SS Nieuw Amsterdam
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SS Nieuw Amsterdam

ship built in 1938


Country of Registry
Netherlands
Service Entry
1938
Manufacturer
Rotterdamsche Droogdok Maatschappij
Operator
Holland America Line
Vessel Type
cruise ship
IMO Number
5251719

* This information from Wikidata is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

The SS Nieuw Amsterdam (1938) was a prominent Dutch transatlantic ocean liner and the flagship of Holland America Line (NASM). Built by Rotterdamsche Droogdok Maatschappij in Rotterdam at a cost of 20 million guilders, she was launched by Queen Wilhelmina on April 10, 1937, and completed on April 23, 1938. With an overall length of approximately 758 feet (231 meters) and a registered length of 713.7 feet (217.5 meters), she was the largest ship ever built in the Netherlands at the time. Her beam measured 88.3 feet (26.9 meters), and her depth was 50 feet (15.2 meters). Powered by six water-tubed Schelde-Yarrow boilers and eight steam turbines arranged in four pairs, she could produce a total of 8,116 NHP (34,620 ihp), enabling her to reach a service speed of 20 knots and a trial speed of 21.5 knots. Her propulsion system drove twin screws via single reduction gearing. She accommodated 1,220 passengers across three classes: 556 in first class, 455 in second, and 209 in third, with extensive cargo capacity and refrigeration facilities. The vessel’s Art Deco interior, designed by Huibert Prins and decorated by a team of artists, featured spacious public rooms with fluorescent lighting, aluminum motifs, and pastel colors. Notable amenities included the first ocean liner air-conditioned theater, a luxurious first-class dining saloon with gold leaf columns, and cabins with en-suite bathrooms—an innovation at the time. She also boasted two swimming pools, one outdoor and one indoor, and had the distinction of being well-protected against fire. Nieuw Amsterdam’s career combined seasonal transatlantic crossings between Rotterdam and Hoboken with cruising voyages, mainly to the Caribbean. She served as an Allied troopship during World War II from 1940 to 1946, undertaking extensive troop movements across the Indian Ocean, Atlantic, and Pacific, and participating in operations such as troop repatriations from Australia and the Netherlands. After the war, she was extensively refitted, with her tonnage revised to 36,667 GRT, and her interior restored by artists who had originally decorated her. She resumed passenger service in 1947, maintaining her status as NASM’s flagship until 1959. From the early 1960s, she was refitted for cruising, with flexible interior arrangements and modern amenities, including a golf simulator added in 1967. Her service continued until her final cruise in 1973, after which she was sold for scrap in Taiwan in 1974. The SS Nieuw Amsterdam remains a significant vessel for its engineering, luxury design, and role in maritime history.

This description has been generated using GPT-4.1-NANO based on the Vessel's wikidata information and then modified by ShipIndex.org staff.

Ships

6 ship citations (3 free) in 5 resources

Nieuw Amsterdam
Book Ocean Liners of the 20th Century Illustration
Author Gordon Newell
Published Superior Publishing Company, Seattle,
Page 183
Nieuw Amsterdam
Book Ocean Liners Illustration
Author Robert Wall
Published Chartwell Books, Secaucus, NJ,
ISBN 0525169903, 9780525169901
Pages 19, 79, 83, 147, 148, 231
Nieuw Amsterdam (2) (Steamship, 1937; Holland America Line) Subscribe to view
Nieuw Amsterdam (Dutch, 1938) Subscribe to view
Nieuw Amsterdam (II)
Book Ocean Liners
Author Robert Wall
Published Chartwell Books, Secaucus, NJ,
ISBN 0525169903, 9780525169901
Pages 241, 243
Nieuw Amsterdam: 36,300 tons, Holland-Amerika Line, 1938 Subscribe to view