My mother sailed on the Queen Mary from Southampton in 1946. She was a Canadian war bride and sailed to Halifax, Nova Scotia to be reunited with Dad, a Canadian soldier. Seems she was one of over 46,000 war brides to have made the journey. Her stories of the voyage came to life watching this video. The sea sickness was bad but the ladies sipped Canada Dry Ginger Ale to quell the nausea!! They were so brave, giving up everything they were familiar with to cross the Atlantic to start new lives with the men they had fallen in love with.
My Mother went to England on the Queen Mary during WW2 as an army nurse. It was blacked out at night to prevent torpedo attacks. She never forgot the trip
@@user-hs5in6vv1h blessings on your mother for making journey is she still around if not here soul will be with you always my believe is people long gone from us there souls are here to watch over us in our dreams and are watching over us because of how our souls are connected to one another I do know that because of how when I'm having a dream about my grandmother she always seems to be guiding me to make the right decision and sometimes I have spiritual dreams about me and my mom doing something and then it turns out she had same one and it always feels like I'm getting guided if you're mother is still around though keep on hanging out with her and enjoy life one step at a time
Poor Tim, he finally realized the historical Queen Mary is just what she is: an amazing, beautiful piece of maritime history that we are fortunate to enjoy and experience as a point of interest and a hotel that guests can explore all night long, if they choose. I have stayed aboard before and I absolutely loved it. It is so beautiful, peaceful and relaxing and the brunch buffet is amazing ! If you want The Haunted Mansion, there’s always Disneyland.
My late Father worked on the Queen Mary in the late1940's into the early 1950's. I have loads of original memorabilia from the ship which was passed on to me. A true ocean liner and very majestic looking as well. It's a pity she wasn't retired back here in the UK where she belongs. Dad was a musician on the ship and would regularly set sail from Southampton to New York. Many stars of the silver screen were regular passengers on the RMS Queen Mary as well. RIP Dad X
@@tonyburgham4322 - I was just about to report the same thing, that the QM was always a transatlantic liner, not a “cruise ship”. It’s a mistake many people make.
We stayed in the haunted room on the Queen Mary. It didn't feel very haunted and nothing happened. The most fun we had was when people would come up to the door and knock and we'd sneak over and knock back. They would SCREAMMMM and run. It was fun.
I got a big kick from this post. I am going to be spending 3 nights on the Queen Mary next month. I think I’ll tap on the door and if there is an answering tap, I’ll yell out BOO!
@@deborahlynch2580 😂 just don't use a ouija board there. i heard ghost stories that kids were playing with a ouija board in room B340 and boy oh boy did they summon something dark and never closed the portal out of fear.
I stayed on this ship in 1986 on my wedding night. We were upgraded to your rooms sister suite “Queens” Suite. Just like yours, it had a living room, huge bedroom, maids/kids room and 2 bathrooms…beautiful room! Room service breakfast the next day just added to the ambiance. Im glad the City of Long Beach is working on restoring her. I’m so happy you went visited the Queen Mary. The Grand Ball Room is incredible, enjoyed a couple New Years Eves there!
I live in Long Beach. The Queen Mary has been going through Preservation, Refurbishment and Expansion Projects The City continues to identify projects that address the ship’s preservation, refurbishment, maintenance and expansion. There are several projects planned for 2024, including hotel room renovations and repairs, elevator upgrades, HVAC controls, and repair/repainting of the third smokestack. An expansive section of the Sun Deck, a popular location for special events and weddings, will be extensively renovated and repaired and renovated this year, which is expected to increase revenue generation immediately upon completion. There are also plans to renovate areas of the ship to support the return of the “Ghosts and Legends” tour, including the guest queuing and entry areas and areas within the tour. City staff will also collaborate with nonprofit partners to identify and fund art and historic restorations projects onboard. The Queen Mary’s role as a historic and cultural resource will be further promoted by identifying ways to integrate art, music and culture into ship programming.
I follow another channel that gives regular updates about the Queen Mary. Its been great to see and hear about the upgrades and restoration of this grand lady! Of course some of the issues Tim shows have not been yet been fixed, but I have total faith they will continue to spruce her up!
My father sailed on Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth before, after a during the War as a first class bedroom steward. 124 Atlantic crossings during his time on the Queens. He looked after many of the celebs and Winston Churchill during that time. In the time when GI’s were coming over to the Uk there were 17,000 troops on board many who had never seen the sea before joining up. He once told me that Sea Sick you would not believe how much the rolling Mary could manufacture. At one time when there was a refit/service in NY during the war as she was considered a target by the Germans if carried out in the Uk he lost his pay and ended up working in the Empire State Building as a cleaner for three months until the ship was ready to sail again. So much for the life of a merchant seaman! He carried on after the war but knew the time was against the Liners as he would often see the jets crossing over head. He left the sea but always the Salt was in his blood. God bless Dad x
Then my uncle Bill and he were shipmates. My grandmother got him on as a cabin boy when he was 14 after he threaten to run off to sea and join some tramp steamer sailing out of Liverpool with the wartime convoys. He made a career in the merchant marine rising to first mate.
I did a ghost walk here about 15 yrs ago, some of which was filmed for a tv show. I went here to see for myself if ghosts truly existed, we had a great tour, saw the sights and as we got to the end of the tour, we all stood in the bowels of the ship, my own bowels gave way and i farted, a kind of muffled one as i tried desperately to hold it in. The leader of the tour had headphones on and shouted excitedly " I heard something! Let me play it back" As he did this his counterpart exclaimed " I saw something!" And preceded to run off down the length of the room. So ultimately, i had one guy listening to my fart over and over, playing it back, and his mate chasing my fart along the corridor. I concluded that i no longer believe in ghosts, and still to this day search for the footage.
When I was 12, over 60 years ago, The Queen Mary was docked in Southampton and my parents took me on a tour, I was amazed at the size of it and the grandness , I loved it , the shops, dance hall and everything , I have never forgotten it, thank you Tim for the memory x
I lived Southampton as a child and teenager and like you went on a tour of both The Queen Mary and The Queen Elizabeth. Later on my family and I toured the new QE2. I was left with the impression that those who sailed on the first two ships possessed wealth and taste while those who made the transatlantic journey on the QE2 had money but no taste. My mother was distinctly put out to see cigarette burns on gaming tables in the first class saloon. In fairness the QE2 was launched at the time when 60s flair had morphed into 70s over the top tackiness.
Glad to see how much work has been done since we were last there a year ago. During covid the ship was incredibly close to going away for good. The efforts made by the city of long beach in the past few years to restore the ship have been immense and it is a massive project to preserve such a beautiful piece of history. Frankly anyone is lucky to stay on her.
That is wonderful but I thought the room was overpriced with scruffy fittings - sink collapsing, bath etc, scuffs and especially not vacuumed around the walls. Ugghh. If same price for 2 adults and a chid still not great.
Hi Tim she’s showing her age now i went on her in 1972 in long-beach and she looked a lot better. She has a special place in my heart as the bar you walked through after the kids area was where my Dad was a cocktail barman in the 50’s and i used to go on board as a child when she was in Southampton. So Thanks for the Memories.
I spent a night on the QM around 1990. It was my biyfriend's birthday and I got us a first class cabin much like yours, with an old fan and also a button to call the stewardess. We had cocktails at a bar, the name of which I've forgotten, and an excellent dinner at Sir Winston's. However, we saw no ghosts. Another time we did a day visit with our sons, who were about four and five at the time. We took a two-hour tour that included areas of the ship that are off- limits to unaccompanied guests, like the pool and the engine room and the bridge. The guide mentioned that guests frequently report seeing and hearing strange things in the pool area, which is considered to be the "most haunted" part of the ship. As we left the ship and set out across the parking lot to the car the ship blasted her horn and we all jumped a foot.
