Blue Riband
The Blue Riband is an unofficial accolade recognizing the ocean liner with the fastest average speed for a commercial passenger crossing of the North Atlantic Ocean between Europe and North America, typically measured over approximately 2,900 nautical miles.[1] This honor, rooted in the competitive spirit of 19th-century steamship innovation, emphasizes average speed to account for variables like weather, currents, and route variations, with separate records often tracked for eastbound and westbound voyages.[2] The pursuit of the Blue Riband began with the advent of regular transatlantic steam service in the 1830s, when the British paddle steamer SS Sirius claimed the inaugural record in 1838 by completing the westbound voyage from Cork, Ireland, to Sandy Hook, New York, in 18 days, 14 hours, and 22 minutes at an average speed of 8.03 knots.[1] Early record-holders, such as the SS Great Western in 1839 (9.52 knots), marked the transition from sail to steam power, fostering national pride among shipbuilding nations like Britain and the United States.[1] By the late 19th century, German liners like the SS Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse (22.29 knots in 1898) elevated the competition, turning it into a symbol of engineering prowess and imperial rivalry.[2] In the 20th century, the Blue Riband became a focal point of intense transatlantic "duels," particularly during the 1930s "superliner era," where British, French, Italian, and American vessels vied for supremacy amid the Great Depression and pre-World War II tensions.[3] Iconic ships such as the French SS Normandie (30.58 knots in 1937), British RMS Queen Mary (30.99 knots in 1938), and Italian SS Rex (28.92 knots in 1933) repeatedly captured the title, often amid dramatic publicity campaigns.[2] The honor was formalized in 1935 with the donation of the Hales Trophy by British shipping magnate Harold Keates Hales, which was awarded to select record-holders like the Rex, Normandie, and later the American SS United States.[2] The SS United States seized the Blue Riband on its maiden voyage in July 1952, achieving 34.51 knots westbound (3 days, 12 hours, 12 minutes) and 35.59 knots eastbound (3 days, 10 hours, 40 minutes), a record that remains unbroken as of 2025 due to the decline of ocean liners in favor of air travel and modern cruise ships.[1] Although no longer actively contested in the traditional sense, the Blue Riband endures as a benchmark of maritime history, highlighting advancements in propulsion, hull design, and naval architecture that influenced global shipping.[4]Definition and Origins
Definition
The Blue Riband is an unofficial accolade bestowed upon the passenger liner that records the highest average speed for a scheduled transatlantic crossing in regular service. The term 'Blue Riband' originates from the blue ribbon awarded to winners in British horse racing, symbolizing supremacy.[2] Unlike formal awards, it emerges from longstanding maritime tradition rather than oversight by any governing body, serving as a symbolic recognition of engineering and operational excellence in ocean liner design.[5] Eligibility for the Blue Riband is strictly limited to commercial passenger liners operating on scheduled routes, excluding warships, yachts, or vessels not carrying passengers.[5] The recognized crossing follows the North Atlantic route between Ambrose Light off New York and Bishop Rock in the Isles of Scilly, accounting for navigational standards established in maritime practice.[6] Records are tracked separately for eastbound and westbound directions to reflect varying environmental factors, such as prevailing winds and currents like the Gulf Stream, with the overall Blue Riband held by the liner achieving the superior speed across both or the faster leg.[5] Performance is evaluated by average speed in knots—nautical miles per hour—supplemented by total elapsed time expressed in days, hours, and minutes, ensuring comparability despite potential route variations.[2]Origins
The tradition of the Blue Riband emerged in 1838 with the transatlantic crossing of the British paddle steamer SS Sirius, operated by the British and American Steam Navigation Company, which completed the voyage from Cork, Ireland, to New York in 18 days at an average speed of approximately 8 knots, marking the first recognized steam-powered passage and the shift from unreliable sail-dependent travel to scheduled steam services enabled by early paddle-wheel engines and coal-fired boilers.[7][1] This feat initiated the competition for transatlantic speed records, with the standard route later established as between Ambrose Light off New York and Bishop Rock off the Isles of Scilly, a distance of approximately 2,900 nautical miles.[1] British and American shipping companies, including the British Cunard Line and the American Collins Line, initiated speed competitions in the mid-19th century to attract passengers and cargo by demonstrating reliability and prestige, with vessels like the Collins Line's Atlantic surpassing Cunard records in the 1850s through larger, faster designs subsidized by national governments to challenge British dominance in transatlantic mail and passenger services.