| Author |
Message |
   
Mark Baber
Moderator Username: mab
Post Number: 2384 Registered: 12-2000
| | Posted on Wednesday, September 26, 2007 - 4:37 am: |
|
The New York Times, 26 September 1907 LUSITANIA GOES 525 MILES --- ON BOARD THE LUSITANIA, Sept 25, (noon) By Wireless Telegraph to Cape Race---At noon to-day we are in latitude 47.02, longitude 43.15. The day's run was 525 nautical miles. For the last twenty-four hours, ending at noon, at which time the daily reckoning is made, the steamer has maintained a speed of 22.66 knots an hour. The wind is cloudy and cold, with a light wind blowing from the southeast. -30- MAB http://groups.yahoo.com/group/OceanicSteamNavigationCo/ http://www.greatships.net/
|
   
Mark Baber
Moderator Username: mab
Post Number: 2385 Registered: 12-2000
| | Posted on Thursday, September 27, 2007 - 4:58 am: |
|
The New York Times, 27 September 1907 THE LUSITANIA ARRIVES --- Is at Queenstown After 5 Days 4 Hours 19 Minutes --- QUEENSTOWN, Friday, Sept 27---The Lusitania arrived here at 3 A. M. to-day, having made the run from New York in 5 days 4 hours and 19 minutes. Her average speed was 22 5/8 knots. ----- By Wireless Telegraph and Cable from THE TIMES's Correspondent --- ABOARD THE LUSITANIA, Thursday, Sept. 26---Capt. Watt authorizes me to publish the following statement: "The Lusitania, according to our calculation, made this evening, will arrive at the Daunt Rock light vessel at Queenstown at 3 o'clock Friday morning, after a passage of five days three hours and twenty-three minutes from Sandy Hook, at an average hourly speed of 22.75 knots over a total distance of 2,807 miles. "The best previous record for the course is that of the Lucania, in 1894, of five days, seven hours and twenty-three minutes. "Our maiden homeward passage has been satisfactory in every respect. The machinery has behaved magnificently throughout, and has performed its full duty without a single flaw. "We know from our trial trip that the Lusitania has it in her to do 26.75 knots, and we confidently expect her to execute a similar performance across the Atlantic when the right time comes. "We attempted no record on our maiden voyages except the record of landing our passengers safe and happy." ----- CROOKHAVEN, Sept 26---In a wireless message received here to-night from the steamer Lusitania she was going 23 knots an hour and Bull Rock was in sight. The night was clear, the sea smooth, and the wind light fro the east. --- BROWHEAD, Friday, Sept. 27---The steamer Lusitania passed here at 1:20 this morning. She has still seventy miles to go to Queenstown. -30- MAB http://groups.yahoo.com/group/OceanicSteamNavigationCo/ http://www.greatships.net/
|
   
Mark Baber
Moderator Username: mab
Post Number: 2388 Registered: 12-2000
| | Posted on Thursday, September 27, 2007 - 10:26 pm: |
|
MAB Note: With Lusitania's maiden voyage at an end, so is this series of articles. The New York Times, 28 September 1907 LUSITANIA GOES AT 25-KNOT SPEED --- Does 228 Knots from Queenstown to Liverpool in a Little Over Nine Hours --- STOKERS DELAYED VOYAGE --- They Were Refractory and Inefficient---Fog and Heavy Sea Further Held Big Boat Back --- Special Cable to THE NEW YORK TIMES --- LONDON, Sept. 27---Evidence as to what the Lusitania can do, writes THE NEW YORK TIMES's correspondent, who was a passenger aboard the Cunarder which reached Liverpool at 4 this afternoon, was reserved until the very end of the voyage. From Queenstown to Liverpool, a distance of 228 knots, she traveled at a speed of 25 knots, covering the distance in a little over nine hours. The new record which she established between Sandy Hook and Daunt's Lightship of 5 days 4 hours and 19 minutes she made despite sixteen hours of fog, two days of very heavy sea, and a refractory crew of stokers. The Lusitania underwent a baptism of rough sea in the mid-Atlantic from Tuesday night to Thursday afternoon and weathered it magnificently. She careened gently to an observed maximum angle of 20 degrees, but went forward with the rhythmic ease of a cruising yacht. Throughout the trip the work of the stokers continued to be loose, half-hearted, and at times approaching absolute inefficiency. It was impossible to get more than 150 to 160 revolutions out of the turbines, which were built to do 180 to 200. The Lusitania's passengers arrived at London shortly after 9 to-night, but there was no distribution of her mails to-night. ----- QUEENSTOWN, Sept. 27---Sandy Hook Lightship was passed by the Lusitania at 6:37 P. M. Saturday, Sept. 21, and the ship had covered 369 miles up to noon Sunday, Sept. 22. On Monday at noon the steamer had added 524 miles. At noon Tuesday she had covered 525 miles more; at noon Wednesday she had made an additional 530 miles; at noon Thursday she had 523 miles more to her credit, and at 3:56 A. M. to-day she had run 336 miles from noon yesterday to Daunt's Rock, making the total distance 2,807 nautical miles, at an average speed of 22.58 knots per hour. The American coal was said by the engineers not to have been so satisfactory as the coal used during the westward trip. The confidence of the engineers in the Lusitania's ability to beat all competitors when things are running more smoothly is not diminished. -30- MAB http://groups.yahoo.com/group/OceanicSteamNavigationCo/ http://www.greatships.net/
|
   