Celebrated my wife being pregnant with our only child in early 1982 with an overnight stay on QM. Newport Jazz festival was outside in a large lot and I sat on deck in a light rain watching the concert from a distance. Also, enjoyed one of the best meals ever in Sir Winston's restaurant onboard. It was like a time machine to be there. Also, I seem to remember the stern (rear) had an anti aircraft gun for use during WW2. Fantastic experience
Here's some facts about the Queen Mary: She's 1,019ft long, 118ft wide, 181ft tall, has 12 decks, has an internal volume or Gross Registered Tonnage (GRT) of 81,237, and has an actual displacement (weight) of 77,400 long tons. Her 24 Yarrow Boilers, 4 Parsons steam turbines and 4 propellers produced about 200,000 shaft horsepower, which gave the ship a top speed of 32.84 knots (37.79mph). Like many large ships of her time, she was designed to be slightly curved up at each end, something called a "sheer". This was to lessen the stress on the hull in harsh Atlantic weather. You can notice in a few long hallways in the ship, it visibly dips down in the middle. The ship’s construction should have taken only three years, but it lasted 6 years due to labour disputes during the Great Depression. Construction began in December 1930 in Clydebank, Scotland, and she was ready for her maiden voyage in May 1936, from Southampton to New York. Legend has it that Queen Mary's owners, Cunard line, wanted to name the ship “Victoria” after Queen Victoria. When Percy Bates, Chairman of Cunard, asked King George V to name the ship after “Britain's greatest Queen”, he responded “My wife would be delighted”, referring to Queen Mary of Teck. In 1938, she captured the Blue Riband award for fastest Atlantic crossing from the French superliner SS Normandie. She held onto this record until 1952, when it was taken from her by the SS United States - a ship whose design was a US Navy secret until 1977. In 1940, after being laid up in New York for months following the outbreak of the war, she was recruited by the Royal Navy for troop carrying service. During the War, Queen Mary gained the nickname “Grey Ghost” due to her being painted entirely grey, and for her high speed. At 30 knots, she was faster than any U-boat or their torpedoes. Adolf Hitler himself put a bounty on the Queen Mary for any sailor who could sink her. At the conclusion of the war, Winston Churchill praised the Queen Mary for having shortened the war by at least two years. After returning to civilian service in 1946, the ship served reliably on the Atlantic until she was retired in 1967, when she was sold to the City of Long Beach after her 1,001st crossing to New York, and one last great cruise around South America. According to Pathé news, for one voyage, the ship needed to be stocked with 33,000lbs of meat, 70,000 eggs, 4,000 bottles of whiskey, 1,000,000 cigarettes, and 12,000 potted plants. In her original configuration, she had capacity for 2,140 passengers (776 Cabin class, 785 Tourist class, and 579 Third class), and 1,100 crew. 3,240 in total. Though this sounds like a lot, this pales compared to the record she still holds for carrying the most people at sea - about 16,600 troops on one voyage during the Second World War.
Little note from this 76 year old American woman, that phone is only old to you, Tim, it would have been a puzzle to those who cruised on the Queen Mary. Phones with push buttons didn't come out until the mid 1960's as I recall.😊
@@kathleenmckeithen118 Push button phones came on the market in 1963, quite updated in contrast to the late '30s, so relatively speaking, vintage, but not that old compared to the ship.
Yeah, that phone ain't old. When I was in elementary school we had a rotary dial phone that sat on the bar between the kitchen and dining room. That was in the 70s. I'm nostalgic for that old technology....
As i recall pushbutton phones were a futuristic novelty at the 1964-5 NY Worlds Fair. Everybody still used dial phones. And of course there was no such thing as mobile phones, let alone smart ones.
My Wife’s parents emigrated to Canada from Ireland and came across the Atlantic on this very ship. We have the documents with the room number as well. Thanks for sharing Tim!
My husband and I stayed on the Queen Mary years ago. Our room was somewhere on B Deck. We spent much of the night wandering all over the ship, even in places that are now unaccesable. We were haunted in the daytime and at night. I wrote a piece titled The Queen Is Haunted in which I detail our experiences. She is a beautil, if sometimes creepy, ship. Thanks for a more recent peak at her.
From 1945 to 1951 my father’s work took him to England 4 times a year and he a.ways took me and my mother along with him. Daytimes - reading in the library, writing letters in the writing room, sipping hot bouillon in a deck chair wrapped in a Shetland blanket. If the weather permitted, which it usually didn’t, a brash game of shuffle board. Evenings- lengthy dinners, then up to the ballroom. Y father in a tux, my mother in a Schapparelli ball gown dancing past me. My grandmother had made me my own little blue taffeta ball gown. As long as I was well behaved, ( and who wouldn’t be?) I could stay up with the grown ups until midnight when the buffet consisting of scrambled eggs with caviar and champagne was served. People who cruise today wouldn’t believe the pace of 5 days of this elegant self indulgence!
The Queen Mary was used for the external and internal pre-capzinging scenes in the iconic 1972 movie “The Poseidon Adventure.” When I was a kid, I was obsessed with that movie, practically wearing out my DVD. Ironically, I’ve lived in Los Angeles almost my entire adult life just a short drive up the freeway yet I’ve never visited the ship. Thanks for the great video, as usual.
That was not a wine rack, but a shoe rack. And the round cutouts (various sizes) were likely to put your umbrellas (parasols, as well), plus walking canes into. They would be quite secure there in case of rough seas.
Also the big walk in closets would have been necessary for all the clothes people would have taken then. Ball gowns every night, hats, tuxedos, plus fours, lounge suits for the men. Plus room to store your luggage trunks, not suitcases back then.
The round cut-outs aren't for umbrellas or parasols: they're to hold bar ware like ice buckets and other items. My grandparents had a stand-alone bar with a middle shelf with the exact same holes cut in it. I don't think the rack was either a wine rack or a shoe rack, to be honest. I'd have to have a better look at the whole sideboard/cabinet to figure out what it was for. But I'd bet folding money that the shelf with the holes is for bar ware.
Amazing how a 35 minute review can feel like only 12 minutes. Hope Tim revisits this ship again when things are in even better condition than what they’ve done so far since the pandemic.
We stayed on the Queen Mary several years ago, the guest in the room next to us was on her cell phone all night, you could hear her entire conversation, tried to get her to shut it down but she didn’t seem to care…wish we had better memories of it, very thin walls…
@@eugeneandmichellesmargiass6465 We stayed there too and can confirm thin walls. We were told (or read it somewhere) that the walls were designed for the ship being in motion - the hum of the engines would drown out any noise coming from adjacent rooms.
I've stayed on this ship and attended a wedding. I don't believe in ghosts, but if there is such a thing as a haunted place, this is it; especially if you walk down some of the unoccupied floors of the ship. Also, I highly recommend the tours of the lower levels, which are truly sketchy and scary. Next door to the ship you can also tour the Russian submarine (I believe it is called the scorpion). As mentioned in the video, the walls are very thin and you will hear your neighbors. And there is no excuse in any hotel for not keeping the rooms clean, however old they may be.
My Mother sailed on the QM after the war to Canada. Much of it was still configured as a troop ship and they were referbishing while they were at sea. Back in the 80's or 90's the company I worked for had a booth at a trade show there. It was amazing to walk around and know my Mother had wandered around the same places.
It can be forgiven for looking a bit tired it gives it character. However, I do agree it could be cleaned better, and the bath could be shorted out to look a bit smarter.
QM has been struggling to keep it's doors open for years. It's like sleeping in a museum and a treasured memory of mine. This poster is used to reveling in posh luxury. Sniffing his nose at miniscule frustrations. I find this episode just irritating beyond belief!