[1][8] These rivalries underscored the commercial value of speed, as faster crossings reduced travel time from weeks to days, boosting bookings among emigrants, businessmen, and elites seeking luxurious, punctual voyages. The Blue Riband remained an unofficial honor in its early years, with no formal organization overseeing records; instead, maritime journalists and newspapers, including early mentions in British publications around 1890, tracked and publicized average speeds based on shipping logs and arrival reports to fuel public interest in the evolving technology of ocean liners.[7] A formal trophy was absent until 1935, when British shipping magnate and politician Harold K. Hales donated the Hales Trophy as a permanent symbol of the Blue Riband, intended to recognize the fastest commercial passenger vessel crossing and held by successive winners.[9]Significance
Commercial Role
The Blue Riband played a pivotal role in the commercial landscape of transatlantic shipping by incentivizing competition among liner companies to capture lucrative passenger traffic, particularly from wealthy elites seeking prestige and efficiency in their voyages. Speed became a primary marketing tool for luxury liners, allowing companies to advertise record-breaking crossings as a symbol of superior service and modernity, thereby attracting high-paying first-class passengers who valued the status associated with traveling on the fastest vessel.[10] Simultaneously, these liners facilitated the mass transport of immigrants in steerage, providing a steady revenue stream from lower-fare passengers, though the Blue Riband's allure primarily boosted premium bookings and overall market share for record-holding operators.[11] Government subsidies, often tied to mail contracts, were instrumental in funding the development of faster ships to vie for the Blue Riband, enabling shipping lines to offset the high costs of speed-oriented designs. In Britain, the government awarded Cunard Line substantial support, including an annual mail contract worth £68,000 and operating subsidies of £75,000 per vessel, alongside low-interest loans such as the £2.6 million provided in 1903 for building advanced liners like Lusitania and Mauretania.[12] Similarly, in Germany, the 1885 imperial mail contract with North German Lloyd provided financial backing for fleet expansion and faster vessels, while Hamburg Amerika Line benefited from comparable subsidies to maintain competitive edge in transatlantic services.[13] These incentives not only secured reliable income from postal duties but also spurred investments in propulsion and hull innovations, driving the shipbuilding industry toward greater efficiency and higher velocities to secure the economic advantages of the accolade.[14] Intense economic rivalries among major lines amplified the Blue Riband's commercial stakes, as companies poured resources into outpacing competitors to dominate passenger and mail routes. The Anglo-American contest between Cunard and White Star Line exemplified this, with Cunard emphasizing speed to reclaim market leadership in the early 20th century, ultimately leading to their 1934 merger amid financial pressures from the race for supremacy.[15] In Germany, North German Lloyd and Hamburg Amerika Line engaged in fierce intra-national competition, with each launching high-speed liners to alternately claim the Riband and bolster their shares of the lucrative transatlantic trade.[16] This byproduct of commercial success often intertwined with national prestige, enhancing a line's global reputation and government favor. The Blue Riband's commercial relevance waned after World War II as commercial air travel rapidly eroded the ocean liner's dominance in passenger transport, rendering speed records less critical for profitability. By the late 1950s, airlines had overtaken ships as the preferred mode for transatlantic crossings, drastically reducing liner bookings and halting significant investments in new record-breaking vessels after the SS United States claimed the honor in 1952.[17][10]National Prestige
The Blue Riband served as a powerful emblem of national technological and engineering superiority, particularly during the late 19th and early 20th centuries when Britain dominated the records with ships like the RMS Mauretania, which held the westward crossing speed of 26.06 knots from 1909 to 1929, reinforcing the British Empire's status as a maritime and industrial leader.[18] This dominance was emblematic of imperial prestige, as Cunard Line vessels, supported by government mail contracts, symbolized Britain's global reach and engineering innovation.[19] In response, Germany mounted significant challenges pre-World War I through North German Lloyd liners such as the SS Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse, which captured the record in 1898 with speeds of 22.7 knots westward and 22.8 knots eastward, showcasing the rising industrial might of the German Empire and intensifying Anglo-German naval and commercial rivalries.