Celtic was the first of the "Big Four", entering service in 1901. She was the first ship to exceed the Great Eastern in tonnage. Her career was marred by several accidents. Transformed into an
auxiliary cruiser during the
First World War, she struck a
mine in 1917, killing 17 people. In 1918, she was
torpedoed by a German submarine, but once again remained afloat. In 1925, she was in collision with another vessel, but neither ship suffered serious damage. She was involved in another collision in 1927. Finally, in 1928, she struck rocks off
Cobh and was considered unrecoverable. It took five years for the ship to be completely dismantled.
Cedric entered service in 1903. Her commercial career was divided into transatlantic crossings and cruises. When the sank,
Cedric was docked in New York. After the sinking it was reported that
J. Bruce Ismay, managing director of the White Star line, had attempted to arrange, by wireless with the White Star New York offices, to delay the sailing of
Cedric until arrived in port so that he and the surviving crew members of
Titanic could return to England without setting foot in the United States. However
Cedric sailed on schedule. During the First World War,
Cedric was transformed into an auxiliary cruiser. On she collided with the
Canadian Pacific ship
Montreal off
Morecambe Bay.
Montreal was taken in tow but sank the next day from the Mersey Bar
lightvessel. On 30 September 1923,
Cedric collided with of the
Cunard Line in
Queenstown harbour during dense fog. Neither vessel was seriously damaged. She was decommissioned in 1931 and was scrapped the following year.
Baltic Commissioned in 1904, the was involved in rescues at sea on a number of occasions. In 1909, she received a call for help from the , which had collided with
SS Florida of Lloyd Italiano. On 15 April 1912,
Baltic received the distress call from
Titanic, but was unable to assist. She was also involved in a rescue on , when she assisted the sinking schooner
Northern Light. On 17 February 1933, she sailed for
Osaka where she was scrapped.
Baltic was commonly accompanied by White Star tender
SS Magnetic, which serviced her throughout most of her career. The two ships appear together on many White Star Line postcards.
Adriatic entered service in 1907. She was the largest, the fastest, and the most luxurious of the Big Four, being the first ocean liner to have an indoor
swimming pool and a Victorian-style Turkish bath.
Adriatic enjoyed a successful commercial career, which included war service during the First World War when the ship made several voyages as a troop transport.
Adriatic was devoted full-time to cruising from 1933, and was retired the following year, then sold by the White Star Line for scrapping in Japan in 1935. == Footnotes ==