Thanks for the tour. I stayed on the Queen Mary earlier this year and yes, the walls are paper-thin and I could clearly hear my neighbors' conversation and snoring. The historic ambience and uniqueness of the experience make up for whatever negatives there are. And I think funding is a continuous issue, so repairs and upgrades are ongoing. In terms of haunting, nothing during the night but the next morning on the outdoor deck as I entered a narrow alleyway leading from one side of the ship to the other, I felt a giddiness/chill that I associate with the paranormal and I blurted out the name "Joe" - and then asked, "Is there a Joe here?" Seemed odd as the thought appeared out of nowhere, then I remembered that during WWII, the Queen Mary transported thousands of troops, who at that time were known as GI Joes.
My grandfather sailed on that ship from New York to Southampton in 1945, as a returning prisoner of war from the Far East. Fascinating to see its interiors, although I imagine it was very different in 1945.
@@kathymmkathymmThat’s really interesting, I wonder if your father departed from Southampton in November after my grandfather had just arrived - on the return journey to the States as it were. There’s a big plaque in Southampton dedicated to all the troops who travelled on the ships via Southampton in WW2.
A magnificent ship - I’m so pleased that they are repairing and refurbishing it - I think it was in a right state a few years ago! I’ve never seen so much wood panelling in my life!
I follow another channel that gives regular updates about the Queen Mary. Its been great to see and hear about the upgrades and restoration of this grand lady! Of course some of the issues Tim shows have not been yet been fixed, but I have total faith they will continue to spruce her up!
I was very fortunate to stay on the QM just before COVID with my husband. I had always hoped i would get a chance but never thought i would till we had a chance on a trip to California. Yes its a bit tired in places, certainly not dirty when i visited, but, truly, after a few hours i began to feel i had slipped back in time. I loved the cocktail bar, i did a ghost tour. But, the best part was when my husband and i crept into the main ballroom ( it was deserted) and danced. It felt as if we were joined by many others. I am open to supernatural, my husband isn't yet a month later when we were talking about it he admitted he felt it to. She is a very special ship and i hope she has decades to go. Thank you Tim for a great overview of her.
I sailed in her in 1965 as a boy, and it was fun to see the cabins, which I remember, especially for the beautiful woods. I had forgotten about the choice of saltwater and freshwater in the bathrooms.
My wife’s grandad was a joiner on the ship when it was built. It was very emotional for her to visit the ship imagining that he had worked on its wooden interior. We were very impressed with the ship and decided to book a ghost tour. We were taken on the tour to the bottom of the ship and the lights were switched off. We were also taken to the bow of the ship where it collided with HMS Curacao and killed over 300 people. I can well understand it being haunted.
WOW, this ship was absolutely fascinating. Although it is obviously very worn in places, this ship blew me away! Love how they have kept all the original furnishings throughout the place and in the rooms, too ❤ loved this so much
3:33 there is an identical suite on the other side of those doors. The King George suite and the Queen Mary suite (in this case at least) were two of the largest rooms available to book on the ship, and the reason that those doors are there is because back in the days of her crossing the Atlantic a first class passenger with really deep pockets could book both this suite and the one next to it and those doors could be opened and those two rooms essentially became one giant stateroom with four bedrooms and two maid’s rooms with multiple bathrooms. I suppose this could technically still be done nowadays if a person really wanted to and had the money of course, but it’s certainly a cool piece of history for sure!
My parents stayed on the Queen Mary years ago. They were in Long Beach for a WWII Army reunion. They really enjoyed the hotel especially the Belgian waffles with strawberries and creme. Thank you for a great tour! 🇺🇸❤️🇬🇧
I stayed on her one night in 2020 just before the COVID lockdowns during a trip to LA, and decided to put a crossing on the QM2 on my bucket list. I did my dream transatlantic crossing on her last December.😍
I loved watching this video, my Dad left for World War II on the Queen Mary and they hadn’t had time to turn it into a troop carrier so it would have looked similar to this as he went off on it.
I stayed in the "Windsor Suite" about 15 years ago. It was a trip-- all of the valet and maid buttons throughout the rooms and the various built-ins. The 1st class bar is where I had a bite and a drink one evening-- I could just imagine the stellar names of passengers who must have frequented that bar. So cool! The tiny bedroom would have been for a traveling maid or butler... Nanny... etc
I stayed there twice, one year the night before leaving LAX and the other on arrival. Tim, you do have to give it a bit of leeway, it closed down for several years recently before Long Beach government stepped up to save it. It has undergone extensive and expensive checks on the hull to make sure it will stay afloat, hardly any reduction in section was found. They could gut the place and fit it with IKEA furniture but what would be the point. Like the Forth Bridge, they’ve started sympathetic refurbishment but it’s still going to be an eighty or ninety year old ship. They’ve completely redone the Cocktail lounge and a few other areas. I’d care to bet you’d find a few dusty corners in Buckingham Palace! Even the cheaper ($100 rooms when I stayed) are made up of two original cabins, one room being the lounge and bathroom I think and the other the bedroom. Get the carpet shampooer out but don’t change it too much, it’s a stunning place as worthy as many Chateaus and Castles in Europe. 😎😇
I remember in early college having a blast singing on the Queen Mary in period attire with our Jazz Choir. Getting to do solos while hearing and seeing the crowd cheer and clap was exciting and made me feel like I was back in time. We later got to explore the ship. It was fun but on some parts of the ship it became really eerie. A small handful of us got to go on a personal tour and it felt like we were being watched and followed. The air got heavy, musty, and cold but it was an old ship. At one point, we all felt unsafe and decided to walk back together. We couldn’t explain what exactly we were feeling but we all seemed to understand it was time to head back. Although we felt fine upon returning to the main lobby, we decided to leave earlier than anticipated. We’d had our fun but it was time to head back to our own time.
This is honestly one of my top five videos you've created. I absolutely love this ship; it's like staying a night in a museum. It's a shame it's in America, as I would love to stay a night myself.
Good joke.😂 She isen't seaworthy and has a lot of work to be done, just to keep her safe where she is berthed, on limited funds; let alone bringing her up to being seawortby at today's standards.
Stayed on the ship in 1974 it was great and in much better shape. All those years and only beginning to renovate now unbelievable. as I recall it was $30 a night. Hope it's restored to its former glory soon. Beautiful Ship huge project
I have visited the Queen Mary twice. The second time I booked a suite for 2 nights. Luckily, the bath in my suite wasn't peeling. The suite was on the starboard side aft of reception. It was £300 per night in 2006. A lot of the teak has been replaced, the wood panelling has been cleaned and the lighting upgraded. I think that you were in a suite used by the Royal Family. The single bedroom was for a servant. The highlight for me was Sunday brunch in the room that you visited with the 3 fireplaces. I think it was a ballroom that was also used as a cinema. The forward bar was a great place to relax. The downside, was that I travelled to Long Beach from Hollywood. I had been staying in a hotel behind the Kodak theatre. It was pre-uber and no taxi company would drive us to Long Beach. Had to get the public transport system via Compton. We had armed security sat next to us. Hollywood Boulevard has the only McDonald's I have ever been in with armed guards on the door. Really amazing hot dogs just down the Road at Pinks. Thanks for posting this video Tim. Have you done the Orient Express?
I’ve stayed on the “Queen Mary” twice. I’m a bit of an ocean liner aficionado so it was a must-see for me when I was in Southern California. I stayed on her back in August 2001 and again in 2002 so the room where I stayed was in a bit better shape than yours. I don’t remember any issues with cleanliness but there were areas that looked a bit worn which I just chalked up to the overall age of the ship. I loved being able to walk around late at night, too, when all the day tourists had gone. The promenade deck is beautiful and you really do get the feeling you’ve stepped back in time. I loved all the Art Deco, too. Considering her fate was very much up in the air a few short years ago, I’m just glad her future is more or less secure. She really is a treasure. I’m glad you had the opportunity to stay on her. A unique experience for sure.