[18] The award's propaganda value was evident in how record-breaking crossings were leveraged by media and governments to elevate national morale, especially amid economic hardships like the Great Depression of the 1930s. Posters and advertisements for German ships such as the SS Bremen (which reclaimed the Blue Riband in 1929 at 27.92 knots eastward) and Italian liner SS Rex (1933, 28.92 knots westward) glorified speed and innovation, portraying these vessels as symbols of national resurgence and attracting passengers while countering economic gloom.[20] French liners like the SS Normandie also contributed to this national symbolism, capturing the Blue Riband in 1935 and 1937 with speeds up to 30.58 knots, highlighting France's interwar engineering achievements and prestige.[2] Similarly, British promotions for the RMS Queen Mary, which secured the record in 1938 at 30.99 knots westward, framed the achievement as a triumph of resilience, boosting public spirit during the interwar downturn.[20] These efforts extended to American post-World War II recovery, where the SS United States captured the Blue Riband in 1952 with 34.51 knots westbound (3 days, 10 hours, 40 minutes) and 35.59 knots eastbound, marking the first U.S. victory in a century and embodying national renewal, technological prowess, and Cold War-era optimism as a government-subsidized flagship.[21][22] Controversies surrounding the Blue Riband often centered on debates over "fair" competition, particularly regarding propulsion technologies like steam turbines versus traditional propellers, which influenced perceived legitimacy of records. For instance, the Mauretania's turbine engines, introduced in 1907, enabled sustained high speeds that outpaced propeller-driven predecessors like the German Deutschland, prompting accusations of uneven playing fields despite the informal nature of the award.[18] Such disputes highlighted how national subsidies and design choices fueled perceptions of biased rivalries, yet they underscored the era's rapid maritime advancements. The cultural legacy of Blue Riband holders endures through depictions in stamps, films, and maritime museums, immortalizing their role in national identity. Postage stamps, such as the 1969 British issue featuring the Mauretania as a record-holder, celebrated these liners' contributions to imperial and commercial history.[23] Archival films, including British Pathé footage of the SS United States' 1952 triumph, captured the excitement of record attempts, while exhibits at institutions like the Peabody Essex Museum's "Ocean Liners: Speed and Style" (2017) showcase models and artifacts of Blue Riband winners like the Normandie, emphasizing their glamour and geopolitical significance.[24] The SS United States Conservancy further preserves this heritage through planned museum displays of the ship's artifacts, reinforcing its status as an enduring American icon.[25]Historical Evolution
Paddle Steamers (1838–1872)
The era of paddle steamers marked the pioneering phase of transatlantic steam navigation, transitioning from reliance on sailing vessels to powered crossings that reduced typical journey times from weeks to days. The first record was set by the SS Sirius, a wooden-hulled sidewheel steamer built in 1837 for the St. George Steam Packet Company, which departed Passage West, Cork, Ireland, on April 4, 1838, and arrived in New York on April 22 after a voyage of 18 days, 14 hours, and 22 minutes, the first entirely under continuous steam power despite burning furniture and a mast for fuel due to coal shortages.[26] Just four days later, on April 8, the larger SS Great Western, designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel and purpose-built for the route, left Bristol, England, and reached New York on April 23 in 15 days, establishing a faster benchmark and demonstrating the viability of dedicated steam liners with her side-lever engines producing around 450 nominal horsepower (nhp) for speeds up to 10 knots.[27] The introduction of regular mail service by the British and North American Royal Mail Steam Packet Company (later Cunard Line) in 1840 further solidified the paddle steamer's role, with RMS Britannia inaugurating the line's operations on July 4, 1840, from Liverpool to Halifax and Boston in 13 days at a service speed of 9 knots, carrying 63 passengers including founder Samuel Cunard.[28] Britannia, part of a class of four similar vessels with side-lever engines, captured the eastbound Blue Riband on August 14, 1840, completing Liverpool to Halifax in 9 days, 21 hours, and 44 minutes at an average of 10.98 knots, a record held until 1842.[29] By the 1850s, advancements in engine power and hull design pushed records further, exemplified by Cunard's iron-hulled RMS Persia, launched in 1855 with trunk engines delivering up to 850 nhp; on her maiden voyage from Liverpool to New York starting January 26, 1856, and subsequent runs, she secured the westbound Blue Riband with a crossing in 9 days, 16 hours, and 16 minutes at 13.11 knots, while trials showed speeds exceeding 16 knots over short distances.