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All Digitized Passenger Lists For the RMS Celtic Available at the GG Archives. Listing Includes Date Voyage Began, Steamship Line, Vessel, Passenger Class and Route.
A history of the steam-powered passenger ship that details its story from the SS Savannah of 1819 to the SS Hamburg of 1969. It contains historical details of all civilian vessels built in the intervening years, with numerous illustrations and previously unpublished material.
RMS Celtic was an ocean liner owned by the White Star Line. The first ship larger than SS Great Eastern by gross register tonnage (it was also 9 ft [2.7 m] longer), Celtic was the first of a quartet of ships over 20,000 tons, the dubbed The Big Four. [4] She was the last ship ordered by Thomas Henry Ismay before his death in 1899.
RMS Celtic was a White Star Line ship, launched in February 1901. Built at Harland and Wollf, and owned by the same company as Titanic.
The Celtic, with 870 passengers, had been steaming westbound for New York City, while the Britannic, carrying 450 passengers, was on the second day of her eastward journey to Liverpool. The two ships collided at almost right angles, with the Celtic burying her prow 10 feet (3 m) in the aft port side of Britannic.
SS Celtic was a 3,867 ton iron steamship with four masts and one funnel – built for the White Star Line to sail with passengers and cargo between Britain and America.
Celtic (1), White Star Line steamship, history and description, built 1872 at Belfast by Harland & Wolff.