French Line Fleet List

 

Fleet List of the French Line Showing Ownership, Nationality, Name of Ship, Year Placed in Service, and Gross Tonnage. Gross tonnage equals cubic feet of all enclosed space divided by 100. Notations Regarding the Ship (if any), Such as Previous Name or Renaming, are shown after the Gross Tonnage.

 

FRENCH LINE

Compagnie Générale Transatlantique (CGT)

(French)

The Compagnie Générale Transatlantique (CGT, commonly named "Transat") was a French shipping company, typically known overseas as the French Line. Established in 1855 by the brothers Émile and Issac Péreire under the name Compagnie Générale Maritime, the company was entrusted by the French government to transport mail to North America.

In 1861, the company's name was changed to Compagnie Générale Transatlantique. The company's first vessel, SS Washington, had its maiden voyage on 15 June 1864. After a period of trials and errors in the late 19th century, the company, under the direction of its presidents Jules Charles-Roux and John Dal Piaz, gained fame in the 1910s and 1930s with its prestigious ocean liners such as SS Paris, SS Île de France, and especially SS Normandie.

Fragilized by the Second World War, the company regained its fame in 1962 with the famous SS France, which suffered significant competition from air transport and was retired in 1974.

In 1977, the company merged with the Compagnie des Messageries Maritimes to form the Compagnie Générale Maritime. Then, in 1996, Compagnie Générale Maritime merged to form the CMA CGM.

  1. Amérique (1864) 4,585
  2. Antilles (1952) 20,419
  3. Arkansas (1899) 6,863
  4. Atlantique (1864) 3,200
  5. Bretagne (1922) 10,171
  6. Californie (1905) 5,455
  7. Canada (1865) 4,287
  8. Caravelle (1904) 2,518
  9. Caroline (1908) 6,698
  10. Champlain (1932) 28,124
  11. Carthage (1910) 5,601
  12. Charles Roux (1908) 4,104
  13. Chicago (1908) 9,350
  14. Colombie (1862) 1,859
  15. Colombie (1931) 13,391
  16. Commandant Quere (1948) 4,478
  17. Cuba (1923) 11,337
  18. De Grasse (1924) 17,759
  19. De la Salle (1924) 8,400
  20. Duc d'Aumale (1912) 4,452
  21. Duc de Bragance (1889) 2,033
  22. Espagne (1909) 11,155
  23. Europe (1864) 3,443
  24. Ferdinand de Lesseps (1875) 2,920
  25. Figuig (1903) 3,714
  26. Flandre (1914) 8,503
  27. Flandre (1951) 20,459
  28. Floride (1862) 2,706
  29. Floride (1907) 7,029
  30. France (1865) 3,300
  31. France (1912) 23,769
  32. France (1961) 66,348
  33. Gascogne (1924) 5,195
  34. General Chanzy (1891) 2,299
  35. Gouverneur General Chanzv (1921) 4,397
  36. Gouverneur General Grew (1922) 4,565
  37. Gouverneur General de Gueydou (1922) 4,513
  38. Gouverneur General Jonnart 4,513
  39. Gaudeloupe (1855) 1,900
  40. Guadeloupe (1906) 6,600
  41. Guadeloupe (1908) 10,502
  42. Haiti (1913) 6,288
  43. Hudson (1904) 5,558
  44. Ile de France (1926) 43,153
  45. Impératrice Eugenie(1864) 3,200
  46. Jacques Cartier (1908) 6,693
  47. Jacques Cartier (1918) 8,379
  48. L'Aquitaine (1890) 8,810
  49. La Bourdonnais (1904) 8,287
  50. La Bourgogne (1886) 7,395
  51. La Bretagne (1886) 6,756
  52. La Champagne (1885) 7,087
  53. La Gascogne (1887) 7,090
  54. La Lorraine (1899) 11,146
  55. La Navarre (1892) 6,648
  56. La Normandie (1882) 6,283
  57. La Provence (1905) 13,753
  58. La Savoie (1900) 11,168
  59. La Touraine (1891) 9,047
  60. Labrador (1865) 4,612
  61. Lafayette (1864) 3,394
  62. Lafayette (1915) 11,953
  63. Lafayette (1930) 25,178
  64. Lamoriciere (1921) 4,713
  65. Laperouse (1916) 9,717
  66. Leopoldina (1901) 12,334
  67. Liberte (1930) 51,839
  68. Louisiane (1862) 1,786
  69. Louisiane (1905) 5,399
  70. Macoris (1902) 5,879
  71. Maroc (1949) 9,544
  72. Marrakech (1913) 6,179
  73. Martinique (1855) 1,900
  74. Martinique (1883) 4,392
  75. Meknes (1913) 6,127
  76. Mexico (1905) 4,885
  77. Mexique (1915) 12,220
  78. Montreal (1896) 3,342
  79. Napoleon (1960) 5,802
  80. Napoleon III (1866) 3,376
  81. Niagara (1908) 9,614
  82. Normandie (1933) 82,799
  83. Nouveau Monde (1865) 3,200
  84. Olinde-Rodriques (1873) 3,188
  85. Oregon (1929) 7,706
  86. Paimpol (1918) 8,379
  87. Panama (1865) 3,200
  88. Paris (1921) 34,569
  89. Pellerin de la Touche (1913) 8,217
  90. Pereire (1865) 3,150
  91. Pérou (1907) 6,599
  92. Picardie (1865) 1,371
  93. Pologne (1911) 3,112
  94. President Dal Piaz (1929) 4,929
  95. Puerto Rico (1913) 6,127
  96. Quebec (1896) 3,342
  97. Rochambeau (1911) 12,678
  98. Roussillon (1906) 8,800
  99. St, Germain (1874) 3,641
  100. Saint Laurent (1866) 3,400
  101. Saint Laurent (1905) 5,614
  102. Saint Simon (1874) 3,133
  103. Suffren (1901) 10,622
  104. Tampico (1855) 1,707
  105. Timgad (1911) 5,232
  106. Venezuela (1905) 4,772
  107. Vera Cruz (1855) 1,739
  108. Versailles (1882) 4,336
  109. Ville d'Alger (1890) 2,097
  110. Ville d'Alger (1935) 10,172
  111. Ville d* Oran (1936) 10,172
  112. Ville de Bordeaux (1870) 2,670
  113. Ville de Bordeaux (1940) 6,541 ex-Saga (1956)
  114. Ville de Brest (1870) 2,676
  115. Ville de Marseille (1874) 2,836
  116. Ville de Marseille (1951) 9,576
  117. Ville de Paris (1866) 3,014
  118. Ville de St, Nazaire (1870) 2,623
  119. Ville de Tunis (1884) 1,903
  120. Ville de Tunis (1952) 9,226
  121. Ville du Havre (1866) 5,065
  122. Virginie (1903) 5,330
  123. Volubilis (1902) 4,747
  124. Washington (1863) 3,401
  125. Washington (1929) 7,817
  126. Winnipeg (1918) 9,802
  127. Wisconsin (1929) 8,062
  128. Wyoming (1930) 8,062

