been saved, possibly as a museum and hotel, and like theQE2 in Dubai. This would have been better. Her steel hull was still so strong. It was 2 inches thick below the waterline. We once had a problem undocking. Bit in the end, there was more damage to the pier than to the ship.”Photograph, by Luís Miguel Correia, of PORTUSCALE CRUISES AZORES arriving Lisbon on 13 September 2014. Further interest in readingthe FRANCE and NORWAY story? Get your copy of L.M.Correia and Bill Miller's book on the FRANCE / NORWAY, available for purchase here....
Texto e imagens /Text and images copyright L.M.Correia. Favor não piratear. Respeite o meu trabalho / No piracy, please. For other posts and images, check our archive at the right column of the main page. Click on the photos to see them enlarged. Thanks for your visit and comments. Luís Miguel Correia

Sunday, March 30, 2014

Um navio de sonho: o FRANCE de 1962

Esta fotografia do FRANCE simboliza toda a beleza e harmonia do maior navio de passageiros construído na década de 1960. Foi feita ao largo da ilha de Cowes  no ano de 1962 por um dos fotógrafos da família Beken, três fotógrafos de marinha de três gerações, quase tão famosos como o navio.
O FRANCE foi construído em St. Nazaire para fazer a carreira Le Havre - Southampton - Nova Iorque da Cie Génerale Transatlantique substituindo os paquetes ILE DE FRANCE e LIBERTÉ, embora a sua construção tivesse tido um significado mais profundo: o FRANCE foi um verdadeiro símbolo do renascimento da França depois da Segunda Guerra Mundial e o digno sucessor do NORMANDIE de 1935. ~
A sua curta história de apenas 12 anos a navegar com as cores francesas confirma que este navio absolutamente magnífico foi construído demasiado tarde , tal como os nossos paquetes INFANTE DOM HENRIQUE e PRÍNCIPE PERFEITO.
Podia acrescentar muito mais acerca do FRANCE, mas recomendo, para quem queira saber mais, a consulta ou compra do meu livro SS FRANCE of 1962 / SS NORWAY of 1979, feito em parceria com William H. Miller. Ver aqui...
Texto de  /Text copyright L.M.Correia. imagens /Text and images copyrightFavor não piratear. Respeite o meu trabalho / No
piracy, please. For other posts and images, check our archive at the right column of the main page. Click on the photos to see them enlarged. Thanks for your visit and comments. Luís Miguel Correia

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Crossing the Atlantic Eastbound at 30 knots

Eastbound at 30 Knots on the FRANCE!

 - When Bill Miller crossed From New York to Europe in July 1973 onboard the legendary France, he recalls that, "along with 1,700 passengers, there were 24 dogs, 11 cats & 3 birds aboard and in the top-deck kennel." 

It was a liner voyage and the FRANCE was on the final stage of her short career as French Line flagship. 

She would return in 1980 as the first mega cruise ship NORWAY...

Texto e imagens /Text and images copyright L.M.Correia. Favor não piratear. Respeite o meu trabalho / No piracy, please. For other posts and images, check our archive at the right column of the main page. Click on the photos to see them enlarged. Thanks for your visit and comments. Luís Miguel Correia

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

FRANCE and ESSO BRUSSELS

My long time friend Bill Miller has been celebrating "Over 50 Years of Travel, Travel by Ship & Travel Photography". Here it is another of Bill photographs and respective caption: "Sometimes, there were rather unusual meetings, pairings if you will, with liners in New York harbor. 
In this view, I was looking north, on a balmy June afternoon in 1973, from Stevens campus in Hoboken. Farther up river, the exquisite FRANCE was just making a 3pm departure from Pier 84 while, in the foreground, McAllister & Moran tugs were moving the fire-gutted tanker ESSO BRUSSELS into the Bethlehem Steel shipyard, which was also in Hoboken, for damage inspection & survey. Earlier, the tanker had collided with an American Export container ship, the SEA WITCH, while in the Narrows. Both ships caught fire and even scorched the Verrazano Bridge."
Texto e imagens /Text and images copyright L.M.Correia. Favor não piratear. Respeite o meu trabalho / No piracy, please. For other posts and images, check our archive at the right column of the main page. Click on the photos to see them enlarged. Thanks for your visit and comments. Luís Miguel Correia

