 In 1957 the
Orient Line commissioned their largest and last passenger ship. Although built
primarily for Australasian line voyages, she was also designed with a view to
seasonal cruising.
Equipped with full air conditioning, bow and stern
thrusters and a welded aluminum superstructure, she had a radio in every cabin;
a luxurious feature at the time.
Steaming 3,430,902 nautical miles and
visiting 108 ports during her working career, Oriana was the fastest ship ever
to sail to Sydney, making the passage from Southampton via Suez in only
twenty-one days.
It would be all to easy to bemoan her subsequent fate,
however, unlike her much admired running mate Canberra, she has survived in
spite of the odds. Luridly lit with neon and variously touted as the "Titanic of
Huangpu River", the sister ship of the Queen Elizabeth, a "British imperial
cruiser " and "one of the four most famous luxury boats of the contemporary
world," the old gal now graces an otherwise undistinguished waterfront at
Shanghai.
 
Specifications
Displacement 41,915 Gross Tons.
Length 245.1 metres or 804 feet.
Beam 30.5m wide or 97 feet. Maximum
draft 9.7 metres or 31 feet 6 inches. Overall
height 51.27 metres (16 floors).
Builders Vickers-Armstrongs (Shipbuilders) Ltd. at
Barrow-in-Furness, for ¡ê12,500,000. Propulsion Six
Parsons geared turbines, total 80,000 ship's horsepower, single reduction geared
to twin screws. Maximum speed 30.64 knots (57
k.m.h.) Cruising speed Speed 27.5 knots, her record
day's run was 701 nautical miles at 29.21 knots.
Accomodation 730 cabins for 638 First & 1,496
Tourist Passengers (later 1677 in one class).
Facilities 17 public rooms and 11 passenger decks;
Tennis Deck, Bathing Deck, Stadium Deck, Verandah Deck and the "A" thru "E"
Decks. Crew 903 Port of
registry London

Tourist class
ballroom

First class
swimming pool
Ship's Log
1957 September
18 The keel was laid of what was to be the largest
passenger ship built at Barrow and (at that time) the largest built in England.
Planning the new liner took two years, for when the Orient Line decided to build
a further ship for their Australian and trans-Pacific service, they were faced
with the problem of whether to order another 28,000-tonner, like the Orsova,
with 22.5 knots speed, or a bigger vessel capable of greater speed.
Vickers-Armstrong was asked to calculate the dimensions, fuel consumption and
cost of a bigger ship with a speed of 27 knots. One conclusion was that such a
vessel, reducing the round trip by a fortnight, would save more than enough in
cost on the shorter voyage to outweigh the increased cost of the faster speed.

1959 November
3 Launched by H.R.H. the Princess Alexandra, who
christened her with the name given to four previous Iron vessels (1869, 1887,
1905 &1914). The derivation of the name is from ancient Greek for the East
and also from the Latin for the dawn. She was then was berthed at the fitting
out quay in Buccleuch Dock.

The newly
completed Oriana passes through the Ramsden Dock entrance into the Walney
Channel with barely a foot to spare on either side, before sailing for dry
docking at Falmouth.
1960 November
Trials were carried out on the Clyde and a maximum speed of 30.64 knots was
attained in adverse weather conditions. 1960
December 3 Departed from Southampton on her maiden
voyage to Australia. 1960 December
27 At Melbourne. 1960 December 30 Arrived at
Sydney.

1961 January 5 Departed from
Sydney's new International Terminal at Circular Quay for Auckland, Vancouver and
US West Coast ports. 1961 February
5 First visit to San Francisco, the city council
proclaimed the day would be known as Oriana Day.
1961 February 25 Arrived at
Sydney. 1961 March 25
Arrived at Southampton. 1961 June Below: a sailing schedule for June
1961.
1961 June 9
Departed Auckland at 5 p.m. for Sydney at 27 knots to set a new trans Tasman
record of 47 hours and 30 minutes.

1961 July
31 Passed through the Panama Canal for the first time on
a return voyage to Southampton. She was the largest vessel to pass through
the canal since the German liner Bremen in 1938.
1962 Carried 156 Maltese emigrants to Australia. Below: anchored in Valetta Harbour,
Malta.

