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QE2 sold as $100m floating Dubai hotel
The Telegraph (U.K.) ^
| June 18, 2007
| David Millward
Posted on 06/18/2007 12:53:03 PM PDT by Stoat
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The world's most famous cruise liner Uk News News Telegraph
The world's most famous cruise liner
By Laura Clout Last Updated: 11:19am BST 18/06/2007
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Built at the John Brown Shipyard on the Clyde in Scotland, the QE2 came into service in 1969 and is the longest-serving ship in Cunards 168-year history. It was not until the Queen officially launched the ship in September 1967 that anyone knew what the vessel would be called. Until then, she had been assigned the somewhat unglamorous title of "Job number 736". The ships first captain was Bill Warwick, who took her on sea trials before her official maiden voyage to Las Palmas on April 22, 1969. She remained the Cunards flagship until she was replaced by the 150,000-tonne Queen Mary 2 (QM2) in 2004, although the QE2 has carried on cruising. Since 1969, the QE2 has undertaken 25 world cruises, has crossed the Atlantic more than 800 times and has carried more than 2.5 million passengers. In 1996 during her 20th world cruise, the ship sailed her 4 millionth mile, equivalent to 185 times round the world. In 1982, the vessel was requisitioned for the Falklands War as a troop ship. She set sail on May 12 that year and arrived safely back in Southampton on June 11, with many of the survivors of the conflict on board. The QM2 took over the traditional transatlantic route in 2005, but the QE2 still undertakes an annual world cruise and regular trips to the Mediterranean. There has been further speculation over the ships future since the announcement that a new Cunard liner, the MS Queen Victoria, would set sail later this year. Both the QE2 and QM2 are successors to two famous Cunard vessels - the Queen Mary and the Queen Elizabeth. Launched in 1936, the Queen Mary ceased service in 1967 and is now a floating hotel and museum at Long Beach, California. The 84,000-tonne Queen Elizabeth was in service from 1940 to 1968 and caught fire and was scrapped in Hong Kong harbour in 1975.
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1
posted on
06/18/2007 12:53:10 PM PDT
by
Stoat
To: All

Huge crowds lined the shores of Sydney Harbour in February this year for an historic reunion between the Queen Mary II (back left) and Queen Elizabeth II (front left) cruise liners

A flotilla of yachts crowded the harbour and onlookers were treated to a fireworks display as the giant Cunard ships greeted each other with blasts of their horns.
The £400 million QM2 sailed into the harbour shortly before dawn as part of a round the world cruise

As high as a 23-storey building, she was too tall to sail under the Harbour Bridge and too long to berth at the normal cruise ship terminal at Circular Quay, in the city centre.
Instead the liner, on her maiden visit to Australia, docked at the Royal Australian Navys Garden Island naval base

A few hours later her sister ship, the QE2, was also welcomed by large crowds as she sailed into the harbour

It was a sight not seen in Sydney since the two ships predecessors - the Queen Mary and the Queen Elizabeth - converged on the harbour as troop carriers in 1941 to take Australian soldiers to North Africa and the Middle East

They were nicknamed "grey ghosts" and their arrivals and departures were closely guarded secrets, with stiff penalties for anyone caught photographing them

