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REGAL E. pg 1
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REGAL History
S.S. OCEANIC
QE2
The Big U
S.S. NORWAY
RMS QUEEN MARY
S.S. MARDI GRAS
STELLA SOLARIS
STELLA SOLARIS
New York Sky & Water

All photos Copyright © Rob O'Brien 2008, 2009 & 2012
Today the ship has been part of the Long Beach skyline longer than she has been at sea as a transatlantic liner. Notice the signboard on the entrance tower along with the Russian submarine, SCORPION.  
A "real" bridge, full of traditional wood and brass, a thing of the past and absent in most modern day passengers ships..
The Long Gallery as it originally appeared, located on the port side of the ship. Sussex Landscape by Bertram Nicholis is at the center of the picture.   Photo Courtesy of William Cotter.
Before the days of the modern cruise ship "Atrium"- the Piccadlily Circus on board QUEEN MARY, looking forward.
At night and the QUEEN MARY is a more magical with her lights aglow, making for a perfect time to explore decks upon decks.  
The MARY passes the New York skyline for the last time & would soon be on her final cruise in which she would steam some 14,559 miles from Southampton to Long Beach via Cape Horn. It would be one of her longest voyages. Authors collection                                                                      
 
Looking aft towards the wheelhouse and forward superstructure, from her well deck and anchor windlass gear. The teak decks are for the  most part in good condition in this area of the ship. A Teak Deck Restoration project began in 1995, with completion of the Sports Deck in 1997. Along with the Sun Deck, nearly $1 million has been spent restoring over 20,000 square feet of deck space. 
The QUEEN MARY on her final call at New York in September 1967.            Authors collection
The former Cabin Class Main Lounge on Promenade Deck looking forward, stretches 30 feet high through three decks.
The former Cabin Class Main Restaurant was meant to seat 815 people. The decorative map by Macdonald Gill is in the center. A crystal model of QUEEN MARY would 'travel' over the map indicating where the ship was during transatlantic service.
 Please do not copy the photos here without proper credit and permission. 
The funnels (also called stacks) of the MARY are not the originals as they were severely rusted and were replaced with those seen here before she opened in 1971. The height of the first forward funnel rises 70.5 feet from its base, the second behind rises 67.5 and the third stank stands 62.5 feet tall.
The Cabin Class Lounge is now called the Queens Salon on board Hotel QUEEN MARY. This room employs two types of woods including makore and maple burr. This view looking aft during its last years of service under the Cunard Line banner.  Photo: Courtesy of William Cotter
 
The same space as seen to the right, with obvious posed models in early days. Photo: Courtesy of William Cotter
Its Brunch time in a late 1960's crossing looking down the promenade deck.  Photo: Courtesy of William Cotter
A fine comparison of the two "near" sister ships both while in New York demonstrates similarities between the two Express liners.  QUEEN MARY above, and her running mate QUEEN ELIZABETH, below.                     Authors collection
Directly over the stage in the image above is Maurice Lamberts bronze-relief panel entilted  'Symphony'.
"Unicorns in Battle" by Alfred Oakley and Gilbert Bayes is a large gesso panel which frames the curved onyx fireplace below. It is flanked by two dark alabaster torchieres. Hinged doors in the panel open to reveal what used to be film projection equipment which in her years past, control the cinema room directly behind.
Above, a detailed image of the 15 foot by 24 foot mapas it originally appeared before her trooping dutieslocated at the forward end of the Cabin Class Restaurant on C Deck(R-Deck today). Authors collection  Below, the map as it appear today. The QUEEN ELIZABETH ( located at the left on the 'New York' side ) was added later by the artist when both liners began the two liner express service in the late 1940s. Gill also re-added AQUITANIA below ELIZABETH as she was still in service.
'Sussex Landscape' by Bertram Nicholis as it appears today, now located in the Regent Room. 
Easily one of the precursors to the QUEEN MARY is the RMS MAURETANIA, seen here in Charles Pears' painting of the liner as she heads to the breakers in 1935. That much loved ship is so iconically depicted in this painting that it is said that part of the personality of this venerable  liner passed to the new speed queen in which she replaced.
'Madonna of the Atlantic' by Kenneth Shoesmith - executed on a gold leaf background - formed as an altar piece in the Cabin Class Drawing room when that room was used as a chapel. Inset, theQueen MaryArt Gallery on R Deck houses some artwork, but like this one from above has recently been moved aft on D Deck near theQueen MaryTimeline.
Some sections of the aft engine room have been kept intact, a most rewarding thing to see preserved especially since this is what helped the QUEEN MARY break transatlantic speed records.
Just as nostalgic to see as the engine room is the only remaining screw (out of four) on the port side which propelled the QUEEN MARY to her 31.69 knots record (36.47 miles per hour) which she achieved in a eastbound voyage in August 1938.
Looking port towards the wheel house from the bridge wing. Notice the brass gryo repeater, and searchlight as well as Radio Directional Finder (RDF) above. 
In more ways than one, it is ironic and almost befitting, that Hotel QUEEN MARY houses a  22 foot model of her greatest rival, the ever brilliant 79,280 ton NORMANDIE. She too was a speed queen, breaking the Atlantic crossing record and capturing the Blue Riband accolade when she debuted in 1935. The two "Ships of State" (of Britain and France) would exchange the title and the prized Blue Riband back and forth from the onset until 1938 when the MARY won the title of fastest liner on the North Atlantic. The NORMANDIE was also largest liner upon her debut, but when the British speed queen was put to see she lost that title until a later refit allowed the French liner to recapture the record as the largest, measuring over 83,000 tons.  These are just a few glimpses of Roberto Pirrone's splendid model as it appears behind glass on board Hotel QUEEN MARY.
The QUEEN MARY is greeted by hundreds of small craft and other vessels for her arrival at her new home in Long Beach, CA.     Photo: William Cotter collection
The glistening QUEEN MARY perhaps on a day before officially opening as evident by the  'Hotel Queen Mary' entrance sign not yet installed.                                       Authors collection
At the aft end of the Promenade Deck is the former Cabin Class Smoking Room. Now called the Royal Salon, this view looking forward reveals Edward Wadsworth 'Dressed Overall at Quay'.
Rising to a height of 22 feet, the room also features 'The Sea,' also by Edward Wadsworth- is  directly across from its counterpart. and likewise, is surrounded by dark oaks and walnuts.
It is June 1, 1936 and the QUEEN MARY makes her  triumphant maiden voyage arrival into New York Harbor, and greeted by one of the harbors great welcomes, complete with a small fleet of boats, ferries, tugboats and pleasure craft.        Authors collection 
Aerial view of the ship as she enters Long Beach harbor for the first time, December 9, 1967.                            Authors collection
Sunrise over the QUEEN MARY makes for the perfect setting in Southern California. Notice the new signboard on the  entrance tower.
An early view of the Queen Mary Hotel taken sometime in the early 1980's. Photo by Russ Finley, Authors collection 
A distant telephoto view taken during the early 1980's. Photo by Russ Finley, Authors collection.
A wonderful aerial view of Long Beach and the complex including the Hotel, LondonTowne, the former Spruce Goose Dome. Notice the walkway connecting the Hotel to Londontowne. Both this walkway and the Towne have been altered since this view was taken.           Photo by Don Cepppi, Authors collection
An interesting perspective taken from the crows nest of the forward mast looking down at the wheelhouse and upper decks.  Authors collection
Located all the way forward and over looking the bow is the charming Observation Bar,  featuring the painting 'Royal Jubilee Week 1935'  by A. R. Thomson as seen over the bar.
Located on the port side of the ship is the former 1st Class Library and from 2006 until January 2015 this had been home to Queen Mary Couture.  The former bookcases were still being used. 
