Queen Victoria has been the name of several ships:
. An immigrant ship that sailed between Le Havre and New York from 1843 to 1852
PS Queen Victoria (1838), a wooden paddlewheel steamer that was wrecked in 1853 off Bailey Lighthouse, Howth with the loss of over 80 peopleTS Queen Mary originally sailed as TS Queen Victoria from 1933 to 1935RMS Queen Mary, according to shipping legend, initially supposed to be called Victoria in line with the naming of Cunard Steamship Lines liners, with an ending in -ia, as with Lusitania, Mauritania, and the likeMS Arcadia (2004), a cruise liner which was intended to be Queen Victoria for Cunard Line. However, a restructuring by Cunard's parent company, Carnival Corporation, saw this vessel transferred to P&O as ArcadiaMS Queen Victoria - a ship of similar design and specifications to Arcadia that was completed and named in 2007 for Cunard LineA number of other ships have been named simply Victoria:
Victoria (ship), the first ship to circumnavigate the globeSpanish frigate Victoria (F82), a Spanish frigateHMS Victoria, five ships of the British Royal NavyMV Princess Victoria, a ferry which sank disastrously in 1953RMS Victoria, a Lake Victoria ferry built in Glasgow and reassembled in East Africa.Victoria-class submarine, a class of Canadian submarineMV Victoria, a P&O cruise ship operated between 1998 and 2002, now named Oceanic IIMS Victoria I, a cruiseferry belonging to TallinkMS Kronprinsessan Victoria, a ferry operated by Sessan Linjen and Stena Line 1981-1988, now sailing as MS Stena EuropeMS Crown Princess Victoria, a ferry operated by Stena Line in 1990, now sailing as MS Amusement WorldVictoria (Liberian ship), a Liberian-flagship bringing Iranian weapons to Gaza.