[30] Paddle wheels, however, imposed significant technological constraints on transatlantic performance, as they functioned best in calm waters but suffered in ocean swells where rolling submerged one wheel while lifting the other, straining engines and reducing efficiency; moreover, paddles only effectively propelled water backward during the lower arc of their cycle, leading to high coal consumption—up to 164 tons per day for later vessels like RMS Scotia in 1863—and low boiler pressures limited to around 25 psi due to scaling from saltwater use.[31] http://www.vliz.be/imisdocs/publications/288691.pdf Despite these limits, records progressively improved from initial 15–18-day crossings at 8–10 knots to 9–10 days at 13 knots by the 1860s, driven by larger engines and iron hulls, as seen in the shift from Great Western's 10 knots in 1838 to Scotia's 13.5 knots.[32] The era waned around 1872 as screw propellers proved superior in efficiency and stability, consuming half the coal for comparable speeds—such as 12.5 knots on 2,200 horsepower in the 1862 screw-driven China—prompting the last major paddle liner, Scotia, to retire without successors in transatlantic service.[32][31]Single-Screw Steamers (1872–1889)
The transition to single-screw propeller steamers marked a pivotal advancement in transatlantic travel during the 1870s and 1880s, supplanting the earlier paddle designs with greater efficiency and potential for higher speeds. Building briefly on the paddle era's benchmarks of around 13-14 knots, these vessels leveraged the screw propeller's superior propulsion in rough seas and at speed, enabling the White Star Line's RMS Oceanic of 1870 to pioneer the era as the first large iron-hulled liner optimized for both speed and passenger comfort, though its sister ship Adriatic claimed the initial Blue Riband westbound record in 1872 with a crossing of 7 days, 23 hours, 17 minutes at 14.53 knots over 2,778 nautical miles.[1][18] Key vessels exemplified the rapid evolution of this technology, with the Guion Line's SS Arizona, launched in 1879, introducing a three-crank compound engine that boosted power to 6,300 indicated horsepower while maintaining fuel efficiency. Arizona secured the eastbound Blue Riband that year with a record 7 days, 8 hours, 11 minutes from Sandy Hook to Queenstown, averaging 15.96 knots over 2,810 nautical miles, demonstrating the vessel's robust iron construction that even withstood an iceberg collision without sinking.[1][18] Her sister ship, SS Alaska, built in 1881 and further refined for speed, dominated the records starting in 1882, capturing the westbound Blue Riband multiple times, including a peak of 6 days, 23 hours, 48 minutes at 17.05 knots in 1883, tying or surpassing Arizona in several crossings under 7 days.[1][33] Technological improvements drove these achievements, particularly the adoption of iron hulls for enhanced durability and lighter weight compared to wood, allowing longer vessels up to 450 feet that reduced resistance and improved stability. Complementing this were compound engines, which expanded steam use across multiple cylinders to cut coal consumption dramatically—from approximately 4 pounds per indicated horsepower-hour in earlier designs to as low as 2.5 pounds by the 1870s—enabling sustained high speeds without excessive refueling stops.[33][18] The period saw steady record progression, with average speeds climbing from 14-15 knots in the early 1870s to 16-17 knots by the late 1880s, consistently bringing westbound and eastbound times below 8 days and often under 7 days for the roughly 2,800-nautical-mile route. These gains underscored the competitive push among lines like White Star and Guion, though single-screw configurations posed notable challenges, including severe vibration at speeds exceeding 15 knots that stressed hulls and discomforted passengers, as evidenced by early failures like the Arabia's engine-induced structural damage.[1][18][33]Twin-Screw Steamers (1889–1907)
The transition to twin-screw steamers marked a significant advancement in transatlantic liner design, overcoming the stability and propulsion limitations of single-screw vessels from the prior era by distributing power across two propellers for enhanced maneuverability and reduced vibration.[1] The Inman Line's SS City of Paris, launched in 1888, exemplified this shift as the first major twin-screw liner to claim the Blue Riband, achieving a westbound average speed of 20.0 knots from Queenstown to Sandy Hook between May 2 and 8, 1889.[1] Equipped with triple-expansion engines producing around 18,000 horsepower and a hull length of 560 feet to minimize wave drag, the City of Paris demonstrated how these innovations allowed for sustained higher speeds while improving fuel efficiency and passenger comfort.[34] This era saw rapid record progression, with speeds surpassing 22 knots and crossing times dipping below six days, driven by Anglo-German competition that intensified as British dominance waned.