Iam glad they are restoring her because i think she is the closest to Titanic. I did not stay on the Queen Mary but i did the ghost tour which was epic.
I’ve always got the feeling that for all the people who loved the ship and want to preserve it. There’s an equally sized element down there in Long Beach at the city would love to get rid of it and develop that area into something else.
@@DaveP-uv1ml I agree, Dave. I’m sure it’s quite the money pit. I hope the revenue and tourism it brings to Long Beach is equal to the amount of money required for its upkeep.
@@cak813 , I don’t think I’ll be ever buying a yacht in my life, but the one person who gave me advice about that who owned one, which was a surprise to me because I never saw the use it and didn’t even know they had it. Told me never to buy one, that they were the worst investment you can make they were all money pits. I tend to think that’s probably true of the queen Mary, even though she’s not ever going to be going anywhere but still sitting in that saltwater I’m sure necessitates a lot of maintenance just to keep her afloat.
I stayed in May 2024 and enjoyed a couple of the historical tours as well as a ghost hunting tour from 10pm - 1 a.m. We explored parts of the infirmary, engine room, swimming pool and B340. It's not really a haunted room as it was set up with things to fool people into believing it was truly haunted. The room is not available for guests as it is specially decorated with occult items and a part of their ghost tours. However, we did experience a few things that were unsettling on our tour and put me on edge when heading back to my room in the early hours of the morning. The most extraordinary part of that ship, in addition to the history, is the wood and art. It really is a living museum. I enjoyed a cocktail in the main bar area, which was absolutely beautiful. I also had a lovely dinner at one of their restaurants. Yes, this was expensive, but truly worth the experience.
How great it is to be taken back in time to yesteryear and to experience the luxury of such an iconic ship. How pleasing that so much of the original has been retained. I agree that your suite did leave a few things that should have been attended to but overall a tour of this ship is much appreciated. The total cost, actually, didn't seem too bad although breakfast seemed a bit steep.
I was watching this video this morning and just when Tim got to the door of the most haunted room a loud advert came on! I jumped out of my skin😂 Great tour of the ship Tim, and I agree that doll is scary, am glad Casper wasn't around on this trip to see it!
I had to cancel staying on this ship because I was sick, we went straight to Disneyland. Our Disney VIP tour guide said he worked on the QM for 7 years and claims that it's definitely haunted. What an awesome piece of history to visit!
I was excited about the great liners in the 1950s and 1960s. In the 1970s through the 1980s I spent time on the Queen Mary. The original restoration in the 1970s was exciting with a Jaques Cousteau Ocean Museum. Back then the engine room and an underwater exhibit of a propeller was available. The general interiors and the number of interiors available is greatly expanded today and much fresher. I started sailing on the QE2 in the 1990s and met the QM2 on its first visit to New York. I went on to sailing several times on the QM2. All this great liners experience is one of the great successes of my life. Thanks for bringing back the memories.
I love the original features but I think the upkeep and hygiene are dreadful..that doll comes alive... creepy as hell. Couldn't stay there in a million 😮 Thanks Tim for excellent video as always. 😮❤
I LOVE this old-time ship and its 1920s tap fittings. Gorgeous bed. All polished timber and marble.tops. Fabulous mirrors. NO PLASTIC. This was the way to sea travel before they decided to cram space and treat EVERYTHING, humans included, as a cost/profit unit.
Fun fact Tim. The one ballroom has a moving map with two ships on it which moved during the voyage and when the Queen Mary ship passed her sister ship the Elizabeth on the ocean guests could see it from moving map and crew would have champagne ready to toast as the ships passed. I do believe they filmed some corridor shots for the movie titanic on the Mary.
I’m impressed with this suite. It is in poor condition but it’s how it originally was. The bathroom fixtures are actually original so they look old. Thanks for this tour.
When news came out 4 years ago about proposals to scrap the QM, the UK's prime minister wrote a letter of protest---I think the complaint was sent to some department in Washington DC. I've always felt the ship is in public trust & is a tribute to its builders, including the people of Clydesbank. Some say the QM should have been moored in the UK instead of the US, but the weather of Southern Calif since 1967 has been generally less tough on her then if she had been stationed in, say, Southhampton. When the QE (circa 1930s) was retired & briefly stationed north of Miami in the late 1960s, the climate of Florida was reportedly hard on the ship.
Thank you for this wonderful video. Made me unexpectedly emotional. My late grandfather worked on the Queen Mary and met many of the VIP’s that sailed on her. I would love to have more time with him to hear his stories. I was too young to appreciate them before he passed.
I spent a night on the Queen Mary in May of 2017. I was assigned to Stateroom A113. The food exceeded expectations. The bed was comfortable, but you could hear everything through the bulkhead (wall). I really enjoyed the tour. The engine room was awesome. I really enjoyed my time on the Queen Mary.
Wow, thank you for this video. We stayed at Queen Mary in the early 80s, during our first trip to LA. My wife started to complain the moment we got into our room ! She thought our room with a tiny window was like a dungeon while we were staying in sunny California. We stayed only one night and checked out early. We did enjoy the ship tour, including the engines, restaurants, etc. It was a great place for a day out, not as a "hotel" unless for the sake of memory lane or for ship enthusiasts. The Spruce Goose was also on display next to the QM in those days.
One thing I would like to point out is that you have the opportunity to stay in a piece of history. It must be quite expensive and also difficult to run a historical hotel to keep it updated but also historical. A friend of mine hates visiting countries that don't have high end restaurants or amenities like back home. I always try to explain to him he is experiencing their culture. I view it the same with the bathrooms and carpets. You're experiencing the history. Of course things need repairs but they get to them when the money is available. Im simply saying being judgemental over the small things may deter some folks from experiencing these amazing hotels.Keep on filming my UK brother. Cheers from Canada 🇨🇦
I stayed on the Queen Mary in Long Beach CA about a year ago and it was a nice stay. I took a tour of the ship and the history. The breakfast was good and also the lunch. My room was dated and comfortable. I agree on the bathroom needs to be renovated. My bathroom had fixtures that worked while also having the oldtime fixtures. There was a gentleman playing the piano in the lobby when I was on the Queen Mary and people gathered around as he played. I was on the A Deck. Glad that you enjoyed your stay on the Queen Mary.
Tim you have excelled yourself. This reminds me of scenes from the Shining. Who knows what celebrities & royalty have taken a bath in that Royal suite. The stunning 1930's wood decor, the art deco and never seen before ballrooms, smoking rooms, gyms and fancy restaurants is reminiscent of the RMS Titanic. I won't be visiting California anytime soon due to the civil unrest and crime but I wish I had back when I visited in 2019.
I love the Queen Mary, I have a friend that used to work there. I’ve never stayed overnight, but I’ve had two very spooky experiences on it, and neither one was on one of their ghost tours because I’ve never been on one.
Totally agree! Yes, it is almost 100 years old but for such an iconic vessel and the price paid, the attention to detail is very bad and the general upkeep of the ship is bad overall. Painting, cleanliness, etc. should be up to scratch. The bath and showerhead are inexcusable.
