The Ghosts
and Legends of the Queen Mary
By Kriss Hammond
You could call the Queen Mary a floating museum, now that she is
permanently dry docked in the Long Beach, California harbor but she
is much more than a icon of a glorious past. Queen Mary
Statistics - She is emotional nostalgia.
She is a representative of not only an era of distinguished travel,
but also a huge Art Deco memento to the still living veterans of
World War II. The Queen Mary was a major instrument of war, then of
peace.
She ferried
thousand of troops from the Pacific theater from 1940 to 1942 and
then from North America to the European theater and she still to
this date holds the record of the most passengers carried on a
single voyage 16,000 GIs.
Many of the exhibits onboard the Grey Ghost are representative of
her days as a troop carrier. Longer than the mighty Titantic, the
Queen Mary was the fastest ship on the high seas, even the Wolf
Pack U-boats couldn't keep up to her amazing 28.5 knots. Why was
she called the Grey Ghost?
She was painted a
military camouflage grey and she glided through the starry, wind
swept waters like a ghost and if you take the Ghost and Legends
Tour, you will learn that many passengers thQueen Mary Historic
Time Lineat died on-board (over 40) during her trans-Atlantic
crossings often reappear at odd times and locations dressed in
vintage period fashions.
And then there are the 330+ British sailors that were killed in a
highly top secret and tight-lipped disaster. The Queen Mary was so
fast that one of her escort cruisers, the H.M.S. Curacoa (Kir-A
sow-a), tendering her off the coast of Scotland, crossed her path
and proved too slow.
The Queen sliced
through the cruiser's mid-section and sunk the warship in minutes,
taking those lives to their secret, watery grave and the news never
appeared until after the war to avoid alerting the Axis powers of
her true North Atlantic route. The accident barely caused a ripple
in the Queen, but a large section was gouged out of her bow
superstructure, and you can see where the replacement steel was
welded back in on the Ghost and Legends Tour.
Cruise From Long BeachThe Queen Mary is more than a museum or
keepsake for an entire war generation. She is also today a fine
dining experience and a wonderful 365-stateroom hotel. You can
voyage from the past to the present in the museums, but the real
artifacts are the staterooms made up exactly as they were during
the Queen's magnificent heyday.
The warm paneled woods and huge staterooms now offer outside cabin
porthole views over the harbor of Long Beach. At one time you could
draw warm seawater (heated by the ships enormous boilers) or
freshwater for your bath with special soaps provided for the
seawater bathing that was de rigueur of the day.
Queen Mary still
provides comfortable quarters and special milled soaps and
toiletries, and maybe when you wake up in the morning for your
morning juice your breaStay On The Queen Marykfast companion will
be one of those ghostly apparitions reading the morning newspaper
in your suite's antechamber. Don't laugh or mock there have been
such reports and on many occasions, and recently.
I indulged myself for the all-inclusive experience as a modern-day
passenger and I was amazed at the new renovations that included air
conditioning and internet access, data ports, touch-tone direct
dial phones, and king, queen and twin beds.
Stay At The Queen MaryThe ship was the first to use that innovative
material of the times plastic Bakelite is found on certain areas of
her hallway handrails. The Queen Mary has the latest in fitness
equipment, and a bustling business center. During her epic
classical era the Queen had a squash court, swimming pools, grand
ballroom, and a small, but well equipped hospital.
Just about every section of the Queen Mary is now open for
exploration. What a beautiful ship she is and I feel jealous that I
am denied North Atlantic passage on her foot polished decks,
rubbing elbows with the elite of North America and Europe.
Celebrity passengers have included the Duke and Duchess of Windsor,
Liberace, Jack Benny, Gloria Swanson, and other Hollywood and
royalty types.
The Queen Mary is now a private enterprise leased from the City of
Long Beach, which paid more than $3 million to bring her to the
port in 1967, a port that once was a hub of Liberty ship
construction during World War II. My mother was a riveter at the
Long Beach dockyards, so she must have known the harbor well.
