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{{Short description|Ocean liner}}
<table border=1 align="right" cellpadding=2 cellspacing=0 width=300>
{{About||the French RO-RO ship operating for Brittany Ferries|MV Normandie}}
<tr><td colspan=2 align="center">''Normandie''<br>[[Image:SS_Normandie.jpg|300px|An aerial view of the ''SS Normandie'']]<br></td></tr>
{{use dmy dates|cs1-dates=ll|date=February 2022}}{{Use British English|date=March 2023}}
<tr><td>Owners:</td><td>Compagnie Générale Transatlantique</td></tr>
<tr><td>Builders:</td><td>Penhoët, [[Saint Nazaire]], [[France]]</td></tr>
<tr><td>Laid down:</td><td>[[January 26]] 1931</td></tr>
<tr><td>Launched:</td><td>[[October 29]], [[1932]]</td></tr>
<tr><td>Christened:</td><td>[[October 29]], [[1932]]</td></tr>
<tr><td>Maiden voyage:</td><td>[[May 29]], [[1935]] </td></tr>
<tr><td>Fate:</td><td>Caught fire in 1942 and was later sold and scrapped in 1946</td></tr>
<tr><th colspan=2 style="color: white; background: black;">General Characteristics</th></tr>
<tr><td>Tonnage:</td><td>79,280/83,423 gross tons</td></tr>
<tr><td>Displacement:</td><td>71,300 tons (approx) Fully loaded</td></tr>
<tr><td>Length:</td><td>1,029 ft (313.6 m)</td></tr>
<tr><td>Beam:</td><td>119.4ft (36.4 m)</td></tr>
<tr><td>Draft:</td><td>37.00 feet</td></tr>
<tr><td>Height:</td><td>184 feet</td></tr>
<tr><td>Power:</td><td>Four Turbo-Electric, total 160,000 hp. </td></tr>
<tr><td>Propulsion:</td><td>Four 3- (later 4-) bladed, 23 tons each </td></tr>
<tr><td>Speed:</td><td> Designed speed 29 knots, could reach 32.2 knots</td></tr>
<tr><td>Complement:</td><td> 1,972 passengers (848 first-(cabin) class, 670 tourist class, 454 third class), 1,345 crew</td></tr>
</table>


{|{{Infobox ship begin}}
[[Image:Normandie poster.jpg|thumb|180px|left|The poster ''Normandie'' (1935) is Cassandre's most famous design]]
{{Infobox ship image
The '''''Normandie''''' was a [[France|French]] [[ocean liner]] built in [[Saint-Nazaire]], [[France]]. When launched she was the ship of superlatives - the largest, fastest, and arguably the greatest [[ocean liner]] of all time. She was the first liner ever to surpass 60,000 tons (70,000 and 80,000 as well), first to surpass 1,000 feet in length, and the first ship to make an [[Atlantic]] crossing with an average speed of over 30 knots.
| Ship image = Normandie color.jpg
| Ship caption = Colorized photo of the ''Normandie'' at sea, c. 1935-1936
}}
{{Infobox ship career
| Hide header =
| Ship country = France
| Ship flag = {{shipboxflag|France|naval}}
| Ship name = ''Normandie''
| Ship namesake = [[Normandy]]
| Ship owner = [[Compagnie Générale Transatlantique]]<ref name=LR>{{cite book |url= https://plimsoll.southampton.gov.uk/shipdata/pdfs/35/35b0606.pdf |year=1935 |title=Lloyd's Register, Steamers & Motorships |location=London |publisher=[[Lloyd's Register]] |access-date=20 May 2013}}</ref>
| Ship operator =
| Ship registry = [[Port of Le Havre]]<ref name=LR/>
| Ship route = [[Le Havre]]-[[Southampton]]-[[New York City|New York]]
| Ship ordered =
| Ship awarded =
| Ship builder = Chantiers de Penhoet, [[Saint-Nazaire]], France<ref name=LR/>
| Ship original cost = |Ship yard number
| Ship laid down = 26 January 1931
| Ship launched = 29 October 1932
| Ship sponsor =
| Ship christened = 29 October 1932
| Ship completed = 1933
| Ship acquired =
| Ship commissioned =
| Ship recommissioned =
| Ship decommissioned =
| Ship maiden voyage = 29 May 1935{{sfn|Bathe|1972|p=236}}
| Ship in service = 1935–1942
| Ship out of service = 1942
| Ship renamed =
| Ship reclassified =
| Ship refit =
| Ship struck =
| Ship reinstated =
| Ship homeport =
| Ship identification = *[[Maritime call sign|Call sign]] FNSK<ref name=LR/>
*{{ICS|Foxtrot}}{{ICS|November}}{{ICS|Sierra}}{{ICS|Kilo}}
| Ship motto =
| Ship honours =
| Ship honors =
| Ship captured =
| Ship fate = Caught fire, capsized February 1942. Scrapped October 1946
| Ship badge =
}}
{{Infobox ship characteristics
| Hide header =
| Header caption =
| Ship type = [[Ocean liner]]
| Ship tonnage = *{{GRT|79280}} (1935–1936)
*{{GRT|83423}} (post-1936)
| Ship displacement = 68,350 tons (loaded)
| Ship length = *{{convert|1029|ft|m|1|abbr=on|order=flip}} [[Length overall|o/a]]
*{{convert|962|ft|m|1|abbr=on|order=flip}} [[Length between perpendiculars|p/p]]<ref name=LR/>
| Ship beam = *{{convert|117|ft|10|in|m|1|abbr=on|order=flip}};<ref name=LR/>
| Ship height = {{convert|184|ft|m|1|abbr=on|order=flip}}
| Ship draught = {{convert|36|ft|7|in|m|1|abbr=on|order=flip}} (loaded)
| Ship depth = {{convert|92|ft|m|1|abbr=on|order=flip}} to promenade (strength) deck
| Ship hold depth =
| Ship decks = 12
| Ship deck clearance =
| Ship ramps =
| Ship ice class =
| Ship power = Four [[turbo-electric transmission|turbo-electric]], total 160,000 hp (200,000 hp max).<ref>{{cite magazine |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=7CcDAAAAMBAJ&q=Popular+Science+1933+plane+%22Popular+Science%22&pg=PA16 |title=Latest Triumphs in Electric Ships |magazine=Popular Science |date=November 1933}}</ref>
| Ship propulsion = Four 3 bladed on launch – later 4 bladed
| Ship sail plan =
| Ship speed = *{{convert|29.5|kn|abbr=on}} designed
*{{convert|32.2|kn|abbr=on}} recorded on trials
| Ship range =
| Ship endurance =
| Ship test depth =
| Ship boats =
| Ship capacity = 1,972: 848 First Class (cabin), 670 Tourist Class, 454 Third Class
| Ship troops =
| Ship complement =
| Ship crew = 1,345
| Ship time to activate =
| Ship sensors =
| Ship EW =
| Ship armament =
| Ship armour =
| Ship notes =
}}
|}


'''SS ''Normandie''''' was a French [[ocean liner]] built in [[Saint-Nazaire]], France, for the French Line ''[[Compagnie Générale Transatlantique]]'' (CGT). She entered service in 1935 as the largest and fastest passenger ship afloat, [[transatlantic crossing|crossing the Atlantic]] in a record 4.14 days, and remains the most powerful steam [[Turbo-electric transmission|turbo-electric]]-propelled passenger ship ever built.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=46–47}}<ref>{{cite news |title=Colossus into Clyde |date=1 October 1934 |newspaper=[[Time (magazine)|Time]] |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,930557-2,00.html |access-date=19 November 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090125153510/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,930557-2,00.html |archive-date=25 January 2009}}</ref>
==Origin==


''Normandie''{{'}}s novel design and lavish interiors led many to consider her the greatest of ocean liners,{{sfn|Ardman|1985|p=2}}<ref name=palaces>''Floating Palaces.'' (1996) A&E. TV Documentary. Narrated by Fritz Weaver</ref> and she would go on to heavily influence the French arm of the [[Streamline Moderne]] design movement (called the ''style paquebot'', or "ocean liner style").{{citation needed|date=December 2021}} Despite this, she was not a commercial success and relied partly on government subsidy to operate.<ref name=palaces/> During service as the [[flagship]] of the CGT, she made 139 westbound [[transatlantic crossing]]s from her home port of [[Le Havre]] to New York City. ''Normandie'' held the [[Blue Riband]] for the fastest transatlantic crossing at several points during her service career, during which the {{RMS|Queen Mary}} was her main rival.
The beginnings of the ''Normandie'' can be traced to the [[Roaring Twenties]] when shipping companies started to look for new ships to replace the aging veterans, such as the ''[[RMS Mauretania (1906)|RMS Mauretania]]'' who had first sailed in 1907. Companies like as [[Cunard]] and [[White Star Line]] planned to build their own super-liners to rival the newer ships on the scene. These new ships included the record-breaking ''Bremen'' and ''Europa'', both German ships. The [[French Line]] was not to be left out of this new race and soon began to plan their own supership.


During the [[World War II|Second World War]], ''Normandie'' was seized by U.S. authorities at New York and renamed '''USS ''Lafayette'''''. In 1942, while being converted to a [[troopship]], the liner caught fire and capsized onto her [[port and starboard|port]] side and came to rest, half submerged, on the bottom of the [[Hudson River]] at Pier 88 (the site of the current [[Manhattan Cruise Terminal]]). Although salvaged at great expense, restoration was deemed too costly and she was scrapped in October 1946.{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|p=391}}
At first the plan was to construct a ship similar to [[French Line]] ships of the past, but instead the designers were approached by a man by the name of [[Vladimir Yourkevitch]], who had been a ship architect in the [[Imperial Russian Navy]] before the revolution and had emigrated to France. His ideas included a slanting clipper-like bow and the bulbous forefoot beneath the waterline in combination with a slim hull, a design which worked wonderfully in the scale model. The French engineers were impressed.


==Origins==
==Construction & Launch==
The origins of ''Normandie'' can be traced to the 1920s, when the U.S. put restrictions on immigration, greatly reducing the traditional market for steerage-class passengers from Europe, and placing a new emphasis on upper-class tourists, largely Americans, many of them wanting to escape prohibition.<ref name=palaces/> Companies like [[Cunard Line|Cunard]] and the [[White Star Line]] planned to build their own [[Superliner (passenger ship)|superliners]]{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|pp=268–269}} to rival newer ships of the day; such vessels included the record-breaking {{SS|Bremen|1928|2}} and {{SS|Europa|1930|2}}, both German.<ref name=palaces/> The French Line ''[[Compagnie Générale Transatlantique]]'' (CGT) began to plan its own superliner.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|p=36}}


[[Image:Normandie poster.jpg|thumb|left|upright=0.65|[[Adolphe Mouron Cassandre|Adolphe Cassandre]]'s famed 1935 depiction of the ''Normandie'']]
Work began on the ship (not yet named ''Normandie'') in January 1931 soon after the terrifying [[stock market crash]] of 1929. This was fortunate for the French because the [[White Star Line]]'s ship - started before the crash - had to be cancelled while the [[Cunard]] ship was put on hold, due to the financial problems that arose in the times following the crash. Soon the French builders had to ask the government for money to continue construction on the ship, which led people to ask why so much money was being spent on an [[ocean liner]]. Still, the building was followed heavily by newspapers and national interest was deep. Though she was designed to represent France in the nation-state contest of the great liners, and though she was built in a French shipyard, parts of her came from all over Europe. The ship's great [[rudder]] was built by [[Skoda Works]] in [[Czechoslovakia]]. The steering mechanism, including the [[teak]] wheel, came from [[Edinburgh]]. The most famous poster of the Normandie was made by [[Adolphe Mouron Cassandre]] who, like Yourkevitch, was a Russian emigrant to France.
The CGT's flagship was the {{SS|Ile de France|3=2}}, which had modern [[Art Deco]] interiors but a conservative hull design.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|p=36}} The designers intended their new superliner to be similar to earlier French Line ships. Then they were approached by [[Vladimir Yourkevitch]], a former ship architect for the [[Imperial Russian Navy]] who had emigrated to France after the [[Russian Revolution|1917 revolution]].{{sfn|Ardman|1985|p=36}} Yourkevitch's ideas included a slanting clipper-like bow and a [[Bulbous bow|bulbous forefoot]] beneath the waterline, in combination with a slim hydrodynamic hull. His concepts worked wonderfully in scale models, confirming the design's performance advantages.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=42–47}}{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|p=273}} The French engineers were convinced by Yourkevitch and asked him to join their project. He also approached Cunard with his ideas, but was rejected because the bow was deemed too radical.<ref name=palaces/>


The CGT commissioned artists to create posters and publicity for the liner. One of the most famous posters was by [[Adolphe Mouron Cassandre]], another Russian emigrant to France.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE5D91E3EF935A15755C0A96E948260|title=Antiques – A Proliferation of Poster Art|date=26 June 1988|newspaper=The New York Times|last=Reif|first=Rita|access-date=19 November 2008}}</ref> Another poster, by Albert Sébille, showed the interior layout in a cutaway diagram {{convert|15|ft|m|order=flip|round=0.5}} long. This poster is displayed in the ''[[Musée national de la Marine]]'' in Paris.{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|p=267}}
As construction went on, the growing hull in [[Saint-Nazaire]] had no name except for "T-6", the contract name. Many names were suggested including ''Doumer'', after the recently assassinated [[president]] [[Paul Doumer]]. Finally the name ''Normandie'' was decided upon after much speculation.