1962 March 12 The
30,800 ton veteran USS aircraft carrier Kearsarge and the Oriana collided in
dense fog off Long Beach, California. The Kearsarge received a 25-foot gash
about ten feet aft on the starboard side. Oriana suffered a 20-foot hole near
the bow and a small fire broke out in her boiler room, the ship was repaired at
Los Angeles.
1963 September
17 Sydney Mayor, Henry Frederick Jensen presents the
keys of the City to the captain of the Oriana at Circular Quay.
1964 Set a new
record for passage between Auckland and Sydney; 45 hours and 24 minutes at 27.76
knots. 1964 Changed to P&O livery with a White hull instead of the traditional Corn
colour.
1965 Ownership transferred to the P&O
Line.
1966
September Arrived at Sydney from San Francisco via Los Angeles; Honolulu, Suva, and
Auckland.
1969 While
transiting the Panama Canal, Oriana struck the side of a lock damaging a
propeller.
1969
March Stephen Wedd was in the Engine/Boiler rooms from
March 1969 until November 1970 as fourth Engineer. A link to his Oriana
page opens in a new window.
"The web site got me thinking about a few
other incidents during my 2 years in the engine and boiler rooms - such as
blowing No 4 boiler - due to lack of water - and the valve sticking due to the
low flow of water when all four boilers were lit and we were in port using very
little steam. It made quite a bang. My 4th Eng. colleague who had just
left to go ashore on a boat saw the blast of steam from the funnel. Later
we put two and two together. He'd 'lost' water about 7am and recovered,
then I lost it again at 8.45, but with the damage unknowingly caused earlier
there was no margin for error. Bang. Many tubes sagging low and burst in
the main chamber - just behind me one of my pictures. Tubes were obtained
in LA (story goes they were freighted out in a cargo plane) and shore staff
sailed with us to Vancouver as they fixed the boiler.
Funny that even
though the ship delayed sailing from Vancouver to Hawaii, the engineers from LA
never quite finished and scored a trip to Hawaii! Oriana could easily make
23 knots on three boilers so we weren't delayed much.
Another post fire
trip event - relatively minor but it got some passengers worried - we were
between Bermuda and Fort Lauderdale I think, and a problem with fuel occurred
when tanks were changed. The fuel had been heated up to 300 F (as normal)
but were brought on-line early when suction was lost on another tank.
Problem was there was a significant amount of water in the fuel which had not
been drained off. We lost the fire to all four boilers and drifted for
about 2 hours whilst gradually we isolated the problem and got clean fuel
thorough. One passenger was heard to say "They've run out of bloody fuel
now and they daren't tell us! "
And in Sydney Harbour at berth in May or
June 1969 one of the crew removed a main door to get access to the port side
main steam condensers. Problem was no one had closed the sea cocks.
The engine room took on about 4 feet of water in 5 minutes! Panic !!"
1970 May Arrived at
Sydney.
1970 August Soon
after departing for Australia and New Zealand, fire broke out in the boiler
room, whilst the ship was still in Southampton Water. The vessel lost all
power and was towed back to the port, where repairs took two weeks.
1970 December 5
Arrived at Melbourne.
"The opportunity to see more of the world appealed
to us, so we arrived at the docks, where the majestic Oriana 42,000 tons, was
waiting. We were to see much less of the world than expected; the Oriana
had had to be refitted due to a fire on its previous voyage and was consequently
delayed, cutting out several of the ports of call. The Bay of Biscay was
rather rough, but the rest of the trip was in calm but overcast weather until
the Indian Ocean. Our first port of call was Madeira, where we watched the
sleds running down the steep streets.
Then on to Cape Town, the
impressive Table Mountain, and an excursion by bus. I did enjoy a bottle of Cap
Constanza, a fortified sweet wine, unavailable in Sweden because of the trade
boycott. The next port was Durban, where we went on an excursion to a
traditional kraal, and an animal park, where the bus took us very close to
ostriches and some huge and rather impressive looking "pussy cats", which our
children wanted to pat.
After Durban, the weather became sunny but the
long (I think six days) voyage across the Indian Ocean was rather boring. Then,
the radio accents changed to Australian, and there was an unmistakable
excitement on board. A new continent emerged, together with Australian customs
and Immigration officials, before we were let ashore at Fremantle. One of the
very first impressions was the intense sun light, coming from an unexpected
angle. The magnificent "Christmas Trees" were in flower. Perth in those days of
