Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

SS Arcadia (1953)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
SS Arcadia

Cost
  
£6,664,000

Construction started
  
28 June 1951

Length
  
220 m

Builder
  
John Brown & Company

Owner
  
P&O

Yard number
  
675

Launched
  
14 May 1953

Draft
  
9.45 m

SS Arcadia (1953) RMS ARCADIA The New Zealand Maritime Record NZNMM

Port of registry
  
Route
  
UK/Australia, and cruising

SS Arcadia was a passenger liner built for P&O in 1953 to service the UK to Australia route. Towards the end of her life she operated as a cruise ship, based in Sydney, until scrapped in 1979.

Contents

SS Arcadia (1953) RMS ARCADIA The New Zealand Maritime Record NZNMM

History

SS Arcadia (1953) SS Arcadia Harbor Bridge amp Steam Ferry September 1973 SS Flickr

The Arcadia was built for P&O by John Brown & Company at Clydebank in Scotland, at an estimated cost of £5 million; her keel was laid in 1952 and she was launched on 14 May 1953, just a couple of hours after the Orsova of the associated Orient Line went down the ways at Barrow in Furness. Her maiden voyage commenced on 22 February 1954, sailing from Tilbury in the UK to Fremantle in Western Australia via the Suez Canal, Aden, Bombay and Colombo. Arcadia had a virtually identical sister in the Belfast-built SS Iberia.

SS Arcadia (1953) 1000 images about P amp O Line on Pinterest Panama canal Cruises

Following the return trip to Australia, Arcadia made a series of cruises from Southampton before embarking for Australia again in October 1954. This mix of liner and cruise trade was expanded in 1959 when Arcadia made her first cruise voyage from an Australian port, sailing from Sydney on a short cruise in November and then to San Francisco in December.

SS Arcadia (1953) PampOOrient Lines 1966 Passenger Fleet and Sailing Schedule

As the number of passengers travelling by ship to Australia declined due to growth in air travel, P&O was expanding its cruise network. In 1959, Arcadia was refitted (with refurbished cabins and air-conditioning extended to all the accommodation) and throughout the 1960s continued the pattern of line voyages interspersed with cruises from Britain and Australia, including trans-Pacific routes, some of which took her through the Panama Canal. Following another refit in 1970, she became a full-time one-class cruise ship. For the next four years she worked the west coat of America, making a series of summer cruises to Alaska and winter cruises to Mexico. In 1975 Arcadia moved its base to Australia (replacing the Himalaya), making a final return trip to Britain and then cruising Asia-Pacific routes until in February 1979 she was delivered to a firm in Taiwan to be scrapped.

SS Arcadia (1953) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Unlike her sister, Arcadia was a reliable and popular ship and whereas Iberia was the first of the post war fleet to be scrapped (in 1972), Arcadia sailed on to be the last of these ships in service.

SS Arcadia (1953) Arcadia 1954 PampO Ocean Liner Postcards

In 1974, when Arcadia sailed up the Columbia and Willamette Rivers to reach Portland, Oregon in the United States, on the first leg of a cruise from Vancouver to Hawaii, she was the largest passenger ship ever to have visited Portland up to that time. From 1975 until scrapped in Taiwan in 1979, her cruising role out of Sydney was full-time. She was replaced by P&O's then newly acquired Sea Princess, formerly the Kungsholm.

Incidents

While undocking at Tilbury in September 1954, the tug Cervia crossed Arcadia's wash while listing from the strain on the towline, and the combination caused the tug to capsize and sink with the loss of five of her eleven crew.

In June 1961 Arcadia hove to off Hawaii to embark a troupe of Polynesian dancers, and as she made way to dock failed to make the tight turn required and ran onto a coral reef, where she was stuck fast for two days but with little damage.

Two crew committed suicide by jumping overboard, in 1954 and 1971.

Battling strong winds on arriving at Tilbury in 1962, the anchor was lowered in an attempt to hold Arcadia in place. The wind turned the ship onto the anchor and a 19-foot hole was torn in the bow.

In the early hours of Friday 2 June 1978 the Arcadia ran into a wild storm coming back into Sydney and was hit by a freak storm which caused extensive damage to the ship. It folded the life raft stairs in half and was sent back to Asia for repairs before it could sail again. It also flooded down to C Deck.

SS Arcadia appeared as stock footage in the 1964 Perry Mason episode Nautical Knot, set near Acapulco, Mexico. The episode only shows this popular ship at dock, though its size near the pier makes an impression on the episode's characters.

References

SS Arcadia (1953) Wikipedia