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The French Line’s fabulous ILE DE FRANCE



Another great YOUTUBE video from Joanna Coleman… of the ILE DE FRANCE…

Here is a wonderful piece on the great French liner ILE DE FRANCE from New York Social Diary by maritime artist and historian: Scott McBee…


The newly re-fitted SS Ile de France in 1949, having been restyle and sporting only two funnels, leaving Le Havre for its Atlantic run to New York
by Scott McBee

The SS Ile de France was built in for the French shipping company, Compagnie Generale Transatlantique (known commercially as The French Line) at a cost of $10,000,000. Her construction began in1925 at the Penhoet shipyards in Saint-Nazaire, France. She was the first major liner built after World War I. She was launched on March 14,1926.

Seven hundred ninety-one feet in length, 91 feet wide, powered by steam turbines geared to quadruple screws, she had a service speed of 23.5 knots. After a period of 14 months for fitting out her interiors the Ile de France weighed in at 44,356 tons and left the shipyards on May 29th for her sea trials.


The cabin class salon decorated by Le Bucheron…

Her maiden voyage was on June 22, 1927 from Le Havre to New York where she received a gala welcome from New York City. had a passenger capacity of 1,395 — 541 First Class, 577 Cabin Class and 277 Tourist class after her refitting after World War II. She was neither the largest (the sixth largest) or the fastest but was and still is considered one of the most beautifully decorated ocean liners built by the French Line.

One of her most distinctive characteristics were the sumptuous, unique interiors which at the time represented a departure, something new in interior design. It would be the first time a passenger ship’s accommodations would not be designed on a theme of the past but more of what was taking place in the present time. In “The Only Way to Cross, Jon Maxtone-Graham calls the Ile “the divide from which point ocean liner decorators reached forward rather than back.”

To read the rest of the story click here.

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VOGUE LIVING was assisted by the CRUISING THE PAST resourses and the website’s historical collection of steamship-liner-cruise memorbalia for the magazine’s Nov/Dec issue.

Cruising The Past assisted the editors of Australia’s VOGUE LIVING. The major publication drew upon our historical collection of steamship-liner-cruise memorabilia in connection with the magazine’s 14 page guide to cruising in November/December issue.  To read all about the popular chic down under fashion journal click here for VOGUE LIVING.

Recalling the grand days of cruising and sailing above P&O Lines, Cunard Line, White Star Line, the French Line, Orient Line… leading up to a major feature on modern day cruises in all parts of the world.

Cruisingthepast.www – helped editors with research for cruise report and provided many of the photos from our collections.

Photo is of the Compagnie des Messageries Maritimes luxury liner La Marseillaise departing from France in the early 1950s.  The ship was symbolic of MM’s recovery after the Second World War and was the company’s new flagship.  Her maiden voyage on August 18, 1949 was from Marseilles to Yokohama.    Although in service for only 6 years after 11 years under construction, La Marseillaise rivalled the Normandie and Pasteur as magnificent exemplars of the French paqueboat at its zenith. She was the largest liner yet built for MM and the fastest due to her triple-screw Sulzer diesels and a very fine hull form. Unlike her unorthodox square funnelled predecessors, she was truly yachtlike with an all-white livery and a heavily flaired bow with her Normandie like “turtleback” over the mooring deck.  When France far east colonies diminished the ship was sold to the Arosa Line.

The photo at the top left is of the grand shopping arcade of the French liner L’Atlantique.  Probably one of the world’s most beautiful liners – her life was tragically brief… built in 1931 for the Europe to South America run… she suffered a major fire in 1933 and burned off the Channel Islands.

P&O offered major liner service from the UK to Australia, India, South Africa and the Orient.  In the 1960s the company merged with the Orient Line and offered liner service from Los Angeles to Europe – around-the-world or via the Panama Canal.



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