Ocean Cruise News 

Welcome
WOCLS Sponsors
Cunard Lines

 

Fred Olsen Cruise Lines  

Voyages of Discovery

Holland America

 

Oceania Cruises 

Regent Seven Seas

Cruise Line Links

  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
Useful Travel Links
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
Member Specials

 

 HAL Ad

 

Mr Ocean Liner

Latest Press Release from Celebrity

 Cruises

 

Miami - Consistently striving to provide its guests with unmatchable vacation experiences, Celebrity Cruises is now offering guests an inside look into the fascinating world of cruise ship operations. A new addition to the unique and robust Celebrity Life onboard activities program, "Celebrity Inside Access" takes guests on a once-in-a-lifetime journey behind the scenes of Celebrity's renowned fleet, inviting them to discover the intricate details and functions behind modern luxury at sea. Celebrity's Inside Access program invites guests to join two intimate and exclusive activities, the "See How It's Done Tour" and the "Bridge Sail Away Experience."

Designed to provide a thorough and rich three-hour experience, the See How It's Done Tour guides an intimate group of guests through several otherwise non-public areas of the ship, including the bridge, mooring deck, crew gym, theater, engine control room, prep rooms and the main dining room galley. At each area of the tour, guests have the opportunity to interact with expert members of the Celebrity crew. Each tour is followed by a savory wine-paired lunch hosted by an officer in the main dining room.

The Bridge Sail Away Experience presents the opportunity for vacationers to join the navigational team on the bridge as the ship sails away from port. Beginning 30 minutes before and concluding 30 minutes after departing, guests are given a tour and an overview of the bridge conducted by a senior Celebrity bridge officer. Guests also have the opportunity to meet and take photos with the ship's captain.

"Celebrity has dedicated itself to providing guests with the finest in culinary experiences, award-winning service and engaging onboard activities," said Simon Weir, Director of Hotel Operations, Celebrity Cruises. "Now, with the addition of Celebrity Inside Access, vacationers can also satisfy their curiosity and gain rare, behind-the-scenes insight into a Celebrity ship's inner workings."

The Celebrity Inside Access program is offered on all ships and available for purchase onboard.


About Celebrity Cruises:
Celebrity Cruises' iconic "X" is the mark of modern luxury, with its cool, contemporary design and warm spaces; dining experiences where the design of the venues is as important as the cuisine; and the amazing service that only Celebrity can provide, all created to provide an unmatchable experience for vacationers' precious time. In addition to offering vacations visiting all continents, Celebrity also presents immersive cruisetour experiences in Alaska, Australia/New Zealand, Canada, Europe and South America. One of the fastest-growing major cruise lines, Celebrity is one of five cruise brands operated by global cruise vacation company Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. (NYSE, OSE: RCL). Celebrity's fleet currently consists of 10 ships, with an additional Solstice Class ship, Celebrity Reflection, scheduled to join the fleet in Fall 2012. For more information, dial 1-800-437-3111 or call your travel agent.

Links to Our Friends

Bill Miller at Sea

 

Cruise Critic

 

Hartford Holidays

 

Maritime Matters

 

Mr. Ocean Liner

 

South Street Seaport

E NEWS SUPPLEMENT...by Bill Miller

 

 

April 1, 2012


Greetings!

 

     Wishing everyone a Happy Holiday Season!!

 

    

Sincerely!
  
Tom Cassidy 

New in the New Year!   

 
For 2013, Cunard has greatly increased the number of 2-night "sampler" cruises, departing from Southampton as well as Hamburg. While the 2,600-passenger Queen Mary 2 will make 18 Atlantic crossings, two of them will be different - instead of 7 days, two trips will be expanded to 8 days.

 

 
                                          Dubai-More from the rumor mill!  Dubai Palm

There's been steady talk lately that the legendary Queen Elizabeth 2, berthed in Dubai since Nov 2008, might be heading to different waters. Purchased from Carnival/Cunard for $100 million, the 1969-commissioned ship was to become a hotel, luxury apartments, museum & entertainment complex as part of the huge Palm Island complex. But major financial problems hit the Gulf kingdom in 2009 and the QE2 project was put on hold. In the care of a custodial crew of 40 these days, the 963-ft long ship has been kept in generally very good condition. She's had little use, however, but was the setting last December for a gala New Year's party. Now, amidst word that she might well be sold off by her debt-ridden Dubai owners, the most recent gossip is that she'll go to Macau, to serve as a casino and entertainment complex. 

