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SS Eugenio C

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In service
  
31 Aug 1966

Length
  
217 m

Identification
  
IMO number 6502024

SS Eugenio C Eugenio C Big Red Boat II

Name
  
1966-1987 Eugenio C 1987-1999 Eugenio Costa 1999-2000 Edinburgh Castle 2000-2004 The Big Red Boat II 2004-2005 Red Boat

Owner
  
1966-1996 Costa Line 1996-1998 Bremer Vulkan shipyard 1998-1999 Lowline Shipping 1999-2003 Cammell Laird 2003-2005 Argo Ship Management

Operator
  
1966-1996 Costa Line 1998-1999 Direct Cruises 2000 Premier Cruises

Christened
  
by Pinuccia Costa Musso

Builder
  
Cantieri Riuniti dell'Adriatico

The SS Eugenio C was a 1966 Italian built ocean liner/cruise ship originally owned by the Costa Line. She was scrapped as the Big Red at Alang, India in June 2005.

Contents

SS Eugenio C Eugenio C Big Red Boat II

History

SS Eugenio C InfoCruceros Actualidad Eugenio C 12

Eugenio C was ordered for the South American service by Costa (Linea C), to replace the Frederico C on that route. Her keel was laid on 4 January 1964, with Eugenio C being delivered to Costa on 22 August 1966, the same day she set out on her maiden trans-Atlantic voyage. For 10 years she only operated trans-Atlantic voyages between Genoa and South America, until passenger loading dropped rapidly in the 1970s, when the Eugenio C began cruising. After 1983 she would cross the Atlantic Ocean twice a year on a repositioning voyage. In 1984 she was extensively renovated and renamed the Eugenio Costa. It was planned the vessel would be renamed American Adventure and transferred to American Family Cruises, which was to be a branch of Costa, but this plan was never realized. Eugenio Costa completed her last cruise for her original owners in November 1996.

SS Eugenio C wwwsimplonpccoukCostaJPEGSEugenioC03jpg

Costa sold the Eugenio Costa to the Bremer Vulcan shipyards in part exchange for the construction of the Costa Victoria. Lowline Shipping would go on to acquire her and well charter her to Direct Cruises, a British cruise line which offered budget cruises marketed via telemarketing. $12 million USD was spent on refitting the Eugenio Costa into the Edinburgh Castle. The vessel's mechanical problems brought about great difficulty to Direct and Lowline, until Direct filed for liquidation and Lowline Shipping filled for bankruptcy in 1999. Ownership of Edinburgh Castle was passed on to Lowline's main creditor, shipbuilder Cammell Laird.

SS Eugenio C Eugenio C Big Red Boat II

Cammell Laird chartered the vessel to Premier Cruises, renaming her The Big Red Boat II and having her go under a 10-month $25 million USD overhaul. Premier went into liquidation in September 2000, as a result Cammell Laird briefly chartered her to the United States Government, after which time she was laid up at Freeport, Bahamas alongside fellow ex-Premier fleet mates Rembrandt and Big Red Boat III.

Demise

SS Eugenio C SS Eugenio C Wikipedia

The Big Red Boat II was sold to Argo Ship Management, who kept her up on the market. By 2005 it was obvious cruise companies were not willing to take their chances with her due to her history of mechanical problems. The vessel was renamed Red Boat, stopping in the Azores to refuel before being broken up for scrap at Alang scrapyards.

Pop Culture

SS Eugenio C Eugenio C to Big Red Boat II

The Eugenio C has a very brief but close-up appearance in the Brazilian movie Roberto Carlos em Ritmo de Aventura (1968), as Roberto buzzes the ship with his helicopter (a Hughes 269) near Rio de Janeiro.

References

SS Eugenio C Wikipedia