[35] The North German Lloyd's SS Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse, entering service in 1897, became the first German liner to seize the Blue Riband, recording 22.29 knots westbound from the Needles to Sandy Hook between March 30 and April 3, 1898.[1] At 655 feet long with powerful reciprocating engines delivering 31,000 horsepower to twin screws, the ship incorporated longer hull forms that reduced hydrodynamic resistance, enabling it to maintain high velocities over the demanding North Atlantic route.[36] Her success ignited fierce rivalry, as German builders challenged established British lines like Cunard and White Star, spurring innovations in engine efficiency and structural scale.[16] The rivalry peaked with the Hamburg-Amerika Line's SS Deutschland in 1900, which eclipsed the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse by attaining 23.09 knots westbound from Cherbourg to Sandy Hook between August 26 and September 1.[1] Measuring 684 feet in length and powered by advanced quadruple-expansion engines driving twin propellers, the Deutschland further optimized hull design for lower drag, achieving crossings in under five and a half days and solidifying Germany's temporary supremacy in the Blue Riband contest.[37] This period's focus on twin-screw configurations and elongated hulls not only elevated average speeds beyond previous benchmarks but also heightened commercial stakes, as liners vied for prestige and passenger traffic amid escalating nationalistic fervor between Britain and Germany.[35]State-Supported Liners (1907–1952)
The era of state-supported liners marked a significant advancement in transatlantic travel, characterized by the widespread adoption of steam turbine propulsion, which offered greater efficiency and higher speeds compared to previous reciprocal engines. This period began with the launch of the RMS Mauretania in 1907, built by the Cunard Line with substantial British government subsidies to reclaim dominance from German competitors. On her maiden return voyage in December 1907, Mauretania captured the eastbound Blue Riband with an average speed of 25.88 knots, followed by the westbound record in 1909 at 26.06 knots, a title she held for 20 years. These subsidies, part of a strategic effort to bolster national shipping interests, enabled the construction of turbine-powered vessels designed for both commercial viability and potential naval conversion, building on the twin-screw configurations that had stabilized earlier steamers.[38] Subsequent record holders intensified the competition, with governments across Europe and the United States providing financial backing to fuel national prestige and economic rivalry. The German liner SS Bremen, launched in 1928 by Norddeutscher Lloyd with Reich subsidies, seized the westbound Blue Riband in July 1929 at 27.83 knots and the eastbound in August at 27.91 knots, ending Mauretania's long reign. This was surpassed by the British RMS Queen Mary in 1938, which, supported by a UK government-backed merger of Cunard and White Star Lines, achieved 30.99 knots westbound after a fierce rivalry with the French SS Normandie—the latter, built with French state aid from the Compagnie Générale Transatlantique, had briefly held the record at 30.58 knots in 1937. The pinnacle came in 1952 with the American SS United States, constructed under a U.S. Maritime Commission contract covering approximately 58% of the $77.7 million costs for its dual civilian-military role, setting the westbound record at 34.51 knots and eastbound at 35.59 knots on her maiden voyage.[39][40][41][21][18][42] These vessels exemplified how state intervention transformed the Blue Riband into a symbol of technological and geopolitical ambition, with turbines enabling sustained speeds over 30 knots and crossing times under four days.[39][40][41][21][18] The two World Wars profoundly disrupted this competitive landscape, halting commercial record attempts and leading to the loss of key ships. During World War I, the rivalry paused as liners were requisitioned for military use; the Cunard sister ship RMS Lusitania was torpedoed and sunk by a German U-boat in 1915, underscoring the vulnerability of these high-profile vessels and shifting focus to wartime priorities. World War II further stalled progress, with icons like Queen Mary and Normandie repurposed as troop transports—Normandie tragically caught fire and capsized in New York in 1942 while being converted—preventing any Blue Riband challenges until postwar recovery. The era concluded with the SS United States as the final holder, as escalating fuel costs for turbine operations and the rapid rise of commercial air travel diminished the economic incentive for such speed pursuits by the early 1950s.[43][44][45][22]Modern Era (1952–Present)