 

 

Veteran cruise ship! Louis Cruise Line   

 

This 1958-built ship was to go to scrap, but has found new life, added service. The 26,400-grt The Emerald is the former Santa Rosa of the Grace Line, used in New York-Caribbean service, but was greatly rebuilt in 1989 (going from 300 capacity to 1000 passengers). She sailed afterward as the Regent Rainbow for long-gone Regency Cruises, but then transferred over to Louis in 1996.   Still a steamship, she has been laid-up in recent years and, just recently, was reportedly sold to Indian ship breakers. The deal fell through, however, and instead the 584-ft long ship is going to South Korea for use as hotel and then to the Caribbean for 3 & 4 day cruises.

Exxon Valdez
Merchant Shipping - Finished with engines!
 
The Exxon Valdez, well remembered from the huge oil spill up in Alaska, is ending her days.   She's been sold to Indian ship breakers.
New York - Sights & sounds! New York City
 
I will be a guest speaker aboard the North River - that's the Hudson River - tour of the Working Harbor Organization on August 7th, 2012 (www.workingharbor.com). It is an evening event - the sun setting, the change in the day's coloring & mood and then the lights of the great Manhattan skyline.

Ocean Liner Collectibles - Heading south!

 

A large booklet describing the 1939 cruise from New York to Rio aboard the fabled French liner Normandie sold recently for $450. The 28-night trip was well timed: being in Rio in time for Carnival.

 

Ocean Liner History - End of the line!

 

In 1963-64, the New York-based Grace Line built a quartet of passenger-cargo ships for their West Coast of South America service. Each ship carried up to 125 passengers in luxurious, all-first class quarters along with lots of cargo.   They were named Santa Magdalena, Santa Maria, Santa Mariana & Santa Mercedes. The first three were scrapped in 1986-87;   the fourth went on to serve as the Massachusetts Merchant Marine Academy's cadet training ship Patriot State. Well over 40 years old, she was decommissioned and laid-up in recent years.   Last week, the 547-ft long ship was being demolished at Brownsville, Texas. And in added news:   nearby was the 7,900-ton Artship, also being scrapped.   She dates from 1940, however, having been designed as the combination passenger-cargo ship Delorleans. She was intended for Delta Line's New Orleans-Rio-Buenos Aires service, but with the outbreak of the Second World War, she was completed instead as the troop transport USS Crescent City.   After the War, she was laid up from 1948 until 1971, but then restored as the California Maritime Academy training ship Golden Bear.   Decommissioined in 1995, she became the Artship in 1999, with the intention of being a floating cultural center. The project was never realized and instead she was idle for over a decade at Mare Island, California.

RCI Logo
New & improved! 
 
 

The Rhapsody of the Seas has just emerged from a 30-day, $54 million makeover in a Singapore shipyard.   Dating from 1997, the 1,998-passenger ship has refurbished staterooms & new dining venues.

Ocean & Cruise News

Current & Past Issues

 
Members can download a PDF of current and past issues using the following links
              
          OCN-Jan 2009     OCN-Jan 2010           OCN-Jan 2011
          OCN-Feb 2009     OCN-Feb 2010          OCN-Feb 2011
          OCN-Mar 2009     OCN-Mar 2010          OCN-Mar 2011   
          OCN-Apr 2009      OCN-Apr 2010          OCN-Apr 2011 
          OCN-May 2009      OCN-May 2010        OCN-May 2011
          OCN-Jun 2009      OCN-Jun 2010          OCN-Jun 2011
          OCN-Jul 2009       OCN-Jul 2010            OCN-Jul 2011
          OCN-Aug 2009     OCN-Aug 2010          OCN-Aug 2011
          OCN-Sep 2009     OCN-Apr 2011           OCN-Sep 2011
          OCN-Oct 2009      OCN-Oct 2010           OCN-Oct 2011
          OCN-Nov 2009     OCN-Nov 2010          OCN-Nov 2011
          OCN-Dec 2009     OCN-Dec 2010           OCN-Dec 2011
          OCN-Jan 2012     OCN-Feb 2012            OCN-Mar2012
  
Past Issues of this "new" Email Supplement beginning with the Feb. 21, 2011 issue can be found by clicking our logo below

 

WOCLS Logo
  
The above listed items are copyrighted material and are for the exclusive use of paid members in good standing. Any unauthorized duplication, transmission or distribution of this material without the written permission of The World Ocean & Cruise Liner Society is   strictly prohibited.
WORLD OCEAN & CRUISE LINER SOCIETY'S
HOSTED CRUISES
  
One of the great things about being a World Ocean & Cruise Liner Society member is joining us aboard one of our "Hosted" member cruises. Each cruise features low group rates, special amenities plus onboard lectures and events
     

 

Veendam - Bermuda (7 Night)

Jun 3, 2012 - Call for Current Rates

  

Queen Mary 2 - Independence Day Cruise

July 1, 2012 - Call for Current Rates

  

Queen Mary 2 - Canada / New England (11 Nights) 

Sep 21, 2012 - Call for Current Rates

 

 

*Rates are per person based on double occupancy.

