1930–1942: Empress of Japan Empress of Japan carried out her sea trial successfully in May 1930, achieving a top speed of ; and on 8 June 1930, she was delivered to Vancouver for service on the trans-Pacific route. In this period, she was the fastest ocean liner on the
Pacific, able to complete a one-way crossing in just nine days. She would continue sailing the Vancouver – Yokohama – Kobe – Shanghai – Hong Kong route for the rest of the decade. Amongst her celebrity passengers were a number of American baseball all-stars, including
Babe Ruth, who
sailed to Japan for a barnstorming tour in October 1934. The outbreak of war in Europe caused
Empress of Japan to be re-fitted for wartime service. Following the Japanese attacks on the Empire outposts in the Far East in December 1941, the Empress of Japan was the last ship to successfully evacuate civilians from Singapore, leaving the dock on 30 January 1942 and arriving in Durban about 10 days later. Later in the same year, she was renamed
Empress of Scotland.
1948–1957: Empress of Scotland Following the end of
World War II,
Empress of Scotland was needed to meet the newly developing demands for trans-Atlantic passenger service. In the period between 1948 and 1950, she was rebuilt at Fairfield in Glasgow. These modifications were necessary to better meet weather conditions on the colder Atlantic route. This extensive re-fitting included a radical reconfiguration of her cabins from the original four classes to just two – first and tourist. In 1951 she carried Princess Elizabeth (later
Queen Elizabeth II) and
Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh returning from their tour of Canada. They departed from St John's Canada and travelled to
Liverpool. The Canadian Pacific
Empress of Scotland completed her last trans-Atlantic crossing in 1957; and she was temporarily laid up in Belfast until being sold.
1958–1966: Hanseatic Following her sale to
Hamburg Atlantic Line in 1958, the ship was radically rebuilt to meet the expanding market for trans-Atlantic passenger service. The ship's rear funnel was removed, her remaining funnels and superstructure were rebuilt and her passenger accommodation was re-configured. The vessel emerged as the TS
Hanseatic. The renamed and re-flagged ship was designed to carry as many 1,350 passengers in comfortable luxury on the Hamburg-New York route. On 8 September 1966, the ship caught fire at
New York. The fire developed in the engine room and gutted five decks. On 28 September, the ship was towed to
Hamburg,
West Germany for inspection. Deemed beyond economic repair, she was scrapped shortly thereafter. ==See also==