RMS Queen Elizabeth 2

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RMS Queen Elizabeth 2

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The Queen Elizabeth 2 at sea

Image:British-Merchant-Navy-Ensign.svg Career
Ordered: ?
Ordered: 1964
Laid down: July 5, 1965
Launched: September 20, 1967
Christened: September 20, 1967
 by Queen Elizabeth II
Maiden voyage: May 2, 1969
Fate: in service
General characteristics
Tonnage: 70,327 gross tonnes
Displacement: N/A
Length: 293.5 m (963 ft)
Beam: 32.03 m (105 ft)
Draft: 9.87 m (32 ft)
Height: 52.2 m (171 ft 4 in)
Power: 9 x 10,625 kW at 400 rpm
Propulsion: 9 MAN 9-cylinder medium speed turbo-charged diesel engines turning two five-bladed propellers
Speed: 32.5 knots (61 km/h), 20 knots (37 km/h) in reverse
Complement: 1,756 passengers
1,892 (all berths) passengers
1,015 officers and crew
Cost: £29,091,000

The RMS Queen Elizabeth 2 (QE2) is a Cunard Line ocean liner named after the earlier Cunard liner Queen Elizabeth. She was the flagship of the line from 1969 until she was succeeded by RMS Queen Mary 2 in 2004. She was considered the last of the great transatlantic ocean liners prior to the construction of the QM2, and before she was refitted with a diesel power plant she was the last oil-fired passenger steamship to cross the Atlantic in scheduled liner service. During her service as the Cunard flagship, the QE2 traveled all over the world, and now operates predominantly as a cruise ship sailing out of Southampton, England.

Contents

Characteristics

At 70,327 tons and 963 ft (294 m) long, with a top speed of 32.5 knots (60 km/h), the Queen Elizabeth 2 is one of the fastest passenger vessels afloat for her size. She is larger than the RMS Titanic, but smaller than her predecessor RMS Queen Elizabeth and her successor Queen Mary 2, in order to allow her to pass through the Panama Canal. The QE2 can carry approximately 1,700 passengers and 1,015 crew members, for a total of approximately 2,715 people on board.

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The QE2 was not named after Queen Elizabeth II, who launched her in 1969, but instead for the previous Queen Elizabeth. Thus, as Roman numerals are always used for monarchs, the Arabic numeral "2" is used in the ship's name is to distinguish her from the monarch, Queen Elizabeth II. Template:Ref It has been claimed, wrongly, that the Queen spoke the liner's name as "Queen Elizabeth Two" when she named her at the launching. However, a sound recording available on the internet shows that she did actually name her "Queen Elizabeth the Second", the correct name of the ship.

History

Concept and construction

By the middle of the 1960s transatlantic travel was clearly dominated by the aeroplane, due to it being much faster and greatly cheaper to the paying passenger, and further expansion of this mode of travel showed no signs of slowing down, let alone stopping. Conversely, the Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth were becoming increasingly expensive to operate, and both internally and externally were relics of the pre-war years. However, Cunard did not want to give up the business of passenger service, and so gambled $80 million on a new ocean liner to replace the original "Queens," as well as to compete with the French Line's recently built SS France.

Realising the decline of transatlantic trade, Cunard decided their new ship was to be smaller and cheaper to operate than her predecessors. Originally designated "Q4" (a previous ship "Q3" had been abandoned just after the end of World War II), she was to be a three class liner. However, looking to the France, designs were changed to make "Q4" a two-class liner that could be modified into a single-class cruise ship, thereby allowing the ship to ply the Atlantic during peak summer season, as well as warmer waters during the winter. Template:Ref

The Queen Elizabeth 2 was built by the Upper Clyde Shipbuilders in the John Brown Shipyard in Clydebank, Scotland, her keel being laid down on July 5, 1965. and she was launched on September 20, 1967, by Queen Elizabeth II, using the same pair of gold scissors used by her mother and grandmother to launch the Queen Elizabeth and Queen Mary respectively.

The QE2 returned to the ship-builders in 1986 to have her steam turbines replaced by diesel engines. This refit took the ship out of service for six months, and cost Cunard $162 million, not including lost revenue. At this time her funnel was also replaced with a more bulky design.

Service History

The Queen Elizabsth 2's maiden voyage, from Southampton to New York City, commenced on May 2, 1969, taking 4 days, 16 hours and 35 minutes. However, Prince Charles was the first "civilian" passenger to board the ship, on her voyage from the shipyard in Clydebank to drydock in Greenock.

