(As always a click on a photo will enlarge the image so you can get a closer look at the details!)
Seventy-five years after she lay burning and
capsized in the New York harbour, the French SS Normandie still holds
the record as the most powerful steam turbo-electric-propelled passenger
ship ever built. She is considered one of the greatest of ocean liners
in history, a floating palace of Art Deco majesty so dazzling, they
nicknamed her the “Ship of Light” similar to Paris as the ‘”City of
Light”. The gilded first class dining hall was longer than the Hall of
Mirrors at Versailles and guests included Ernest Hemingway, Colette,
Fred Astaire, Walt Disney and even the von Trapp family singers, who all
sailed aboard the Normandie during her career of 139
westbound transatlantic crossings from Le Havre, France to New York
City. She was, for a brief time, Queen of the seven seas, before war,
negligence and possibly sabotage, sealed her fate.
An SS Normandie promotional poster, 1935 © MCNY
The Normandie was the fastest transatlantic ship during her career, in
direct rivalry with the British RMS Queen Mary. She was a product of the
roaring twenties when the U.S had closed its door on most immigration
and steamship companies no longer found themselves catering to huge
numbers of steerage-class European immigrants, but instead, to
upper-class American tourists, particularly those wishing to escape the
Prohibition for alcohol-fueled holidays in Europe.
In 1935, three years after the stock market crash (and considerable subsidy from the French government)– the SS Normandie was
sensationally launched in front of 200,000 spectators. There was no
question that the Normandie was designed predominantly with first-class
passengers in mind. Most of the public space, filled with grand
perspectives, over-the-top entryways and grand staircases, was devoted
to the highest paying customer…
One of the salons aboard of the SS Normandie © MCNY
Facilities included lavish dining rooms, lounges, swimming pool, a
luxury department store, theatre, nightclub, chapel, beauty parlour, and
even a winter garden.
First class swimming pool © MCNY
Cinema and theatre © MCNY
Chapel © MCNY
Le Bon Marché luxury department store aboard the Normandie © MCNY
Dog Kennel © MCNY
Salle de sport © MCNY
Wine cellar © MCNY
Each first-class suites was decorated by a different designers and the
most luxurious accommodations featured dining rooms, baby grand pianos,
multiple bedrooms, and private decks.
First class suite © MCNY
But Normandie’s excessive luxury was also perhaps its greatest flaw as a
profitable ocean liner. While the ship’s income covered her operating
expenses almost exactly, throughout her career, the Normandie often
carried less than half of its potential passenger capacity.
The problem was, there weren’t enough passengers willing to pay that
first class fair. With less space and consideration given to second and
tourist class, Normandie‘s luxurious
if not slightly intimidating art deco interiors ended up being a
deterrent to most travellers. She was regarded of as a ship for the rich
and famous only, an unattainable dream voyage. Meanwhile her rival, the
Queen Mary had placed just as much emphasis on decor, space, and
accommodation in second and tourist class as in first class– and making a
profit.
Before the French Line behind the Normandie had a chance to re-think
their marketing plan, the war had other plans for her. With Hitler’s
invasion of Europe looming, the Normandie made its way to New York,
seeking haven on the Hudson River. Although America was not yet involved
in the war, when France declared war on Germany in 1939, American
authorities immediately put Coast Guard troops on board the Normandie and interned her in accordance with international maritime law.
French crew remained aboard but for three years, she remained motionless at pier 88, guarded by the Coast Guard.In 1942, France had been invaded by Hitler and was technically now a German ally under the Vichy government. Within days of the Pearl Harbour attack and America’s entry into the war, the French crew were removed from Normandie and the was ship seized. To defend it against possible sabotage and under the American right “to seize and apply for the purposes of war any kind of property on belligerent territory, including that which may belong to subjects or citizens of a neutral state”, President Roosevelt officially approved the transfer of the SS Normandie to the US Navy.
The ship would be renamed the USS Lafayette, in honor of the French General who had helped make U.S. independence possible during the revolution, and converted into a troopship. The sheer size of the ship saw much of neglected and unmonitored, including the Normandie’s elaborate state of the art fire-watch system which ensured that any fire would be suppressed before it became a danger.
On the afternoon of 9 February 1942, sparks from a welding torch set
fire to stack of flammable life vests being stored in the first-class
lounge. None of the former floating resort’s woodwork had been removed
yet, and the flames were able to spread quickly and a strong wind saw
them engulf the upper decks of the ship in less than an hour. The
Normandie had been built with an efficient fire protection system, but
since its French crew had been removed, it had been disconnected and its
internal pumping system deactivated.
In what might have been an attempt to divert blame and embarrassment on the Navy’s part, all kinds of accusations of enemy sabotage were flying around. It was even suggested that the maffia were responsible for the alleged arson that nearly engulfed the ports of New York, where the mob had strong influence with the unions.
A congressional investigation later concluded that the fire was indeed completely accidental due to a careless and poorly-planned conversion effort; aka. a testament to human stupidity.
Although salvaged at great expense, restoration was deemed too costly and she was sold as scrap in 1946, for US $161,680 (approx. $1,997,000 in 2017 value). Needless to say, that money did not go to the French company that built it on borrowed money from the French government. Many Art Deco treasures recovered from the Normandie were later sold at auctions. One entire corner of the first-c;ass dining room is preserved at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and its doorsare now on the exterior doors of a Brooklyn cathedral (Our Lady of Lebanon Maronit).
More than a decade after the ship’s capsize, one of the 8 foot bronze sculptures from the grand stairway from the first class smoking room was found in a scrapyard in New Jersey. It was later installed in the Fontainebleau Hotel in Miami Beach and now sits on a cruise ship called the Celebrity Summit.
The true splendour of the most elegant ocean liner ever built might be lost to us forever, but the Museum of the New York keeps a very substantial archive of photographs from the SS Normandie. If Art Deco gorgeousness is your thing, I’d suggest a leisurely browse through the extensive collection.
Heave a little nostalgic sigh ... and then go make something beautiful!
¸.•´¸.•*´¨) ¸.•*´¨)(¸.•´
(¸.•´♥ Tristan ♥
(¸.•´♥ Tristan ♥
A sampling of the photo/memory albums I've been working on this summer, getting ready for the holidays! I know it's only September, but a boy has to think ahead!
1 comment:
Oh My Opulence and Splendor!!!!
I looked through the photos first and was completely gobsmacked
Tristan!
Can you imagine the money that was used to create such a beautiful ship! Can you imagine all of that beauty destroyed? What a terrible shame, all the way around;from the original design not accommodating others than the wealthiest (maybe they would have remained a touring ship and not had to go to war) right down to the end with the idiots who could not,would not hear what the designer was saying! sad and shameful.
Thanks as always for sharing these super cool pieces of the past- I really enjoy them!
hugs,Jackie
ps....Those lovely journals you have been working on, need a whole post of their own, not just an end snippet,Tristan!! They Look Gorgeous from what I can see!
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