Why Didn't the Nazis Build an Ocean Liner?

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Few world powers have been quite so fond of  insane megaprojects as Adolf Hitler and the Nazi   party. Through the 1930s, Nazi Germany embarked on  engineering projects on a massive scale, drawing   up plans for thousands of weird and wonderful  machinations from the total re-design and   development of the capital Berlin into some kind  of totalitarian super-monument to the ridiculous   P1000 Monster Land-tank. But at sea Nazi Germany  had a vested interest in combating the might of   British shipbuilding both naval and merchant; but  despite being in power for 12 years Nazi Germany   never built an ocean liner to answer Britain’s  Queen Mary or France’s Normandie. Why - when   ocean liners were such a key symbol of national  power on the world stage - did Hitler fail to   introduce a Nazi ocean liner? Well believe it or  not there were two fully-fledged plans for a super   liner to carry the mantle for the German state  but they were never completed. And here’s why. When Hitler and his fascist party assumed  power over Germany in 1933 they assumed   control of a nation with advanced engineering  capabilities and technological advancement. This   was most evident at sea; Germany’s ocean  liner were some of the best in the world.   Norddeutscher Lloyd’s Bremen and Europa  had directly threatened Britain’s dominance   on the transatlantic trade and really  introduced a new era of transatlantic liner.   They’d been introduced in 1929 and 1930, a product  of Weimar Germany nad 3 or 4 years before the   nazis rose to power. The two sister ships were  Germany’s premiere offering at sea; they were   over 900 feet long, displaced about 55,000 tons  and were very fast. The pair one the coveted   Blue Riband each - the award for the fastest  passenger ship crossing across the Atlantic.   They were pretty forward-thinking too; both ships  carried a catapult and a Heinkel He-12 mail-plane   to be launched when close to the US so mail  could get a head start before the ship docked. While Bremen and Europa were absolutely  dominating the transatlantic trade,   smaller German liners were operating less famous  routes. Hamburg Amerika Line had invested in three   huge superliner sisters; Imperator, Vaterland  and Bismarck; but these had been confiscated at   the end of the first world war and sold off  to British shipping lines instead. Hamburg   Amerika line didn’t try to build a world-class  super liner after that; instead they focused on   building smaller, more economic ships carrying  both cargo and passengers to south America.   They did build some dedicated ocean liners  though like the SS St Louis here; a modest   16,000 ton transatlantic workhorse. She was pretty   and functional but a far cry from the  gargantuan splendour of the Imperator. It was probably the Hamburg South-America Line  that was building the most impressive German   liners of the 20s aside from NDL’s Bremen  and Europa of course - the Cap Arcona was   a great example of these. Completed  in 1927 the ship was a real beauty;   and at 27,000 tons she wasn’t small either! So that’s a rough assessment of the German  passenger merchant lineup at around the time   Hitler came to power. By then, in 1933,  Bremen and Europa had been unseated from   their place as fastest ocean liners in  the world by Normandie and then Queen   Mary. Germany would have to answer the British  and European challenge and if there’s one thing   Hitler and his lackeys loved most of all,  it was showing off. Ocean liners were grand   and always in the spotlight; and Nazi Germany  needed a response to Queen Mary and Normandie.   The Nazi government invited Germany’s shipping  companies to submit design proposals for   superliners to catapult German shipbuilding back  into the world focus and Norddeutscher Lloyd and   Hamburg America Line’s designers set to work  on creating a true superliner for Nazi Germany. The first off the mark was Norddeutscher Lloyd. In  1937 NDL representatives took a train to Berlin to   present their design to the Reich ministry.  They’d worked with the shipbuilder AG Weser   in Bremen before on the SS Bremen and the design  they showed off that day in 1937 was very much in   the tradition of the older ship. The design called  for a liner over 1,075 feet long and in excess of   80,000 tons. This would make the new  ship the largest liner in the world;   but she would also be the fastest. The ship’s  long hull and clean lines would be the perfect   form for carving through the water at  great speed; and to power it the ship   would receive an enormous powerplant; turbines  driving no fewer than 5 propellers at 300,000   horsepower. This immense power output would  propel the new liner through the ocean at   an average of 35 knots, meaning the Blue Riband  prize would fall to Nazi Germany. The fuel costs   would have been enormous; but the government  intended to subsidise the liner’s operations. Crucially though the new liner’s decks would be   even more uncluttered and clean than  those of Normandie or the Queen Mary.   To enhance their profile and balance them out,  many ocean liners from the era used dummy funnels;   smoke stacks not connected to the boilers  and constructed purely for cosmetic purposes.   But NDL would have none of that; the new liner  would feature only one enormous funnel towards   the front of the ship which gave the  ship a strange, imposing appearance. If completed, the monstrous ocean liner would  surely achieve the brief; deposing Queen Mary   and reigning as the largest and fastest  ship at sea for the foreseeable future.   