In 1901, Harland and Wolff shipbuilders completed the Celtic (1901-1928) for the White StarLine. At 20,904 GRT and 681 feet in
length, she was the largest ship in the world at the time of launch. As with Oceanic,
White Star opted for spaciousness and comfort for passengers rather than
speed. She was the first vessel in a series of
similar moderate-speed vessels, dubbed the “Big Four.” In 1903, the Cedric (1903-1931) joined her sister on the Liverpool-New York
run.
RMS Baltic steaming out of New York. 1:1250 model by Mercator. |
The third ship, Baltic
entered service in June 1904 (commanded by Captain Edward J. Smith). Outwardly, she was identical in appearance to
her sisters, but modifications to her design made her 28 feet longer and 2,840
tons heavier. These modifications made
her the largest ship in the world and one of the most popular of the era.
Initially, she was fitted with the same quadruple expansion
reciprocating engines as her fleet mates, but these proved to be underpowered
due to her increased size. Modifications
were made to the machinery in subsequent overhauls.
Baltic and tender Magnetic. |
The original accommodation was for 425 First, 450 Second,
and 2,000 Third class passengers was modified many times throughout her career
to keep pace with changing passenger demands including becoming a Cabin-Class
Liner in the late 1920s.
Baltic’s career
was not without incident and excitement.
In 1907 she ran aground near Sandy Hook and later collided with a coal
barge. In 1909, she rescued survivors
from the Republic and Florida collision. This was the first use of wireless telegraphy
to signal distress and receive assistance at sea. The passengers were transferred in the thick
of a foggy night with lifeboats (no mean feat!) and in its own way added to the
sense of security that help is never far away in the modern sea lanes. Three
years later, Baltic played a small
part in the Titanic story. On
April 14, she relayed as message in the afternoon to Titanic warning of ice ahead.
Later that night, Baltic
received Titanic’s distress calls and
made all possible steam for the location. However, she was many miles away, and nine
hours later she learned of the sinking and thus resumed her original course.
Note the layout of two funnels and four masts. |
During the Great War, Baltic
was one of the few liners maintained on passenger service early on. She carried supplies from America to Britain
in her spacious cargo holds as well. In
1915 she was requisitioned as a troopship.
Baltic had a distinguished war
record. She evaded U-Boat attack,
carried the first contingent of the US Expeditionary Force, and more than
30,000 US and Canadian soldiers to the trenches in 1918.
In December 1918, she resumed passenger service from
Liverpool and joined her sisters Celtic,
Cedric, and Adriatic (the newest
and largest of the four). The ships
maintained a steady and popular service throughout the 1920s.
"RMS Baltic postcard" by Unknown -
www.greatships.net. Licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons - http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:RMS_Baltic_postcard.jpg#/media/File:RMS_Baltic_postcard.jpg
|
The Great Depression prompted a slump in passenger traffic
and the older vessels such as Baltic were
unable to compete with newer modern ships like Britannic and Georgic.
One by one, the Big Four left service. Celtic ran
aground in 1929 and was declared a total loss.
Cedric was retired and sold
for scrap in 1932. In January 1933, Baltic was sold to Japanese ship
breakers and sailed to Osaka for scrapping.
Adriatic was scrapped a year
later.