==Construction and launch==
On October 29th, 1932 - three years to the day from the [[stock market crash]] - the ''Normandie'' was launched in front of 200,000 spectators. The 27,567 ton hull that slid into the [[Loire River]] was the largest hull ever launched and it caused a large wave that crashed into a few hundred people, but with no injury. The ''Normandie'' was outfitted until early 1935, meaning all her interior, funnels, engines, etc. were put in to make her into a working vessel. Finally, in April, 1935 the ''Normandie'' was ready for her trials, which were watched by reporters. It was a great success and finally everyone could see [[Vladimir Yourkevitch]]'s design in action. Hardly a wave was created by the streamlined design and everyone was very impressed with the performance of the ship.
[[File:Yurkevich Normandia Model.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Vladimir Yourkevitch]] working on design of the ''Normandie'']]
[[File:Normandie-under-construction.jpg|thumb|left|''Normandie'' under construction, 1932]]
Work by the ''Société Anonyme des Chantiers de Penhoët'' began on the unnamed flagship on 26 January 1931 at [[Saint-Nazaire]], soon after the [[Wall Street Crash of 1929|stock market crash of 1929]]. While the French continued construction, the competing White Star Line's planned [[Oceanic (unfinished ship)|''Oceanic'']] which quickly cancelled and Cunard's {{RMS|Queen Mary}} which was put on hold.{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|pp=268–269}} French builders also ran into difficulty and had to ask for government money; this subsidy was questioned in the press. Still, the ship's construction was followed by newspapers and national interest was deep, as she was designed to represent France in the nation-state contest of the great liners and was built in a French shipyard using French parts.{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|pp=269–272}}


The growing hull in Saint-Nazaire had no formal designation except "T-6" ("T" for "Transat", an alternate name for the French Line, and "6" for "6th"), the contract name.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=fvEDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA881 "T-6 The Latest Giant Of The Sea"] ''Popular Mechanics'', December 1932</ref> Many names were suggested including ''Doumer'', after [[Paul Doumer]], the recently assassinated [[President of France]]; and originally, ''La Belle France.''{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|p=272}} Finally ''Normandie'' was chosen. In France, boat prefixes properly depend on the boat name's gender, but non-sailors mostly use the masculine form,{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|p=272}} inherited from the French terms for boat, which can be "''paquebot''", "''navire''", "''bateau''", or "''bâtiment''", but English speakers refer to boats as feminine ("she's a beauty") and the CGT carried many rich American customers. The CGT wrote that their boat was to be called simply "''Normandie''", preceded by neither "le" nor "la" (French masculine/feminine for "the") to avoid any confusion.{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|p=273}}
==Interior & Design==


[[Image:Forme Joubert - porte et usine de pompage.jpg|thumb|left|The [[Louis Joubert Lock|''Normandie'' drydock in St. Nazaire]] which was built specifically for the new ship.]]
The luxurious interiors of the ''Normandie'' were marvels of [[Art Deco]] and the [[Streamline Moderne]] style. Many of her sculptures and wall paintings made indirect or direct allusions to [[Normandy]], the province of France for which she was named. Drawings and photographs from the era show a series of vast public rooms of great elegance. The children's dining room was decorated by [[Jean de Brunhoff]], who covered the walls with [[Babar the Elephant]] and his ''entourage''. Indeed, the interior was quite dazzling but perhaps the most dazzling was the first class dining room. Three hundred and five feet long, 46 feet wide and 28 feet high, this was by far the largest room afloat. It could seat 700 diners at a time with 150 tables, serving them with some of the best meals in the world. This ship was a floating promotion of the most sophisticated [[French cuisine]] of the period. However due to the design of the ship, no natural lighting could get in. The designers illuminated the room with twelve tall pillars of [[Lalique]] glass and along the walls stood 38 columns equally bright. In addition, two chandeliers hung at each end of the room. From this gorgeous display of lights came the nickname "Ship of Light".
On 29 October 1932 – three years to the day after the stock market crash – ''Normandie'' was [[ceremonial ship launching|launched]] in front of two-hundred thousand spectators.{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|p=275}} The 27,567-ton hull that slid into the river [[Loire]] was the largest launched and the wave washed up the shoreline and over several hundred spectators, but with no injury.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=7, 17–20}} The ship was dedicated by Madame [[Marguerite Lebrun]], wife of [[Albert Lebrun]], the President of France. She was [[fitting-out|outfitted]] until early 1935, her interiors, funnels, engines, and other fittings put in to make her into a working vessel. Finally, in May 1935, ''Normandie'' was ready for trials, which were watched by reporters.{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|p=281}} The superiority of Yourkevitch's hull was visible; hardly a wave was created off the bulbous bow. The ship reached a top speed of {{convert|32.125|kn|km/h|abbr=on|1}}{{sfn|Ardman|1985|p=111}} and performed an emergency stop from that speed in {{convert|1700|m|ft|abbr=on|sp=us}}.


In addition to hull design which let her attain speed at far less power than other big liners,{{sfn|Ardman|1985|p=171}} ''Normandie'' had a [[turbo-electric transmission]], with turbo-generators and electric propulsion motors built by [[Alstom|Alsthom]] of [[Belfort]].<ref name=LR/> The CGT chose turbo-electric transmission for the ability not need to have astern turbines installed and the ability to use full power in reverse,{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=46–47}} and because, according to CGT officials, it was quieter and more easily controlled and maintained.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=46–47}} The engine installation was heavier than conventional turbines and slightly less efficient at high speed but allowed all propellers to operate even if one engine was not running. This system also made it possible to eliminate astern turbines.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=46–47}} An early form of [[radar]] was installed to prevent collisions.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|p=160}}<ref>{{cite magazine |page=844 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=x98DAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA844 |title=Radio Waves Warn of Obstacles in Path |magazine=Popular Mechanics |date=December 1935}}</ref> The rudder frame, including the 125-ton cast steel connecting rod, was produced by [[Škoda Works]] in [[Czechoslovakia]].
A popular feature was a cafe which led to the grand salon, one of the most popular rooms onboard which would be transformed into a nightclub during voyages. In addition, the ''Normandie'' boasted both an indoor and outdoor pool (the second ship to have one, after the Italian liner ''[[SS Rex|Rex]]''), a chapel and a theater which could function as both a stage and cinema.


''Normandie'' had a significant cost. By the time of her maiden voyage, she had cost 812 million francs, then equal to $53.5 million (equivalent to ${{Inflation|US|53.5|1935|r=2}}&nbsp;million in {{Inflation/year|US}}).<ref>{{Cite web |date=2020-05-07 |title=The SS Normandie – A True Monarch of the Seas {{!}} The Shipyard |url=https://www.theshipyardblog.com/the-ss-normandie-a-true-monarch-of-the-seas/ |access-date=2024-04-08 |language=en-US}}</ref>
The interiors were filled with long perspectives and spectacular entryways such as long, wide staircases in order to give a suitable frame to the many upper middle class ladies who saw an Atlantic crossing as a way to show off their clothes and jewels, and sometimes their husbands.


==Interior==
In addition to a novel hull shape which made it possible for her to attain her great speed at lesser power expenditure than that of the other big liners, the ''Normandie'' was filled with technical feats. She had turbo-electric engines which eliminated the massive gearing of other liners and made control and maintenance much easier. The machinery of the top deck and forecastle, normally an eyesore or an annoyance for passengers on the other liners, had been integrated within the ship, concealing it completely and releasing nearly all of the exposed deck space for the passengers' use. An early form of [[radar]] was installed to detect icebergs and other ships. She was the first liner to have a gyroscopic compass system.
''Normandie''{{'}}s luxurious interiors were designed in [[Art Deco|Art Déco]] and [[Streamline Moderne]] style by architect [[Pierre Patout]], one of the founders of the [[Art Deco]] style.<ref>Oudin, Bernard. ''Dictionnaire des Architectes'', Sechiers, Paris, (1994), (in French), page 372.</ref> Many sculptures and wall paintings made allusions to [[Normandy]], the province of France for which the ship was named.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|p=80}} Drawings and photographs show a series of vast public rooms of great elegance. Her voluminous interior spaces were made possible by having the funnel uptakes split to pass along the sides of the ship, rather than straight upward.{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|p=275}} French architect [[Roger-Henri Expert]] was in charge of the overall decorative scheme.<ref>{{cite news |newspaper=[[The New York Times]] |title=Art Deco Relics of the ''Normandie'' |first=Wendy |last=Moonan |date=17 June 2005 |url= https://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/17/arts/design/17anti.html}}</ref>

Most of the public space was devoted to first-class passengers, including the dining room, first-class lounge, grill room, first-class swimming pool, theatre and [[winter garden]]. The first-class swimming pool featured staggered depths, with a shallow training beach for children.{{sfn|Maddocks|1978|pp=80–83}} The children's dining room was decorated by [[Jean de Brunhoff]], who covered the walls with [[Babar the Elephant]] and his ''entourage''.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Jean de Brunhof and Babar the Elephant |date=2004-12-10 |last=Cech |first=John |website=Recess! |url= http://www.recess.ufl.edu/transcripts/2004/1210.shtml |access-date=19 November 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080513141620/http://www.recess.ufl.edu/transcripts/2004/1210.shtml |archive-date=2008-05-13}}</ref>{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|p=372}}

The interiors were filled with grand perspectives, spectacular entryways, and long, wide staircases. First-class suites were given unique designs by select designers. The most luxurious accommodations were the Deauville and Trouville apartments,{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|p=279}} featuring dining rooms, baby grand pianos, multiple bedrooms, and private decks.{{sfn|Maddocks|1978|pp=80–83}}

[[File:SS Normandie (ship, 1935) interior.jpg|thumb|left|''Normandie'''s main dining room, decorated with [[Lalique]] glass and compared to the [[Hall of Mirrors (Palace of Versailles)|Hall of Mirrors]] at [[Palace of Versailles|Versailles]].]]
''Normandie''{{'}}s first-class dining hall was the largest room afloat. At {{convert|305|ft|m|order=flip|abbr=on}}, it was longer than the [[Hall of Mirrors (Palace of Versailles)|Hall of Mirrors]] at the [[Palace of Versailles]],{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=86–87}}{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|p=276}} {{convert|46|ft|m|order=flip|abbr=on}} wide, and {{convert|28|ft|m|order=flip|abbr=on}} high. Passengers entered through {{convert|20|ft|m|adj=mid|-tall|0|order=flip|spell=in}} doors adorned with bronze medallions by artist Raymond Subes.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=85–86}} The room could seat 700 at 157 tables,{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=86–87}} with ''Normandie'' serving as a floating promotion for the most sophisticated [[French cuisine]] of the period. As no natural light could enter{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=86–87}} it was illuminated by twelve tall pillars of [[Lalique]] glass flanked by 38 matching columns along the walls.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=86–87}} These, with chandeliers hung at each end of the room, earned the ''Normandie'' the nickname "Ship of Light"{{sfn|Maddocks|1978|pp=80–83}} (similar to Paris as the "City of Light").

A popular feature was the café grill, which would be transformed into a [[nightclub]].{{sfn|Ardman|1985|p=88}} Adjoining the café grill was the first-class smoking room, which was paneled in large murals depicting [[ancient Egypt]]ian life. The ship also had indoor and outdoor pools, a chapel, and a theatre which could double as a stage and cinema.{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|p=276}}{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=91–92}}

The machinery of ''Normandie''{{'}}s top deck and [[forecastle]] was integrated within the ship, concealing it and releasing nearly all the exposed deck space for passengers. As such it was the only ocean liner to have a regulation-sized open air [[tennis court]] on board.<ref>{{cite book|title=Luxury Liners Life on Board | author=Catherine Donzel |year=2006 | publisher=Harry Abrams | pages=109–111}}</ref> The air conditioner units were concealed along with the kennels inside the third, dummy, funnel.{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|pp=273–275}}


==Career==
==Career==
[[File:StateLibQld 1 144451 Normandie (ship).jpg|left|thumb|234x234px|The maiden voyage of SS ''Normandie'']]
{{multiple image |direction=vertical |align=right
|image1=SS Normandie Maiden Voyage NY arrival.jpg
|caption1=The triumphant arrival of ''Normandie'' in [[New York Harbor]] in June 1935 on her maiden voyage.
|image2=SS Normandie.jpg
|caption2=''Normandie'' at sea}}
[[File:Le Havre, Normandia, França, Arquivo de Villa Maria, ilha Terceira, Açores.jpg|thumb|225x225px|Postcard of the ''Normandie'']]
''Normandie''{{'}}s maiden voyage was on 29 May 1935. At Le Havre she took aboard 812 Passengers: 467 First Class Passengers, 244 Tourist Class and 101 Third Class. 50,000 people saw her off at Le Havre on what was hoped would be a record-breaking crossing. At Southampton she took aboard an additional 195 Passengers: 122 First Class Passengers, 53 Tourist Class and 20 Third Class. Her combined total was 1,007 passengers. First Class was booked at two-thirds capacity with 589, Tourist Class was half booked at 293, while Third Class was at less than a quarter capacity with only 121.<ref>New York Passenger and Crew Lists, 1820-1957</ref>