In 1970 she set a record in crossing the Atlantic in 3 days, 20 hours and 42 minutes, an average speed of 30.36 knots. The following year she participated in the rescue of some 500 passengers from the burning French Line ship Antilles.

On May 17, 1972, while travelling from New York to Southampton, she was the subject of a bomb threat. She was searched by her crew, and a bomb disposal team parachuted into the sea near the ship. No bomb was found, but the hoaxer was arrested by the FBI. This incident went on to inspire the 1974 Richard Lester feature film Juggernaut. The following year the QE2 undertook two chartered cruises through the Mediterranean to Israel in commemoration of the 25th anniversary of the state's founding. Later, on July 16, 1974, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat revealed in a television interview that Libian President Muammar al-Qaddafi had ordered an Egyptian submarine to torpedo the QE2 during the cruise. Sadat said he had personally intercepted and nullified the order.

Image:QE2-4.jpg In 1982, she took part in the Falklands War, carrying 3,000 troops and 650 volunteer crew to the south Atlantic. She was refitted in Southampton in preparation for war service, including the installation of three helicopter pads. That same year she returned to the UK, being welcomed by Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother on board the Royal Yacht Britannia, and underwent conversion back to passenger service, with her funnel being painted in the traditional Cunard orange-red with black stripes, but her hull painted an unconventional light charcoal grey.

The 1986 removal of her steam engines in favour of diesel marked the end of Cunard's 146 year history of operating steam ships on the Atlantic. The QE2's steam turbines had taken her 2,622,858 miles - the equivalent of 120 times around the world. At the same time she was given a more bulky funnel, which altered the overall appearance of the ship. Four years later, in 1990, the QE2 completed the fastest Atlantic crossing by diesel, undertaking the journey in 4 days, 6 hours and 57 minutes at an average speed of 30.16 knots.

In August 1992, her hull was considerably damaged when she ran aground off Cuttyhunk Island near Cape Cod, on a day trip from New York City to Martha's Vineyard.

In 1995, she encountered a freak wave, estimated at 29 m, in a North Atlantic hurricane.

The QE2 celebrated the 30th anniversary of her maiden voyage in Southampton in 1999. In three decades she had 1,159 voyages, sailed 4,648,050 nautical miles and carried over 2 million passengers. (Much of above from Template:Ref)

Over the months of November and December 2001 the QE2 was given a major refurbishing, which saw new carpets and furnishing throughout many cabins and public rooms, as well as minor changes to layout, such as on the upper level of the Grand Lounge.

While she has been taken off the traditional "transatlantic" route, which has been taken over by the QM2, in 2005, the QE2 still undertakes an annual world cruises, and regular cruises around the Mediterranean. At the end of her 2005 world cruise, certain pieces of her artwork were damaged when some crew members who had become inebriated at an onboard crew party, went on a vandalism rampage through the public areas of the ship. A "priceless" tapestry of Queen Elizabeth II, commissioned for the launch of the ship, was thrown overboard. Further, an oil painting of the QE2 and two other tapestries were damaged, along with a part of the entertainment area and a lifeboat. The crew were dismissed from service with charges pending. Template:Ref

As the QE2 approaches her 40th anniversary in service, there is bound to be some speculation over her future, especially as the new Cunard cruise ship MS Queen Victoria – of similar size to the QE2 – is due to begin sailing in 2007. For the time being, however, Cunard remains committed to the oldest, if no longer the largest, ship in its fleet.

Design

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Exterior

Cunard's last major liner, the Queen Elizabeth, when completed in 1940 was even then considered of an outmoded design, despite some alterations to her overall design which made her sleeker than her sister ship, the Queen Mary. This was especially noticeable when she was compared to French liners like the SS Normandie, built in 1935, and later the SS France, completed in 1962. So, when designing the Queen Elizabeth 2, Cunard wanted her to be modern and reflective of 1960s Britain, as well as featuring the most up to date advancements in maritime design.