Following the achievement of the SS United States in 1952, the Blue Riband entered a prolonged period of dormancy for traditional passenger liners, as the advent of commercial jet aircraft drastically reduced demand for transatlantic ocean voyages by making air travel faster and more accessible.[46] No subsequent liner has challenged or surpassed the record, leaving the SS United States as the holder as of 2025.[22] The Hales Trophy, a silver and onyx challenge cup commissioned in 1935 to formalize competition for the Blue Riband, was awarded to the SS United States following its record eastbound and westbound crossings in 1952.[47] Administered under rules permitting challenges by any commercial vessel carrying passengers in scheduled service, the trophy emphasizes verifiable average speeds over a defined North Atlantic route from Ambrose Light to Bishop Rock or vice versa.[48] It is currently held by the high-speed catamaran ferry Cat-Link V, which claimed it in 1998 with an average speed of 41.284 knots and remains its custodian.[48] Non-liner vessels have pursued the Hales Trophy in the modern era, though ineligible for the traditional Blue Riband reserved for point-to-point transatlantic liners. In 1990, the wave-piercing catamaran Hoverspeed Great Britain became the first to win it post-United States, averaging 36.3 knots on its eastbound crossing.[48] Subsequent Incat-built catamarans, including HSC Fjord Cat (1998, 41.3 knots) and HSC Hainan Express (related series), further elevated ferry technology by securing the trophy multiple times through the 1990s.[47] The power yacht Destriero, a 67-meter monohull, achieved a remarkable 53.1 knots in 1992 over 3,106 nautical miles but was disqualified from the Hales Trophy for lacking commercial passenger operations.[49] Recent developments center on preserving the SS United States itself, which faces conflicting fates amid 2024–2025 campaigns. Acquired by Okaloosa County, Florida, in 2024 for over $10 million, the liner was relocated to Mobile, Alabama, in spring 2025, where, as of November 2025, it is undergoing preparation for scuttling as an artificial reef off Destin-Fort Walton Beach.[50][51] However, the SS United States Conservancy has intensified efforts to repurpose it as a floating museum, including plans for a land-based visitor center in Philadelphia featuring its iconic funnels and digital exhibits, while coalitions advocate relocation to sites like New York Harbor to avert reefing. As of November 2025, despite advocacy for preservation as a museum or relocation to sites like Philadelphia or New York Harbor, preparations for scuttling continue, marking the end of an era for the iconic liner.[25][51] Debates persist on modern eligibility, with traditional Blue Riband criteria—scheduled transatlantic service by liners—excluding contemporary cruise ships optimized for leisure itineraries and high-speed ferries focused on shorter routes, though the broader Hales rules have accommodated the latter.[52] Prospects for reviving Blue Riband competition appear limited, with no liner challenges since the 1950s and Hales pursuits dormant after the 1990s catamaran successes. High-speed catamarans demonstrated feasibility for faster crossings in commercial contexts during that decade, but economic shifts toward air and cruise travel diminished incentives. Emerging technologies like nuclear propulsion could theoretically enable sustained high speeds for future passenger vessels, potentially qualifying under Hales rules if adapted for transatlantic service, though no concrete attempts have materialized.[53]Record Holders
Westbound Records
The westbound Blue Riband records recognize the fastest scheduled passenger liner crossings from Europe to North America, typically measured from points such as Bishop Rock, Cherbourg, or Queenstown to Ambrose Light or Sandy Hook, with distances standardized around 2,780 to 3,149 nautical miles to account for route variations and ensure comparability. These records emphasize adherence to commercial passenger services, excluding military or experimental vessels, and often highlight maiden voyages where ships pushed design limits to claim the honor immediately upon service entry. The following table presents a chronological list of all ships that have set or tied the westbound record, including multiple instances for ships that improved their own marks. Data includes the year and specific voyage dates where available, owner, average speed in knots, elapsed time, approximate distance, and notes on maiden voyage status and route details.| Ship Name | Year (Voyage Dates) | Owner | Speed (knots) | Time (d:h:m) | Distance (nm) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sirius | 1838 (Apr 4–22) | British & American | 8.03 | 18:14:22 | 3,583 | Maiden voyage; from Cork to Sandy Hook, first steam-only crossing. |
| Great Western | 1838 (Apr 8–23) | Great Western | 8.66 | 15:12:00 | 3,220 | Maiden voyage; Avonmouth to New York, paddle steamer. |
| Great Western | 1839 (Jun 2–17) | Great Western | 8.92 | 14:16:00 | 3,140 | Repeat voyage; Avonmouth to New York, standard route. |
| Great Western | 1839 (May 18–31) | Great Western | 9.52 | 13:12:00 | 3,086 | Avonmouth to New York; improved on prior own record. |
