Berengaria in port
After the war, the mighty Imperator was taken as a war prize and given to the British Cunard Line to replace the Lusitania which was sunk by a German U-Boat with the loss of nearly 1200 lives.  The great ship, the biggest one Cunard owned, and the new flag ship of the line, was re-named Berengaria.  this was the first time a Cunard ship wasn't named after a Roman province (Benengaria being the name of Richard Lionheart's wife).
          Before
Benengaria entered British service, there were many things that needed changing.  The signs inside and out had to be changed from German to English, many furnishings changed, and a new colour scheme, getting rid of HAPAG's traditional buff coloured funnels and replacing them with Cunard's orange and black.  If one looks closely at the funnels however, you will notice that not all the sections it has been divided into are not equal, spoiling Cunard's sence of perfection.
          Now in service on the Atlantic, her running mates were the
Mauretania, the fastest ship in the world and  Aquitania, the longest British built ship.  Many famous passengers travelled with Berengaria, including the future Edward VIII, Will Rogers, Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, Henry Ford, Junius Pierpont Morgan and the Queen of Romania, as well as the Astor, Vanderbilt and DuPont families.
          When 1929 rolled past, the world was in the tight grip of depression.  Many of the richest people in the world became ruined, and people could not afford to travel by liner.  The easy way for shipping lines to make money was to offer Americans 'booze-cruises' to help them escape the laws of prohibition.  The prices for these voyages became so low, that soon the
Berengaria was known as the 'Bargain-area'.
           As the hard times rolled on, Cunard and White Star merged in 1934 to colplete Hull 534 (Queen Mary). 
Berengaria had to give up it's title as flag ship of the Cunard-White Star Line to its younger sister, the former Bismarck, Majestic.  As the years quickly rolled on, newer, bigger, faster ships were introduced, first France's Normandie, then England's Queen Mary.  With their arrival, Berengaria appeared very out dated.  Her hull began stressing and she suffered many fires in her interiors.  Eventually, the American government forbade their people to travel on her.  Being such a severe blow to Cunard, the naturally protested, but as another fire broke out, they had to face facts.  She was sent to the ship breakers in Jarrow in 138, such a huge task she was, she was not fully gone until 1946.  Such is the end of one of the most beautiful ships the world has ever seen.
Captured on camera, during the scrapping the forward funnel fell, nearly hitting some workmen
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