Samuel Halpern
Member Username: cmdrsam
Post Number: 1747 Registered: 3-2003
| | Posted on Friday, September 28, 2007 - 3:06 pm: |
|
Thanks Mark for posting this informative series. There are no Unsinkable Theories. Sam Halpern 40° 23' 50'' N, 74° 13' 55'' W.
|
   
Eric Longo
Member Username: mauretania19061936
Post Number: 650 Registered: 8-2004
| | Posted on Saturday, September 13, 2008 - 10:50 am: |
|
Hi All, well, 101 years ago today for this maiden arrival. Time is flying! Best, Eric Mauretania 07 photographs/memorabilia/postcards buy/sell. Image restoration. magikbilly@yahoo.com
|
   
Eric Longo
Member Username: mauretania19061936
Post Number: 888 Registered: 8-2004
| | Posted on Sunday, September 13, 2009 - 7:10 am: |
|
Hi All, 102 years today! Time is certainly flying! Best, Eric Mauretania 07 photographs/memorabilia/postcards buy/sell. Image restoration. magikbilly@yahoo.com
|
   
Jim Kalafus
Member Username: jak
Post Number: 5568 Registered: 12-2000
| | Posted on Sunday, September 13, 2009 - 12:20 pm: |
|
Indeed, time does fly. Grace, my assisant housekeeper, often gets teary eyed when she speaks of arriving in New York, as a 17 year old who had never been out of Italy before, aboard the Lusitania, on this very day in 1907. NOW APPEARING:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9JZ4aLBjzFI
|
   
