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Russian East Asiatic Steamship Company

The Russian East Asiatic Steamship Company was a subsidiary steamship line of the East Asiatic Company that was in business from 1900 until the time of the Russian Revolution in 1917. In 1906 it began passenger service from Libau to New York after the Hamburg America Line acquired a controlling interest in the line.

Background
A Russian-American transpacific line was first theorized in October 1893, when 22,000 Jews were expelled from Siberia creating a transportation need from Russia to America. The viability of a line began being explored in January 1894, on behalf of Amoor Steamship company of Siberia, Chicago capitalist and engineer William D. Richardson, traveled to Pacific ports, "to ascertain the port best situated for a terminus... to ply between America and Vladivostok." The project was meant to compliment the Trans-Siberian Railway, and was backed by Tzar Nicholas II. It was planned that the ships for the new line would be carrying the mail for the Russian government, and would be doing a general carrying business for a period of 15-years. As the same time, Union Iron Works was announced to be constructing several new ships for the line. In 1902, an Italian company began negotiating with the committee of the Russian Volunteer Fleet to open a new line between the Black Sea and North America via Italy. The Russian Volunteer Fleet began sailing to New York carrying immigrants in November 1903. In 1905, plans were revisited in Saint Petersburg for a state-sponsored Russian-American Line which would be governed by the Russian Department of Merchant Marines, led by Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich. Later in 1905, it was decided to merge the Department of Merchant Marines with the newly created Ministry of Commerce. The Hamburg-American Line, in July 1906 intended to start offering a service from Libau in direct competition with the Russian Volunteer Fleet. The announcement was received poorly, as Russia didn't want competition for the Russian Volunteer Fleet. ==History==
History
In May 1909, seven blind men, and a blind woman, stowed away on the Lithunia when it departed from Libau, Russia. In June 1909, four men that attempted to assassinate Czar Nicholas II, escaped to the United States aboard the Russian-American Line ship Russia. The men, Ivan Maslennikoff, Constantine Grueff, Fedor Kasiniroff, and Ivan Worinkin, were all recent graduates of University of Moscow. Max Straus, a representative for the Russian-American Line clarified all the men were afflicted with trachoma and would bar them from being permitted to stay in the United States anyway. On November 12, 1910, the new ship Kursk arrived in New York in 10 1/5 days. In January 1911, it was reported the company was having a "gasoline-driven" vessel built by Barclay Curle. ==Lawsuits==
Lawsuits
On January 4, 1911, the US government under the Sherman Antitrust Act brought a lawsuit against a number of shipping companies. It was alleged the thirteen companies entered into an illegal contract on February 5, 1908, "by which they constituted themselves the Atlantic Conference, with power to impose heavy fines on members of the conference for violation of any articles of agreement and wage competition against all lines outside of the conference." ==Ships of the Russian American Line==
Ships of the Russian American Line
• (1896) • (1894) • (1912) • SS Czaritza (1915) • (1897) • SS Estonia (1889) p. 85 • (1893) • (1899) • (1892) • SS Kursk (1910) • (1889) • (1902) • SS Russia (1908) == References ==
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