- Source: Atlantic Transport Line
The Atlantic Transport Line was an American passenger shipping line based in Baltimore, Maryland. In 1901 the company was folded into the International Mercantile Marine Company (IMM).
History
The line developed with railroad support as an offshoot of Bernard N. Baker's Baltimore Storage and Lighterage Company in 1881. Although American owned, the Atlantic Transport Line operated from Britain, with British registered and manned vessels, most of which were British built. General cargo, live cattle and small numbers of passengers were carried from Baltimore and Philadelphia to British ports and the line developed an excellent reputation for shipping valuable horses. A full-scale weekly passenger service between New York and London commenced in 1892 and today the line is best remembered for its exclusively first class direct London to New York passenger/cargo service operated by its four Minne-class ships: Minneapolis, Minnehaha, Minnetonka and Minnewaska from 1900 to 1915.
In 1898 the U.S. Government bought seven of the Line's ten ships for use as military transports in the Spanish–American War (Baker lent another for use as a hospital ship). The line survived this potentially devastating blow because Baker pulled off a sensational deal and bought a British competitor's five brand new ships almost immediately as replacements. The Atlantic Transport Company of West Virginia was formed at this time to assert American ownership of the line's overseas assets. Baker's attempt to sell the line to British owners in the late 1890s sparked the chain of events that lead to the formation of the IMM.
The line's most important ships were all sunk during the First World War. After the war four huge replacements for the Minne-class ships were planned. Only two of these were built however, and the passenger service, which recommenced in 1923, never matched pre-war successes. With first class travel declining, a tourist third-class ship was introduced in 1925 and for two seasons operated a second. But the line was faltering even before the Wall Street Crash and with the recession of 1931 its remaining ships were laid up or transferred to other IMM lines, and it effectively ceased to exist. The American holding company survived until 1936. Minnewaska was the last ship the Atlantic Transport Line operated.
Fleet
References
= Sources
=Brown, Giles (Aug 1948). "The Hindu Conspiracy, 1914–1917". The Pacific Historical Review. 17 (3). University of California Press: 299–310. doi:10.2307/3634258. ISSN 0030-8684. JSTOR 3634258.
Plowman, Matthew (2003). "Irish Republicans and the Indo-German Conspiracy of World War". New Hibernia Review. Center for Irish Studies at the University of St. Thomas: 81–105. ISSN 1092-3977.
External links
The Atlantic Transport Line, 1881 - 1931
Atlantic Transport Line History and Ephemera GG Archives
Clippings about Atlantic Transport Line in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- International Mercantile Marine Company
- Asosiasi Pengangkutan Udara Internasional
- American Line
- Metropolitan Railway
- European Air Transport
- RMS Olympic
- Maskapai penerbangan di seluruh dunia
- Tallink
- Maskapai penerbangan di Eropa
- Bakteri
- Atlantic Transport Line
- SS Samland
- USED Chinook
- International Mercantile Marine Company
- USAT Logan
- USAT Sherman
- USAT Sheridan
- List of White Star Line ships
- Atlantic City Line
- Minnetonka (disambiguation)