I am so glad you honred the amazing parts of her and it is just a huge project that never gets fully caught up with paint and upkeep mistakes but clean enough to sleep over and enjoy being right there to take a cruise from that port for a pre or post stay and i have toured her 2 times due to taking cruises close from there,,,never have stayed over...thank you for donating to her ...she has amazing art and wood and history worth preserving...thank you. I have been able twice to just do a lot of self guided looking...found the old chappel...it seemed more torn up this time...i saw a bunch of pople dressed to the nines and they used to have a more working barr either forward or aft. I hope they get the sweites especially up to par. I thing those long poles in your suite ere how they hang the probably 1- 2 times a week or so papers they could get printed on board from press or pick up when in port...this was rigged in middle of her time as a mega World War Transfer ship and she so deserves to be honored...thank you.
I was fortunate to spend several days on her back in 2000. I was lucky to get to know the general manager and staff. There was a fine gentleman who presented a daily talk in the engine room and had served on the crew while the ship was at sea. He and his wife invited me to tea a few of the afternoons and we exchanged cards for years afterwards.He showed me that actual keel at the ship's bottom and noted that there were no hull leaks . . . amazingly watertight. It was a great experience.I am so relieved that it's once again being cared for.
I spent a night on that old ship back in the 1980s the room was musty and made me congested. He talks about the smell of the wood. But I recall the musty/mouldy smells.
I spent some time on the QM, and can say for or certain that she is haunted! Lovely beautiful grand art deco ship that is almost certainly an asset to long beach! I loved my time there and hope one day soon to return.
First time aboard was in March, 1983 when the Spruce Goose exhibit opened in the dome built for it adjacent to the ship. Have spent more than 400 nights aboard since then, in everything from original inside single bed cabins to suites like in this video, on Main, A and B deck. Never experienced ghosts or paranormal activity to date... but the ship is still amazing. Years ago, it was easier to get into the pool and other lower deck areas like the boiler rooms, cargo hold and turbo generator rooms. Now it is much more difficult because they keep access to these areas locked up to explorers, and only available through specific tours. At least the aft engine room, steering hydraulics and propeller are still part of the self guided tour. Regarding the 'rough' condition of some areas of the ship and even the hotel rooms... the Queen Mary was shut to the public and essentially abandoned from March, 2020 until May, 2023. It is remarkable they have gotten things at least back to this state. Many rooms on the ship had been taken over by pigeons and seagulls. A lot of work had to be done, and more is ongoing. I stayed aboard for a week in May this year, and the room I was in was totally original with the wood paneled walls and Shanks bathroom fixtures. It had undergone full detailing since I was last in it in 2020, and had new carpet, curtains, and mattresses and bed covers for the two single beds. The room looked real sharp, in fact the best I've seen a Queen Mary cabin look in 20 years... so they are working on it, but progress is slow with so many rooms. Enjoy that the ship is still with us to appreciate.
The lower portions where the engines etc are was scary enough for me even without it being Halloween. I just felt creeped out down there the whole time. The humming noises etc all really make it eerie if you’re alone down there alone as I was.
Hi Tim, loved this video (I’m a big history nerd and I love this period in time!). Where you noticed the worn carpet, I’m pretty sure is actually carpet mites!
My family stayed on her for three nights way back in the early 2000's to attend a model railroad convention held there yearly. While exploring the ship one evening by myself, I was in one of the midship elevators and the thing mysteriously stopped at a deck not of my selection. The door opened and I was dumbfounded thinking that if I walked out into the dark hallway before me, and the door closed behind me, I would be screwed. As the door stayed open, I yelled out to possibly get someone's attention and heard nothing in reply to my question, "Is there anyone here." so I stepped back in, selected the deck I wanted to get to and in seconds later, there I was, in a well lit deck hallway with people there. While checking out, I mentioned the elevator scare to the desk attendant and all she said was, " Well, it is a haunted ship sir." And a blank face was staring back at me. Spooky....
The QE2 is a by-product of the late 1960s, a totally different cultural & visual vibe from the 1930s. The 1960s-70s was Woodstock, the Vietnam War, polyester leisure suits & more TV glitz than movie glamour.
My wife`s uncle was one of a team which plastered below the waterline with a rubber compound to smooth out the rivets making her faster through the water .She took the blue riband for fastest crossing in 1938 and held it until 1952 .
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@@bodyloverz30 that would be amazing !
where did you get the torch from please Tim.
You are brave tim thanks for doing what you do and always be safe and love your beautiful inner being 🎉
Toast is great for breakfast
This is my dream car 🚗
So glad to see Tim being shocked as I was beginning to worry about the recent lack of Tim being shocked.
i know its been over 20 videos now .. i was worried my self ;-)
It would be terrible if he wasn’t shocked
Yea this ”I was shocked” trend on youtube really needs to stop.
only needs to stop when youtubers use it for no reason i show you in everyone i have used im shocked!
Lots of luxury resorts recently..
My mother sailed on the Queen Mary from Southampton in 1946. She was a Canadian war bride and sailed to Halifax, Nova Scotia to be reunited with Dad, a Canadian soldier. Seems she was one of over 46,000 war brides to have made the journey. Her stories of the voyage came to life watching this video. The sea sickness was bad but the ladies sipped Canada Dry Ginger Ale to quell the nausea!! They were so brave, giving up everything they were familiar with to cross the Atlantic to start new lives with the men they had fallen in love with.
My Mother went to England on the Queen Mary during WW2 as an army nurse. It was blacked out at night to prevent torpedo attacks. She never forgot the trip
@@kathleenprice662 Gosh I bet that was terrifying it being all blacked out, aswell as it being WW2 aswell of course 😮... Huge Respect 😊
@@user-hs5in6vv1h blessings on your mother for making journey is she still around if not here soul will be with you always my believe is people long gone from us there souls are here to watch over us in our dreams and are watching over us because of how our souls are connected to one another I do know that because of how when I'm having a dream about my grandmother she always seems to be guiding me to make the right decision and sometimes I have spiritual dreams about me and my mom doing something and then it turns out she had same one and it always feels like I'm getting guided if you're mother is still around though keep on hanging out with her and enjoy life one step at a time
@@kathleenprice662she has a very beautiful brave soul can feel it 🎉
I'm thinking depending on the time of year that ride across the pond was probably a little sloppy!
That "lonely chair" by the window is for the doll when she comes to visit you later tonight.
🤣🤣🤣OMG I would mess my pants
😂😂😂
Lol!!! The place is creepy . What Tim does for his followers.
@@maureen14 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Creepy
Poor Tim, he finally realized the historical Queen Mary is just what she is: an amazing, beautiful piece of maritime history that we are fortunate to enjoy and experience as a point of interest and a hotel that guests can explore all night long, if they choose.
I have stayed aboard before and I absolutely loved it. It is so beautiful, peaceful and relaxing and the brunch buffet is amazing !
If you want The Haunted Mansion, there’s always Disneyland.
My late Father worked on the Queen Mary in the late1940's into the early 1950's. I have loads of original memorabilia from the ship which was passed on to me. A true ocean liner and very majestic looking as well. It's a pity she wasn't retired back here in the UK where she belongs. Dad was a musician on the ship and would regularly set sail from Southampton to New York. Many stars of the silver screen were regular passengers on the RMS Queen Mary as well. RIP Dad X
Lovely historical story ... hope you can make it to the U.S. for a holiday on the ship.
@@sherryw1919what a good idea!
@@sherryw1919 Thank you 👍
@@graceelizabeth130Definitely x
❤
The QM is not a cruise ship, but a purpose built ocean liner. She could handle weather that would keep cruise ships in port.
@@tonyburgham4322 - I was just about to report the same thing, that the QM was always a transatlantic liner, not a “cruise ship”. It’s a mistake many people make.
Just like her successor the Queen Mary 2
We stayed in the haunted room on the Queen Mary. It didn't feel very haunted and nothing happened. The most fun we had was when people would come up to the door and knock and we'd sneak over and knock back. They would SCREAMMMM and run. It was fun.