Sip Brandy at the Observation BarThe Observation Bar is where Clark
Gable once sipped Brandy as he made his way across the Atlantic and
the venue is still alive with fabulous sunsets and distinctive
drinks. It is located near the Chelsea restaurant.
For a fine dining enjoyment, Executive Chef Tom Tassone creates an
epicurean excursion daily. Named 2001 Chef of the Year by the
Southern California Restaurant Writers Association, Chef Tassone
overseas the culinary efforts on-board, including those at the
4-star Sir Winston's (named after Churchill and many of the The
Chelsea for Fine Diningsuites are also named after historical
personages Churchill, Eisenhower, The Windsors, etc.).
Sir Winston's is strictly a formal restaurant located on the
fantail, and it is the signature dining spot on the Queen Mary. I
dined this evening at Chelsea, a less formal experience with wide
harbor-side windows and still first class, most famous for its
seafood. The gold-award winning nitery is open Wednesday through
Sunday evenings. Reservations required for both Sir Winston's and
Chelsea. But of course, the Queen has a majestic wine list. Did you
doubt? During the day I dined at the Promenade Caf or the coffee
and bakery shop, or if you are here on a Sunday, partake the famed
Champagne Brunch featuring more than 50 food stations! Wow, the
Queen knows how to live! Long live the Queen!
To know the Queen you have to take the tours there are numerous
guided tours, or you can take the Self-Guided Shipwalk Tour. I
really recommend the Ghost and Legends Show highlighting the
haunted history of this stellar steel giant. The Treasures from the
Queen Mary Archives and the Behind The Scenes Tour are a great
prelude to the World War II Guided Tour or the exceptional tour of
the Cold War era "Scorpion" Russian Submarine floating alongside at
the Queen's guay.
Visit a Legendary Ghost I booked myself on the Ghost and Legend
Tour, and I am sipping a hot cup of joe (Gi joe moniker for coffee)
from the starboard bakery before the tour begins, then I check out
the replica posters in the Times Past antique poster shop on the
Promenade Deck. The entrance to the Ghost and Legends tour is
outside and you actually walk into the lower decks from a doorway
cut into the Queen's bow.
I look down the
curving graceful lines of her traditional colors of black and red
stripes painted ship length, but the aft is lost in the curves and
horizon. She is so huge! With over ten million rivets holding the
eight-foot-long hull plates together along her entire 1,019 foot
length, the Queen had plenty of muscle 160,000 horsepower to move
the 81,000 gross tons of steel.
There are still reported and recorded testimonials from people that
see ghosts on the Queen, so I had to check out the veracity on the
$4 million exhibit taking up over 25,000-square-feet of space
within the bowels of the ship's bow, where the former boilers, now
removed, were located.
The most stunning
aspect of the tour is when the ship slams into the simulated
Caracoa the boiler room fills with steam (fake, non-lethal
variety), there is a dramatic change in temperature, ghostly
images, special weathered ceilings and walls, electrostatic charges
and a phenomenal water effect making me wonder if I will become one
of the dark denizens of the ship's depths to later appear in a
different time and a different era.
The first class swimming pool is no longer in use, but it is a
familiar site for apparitions. Do you see the footprints made with
no earthly body? The Art Deco pool is a vortex for the other side,
according to clairvoyant paranormal experts. There are reports of
women in vintage bathing suits, the sound of splashing water, and
children laughing near the pool. I must admit I felt a tingler jump
down my spine.
As a member of the Allied Forces The Grey Ghost traveled 630,000
miles and transported over 880,000 personnel to help win the war.
In fact, the ship was Sir Winston Churchill's command post at sea.
Later, she brought back war brides from Europe.
About
the Author
Kriss Hammond,
Jetsetters Magazine Correspondent. Join the Travel Writers Network
in the logo at www.jetsettersmagazine.com Leave your email next to
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