Government fees are additional.

 

 

For Reservations and Information Call WOCLS Group Coordinator Beth Schmitt at (800) 828 4813 Ext 1009

 

About Bill Miller  Bill Miller "Mr. Ocean Liner"  

 

Bill Miller is an international authority on the subject of ocean liners & cruise ships --- from those "floating palaces" of yesteryear to the current generation of cruise ships, the "floating resorts". Called "Mr. Ocean Liner," he has written some 80 books on the subject: from early steamers, immigrant ships and liners at war to other titles on their fabulous interiors, in post card form and about the highly collectible artifacts from them.   He has done specific histories of such celebrated passenger ships as the United States, Queen Mary, Rotterdam, France, Queen Elizabeth 2 and Crystal Serenity.

 

            In all, he has also written over 1,000 articles for newspapers, magazines and nautical journals & newsletters.   He even had his very own ocean liner quarterly, the Millergram. He has made nearly 450 voyages to date:   Atlantic crossings, tropical cruises, coastal runs and even trips on container cargo ships and exotic banana boats. He has appeared in some three dozen video & television series, both in the USA, Britain, Europe and Australia, including Castles of the Sea, The Floating Palaces, The Super Liners, Inside the World of a Cruise Ship, Disasters at Sea, Deco: Age of Glamour, and Lady in Waiting: The Story of the SS United States.   He has also appeared on The Today Show, CBS Evening News, CBS Sunday Morning, Good Morning America, NBC Evening News and many other news broadcasts. He has been guest lecturer aboard over 50 different liners, sailing with the likes of Crystal Cruises, Cunard, Carnival, Holland America, Princess, Radisson-Seven Seas, Saga Cruises and others. Miller was a public school teacher, in middle school and for social studies, for 32 years. He was named "Teacher of the Year" in 2002.  

 

            A native of Hoboken, New Jersey, the once busy port just across the Hudson River from New York City, Miller was named Outstanding American Maritime Scholar in 1994, received the United States Maritime Preservation Award and also the Ocean Liner Council's Silver Riband Award, both in 2004.   Also, he has been chairman of the Port of New York Branch of the World Ship Society, deputy director of the New York Harbor Festival, served on the selection committee for the American Maritime Hall of Fame, created the passenger ship database for the Ellis Island Museum and currently serves as Curator of 20th Century Maritime History at Manhattan's South Street Seaport Museum. He has also organized a 14-week college course on liners, and helped to create & then served as historian at the US Merchant Marine Museum. His private collection includes 4,000 books on ships, over 15,000 photos and some 1,500 miniature ship models, most of them being passenger ships.

 

            By 2011, Miller had 10 new books in the works, was curator to Decodence (an exhibit at the South St Seaport on the design & décor of the grand French liner Normandie) and himself was the subject of a one-hour film documentary aptly titled Mr Ocean Liner. In 2011, he hosted Cinematic Crossings: Ocean Liners on the Big Screen, a 5-day film festival at Manhattan's Lincoln Center. Currently, he spends some 200 days a year lecturing onboard ocean liners & cruise ships. 

 

 

 

Follow Bill's look back at ship's of yesteryear..

Heard Along the Boat Deck

 

And his current and past cruise experiences...

Scribblings  

William Miller Books!

 

  

Busy scribbling! Our good friends Anthony Cooke & John Maxtone-Graham have new titles out on the shelves.   London-based Anthony has just released Favourite British Liners with 216 pages & 216 photos (96 of them in color).   Check through Mainmast Books in the UK.   Meanwhile, Manhattan-homeported John has just finished a new title on the immortal Titanic.   It was published by W W Norton & Company.

  

In the works! The presses are rolling over in England, at the History Press.   I've penned a short, 10,000-word overview of passenger ships entitled The Great Liners.   It should be out soon.   It will be followed, at the same publishing house, by Great Passenger Ships 1910-20 and then Great American Passenger Ships. Happily, my finger keeps on typing ... and happily, there are still photos and anecdotes and maybe something new to be shared.

 

Another new book project!   Happily, I have been signed to do another edition of the Classic Liners series for the History Press over in the UK. In the wake of our book on the Caronia, Cunard's "Green Goddess," this project will deal with two of the most popular, most beloved post-Second World War French liners, the Ile de France & Liberte.   The Ile was built for the French but back in 1927;   the larger Liberte came to them as post-war reparations, having been the German Europa of 1930.  The Ile sailed the Atlantic between 1949 and 1958;   the Liberte ran between 1950 and 1961. They transported thousands on the regular run between New York, Southampton or Plymouth and Le Havre, and even had occasional cruises. They were of course predecessors to the much larger, faster France, commissioned in 1962. If any of our readers has anecdotes, reflections, comments and shared materials on these great liners, please contact me through Ocean & Cruise News.