In a curious twist for a narcissistic  regime the new liner would be named Amerika;   maybe in a move to court American public opinion  and sway them towards more friendly relations   with Germany in the case of a war with Europe.  In any case the design was largely approved and   work continued on refining the details but  by the outbreak of the Second World War in   1939 no keel plates had yet been laid  and the Amerika existed only on paper. But by 1941 things had changed a bit; Hitler’s  armies were at their most victorious, having   crushed Europe’s armies and implementing  a sweeping invasion of the Soviet Union   which - until then - had been going exactly as  planned, resulting in local success after success.   Relationships with the United States had soured  though and in December 1941 the US sided with   the Allies after being attacked at Pearl  Harbour; NDL’s superliner project would need   a new name so Viktoria - Victory - was chosen as  a suitably bold and self-congratulatory moniker. Viktoria though stayed on paper - the ship  was never built because by the time NDL was   at the final stages of preparation Hitler’s armies  began to suffer at the hands of the Allied powers;   by 1945 it was all over. Hitler’s dream  of a great totalitarian state was dead,   he was dead - and the ocean  liner Viktoria was dead.   NDL lost basically all of its ships and its  days as a major transatlantic player were done.   Viktoria’s drawings were archived  away and the plan was forgotten about. But while NDL had been kind of sitting on their   hands through the late 1930s not-building  Viktoria, their competitors at Hamburg   America actually managed to get a Nazi  ocean liner off of paper and into reality. Hamburg America - also known as HAPAG -  had spent the 20s and 30s building modest,   smaller ships and had stayed mostly out of the  race for transatlantic dominance. But by the   mid 30s it became clear that if the company  was to compete with its international rivals   they’d have to do better than just offer  passage on small cargo-passenger ships.   The plan called for a trio of superliners  whose construction would be subsidised by   the Nazi government. HAPAG decided  to not follow in NDL’s footsteps;   the trio of ships would not compete with  Normandie or Queen Mary for supremacy in   either size or speed, but they would be  some of the largest German ships afloat. The first ship was planned through 1936 and  37 and the final design was curious to say   the least. It would be 824 feet in length and  about 41,000 GRT - considerably smaller than   the Queen Mary and more in the size category  of transatlantic liners that had been built   and launched about twenty years earlier  in the days of Titanic. She’d be a little   slow too with a turbo-electric setup driving two  propellers to give the ship a speed of 24 knots;   11 knots lower than the proposed speed of  Viktoria. The design team clearly took great   inspiration from the French liner Normandie  with this one; the bow curvature and breakwater   are almost identical to those found on the French  liner. I’ve even seen some people credit Valdimir   Yourkevitch, Normandie’s chief architect,  with Vaterland’s design. The addition of two,   squat funnels made the ship look a little stout.  She’d have had capacity for 354 first class, 435   tourist and 533 third class passengers. In 1938  the keel was laid at Blohm und Voss in Hamburg,   alongside the likes of the German battleship  Bismarck. HAPAG chose to recycle a favourite   old name; in the wake of the second world war the  SS Vaterland - or father land - had been taken   off the company’s hands and sold to United States  Lines. That had been a huge blow to morale for the   German people - so HAPAG hoped this new Vaterland  would carry the torch. Except - it never would. By 1940 the war was raging but Germany was doing  quite well and work on Vaterland continued until   the ship’s hull was complete and ready for  launch. She rumbled down the slipway at Hamburg   before being led into the fitting-out wharf;  but then disaster struck. German’y military   fortunes were reversed and work on Vaterland was  diverted to more pressing matters. For years the   ship’s incomplete hulk sat with work halted or  continuing at a crawl but then in July 1943,   Vaterland’s day of destiny arrived. Operation  Gomorroah was a combined Royal Air Force and US   Army Air Force initative to destroy the city of  Hamburg and for 8 days and 7 nights the city was   bombed mercilessly by Avro Lancasters and B-17s.  The effect was tremendous and the raid left about   35,000 people dead, and 61% of the city’s housing  destroyed. When the smoke cleared it became clear   that Blohm und Voss had received horrible damage  and the Vaterland itself had taken two direct bomb   hits. One of these detonated within the ship  with such force that the ship’s forecastle   deck at the front blew out and peeled up over  the bridge. The ship was now a write-off as far   as HAPAG were concerned because things just got  worse from there; as their armies suffered more   defeats and the war decisively turned against  Nazi Germany, no attempt to salvage or repair   Vaterland was ever made. In 1945 the war was  over and cleanup could begin; but Vaterland   sat forlorn and abandoned for another 3 years  until 1948 when the hulk was broken up for scrap.
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Channel: Oceanliner Designs
Views: 264,983
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: great ocean liners, maritime history, ocean liners, famous oceanliners, ships documentary, history of ships
Id: u5sZ75XGoMw
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Length: 11min 27sec (687 seconds)
Published: Wed Sep 28 2022
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