Ok this made me laugh just reading it, definitely sounds like something I’d do! Those people had to be terrified🤣
Lol. Especially back when there wasn't a window in the door.....
I got a big kick from this post. I am going to be spending 3 nights on the Queen Mary next month. I think I’ll tap on the door and if there is an answering tap, I’ll yell out BOO!
@@deborahlynch2580 😂 just don't use a ouija board there. i heard ghost stories that kids were playing with a ouija board in room B340 and boy oh boy did they summon something dark and never closed the portal out of fear.
@lukepevensie
Lol you tryin to start a creepypasta?
I stayed on this ship in 1986 on my wedding night. We were upgraded to your rooms sister suite “Queens” Suite. Just like yours, it had a living room, huge bedroom, maids/kids room and 2 bathrooms…beautiful room! Room service breakfast the next day just added to the ambiance. Im glad the City of Long Beach is working on restoring her. I’m so happy you went visited the Queen Mary. The Grand Ball Room is incredible, enjoyed a couple New Years Eves there!
I live in Long Beach. The Queen Mary has been going through Preservation, Refurbishment and Expansion Projects
The City continues to identify projects that address the ship’s preservation, refurbishment, maintenance and expansion. There are several projects planned for 2024, including hotel room renovations and repairs, elevator upgrades, HVAC controls, and repair/repainting of the third smokestack. An expansive section of the Sun Deck, a popular location for special events and weddings, will be extensively renovated and repaired and renovated this year, which is expected to increase revenue generation immediately upon completion. There are also plans to renovate areas of the ship to support the return of the “Ghosts and Legends” tour, including the guest queuing and entry areas and areas within the tour. City staff will also collaborate with nonprofit partners to identify and fund art and historic restorations projects onboard. The Queen Mary’s role as a historic and cultural resource will be further promoted by identifying ways to integrate art, music and culture into ship programming.
its had a tough time over the decades lets hope the city doesnt run out of money to support it!
That room under black light reminds me of a Jackson Pollack painting. Wouldn’t have spent 5 seconds more in that place 🤮
I follow another channel that gives regular updates about the Queen Mary. Its been great to see and hear about the upgrades and restoration of this grand lady! Of course some of the issues Tim shows have not been yet been fixed, but I have total faith they will continue to spruce her up!
Thank you for giving it a good home and looking after it. I'm so glad it ended up being cared for, it's so beaitiful.
Sounds like a typical government mess. Probably why it’s dirty and not maintained
My father sailed on Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth before, after a during the War as a first class bedroom steward. 124 Atlantic crossings during his time on the Queens.
He looked after many of the celebs and Winston Churchill during that time. In the time when GI’s were coming over to the Uk there were 17,000 troops on board many who had never seen the sea before joining up. He once told me that Sea Sick you would not believe how much the rolling Mary could manufacture. At one time when there was a refit/service in NY during the war as she was considered a target by the Germans if carried out in the Uk he lost his pay and ended up working in the Empire State Building as a cleaner for three months until the ship was ready to sail again. So much for the life of a merchant seaman! He carried on after the war but knew the time was against the Liners as he would often see the jets crossing over head. He left the sea but always the Salt was in his blood.
God bless Dad x
Then my uncle Bill and he were shipmates. My grandmother got him on as a cabin boy when he was 14 after he threaten to run off to sea and join some tramp steamer sailing out of Liverpool with the wartime convoys. He made a career in the merchant marine rising to first mate.
I did a ghost walk here about 15 yrs ago, some of which was filmed for a tv show.
I went here to see for myself if ghosts truly existed, we had a great tour, saw the sights and as we got to the end of the tour, we all stood in the bowels of the ship, my own bowels gave way and i farted, a kind of muffled one as i tried desperately to hold it in. The leader of the tour had headphones on and shouted excitedly " I heard something! Let me play it back"
As he did this his counterpart exclaimed " I saw something!" And preceded to run off down the length of the room.
So ultimately, i had one guy listening to my fart over and over, playing it back, and his mate chasing my fart along the corridor.
I concluded that i no longer believe in ghosts, and still to this day search for the footage.
lol
Funny story lolol !
They do exist. There are 2 of them in my house.
@@danielledewitt1ooh do share please 😮
You gave me my laugh for the day!
You said your room was "dated" but that's what is so much fun about it! Like stepping back in time.
When I was 12, over 60 years ago, The Queen Mary was docked in Southampton and my parents took me on a tour, I was amazed at the size of it and the grandness , I loved it , the shops, dance hall and everything , I have never forgotten it, thank you Tim for the memory x
What a lovely memory for you Judi. X
I lived Southampton as a child and teenager and like you went on a tour of both The Queen Mary and The Queen Elizabeth. Later on my family and I toured the new QE2. I was left with the impression that those who sailed on the first two ships possessed wealth and taste while those who made the transatlantic journey on the QE2 had money but no taste. My mother was distinctly put out to see cigarette burns on gaming tables in the first class saloon. In fairness the QE2 was launched at the time when 60s flair had morphed into 70s over the top tackiness.
Lol he says with disdain, "That phone is old, really old" And I remember when that style phone was new.
Touch dials came maybe 40 years after the ship lol.
Glad to see how much work has been done since we were last there a year ago. During covid the ship was incredibly close to going away for good. The efforts made by the city of long beach in the past few years to restore the ship have been immense and it is a massive project to preserve such a beautiful piece of history. Frankly anyone is lucky to stay on her.
That is wonderful but I thought the room was overpriced with scruffy fittings - sink collapsing, bath etc, scuffs and especially not vacuumed around the walls. Ugghh. If same price for 2 adults and a chid still not great.
Wasn’t it in danger of sinking?
@zingerbear27 I believe the rust was real and was a danger. Really thankful the city stepped in.
Hi Tim she’s showing her age now i went on her in 1972 in long-beach and she looked a lot better. She has a special place in my heart as the bar you walked through after the kids area was where my Dad was a cocktail barman in the 50’s and i used to go on board as a child when she was in Southampton. So Thanks for the Memories.
I spent a night on the QM around 1990. It was my biyfriend's birthday and I got us a first class cabin much like yours, with an old fan and also a button to call the stewardess. We had cocktails at a bar, the name of which I've forgotten, and an excellent dinner at Sir Winston's. However, we saw no ghosts.
Another time we did a day visit with our sons, who were about four and five at the time. We took a two-hour tour that included areas of the ship that are off- limits to unaccompanied guests, like the pool and the engine room and the bridge. The guide mentioned that guests frequently report seeing and hearing strange things in the pool area, which is considered to be the "most haunted" part of the ship.
As we left the ship and set out across the parking lot to the car the ship blasted her horn and we all jumped a foot.
The ship may appear a bit shabby now but you should have seen the state it was in 20 years ago - it made you cry to see so much deterioration.
It does seem to be small issues a bit untidy around the edges. Hopefully they get on top of it and sort it out.
A "bit" shabby? Just plain outdated an very dirty.
@@patrickh4540 it's a ship from the 30s Do you expect them to totally redecorate it? It wouldn't be the historic ship then
Celebrated my wife being pregnant with our only child in early 1982 with an overnight stay on QM. Newport Jazz festival was outside in a large lot and I sat on deck in a light rain watching the concert from a distance. Also, enjoyed one of the best meals ever in Sir Winston's restaurant onboard. It was like a time machine to be there. Also, I seem to remember the stern (rear) had an anti aircraft gun for use during WW2. Fantastic experience
@@kgbusa3415 It was used to transport troops at war’s end if not during WW 2.