| Columbia | 1841 (Jun 4–15) | Cunard | 9.78 | 10:19:00 | 2,534 | Maiden voyage; Liverpool to Halifax, shorter northern route. |
| Great Western | 1843 (Apr 29–May 11) | Great Western | 10.03 | 12:18:00 | 3,068 | Liverpool to New York; route shift for longer distance. |
| Cambria | 1845 (Jul 19–29) | Cunard | 10.71 | 9:20:30 | 2,534 | Liverpool to Halifax; adhered to Cunard mail route. |
| America | 1848 (Jun 3–12) | Cunard | 11.71 | 9:00:16 | 2,534 | Liverpool to Halifax; not maiden (launched 1847). |
| Europa | 1848 (Oct 14–23) | Cunard | 11.79 | 8:23:00 | 2,534 | Maiden voyage; Liverpool to Halifax. |
| Asia | 1850 (May 18–27) | Cunard | 12.25 | 8:14:50 | 2,534 | Maiden voyage; Liverpool to Halifax. |
| Pacific | 1850 (Sep 11–21) | Collins | 12.46 | 10:04:45 | 3,050 | Maiden voyage; Liverpool to New York, American challenger. |
| Baltic | 1851 (Aug 6–16) | Collins | 12.91 | 9:19:26 | 3,039 | Not maiden; Liverpool to New York. |
| Baltic | 1854 (Jun 28–Jul 7) | Collins | 13.04 | 9:16:52 | 3,037 | Repeat; Liverpool to New York, minor improvement. |
| Persia | 1856 (Apr 19–29) | Cunard | 13.11 | 9:16:16 | 3,045 | Maiden voyage; Liverpool to Sandy Hook, first iron screw steamer record. |
| Scotia | 1863 (Jul 19–27) | Cunard | 14.46 | 8:03:00 | 2,820 | Last paddle steamer; Queenstown to New York. |
| Adriatic | 1872 (May 17–25) | White Star | 14.53 | 7:23:17 | 2,778 | Maiden voyage; Queenstown to Sandy Hook, single-screw era start. |
| Germanic | 1875 (Jul 30–Aug 7) | White Star | 14.65 | 7:23:07 | 2,800 | Not maiden; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| City of Berlin | 1875 (Sep 17–25) | Inman | 15.21 | 7:18:02 | 2,829 | Not maiden; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| Britannic | 1876 (Oct 27–Nov 4) | White Star | 15.43 | 7:13:11 | 2,795 | Maiden voyage; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| Germanic | 1877 (Apr 6–13) | White Star | 15.76 | 7:11:37 | 2,830 | Repeat; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| Alaska | 1882 (Apr 9–16) | Guion | 16.07 | 7:06:20 | 2,802 | Maiden voyage; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| Alaska | 1882 (May 14–21) | Guion | 16.67 | 7:04:12 | 2,871 | Repeat; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| Alaska | 1882 (Jun 18–25) | Guion | 16.98 | 7:01:58 | 2,836 | Repeat; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| Alaska | 1883 (Apr 29–May 6) | Guion | 17.05 | 6:23:48 | 2,844 | Repeat; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| Oregon | 1884 (Apr 13–19) | Guion | 18.56 | 6:10:10 | 2,861 | Maiden voyage; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| Etruria | 1885 (Aug 16–22) | Cunard | 18.73 | 6:05:31 | 2,801 | Maiden voyage; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| Umbria | 1887 (May 29–Jun 4) | Cunard | 19.22 | 6:04:12 | 2,848 | Maiden voyage; Queenstown to Sandy Hook, twin-screw. |
| Etruria | 1888 (May 27–Jun 2) | Cunard | 19.56 | 6:01:55 | 2,854 | Repeat; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| City of Paris | 1889 (May 2–8) | Inman & International | 19.95 | 5:23:07 | 2,855 | Maiden voyage; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| City of Paris | 1889 (Aug 22–28) | Inman & International | 20.01 | 5:19:18 | 2,788 | Repeat; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| Majestic | 1891 (Jul 30–Aug 5) | White Star | 20.10 | 5:18:08 | 2,777 | Maiden voyage; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| Teutonic | 1891 (Aug 13–19) | White Star | 20.35 | 5:16:31 | 2,778 | Maiden voyage; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| City of Paris | 1892 (Jul 20–27) | Inman & International | 20.48 | 5:15:58 | 2,735 | Repeat; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| City of Paris | 1892 (Oct 13–18) | Inman & International | 20.70 | 5:14:24 | 2,782 | Repeat; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| Campania | 1893 (Jun 18–23) | Cunard | 21.12 | 5:15:37 | 2,864 | Maiden voyage; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| Campania | 1894 (Aug 12–17) | Cunard | 21.44 | 5:09:29 | 2,776 | Repeat; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| Lucania | 1894 (Aug 26–31) | Cunard | 21.65 | 5:08:38 | 2,787 | Maiden voyage; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| Lucania | 1894 (Sep 23–28) | Cunard | 21.75 | 5:07:48 | 2,782 | Repeat; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| Lucania | 1894 (Oct 21–26) | Cunard | 21.81 | 5:07:23 | 2,779 | Repeat; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| Kaiser Wilhelm der Große | 1898 (Mar 30–Apr 3) | Norddeutscher Lloyd | 22.29 | 5:20:00 | 3,120 | Maiden voyage; Needles to Sandy Hook, first German holder. |
| Deutschland | 1900 (Jul 6–12) | Hamburg-Amerika | 22.42 | 5:15:46 | 3,044 | Maiden voyage; Eddystone to Sandy Hook. |
| Deutschland | 1900 (Aug 26–Sep 1) | Hamburg-Amerika | 23.02 | 5:12:29 | 3,050 | Repeat; Cherbourg to Sandy Hook. |
| Deutschland | 1901 (Jul 26–Aug 1) | Hamburg-Amerika | 23.06 | 5:16:12 | 3,141 | Repeat; Cherbourg to Sandy Hook. |
