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On this day in 1936

Clydebank-built RMS Queen Mary takes her maiden voyage

RMS Queen Mary was commissioned by Cunard to replace the Mauritania, and, once it entered service, it would share the Southampton to New York route with its sister, the Queen Elizabeth.

She was ordered in 1929, laid down in 1930, launched and christened in 1934, and carried her first passengers in 1936. She was built on the River Clyde by John Brown & Company, and until officially named was known as Hull Number 534.

Maiden Voyage

According to The Scotsman on the day of the maiden voyage to New York, which was scheduled to depart at half past four in the afternoon, she would be carrying 2000 passengers, some of whom had booked their cabins back in 1930. Her departure was expected to draw an audience of quarter of a million along Southampton Water and on the Isle of Wight.

Queen Mary herself named the boat on the Clyde while it was still under construction in 1934 and, according to London paper Truth on 20 May 1936, was set to visit the completed liner at Southampton two days before its maiden voyage with the Duke of Kent “when her majesty will unveil the silk flag – her own personal standard – which she has presented to the ship. The standard has been framed in a glass panel on the grand staircase”.

“Marvellous ship”

The Queen Mary had elicited much interest, even from her rivals. The Port Glasgow Express of 8 May reported that the director-general of rival French Line, Henri Cangardel, owner of the Queen Mary’s main rival, the recently refurbished Normandie, had been given a two-hour tour. He declared it “a marvellous ship [and] a credit both to her builders and her owners.”

Her first crossing took just five days, and she arrived in New York Harbour on 1 June, although she would have arrived sooner had it not been for dense fog. That day, the Portsmouth Evening News reported that the roofs of the city’s skyscrapers were crowded with sightseers wanting to watch the ship arrive and “the vast new pier which has been specially built was thronged with an excited mass of spectators”. Brits living in America had travelled from all over the country and from a plane flying over the harbour “a two-way conversation between the liner and the plane will be broadcast from coast to coast across the country… Seventy-five private police, all picked men, will guard the Queen Mary from the clutching hands of souvenir hunters on her arrival [and] will protect the passengers from the numerous annoying incidents which are apt to occur when big liners are on their maiden voyage.”

World record missed

The fog – and the slow running it required – robbed the RMS Queen Mary of a likely world record. The Atlantic Blue Ribbon is awarded for the fastest crossing between Bishop’s Rock on the Scilly Islands and Ambrose Light in New York Harbour, which are 3015 miles apart. The Normandie had been fitted with new propellers just before the Queen Mary’s maiden voyage and subsequently made the crossing in four days, three hours and 14 minutes. The Queen Mary took two hours 39 minutes longer but had achieved a higher top speed than the Normandie during the journey.

RMS Queen Mary was retired in December 1967, at which point she was purchased by the city of Long Beach, California. She was moored at the city’s harbour, and significant internal changes were initiated, including the removal of her engines, to convert her into a hotel and museum. Her sister ship, RMS Queen Elizabeth, caught fire in Hong Kong Harbour. She sank on one side and featured in the James Bond film, The Man with the Golden Gun, in which she was supposedly used as a covert base by British Intelligence.

 

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...and on this day in 1849

Tearoom founder Catherine Cranston is born in Glasgow

Catherine Cranston – also known as Kate – is remembered for her Glasgow tearooms. She established the first on Argyll Street in 1878, when she was then just 29, and followed with a second, in 1886, on Ingram Street. A third, then fourth, on Buchanan Street and Sauchiehall Street respectively, completed the collection.

She wanted to do more than just provide drinks and sustenance in basic surroundings, so made sure her tearooms were somewhere that people would actively want to spend time, rather than merely visit for a quick drink and a snack. She was therefore not afraid to spend money commissioning designers to produce something quite special for their interiors. This contrasted with her brother, Stuart, who was already running his own rather more basic tea shops.

Importantly, tearooms would be a place where people could congregate and socialise at a time when the Temperance movement was highly influential, making pubs less appealing to many.

Catherine Cranston, champion of the arts

Arguably the most celebrated of her commissioned designers was Charles Rennie Mackintosh, who designed the Willow Tearooms on Sauchiehall Street with his wife Margaret MacDonald. In this four-storey building, which opened as a tearoom in 1903, he created themed rooms for specific uses, in some cases delineated by gender, going beyond mere decoration to also design cutlery, fabric and furniture that would work as a whole.

Mackintosh had previously worked on furnishing, murals or individual rooms within Cranston’s other tearooms, including her second, in Ingram Street. Here, he had designed a double-height Oak Room, which was restored in 2018 and now forms a centrepiece of the Scottish Design Galleries at V&A Dundee where it is a permanent exhibit.

Later life and legacy

Although Catherine Cranston eventually sold off her tearooms, she was so closely associated with their success that her name continued to be used on tearooms in the city.

Shedied in Glasgow in 1934 and left most of her estate to the city’s poor. She featured on the rear of the Royal Bank of Scotland £20 note issued in 2020, having been chosen after consultation with the public as part of the bank’s People’s Money programme. The bank said that it selected Cranston because her legacy “touches so many aspects of Scottish life that we, as a nation, are justifiably proud; entrepreneurialism, art, philanthropy and dedication”.

The £20 note is the most common note in circulation in Scotland. As with all RBS notes, the bank’s first governor, Archibald Campbell, appears on the front of the Catherine Cranston design.


 

Yesterday…

Scotland’s first commercial railway signed off

The Edinburgh and Dalkeith Railway, which was initially intended to carry freight, was authorised by an Act of Parliament on 26 May 1826.

Tomorrow…

Dozens of miners killed at Udston Colliery

An explosion ripped through the mine at Udston Colliery and killed 73 miners, of whom 20 suffocated when the oxygen was burned up.