Showing posts with label ORIANA (Passenger Ship 1960). Show all posts
Showing posts with label ORIANA (Passenger Ship 1960). Show all posts

Wednesday, July 09, 2014

ORIANA photographed from fleet mate CANBERRA


Bill Miller tells us: It was just before dinner.   The date:  October 1980.   I was aboard the Canberra, returning from a cruise to Southampton.   Almost without warning, her fleetmate Oriana swept past at rather high speed.  We were in the Bay of Biscay and it was the last meeting of the two great P&O liners in Northern waters.   The Oriana was heading for Australia, where she would be based full-time at Sydney for Pacific cruising.
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, February 20, 2013

ORIANA of 1960

Bill Miller's lives of the liners: "When she was completed in December 1960, the 41,000-ton Oriana of Britain’s P&O-Orient Lines was the largest passenger liner yet built for the busy UK-Australia run. Carrying up to 2,022 passengers (530 in first class and 1,492 less fancy tourist), the 27 1/2-knot ship was also notably the very fastest --- she could do the Southampton-Sydney run via Suez in 21 days, a full week less than previous P&O-Orient liners. Immediately, she was immensely popular and very successful. Every sailing was, it seemed, full-up to capacity. Built by the Vickers-Armstrong shipyard at Barrow-in-Furness, in northwest England, the 804-ft long liner was commissioned in what came to be the final great age of British-built, British-owned liners. Others included the likes of the Windsor Castle, the Empress of Canada and then finished-up, in 1969, with theQueen Elizabeth 2. British shipbuilding was losing its long-held prominent place to less expensive, more efficient shipbuilders. Meanwhile, the sleek Oriana was soon to begin a losing battle of her own, with speedy jets on the Australian run. Six months later, in June 1961, P&O added an even larger liner, the 44,000-ton Canberra. She could carry even more passengers, over 2,270 in all.
“The Oriana was my preference over the Canberra. Both very large & important ships, the Oriana was quite different from the Canberra,” according to Howard Franklin, who sailed in both ships and on many occasions -- and often as a guest speaker. “The Oriana was, as it seemed, all graciousness and luxury, and lots of carpets whereas the Canberra, it appeared to me, was more informal and acres of lino. I was, however, amazed in tourist class on the Oriana by the low ceilings in the public rooms and small, even tiny cabins. Originally, the Oriana had a Silver Grill in first class, but that space was later made into cabins. The Monkey Bar Garden felt like you were suspended over the ocean itself. She also had a great enclosed promenade area as well. And more specifically, I remember the enormous proportions of the drinks served onboard. There was especially high excitement on sailing days and with great reunions & meetings of past passengers. The commodore of the Orient Line was aboard and was very precise, very exacting.”
I took this photo of the splendid Oriana from the 20th floor of an apartment tower at Circular Quay in Sydney. The date is July 1984 and I was about to sail off on a 2-week cruise around the South Pacific Islands."
Texto e imagens /Text 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, May 21, 2011

ORIANA in Sidney, Australia



The brand new S.S. ORIANA arriving at Sidney, Australia, for the first time on 30 December 1960 on another set of photographs from the collection of Michael Sutcliffe.
At the time ORIANA was the largest passenger ship purpose built for the Europe - Australia service and also the fastest ith a regular cruising speed of 27 knots. She was joinned by CANBERRA in 1961.
Texto de  /Text  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, May 11, 2011

ORIANA in Black & White

The magnificent ORIANA of 1960 was the last passenger liner built for the famous Orient Line. See some stunning ORIANA photos from the collection of our friend Michael Sutcliffe...
Photos of ORIANA undergoing sea trials prior to delivery by Vickers to the Orient Line. 
Her shake down cruise in November 1960 was a special short cruise from Southampton to Lisbon and back.
Orient Line passenger liners had their hulls painted in very original "corn colour", a spectacular shade of yellow created by Laurence Dunn for the ORION of 1935. That feature was lost when the Orient fleet was absorbed into the P&O-Orient Line and later in P&O Lines... By now only Carnival UK is left of all those great P&O Group liner companies...

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 09, 2011

P&O Fleet meeting

Mar 07, 2011 - All seven ships in the P&O Cruises fleet are to dock together for the first time in Southampton next year. The vessels will come together in their home port for The Grand Event on July 3, 2012 as part of a year of celebrations in 2012.
The company will be marking the 175th anniversary of the Peninsular Steam Navigation Company being awarded the Admiralty contract to carry mail to the Iberian Peninsula and beyond.
Following the event in the port, each ship will depart on its own Grand Event cruise, forming a procession as they leave Southampton. Once in the open water, the ships will meet again, saluting one another before they sail to their various destinations.
The seven cruises will be heritage themed with special on board entertainment including a 175th Anniversary Gala dinner, heritage art display and guest speakers. A full world cruise prize draw will be held on each cruise and a total of seven passengers plus guests will be travelling in 2013. They are detailed in the company’s 2012-13 brochure which goes on sale on April 5.
The Grand Event Cruises are:
• An 11-night Atlantic Islands cruise on Azura starting at £1,149
• A 17-night Central Mediterranean cruise on Ventura starting at £1,699
• A seven-night Norwegian Fjords cruise on Oceana starting at £749
• A 14-night Norway and Iceland cruise on Arcadia starting at £1,549
• A17-night Baltic cruise on Aurora starting at £1,749
• A four-night cruise break on Oriana starting at £399
• A 21-night Central Mediterranean cruise on Adonia starting at £2,349
P&O Cruises’ managing director Carol Marlow said: “We are very excited to announce this special day. It will be a great celebration for P&O Cruises, our passengers and for the whole maritime world.
“Whereas the very first P&O ships plied their trades to the Iberian Peninsular and the Orient, P&O Cruises ships sail throughout Europe, the Caribbean, South America, Scandinavia, Mediterranean, Atlantic islands and on round the world cruises. What was once a national necessity is now a national pastime and is worthy of a grand celebration.”
Photo of a former P&O cruis ship of the 20th century, the ORIANA of 1960 at Ponta Delgada, Azores...

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

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

ORIANA of 1960 in Sydney

The final passenger liner built for the old Orient Line, the turbine steam ship ORIANA of 1960 seen here berthed in Sydney, Australia. One of the more important passenger ships built in the 1960s, she was always one of my favourites, and , yes I know, she was also a special ship for my friend Miguel Malho, to whom I offer this post...
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

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

LMC favorite Liners: ORIANA of 1960





ORIANA of 1960, the final liner built for Orient Line is one of my really favorite ships. Although she was not as lucky as her rival CANBERRA she was a very distinctive ship and if I had to choose between the two, it was ORIANA, no second chance.
This series of photos sent by a very special friend were taken on ORIANA's arrival in Sydney on 30 December 1960. She was brand new by then and it was the maiden arrival in Sydney.
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

Friday, January 05, 2007

THE ORIANA of 1960





At the request of Miguel M, here there are several of my early photgraphs of the 1960-ORIANA in Lisbon. All were taken in 1975, the b&w on 11 July and the colour photos on 19 August... Both photos were taken at the Rocha passenger ship terminal.
Copyright photos by L. M. Correia