early December 1970, was rather relaxed. The Oriana then took us across the
Great Australian Bight, and finally in through the Rip, into Port Phillip Bay,
and berthing at the pier in Melbourne, on 5th December, 1970."
1971 August At Lisbon
(below)
1972 January 29
Traversed the Panama Canal. 1972 November
13 Arrived at Sydney. 1973
Accommodation altered to 1,677 in one class. Cruising nine months out of
Southampton and for three months from November out of Sydney.
1974 December 16 Berthed at
Auckland. 1978 May
Whilst on a Caribbean cruise, the liner was a victim of a bombing hoax. Three
days out from Southampton, an anonymous letter to the P&O headquarters
warned that a bomb was on board. Although a bomb disposal squad was flown out to
join the ship, a thorough search found nothing amiss and the squad was not required to parachute on
board.
1979 March
24 Arrived at Auckland. 1981 Based permanently at Sydney for South Pacific cruising, replacing the Sea
Princess.
1985 P&O announce her
withdrawal from service. 1986 March
27 End of the final cruise voyage and then laid up at
Sydney. 1986 May 21 Sold to
Daiwa House Sales of Japan for use as a for use as an hotel, museum and cultural
and tourist centre. 1986 May 28
Departed from Sydney for the Hitachi Zosen shipyard where she was refitted for
her new role. The propellors and rudder were removed and placed on the fore deck by the former crew's swimming
pool.
1986 August 1
Moored at Oita, near Beppu, a resort on the Japanese island of Kyushu. She was
welded to a wharf and her funnels were painted pink.
1995 Sold to the Hangzhou Jiebai Group Co
Ltd, a department store operator and towed to Chinwangtao (Qinhuangdao), China
where she served as an accommodation center and hotel.
1998 November The Hangzhou
West Lake International Tourism Culture Development Co Ltd. purchased the vessel
for US$6 million from Qinhuangdao in Hebei Province, the latter holding a 85 per
cent stake.
1998 November
15 Towed by five tug boats from Qinhuangdao Port in
North China to Shanghai. The subsequent restoration project included new
elevators, alarm systems, and climate control. A press release stated that "the
ship will maintain the traditional British style and elegance of its earlier
years. Original furniture, ornamental objects, and even old newspapers will be
maintained in the cabins".
1999 February 16
After a US$3.63 million renovation and with hotel accommodation, a "Museum of
World-Famous Ship Models," a swimming pool, a miniature golf course, a wedding
chapel, and a 20,000 square metre exhibition hall, she was opened to the public
on the Huangpu River at Shanghai and and received an average of 3,000 visitors
daily.
1999 October
18 A foreign tourist reported, "Finally, we toured the
innards of the very retired S.S. Oriana. This is the colorfully lit hulk that we
can see from our 83rd floor hotel window. At that distance it looks like a
classic ocean liner. Up close it looks tacky but tacky with class. Inside it
looks like chilled death. Unfortunately, the tour of its organs included a
dinner in its European style restaurant. As we were the only customers in the
restaurant the staff seemed caught off guard when we actually ordered something;
apparently the menu is a period piece that just reflects what once was. Even
spookier than the restaurant was what was left of the ship. It was as if the
Bangladesh breakers had just finished work on the interior; then someone had bad
second thoughts about it and called on Bangladesh interior decorators to put it
back together again".
1999 December
24 Nine-day millennium celebration from December 24,
1999 to January 3, 2000 included theme dinners, symphony concerts, buffets,
fashion shows, auctions, and garden parties.
2000
July Despite more than 500,000 visitors, the liner
failed to attain expected profit levels and its operators lost at least
US$241,000.
2000
August 16 It is announced that the Shanghai
International Commodity Auction Corporation will auction 85% of the shares in
the "Former British Royal Vessel." The net assets of the Shanghai Oriana
Entertainment Corporation are estimated at 112 million yuan.
2000 September
28 The Hangzhou based Song Dynasty Town Group succeeded
in netting an 85% stake at a price of US$7.25 million from one of the liner's
major shareholders at an auction. Huang Qiaoling, a member of the board of
directors, revealed that the future operation of the liner will focus on its features as a "British culture and a palace at
sea."
2001
December The World Ship Society's December newsletter
reports that the liner is to be moved yet again. This time to the Chinese port
of Dalian, having been sold for approximately US$4.5m. She is to be refitted to become a floating theme park, museum and banquet
hall.


