Photo taken in Istanbul,
Turkey, 1986.
Built: 1955 by John Brown & Co., Clydebank, Scotland.
Technical:
Overall length: 185.38 m Beam: 24.4 m Draft: 8.7 m Gross Tonnage: 21370 tons Passengers: 929 Power: 4 John Brown steam turbines, 18032 kW Service Speed: 19.0 knots Operating Routes: Far East, Mediterranean and Europe. Sister Ships: T.S. Leonid
Sobinov (ex. RMS Saxonia (1954), RMS Carmania (1962)) Former Names: T.S. Ivernia
(1955), T.S. Franconia (1963) Later Names: T.S. Fedor Shalyapin (1973) History and Current Status: Her past history can be
read at www.lostliners.com's T.S.
Ivernia page. After her acquisition by BLASCO, she was used in
Mediterranean-European and Far-Eastern
cruising very successfully, together with her sister T.S. Leonid Sobinov. After
the fall of the Soviet Union, she sailed again for BLASCO under the flag of
Ukraine. I was told that she got transferred to the Far Eastern Shipping Company
(FESCO) to
be used in the Pacific and Indian Ocean and in the UK-Australia route for a
while, but I have
not confirmed this. In 1996,
she got laid up at Ilyichevsk shipyard, under a Maltese flag but Ukrainian ownership
and in need of repairs and modernization, shortly after T.S. Leonid
Sobinov (1995). She never sailed again. In October 2001, a court
ruling has returned the control of the laid up T.S. Fedor Shalyapin from BLASCO
to the State of Ukraine. There are rumors that she will be broken up but I
consider her future to be unknown as of January 2002.
(email all info about her to ata.bilgili@dartmouth.edu) Notes: My memories of T.S. Fedor Shalyapin actually
start with her sister, T.S. Leonid Sobinov, which left me breathless, suddenly
appearing behind the trees as I was watching Bosphorus from the benches of the
Bosphorus University at Istanbul. This was in 1979, and it was my first
introduction to a "real" ocean liner of the past and on top of that to a past
Cunarder! In the following years, I
could not get to see T.S. Leonid Sobinov much (only 3-4 times) but T.S. Fedor
Shalyapin filled the void... She was an occasional caller at the port of
Istanbul and her sight was always a great pleasure, especially as years passed
and the classic curves of the past left the arena for straight lines, boxy shapes
and un-asthetic grandeur!... Especially beautiful for me was her traditional
looking mast, big funnel and long bow section that used to house the cargo
holds. I badly wish for some company to save her before it is too late as in the
case of T.S. Leonid Sobinov, but I know that this is very unlikely... In any
case, my hopes are to see her one more time, even if it is while she is passing through
Bosphorus on her way to scrappers somewhere in the world...
This nice piece of info came from Max Cleary on April 2002: "Incidentally, did you know that the
Ivernia/Franconia/Fedor Shalyapin (a great Russian baritone) had a permanent list - to starboard if I
remember correctly. Apparently it was a design fault. This list could become quite uncomfortable during a long cruise. They would try to
balance it with the fresh water tanks, but as the water was used, the list became more apparent." R.D. Cotton added to that on July 2004: "I sailed on her as M.S. Franconia in 1967, joining her in Hamilton Bermuda on 05.04.67 and being discharged on 18.07.67.
She was on the New York-Bermuda cruise run. One week round trips.
Prior to me joining her she had been painted green, but had been repainted white for the American cruise market.
The after hatches and derricks were removed and a swimming "Lido" built in their place.
I also recall that she had to be dry docked in New York (Brooklyn) to have repairs done to her rudder.
I recall her having sand put into her foreward hatch, 300 tons I think, to keep her head down in heavy weather, I don't recall a list, but perhaps this sand was to try and correct that.
She was a lovely little ship."
Links: Line Drawings: From the book "Soviet Bloc Merchant Ships" by
Bruno Bock and Klaus Bock, 1981. Other Pictures:
- 1955-1973: Cunard Line, UK.
- 1973-Oct, 2001: Black Sea Shipping Company (BLASCO), Odessa, Soviet Union, also
operated by the Far Eastern Shipping Company (FESCO), Vladivostok, on far
eastern routes (?).
- Oct, 2001-Present: State of Ukraine.
- 1996-Present: Laid up.
- Jan Tiedemann's T.S Fedor
Shalyapin.
- From Aleksi
Lindstrom's webpage, laid up T.S. Fedor Shalyapin.
-
Stefanie Diez's T.S. Fedor Shalyapin page..
- Philippe
Brebant's T.S. Fedor Shalyapin.
- Lostliners.com's T.S.
Ivernia page.
- "The Saxonia Sisters": A
book by Clive Harvey.
- The Saxonia Class
Sisters by e-cruiseworld.com.
- T.S. Ivernia page at
Ren L'Ecuyer's Grostenquin France homepage.
- T.S. Ivernia
page by D.F. Stoner.
-
Greatships.net's T.S. Ivernia page.
-
The Cunard Line.
Pictures from Max Cleary:
Postcards from My Collection: