- Barbarossa class ocean liner
The "Barbarossa" class was a class of
ocean liner s ofNorth German Lloyd and theHamburg America Line of theGerman Empire . Of the ten ships built between 1896 and 1902, six were built byAG Vulcan Stettin , three were built byBlohm and Voss , and one was built byF. Schichau ; all were built in Germany. They averaged , and larger than the other "Barbarossa"-class ships and a full liners, two, and NDL shared. [Bonsor, Vol. 1, p. 408, 410.] Displeased with the Far East service, and , launched in August and November 1901. "Moltke" spent time on North Atlantic andMediterranean routes; "Blücher" on North Atlantic andSouth America n routes.Bonsor, Vol. 1, p. 410.]World War I
At the outbreak of
World War I , rather than face capture or destruction at the hands of the BritishRoyal Navy , most of the "Barbarossa"-class ships were interned in neutral ports. "König Albert" and "Moltke" were interned atGenoa ,Bonsor, Vol. 2, p. 566.] while "Blücher" was interned atPernambuco ,Brazil . Five ships were interned at U.S.-controlled ports: four—"Barbarossa", "Friedrich der Grosse", "Prinzess Irene", and "Hamburg"—were interned at Hoboken,New Jersey and "Princess Alice" was interned atCebu , Philippine Islands. Only "Königin Luise" and "Bremen" were in German ports, where they remained throughout the war.Bonsor, Vol. 2, p. 559–60.] In September 1914, "Hamburg" was briefly renamed and chartered to theAmerican Red Cross . Sailing under the name "Red Cross", she made one roundtrip voyage to Europe before returning to New York, and her previous name.Bonsor, Vol. 1, p. 410.]As Italy, the United States, and Brazil successively joined the war, each seized the interned "Barbarossa" ships (along with all other German and Austro-Hungarian ships) and renamed them. In Italy, "Moltke" became "Pesaro", while "König Albert" became
hospital ship "Ferdinando Palasciano"; in Brazil, "Blücher" became "Leopoldina". The five ships interned under U.S. control all becameUnited States Navy transport ship s, and were renamed as follows:
* "Barbarossa" became USS "Mercury" (ID-3012)
* "Friedrich der Grosse" became USS "Huron" (ID-1408)
* "Prinzess Irene" became USS "Pocahontas" (ID-3044)Drechsel, p. 231–32.]
* "Hamburg" became USS "Powhatan" (ID-3013)
* "Princess Alice" became USS "Princess Matoika" (ID-2290)Drechsel, p. 338–39.] These five ex-German transports carried over 95,000 American troops to France before the Armistice. [Gleaves, p. 246, 248.]Postwar service
At the conclusion of World War I, war reparations permanently assigned the eight seized ships to the nations that held them. Further, "Königin Luise" and "Bremen", safely laid up in Germany during the war, were assigned to the UK. Apart from those two, only two other "Barbarossa"-class ships changed national registry after the war. Brazil sold "Leopoldina" (the ex-"Blücher") to the French
Compagnie Générale Transatlantique which operated her under the name "Suffren". "Pocahontas" (the ex-"Prinzess Irene") was laid up inGibraltar after mechanical failures and was purchased by NDL in 1923. She became the only member of the "Barbarossa" class to resume sailing under the German flag. First renamed "Bremen" and later "Karlsruhe" (to free the name "Bremen" for a newer ship), she sailed primarily on the Bremen–New York route.In 1922, "City of Honolulu" (the ex-"Friedrich der Grosse"), sailing on her first roundtrip on the Los Angeles–Honolulu route for the
Los Angeles Steamship Company , caught fire and burned in a calm sea. No one on board was killed or injured when the lifeboats were launched, and when towing the burned hulk proved unsuccessful, the ship was sunk by gunfire from aUnited States Coast Guard Cutter ; she was the only member of the "Barbarossa" class to sink. By the end of the 1920s, six more "Barbarossa" ships had met their ends at the hands ofshipbreaker s, and none of the remaining three ships would survive the next decade. All were scrapped by 1935, bringing an end to the career of the "Barbarossa" class.The ships
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