Four-funnel liner


A four-funnel liner is an ocean liner with four funnels., launched 40 years prior to any other comparable ship in 1858, was the only ocean liner to ever have five funnels., launched in 1897, was the first ocean liner to have four funnels and was one of the first of the golden era of ocean liners that became prominent in the 20th century.
Among the most well-known four-funnels are, sunk on her maiden voyage on, and, torpedoed on, during the First World War. In all, 15 four-funnel liners were produced; Great Eastern in 1858, and the remainder between 1897 and 1922. Four were sunk during the World Wars, and all others besides Titanic were scrapped.
was the fastest of all four-funnelled liners. The last four-funnelled liner ever built was, however, later on, two of her funnels were removed, making the the last four-funnel liner in service and the only one to survive service during both World Wars.

Description

The primary purpose of funnels on steamships was to allow smoke, heat and excess steam to escape from the boiler rooms. As liners became larger, more boilers were used. The number of funnels became symbolic of speed and safety, so shipping companies sometimes added false funnels—like the —to give an impression of power.
The trend of competing shipping lines building four-funnel liners encompassed a very short time span ranging from the in 1897 to the in 1922. Four funnels were sometimes a matter of necessity, other times purely symbolic.
The Cunard Line record holders, and, were both laid out with four boiler rooms with one funnel to each room, other slower ships such as the, and only had three operational funnels. However, four funnels represented power, safety and prestige.
In keeping with the style and fashion of the early-20th century, the White Star Line opted to fit the three Olympic-class ships with a dummy fourth funnel to rival the two Cunard ships. The notion of four funnels representing size and power rapidly diminished soon after the First World War. Later flagships such as,, and, all fitted three funnels to conserve deck space.
Later still as shipbuilding became more efficient the, and the reduced this further down to two funnels, today's modern cruise ships are mostly built with only a single funnel and many military vessels no longer have one at all.

Proposed ships

The United States never operated any four-funneled ocean liners in commercial service. However, in the late 1910s, William Francis Gibbs began to draft designs for new 1,000-foot liners that could reach a speed of 30 knots. Among the proposals was a pair of four-funneled ships designed in 1919. The funnel/boiler arrangement would have been similar to the German four stackers, with the four funnels grouped in pairs with a wider gap between the second and third funnels. Possible names for the liners were the SS Boston and the SS Independence, but the ships never made it past the design phase.
In the late 1920s the world's main shipping lines were Britain's Cunard Line and White Star Line and France's Compagnie Générale Transatlantique. Each of these three were operating ageing vessels and required new larger and more modern long superliners to remain competitive. CGT began construction of the while Cunard placed an order for the.
White Star placed an order to their shipbuilders Harland and Wolff for, a successor to the line's inaugural 1870-liner,. The exact intended design of Oceanic III is unknown, although company concept renderings show it to be a three-funnelled liner. However, early plans from Harland and Wolff's archives show a design from 1927 for a four-funnelled liner almost identical to the Olympic-class, except with a more-modern cruiser stern.
With the onset of the Great Depression the shipping lines were crippled. The completion of Cunard's Queen Mary was delayed for four years and to raise the funds to complete her the British government gave Cunard a loan on the condition that Cunard merge with White Star into a single British shipping line. Upon the merger into the Cunard-White Star Line Oceanic, with only her keel laid, was abandoned.