| Kronprinz Wilhelm | 1902 (Sep 10–16) | Norddeutscher Lloyd | 23.09 | 5:11:57 | 3,047 | Maiden voyage; Cherbourg to Sandy Hook. |
| Deutschland | 1903 (Sep 23–29) | Hamburg-Amerika | 23.15 | 5:11:54 | 3,091 | Repeat; Cherbourg to Sandy Hook. |
| Lusitania | 1907 (Oct 7–11) | Cunard | 23.99 | 4:19:52 | 2,780 | Maiden voyage; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| Lusitania | 1908 (May 13–17) | Cunard | 24.83 | 4:20:22 | 2,889 | Repeat; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| Lusitania | 1908 (Jul 7–11) | Cunard | 25.01 | 4:19:36 | 2,891 | Repeat; Queenstown to Sandy Hook. |
| Lusitania | 1909 (Jul 28–Aug 1) | Cunard | 25.65 | 4:16:40 | 2,890 | Repeat; Queenstown to Ambrose. |
| Mauretania | 1909 (Sep 21–25) | Cunard | 26.06 | 4:10:51 | 2,784 | Maiden voyage; Queenstown to Ambrose, held for 20 years. |
| Bremen | 1929 (Jul 4–9) | Norddeutscher Lloyd | 27.83 | 4:17:42 | 3,164 | Maiden voyage; Cherbourg to Ambrose. |
| Europa | 1930 (Mar 12–16) | Norddeutscher Lloyd | 27.91 | 4:17:06 | 3,157 | Maiden voyage; Cherbourg to Ambrose. |
| Europa | 1933 (Aug 1–5) | Norddeutscher Lloyd | 27.92 | 4:16:48 | 3,149 | Repeat; Cherbourg to Ambrose. |
| Rex | 1933 (Aug 11–16) | Italia Flotta | 28.92 | 4:13:58 | 3,181 | Not maiden; Gibraltar to Ambrose, first Italian holder. |
| Normandie | 1935 (Jun 27–Jul 1) | Compagnie Générale Transatlantique | 29.98 | 4:03:02 | 2,971 | Maiden voyage; Bishop Rock to Ambrose. |
| Queen Mary | 1936 (Aug 25–29) | Cunard-White Star | 30.14 | 4:00:27 | 2,907 | Not maiden (maiden 1936); Bishop Rock to Ambrose. |
| Normandie | 1937 (Aug 5–8) | Compagnie Générale Transatlantique | 30.58 | 3:23:02 | 2,906 | Repeat; Bishop Rock to Ambrose. |
| Queen Mary | 1938 (Aug 3–6) | Cunard-White Star | 30.99 | 3:21:48 | 2,907 | Repeat; Bishop Rock to Ambrose. |
| SS United States | 1952 (Jul 3–7) | United States Lines | 34.51 | 3:12:12 | 2,942 | Maiden voyage; Bishop Rock to Ambrose, current record, U.S.-built. |
Eastbound Records
The eastbound Blue Riband records recognize the fastest average speeds for passenger liners traveling from Europe to New York, typically measured over the Ambrose Light to Bishop Rock route, which is complicated by prevailing westerly winds and the adverse effects of the Gulf Stream. These records are generally slower and less frequently updated than their westbound counterparts due to unfavorable weather patterns and currents that hinder eastward progress. The following table lists the ships that have held the eastbound record chronologically, including key details on their achievements. For consistency with westbound records, distances are not standardized but reflect historical route variations; the list includes major record holders to highlight progression, compiled from maritime records.| Ship Name | Year | Owner/Operator | Average Speed (knots) | Time (days:hours:minutes) | Distance (nautical miles) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SS Sirius | 1838 | British and American Steam Navigation Company | 7.31 | 18:00:00 | 3,159 |
| SS Great Western | 1838 | Great Western Steamship Company | 10.17 | 12:16:34 | 3,099 |
| SS Britannia | 1841 | Cunard Line | 10.98 | 9:21:44 | 2,610 |
| SS Great Western | 1842 | Great Western Steamship Company | 10.99 | 12:07:30 | 3,248 |
| SS Columbia | 1843 | Cunard Line | 11.11 | 9:12:00 | 2,534 |
| SS Hibernia | 1843 | Cunard Line | 11.80 | 8:22:44 | 2,534 |
| SS Canada | 1849 | Cunard Line | 12.38 | 8:12:44 | 2,534 |
| SS Pacific | 1851 | Collins Line | 13.03 | 9:20:14 | 3,078 |
| SS Arctic | 1852 | Collins Line | 13.06 | 9:17:15 | 3,051 |
| SS Persia | 1856 | Cunard Line | 14.15 | 8:23:19 | 3,046 |
| SS Scotia | 1863 | Cunard Line | 14.16 | 8:05:42 | 2,800 |
| SS City of Brussels | 1869 | Inman Line | 14.74 | 7:20:33 | 2,780 |
| SS Baltic | 1873 | White Star Line | 15.09 | 7:20:09 | 2,840 |
| SS City of Berlin | 1875 | Inman Line | 15.37 | 7:15:28 | 2,820 |
| SS Germanic | 1876 | White Star Line | 15.79 | 7:15:17 | 2,894 |
| SS Britannic | 1876 | White Star Line | 15.94 | 7:12:41 | 2,892 |
| SS Arizona | 1879 | Guion Line | 15.96 | 7:08:11 | 2,810 |
| SS Alaska | 1882 | Guion Line | 17.10 | 6:18:37 | 2,781 |
| SS Oregon | 1884 | Guion Line | 18.39 | 6:11:09 | 2,853 |
| SS Etruria | 1888 | Cunard Line | 19.36 | 6:04:50 | 2,981 |
| SS City of Paris | 1889 | Inman Line | 20.03 | 6:00:29 | 2,894 |
| SS City of New York | 1892 | Inman Line | 20.11 | 5:19:57 | 2,814 |
| SS Campania | 1893 | Cunard Line | 21.30 | 5:17:27 | 2,928 |
| SS Lucania | 1894 | Cunard Line | 22.00 | 5:11:40 | 2,897 |
| SS Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse | 1898 | Norddeutscher Lloyd | 21.91 | 5:05:00 | 3,124 |
| SS Deutschland | 1900 | Hamburg-Amerika Line | 22.97 | 4:50:00 | 3,124 |
| RMS Mauretania | 1909 | Cunard Line | 25.88 | 4:17:00 | 3,124 |
| SS Bremen | 1929 | Norddeutscher Lloyd | 27.80 | 4:06:00 | 3,124 |
| SS Normandie | 1937 | Compagnie Générale Transatlantique | 31.20 | 3:22:07 | 2,936 |
| SS Queen Mary | 1938 | Cunard-White Star Line | 31.69 | 3:20:42 | 2,938 |
| SS United States | 1952 | United States Lines | 35.59 | 3:10:40 | 2,942 |