RMS Olympic
| RMS Olympic arriving at New York on her maiden voyage, 21 June 1911 | |
| History | |
|---|---|
| United Kingdom | |
| Name | RMS Olympic | 
| Owner | 
 | 
| Operator | 
 | 
| Port of registry | Liverpool | 
| Route | Southampton – Cherbourg – Queenstown – New York City | 
| Ordered | 1907 | 
| Builder | Harland & Wolff, Belfast | 
| Cost | $7.5 million (USD) | 
| Yard number | 400 | 
| Way number | 347 | 
| Laid down | 16 December 1908 | 
| Launched | 20 October 1910 | 
| Completed | 31 May 1911 | 
| Maiden voyage | 14 June 1911 | 
| In service | 1911–1935 | 
| Out of service | 12 April 1935 | 
| Identification | 
 | 
| Nickname(s) | "Old Reliable" | 
| Fate | Scrapped 1935–37 | 
| General characteristics | |
| Class & type | Olympic-class ocean liner | 
| Tonnage | 45,324 gross register tons (1911); 46,358 (1913); 46,439 (1920). 20,894 to 22,350 net register tons | 
| Displacement | 52,067 tons | 
| Length | 882 ft 9 in (269.1 m) | 
| Beam | 92 ft 9 in (28.3 m) | 
| Height | 175 ft (53.4 m) (keel to top of funnels) | 
| Draught | 34 ft 7 in (10.5 m) | 
| Decks | 9 decks (8 for passengers and 1 for crew) | 
| Installed power | 24 double-ended (six furnace) and 5 single-ended (three furnace) Scotch boilers originally coal burning, later converted to oil fired in 1919. Two four-cylinder triple-expansion reciprocating engines each producing 15,000 hp for the two outboard wing propellers at 85 revolutions per minute. One low-pressure turbine producing 16,000 hp. Total 46,000 hp, however capable of 59,000 hp at full speed. | 
| Propulsion | Two bronze three-bladed wing propellers. One bronze four-bladed centre propeller. | 
| Speed | 
 | 
| Capacity | 2,435 passengers | 
| Crew | 950 | 
RMS Olympic was a British ocean liner and the lead ship of the White Star Line's trio of Olympic-class liners. Olympic had a career spanning 24 years from 1911 to 1935, in contrast to her short-lived sister ships, RMS Titanic and the Royal Navy hospital ship HMHS Britannic. This included service as a troopship during the First World War, which gained her the nickname "Old Reliable", and during which she rammed and sank the U-boat U-103. She returned to civilian service after the war and served successfully as an ocean liner throughout the 1920s and into the first half of the 1930s, although increased competition, and the slump in trade during the Great Depression after 1930, made her operation increasingly unprofitable. Olympic was withdrawn from service and sold for scrap on 12 April 1935, which was completed by 1939.
Olympic was the largest ocean liner in the world for two periods during 1910–13, interrupted only by the brief service life (six-day maiden voyage in April 1912) of the slightly larger Titanic, which had the same dimensions but higher gross register tonnage, before the German SS Imperator went into service in June 1913. Olympic also held the title of the largest British-built liner until RMS Queen Mary was launched in 1934, interrupted only by the short career of Titanic; Britannic, intended as a liner, instead served as a Royal Navy hospital ship for her 11-month life (December 1915 to November 1916), sinking when she hit a mine.