Red Star Line

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Logo showing Red Star Line house flag
File:Henri Cassiers 002.JPG
Poster of the Belgenland by Henri Cassiers

The Red Star Line was an ocean passenger line founded in 1871 as a joint venture between the International Navigation Company of Philadelphia, which also ran the American Line, and the Société Anonyme de Navigation Belgo-Américaine of Antwerp, Belgium. The company's main ports of call were Antwerp[1] in Belgium, Liverpool and Southampton[1] in the United Kingdom and New York City[1] and Philadelphia[citation needed] in the United States. The company operated until 1935 when, due to the economic depression, it ceased trading. Its assets were eventually sold to the Holland-America Line.

Owners

The company was founded by Clement Griscom, who led it from its founding until the International Mercantile Marine Co. took it over in 1902. Red Star Line survived IMM's financial crisis in 1915. In the 1930s Red Star Line was part of Arnold Bernstein Line.[1]

Heritage

File:Red Star Line Museum.jpg
Red Star Line museum at Antwerp

The former warehouses of the Red Star Line In Antwerp were designated as a landmark and reopened as a museum on 28 September 2013 by the City of Antwerp.[2] The main focus of the museum is the travel stories that could be retrieved through relatives of the some two million Red Star Line passengers.[3][4] In the exhibition the visitor follows the travelers' tracks from the travel agency in Warsaw until their arrival in New York. Works of art depicting the Red Star Line emigrants made by the Antwerp artist Eugeen Van Mieghem (1875-1930) will be exhibited there, next to Red Star Line memorabilia of the collection of Robert Vervoort.[2][5]

About a quarter of the some two million Red Star Line migrants were Jews, largely from Eastern Europe until the exodus driven by the rise of Nazi Germany. Among them were many famous persons, including regular passenger Albert Einstein.[3][6] On learning of the Nazi confiscation of his possessions, Einstein chose not to return to Germany; his letter resigning from the Prussian Academy of Sciences, written on the line's stationery, is a part of the museum exhibit.[4] Other notable emigrants included the five-year-old Irving Berlin.[4]

Ships

Postcard from the Belgenland
File:Lapland.jpg
Postcard from the Lapland
File:Builders hull model of SS Friesland.jpg
A model of the SS Friesland, on display at the Merseyside Maritime Museum.

Red Star Line ships had a black funnel with a white band bearing a five-pointed red star.[1] The house flag was a white burgee with a red star.[1]

Some Red Star ships were given names ending in "-land". Notable Red Star ships included:

Edward Spears and Charles de Gaulle en route for Dakar aboard Westernland
  • Westernland (1918) Launched in 1918[1] for White Star Line as Regina. Transferred to Red Star Line in 1930 and renamed Westernland.[8] Albert Einstein traveled to the United States aboard Westernland in 1933 and remained after learning Nazis had confiscated his possessions.[4] Transferred to Bernstein Red Star Line of Hamburg in 1935. Served as Allied troop ship in the Battle of Dakar in 1940.[8]
  • Zeeland (1865). Bought as SSJava from Cunard Line in 1878. Sold to France in 1889.
  • Zeeland (1901). Launched 1900 and remained at Red Star until World War I 1914.

Funnels of the «Red Star Line»'s steamers

The pictures shown below are from a Red Star Line brochure that agents based in the United States and Canada gave out to potential passengers.

Red Star Line offices:

  • Main Office - 9 Broadway, New York
  • Boston - 84 State Street
  • Chicago - 90-96 Dearborn Street
  • Minneapolis - 121 S. Third Street
  • Montreal - 118 W. Notre Dame Street
  • New Orleans - 219 St. Charles Street
  • Philadelphia - 1319 Walnut Street
  • Portland, Maine - 1 India Street
  • San Francisco - 319 Geary Street
  • Seattle - 709 Second Avenue
  • St. Louis - 900 Locust Street
  • Toronto - 41 E. King Street
  • Washington - 1306 N.W. F Street
  • Winnipeg - 205 McDermot Avenue

In popular culture

The Red Star Lines appear in the Mario Puzo's The Godfather Part II when the young Vito Corleone arrives in New-York. His identification badge is from the Red Star Lines company.

The Paris football club Red Star FC are named after the Red Star Line, on which the club's founder Jules Rimet's English housekeeper had travelled.

References

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 Harnack, 1938, page 566
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Bibliography

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External links