RMS Empress of China (1890)

For other ships with the same name, see RMS Empress of China.
Empress of China
History
Name: 1891-1913: RMS Empress of China
Owner: 1891-1912: Canadian Pacific Railway
Port of registry: 1891-1912: Canada
Builder: Naval Construction & Armament Co., Barrow
Laid down: 1890
Launched: 25 March 1890
Maiden voyage: 15 July 1891
Fate: Scrapped in 1912, Yokohama
General characteristics
Class and type: Ocean liner
Tonnage: 5,905 tons
Length: 455.7 ft
Beam: 51.2 ft
Propulsion:
  • Three masts
  • twin propellers
Speed: 16 knots
Capacity:
  • 50 1st class passengers
  • 150 2nd class
  • up to 400 steerage passengers

RMS Empress of China was an ocean liner built in 1890-1891[1] by Naval Construction & Armament Co., Barrow, England for Canadian Pacific Steamships (CP).[2] This shipthe first of three CP vessels to be named Empress of China[3]regularly traversed the trans-Pacific route between the west coast of Canada and the Far East until she struck an underwater reef and sank in Tokyo harbour in 1911.[4]

Royal Mail Ship

In 1891, Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) and the British government reached agreement on a contract for subsidized mail service between Britain and Hong Kong via Canada; and the route began to be serviced by three specially designed ocean liners. Each of these three vessels was given an Imperial name.[5]

The RMS Empress of China and her two running mates, the RMS Empress of India and the RMS Empress of Japan, created a flexible foundation for the CPR trans-Pacific fleet which would ply this route for the next half century.[4]

History

Barrow-in-Furness, shipbuilding yards (1890).

The Empress of China was built by Naval Construction & Armament Co. (now absorbed into Vickers Armstrongs) at Barrow, England. The keel was laid in 1890; and she was launched on 25 March 1891.[4]

The 5,905-ton vessel had a length of 455.6 feet, and her beam was 51.2 feet. The graceful white-painted, clipper-bowed ship had two buff-coloured funnels with a band of black paint at the top, three lightweight schooner-type masts, and an average speed of 16-knots. This Empress and her two sister-ship Empresses were the first vessels in the Pacific to have twin propellers with reciprocating engines.[6] The ship was designed to provide accommodation for 770 passengers (120 first class, 50 second class and 600 steerage).[5]

The SS Empress of China left Liverpool on 15 July 1891 on her maiden voyage via Suez to Hong Kong and Vancouver. Thereafter, she regularly sailed the route between Canada and the east coast of Asia.[4] In the early days of wireless telegraphy, the call sign established for the Empress of China was "MPG."[7]

Much of what would have been construed as ordinary, even unremarkable during this period was an inextricable part of the ship's history. In the conventional course of trans-Pacific traffic, the ship was sometimes held in quarantine, as when it was discovered that a passenger from Hong Kong to Yokohama showed signs of smallpox, and the vessel was held in Yokohama port until the incubation period for the disease had passed.[8] The cargo holds of the Empress would have been routinely examined in the normal course of harbor-master's business in Hong Kong, Yokohama or Vancouver.[9]

Amongst the celebrities sailing on the Empress, was Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria. On 25 August 1893, the Archduke boarded the ocean liner at Yokohama for a voyage across the Pacific to Vancouver.[10]

On 27 July 1911 the Empress encountered rough seas and thick fog 65 mile south of Tokyo harbor. She struck a submerged rock off the Nojima Saki Light while trying to round the southern tip of the Awa peninsula inbound for Yokohama. Submerged rocks extend about a mile from the coast in an area of the bay which is known for its dangerous currents. This accident occurred very close to where another ship foundered on the rocks in 1907. The Japanese cruisers Aso and Soya were dispatched to assist in removing mail, baggage, and passengers. The ship was abandoned with no loss of life.[11] A year later, the Empress was re-floated; and in October 1912, she was towed into Yokohama where she was dismantled and scrapped. [4]

CP Empresses of China
In 1921, Canadian Pacific added two German-built vessels to the Empress fleet; and initially, both were confusingly renamed Empress of China. A quick explanation will help distinguish these the quite different ships which each sailed with the same name.

Notes

  1. The disambiguation date used in this article's title is not the year in which the hull is launched, but rather the year of the vessel's sea trial or maiden voyage.
  2. Simplon Postcards: Empress of China, 3 images
  3. The second of three ships named SS Empress of China (1908) was built for Norddeutscher Lloyd Line (NDL), purchased by CP in 1921, then re-named; and the third SS Empress of China (1919) was built for Hamburg America Line (HAPAG), purchased by CP in 1921, then re-named.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Ship List: Description of Empress of China
  5. 1 2 Miller, William H. (1984). The First Great Ocean Liners in Photographs, p. 52.
  6. Tate, E. Mowbray. (1986). Transpacific Steam: The Story of Steam Navigation from the Pacific Coast of North America to the Far East and the Antipodes, 1867-1941, p. 145.
  7. Trevent, Edward. (1911) The A B C of Wireless Telegraphy: A Plain Treatise on Hertzian Wave Signalling, p. 13.
  8. Dept. of Agriculture, Canada. (1907). Report of the Minister of Agriculture for Canada, p. 12.
  9. Parliament, Canada. (1892) Sessional Papers, p. 223.
  10. Katalog Land in Sicht! ("Land Ahoy: Austria on the Seven Seas"), p. 8. Exhibition of the Austrian Mint, 17 August 2005 - 3 February 2006. Münze Österreich (Austrian Mint).
  11. "Another Liner on Rocks near Tokyo; Canadian Pacific Steamer Empress of China StrandsShe Is Badly Damaged," New York Times. 28 July 1911.
  12. 1 2 3 White Empress fleet: 20 ships, descriptions
  13. 40-year-old Ship Makes Last Trip; Empress of Australia, Luxury Liner and Troop Carrier, on Way to Scrap Heap," New York Times. 1 May 1952.

See also

References

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