But there was no such secrecy this time around. After less than 24 hours in port, the 150,000-tonne QM2 departed Sydney for Hong Kong while the QE2 will leave on Thursday for Brisbane
2
posted on
06/18/2007 12:53:34 PM PDT
by
Stoat
(Rice / Coulter 2008: Smart Ladies for a Strong America)
To: Stoat
*
sigh*
Sorry but this is very sad. She is just too fine a vessel to have speakers blaring 5 times a day from her so everyone's butts can go in the air on her at the same time....
3
posted on
06/18/2007 1:04:27 PM PDT
by
Abathar
(Proudly catching hell for posting without reading the article since 2004)
To: Stoat
Here's a graphic comparing the QM2 to the Titanic -- the Titanic is the smaller one -- (I originally saw this at the Titanic exhibit at the museum here in Victoria, BC):
To: Stoat
Very nice pics.........
Thanks-
5
posted on
06/18/2007 1:09:35 PM PDT
by
Osage Orange
(I have a shotgun, a shovel, and five hundred acres behind the house. Do not trifle with me.)
To: Stoat
I watched the QE2 sail past my garden last Friday evening around 7:30 immediately followed by a huge modern ocean liner, Navigator of Seas (IIRC). The older liners are so much more beautiful than the newer floating hotel designs. Will be sad to no longer see her cruise past while I’m tending the barbecue or sipping a Pimms.
6
posted on
06/18/2007 1:20:16 PM PDT
by
britemp
To: Stoat
First it was US ports and now it’s England’s QE2. Speaking from under my foil hat, but Dubai certainly is sticking it’s nose into Western shipping interests lately.
7
posted on
06/18/2007 1:25:45 PM PDT
by
mtbopfuyn
(I think the border is kind of an artificial barrier - San Antonio councilwoman Patti Radle)
To: mtbopfuyn
Dubai certainly is of interest.
To: Abathar
Symbolic of the takeover of the west by muslims. At least this is what I think THEY think.
9
posted on
06/18/2007 1:38:33 PM PDT
by
subterfuge
(Today, Tolerance =greatest virtue;Hypocrisy=worst character defect; Discrimination =worst atrocity)
To: britemp
To me, the QE2 is the most beautiful liner ever. The modern Carnival-style cruise ships (and the QM2) look way too top-heavy and blocky, but the QE2 has wonderful, very sleek lines, like the ocean liners from their heyday in the 1940s and ‘50s. She looks fast even at the dock.
}:-)4
10
posted on
06/18/2007 1:39:54 PM PDT
by
Moose4
(Effing the ineffable since 1966.)
To: ThisLittleLightofMine
I kind of wonder about reconciling western culture with Muslim sensibilities. I would be hard pressed to spend a whole lot of money on accommodations if I couldn't’t have a glass of wine with my meal.
To: mtbopfuyn
Get on Google earth and look up Dubai. That is one wealthy country to be building the “palm tree islands”, not to mention the islands that look like the globe. It’s insane what they are doing over there.
To: mtbopfuyn
She won't be a "ship" much longer, like her predecessor RMS
Queen Mary, she will be permenantly docked. It is a much better fate that which befell RMS
Queen Elizabeth which was being refitted for crusing as
Seawise University and burned and sank in Hong Kong harbor. Or indeed SS
United States which is mothballed in Philadelphia.
Besides, there is very little US or British flagged shipping anymore. However the "fleets" of Panama, Liberia, and The Bahamas are huge.
13
posted on
06/18/2007 1:45:55 PM PDT
by
GreenLanternCorps
(Thompson for President: 2008, 2012: Jindal for President 2016, 2020)
To: Stoat
Pity. We took my family over to England for a year on the QE2 in 1974-75, along with a year’s worth of baggage and our VW Bus in the hold. That’s one thing you couldn’t do on an airliner.
14
posted on
06/18/2007 1:48:02 PM PDT
by
Cicero
(Marcus Tullius)
To: USFRIENDINVICTORIA
Thank you very much for providing the graphic which shows such an excellent perspective. She is truly a magnificent feat of maritime engineering
15
posted on
06/18/2007 1:48:39 PM PDT
by
Stoat
(Rice / Coulter 2008: Smart Ladies for a Strong America)
To: Osage Orange
Very nice pics......... Thanks-
You're quite welcome. I'm delighted that you've enjoyed them. :-)
16
posted on
06/18/2007 1:50:30 PM PDT
by
Stoat
(Rice / Coulter 2008: Smart Ladies for a Strong America)
To: Cicero
Pity. Indeed. This story brings me (and many others here, as I can see) great sadness.
We took my family over to England for a year on the QE2 in 1974-75, along with a years worth of baggage and our VW Bus in the hold. Thats one thing you couldnt do on an airliner.
What wonderful memories that you and yours can retell for generations.
17
posted on
06/18/2007 1:56:40 PM PDT
by
Stoat
(Rice / Coulter 2008: Smart Ladies for a Strong America)
To: Moose4
18
posted on
06/18/2007 2:04:18 PM PDT
by
britemp
To: Stoat
I can safely say I water skied the wake of the QE2 as she cruised through the Panama Canal somewhere around 1978. Mighty big wake!
19
posted on
06/18/2007 2:04:25 PM PDT
by
ßuddaßudd
(7 days - 7 ways Guero >>> with a floating, shifting, ever changing persona....)
To: Stoat
What wonderful pictures - thank you. My grandfather came home on the QM from WWII during her “Grey Ghost” years. He said she’d been stripped down to bones.
20
posted on
06/18/2007 2:06:17 PM PDT
by
Kieri
(Midwest Snark Claw & Feather Club Founder)
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