The maiden voyage came on May 29th, 1935 after more fitting out and final touches. Fifty thousand people came to [[Le Havre]] to see the large ship off, on what was hoped would be a record-breaking crossing. And indeed it was. The ''Normandie'' reached New York after just four days, three hours and fourteen minutes thus snatching away the [[Blue Riband]] from the Italian liner ''[[SS Rex|Rex]]''. This prize was a source of great pride for the French. They had watched other countries gain this prestigious award year after year but had never had it themselves, until the ''Normandie''. Her average speed on the maiden voyage was around 30 knots and on the eastbound crossing to [[France]] she averaged over 30 knots, shattering records on the way.
She reached New York City after four days, three hours and two minutes, taking away the [[Blue Riband]] from the Italian liner {{SS|Rex|3=2}}.{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|p=284}} This brought great pride for the French, who had not won the distinction before. Under the command of Captain René Pugnet, ''Normandie''{{'}}s average on the maiden voyage was {{convert|29.98|kn}} and on the eastbound crossing to France, she averaged over {{convert|30|kn}}, breaking records in both directions.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|p=147}}
[[File:Le Havre, França, Normandie en mer, princípio do séc. XX, França, Arquivo de Villa Maria, Angra do Heroísmo, Açores..jpg|left|thumb|Postcard of SS ''Normandie'']]
During the maiden voyage, the CGT refused to predict that their ship would win the Blue Riband.<ref name="palaces" /> However, by the time the ship reached New York, medallions of the Blue Riband victory, made in France, were delivered to passengers and the ship flew a {{convert|30|ft|m|0|adj=mid|-long|order=flip}} blue [[Pennant (commissioning)|pennant]].<ref name="palaces" />{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|p=284}} An estimated 100,000 spectators lined [[New York Harbor]] for ''Normandie''{{'}}s arrival.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|p=137}} All passengers were presented with a medal celebrating the occasion on behalf of the CGT.
[[File:NORMANDIE - Sjöhistoriska museet - Fo216301 (page 1 crop).tiff|left|thumb|SS ''Normandie'' in the seas]]
{{multiple image |direction=vertical |align=left |title=Cunard contemporary rival
|image1=StateLibQld 1 171411 Queen Mary (ship).jpg
|caption1={{RMS|Queen Mary}}
}}
''Normandie'' had a successful year but ''Queen Mary'', [[Cunard Line|Cunard White Star Line]]'s superliner, entered service in May 1936. At 80,774 gross registered tons, she was larger than ''Normandie's'' 79,280 gross registered tons, and captured the title of the world's largest passenger ship.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=166–170}} In response, CGT increased ''Normandie''{{'}}s size, mainly through the addition of an enclosed tourist lounge on the aft boat deck. Following these and other alterations, she measured 83,423 [[gross register tonnage|GRT]].{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=166–170}} When the ''Normandie'' reentered service, she exceeded ''Queen Mary'' by 2,000 tons, reclaiming the title of world's largest ship.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=166–170}} ''Normandie'' retained the title until Cunard White Star Line's [[RMS Queen Elizabeth]] at 83,673 gross registered tons formally entered service in 1946.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|p=221}}


On 22 June 1936, a [[Blackburn Baffin]], [[United Kingdom military aircraft serials|''S5162'']] of A Flight, [[HMS Sultan (shore establishment)|RAF Gosport]], flown by Lt Guy Kennedy Horsey on torpedo-dropping practice, buzzed ''Normandie'' {{convert|1|nmi|km|0|spell=on|order=flip|abbr=off}} off [[Ryde Pier]] and collided with a [[derrick]] which was transferring a motor car belonging to [[Arthur Evans (politician)|Arthur Evans]], [[Member of Parliament|MP]], onto a [[barge]] alongside the ship. The aircraft crashed onto ''Normandie{{'}}''s bow. The pilot was taken off by tender, but the wreckage of the aircraft remained on board ''Normandie'' as she had to sail due to the tide. It was carried to Le Havre. A salvage team from the [[Royal Air Force]] later removed the wreckage. Horsey was [[court-martial]]led and found guilty on two charges, and Evans' car was wrecked in the accident.<ref name=Aeroplane>{{cite magazine |last1=Hooks |first1=Mike |year=2010 |title=Buzzing the ''Normandie'' |magazine=Aeroplane |publisher=IPC Media |issue=November 2010 |page=60}}</ref><ref name=Hansard>{{cite web |url=https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/commons/1936/jun/23/royal-air-force-accident-solent#S5CV0313P0_19360623_HOC_237|title=ROYAL AIR FORCE (ACCIDENT, SOLENT). |work=[[Hansard|Parliamentary Debates (Hansard)]] |date=23 June 1936|access-date=13 October 2010}}</ref>
With the [[Blue Riband]] hers, the ''Normandie'' had a successful year but come 1936 a new ship was on the scene. The ''[[RMS Queen Mary]]'', [[Cunard]]'s superliner entered service in the summer of 1936. They had announced the ''Queen Mary'' would surpass 80,000 tons. At 79,280 gross tons, the Normandie would in that case lose the prestigious title of being the world’s largest liner to her British rival. Therefore, the French Line decided to increase the Normandie’s size, mainly through the addition of an enclosed tourist lounge on the aft boat deck. Following these and a few other alterations, the Normandie was re-measured at 83,423 gross tons. Exceeding the Queen Mary by some 2,000 tons, she would remain the world’s largest. However in August of that year, the ''Queen Mary'' stole the [[Blue Riband]] from the ''Normandie'' averaging 30.14 knots, thus starting a fierce rivalry.


In July of 1937 the ''Normandie'' regained the Blue Riband once more, but the ''Queen Mary'' took it back the next year. After this the captain of the ''Normandie'' sent a message to the British liner saying "Bravo to the ''Queen Mary'' until next time!" This rivalry could have gone on into the 1940s but was unfortunately put to a halt due to [[World War II]], proving that there would be no next time.
In August 1936, ''Queen Mary'' captured the Blue Riband, averaging {{convert|30.14|kn}}, starting a fierce rivalry.<ref name=palaces/> To recapture the speed record, CGT modified ''Normandie'' to reduce vibration and increase her speed. CGT replaced her three-bladed propellers with four-bladed ones, and made structural modifications to her lower aft section. These modifications reduced vibration at speed.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=172–173}}{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|pp=286–287}} In July 1937, she regained the Blue Riband, but ''Queen Mary'' took it back in 1938. After this, the captain of ''Normandie'' sent a message: "Bravo to the ''Queen Mary'' until next time!" This rivalry could have gone on into the 1940s, but was ended by the [[World War II|Second World War]].


''Normandie'' carried distinguished passengers, including the authors [[Colette]] and [[Ernest Hemingway]];{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=325–326}} the wife of French President [[Albert Lebrun]];{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|p=284}} songwriters [[Noël Coward]] and [[Irving Berlin]]; and Hollywood celebrities such as [[Fred Astaire]], [[Marlene Dietrich]], [[Walt Disney]], [[Douglas Fairbanks, Jr]], conductor [[Arturo Toscanini]] and [[James Stewart]].{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=147, 184–185, 205, 218, 238}} She also carried the [[Georg Ludwig von Trapp|von Trapp family singers]] of ''[[The Sound of Music]]'' from New York to [[Southampton]] in 1938, and from Southampton, the family went to Scandinavia for a tour before returning to the United States.
==Demise==


==Planned running mate – SS ''Bretagne''==
The outbreak of war found the ''Normandie'' in New York Harbor. Soon the ''Queen Mary'' docked near the ''Normandie''. She would later be refitted to become a troop ship. In addition, the newly launched ''Queen Elizabeth'' docked nearby, so for a time the three largest liners in the world were docked side by side. Soon the Queens left and ''Normandie'' was left alone. In 1940 after the [[Fall of France]], the [[United States]] seized the ship.
While ''Normandie'' rarely was occupied at over 60% of her capacity, her finances were such that she did not require government subsidies every year. She never repaid any of the loans that made her construction possible. The CGT considered a sister ship, SS ''Bretagne'', which was to be longer and larger. There were two competing designs for this ship {{ndash}} one conservative, one radical. The conservative design was essentially ''Normandie'' with two funnels, possibly larger as well. The radical one was from ''Normandie''{{'}}s designer, Vladimir Yourkevitch, and was super-streamlined with twin, side-by-side funnels just aft of the bridge. The more conservative design won, but the outbreak of the war halted the plan indefinitely.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=237, 423}}{{sfn|Williams|De Kerbrech|1982|p=}}{{page needed|date=August 2021}}


==Popularity==
By 1941 the United States Navy decided to convert the ''Normandie'' into a [[troopship]], the aptly named USS ''[[Marquis de Lafayette|Lafayette]]''. The ship was moored at Manhattan's Pier 88 for the conversion. On 9 February 1942, sparks from a welding torch ignited a stack of thousands of lifevests filled with [[kapok]], a highly flammable material, that had been stored in the first class dining room. The woodwork had not yet been removed, and the fire spread rapidly. The ship had a very efficient fire protection system, but it had been disconnected during the conversion. All on board fled the ship. As firefighters on shore and in fireboats poured water on the blaze, the ship developed a dangerous list to port. About 2:45 a.m. on 10 February, the ''Normandie'' [[capsize|capsized]], crushing a fireboat. A shot of the capsized ship makes a brief [[cameo appearance]] towards the end of [[Alfred Hitchcock]]'s film [[Saboteur (film)|Saboteur]].
Although ''Normandie'' was a critical success in her design and decor, ultimately North Atlantic passengers flocked to the more traditional ''Queen Mary''. Two of the ship's greatest attributes, in reality, turned out to be two of her biggest faults.


[[File:Jeton du paquebot Normandie, 1930-1940.jpg|thumb|''Normandie'' depicted on a token]]
The ship was righted in 1943 by the world's most expensive salvage operation, but it was subsequently determined that the cost of restoring the liner was too great. After neither the US Navy nor the French Line offered to restore the liner, the ship's designer, Vladimir Yourkevitch, made a last-ditch proposal to cut the ship down and restore her as a mid-sized passenger liner. This, too, failed to draw backing, and the former ''Normandie'' was sold to [[Lipsett]] Inc. and scrapped in 1947.
[[File:Luftaufnahme der Normandie.jpg|thumb|left|upright|Overhead view of ''Normandie'' at sea]]
Part of ''Normandie''{{'}}s problem lay in the fact that the majority of her passenger space was devoted solely to first class, which could carry up to 848 people. Less space and consideration were given to second and tourist class, which numbered only 670 and 454 passengers respectively. As a result, the consensus among North Atlantic passengers was that she was primarily a ship for the rich and famous. In contrast, in ''Queen Mary'', Cunard White Star had placed just as much emphasis on décor, space, and accommodation in second and tourist class as in first class. Thus ''Queen Mary'' accommodated American tourists, who had become numerous in the 1920s and 1930s. Many of these passengers could not afford first-class passage yet wanted to travel with much of the same comfort as that experienced in first. As a result, second and tourist class became a major cash source for shipping companies at that time. ''Queen Mary'' would accommodate these trends and subsequently the liner achieved greater popularity among North Atlantic travellers during the late thirties.<ref name="thegreatoceanliners.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.thegreatoceanliners.com/normandie2.html|title=TGOL – Normandie|website=thegreatoceanliners.com|access-date=9 September 2009|archive-date=21 July 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160721130024/http://www.thegreatoceanliners.com/normandie2.html|url-status=dead}}</ref>


Another of the CGT's greatest triumphs also turned out to be one of ''Normandie''{{'}}s greatest flaws: her décor. The ship's slick and modern Art Deco interiors proved to be somewhat intimidating and uncomfortable for her travellers, with some claiming that interiors gave them headaches. It was also here that ''Queen Mary'' triumphed over her French rival. Although also decorated in an Art Deco style, ''Queen Mary'' was more restrained in her appointments and was not as radical as ''Normandie'', and proved ultimately to be more popular with travellers.<ref name="thegreatoceanliners.com"/>
==Influences==


[[File:SS Normandie in NYC Harbor at Pier.jpg|thumb|''Normandie'' at C.G.T.'s pier 88 in New York]]
The SS Normandie inspired the architecture and design of the [[Normandie Hotel]] in [[San Juan, Puerto Rico]]. It was designed by [[Félix Benítez]], a Puerto Rican engineer as a tribute to his French wife, Moineau, whom he met aboard the French ocean liner (see [[Normandie Hotel]].)
As a result, ''Normandie'' at many times throughout her service history carried less than half her full complement of passengers. Her German rivals ''Bremen'' and ''Europa'', and Italian rivals ''Rex'' and {{SS|Conte di Savoia||2}} also suffered from this problem; despite their innovative designs and luxurious interiors, they made little profit for their respective companies. Contributing to this were international boycotts against [[Nazi Germany|Germany]] and [[Fascist Italy (1922–1943)|Italy]] as the European geopolitical situation deteriorated through the 1930s. The Italian liners relied heavily on government subsidies, while the German Lloyd liners never received funding. In comparison, ''Normandie'' did not require government subsidies in service, with her income covering not only her operating expenses but generating revenue of 158,000,000 [[franc]]s.


In contrast, Cunard White Star's ''[[MV Britannic (1929)|Britannic III]]'', ''[[MV Georgic (1931)|Georgic II]]'', and much older ''[[RMS Aquitania|Aquitania]]'', along with the [[Holland America Line]]'s {{SS|Nieuw Amsterdam|1937|3=6}}, were among the few North Atlantic liners to make a profit, carrying the lion's share of passengers in the years preceding the Second World War.
==Views of the SS Normandie==


==World War II==
[[Image:SS-Normandie side01 NYC.jpg|thumb|550px|center|The streamlined profile of the ''Normandie''.]]
[[File:The three largest ships in the world, New York, 1940 - photographic postcard (3796186285).jpg|thumb|right|''Normandie'', ''Queen Mary'' and ''Queen Elizabeth'' in New York Harbor in 1940|300px]]
The outbreak of the war found ''Normandie'' in New York Harbor. Looming hostilities in Europe had compelled ''Normandie'' to seek haven in the U.S. The federal government [[Internment|interned]] her on 3 September 1939, the same day France declared war on Germany. Soon ''Queen Mary'', later refitted as a [[troopship]], moored nearby. Then, two weeks later, ''Queen Elizabeth'' joined ''Queen Mary''. For five months, the three largest liners in the world were tied up side by side.{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|pp=360–361}} ''Normandie'' remained in French hands, with French crewmembers on board, led by Captain Hervé Lehuédé, into the spring of 1940.


