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Royal Mail aircraft-marking; on a British Airways Airbus A320-232 G-EUUI. In recent years the shift to air transport for mail has left only three ships with the right to the prefix or its variations: RMS Segwun, which serves as a passenger vessel in Gravenhurst, Ontario, Canada; RMV Scillonian III, which serves the Isles of Scilly; and RMS Queen Mary 2.
Pages in category "Ships of the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
RMS Olympic was a British ocean liner and the lead ship of the White Star Line's trio of Olympic-class liners. Olympic had a career spanning 24 years from 1911 to 1935, in contrast to her short-lived sister ships, Titanic and Britannic .
RML was also a leading cruise ship operator. RMS's largest ship was the 25,895 GRT turbine steamship RMS Andes. She was designed as an ocean liner but when launched in 1939 was immediately fitted out as a troopship. She finally entered civilian liner service in 1948, was converted to full-time cruising in 1960 and was scrapped in 1971. [16]
RMS Mauretania was a British ocean liner designed by Leonard Peskett and built by Swan Hunter and Wigham Richardson on the River Tyne, England for the Cunard Line, launched on the afternoon of 20 September 1906. She was the world's largest ship until the launch of RMS Olympic in 1910.
RMS Campania; SS Canadian; PS Cardiff Queen (1947) RMS Carinthia (1925) RMS Carinthia (1955) SS Carlos de Eizaguirre; TSS Carlotta; RMS Caronia (1947) RMS Carpathia; RMS Carthage; SS Catalonia; SS Cathay (1924) TSS Chelmsford (1893) PS Cheshire (1889) HMS Cheshire; TSS City of Belfast (1893) SS City of Berlin; SS City of Bradford (1903) SS City ...
List of Cunard Line ships * America-class steamship; Britannia-class steamship; A. SS Abyssinia; RMS Alaunia (1913) RMS Alaunia (1925) SS Albania (1920) SS Aleppo;
RMS Queen Elizabeth was an ocean liner operated by Cunard Line. Along with the Queen Mary , she provided a weekly transatlantic service between Southampton in the United Kingdom and New York City in the United States, via Cherbourg in France.