Like both the Normandie and France, the QE2 has a bulbous bow, flared stem, and clean forecastle. One innovation that made her distinct from all other ships is her funnel, which bears at its base an upward turned wind scoop that uses the forward motion of the ship to push air directly up the flanks of the funnel to catch the exhaust and disperse it far above the aft passenger decks. Template:Ref What was controversial at the time was that Cunard decided not to paint the funnel with the line's distinctive colour and pattern, something that had been done on all merchant vessels since the first Cunard ship, the Britannia, sailed in 1840. Instead the funnel was painted white and black, with the Cunard orange-red appearing only on the inside of the wind scoop. This practice ended in 1983 when the QE2 returned from service in the Falklands War, and the funnel has been painted in Cunard orange-red with black horizontal bands (correctly known as "hands") ever since. The original pencil-like funnel was replaced in 1986 with a more robust one, but it still maintained the wind scoop.

Large amounts of aluminium were used in the framing and cladding of the QE2's superstructure. This reduced weight, and therefore fuel consumption, but also posed problems with joining the aluminium to the steel hull, as with the SS United States. Aluminium also has a low melting point, which caused concern when the QE2 was serving as a troop ship during the Falklands War; some feared that if the ship were struck by rockets her upper decks would collapse quickly due to fire, thereby causing greater casualties.

In 1972 two penthouse suites were added in an aluminium structure on the Signal Deck, behind the ship's bridge, and in 1977 this structure was expanded to include more suites with balconies, making the QE2 one of the first ships to offer private terraces to passengers since the RMS Olympic was decommissioned in 1935.

Interior

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The Queen Elizabeth 2's interior configuration was laid out in a horizontal fashion, similar to the SS France, where the spaces dedicated to the two classes were spread horizontally on specific decks, in contrast to the vertical class divisions of older liners. Where the QE2 differed from the France was that the first class deck (Quarter Deck) was below the deck dedicated to tourist class (Upper Deck). Originally there were to be main lounges serving three classes, layered one atop the other, but when Cunard decided to make the ship a two-class vessel, only two main lounges were needed. Instead of completely reconfiguring the Boat Deck, the ship's architects simply opened a well in the deck between what were to have been the second and third class lounges, creating a double-height space known as the Double Room, now the Grand Lounge. This too was unconventional in that it designated a grander two-storey space for tourist class passengers, while first class passengers gathered in the standard height Queen's Room. However, the configuration for segregated Atlantic crossings gave first class passengers the theatre balcony on Boat Deck, while tourist class used the orchestra level on Upper Deck.

Over the span of 30 years the QE2 has had a number of interior refits and alterations.

1969, the year of her fitting out, was also the year of the Apollo 11 mission, when the Concorde's prototype was unveiled, and the previous year Stanley Kubrick's film 2001: A Space Odyssey premiered. In keeping with those times, originally Cunard broke from the traditional interiors of their previous liners for the QE2, especially the Art Deco modern of the previous Queens. Instead modern materials like plastic laminates, aluminium, and Plexiglas were used. Furniture was modular, and abstract art was used throughout public rooms and cabins.

The Midships Lobby on Two Deck, where first class passengers boarded for transatlantic journeys and all passengers boarded for cruises, was a circular room with a sunken seating area in the centre with green leather clad banquettes, and surrounded by a chrome railing. As a king-pin to this was a flared, white, trumpet-shaped, up-lit column. Another room where the QE2's advanced interior design was demonstrated was the first class lounge, the Queen's Room on Quarter Deck. This space, in colours of white and tan, featured a recessed, slotted ceiling, and indirect lighting. As well, the columns were flared in the same fashion as the one in the Midships Lobby, with recessed up-lighting, and also reflecting the shape of the bases of the tables and leather shell chairs. The Theatre Bar on Upper Deck featured red chairs, red drapes, a red egg-crate fibreglass screen, and even a red baby grand piano. Some more traditional materials like wood veneer were used as highlights throughout the ship, especially in passenger corridors and staterooms.

There was also an Observation Bar on Quarter Deck, a successor to its namesake, located in a similar location, on both previous Queens, which offered views through large windows over the ship's bow. This room was lost in the QE2's 1972 refit, becoming kitchen space with the forward-facing windows plated over. Cunard ships were without a forward passenger room like this until the Commodore Club on the Queen Mary 2. Template:Ref

In the 1994 refit almost all of the remaining original decor was lost, with Cunard opting to reverse the original decision of the QE2's designers and use the line's traditional ocean liners as inspiration. The green velvet and leather Midships Bar became the Art Deco inspired Chart Room, and received an original, custom designed piano from the Queen Mary. The (by now) blue-dominated Theatre Bar was transformed into the Golden Lion Pub, which mimics a traditional Edwardian pub.

The Synagogue is the only room that remains unaltered since 1969. Template:Ref

Artwork & artefacts

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The Queen Elizabeth 2 holds many pieces of artwork, as well as maritime artefacts drawn from Cunard's long history of operating merchant vessels.

In the Mauritania Restaurant sits Althea Wynne's sculpture of the White Horses of the Atlantic Ocean. There are bronze busts of both Sir Samuel Cunard (outside the Yacht Club) and Queen Elizabeth II (in the Queen's Room). The Princess Grill holds four life-size statues of human forms representing the four elements, done by sculptor Janine Janet in marine materials like shell and coral. The Chart Room's frieze was designed by Brody Nevenshwander, and depicts the words of T. S. Eliot, Sir Francis Drake, and John Masefield. The Midships Lobby holds a solid silver model of the Queen Elizabeth 2 made by Asprey of Bond Street in 1975, that was lost until a photograph was found in 1997 that led to the discovery of the model itself, and its placement on the QE2 in 1999. In E stairway hangs three custom designed tapestries, commissioned from Helena Barynina Hernmarck for the ship's launch, that depict the Queen as well as the launch of the ship. These tapestries, which were originally hung in D Stairway, Quarter Deck, outside the Colombia Restaurant, were damaged, and one thrown overboard, in 2005, as mentioned in the Service history section on this page. They were originally made with golden threads however much of this was lost when they were cleaned incorrectly as part of the 1987 refit.

There are also numerous photographs, oils and pastels of various members of the Royal Family throughout the vessel, and silver plaques commemorating the visits of every member of the Royal Family, as well as other dignitaries like South African president Nelson Mandella.

Amongst the artefacts on board is a set of antique Japanese armour presented to the QE2 by the Governor of Kagoshima, Japan, during her 1979 world cruise, and a Wedgewood vase presented to the ship by Lord Wedgewood.

From previous Cunard ships are a brass relief plaque with a fish motif from the RMS Mauretania, as well as an Art Deco bas-relief titled Winged Horse and Clouds, by Norman Foster for the RMS Queen Elizabeth. There is also a vast array of Cunard postcards, porcelain, flatware, boxes, linen, and Lines Bros Ltd Tri-anic model ships. One of her key pieces is the figurehead from Cunard's first ship, the RMS Britannia, carved from Quebec yellow pine by Cornish sculptor Charles Moore, and presented to the Britannia by Lloyds of London. On Upper Deck sits the silver Boston Commemorative Cup, presented to the Britannia by the City of Boston in 1840. This cup was lost for many decades until being found again in a pawn-shop in Halifax. On 2 Deck is a bronze entitled Spirit of the Atlantic which was designed by Barney Seale for the second ship Mauretania. A large wooden plaque was presented to the QE2 by First Sea Lord Sir John Fieldhouse to commemorate the ship's service in the Falklands War.

There is also an extensive collection of large scale models of various Cunard ships throughout the QE2. Template:Ref

Crew accommodation

The majority of crew are accommodated in mostly four, and some two, berth cabins, with showers and toilets at the end of the alleyway. These are located forward and aft on 3,4, and 5 Deck, as well as at various points along 6 Deck, where the Crew Purser's Office is also located. Cabins in the aft end of the vessel are subject to severe noise and vibration owing to their proximity to the variable pitch propellors.

Accommodation is cramped, basic, lacking in privacy, as well as natural light, and is subject to inspection by Officers every five days. Unlike the passenger areas, crew accommodation has seen little renovation in the Queen Elizabeth 2's 40 years of service.

There is a crew bar, nicknamed "The Pig."

Officers are accommodated in single cabins with private en suite bathrooms. These cabins are located on 1 Deck forward, and on Sports Deck.

Media appearances

The Queen Elizabeth 2 has been featured in a number of films and television shows.

  • The 1981 television adaptation of Brideshead Revisited used the aft decks of the QE2 for outdoor scenes aboard a fictional transatlantic liner.
  • In 1993 BBC filmed the two-part "Sea Fever" episode of Keeping up Appearances on board the QE2.
  • A 1995 episode of Coronation Street was filmed on the QE2.

External links

Footnotes

fr:Queen Elizabeth 2 nl:Queen Elizabeth 2 ja:クィーン・エリザベス2世号 sv:Queen Elizabeth 2