@nanclarke8575 it had an anti aircraft gun in rear
Here's some facts about the Queen Mary:
She's 1,019ft long, 118ft wide, 181ft tall, has 12 decks, has an internal volume or Gross Registered Tonnage (GRT) of 81,237, and has an actual displacement (weight) of 77,400 long tons. Her 24 Yarrow Boilers, 4 Parsons steam turbines and 4 propellers produced about 200,000 shaft horsepower, which gave the ship a top speed of 32.84 knots (37.79mph). Like many large ships of her time, she was designed to be slightly curved up at each end, something called a "sheer". This was to lessen the stress on the hull in harsh Atlantic weather. You can notice in a few long hallways in the ship, it visibly dips down in the middle.
The ship’s construction should have taken only three years, but it lasted 6 years due to labour disputes during the Great Depression. Construction began in December 1930 in Clydebank, Scotland, and she was ready for her maiden voyage in May 1936, from Southampton to New York. Legend has it that Queen Mary's owners, Cunard line, wanted to name the ship “Victoria” after Queen Victoria. When Percy Bates, Chairman of Cunard, asked King George V to name the ship after “Britain's greatest Queen”, he responded “My wife would be delighted”, referring to Queen Mary of Teck. In 1938, she captured the Blue Riband award for fastest Atlantic crossing from the French superliner SS Normandie. She held onto this record until 1952, when it was taken from her by the SS United States - a ship whose design was a US Navy secret until 1977.
In 1940, after being laid up in New York for months following the outbreak of the war, she was recruited by the Royal Navy for troop carrying service. During the War, Queen Mary gained the nickname “Grey Ghost” due to her being painted entirely grey, and for her high speed. At 30 knots, she was faster than any U-boat or their torpedoes. Adolf Hitler himself put a bounty on the Queen Mary for any sailor who could sink her. At the conclusion of the war, Winston Churchill praised the Queen Mary for having shortened the war by at least two years. After returning to civilian service in 1946, the ship served reliably on the Atlantic until she was retired in 1967, when she was sold to the City of Long Beach after her 1,001st crossing to New York, and one last great cruise around South America.
According to Pathé news, for one voyage, the ship needed to be stocked with 33,000lbs of meat, 70,000 eggs, 4,000 bottles of whiskey, 1,000,000 cigarettes, and 12,000 potted plants. In her original configuration, she had capacity for 2,140 passengers (776 Cabin class, 785 Tourist class, and 579 Third class), and 1,100 crew. 3,240 in total. Though this sounds like a lot, this pales compared to the record she still holds for carrying the most people at sea - about 16,600 troops on one voyage during the Second World War.
@@unpro04 thank you for this Info
The corridor reminds me of a scene in the movie, "The shining!"
"Goliath awaits" is what comes to mind if I look down the corridor.
Little note from this 76 year old American woman, that phone is only old to you, Tim, it would have been a puzzle to those who cruised on the Queen Mary. Phones with push buttons didn't come out until the mid 1960's as I recall.😊
I think it was later than that right? we had them until the 1990's in my town
@@kathleenmckeithen118
Push button phones came on the market in 1963, quite updated in contrast to the late '30s, so relatively speaking, vintage, but not that old compared to the ship.
Yeah, that phone ain't old. When I was in elementary school we had a rotary dial phone that sat on the bar between the kitchen and dining room. That was in the 70s. I'm nostalgic for that old technology....
@@Goparis1 It helps to have lived a while.😊
As i recall pushbutton phones were a futuristic novelty at the 1964-5 NY Worlds Fair. Everybody still used dial phones. And of course there was no such thing as mobile phones, let alone smart ones.
My Wife’s parents emigrated to Canada from Ireland and came across the Atlantic on this very ship. We have the documents with the room number as well. Thanks for sharing Tim!
My husband and I stayed on the Queen Mary years ago. Our room was somewhere on B Deck. We spent much of the night wandering all over the ship, even in places that are now unaccesable. We were haunted in the daytime and at night. I wrote a piece titled The Queen Is Haunted in which I detail our experiences. She is a beautil, if sometimes creepy, ship. Thanks for a more recent peak at her.
From 1945 to 1951 my father’s work took him to England 4 times a year and he a.ways took me and my mother along with him. Daytimes - reading in the library, writing letters in the writing room, sipping hot bouillon in a deck chair wrapped in a Shetland blanket. If the weather permitted, which it usually didn’t, a brash game of shuffle board. Evenings- lengthy dinners, then up to the ballroom. Y father in a tux, my mother in a Schapparelli ball gown dancing past me. My grandmother had made me my own little blue taffeta ball gown. As long as I was well behaved, ( and who wouldn’t be?) I could stay up with the grown ups until midnight when the buffet consisting of scrambled eggs with caviar and champagne was served. People who cruise today wouldn’t believe the pace of 5 days of this elegant self indulgence!
@Karen you describe an idyllic picture, lovely
I love your memories of her.
What wonderful memories to have!
The Queen Mary was used for the external and internal pre-capzinging scenes in the iconic 1972 movie “The Poseidon Adventure.” When I was a kid, I was obsessed with that movie, practically wearing out my DVD. Ironically, I’ve lived in Los Angeles almost my entire adult life just a short drive up the freeway yet I’ve never visited the ship.
Thanks for the great video, as usual.
That was not a wine rack, but a shoe rack. And the round cutouts (various sizes) were likely to put your umbrellas (parasols, as well), plus walking canes into. They would be quite secure there in case of rough seas.
Also the big walk in closets would have been necessary for all the clothes people would have taken then. Ball gowns every night, hats, tuxedos, plus fours, lounge suits for the men. Plus room to store your luggage trunks, not suitcases back then.
The round cut-outs aren't for umbrellas or parasols: they're to hold bar ware like ice buckets and other items. My grandparents had a stand-alone bar with a middle shelf with the exact same holes cut in it. I don't think the rack was either a wine rack or a shoe rack, to be honest. I'd have to have a better look at the whole sideboard/cabinet to figure out what it was for. But I'd bet folding money that the shelf with the holes is for bar ware.
@@dragondawn420 yeah Ice bucket etc
The woodwork in her is beautiful!!! She shines!!!!
Amazing how a 35 minute review can feel like only 12 minutes. Hope Tim revisits this ship again when things are in even better condition than what they’ve done so far since the pandemic.
Plandemic
We stayed on the Queen Mary several years ago, the guest in the room next to us was on her cell phone all night, you could hear her entire conversation, tried to get her to shut it down but she didn’t seem to care…wish we had better memories of it, very thin walls…
@@eugeneandmichellesmargiass6465 We stayed there too and can confirm thin walls. We were told (or read it somewhere) that the walls were designed for the ship being in motion - the hum of the engines would drown out any noise coming from adjacent rooms.
I've stayed on this ship and attended a wedding. I don't believe in ghosts, but if there is such a thing as a haunted place, this is it; especially if you walk down some of the unoccupied floors of the ship. Also, I highly recommend the tours of the lower levels, which are truly sketchy and scary. Next door to the ship you can also tour the Russian submarine (I believe it is called the scorpion). As mentioned in the video, the walls are very thin and you will hear your neighbors. And there is no excuse in any hotel for not keeping the rooms clean, however old they may be.
My Mother sailed on the QM after the war to Canada. Much of it was still configured as a troop ship and they were referbishing while they were at sea. Back in the 80's or 90's the company I worked for had a booth at a trade show there. It was amazing to walk around and know my Mother had wandered around the same places.
It can be forgiven for looking a bit tired it gives it character. However, I do agree it could be cleaned better, and the bath could be shorted out to look a bit smarter.
QM has been struggling to keep it's doors open for years. It's like sleeping in a museum and a treasured memory of mine. This poster is used to reveling in posh luxury. Sniffing his nose at miniscule frustrations. I find this episode just irritating beyond belief!
