The
Adriatic returned to service on 3 September 1919, once again on the Southampton-Cherbourg-New York service, reopening the route along with the
Lapland, to ensure provisional service pending the return of requisitioned ships and the arrival of new liners. In December, the
Lapland was returned to Red Star Line service. From January through June 1920,
Adriatic maintained the Southampton service on her own, until the
Olympic returned to service on 25 June. Throughout 1920,
Olympic and
Adriatic made a combined 37 crossings and carried a combined 59,660 passengers for an average of 1,612 passengers per crossing.
Olympic carried 28,458 passengers over 16 crossings for an average of 1,779 passengers per crossing.
Adriatic carried a career high 31,202 passengers over 21 crossings for an average of 1,486 passengers per crossing.
Adriatic was finally withdrawn from the Southampton route after a last crossing, on 14 December 1921, in view of the arrival of the
Majestic and the
Homeric. After an overhaul in Belfast, she rejoined her sisters on the Liverpool route on 13 May 1922. On a westbound voyage at 01:30 on 10 August 1922 near
Cobh, the
Adriatic suffered a gas explosion in her #3 hold, which she was using as a reserve coal bunker. The explosion killed five crewmen, severely injured another three, tore the hatch off the hold, broke and twisted girders and beams, and started a coal fire. Some of the dead and injured were stokers who had gone into the hold to work coal for her furnaces. One was an electrician, Leslie Ablett, who was rigging a cluster of electric lights by which the stokers were to work. Three were stokers who had been sleeping in the open on the hatch cover because it was a hot summer night. One of the stokers sleeping on the hatch cover was blown overboard Two liners,
CGT's
Lafayette and
United States Lines'
Reliance, changed course to come to
Adriatics assistance.
Adriatics crew fought and extinguished the fire. Her
Second Engineer, James Corrigan, entered the burning hold and rescued two injured men. At 03:55
Adriatics wireless operator signalled that there was no further danger, so
Lafayette and
Reliance resumed their normal courses. All of the dead and injured were from
Liverpool. on 19 August. From 1923 onwards, the Big Four made regular stops in Boston before arriving in New York. In 1925, the
Adriatic was chartered by Welsh people living in the United States who wanted to go to the
Eisteddfod Genedlaethol. In May of the same year, and despite her being eighteen years of age, she broke her speed record by crossing between New York and Liverpool in 7 days and 6 minutes, at an average speed of 17.86 knots. At the same time, with less transatlantic traffic, the
Adriatic was increasingly used for cruises. In 1928, when she returned from the Mediterranean, she was reconverted again, this time to become a "cabin class" ship offering more affordable rates. Making her first crossing in this capacity on 28 April 1928, she quickly met great success in this area. She served as an experimental ground for a very low-cost weekend cruise in the summer of 1931, but the operation was inconclusive and her September cruises were cancelled. She was followed the following year by the
Baltic. Nevertheless, the company decided to keep the
Adriatic as a reserve ship, as the British economy seemed to recover little by little. The following summers were not more prolific and the liner only made a few cruises off the Iberian Peninsula and occasional crossings of the Atlantic. On 24 February 1934, the
Adriatic made her last transatlantic crossing. After 's successful 1933 "Peace Cruise" in the Baltic, in 1934, the British Boy Scouts and Girl Guides chartered her for a similar cruise with
Robert Baden-Powell on board in the Mediterranean, under the command of Commander CP Freeman,
RD.
Adriatic sailed from Liverpool on 29 March 1934, and called at
Gibraltar,
Villefranche-sur-Mer,
Malta,
Algiers, and
Lisbon. After a final voyage in September, she was taken off service, and sold in November to Japanese shipbreakers for £48,000. She left Liverpool for the last time on 19 December 1934, her longest voyage ever; to be scrapped at
Osaka,
Japan, in 1935. ==See also==