 

On the horizon!   Brian Hawley is penning a new book, filled with lots of photos, about the Olympic, the White Star liner completed in 1911 and sister to the infamous Titanic

 

Ocean liners in words & pictures!  An updated list of my published ocean liner books ... and available thru bmce48@yahoo.com.

  

Great Passenger Ships

Great Passenger Ships 1910-1920

It was an age of evolution, when size and speed were almost the ultimate considerations. 'Bigger was said to be better' and ship owners were not exempted from the prevailing mood. While the German four-stackers of 1897-06 and then Cunard's brilliant Mauretania & Lusitania of 1907 led the way to larger and grander liners. White Star Line countered by 1911 with the Olympic, her sister Titanic and a near-sister, the Britannic. The French added the France while Cunard took delivery of the beloved Aquitania. But the Germans won out -- they produced the 52,000-ton Imperator and a near-sister, the Vaterland, the last word in shipbuilding and engineering prior to the First World War. They and their sister, the Bismarck, remained the biggest ships in the world until 1935. 

 

But other passenger ships appear in this decade --- other Atlantic liners, but also ships serving on more diverse routes: Union Castle to Africa, P&O to India and beyond, the Empress liners on the trans-Pacific run. We look at a grand age of maritime creation, ocean-going superlative, but also sad destruction in the dark days of the First War. It was, in all ways, a fascinating period. 

The Last Atlantic Liners 

 

 

 

Last Atlantic Liners:  Getting There is Half the Fun  (Amberley Publishing, Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK, 2011

 

  

 

 

 

Rms Caronia Book

 

 

RMS Caronia:   Cunard's Green Goddess 

(co-authored with Brian Hawley)  The History Press Ltd, Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK, 2011

  

 

 

 

 

Floating Palaces

 

 

Floating Palaces:   The Great Atlantic Liners(Amberley Publishing, Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK, 2011

  

  

 

 

 

 

Great British Passenger Ships

 

 

 

 

Great  British Passenger Ships  (The History Press Ltd, Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK, 2010)

  

 

 

 

 

ss Nieuw Amsterdam

 

 

 

 

 

SS Nieuw Amsterdam:   The Darling of the Dutch  (Amberley Publishing, Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK, 2010)

  

 

 

Cunard's Three Queens

 

 

 

Cunard's Three Queens:   A Celebration  (Amberley Publishing, Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK, 2009)

 

 

 

 

Under The Red Ensign

 

 

 

Under the Red Ensign:   British Passenger Liners of the '50s & '60s  (The History Press, Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK, 2009)

 

 

 

 

 

ss United States Speed Queen

 

 

 

SS United States:   Speed Queen of the Seas  (Amberley  Publishing, Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK, 2009)

 

 

 

 

And yet to come.....

 

Great Passenger Ships 1910-20  (The History Press Ltd, Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK, due Sep 2011)

 

I Was Born in Hoboken:  Memories of the 1950s & '60s  (Hoboken Historical Museum, Hoboken, NJ, due fall 2011)

 

Along the Hudson:   Great Passenger Ships at New York in Photos  (Amberley Publishing, Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK, due 2012)

 

The Last Great Dynasty:  The Royal House of Windsor  (Amberley Publishing, Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK, due 2012)

 

Great Atlantic Liners of the 20th Century in Color (co-authored with Anton Logvinenko;  Amberley Publishing, Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK, due 2012)

 

Great American Passenger Ships  (The History Press Ltd, Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK, due 2012)

 

The Cunard Yanks (co-authored with Ian Wright;   pending but due 2012)

 

 

 

WOCLS LogoWOCLS E News & Renewals  

If you've been receiving this E-news but not the monthly print publication chances are your subscription has expired. Please renew now as your E-news will stop shortly.  Please renew online using the following link 

                                                  Join or Renew Here

 

If you receive both...we ask you to please help us keep renewal mailing costs down. Renew today before we need to send you a notice. 

 

In either case you may join or renew securely using your Visa or MasterCard. This form features VeriSign's Secure processing so you know your vital information is secure. You may also mail your check to The World Ocean & Cruise Liner Society - P.O. Box 329 - Northport NY 11768. A renewal ($30/year domestic  -or- $36/ year foreign) will extend your existing subscription to both this "E-News" Supplement and Ocean Cruise News a full 12 months from the end of your current subscription