Caronia left
Liverpool on her maiden voyage to New York on 25 February 1905. A successful 1906 cruise from New York to the
Mediterranean led to
Caronia frequently being used for cruising. On 14 April 1912
Caronia transmitted the first ice warning at 09:00 to RMS
Titanic reporting "bergs, growlers and field ice". In 1914 Cunard briefly placed
Caronia on its
Boston service. At the start of the
First World War the
Admiralty requisitioned her to be an armed merchant cruiser. She was stationed off New York on
contraband patrol. She was a troop ship from 1916 until after the
Armistice of 11 November 1918. Her last duties were to repatriate Canadian troops in 1919. She returned to the Liverpool – New York run after the war. In 1920
Caronia was converted to burn oil instead of coal. After returning to service, she sailed on a number of different routes, including: • Liverpool – New York / Boston •
London – New York • Liverpool - Mediterranean cruise stopping at Gibraltar, Algiers, Monaco, Genoa and Naples (Dec 1921 - approx Mar 1922) •
Hamburg – New York (1922) • Liverpool –
Quebec (1924) • New York –
Havana ==Fate==