On 15 May 1940, during the [[Battle of France]], the [[United States Department of the Treasury|U.S. Treasury Department]] detailed about 150 agents of the [[United States Coast Guard]] (USCG) to go aboard the ship and Manhattan's [[New York Passenger Ship Terminal|Pier 88]] to defend it against possible [[sabotage]]. (At the time, U.S. law mandated the Coast Guard as part of the Treasury during peacetime.) When the USCG became a part of the [[United States Navy]] on 1 November 1941, ''Normandie''{{'}}s USCG detail remained intact, mainly observing while the French crew maintained the vessel's boilers, machinery, and other equipment, including the fire-watch system. On 12 December 1941, five days after the [[attack on Pearl Harbor]], the USCG removed Captain Lehuédé and his crew and took possession of ''Normandie'' under the right of [[angary]], maintaining steam in the boilers and other activities on the idled vessel. However, the elaborate fire-watch system which ensured that any fire would be suppressed before it became a danger was abandoned.{{sfn|Braynard|1987|p=87}}
[[Image:Ssnormandie sideelevation NYC.png|thumb|550px|center|Side elevation and cutaway, revealing the vast amount of internal space devoted to the ''Normandie'''s public rooms]]


===''Lafayette'' conversion===
==Photo model boat SS Normandie 1935==
[[File:SS Normandie docked at Pier 88, New York city (USA), 20 August 1941 (80-G-410223).jpg|thumb|''Normandie'' docked in New York Harbor at Pier 88, site of attempted troopship conversion.]]
On 20 December 1941, the Auxiliary Vessels Board officially recorded [[President of the United States|President]] [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]]'s approval of ''Normandie'''s transfer to the U.S. Navy. Plans called for the vessel to be turned into a troopship ("convoy unit loaded transport"). The Navy renamed her USS ''Lafayette'', in honor of both [[Marquis de la Fayette]], the French general who fought on the [[Colonial history of the United States|Colonies]]' behalf in the [[American Revolution]], and the alliance with France that made American independence possible. The name was a suggestion of J. P. "Jim" Warburg, advisory assistant to Colonel [[William J. Donovan]], [[Coordinator of Information]], which was passed through multiple channels including [[Secretary of the Navy]] [[Frank Knox]]; Admiral [[Harold R. Stark]], [[Chief of Naval Operations]] (CNO); and Rear Adm. Randall Jacobs, Chief of the [[Bureau of Navigation]]. The name ''La Fayette'' (later universally and unofficially contracted to ''Lafayette'') was officially approved by the Secretary of the Navy on 31 December 1941, with the vessel classified as a transport, AP-53.


Earlier proposals included turning ''Lafayette'' into an [[aircraft carrier]], but this was dropped in favor of immediate troop transport.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=274–276}} The ship remained moored at Pier 88 for the conversion. A contract for her conversion to a troop transport was awarded to Robins Dry Dock and Repair Co., a subsidiary of [[Vigor Shipyards|Todd Shipyards]], on 27 December 1941. On that date, Capt. Clayton M. Simmers, the 3rd Naval District Materiel Officer, reported to the Bureau of Ships (BuShips) his estimate that the conversion work could be completed by 31 January 1942, and planning for the work proceeded on that basis.


Capt. Robert G. Coman reported as ''Lafayette'''s prospective commanding officer on 31 January 1942, overseeing a [[skeleton crew|skeleton]] engineering force numbering 458 men. The complicated nature and enormous size of the conversion effort prevented Coman's crew from adhering to the original schedule; crew familiarization with the vessel was an issue, and additional crew members were arriving to assist the effort. On 6 February 1942, a request for a two-week delay for the first sailing of ''Lafayette'', originally scheduled for 14 February, was submitted to the Assistant Chief of Naval Operations. On that day, a schedule extension was granted due to a design plan change: elements of the superstructure were to be removed to improve stability, in work that was expected to take another 60 to 90 days. However, on 7 February, orders came from [[Washington, D.C.|Washington]] that the reduction of the top-hamper had been abandoned and ''Lafayette'' was to sail on 14 February as planned. This abrupt reversal necessitated a frantic resumption of conversion work, and captains Coman and Simmers scheduled 9 February{{clarify|date=December 2012}} meetings in New York and Washington to lobby for further clarification of conversion plans; ultimately, these meetings would never take place.
1500 passengers of the SS Normandie get a gift a model boat of SS Normandie.


===Fire and capsizing===
[[Image:Normandie fire.jpg|thumb|''Lafayette'' (AP-53) afire at New York Harbor on 9 February 1942]]
At 14:30 on 9 February 1942, sparks from a [[welding torch]] used by workman Clement Derrick ignited a stack of life vests filled with flammable [[Ceiba pentandra|kapok]] that had been stored in ''Lafayette''{{'}}s first-class lounge.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|p=299}}{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|pp=367–368}} The flammable varnished woodwork had not yet been removed, and the fire spread rapidly. The ship had a very efficient fire protection system, but it had been disconnected during the conversion and its internal pumping system was deactivated.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=272, 304–314}} The [[New York City Fire Department]]'s hoses did not fit the ship's French inlets. Before the fire department arrived, approximately 15 minutes after fire broke out, all onboard crew were using manual means in a vain attempt to stop the blaze. A strong northwesterly wind blowing over ''Lafayette''{{'}}s [[port and starboard|port]] quarter swept the blaze forward, eventually consuming the three upper decks of the ship within an hour of the start of the conflagration. Capt. Coman, along with Capt. Simmers, arrived about 15:25 to see his huge prospective command in flames.


[[File:Normandie capsized (LIFE).jpg|left|thumb|USS ''Lafayette'' capsized in New York Harbor]]
<!-- Unsourced image removed: [[Image:Paquebot_Normandie 1935.jpg|thumb|550px|center|Making the model boat, right : Normandie, left : Queen Mary]] -->
As firefighters on shore and in fire boats poured water on the blaze, ''Lafayette'' developed a dangerous [[angle of list|list]] to port due to water pumped into the seaward side by fireboats. [[Vladimir Yourkevitch]], the ship's designer, arrived at the scene to offer expertise but was barred by harbor police.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=325–326}}{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|pp=373–374}} Yourkevitch's suggestion was to enter the vessel and open the sea-cocks. This would flood the lower decks and make her settle the few feet to the bottom. With the ship stabilised, water could be pumped into burning areas without the risk of [[capsizing]]. The suggestion was rejected by the commander of the [[3rd Naval District]], Rear Admiral [[Adolphus Andrews]].


Between 17:45 and 18:00 on 9 February 1942, authorities considered the fire under control and began winding down operations until 20:00. Water entering ''Lafayette'' through submerged openings and flowing to the lower decks negated efforts to counter-flood, and her list to port gradually increased. Shortly after midnight, Rear Adm. Andrews ordered ''Lafayette'' abandoned. The ship continued to list, a process hastened by the 6,000 tons of water that had been sprayed on her. New York fire officials were concerned that the fire could spread to the nearby buildings. ''Lafayette'' eventually capsized during the mid watch (02:45) on 10 February, nearly crushing a fire boat, and came to rest on her port side at an angle of approximately 80 degrees. Recognising that his incompetence had caused the disaster, Rear Adm. Andrews ordered all pressmen barred from viewing the moment of capsize in an effort to lower the level of publicity.{{sfn|Braynard|1987|p=97}}


[[Image:USS Lafayette 1942.jpg|thumb|''Normandie'', renamed USS ''Lafayette'', lies capsized in the frozen mud of her New York pier in the winter of 1942]]
<!-- Unsourced image removed: [[Image:Paquebot_Normandie_backside 1935.jpg|thumb|550px|center|Back side of the photo]] -->
One man died in the incident – Frank "Trent" Trentacosta, 36, of [[Brooklyn, New York|Brooklyn]], a member of the fire watch. Some 94 USCG and Navy sailors, including some from ''Lafayette'''s pre-commissioning crew and men assigned to the receiving ship ''[[USS Washington (ACR-11)|Seattle]]'', 38 fire fighters, and 153 civilians, were treated for various injuries, burns, [[smoke inhalation]], and exposure.


====''Saboteur'' (film)====
==External links==
The ruined ''Lafayette'' after the fire can be seen briefly in the film ''[[Saboteur (film)|Saboteur]]'' (1942). The ship is not identified in the film, but the antagonist smiles when he sees it, suggesting that he was responsible. The film's director, [[Alfred Hitchcock]], later said that "the Navy raised hell" about the implication that their security was so poor.{{sfn|Spoto|1999|p=[https://archive.org/details/darksideofgenius00spot_0/page/253 253]}}
*Website of Normandie Hotel [http://www.normandiepr.com/]


===Investigation and salvage===
== References ==
{{See also|Operation Underworld}}
* Ardman, Harvey. "Normandie, Her Life and Times," New York, Franklin Watts, 1985
[[File:J4F Widgeon flies over wreck of Lafayette in New York 1943.jpg|thumb|[[United States Coast Guard|U.S. Coast Guard]] [[Grumman G-44 Widgeon|Grumman Widgeon]] flies over wreck of ''Lafayette'' in New York 1943]]
* Brinnin, John Malcolm. ''The Sway of the Grand Saloon : a Social History of the North Atlantic''. New York : Delacorte Press, 1971
Enemy sabotage was widely suspected, but a congressional investigation in the wake of the sinking, chaired by [[United States Representative|Representative]] [[Patrick Henry Drewry]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|D]]-[[Virginia]]), concluded that the fire was accidental.{{sfn|Ardman|1985 |}}{{page needed|date=July 2022}}{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972}}{{Page needed|date=August 2023}} The investigation found evidence of carelessness, rule violations, lack of coordination between the various parties on board, lack of clear [[command structure]] during the fire, and a hasty, poorly-planned conversion effort.
* Coleman, Terry. ''The liners : a history of the North Atlantic crossing''. Harmondsworth, England : Penguin Books, 1977

* Fox, Robert. ''Liners: The Golden Age. Die Grosse Zeit der Ozeanriesen. L'Age d'or des paquebots''.[trilingual text ] Cologne: Konneman, 1999.
Members of [[organized crime]] retrospectively claimed that they had sabotaged the vessel. It was alleged that [[arson]] had been organized by mobster [[Anthony Anastasio]], who was a power in the local longshoremen's [[labor union|union]], to provide [[Leverage (negotiation)|leverage]] for the release of mob boss [[Charles Luciano|Charles "Lucky" Luciano]] from prison. Luciano's end of the bargain would be to ensure that there would be no further "enemy" sabotage in the ports where the mob had strong influence with the unions.{{efn|The suggestion that the fire was caused by arson comes from [[Meyer Lansky]] and Luciano themselves.{{sfn|Bondanella|2004|p=[https://archive.org/details/hollywooditalian00bond/page/200 200]}}{{sfn|Gosch|Hammer|1974|pp=260–262}}}}
* Kludas, Arnold. ''Record breakers of the North Atlantic - Blue Riband Liners 1838-1952'', Chatham Publishing, London, 2000.

* Maddocks, Melvin ''The Great Liners''. Alexandria, Virginia: Time-Life Books, 1978.
In one of the largest and most expensive [[Marine salvage|salvage operations]] of its kind, estimated at $5{{nbs}}million at the time (equivalent to ${{Inflation|US|5|1943}}{{nbs}}million in {{Inflation/year|US}}), the ship was stripped of superstructure and righted on 7 August 1943.{{sfn|Schenk|2013|p=}}{{page needed|date=August 2021}} She was renamed ''Lafayette'' and reclassified as an aircraft and transport ferry, APV-4, on 15 September 1943 and placed in [[drydock]] the following month. However, extensive damage to her hull, deterioration of her machinery, and the necessity for employing manpower on other more critical war projects prevented resumption of the conversion program, with the cost of restoring her determined to be too great. Her hulk remained in the Navy's custody through the end of the war.
* Maxtone-Graham, John. ''The Only Way to Cross''. New York: Collier Boooks, 1972.

* Boks, W. Holland: photo of the model boat SS Normandie 1935.
''Lafayette'' was stricken from the [[Naval Vessel Register]] on 11 October 1945 without having ever sailed under the U.S. flag. President [[Harry Truman]] authorized her disposal in an Executive Order on 8 September 1946, and she was sold as scrap on 3 October 1946 to Lipsett, Inc., an American salvage company based in New York City, for [[United States dollar|US$]]161,680 (approx. $1,997,000 in 2017 value). After neither the Navy nor French Line offered a plan to salvage her, Yourkevitch, the ship's original designer, proposed to cut the ship down and restore her as a mid-sized liner.{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|p=392}} This plan also failed to draw backing. She was sent for scrapping beginning in October 1946{{sfn|Maxtone-Graham|1972|p=391}} at [[Port Newark, New Jersey|Port Newark]], [[New Jersey]], and completely scrapped by 31 December 1948.