Monday, December 10, 2012

FRANCE overnight calls in NY

There was something exciting about loading the great liners, preparing them for their next voyage, which was usually a crossing to Europe. Mostly, they carried high grade cargo and, because of their speed, lots of mail. The French liners, as an example, brought those great Paris fashions over. And while docked, a refuelling barge was usually along the ship's outer side. 
Overnight in port: We were actually visiting the splendid France at Pier 88 in June 1973 for an afternoon World Ship Society tour when I took this photo.
Texto e imagens /Text and images copyright BillMiller. Favor não piratear. Respeite o meu trabalho / No piracy, please. For other posts and images, check our archive at the right column of the main page. Click on the photos to see them enlarged. Thanks for your visit and comments. Luís Miguel Correia

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Bill Miller photographs

Two funnelled passenger liners in NewYork photographed by my friend Bill Miller: the FRANCE sailing for Europe in 1973 and the handsome INDEPENDENCE leaving port in 1967 with the HOMERIC alongside...
Bill Miller writes / I took this photo of the Caribbean-bound Independence on a bitterly cold February afternoon in 1967. She was departing from Pier 84 at West 44th Street in Manhattan. I was using a $10 plastic box camera at that time.
My good friend and fellow Hobokenite Tony La Forgia recalled: I remember the American Export piers in Hoboken and seeing the “Four Aces” [Excalibur, Exeter, Excambion & Exochorda] and later the nuclear-powered Savannah. In winter, the Independence & Constitution were berthed for several weeks at Pier B at the foot of Third Street for wintertime dockside maintenance. With their twin funnels, they towered above the pier’s roof. The Export piers were always busy, sometimes with five or six freighters at dock as well, and smelled of olives and leather and of course grease and oil. This was part of the Hoboken waterfront. Along River Street, the piers would be jammed with loose freight and waiting trucks.

Texto / Text copyright L.M.Correia. e imagens / and images copyright Bill Miller. Favor não piratear. Respeite o meu trabalho / No piracy, please. For other posts and images, check our archive at the right column of the main page. Click on the photos to see them enlarged. Thanks for your visit and comments. Luís Miguel Correia

Saturday, November 27, 2010

NORWAY in Lisbon in 1998

The largest cruise ship to operate special cruises asociated to the EXPO 98 in Lisbon was no other than NCL's NORWAY, seen here in two photographs taken in August 1998 when she was leaving Alcântara passenger ship terminal...

Texto e imagens /Text and images copyright L.M.Correia. For other posts and images, check our archive at the right column of the main page. Click on the photos to see them enlarged. Thanks for your visit and comments. Luís Miguel Correia

Friday, June 26, 2009

FRANCE - LE HAVRE

FRANCE - LE HAVRE were magic words in gold lettering engraved at the magnificent cruiser stern of the largest passenger liner of the 1960s.
The FRANCE was a symbol of France and Europe as well as a supreme achievement of her dedicated builders, Chantiers de L'Atlantique in St. Nazaire.
So sad the French were unable to keep her in service after 1974 and were unable to repurchase her after NCL decided to dispose of the old lady. She could have had a reprieve cruising from Marseilles on a 7-day basis, the same way OCEANIC operated between 2001 and 2008...
Texto e imagens /Text and images copyright L.M.Correia. For other posts and images, check our archive at the right column of the main page. Click on the photos to see them enlarged. Thanks for your visit and comments. Luís Miguel Correia

FRANCE off Cannes


FRANCE anchored in Cannes while cruising in the Nediterranean in early Spring, just in time to start another Atlantic Ferry season between Le Havre - Southampton - New Iork.
Texto e imagens /Text and images copyright L.M.Correia. For other posts and images, check our archive at the right column of the main page. Click on the photos to see them enlarged. Thanks for your visit and comments. Luís Miguel Correia