Looking forward on the port side of the Promenade Deck in what maybe the same view to the left, the teak deck is well preserved today.
At the aft end of the Grand Salon is these bronze doors, which served as the entrance to the restaurant while in liner service. They are the work of father and son team Walter and Donald Gilbert.
Bainbridge Copnall was commissioned to create ten carved wood-relief panels in the Cabin Class Restaurant centering around the theme, 'Ships through the Ages' The two featured here include a representation of the great Atlantic liners[above]- GREAT EASTERN, MAURETANIA & QUEEN MARY herself in the center. The other, below, centers around trading between Native Americans and early settlers. 
Also located on R Deck- formally C-Deck- include the former mainentrance to the Swimming Pool, at left which looks more like an entrance to a theater. At right, the two level pool- now home to the "Ghosts and Legend" tour- looks much today as it did when the great liner was in service.
Above, 'Birds of the Old World' by A. Duncan Carse hangs in the center of the port-side bulkhead of the Cabin Class Restaurant/Grand Salon. Left, one of Walter & Donald Gilberts hand engraved silvered plate glass panels tells the Greek mythology story of Jason & the Golden Fleece most of which hangs in the current day Windsor Salon on R Deck.
Above, a direct view of the ship showing the half model with the exterior detail on the left and the interior details on the right. Below, close-up view of the wheelhouse and forward superstructure.
Two impressive rooms adjoined undisturbed by funnel uptakes(shafts) was not the case with many ocean liners of the age. NORMANDIE broke the norm in this regard as the funnel uptakes where divided. The result was an unobstructed sweep of axial joining of public rooms that ran some 500 feet forward to aft. One of these rooms was, the 1st Class Fumoir or Smoking Room staircase (above) the 'La Normandie' statue is to the left at the top of the staircase.  Below, the Grand Salon was perhaps the heart of this remarkable and unrivaled space. The famed Dupas panels ('Chariot of Poseidon' on the left) Labourets lighting towers and pewter vases by Daurat are two elements that add to the splendour to what this space was like.
Raymond Subes's superbly decorated Promenade Deck elevator grills; reproduced just as wonderfully as the originals. Below, 1st Class Elevator Lobby/ Entrance Hall three decks down was another impressive space.
A rather popular promotional material comparing two former Cunarders that preceded what was known as Hull 534 before being named QUEEN MARY and breaking the "ia" suffix that had long been the tradition of the Cunard Line. At the waterline, QUEEN MARY was the first ship to eclipse 1000 feet in length.  All authors collection
March 7, 1940 & the three largest ocean liners ever built gather for the first & only time at the West Side Piers of 88 & 90 in New York Harbor. The mighty QUEEN ELIZABETH at the left, has just arrived  from her secretive maiden voyage across the North Atlantic to escape possible German sinking/bombing. The MARY in the middle is being readied for troop duties, & the NORMANDIE was under U.S. government hands and was preparing to join the two Queens for the war effort. Sadly, she burned where she lay in this photo, and the ELIZABETH would meet the same fate half-way across the world some 30 years later.      Authors collection
Despite a grey, cold, and wet day, "the Stateliest ship" meets her element for the first time in the presence of some 200,000 people. The date was Wednesday, September the 26th in the year 1934.  Authors collection. 

    The boom of the 1920s, together with talk of France building a "Super- ILE DE FRANCE," prompted Cunard Line to formulate plans to build a new ship, some called "a super- AQUITANIA." Under the leadership of Cunard Chairman Sir Percy Bates, the plans to build the first of two ships to maintain the service across the North Atlantic were advancing at nearly the same time as France's hull T6 forming across the English Channel. This was the start of what would become the greatest rivalry known on the North Atlantic since the age of steam began over a century ago. The Great Depression ensued by the Stock Market crash in New York held an overbearing grip over the British nation bringing all work to a halt on the construction of the Cunard ship on December 11, 1931. Thru a campaign led by David Kirkwood, it became a matter of national importance to resume work on Hull 534- the ship that would eventually become QUEEN MARY. After 27 months of riveting silence, work was resumed on April 3, 1934, with the launching taking place on September 26 of that same year. 