==Legacy==
The silhouette of ''Normandie'' influenced ocean liners over the decades, including ''[[Queen Mary 2]]''.{{cn|date=September 2023}} The ambience of classic transatlantic liners like ''Normandie'' and ''Queen Mary'' was the source of inspiration for [[Disney Cruise Line]]'s matching vessels, ''[[Disney Magic]],'' ''[[Disney Wonder]]'', ''[[Disney Dream]]'', and ''[[Disney Fantasy]]''.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.britishdesigninnovation.org/index.php?page=newsservice/view&news_id=2431 |title=Imagination Creates Atmosphere on Disney Wonder, UK |date=27 May 2003 |publisher=British Design Innovation |access-date=22 November 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090529054916/http://www.britishdesigninnovation.org/index.php?page=newsservice/view&news_id=2431 |archive-date=2009-05-29}}</ref>

[[Image:San Juan, PR 05.jpg|thumb|The [[Normandie Hotel]] in San Juan, Puerto Rico]]
''Normandie'' also inspired the architecture and design of the [[Normandie Hotel]] in [[San Juan, Puerto Rico|San Juan]], [[Puerto Rico]]. The hotel's roof sign is one of the two signs that adorned the top deck of ''Normandie'' but were removed from it during an early refitting. It also inspired the nickname 'The Normandie' given to the [[Wukang Mansion|International Savings Society Apartments]] in [[Shanghai]], one of the most fashionable residential buildings during the city's pre-revolutionary heyday and home to several stars of China's mid-20th century film industry.{{citation needed|date=June 2022}} ''Normandie''{{`s}} name also may have inspired that of [[The Normandy]] apartment building in New York City.<ref>{{cite book |last=Ruttenbaum |first=Steven |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ssZPAAAAMAAJ |title=Mansions in the Clouds: The Skyscraper Palazzi of Emery Roth |publisher=Balsam Press |year=1986 |isbn=978-0-917439-09-4 |oclc=13665931 |page=172}}</ref>

Items from ''Normandie'' were sold at a series of auctions after her demise,{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=418–420}} and many pieces are considered valuable Art Deco treasures today. The rescued items include the ten large dining-room door medallions and fittings, and some of the individual [[Jean Dupas]] glass panels that formed the large murals mounted at the four corners of her Grand Salon.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=418–420}} One entire corner is preserved at the [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]] in New York.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/1976.414.3a-ggg|title='History of Navigation' Mural – Jean Dupas – 1934 |id=1976.414.3a-ggg |publisher=The Metropolitan Museum of Art}}</ref> The dining room door medallions are now on the exterior doors of [[Our Lady of Lebanon Maronite Cathedral (Brooklyn)|Our Lady of Lebanon Maronite Cathedral]] in Brooklyn.<ref name=cathedral>{{cite web|url=http://ololc.org/about.html|title=History of Our Lady of Lebanon|publisher=Our Lady of Lebanon Cathedral|access-date=8 January 2014}}</ref>

[[File:Normandie doors.jpg|thumb|upright=0.5|left|Dining room door medallions]]
Also surviving are some examples of the 24,000 pieces of crystal, some from the massive Lalique torchères that adorned her dining salon. Also extant are some of the room's table silverware, chairs, and gold-plated bronze table bases. Custom-designed suite and cabin furniture as well as original artwork and statues that decorated the ship, or were built for use by the CGT aboard ''Normandie'', also survive today.

The eight-foot-high, 1,000-pound bronze figural sculpture of a woman named "''La Normandie''", which was at the top of the grand stairway from the first class smoking room up to the grill room café, was found in a New Jersey scrapyard in 1954 and was purchased for the then-new [[Fontainebleau Hotel]] in [[Miami Beach]], [[Florida]]. It was first displayed outside in the [[parterre]] gardens near the formal pool and later indoors near the then-Fontainebleau Hilton's spa. In 2001, the hotel sold the statue to [[Celebrity Cruises]], which placed it in the main dining room of their new ship ''[[Celebrity Summit]]''.{{sfn|Ardman|1985|pp=418–420}} The cruise ship also had a separate Normandie Restaurant, designed to reflect the interiors of the liner, and containing gold lacquered panels from the Normandie's First Class Smoking Room.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thecaptainslog.org.uk/ShipGalleryIndex/Summit.html|title=Summit Gallery|website=thecaptainslog.org.uk}}</ref> The Normandie Restaurant and associated ocean liner decor was removed in 2015.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://maritimematters.com/2015/10/celebrity-to-replace-ocean-liner-themed-restaurants/|title=Celebrity To Replace Ocean Liner-Themed Restaurants|access-date=25 November 2017|archive-date=1 December 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171201031658/http://maritimematters.com/2015/10/celebrity-to-replace-ocean-liner-themed-restaurants/|url-status=dead}}</ref> The statue "''La Paix''", which stood in the First Class Dining Room, now stands in the Pinelawn Memorial Park, a cemetery in New York.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://wikimapia.org/6441753/La-Paix-from-the-Normandie|title="La Paix" from the Normandie Oceanliner|website=wikimapia.org}}</ref>

The three-note chime steam whistle, after salvage, was sent to the Bethlehem Steel factory in [[Bethlehem, Pennsylvania|Bethlehem]], [[Pennsylvania]], where it was used to announce shift changes.<ref>{{cite news |title=History's Headlines: Doomed ocean liner's whistle lived on at Bethlehem Steel |url=https://www.wfmz.com/features/historys-headlines/historys-headlines-doomed-ocean-liners-whistle-lived-on-at-bethlehem-steel/21047952 |work=WFMZ |date=10 February 2015}}</ref> It later resided in the [[Pratt Institute]] in Brooklyn and was used in their New Year's Eve steam whistle ceremony until 2014.<ref>{{cite news |title=New Year's Eve 2014 Marked Final Year of Steam Whistle Tradition |url=https://www.pratt.edu/news/view/new-years-eve-2014-marked-final-year-of-steam-whistle-tradition |work=Pratt Institute |date=21 December 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Rueb |first1=Emily S. |title=The Normandie Breathes Again |url=https://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/06/04/the-normandie-breathes-again/ |website=City Room |access-date=31 July 2019 |date=4 June 2010}}</ref> This whistle is now at SUNY Maritime's Fort Schuyler.{{Citation needed|date=October 2014}}

Pieces from ''Normandie'' occasionally appear on the [[BBC]] television series ''[[Antiques Roadshow]]''<ref>{{cite web|last=Crafton|first=Luke|title=The Normandie: A Legend Undiminished|url=https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/roadshow/fts/savannah_200301T08.html|work=Antiques Roadshow |access-date=1 May 2016}}</ref> and also on its [[Antiques Roadshow (U.S.)|American counterpart]]. A public lounge and promenade was created from some of the panels and furniture from ''Normandie'' in the [[Hilton Chicago]]. The dining room "Normandie" on the Carnival Cruise ship ''[[Carnival Pride]]'' was also inspired by the ocean liner, per the ship's designer Joseph Farcus.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.beyondships.com/Carnival-art-Farcus.html|title=Carnival Dream – An Interview with Designer Joe Farcus|website=beyondships.com|access-date=19 December 2011|archive-date=7 January 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120107070232/http://www.beyondships.com/Carnival-art-Farcus.html|url-status=dead}}</ref>

Though not shown explicitly, "the majestic form of the ''Normandie"''<ref>{{Cite book |last=Horeau |first=Yves |title=The Adventures of Tintin at Sea |publisher=Éditions Moulinsart |year=2021 |isbn=978-2-87424-484-1 |editor-last=Farr |editor-first=Michael |location=Belgium |pages=30 |translator-last=Farr |translator-first=Michael}}</ref> appears in the [[The Adventures of Tintin|Tintin]] story, ''[[The Broken Ear]]''.
{{Clear}}

==Profile views==
[[File:Normandie deck e lateral.GIF|center|thumb|550px|Starboard and side elevation diagram of ''Normandie''{{'}}s [[Streamline Moderne]] profile. The third funnel was a dummy employed to balance the ship aesthetically and contain the air conditioning machinery. This third funnel also was known to contain the dog kennels.]]
[[Image:Ssnormandie sideelevation NYC.png|thumb|550px|center|Side elevation and cutaway, revealing the vast internal spaces devoted to ''Normandie''{{'}}s public compartments.]]

==See also==
*''[[The Big Broadcast of 1938]]'', a 1938 film that featured the fictional ocean liner S.S. ''Colossal'', based upon the''SS Normandie.''
* [[Oceanic (unfinished ship)|''Oceanic III'']]
* [[Pierre-Marie Poisson]]
* {{RMS|Queen Elizabeth}}
* {{SS|France|1961}}
* {{SS|Ile de France}}
* [[SS Europa (1930)|SS ''Liberté'']]
* {{SS|Paris|1916}}

==Notes==
{{notelist}}

==References==
{{Reflist}}

==Bibliography==
{{refbegin}}
{{DANFS}}
*{{cite book |last=Ardman |first=Harvey |year=1985 |title=Normandie, Her Life and Times |location=New York |publisher=Franklin Watts |isbn=0531097846 |oclc=1359091087 |url=https://archive.org/details/normandieherlife0000ardm |url-access=registration |via=Internet Archive}}
*{{cite book |last=Bathe |first=Basil W. |year=1972 |title=Seven Centuries of Sea Travel: from the Crusaders to the Cruises |publisher=Barrie & Jenkins |location=London |isbn=0-214-66811-8}}
*{{cite book |last=Bondanella |first=Peter E. |title=Hollywood Italians: Dagos, Palookas, Romeos, Wise Guys, and Sopranos |location=New York |publisher=Continuum International Publishing Group |year=2004 |isbn=0-8264-1544-X |url=https://archive.org/details/hollywooditalian00bond |url-access=registration}}
*{{cite book |last=Braynard |first=Frank O. |title=Picture History of the Normandie With 190 Illustrations |year=1987 |publisher=Dover Publications |location=New York |isbn=0486252574 |url=https://archive.org/details/picturehistoryof00bray }}
*{{cite book |last=Brinnin |first=John Malcolm |year=1971 |title=The Sway of the Grand Saloon: a Social History of the North Atlantic |url=https://archive.org/details/swayofgrandsaloo00brin |url-access=registration |location=New York |publisher=Delacorte Press }}
*{{cite book |last=Coleman |first=Terry |year=1977 |title=The liners: a history of the North Atlantic crossing |location=Harmondsworth |publisher=Penguin Books }}
*{{cite web |last=Cressman |first=Robert J. |date=2 May 2007 |title=''Lafayette'' (AP 53) ex-''Normandie'' |work=Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships |publisher=U.S. [[Naval Historical Center]] |url= http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/l1/lafayette.html |access-date=21 June 2008}}
*{{cite book |last=Fox |first=Robert |year=1999 |title=Liners: The Golden Age. Die Grosse Zeit der Ozeanriesen. L'Âge d'or des paquebots |location=Cologne |publisher=Konneman }}
*{{cite book |last1=Foucart |first1=Bruno |last2=Robichon |first2=François |title=Normandie: Queen of the Seas |year=1985 |publisher=Vendome Press |location=New York |isbn=0865650578 }}
*{{cite book |last1=Gosch |first1=Martin A |last2=Hammer |first2=Richard |title=The Last Testament of Lucky Luciano |location=Boston |publisher=Little, Brown and Company |year=1974 |url=http://www.dcdave.com/article5/101110.htm}}
*{{cite book |last=Kludas |first=Arnold |year=2000 |title=Record breakers of the North Atlantic – Blue Riband Liners 1838-1952 |location=London |publisher= Chatham Publishing }}
*{{cite book |last=Maddocks |first=Melvin |year=1978 |title=The Great Liners |url=https://archive.org/details/greatliners00madd |url-access=registration |location=Alexandria, VA |publisher=Time-Life Books }}
*{{cite book |last=Maxtone-Graham |first=John |author-link=John Maxtone-Graham |year=1972 |title=The Only Way to Cross |location=New York |publisher=Collier Books |isbn=0020960107 }}
*{{cite book|last=Maxtone-Graham|first=John|title=Normandie: France's Legendary Art Deco Ocean Liner|year=2007|publisher=W. W. Norton & Co.|location=New York|isbn=9780393061208}}
*{{cite book|last1=Miller|first1=William H.|title=SS Normandie|series=Classic Liners series|date=2013|publisher=[[The History Press]]|location=Stroud, Gloucestershire|isbn=9780752488080}}
*{{cite web |last=Priolo |first=Gary P. |date=25 April 2008 |title=''Lafayette'' (AP-53) |work=Service Ship Photo Archive |publisher=NavSource Online |url= http://www.navsource.org/archives/09/22/22053.htm |access-date=21 June 2008}}
*{{cite book |last=Schenk |first=Paul |year=2013 |title=The Silent Front: Tales of Our Navy Salvage Divers |publisher=Blurb |url= http://www.blurb.com/b/4314369-the-silent-front |access-date=9 October 2013}}
*{{cite journal |last=Smith |first=Daniella Ohad |date=March 2011 |title=Legendary Interiors and Illustrious Travelers aboard the SS Normandie |journal=Interiors: Design, Architecture, Culture |volume=2 |issue=1 |pages=128–131 |doi=10.2752/204191211X12980384100274 |s2cid=194098328 }}
*{{cite book |last=Spoto |first=Donald |author-link=Donald Spoto |title=The Dark Side of Genius: The Life of Alfred Hitchcock |publisher=Da Capo |year=1999 |isbn=0-306-80932-X |url=https://archive.org/details/darksideofgenius00spot_0}}
*{{cite book |last1=Williams |first1=David L. |last2=De Kerbrech |first2=R. P. |title=Damned by Destiny |year=1982 |place=Brighton |publisher=Teredo Books |isbn=978-0-90366209-3}}
*{{cite web |last=Streater |first=Les |title=NORMANDIE Vols 1–5: The complete history |website=marpubs |url=https://www.marpubs.com/books-an-overview/normandie-vols-1-5/ |ref=none |access-date=2023-08-22}}
* {{citation |last=Boks |first=W. Holland |title=photo of the model boat SS ''Normandie'' |year=1935}}{{clarify|date=May 2013}}
{{refend}}

==External links==
{{Commons category|Normandie (ship, 1935)}}
* [https://books.google.com/books?id=pigDAAAAMBAJ&dq=Popular+Science+1931+plane&pg=PA36 How Biggest Ship Was Safely Launched, February 1933, ''Popular Science''] slipway and launching of French passenger liner ''Normandie'' in 1933—excellent drawing and illustrations showing basics of process
* [https://books.google.com/books?id=uN4DAAAAMBAJ&dq=Popular+Science+1933+plane+%22Popular+Mechanics%22&pg=PA826 "The Queen Of The Seven Seas" ''Popular Mechanics'', June 1935]
* [https://books.google.com/books?id=tt4DAAAAMBAJ&dq=Popular+Science+1935+plane+%22Popular+Mechanics%22&pg=PA164 "Normandie a Marvel in Speed and Comfort" ''Popular Mechanics'', August 1935] detailed drawings on steam-electric drive system
* [https://books.google.com/books?id=wN8DAAAAMBAJ&dq=Popular+Science+1935+plane+%22Popular+Mechanics%22&pg=PA536 "Across the Atlantic in a Blue Ribbon Winner" ''Popular Mechanics'', October 1935]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20070331085755/http://www.alae.us/Normandie/ The ''Normandie'' – virtual reality tour of the Art Deco masterpiece]
* Pictures in the official French Lines Archives : [https://web.archive.org/web/20071115200154/http://www.frenchlines.com/images/resultat_fr.php?origine=rindex&champ=navire&mc=Normandie SS ''Normandie''] (French captions)
* [http://www.thegreatoceanliners.com/normandie2.html The Great Ocean Liners: ''Normandie''] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160721130024/http://www.thegreatoceanliners.com/normandie2.html |date=21 July 2016 }}
*{{YouTube| rBYpqlqZryk | ''Salvage of the USS Lafayette (AP-53)'' – 1944 United States Navy Educational Documentary" }}
* [http://www.charlesfreemandesign.com/curator-intro Hommage Au Normandie Exhibition, New York] SS ''Normandie'' – Ocean Liner Museum Exhibit in New York City
* [https://www.ggarchives.com/OceanTravel/ImmigrantShips/Normandie.html GG Archives] Ephemera for the SS Normandie, including Passenger Lists, Menus, Brochures, Passage Tickets, Photographs, etc.


