The most detailed technical history of one of the world's greatest ocean liners.
SS United States set the record for fastest transatlantic journey by a surface vessel on her first voyage in 1952, a record that stood until 1986. It was the flagship of the United States Lines and represented the apex of steam engineering technology. Designed by William Francis Gibbs, the ship was fast, safe, and luxurious.
This work chronicles the design, construction, and operation of the liner. Coauthor Jim Rindfleisch spent significant time aboard the ship in the late 1980s and early 1990s, serving as the owner's agent and unofficial caretaker. He is one of the few people outside of the ship's crew who learned to navigate the entire ship without a map.
The book is richly illustrated with many previously unpublished photographs and diagrams, including those sourced from the ship's onboard archives. Also included are personnel lists, performance and engineering data, transcripts of ship's logs, and other documents that illustrate the massive undertaking and attention to detail that made this "America's Flagship."
Rezensionen / Stimmen
The title of the book, SS United States: An Operational Guide to America's Flagship is a most appropriate title of this fascinating book. Unlike other books which address the life and times of the ship's career, the three authors document the design, building, and day-to-day operations of the Big U, as well as her current status and possible future. The book is "chock-a-block" with never before seen photos, diagrams, and artifacts of the ship. Of particular interest is Chapter 4: A Grant Hotel and Chapter 6: Special Features, Amenities, and Safety. Chapter 7: Running a Tight Ship, details the brig, kennels, and the care of corpses and servants. Chapter 8: The Engineering Department addresses ballast, fuel oil, stability and trim, and discusses whether the Big U shook. Throughout the 10 chapters and 5 appendixes, many little known facts about the ship are revealed. It should be noted that the three authors have been long members of the SS United States Conservancy, where efforts are being made to preserve the ship. The book is a good read for anyone interested in the SS United States. -- Captain James McNamara, Board of Directors' Chairman of the SUNY Maritime Museum at Fort Schuyler Ever since my fellow-ship lover friend Stanton Daywalt informed me some years ago that he was co-authoring with James K. Rindfleisch and F. Samuel Bauer, a new book on the SS United States, I have been looking forward with eager anticipation to receiving a copy of this new publication. Published by Schiffer Publishing and entitled, SS United States: An Operational Guide to America's Flagship, this book certainly was well worth waiting for.If you are at all interested in the history, building and operation of America's most famous and iconic passenger superliner, this is an absolute must for you. The authors have skillfully woven historic backgrounds, personal narratives, and many previously unseen photos, plans and illustrations into this beautifully produced work of the heart. The book covers the legendary liner's story from design, build, trials, and transatlantic operation, along with many logs and documents describing day-to-day life aboard the SS United States. The publication also charts what has happened over her years since withdrawal from service and the exciting plans for her future by the SS United States Conservancy, led by Susan Gibbs, granddaughter of the vessel's chief designer, William Francis Gibbs. In short, a great opportunity to immerse yourself in the life and times of the United States Lines' most famous flagship and one of the world's most memorable passenger liners. Don't miss it! -- Gordon Bauwens, Scottish & International Maritime Artist
Sprache
Verlagsort
Produkt-Hinweis
Fadenheftung
Gewebe-Einband
Illustrationen
Over 250 color and b/w photos
Maße
Höhe: 286 mm
Breite: 225 mm
Dicke: 27 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-7643-6655-0 (9780764366550)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Jim Rindfleisch's first steps aboard SS United States were in 1984, when the ship was opened for tours. With repeated visits and an eventual ascension to ship's caretaker, he gained a detailed knowledge of the general workings of the ship.
A professor of psychology, Sam Bauer spent countless hours aboard the laid-up superliner SS United States, collecting items and documents. Along with Stanton Daywalt, he has edited and expanded this book, first drafted by the late Jim Rindfleisch.
Before assisting Sam Bauer with Jim's original manuscript, Stanton Daywalt already had an extensive knowledge of SS United States. After reading and digitizing Jim's massive collection of ship documents, Stanton learned even more that contributed to this book's details.