FRANCE in European waters


The magnificent French Line passenger liner FRANCE alongside the port of Bremerhaven in October 1979 shortly after sale to NCL and renaming as NORWAY...
Texto e imagens /Text and images copyright L.M.Correia collection. For other posts and images, check our archive at the right column of the main page. Click on the photos to see them enlarged. Thanks for your visit and comments. Luís Miguel Correia

Monday, June 22, 2009

Última escala do NORWAY no Tejo


Paquete NORWAY ex-FRANCE à chegada a Lisboa na última escala que fez no Tejo, na manhã de 25 de Setembro de 2005.
O NORWAY atracou ao Cais de Alcântara largando para Marselha à 01h00 da madrugada seguinte.
Quer como NORWAY, quer na sua encarnação original como FRANCE, este belo paquete esteve diversas vezes no Tejo, a primeira das quais em Fevereiro de 1964, atracado ao Cais da Rocha, onde então se registavam os fundos mais amplos.
The NORWAY ex-FRANCE arriving in Lisbon on 25 September 2001 on her final call in the river Tagus.
Texto e imagens /Text and images copyright L.M.Correia. For other posts and images, check our archive at the right column of the main page. Click on the photos to see them enlarged. Thanks for your visit and comments. Luís Miguel Correia

Monday, February 09, 2009

Despojos do FRANCE em leilão em Paris

Decorreu nos dias 8 e 9 de Fevereiro em Paris um leilão com cerca de 500 peças associadas ao famoso paquete FRANCE / NORWAY.
Na sua maior parte as peças foram adquiridas ao sucateiro indiano que desmantelou o paquete na praia de Alang.
O FRANCE foi construído em St. Nazaire e fez a carreira de Nova Iorque e cruzeiros de 1962 a 1974. Em 1980 volto ao serviço como NORWAY, fazendo cruzeiros nas Caraíbas.
O catálogo do leilão pode ser descarregado em PDF aqui...
Mais imagens do FRANCE / NORWAY aqui...
Texto de L.M.Correia. Photos from the ARTCURIAL site. For other posts and images, check our archive at the right column of the main page. Click on the photos to see them enlarged. Thanks for your visit and comments. Luís Miguel Correia

PROA DO NORWAY ex-FRANCE para venda

O objecto mais sensacional do leilão FRANCE / NORWAY realizado em Paris é nada mais nada menos que esta parte da proa do famoso navio, com um preço estimado de €80.000 a €100.00. Um leilão semelhante com estas e outras peças foi efectuado anteriormente em Nova Iorque, mas não obteve o exito que os promotores esperavam.
Conheci bem o navio quer na sua fase original como FRANCE, quer como NORWAY, e sinto que esta feira / leilão dos despojos do navio é um atentado à dignidade do velho FRANCE. Por um lado cho bem que algo seja preservado, mas é um crime destruir um navio como o FRANCE.
Texto copyright L.M.Correia. Photo ARTCURIAL. For other posts and images, check our archive at the right column of the main page. Click on the photos to see them enlarged. Thanks for your visit and comments. Luís Miguel Correia

Thursday, January 22, 2009

The "Paquebot" FRANCE (1962-1979)


A beautiful view of the famous liner FRANCE dressed overall while cruising.
One of the more important passenger ships of the 20th century, the FRANCE had a relatively short career under the original name and flag, only about 12 years followed by another 5 in lay up at the back waters of Le Havre.
Rescued by Kloster Rederi of Oslo, she was towed to Bremerhaven in August 1979 and rebuilt as the tropical cruise ship NORWAY.
As such she cruised in the Caribbean for many years with several summer seasons in European waters and a few transatlantic voyages.
Built in St. Nazaire she has been scrapped at Alang in far away India, a sad end for such a magnificent liner.
Texto e imagens /Text and images copyright L.M.Correia. For other posts and images, check our archive at the right column of the main page. Click on the photos to see them enlarged. Thanks for your visit and comments. Luís Miguel Correia