{{S-start}}
[[Category:Ocean liners|Normandie]]
{{S-ach|rec}}
[[Category:Art Deco|Normandie]]
{{S-bef|before={{SS|Rex|3=2}}}}
{{S-ttl|title=[[Blue Riband]] (Westbound record-holder)|years=1935–1936}}
{{S-aft|rows=2|after={{RMS|Queen Mary|3=2}}}}
{{S-bef|before={{SS|Bremen|1928|2}}}}
{{S-ttl|title=[[Blue Riband]] (Eastbound record-holder) |years=1935–1936}}
|-
{{S-bef|rows=2|before={{RMS|Queen Mary|3=2}}}}
{{S-ttl|title=[[Blue Riband]] (Westbound record-holder)|years=1937–1938}}
{{S-aft|rows=2|after={{RMS|Queen Mary|3=2}}}}
|-
{{S-ttl|title=[[Blue Riband]] (Eastbound record-holder) |years=1937–1938}}
{{s-bef|before= [[SS Rex|''Rex'']]}}
{{s-ttl|title=Holder of the [[Hales Trophy]] |years=1935–1952}}
{{s-aft|after= [[SS United States|'' United States'']]}}
{{end}}
{{Compagnie Générale Transatlantique ships}}
{{Largest passenger ships}}
{{Unique United States Navy transports}}
{{February 1942 shipwrecks}}
{{Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette}}
{{Authority control}}


[[da:SS Normandie]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Normandie}}
[[Category:1932 ships]]
[[de:Normandie (Schiff)]]
[[Category:Art Deco ships]]
[[fr:Normandie (paquebot)]]
[[Category:Blue Riband holders]]
[[pl:Normandie (statek)]]
[[Category:Maritime incidents in February 1942]]
[[Category:Ocean liners]]
[[Category:Passenger ships of France]]
[[Category:Ships built in France]]
[[Category:Ship fires]]
[[Category:Ships of the Compagnie Générale Transatlantique]]
[[Category:Shipwrecks of the New York (state) coast]]
[[Category:Turbo-electric steamships]]
[[Category:United States home front during World War II]]
[[Category:Transportation accidents in New York City]]
<!-- [[Category:World War II auxiliary ships of the United States]] -->

Latest revision as of 03:21, 26 April 2024

Colorized photo of the Normandie at sea, c. 1935-1936
History
France
NameNormandie
NamesakeNormandy
OwnerCompagnie Générale Transatlantique[1]
Port of registryPort of Le Havre[1]
RouteLe Havre-Southampton-New York
BuilderChantiers de Penhoet, Saint-Nazaire, France[1]
Laid down26 January 1931
Launched29 October 1932
Christened29 October 1932
Completed1933
Maiden voyage29 May 1935[2]
In service1935–1942
Out of service1942
Identification
FateCaught fire, capsized February 1942. Scrapped October 1946
General characteristics
TypeOcean liner
Tonnage
  • 79,280 GRT (1935–1936)
  • 83,423 GRT (post-1936)
Displacement68,350 tons (loaded)
Length
  • 313.6 m (1,029 ft) o/a
  • 293.2 m (962 ft) p/p[1]
Beam35.9 m (117 ft 10 in);[1]
Height56.1 m (184 ft)
Draught11.2 m (36 ft 7 in) (loaded)
Depth28.0 m (92 ft) to promenade (strength) deck
Decks12
Installed powerFour turbo-electric, total 160,000 hp (200,000 hp max).[3]
PropulsionFour 3 bladed on launch – later 4 bladed
Speed
  • 29.5 kn (54.6 km/h; 33.9 mph) designed
  • 32.2 kn (59.6 km/h; 37.1 mph) recorded on trials
Capacity1,972: 848 First Class (cabin), 670 Tourist Class, 454 Third Class
Crew1,345

SS Normandie was a French ocean liner built in Saint-Nazaire, France, for the French Line Compagnie Générale Transatlantique (CGT). She entered service in 1935 as the largest and fastest passenger ship afloat, crossing the Atlantic in a record 4.14 days, and remains the most powerful steam turbo-electric-propelled passenger ship ever built.[4][5]

Normandie's novel design and lavish interiors led many to consider her the greatest of ocean liners,[6][7] and she would go on to heavily influence the French arm of the Streamline Moderne design movement (called the style paquebot, or "ocean liner style").[citation needed] Despite this, she was not a commercial success and relied partly on government subsidy to operate.[7] During service as the flagship of the CGT, she made 139 westbound transatlantic crossings from her home port of Le Havre to New York City. Normandie held the Blue Riband for the fastest transatlantic crossing at several points during her service career, during which the RMS Queen Mary was her main rival.

During the Second World War, Normandie was seized by U.S. authorities at New York and renamed USS Lafayette. In 1942, while being converted to a troopship, the liner caught fire and capsized onto her port side and came to rest, half submerged, on the bottom of the Hudson River at Pier 88 (the site of the current Manhattan Cruise Terminal). Although salvaged at great expense, restoration was deemed too costly and she was scrapped in October 1946.[8]

Origins[edit]

The origins of Normandie can be traced to the 1920s, when the U.S. put restrictions on immigration, greatly reducing the traditional market for steerage-class passengers from Europe, and placing a new emphasis on upper-class tourists, largely Americans, many of them wanting to escape prohibition.[7] Companies like Cunard and the White Star Line planned to build their own superliners[9] to rival newer ships of the day; such vessels included the record-breaking Bremen and Europa, both German.[7] The French Line Compagnie Générale Transatlantique (CGT) began to plan its own superliner.[10]

Adolphe Cassandre's famed 1935 depiction of the Normandie

The CGT's flagship was the Ile de France, which had modern Art Deco interiors but a conservative hull design.[10] The designers intended their new superliner to be similar to earlier French Line ships. Then they were approached by Vladimir Yourkevitch, a former ship architect for the Imperial Russian Navy who had emigrated to France after the 1917 revolution.[10] Yourkevitch's ideas included a slanting clipper-like bow and a bulbous forefoot beneath the waterline, in combination with a slim hydrodynamic hull. His concepts worked wonderfully in scale models, confirming the design's performance advantages.[11][12] The French engineers were convinced by Yourkevitch and asked him to join their project. He also approached Cunard with his ideas, but was rejected because the bow was deemed too radical.[7]

The CGT commissioned artists to create posters and publicity for the liner. One of the most famous posters was by Adolphe Mouron Cassandre, another Russian emigrant to France.[13] Another poster, by Albert Sébille, showed the interior layout in a cutaway diagram 4.5 metres (15 ft) long. This poster is displayed in the Musée national de la Marine in Paris.[14]

Construction and launch[edit]

Vladimir Yourkevitch working on design of the Normandie
Normandie under construction, 1932

Work by the Société Anonyme des Chantiers de Penhoët began on the unnamed flagship on 26 January 1931 at Saint-Nazaire, soon after the stock market crash of 1929. While the French continued construction, the competing White Star Line's planned Oceanic which quickly cancelled and Cunard's RMS Queen Mary which was put on hold.[9] French builders also ran into difficulty and had to ask for government money; this subsidy was questioned in the press. Still, the ship's construction was followed by newspapers and national interest was deep, as she was designed to represent France in the nation-state contest of the great liners and was built in a French shipyard using French parts.[15]

The growing hull in Saint-Nazaire had no formal designation except "T-6" ("T" for "Transat", an alternate name for the French Line, and "6" for "6th"), the contract name.[16] Many names were suggested including Doumer, after Paul Doumer, the recently assassinated President of France; and originally, La Belle France.[17] Finally Normandie was chosen. In France, boat prefixes properly depend on the boat name's gender, but non-sailors mostly use the masculine form,[17] inherited from the French terms for boat, which can be "paquebot", "navire", "bateau", or "bâtiment", but English speakers refer to boats as feminine ("she's a beauty") and the CGT carried many rich American customers. The CGT wrote that their boat was to be called simply "Normandie", preceded by neither "le" nor "la" (French masculine/feminine for "the") to avoid any confusion.[12]

The Normandie drydock in St. Nazaire which was built specifically for the new ship.

On 29 October 1932 – three years to the day after the stock market crash – Normandie was launched in front of two-hundred thousand spectators.[18] The 27,567-ton hull that slid into the river Loire was the largest launched and the wave washed up the shoreline and over several hundred spectators, but with no injury.[19] The ship was dedicated by Madame Marguerite Lebrun, wife of Albert Lebrun, the President of France. She was outfitted until early 1935, her interiors, funnels, engines, and other fittings put in to make her into a working vessel. Finally, in May 1935, Normandie was ready for trials, which were watched by reporters.[20] The superiority of Yourkevitch's hull was visible; hardly a wave was created off the bulbous bow. The ship reached a top speed of 32.125 kn (59.5 km/h)[21] and performed an emergency stop from that speed in 1,700 m (5,600 ft).

In addition to hull design which let her attain speed at far less power than other big liners,[22] Normandie had a turbo-electric transmission, with turbo-generators and electric propulsion motors built by Alsthom of Belfort.[1] The CGT chose turbo-electric transmission for the ability not need to have astern turbines installed and the ability to use full power in reverse,[4] and because, according to CGT officials, it was quieter and more easily controlled and maintained.[4] The engine installation was heavier than conventional turbines and slightly less efficient at high speed but allowed all propellers to operate even if one engine was not running. This system also made it possible to eliminate astern turbines.[4] An early form of radar was installed to prevent collisions.[23][24] The rudder frame, including the 125-ton cast steel connecting rod, was produced by Škoda Works in Czechoslovakia.

Normandie had a significant cost. By the time of her maiden voyage, she had cost 812 million francs, then equal to $53.5 million (equivalent to $1188.95 million in 2023).[25]

Interior[edit]

Normandie's luxurious interiors were designed in Art Déco and Streamline Moderne style by architect Pierre Patout, one of the founders of the Art Deco style.[26] Many sculptures and wall paintings made allusions to Normandy, the province of France for which the ship was named.[27] Drawings and photographs show a series of vast public rooms of great elegance. Her voluminous interior spaces were made possible by having the funnel uptakes split to pass along the sides of the ship, rather than straight upward.[18] French architect Roger-Henri Expert was in charge of the overall decorative scheme.[28]

Most of the public space was devoted to first-class passengers, including the dining room, first-class lounge, grill room, first-class swimming pool, theatre and winter garden. The first-class swimming pool featured staggered depths, with a shallow training beach for children.[29] The children's dining room was decorated by Jean de Brunhoff, who covered the walls with Babar the Elephant and his entourage.[30][31]

The interiors were filled with grand perspectives, spectacular entryways, and long, wide staircases. First-class suites were given unique designs by select designers. The most luxurious accommodations were the Deauville and Trouville apartments,[32] featuring dining rooms, baby grand pianos, multiple bedrooms, and private decks.[29]

Normandie's main dining room, decorated with Lalique glass and compared to the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles.

Normandie's first-class dining hall was the largest room afloat. At 93 m (305 ft), it was longer than the Hall of Mirrors at the Palace of Versailles,[33][34] 14 m (46 ft) wide, and 8.5 m (28 ft) high. Passengers entered through six-metre-tall (20 ft) doors adorned with bronze medallions by artist Raymond Subes.[35] The room could seat 700 at 157 tables,[33] with Normandie serving as a floating promotion for the most sophisticated French cuisine of the period. As no natural light could enter[33] it was illuminated by twelve tall pillars of Lalique glass flanked by 38 matching columns along the walls.[33] These, with chandeliers hung at each end of the room, earned the Normandie the nickname "Ship of Light"[29] (similar to Paris as the "City of Light").