2002
July An English-language Chinese newspaper reported that The
Oriana luxury liner theme park is to open to the public in Dalian, a port city
in northeast China in July. (It was later reported that the park was
commissioned on 18 July)
The Hangzhou Songcheng Group, a company in east
China's Zhejiang Province invested nearly 300 million yuan (375,000 US dollars)
to purchase the ship in 2001 and refit it.
The refurbished ship is
expected to be berthed permanently at Xinghai Bay in Dalian. Visitors will be
able to see the ship's original bridge, VIP hall, post office, hospital and
museums and enjoy films and artistic performances there. 2004
June Oriana reported to have been severely damaged
and partially sunk in a major storm. Detailed report
Bibliography
Dawson, Philip S. British Superliners of The
Sixties A Design Appreciation of the Oriana, Canberra
and QE2
Conway Maritime Press, 1990. ISBN 085177542X
A most interesting
book about the development and construction of large passenger ships of the
1960. Mainly concerned with ship construction and accommodation layout but also
some detail of machinery. Deals
essentially with Canberra, Oriana and
QE2 but also mentions other liners of the period.
French,
Nelson
Ormonde to Oriana Orient Line to Australia
and Beyond - A Purser remembers. UK: The Self Publishing Network, 1996. ISBN
0 902830 43 0 Nelson French joined the Orient Line In 1947 and served in
every ship of the Fleet, including the commissioning and Maiden Voyage of the
last of the great Orient Liners - Oriana.
Griffiths, Denis
Steam
at Sea Two Centuries of Steam Powered Ships UK:
Conway Maritime Press, 1996. ISBN 0851776663 A detailed look at the history
of steam power at sea.
McCart, Neil
20th Century Passenger Ships
of the P&O Wellingborough: Patrick Stephens, 1985. ISBN
0850597161 Details of all 20th century P&O ships
McCart,
Neil
 S.S. Oriana The Last Great Orient
Liner
UK: Fan Publications, 1992. Famous British Liners Series, soft
covered, 52 pages.
Gives a brief history of the Orient and P&O Lines,
and how the Oriana came to be built. The author uses many anecdotes from ship's
crew, passengers and builders. The ship is described throughout, and has
numerous black and white photos accompanying the text. Also covered are some of
the problems the Oriana encountered, including the collision with USS Kearsage,
an Essex Class aircraft carrier, fires, and a bomb threat. Most of the 70
photographs included in the book are monochrome. There are two colour
photographs of the Oriana in her original "corn" coloured livery, and also in
her all white livery (all white was adopted in 1964). The photographs show the
Oriana in close up, profile, aerial, and in dry dock , and make this book most
useful to the modeller wishing to build and detail the Revell/Modelcraft kit of
this beautiful liner.
Morris, Charles F. Origins, Orient and
Oriana Brighton: Teredo, 1980. 491 pages. Illustrated throughout with b&w
photographs, and line drawings. The book extends far beyond the confines of
this one company to describe the many pitfalls few professional seamen would
guess.
Rabson, S. & O`Donoghue, K. P&O A Fleet History UK:
Wold Ship Society, 1988. ISBN 0905617452 General history of all P&O
ships.
Scott, J.D. Vickers A
History London: Weidenfield & Nicholson. 1962.
Periodicals
Life Magazine March 3, 1961 S.S.
Oriana an illustrated article. Ships Monthly
Magazine November 1993 Illustrated
article: former P&O liner, now a museum. Ships Monthly
Magazine June 1999 Illustrated article:
tourist attraction in Shanghai.
 "Chusan and Oriana" by Jack Loius Koskie
(1914-1997) Watercolour, 19.5 x 23cm. 

Above Right:
transiting the narrow Boulari Passage at Noumea in New Caledonia
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