 

Smith, Eugene W., Passenger Ships of the World: Past and Present, Boston: George H. Dean Company, 1963.

 

Compagnie Générale Transatlantique

A French undertaking known as the Compagnie Générale Maritime was founded in 1855, owing its inception to the brothers Emile and Isaac Pereire. Services were first organized from Rouen to Algeria, between Havre and Hamburg, and between Marseilles and Antwerp, with calls at Spanish and Portuguese ports.

In 1861, the company was allowed to change its title to the more comprehensive one under which it is now known. It undertook its first contracts to carriage French mail to the United States, the Antilles, and Mexico.

Some of the earlier vessels employed in the New York service were outstanding specimens of the naval architecture of their day. Among them may be the excellent iron paddle-steamer "Napoleon III.," built in 1864 by Messrs Scott & Co. of Greenock, who constructed most of the more important vessels for this service at that time. This vessel, with her imperially titled sisters, suffered a change of name in the early 1870s when several of them were lengthened and altered to screws.

In 1881, again, there was a significant movement towards accelerating and improving the New York service, and a new fleet was begun with the single-screw steamship "La Normandie," launched at Barrow-in-Furness in 1883.

Four larger vessels of the same class followed, three constructed in the owners' yard at Penhoet. In 1890, the first twin-screw steamer of the line appeared in "La Touraine," and the British-built "L'Aquitaine" was purchased, proving a success.

A new postal contract was arranged in 1898. Under its terms, it became necessary for the company to build still larger and faster vessels. Eventually, four such ships were to be provided. These vessels are at 22 knots on trial and are among the fastest on the Atlantic.

The company maintains a weekly service to New York and the lines to the Antilles and Mexico in the Atlantic. There are also communications with British and Algerian ports.

 

Philip Watts, "Compagnie Générale Transatlantique." in Encyclopædia Britannica, Volume 24, 1911.

 

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