Jim Kalafus
Member Username: jak
Post Number: 5569 Registered: 12-2000
| | Posted on Sunday, September 13, 2009 - 12:37 pm: |
|
Seriously, 'though. On this day in 1915, the Lusitania was one day out, on her first crossing since the attempted sabotage of one of her turbines in the first week of August. This crossing was laden with wealthy Americans, hastily returning to the U.S. as the war continued to escalate. ________________________________________________ The Lusitania Commandeered as Transport. She is to go to Halifax. And There, the Report Declares, Take on Canadian Troops for Europe. September 18: The Cunard Liner Lusitania, from Liverpool, reached her pier here early today under wireless orders received last night as she was nearing port, according to passengers, ordering her to make all possible speed, unload her passengers, and be ready to sail for Halifax to act as a transport for Canadian troops. The officers would not verify this report, but offered no explanation for rushing the big liner to her pier at one o’clock in the morning. Prominent among the 1502 passengers, the majority of whom were returning Americans, were Sir James Barrie, author and playwright; A.E. Mason the English novelist; Mrs. George Vanderbilt and Miss Cornelia Vanderbilt; George deForest Lord; Marshall Field III; Chauncey Depew, Jr. and William Dudley Foulkes, president of the Municipal League of the United States. ________________________________________________ Also on board was Ralph Moodie of Gainesville Texas, who would die on May 7, 1915. This particular celebrity-laden crossing would later feature in just about the only positive publicity the liner garnered during her final nine months: _______________________________________________ February 1915: The Sensible Romance of Marshall Field III “The Richest Boy in the World” How the Future Heir of $200,000,000.00 American Dollars Turned His Back on Every Proud and Titled Foreign Beautyand Picked Out for His Bride A Simple, Charming American Girl. From all accounts his engagement to Miss Marshall was the result of a brief but pretty romance aboard the ocean liner Lusitania, aboard which they were recently fellow passengers from Europe. There are stories of smooth walks on the promenade deck lasting until the early hours of the next day. It was remarked by passengers that the young man seemed deeply smitten. Those interested passengers had their reward a day or two before the Lusitania reached the port of New York. For some time the young man had not been in evidence. Suddenly he appeared on deck- alone, but looking very happy, quite the expression of a sighing lover who had staked his future happiness on a certain answer to a certain question and had not been disappointed. Marshall Field III, with his retinue of servants, put up at the Ritz-Carlton. Miss Marshall went directly to her home at 6 East 77th street, where young Field was observed as a frequent caller. And presently came the announcement of their engagement. _________________________________________________ Other articles spoke of the smitten couple keeping constant company in the lounge, dining room, verandah café, and on the boat deck. Journalists, and friends of the couple, enjoyed playing up the cute meeting aboard the Lusitania angle, when they married in February 1915. This was the last touch of romance to attach itself to the liner. Marshall Field III and Evelyn Field remained married for about fifteen years; upon their divorce she was awarded S1, 000,000.00 per year in alimony and their New York residence. The liner's next Westbound voyage was equally star-studded: Lusitania Sails October 3: The Lusitania sailed today with a large compliment of notables including Assistant Secretary of War Breckinridge, and the army officers who came over on the U.S.S. Tennessee. Everyone is glad to be on the way to the land of the free, where daily baseball scores promise much more exciting reading than the dribbles of censored war news printed here. Miss Sarah Cooper Hewitt and her sister, Miss Eleanor Cooper Hewitt, were aboard the Lusitania; returned recently from Italy. Jerome K. Jerome, the novelist, lingered in a corner of his room and refused to talk about a new play which he is going to launch. Bishop Rhinelander, of Pennsylvania is also hurrying home. Other notables on board the Lusitania include Miss Elizabeth Frick; Mrs. S.R. Guggenheim and family; Mrs. P.H. Mellon and daughters; Mrs. Frederick Orr-Lewis; Mrs. V. Henry Rothschild and Mrs. Gertrude Cornwallis West, better known as Mrs. Patrick Campbell, the actress. _______________________________________________ Aboard this voyage were at least five passengers who would be on the May 1, 1915 passenger list. Thomas Slidell and Frederich Schwarte would survive, while Walter McLean; Lee Schwabacher, and Henry B. Sonneborn would not. Her final October westbound was the first voyage to which "war terrors" were affixed since she was chased by the German cruiser in August. She sailed under wireless blackout, and when she did not arrive in New York on schedule, it was strongly suspected that she had met with some sort of war-disaster. She arrived a day late, held up by a big storm. Aboard her were Josephine Burnside, whose family owned Eaton's Department Store in Montreal, and her daughter, Iris, and maid, Mattie Waites. Iris and Mattie died on May 7th, 1915, (Iris' formal portait is currently in Eaton's archive) but Josephine survived. After that the story was relentlessly grim, straight thru the end. NOW APPEARING:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9JZ4aLBjzFI
|
   
Jim Kalafus
Member Username: jak
Post Number: 5570 Registered: 12-2000
| | Posted on Monday, September 14, 2009 - 2:33 am: |
|
>Seriously, 'though. On this day in 1915, 1914. Nothing you write before 7AM is EVER worth shi... the price of a cold cup of coffee. NOW APPEARING:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9JZ4aLBjzFI
|
   
Samuel Halpern
Member Username: cmdrsam
Post Number: 2639 Registered: 3-2003
| | Posted on Monday, September 14, 2009 - 4:53 pm: |
|
Jim, How could you be doing anything before having a cup of coffee in the morning? I consider myself lucky just to be able to find the coffee pot to make a fresh cup.  Sam Halpern TITANICOLOGY
|
   
Jim Kalafus
Member Username: jak
Post Number: 5574 Registered: 12-2000
| | Posted on Monday, September 14, 2009 - 11:09 pm: |
|
>How could you be doing anything before having a cup of coffee in the morning? I'm up at 4:45. First, I shake off the residual disturbing images from the previous night's nightmares: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yDopZfUdjIM&feature=related Then deal with issues of eroded self-worth amongst my household staff who, between them, cannot brew a decent pot of coffee... and on those occasions that something halfway decent comes to the table, I invariably find a cigarette butt, used Band-aid or corn plaster, or cat hairball at the bottom of the pot as I finish it off, and no one ever confesses up. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0swhyuQaGuk THEN, I go online, or work on my article. If I eliminate the earlier parts of the ritual, I end up making cretinous mistakes, such as "1915" for "1914." NOW APPEARING:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9JZ4aLBjzFI
|
   