A popular feature was the café grill, which would be transformed into a nightclub.[36] Adjoining the café grill was the first-class smoking room, which was paneled in large murals depicting ancient Egyptian life. The ship also had indoor and outdoor pools, a chapel, and a theatre which could double as a stage and cinema.[34][37]

The machinery of Normandie's top deck and forecastle was integrated within the ship, concealing it and releasing nearly all the exposed deck space for passengers. As such it was the only ocean liner to have a regulation-sized open air tennis court on board.[38] The air conditioner units were concealed along with the kennels inside the third, dummy, funnel.[39]

Career[edit]

The maiden voyage of SS Normandie
The triumphant arrival of Normandie in New York Harbor in June 1935 on her maiden voyage.
Normandie at sea
Postcard of the Normandie

Normandie's maiden voyage was on 29 May 1935. At Le Havre she took aboard 812 Passengers: 467 First Class Passengers, 244 Tourist Class and 101 Third Class. 50,000 people saw her off at Le Havre on what was hoped would be a record-breaking crossing. At Southampton she took aboard an additional 195 Passengers: 122 First Class Passengers, 53 Tourist Class and 20 Third Class. Her combined total was 1,007 passengers. First Class was booked at two-thirds capacity with 589, Tourist Class was half booked at 293, while Third Class was at less than a quarter capacity with only 121.[40]

She reached New York City after four days, three hours and two minutes, taking away the Blue Riband from the Italian liner Rex.[41] This brought great pride for the French, who had not won the distinction before. Under the command of Captain René Pugnet, Normandie's average on the maiden voyage was 29.98 knots (55.52 km/h; 34.50 mph) and on the eastbound crossing to France, she averaged over 30 knots (56 km/h; 35 mph), breaking records in both directions.[42]

Postcard of SS Normandie

During the maiden voyage, the CGT refused to predict that their ship would win the Blue Riband.[7] However, by the time the ship reached New York, medallions of the Blue Riband victory, made in France, were delivered to passengers and the ship flew a 9-metre-long (30 ft) blue pennant.[7][41] An estimated 100,000 spectators lined New York Harbor for Normandie's arrival.[43] All passengers were presented with a medal celebrating the occasion on behalf of the CGT.

SS Normandie in the seas
Cunard contemporary rival

Normandie had a successful year but Queen Mary, Cunard White Star Line's superliner, entered service in May 1936. At 80,774 gross registered tons, she was larger than Normandie's 79,280 gross registered tons, and captured the title of the world's largest passenger ship.[44] In response, CGT increased Normandie's size, mainly through the addition of an enclosed tourist lounge on the aft boat deck. Following these and other alterations, she measured 83,423 GRT.[44] When the Normandie reentered service, she exceeded Queen Mary by 2,000 tons, reclaiming the title of world's largest ship.[44] Normandie retained the title until Cunard White Star Line's RMS Queen Elizabeth at 83,673 gross registered tons formally entered service in 1946.[45]

On 22 June 1936, a Blackburn Baffin, S5162 of A Flight, RAF Gosport, flown by Lt Guy Kennedy Horsey on torpedo-dropping practice, buzzed Normandie two kilometres (one nautical mile) off Ryde Pier and collided with a derrick which was transferring a motor car belonging to Arthur Evans, MP, onto a barge alongside the ship. The aircraft crashed onto Normandie's bow. The pilot was taken off by tender, but the wreckage of the aircraft remained on board Normandie as she had to sail due to the tide. It was carried to Le Havre. A salvage team from the Royal Air Force later removed the wreckage. Horsey was court-martialled and found guilty on two charges, and Evans' car was wrecked in the accident.[46][47]

In August 1936, Queen Mary captured the Blue Riband, averaging 30.14 knots (55.82 km/h; 34.68 mph), starting a fierce rivalry.[7] To recapture the speed record, CGT modified Normandie to reduce vibration and increase her speed. CGT replaced her three-bladed propellers with four-bladed ones, and made structural modifications to her lower aft section. These modifications reduced vibration at speed.[48][49] In July 1937, she regained the Blue Riband, but Queen Mary took it back in 1938. After this, the captain of Normandie sent a message: "Bravo to the Queen Mary until next time!" This rivalry could have gone on into the 1940s, but was ended by the Second World War.

Normandie carried distinguished passengers, including the authors Colette and Ernest Hemingway;[50] the wife of French President Albert Lebrun;[41] songwriters Noël Coward and Irving Berlin; and Hollywood celebrities such as Fred Astaire, Marlene Dietrich, Walt Disney, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr, conductor Arturo Toscanini and James Stewart.[51] She also carried the von Trapp family singers of The Sound of Music from New York to Southampton in 1938, and from Southampton, the family went to Scandinavia for a tour before returning to the United States.

Planned running mate – SS Bretagne[edit]

While Normandie rarely was occupied at over 60% of her capacity, her finances were such that she did not require government subsidies every year. She never repaid any of the loans that made her construction possible. The CGT considered a sister ship, SS Bretagne, which was to be longer and larger. There were two competing designs for this ship – one conservative, one radical. The conservative design was essentially Normandie with two funnels, possibly larger as well. The radical one was from Normandie's designer, Vladimir Yourkevitch, and was super-streamlined with twin, side-by-side funnels just aft of the bridge. The more conservative design won, but the outbreak of the war halted the plan indefinitely.[52][53][page needed]

Popularity[edit]

Although Normandie was a critical success in her design and decor, ultimately North Atlantic passengers flocked to the more traditional Queen Mary. Two of the ship's greatest attributes, in reality, turned out to be two of her biggest faults.

Normandie depicted on a token
Overhead view of Normandie at sea

Part of Normandie's problem lay in the fact that the majority of her passenger space was devoted solely to first class, which could carry up to 848 people. Less space and consideration were given to second and tourist class, which numbered only 670 and 454 passengers respectively. As a result, the consensus among North Atlantic passengers was that she was primarily a ship for the rich and famous. In contrast, in Queen Mary, Cunard White Star had placed just as much emphasis on décor, space, and accommodation in second and tourist class as in first class. Thus Queen Mary accommodated American tourists, who had become numerous in the 1920s and 1930s. Many of these passengers could not afford first-class passage yet wanted to travel with much of the same comfort as that experienced in first. As a result, second and tourist class became a major cash source for shipping companies at that time. Queen Mary would accommodate these trends and subsequently the liner achieved greater popularity among North Atlantic travellers during the late thirties.[54]

Another of the CGT's greatest triumphs also turned out to be one of Normandie's greatest flaws: her décor. The ship's slick and modern Art Deco interiors proved to be somewhat intimidating and uncomfortable for her travellers, with some claiming that interiors gave them headaches. It was also here that Queen Mary triumphed over her French rival. Although also decorated in an Art Deco style, Queen Mary was more restrained in her appointments and was not as radical as Normandie, and proved ultimately to be more popular with travellers.[54]

Normandie at C.G.T.'s pier 88 in New York

As a result, Normandie at many times throughout her service history carried less than half her full complement of passengers. Her German rivals Bremen and Europa, and Italian rivals Rex and Conte di Savoia also suffered from this problem; despite their innovative designs and luxurious interiors, they made little profit for their respective companies. Contributing to this were international boycotts against Germany and Italy as the European geopolitical situation deteriorated through the 1930s. The Italian liners relied heavily on government subsidies, while the German Lloyd liners never received funding. In comparison, Normandie did not require government subsidies in service, with her income covering not only her operating expenses but generating revenue of 158,000,000 francs.

In contrast, Cunard White Star's Britannic III, Georgic II, and much older Aquitania, along with the Holland America Line's SS Nieuw Amsterdam, were among the few North Atlantic liners to make a profit, carrying the lion's share of passengers in the years preceding the Second World War.

World War II[edit]

Normandie, Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth in New York Harbor in 1940

The outbreak of the war found Normandie in New York Harbor. Looming hostilities in Europe had compelled Normandie to seek haven in the U.S. The federal government interned her on 3 September 1939, the same day France declared war on Germany. Soon Queen Mary, later refitted as a troopship, moored nearby. Then, two weeks later, Queen Elizabeth joined Queen Mary. For five months, the three largest liners in the world were tied up side by side.[55] Normandie remained in French hands, with French crewmembers on board, led by Captain Hervé Lehuédé, into the spring of 1940.

On 15 May 1940, during the Battle of France, the U.S. Treasury Department detailed about 150 agents of the United States Coast Guard (USCG) to go aboard the ship and Manhattan's Pier 88 to defend it against possible sabotage. (At the time, U.S. law mandated the Coast Guard as part of the Treasury during peacetime.) When the USCG became a part of the United States Navy on 1 November 1941, Normandie's USCG detail remained intact, mainly observing while the French crew maintained the vessel's boilers, machinery, and other equipment, including the fire-watch system. On 12 December 1941, five days after the attack on Pearl Harbor, the USCG removed Captain Lehuédé and his crew and took possession of Normandie under the right of angary, maintaining steam in the boilers and other activities on the idled vessel. However, the elaborate fire-watch system which ensured that any fire would be suppressed before it became a danger was abandoned.[56]

Lafayette conversion[edit]

Normandie docked in New York Harbor at Pier 88, site of attempted troopship conversion.

On 20 December 1941, the Auxiliary Vessels Board officially recorded President Franklin D. Roosevelt's approval of Normandie's transfer to the U.S. Navy. Plans called for the vessel to be turned into a troopship ("convoy unit loaded transport"). The Navy renamed her USS Lafayette, in honor of both Marquis de la Fayette, the French general who fought on the Colonies' behalf in the American Revolution, and the alliance with France that made American independence possible. The name was a suggestion of J. P. "Jim" Warburg, advisory assistant to Colonel William J. Donovan, Coordinator of Information, which was passed through multiple channels including Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox; Admiral Harold R. Stark, Chief of Naval Operations (CNO); and Rear Adm. Randall Jacobs, Chief of the Bureau of Navigation. The name La Fayette (later universally and unofficially contracted to Lafayette) was officially approved by the Secretary of the Navy on 31 December 1941, with the vessel classified as a transport, AP-53.

Earlier proposals included turning Lafayette into an aircraft carrier, but this was dropped in favor of immediate troop transport.[57] The ship remained moored at Pier 88 for the conversion. A contract for her conversion to a troop transport was awarded to Robins Dry Dock and Repair Co., a subsidiary of Todd Shipyards, on 27 December 1941. On that date, Capt. Clayton M. Simmers, the 3rd Naval District Materiel Officer, reported to the Bureau of Ships (BuShips) his estimate that the conversion work could be completed by 31 January 1942, and planning for the work proceeded on that basis.

Capt. Robert G. Coman reported as Lafayette's prospective commanding officer on 31 January 1942, overseeing a skeleton engineering force numbering 458 men. The complicated nature and enormous size of the conversion effort prevented Coman's crew from adhering to the original schedule; crew familiarization with the vessel was an issue, and additional crew members were arriving to assist the effort. On 6 February 1942, a request for a two-week delay for the first sailing of Lafayette, originally scheduled for 14 February, was submitted to the Assistant Chief of Naval Operations. On that day, a schedule extension was granted due to a design plan change: elements of the superstructure were to be removed to improve stability, in work that was expected to take another 60 to 90 days. However, on 7 February, orders came from Washington that the reduction of the top-hamper had been abandoned and Lafayette was to sail on 14 February as planned. This abrupt reversal necessitated a frantic resumption of conversion work, and captains Coman and Simmers scheduled 9 February[clarification needed] meetings in New York and Washington to lobby for further clarification of conversion plans; ultimately, these meetings would never take place.

Fire and capsizing[edit]

Lafayette (AP-53) afire at New York Harbor on 9 February 1942

At 14:30 on 9 February 1942, sparks from a welding torch used by workman Clement Derrick ignited a stack of life vests filled with flammable kapok that had been stored in Lafayette's first-class lounge.[58][59] The flammable varnished woodwork had not yet been removed, and the fire spread rapidly. The ship had a very efficient fire protection system, but it had been disconnected during the conversion and its internal pumping system was deactivated.[60] The New York City Fire Department's hoses did not fit the ship's French inlets. Before the fire department arrived, approximately 15 minutes after fire broke out, all onboard crew were using manual means in a vain attempt to stop the blaze. A strong northwesterly wind blowing over Lafayette's port quarter swept the blaze forward, eventually consuming the three upper decks of the ship within an hour of the start of the conflagration. Capt. Coman, along with Capt. Simmers, arrived about 15:25 to see his huge prospective command in flames.

USS Lafayette capsized in New York Harbor

As firefighters on shore and in fire boats poured water on the blaze, Lafayette developed a dangerous list to port due to water pumped into the seaward side by fireboats. Vladimir Yourkevitch, the ship's designer, arrived at the scene to offer expertise but was barred by harbor police.[50][61] Yourkevitch's suggestion was to enter the vessel and open the sea-cocks. This would flood the lower decks and make her settle the few feet to the bottom. With the ship stabilised, water could be pumped into burning areas without the risk of capsizing. The suggestion was rejected by the commander of the 3rd Naval District, Rear Admiral Adolphus Andrews.

Between 17:45 and 18:00 on 9 February 1942, authorities considered the fire under control and began winding down operations until 20:00. Water entering Lafayette through submerged openings and flowing to the lower decks negated efforts to counter-flood, and her list to port gradually increased. Shortly after midnight, Rear Adm. Andrews ordered Lafayette abandoned. The ship continued to list, a process hastened by the 6,000 tons of water that had been sprayed on her. New York fire officials were concerned that the fire could spread to the nearby buildings. Lafayette eventually capsized during the mid watch (02:45) on 10 February, nearly crushing a fire boat, and came to rest on her port side at an angle of approximately 80 degrees. Recognising that his incompetence had caused the disaster, Rear Adm. Andrews ordered all pressmen barred from viewing the moment of capsize in an effort to lower the level of publicity.[62]

Normandie, renamed USS Lafayette, lies capsized in the frozen mud of her New York pier in the winter of 1942

One man died in the incident – Frank "Trent" Trentacosta, 36, of Brooklyn, a member of the fire watch. Some 94 USCG and Navy sailors, including some from Lafayette's pre-commissioning crew and men assigned to the receiving ship Seattle, 38 fire fighters, and 153 civilians, were treated for various injuries, burns, smoke inhalation, and exposure.

