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MS Regal Empress

The Olympia (Regal Empress) (2698463822) (cropped).jpg
Regal Empress in Nassau, Bahamas in 2008
History
Name:
  • 1953–1981: SS Olympia
  • 1981–1983: SS Caribe
  • 1983–1993: MS Caribe I
  • 1993–2009 : MS Regal Empress
Owner:
Operator:
Port of registry:
Builder: Alexander Stephen & Sons, Glasgow, Scotland
Yard number: 636
Launched: 16 April 1953
Christened: 12 October 1953
Maiden voyage: 15 October 1953
In service: 15 October 1953
Out of service: 9 March 2009
Identification:
Fate: Scrapped in 2009
General characteristics (as built)
Tonnage: 22,979 GRT
Length: 611 ft (186 m)
Draught: 28 ft (8.5 m)
Decks: 10
Installed power: Parson Steam Turbines
Propulsion: Two propellers
Speed: 21 knots (39 km/h; 24 mph)
Capacity: 138 First class, 1,169 Tourist class passengers
General characteristics (after 1983 refit)
Tonnage: 21,909 GRT
Installed power: Two Klockner-Humboldt-Deutz diesel engines
Speed: 18 knots (33 km/h; 21 mph)
Capacity: 1,475 passengers
Crew: 900

MS Regal Empress was a cruise ship that recently operated for Imperial Majesty Cruise Line. She was built in 1953 by Alexander Stephen & Sons at Glasgow, Scotland as the ocean liner SS Olympia for the Greek Line. Greek Line withdrew the Olympia from service in 1974. Following an extended lay-up period and reconstruction into a diesel-engined Caribbean cruise ship, the ship re-emerged in 1983 as MS Caribe I for Commodore Cruise Line. In 1993 she was sold to Regal Cruise Line and received her final name. She operated for Imperial Majesty Cruise Line from 2003 until 2009. The Regal Empress was also the last vintage passenger ship to regularly sail from the United States.

One of the longest serving passenger ships in history, and the only ship expressly built for the Greek Line was initially named Olympia. Olympia was completed by Alexander Stephen & Sons, on the River Clyde, in 1953. She was initially measured at 22,979 gross register tons (GRT), and carried 138 First Class, and 1169 Tourist Class passengers. She was registered in Liberia. Parsons turbines of 25,000 shp drove her at a service speed of 21 knots (23 knots maximum). The maiden voyage left Glasgow for Liverpool and New York City on October 20, 1953. Her first voyage on the intended route from Piraeus to New York City as an ocean liner did not take place until March 1955 due to legal complications. In 1961, the route was extended to Haifa, Israel. Her voyages to New York usually included numerous intermediary stops. Olympia was a frequent caller with immigrant families to Pier 21 in Halifax, Nova Scotia making 86 calls at Halifax. In 1968, Olympia was registered in Greece, and spent an increasing number of voyages cruising, this becoming her exclusive occupation in 1970. By this time she had been re-measured at 17,400 GRT. She was laid up at Piraeus in 1974, and the Greek Line suffered financial collapse the following year.


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