cruise ship

print Print
Please select which sections you would like to print:
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

External Websites
Also known as: passenger ship
Related Topics:
ship
tourism
recreation

cruise ship, a large ship used primarily for leisure cruising. While earlier cruises were usually undertaken on ships that had been built for a different primary purpose—such as mail delivery ships or ocean liners meant for transportation—modern cruise ships are essentially floating holiday resorts that feature entertainment, sports activities, and multiple restaurants.

Origins

The first cruise ships were actually mail delivery ships owned by the Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company (P&O). The company sold the first leisure cruise tickets on these ships in 1844, offering tourists a trip from London around the Mediterranean Sea. Over the years, P&O expanded its leisure offerings, and a handful of other ships began to offer cruises. Perhaps the most well-known mid-19th century cruise is the one taken by prominent American author Mark Twain aboard the wooden paddle steamer Quaker City in 1867, which was the first cruise to depart from North America.

The SS Ceylon was the first vessel repurposed to be a cruise ship. It was owned by the London-based ship brokerage Culliford & Clarke, which hoped to make cruising the centre of its business. The Ceylon was a single-screw, iron-hulled auxiliary steamer—meaning that it had both a steam engine and sails—and could hold up to 100 passengers. Its renovation had removed several dozen passenger cabins and replaced them with public spaces, including a dining room, a boudoir, a smoking room, and a steam-powered fairground organ. After its refit, the Ceylon offered the first around-the-world cruise in history. It departed from Liverpool in 1881 for its 10-month journey. However, it had difficulty attracting a full complement of guests, and the company failed to recover from the expense. In 1885 Culliford & Clarke went into liquidation.

passenger ship
More From Britannica
ship: Cruise ships

Nonetheless, the idea of cruising had begun to catch on. The charter for the Ceylon was soon sold to the British Regent Street Polytechnic school, which added more berths and began offering affordable and educational leisure cruises to its mainly working-class students. Other organizations and naval companies began to offer cruises, using older ocean liners or ships that were not needed for other business.

Early history

The first cruise ship built solely for the purpose of leisure was produced by Albert Ballin of the German Hamburg-America Line company. Ballin spearheaded the development of the shipping company’s cruise offerings, culminating in the construction of the cruise ship Prinzessin Victoria Luise. She was a 407-foot (124-metre), 4,419-ton vessel with twin-screw engines. Ballin’s target market was people who were rich but not rich enough to own their own leisure yachts. The ship thus had 120 exclusively first-class cabins. It also had a gymnasium, a library, an art gallery, a ballroom, and a darkroom. The Victoria Luise was launched on June 29, 1900, and operated until December 1906, when it wrecked near Jamaica. Though all passengers survived, the ship was unsalvageable. Popularity in leisure cruising declined after the grounding of the Victoria Luise, the 1912 sinking of the Titanic, and the outbreak of World War I (1914–18), which saw the sinking of the Lusitania in 1915.

As countries began to recover from World War I, cruising slowly began to increase in popularity. In the United States, Prohibition (1920–33) drove the rise of affordable cruises. U.S. anti-alcohol law applied only as far as 3 nautical miles (5.6 km) from shore, and many shipping and ocean liner companies began to offer cruises outside this range. Some were simple “booze cruises,” in which the ships traveled 3.1 nautical miles (5.7 km) out to sea and then essentially floated around for a few days. Others were trips to islands in the Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea, catering to passengers interested in a holiday that would include alcohol. The Great Depression and the repeal of Prohibition gradually ended booze cruises, although some leisure cruises remained.

In the 1930s the largest cruise operation in existence was run by the National Socialist Party of Germany, better known as the Nazi Party. The purpose of the cruise line was propaganda, as it allowed the party to advertise its apparent care for the German middle and working classes, who once on board were essentially a captive audience for indoctrination. The success of the operation led to the planning of the world’s first cruise fleet, although the war interrupted its construction.

Are you a student?
Get a special academic rate on Britannica Premium.

Cruising came to a complete halt during World War II (1939–45), as all ships were repurposed for military uses. After the war, cruising slowly grew throughout the Atlantic Ocean. Mediterranean cruise companies were founded, and in the United States the business slowly expanded, though still using vessels with other primary commercial purposes.

Cruise ships post-World War II

The mid-century rise of cheap commercial flights across the Atlantic forced many naval companies to reorient toward cruising. Ocean liners, once essential to mass transportation, were largely repurposed as cruise ships. As older companies turned to cruising, many new companies exclusively focused on cruises were founded in the 1960s and ’70s. These included Princess Cruises in 1965, Norwegian Cruise Line in 1966, Royal Caribbean Cruises in 1968, MSC in 1970, and Carnival Cruise Lines in 1972. These companies offered prices that were increasingly affordable for middle-class consumers, driving the industry to expand and more purpose-built cruise ships to be commissioned.

The television show The Love Boat, which took place aboard a ship called the MS Pacific Princess, is generally credited for the explosion of the cruising industry in the 1980s. In 1987 Royal Caribbean launched the world’s first megaship, MS Sovereign of the Seas. It could hold almost 3,000 passengers and became the model for all modern cruise ships as floating resorts. The Sovereign had five restaurants, nine bars, a spa, four pools, and a casino.

From that point on, competition drove cruise companies to construct even bigger ships with more unique selling points. The largest cruise ships now can hold up to 7,000 passengers and include features such as planetariums, surf simulators, water parks, and much more.

Rebecca M. Kulik