Empress of Canada
by Published on 8th May 2016 09:00 PM
Long-vanished, British-based Canadian Pacific Steamships could never have guessed. Their last liner, the Empress of Canada is seen here at Malta in the early Sixties during one of her 60-day winter Mediterranean-Black Sea cruises (remember, it was still New York-to-New York – no segments in those days). And it was $1,250 & up for those 60 days.
Commissioned in 1961, life for the 27,000-ton, 1,050-passenger ship as the Empress of Canada lasted only just ten years. Among other problems, the airlines had stolen almost all of Canadian Pacific's trans-Atlantic passengers. The ship was put up for sale, sitting in the London Docks for easy inspection by perspective buyers. An unknown named Ted Arison came along, bought the ship and laid plans for his brand new cruise line. He took the ship across the Atlantic to Miami. The Empress of Canada was rechristened Mardi Gras, the very first ship in a new, discount, fun-in-the-sun cruise company: Carnival Cruise Lines. The rest is history, great history – today, the Carnival empire includes 15 separate cruise lines (including Cunard), some 105 liners and with another dozen or so under construction or on order. Although long since retired and demolished (out in India), the former Empress of Canada was the beginning for mighty & extraordinary Carnival.
Last edited by Doc Vernon; 8th May 2016 at 09:07 PM.
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