Jim Kalafus
Member Username: jak
Post Number: 5575 Registered: 12-2000
| | Posted on Monday, September 14, 2009 - 11:21 pm: |
|
Sometimes, the nightmares take a long time to "shake." http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aMqd5EQXD-g&feature=related NOW APPEARING:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9JZ4aLBjzFI
|
   
Michael H. Standart
Moderator Username: mstandart
Post Number: 30295 Registered: 12-2000
| | Posted on Tuesday, September 15, 2009 - 6:17 am: |
|
When in doubt, make your own coffee. I don't let my cats anywhere near the pot! Cordially, Michael H. Standart Equal Opportunity Curmudgeon
|
   
Bob Godfrey
Member Username: bobgod1
Post Number: 4884 Registered: 11-2002
| | Posted on Tuesday, September 15, 2009 - 9:43 pm: |
|
Coffee? Well, that's your problem right there. You Americans should set yourselves up in the morning with a proper beverage, like wot we do over 'ere in Blighty. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HgzEBLa3PPk |
   
Jim Kalafus
Member Username: jak
Post Number: 5577 Registered: 12-2000
| | Posted on Tuesday, September 15, 2009 - 11:38 pm: |
|
>I don't let my cats anywhere near the pot! I don't HAVE a cat. That's what makes the hairball at the bottom of the coffeepot even more disturbing. >When in doubt, make your own coffee. I'm NOT paying three people close to $4 an hour, each, in order to make my OWN coffee. I like to believe that the occasional used Band-aid or/and Q-Tip that comes to light as I finish the pot is an accident, but sometimes I wonder.... If the original Lusitania article Mike and I did for ET is still online (eventually, it wont be... we've disavowed it, and it will be replaced) there is a letter written by one of the officers, at the end of the maiden voyage, to a Mr. Smith, of Yonkers, who lost his brother, sister in law, niece, and two nephews on May 7th, 1915. His sister, and one niece, survived. NOW APPEARING:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9JZ4aLBjzFI
|
   
Michael H. Standart
Moderator Username: mstandart
Post Number: 30329 Registered: 12-2000
| | Posted on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 - 6:17 am: |
|
>>I don't HAVE a cat.<< Ooops! >>but sometimes I wonder....<< Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean "They" aren't out to get you! Cordially, Michael H. Standart Equal Opportunity Curmudgeon
|
   
Michael Cundiff
Member Username: robin
Post Number: 1099 Registered: 1-2001
| | Posted on Thursday, September 17, 2009 - 6:45 pm: |
|
For the record Mark, don't know why it took me so long to read your Sept. 27, 07 LUSITANIA ARRIVES "Is at Queenstown after 5 days 4 hours 19 minutes". Thanking you now ;-) Coincides and couples spendily with my Lusitania p.c. cancelled PA QUE BOT Sept. 27, '07 Queenstown. And yes, Eric L., closing in on 102 yrs! Nice to know that an historic paper postcard is so lovingly preserved, as is most of our other collectibles. So I pause now to think of my Great Grandmother Jacobs who was two yrs. old in 1907...and passed away at 104 yrs. of age. Michael Cudiff NV, USA |
   
Michael Cundiff
Member Username: robin
Post Number: 1101 Registered: 1-2001
| | Posted on Thursday, September 17, 2009 - 7:41 pm: |
|
POSTSCRIPT: Boy, sorry about the last paragraph, my numbers just did'nt figure :-( My Great Grandmother Jacobs was 16 yrs. old when TITANIC foundered, so eleven yrs. old in 1907...and not living still...but did pass away at 104 yrs. of age... ...never did like mathematics in school ;-) Michael Cundiff NV, USA |
   
Michael Cundiff
Member Username: robin
Post Number: 1102 Registered: 1-2001
| | Posted on Friday, September 18, 2009 - 6:26 pm: |
|
Boy oh boy! I was off by a country mile. Per our, this morning conversation, my Mother informed me Great Grandmother Jacobs was born Sep. 2, 1878, thus making her 29 yrs. 25 days old on Sept. 27, 1907, and passed in 1982. Unfortunately my ocean-liner interest did'nt peak until 1 Sept. 1985. I would have loved to talk with her on any memories she had upon hearing news about the loss of Lusitania & Titanic, on knowing that she never cotracted Alheimers disease. May her genes thrive in me O' Lord...;-) Michael Cundiff NV, USA |
|