      Further fruition of this national symbol of hope and prosperity came about on March 24, 1936, as she took the first steps from her birthplace on the Clyde and began what is known as a most illustrious career in what history calls the 'Golden Age' of the ocean liner. Sea trials took place in the middle of April, and on May 12, she was officially handed over by the John Brown builders to her owners, Cunard-White Star Line. May 27 began the start of the maiden voyage, with arrival at New York on June 1, 1936. While she did not take the revered Blue Riband speed record from NORMANDIE, she was poised to do so in her debut year. The two rivals battled out the record until August 1938, when QUEEN MARY proved the fastest with a speed of 30.99 knots (Westbound). 
      Two years later, the ship was sporting somewhat less pleasing colours in which she became famous for battleship gray and the start of her heroic war duties that lasted until September 29, 1946. The QUEEN MARY was able to make revolutions for 30 knots and follow zig-zag courses, which gave the 1,019-foot ship the ability to quickly disappear from view, especially on an overcast day or one with poor visibility, like a ghost- hence the nickname, the Gray Ghost. During the war, the "Gray Ghost" carried some 810,730 passengers and steamed 661,771 miles. Among the many numbers attached to the QUEEN MARY, the greatest number of souls ever carried aboard one ship at one time remains her most significant -16,683. 
      After being returned to service in July 1947 and joining her sister, QUEEN ELIZABETH, the two Queens ushered in Cunards' most profitable decade in their history. No two other ships could be said to be of equal service and success than the two Queens. But it would be the last decade that ocean liners like this would bask in the glory, for in the skies would lurk competition that would seriously question the future of not just the two liners but of ocean liners in general. Many of the same ships in that decade of the 1960s struggled, and many had to adapt to perform more cruising in tropical settings or end their careers in the scrapyards. Cunard was losing millions each year, coupled with labour unrest and rising fuel costs; the decision was made to sell both Queens. Thankfully, both luck and the QUEEN's popularity placed both 1,000-foot ships in static roles. One of the West coast of Long Beach upon her last voyage in 1967, and her sister on the East coast of Florida upon her retirement in 1968. Static roles with ships, especially the size of the QUEENS, are almost always risky and take a great deal of planning and funds to remain viable. The financial backers of the MARY faired better than her sister ELIZABETH, which were, at best, shady, and in the end, wound up being Cunard Line itself until her sale to a Chinese shipper in 1970. QUEEN MARY has thankfully managed the cruel fate that befell her sister, but her preservation continues to be a priority in the face of owners seeking to profit. No doubt, her popularity continues as many come to understand the magic of this 'Queen of the Seas,' surely intriguing many countless guests of the romance of the ocean liner era. ​
A fascinating view of the NORMANDIE (left) and QUEEN MARY (right) side by side in 1940 at New York. The MARY would sail on to become the Grey Ghost, NORMANDIE would suffer the fate of carelessness, and burn where she lay in this photo.                                                        Authors Collection 
MARY is eased from her birthplace and thousands looked on as seen at the left. Millions of cubic feet of the river bottom had been removed prior to ensure the vessel would not ground. Notice there are no lifeboats except two all the way forward to make her as light and with as little of the ship in the water as possible.  
Directly over the stage in the image above is Maurice Lamberts bronze-relief panel entilted 'Symphony'.
An early postcard view, the ships first journey down the Clyde as evident by her lack of lifeboats except lifeboats #2 and 4.        Authors collection
Red Funnel Steamers postcard view looking like the stately ship she was called before meeting her element.                  Authors collection
The same space as seen to the left, with obvious posed models in early days.                                    Photo: Courtesy of William Cotter 
QUEEN MARY in the King George V Drydock, built specifically for the two Queens in 1934.  R.M.S. MAJESTIC in the background.   Authors Collection