Saboteur (film)[edit]

The ruined Lafayette after the fire can be seen briefly in the film Saboteur (1942). The ship is not identified in the film, but the antagonist smiles when he sees it, suggesting that he was responsible. The film's director, Alfred Hitchcock, later said that "the Navy raised hell" about the implication that their security was so poor.[63]

Investigation and salvage[edit]

U.S. Coast Guard Grumman Widgeon flies over wreck of Lafayette in New York 1943

Enemy sabotage was widely suspected, but a congressional investigation in the wake of the sinking, chaired by Representative Patrick Henry Drewry (D-Virginia), concluded that the fire was accidental.[64][page needed][65][page needed] The investigation found evidence of carelessness, rule violations, lack of coordination between the various parties on board, lack of clear command structure during the fire, and a hasty, poorly-planned conversion effort.

Members of organized crime retrospectively claimed that they had sabotaged the vessel. It was alleged that arson had been organized by mobster Anthony Anastasio, who was a power in the local longshoremen's union, to provide leverage for the release of mob boss Charles "Lucky" Luciano from prison. Luciano's end of the bargain would be to ensure that there would be no further "enemy" sabotage in the ports where the mob had strong influence with the unions.[a]

In one of the largest and most expensive salvage operations of its kind, estimated at $5 million at the time (equivalent to $88 million in 2023), the ship was stripped of superstructure and righted on 7 August 1943.[68][page needed] She was renamed Lafayette and reclassified as an aircraft and transport ferry, APV-4, on 15 September 1943 and placed in drydock the following month. However, extensive damage to her hull, deterioration of her machinery, and the necessity for employing manpower on other more critical war projects prevented resumption of the conversion program, with the cost of restoring her determined to be too great. Her hulk remained in the Navy's custody through the end of the war.

Lafayette was stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on 11 October 1945 without having ever sailed under the U.S. flag. President Harry Truman authorized her disposal in an Executive Order on 8 September 1946, and she was sold as scrap on 3 October 1946 to Lipsett, Inc., an American salvage company based in New York City, for US$161,680 (approx. $1,997,000 in 2017 value). After neither the Navy nor French Line offered a plan to salvage her, Yourkevitch, the ship's original designer, proposed to cut the ship down and restore her as a mid-sized liner.[69] This plan also failed to draw backing. She was sent for scrapping beginning in October 1946[8] at Port Newark, New Jersey, and completely scrapped by 31 December 1948.

Legacy[edit]

The silhouette of Normandie influenced ocean liners over the decades, including Queen Mary 2.[citation needed] The ambience of classic transatlantic liners like Normandie and Queen Mary was the source of inspiration for Disney Cruise Line's matching vessels, Disney Magic, Disney Wonder, Disney Dream, and Disney Fantasy.[70]

The Normandie Hotel in San Juan, Puerto Rico

Normandie also inspired the architecture and design of the Normandie Hotel in San Juan, Puerto Rico. The hotel's roof sign is one of the two signs that adorned the top deck of Normandie but were removed from it during an early refitting. It also inspired the nickname 'The Normandie' given to the International Savings Society Apartments in Shanghai, one of the most fashionable residential buildings during the city's pre-revolutionary heyday and home to several stars of China's mid-20th century film industry.[citation needed] Normandie's name also may have inspired that of The Normandy apartment building in New York City.[71]

Items from Normandie were sold at a series of auctions after her demise,[72] and many pieces are considered valuable Art Deco treasures today. The rescued items include the ten large dining-room door medallions and fittings, and some of the individual Jean Dupas glass panels that formed the large murals mounted at the four corners of her Grand Salon.[72] One entire corner is preserved at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.[73] The dining room door medallions are now on the exterior doors of Our Lady of Lebanon Maronite Cathedral in Brooklyn.[74]

Dining room door medallions

Also surviving are some examples of the 24,000 pieces of crystal, some from the massive Lalique torchères that adorned her dining salon. Also extant are some of the room's table silverware, chairs, and gold-plated bronze table bases. Custom-designed suite and cabin furniture as well as original artwork and statues that decorated the ship, or were built for use by the CGT aboard Normandie, also survive today.

The eight-foot-high, 1,000-pound bronze figural sculpture of a woman named "La Normandie", which was at the top of the grand stairway from the first class smoking room up to the grill room café, was found in a New Jersey scrapyard in 1954 and was purchased for the then-new Fontainebleau Hotel in Miami Beach, Florida. It was first displayed outside in the parterre gardens near the formal pool and later indoors near the then-Fontainebleau Hilton's spa. In 2001, the hotel sold the statue to Celebrity Cruises, which placed it in the main dining room of their new ship Celebrity Summit.[72] The cruise ship also had a separate Normandie Restaurant, designed to reflect the interiors of the liner, and containing gold lacquered panels from the Normandie's First Class Smoking Room.[75] The Normandie Restaurant and associated ocean liner decor was removed in 2015.[76] The statue "La Paix", which stood in the First Class Dining Room, now stands in the Pinelawn Memorial Park, a cemetery in New York.[77]

The three-note chime steam whistle, after salvage, was sent to the Bethlehem Steel factory in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, where it was used to announce shift changes.[78] It later resided in the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn and was used in their New Year's Eve steam whistle ceremony until 2014.[79][80] This whistle is now at SUNY Maritime's Fort Schuyler.[citation needed]

Pieces from Normandie occasionally appear on the BBC television series Antiques Roadshow[81] and also on its American counterpart. A public lounge and promenade was created from some of the panels and furniture from Normandie in the Hilton Chicago. The dining room "Normandie" on the Carnival Cruise ship Carnival Pride was also inspired by the ocean liner, per the ship's designer Joseph Farcus.[82]

Though not shown explicitly, "the majestic form of the Normandie"[83] appears in the Tintin story, The Broken Ear.

Profile views[edit]

Starboard and side elevation diagram of Normandie's Streamline Moderne profile. The third funnel was a dummy employed to balance the ship aesthetically and contain the air conditioning machinery. This third funnel also was known to contain the dog kennels.
Side elevation and cutaway, revealing the vast internal spaces devoted to Normandie's public compartments.

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ The suggestion that the fire was caused by arson comes from Meyer Lansky and Luciano themselves.[66][67]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Lloyd's Register, Steamers & Motorships (PDF). London: Lloyd's Register. 1935. Retrieved 20 May 2013.
  2. ^ Bathe 1972, p. 236.
  3. ^ "Latest Triumphs in Electric Ships". Popular Science. November 1933.
  4. ^ a b c d Ardman 1985, pp. 46–47.
  5. ^ "Colossus into Clyde". Time. 1 October 1934. Archived from the original on 25 January 2009. Retrieved 19 November 2008.
  6. ^ Ardman 1985, p. 2.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Floating Palaces. (1996) A&E. TV Documentary. Narrated by Fritz Weaver
  8. ^ a b Maxtone-Graham 1972, p. 391.
  9. ^ a b Maxtone-Graham 1972, pp. 268–269.
  10. ^ a b c Ardman 1985, p. 36.
  11. ^ Ardman 1985, pp. 42–47.
  12. ^ a b Maxtone-Graham 1972, p. 273.
  13. ^ Reif, Rita (26 June 1988). "Antiques – A Proliferation of Poster Art". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 November 2008.
  14. ^ Maxtone-Graham 1972, p. 267.
  15. ^ Maxtone-Graham 1972, pp. 269–272.
  16. ^ "T-6 The Latest Giant Of The Sea" Popular Mechanics, December 1932
  17. ^ a b Maxtone-Graham 1972, p. 272.
  18. ^ a b Maxtone-Graham 1972, p. 275.
  19. ^ Ardman 1985, pp. 7, 17–20.
  20. ^ Maxtone-Graham 1972, p. 281.
  21. ^ Ardman 1985, p. 111.
  22. ^ Ardman 1985, p. 171.
  23. ^ Ardman 1985, p. 160.
  24. ^ "Radio Waves Warn of Obstacles in Path". Popular Mechanics. December 1935. p. 844.
  25. ^ "The SS Normandie – A True Monarch of the Seas | The Shipyard". 7 May 2020. Retrieved 8 April 2024.
  26. ^ Oudin, Bernard. Dictionnaire des Architectes, Sechiers, Paris, (1994), (in French), page 372.
  27. ^ Ardman 1985, p. 80.
  28. ^ Moonan, Wendy (17 June 2005). "Art Deco Relics of the Normandie". The New York Times.
  29. ^ a b c Maddocks 1978, pp. 80–83.
  30. ^ Cech, John (10 December 2004). "Jean de Brunhof and Babar the Elephant". Recess!. Archived from the original on 13 May 2008. Retrieved 19 November 2008.
  31. ^ Maxtone-Graham 1972, p. 372.
  32. ^ Maxtone-Graham 1972, p. 279.
  33. ^ a b c d Ardman 1985, pp. 86–87.
  34. ^ a b Maxtone-Graham 1972, p. 276.
  35. ^ Ardman 1985, pp. 85–86.
  36. ^ Ardman 1985, p. 88.
  37. ^ Ardman 1985, pp. 91–92.
  38. ^ Catherine Donzel (2006). Luxury Liners Life on Board. Harry Abrams. pp. 109–111.
  39. ^ Maxtone-Graham 1972, pp. 273–275.
  40. ^ New York Passenger and Crew Lists, 1820-1957
  41. ^ a b c Maxtone-Graham 1972, p. 284.
  42. ^ Ardman 1985, p. 147.
  43. ^ Ardman 1985, p. 137.
  44. ^ a b c Ardman 1985, pp. 166–170.
  45. ^ Ardman 1985, p. 221.
  46. ^ Hooks, Mike (2010). "Buzzing the Normandie". Aeroplane. No. November 2010. IPC Media. p. 60.
  47. ^ "ROYAL AIR FORCE (ACCIDENT, SOLENT)". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 23 June 1936. Retrieved 13 October 2010.
  48. ^ Ardman 1985, pp. 172–173.
  49. ^ Maxtone-Graham 1972, pp. 286–287.
  50. ^ a b Ardman 1985, pp. 325–326.
  51. ^ Ardman 1985, pp. 147, 184–185, 205, 218, 238.
  52. ^ Ardman 1985, pp. 237, 423.
  53. ^ Williams & De Kerbrech 1982.
  54. ^ a b "TGOL – Normandie". thegreatoceanliners.com. Archived from the original on 21 July 2016. Retrieved 9 September 2009.
  55. ^ Maxtone-Graham 1972, pp. 360–361.
  56. ^ Braynard 1987, p. 87.
  57. ^ Ardman 1985, pp. 274–276.
  58. ^ Ardman 1985, p. 299.
  59. ^ Maxtone-Graham 1972, pp. 367–368.
  60. ^ Ardman 1985, pp. 272, 304–314.
  61. ^ Maxtone-Graham 1972, pp. 373–374.
  62. ^ Braynard 1987, p. 97.
  63. ^ Spoto 1999, p. 253.
  64. ^ Ardman 1985.
  65. ^ Maxtone-Graham 1972.
  66. ^ Bondanella 2004, p. 200.
  67. ^ Gosch & Hammer 1974, pp. 260–262.
  68. ^ Schenk 2013.
  69. ^ Maxtone-Graham 1972, p. 392.
  70. ^ "Imagination Creates Atmosphere on Disney Wonder, UK". British Design Innovation. 27 May 2003. Archived from the original on 29 May 2009. Retrieved 22 November 2008.
  71. ^ Ruttenbaum, Steven (1986). Mansions in the Clouds: The Skyscraper Palazzi of Emery Roth. Balsam Press. p. 172. ISBN 978-0-917439-09-4. OCLC 13665931.
  72. ^ a b c Ardman 1985, pp. 418–420.
  73. ^ "'History of Navigation' Mural – Jean Dupas – 1934". The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 1976.414.3a-ggg.
  74. ^ "History of Our Lady of Lebanon". Our Lady of Lebanon Cathedral. Retrieved 8 January 2014.
  75. ^ "Summit Gallery". thecaptainslog.org.uk.
  76. ^ "Celebrity To Replace Ocean Liner-Themed Restaurants". Archived from the original on 1 December 2017. Retrieved 25 November 2017.
  77. ^ ""La Paix" from the Normandie Oceanliner". wikimapia.org.
  78. ^ "History's Headlines: Doomed ocean liner's whistle lived on at Bethlehem Steel". WFMZ. 10 February 2015.
  79. ^ "New Year's Eve 2014 Marked Final Year of Steam Whistle Tradition". Pratt Institute. 21 December 2015.
  80. ^ Rueb, Emily S. (4 June 2010). "The Normandie Breathes Again". City Room. Retrieved 31 July 2019.
  81. ^ Crafton, Luke. "The Normandie: A Legend Undiminished". Antiques Roadshow. Retrieved 1 May 2016.
  82. ^ "Carnival Dream – An Interview with Designer Joe Farcus". beyondships.com. Archived from the original on 7 January 2012. Retrieved 19 December 2011.
  83. ^ Horeau, Yves (2021). Farr, Michael (ed.). The Adventures of Tintin at Sea. Translated by Farr, Michael. Belgium: Éditions Moulinsart. p. 30. ISBN 978-2-87424-484-1.

Bibliography[edit]

This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.

External links[edit]

Records
Preceded by Blue Riband (Westbound record-holder)
1935–1936
Succeeded by
Preceded by Blue Riband (Eastbound record-holder)
1935–1936
Preceded by Blue Riband (Westbound record-holder)
1937–1938
Succeeded by
Blue Riband (Eastbound record-holder)
1937–1938
Preceded by Holder of the Hales Trophy
1935–1952
Succeeded by