Thanks for the tour. I stayed on the Queen Mary earlier this year and yes, the walls are paper-thin and I could clearly hear my neighbors' conversation and snoring. The historic ambience and uniqueness of the experience make up for whatever negatives there are. And I think funding is a continuous issue, so repairs and upgrades are ongoing. In terms of haunting, nothing during the night but the next morning on the outdoor deck as I entered a narrow alleyway leading from one side of the ship to the other, I felt a giddiness/chill that I associate with the paranormal and I blurted out the name "Joe" - and then asked, "Is there a Joe here?" Seemed odd as the thought appeared out of nowhere, then I remembered that during WWII, the Queen Mary transported thousands of troops, who at that time were known as GI Joes.
My grandfather sailed on that ship from New York to Southampton in 1945, as a returning prisoner of war from the Far East. Fascinating to see its interiors, although I imagine it was very different in 1945.
wow .. yes when it was used for the war i think they took some things away
@@kathymmkathymmThat’s really interesting, I wonder if your father departed from Southampton in November after my grandfather had just arrived - on the return journey to the States as it were. There’s a big plaque in Southampton dedicated to all the troops who travelled on the ships via Southampton in WW2.
A magnificent ship - I’m so pleased that they are repairing and refurbishing it - I think it was in a right state a few years ago!
I’ve never seen so much wood panelling in my life!
I follow another channel that gives regular updates about the Queen Mary. Its been great to see and hear about the upgrades and restoration of this grand lady! Of course some of the issues Tim shows have not been yet been fixed, but I have total faith they will continue to spruce her up!
I was very fortunate to stay on the QM just before COVID with my husband. I had always hoped i would get a chance but never thought i would till we had a chance on a trip to California. Yes its a bit tired in places, certainly not dirty when i visited, but, truly, after a few hours i began to feel i had slipped back in time. I loved the cocktail bar, i did a ghost tour. But, the best part was when my husband and i crept into the main ballroom ( it was deserted) and danced. It felt as if we were joined by many others. I am open to supernatural, my husband isn't yet a month later when we were talking about it he admitted he felt it to. She is a very special ship and i hope she has decades to go. Thank you Tim for a great overview of her.
The black light is a game changer. Keep bringing it with you!
I sailed in her in 1965 as a boy, and it was fun to see the cabins, which I remember, especially for the beautiful woods. I had forgotten about the choice of saltwater and freshwater in the bathrooms.
My wife’s grandad was a joiner on the ship when it was built. It was very emotional for her to visit the ship imagining that he had worked on its wooden interior. We were very impressed with the ship and decided to book a ghost tour. We were taken on the tour to the bottom of the ship and the lights were switched off. We were also taken to the bow of the ship where it collided with HMS Curacao and killed over 300 people. I can well understand it being haunted.
@@pontecarlo4354 over 600 perished.
As a maintenance man for 18yrs, and a Navy veteran, YUCK. Sad state for any hotel, much less a historic monument. Been there as a kid decades ago.
WOW, this ship was absolutely fascinating. Although it is obviously very worn in places, this ship blew me away! Love how they have kept all the original furnishings throughout the place and in the rooms, too ❤ loved this so much
3:33 there is an identical suite on the other side of those doors. The King George suite and the Queen Mary suite (in this case at least) were two of the largest rooms available to book on the ship, and the reason that those doors are there is because back in the days of her crossing the Atlantic a first class passenger with really deep pockets could book both this suite and the one next to it and those doors could be opened and those two rooms essentially became one giant stateroom with four bedrooms and two maid’s rooms with multiple bathrooms. I suppose this could technically still be done nowadays if a person really wanted to and had the money of course, but it’s certainly a cool piece of history for sure!
My parents stayed on the Queen Mary years ago. They were in Long Beach for a WWII Army reunion. They really enjoyed the hotel especially the Belgian waffles with strawberries and creme. Thank you for a great tour! 🇺🇸❤️🇬🇧
I stayed on her one night in 2020 just before the COVID lockdowns during a trip to LA, and decided to put a crossing on the QM2 on my bucket list. I did my dream transatlantic crossing on her last December.😍
I loved watching this video, my Dad left for World War II on the Queen Mary and they hadn’t had time to turn it into a troop carrier so it would have looked similar to this as he went off on it.
Bless your dad.
Hi, I hope your Dad come back x
My grandad was the Staff Captain on board the Queen Mary when it was in service. It's great to see some of the areas. Thanks
I stayed in the "Windsor Suite" about 15 years ago. It was a trip-- all of the valet and maid buttons throughout the rooms and the various built-ins. The 1st class bar is where I had a bite and a drink one evening-- I could just imagine the stellar names of passengers who must have frequented that bar. So cool! The tiny bedroom would have been for a traveling maid or butler... Nanny... etc
I was on the Queen Mary in 1976 when I was 10. Incredible ship. Thank you for the video it brings back some good memories. God bless.
I stayed there twice, one year the night before leaving LAX and the other on arrival. Tim, you do have to give it a bit of leeway, it closed down for several years recently before Long Beach government stepped up to save it. It has undergone extensive and expensive checks on the hull to make sure it will stay afloat, hardly any reduction in section was found. They could gut the place and fit it with IKEA furniture but what would be the point. Like the Forth Bridge, they’ve started sympathetic refurbishment but it’s still going to be an eighty or ninety year old ship. They’ve completely redone the Cocktail lounge and a few other areas.
I’d care to bet you’d find a few dusty corners in Buckingham Palace! Even the cheaper ($100 rooms when I stayed) are made up of two original cabins, one room being the lounge and bathroom I think and the other the bedroom. Get the carpet shampooer out but don’t change it too much, it’s a stunning place as worthy as many Chateaus and Castles in Europe. 😎😇
I remember in early college having a blast singing on the Queen Mary in period attire with our Jazz Choir. Getting to do solos while hearing and seeing the crowd cheer and clap was exciting and made me feel like I was back in time. We later got to explore the ship. It was fun but on some parts of the ship it became really eerie. A small handful of us got to go on a personal tour and it felt like we were being watched and followed. The air got heavy, musty, and cold but it was an old ship. At one point, we all felt unsafe and decided to walk back together. We couldn’t explain what exactly we were feeling but we all seemed to understand it was time to head back. Although we felt fine upon returning to the main lobby, we decided to leave earlier than anticipated. We’d had our fun but it was time to head back to our own time.
This is honestly one of my top five videos you've created. I absolutely love this ship; it's like staying a night in a museum. It's a shame it's in America, as I would love to stay a night myself.
@@gravelsyrup apparently it sets sail next month travelling the globe as a floating hotel
exactly for that reason it should not be renovated or restored. It's perfect as is. Dude has to relax.
Good joke.😂 She isen't seaworthy and has a lot of work to be done, just to keep her safe where she is berthed, on limited funds; let alone bringing her up to being seawortby at today's standards.
@@halitosis75 erm no thanks it can stay there
Stayed on the ship in 1974 it was great and in much better shape. All those years and only beginning to renovate now unbelievable. as I recall it was $30 a night. Hope it's restored to its former glory soon. Beautiful Ship huge project
I'm really pleased how well they've preserved this ship. So important to keep these things going, so much history. Great video ❤
I have visited the Queen Mary twice.
The second time I booked a suite for 2 nights. Luckily, the bath in my suite wasn't peeling.
The suite was on the starboard side aft of reception.
It was £300 per night in 2006.
A lot of the teak has been replaced, the wood panelling has been cleaned and the lighting upgraded.
I think that you were in a suite used by the Royal Family. The single bedroom was for a servant.
The highlight for me was Sunday brunch in the room that you visited with the 3 fireplaces. I think it was a ballroom that was also used as a cinema.
The forward bar was a great place to relax.
The downside, was that I travelled to Long Beach from Hollywood. I had been staying in a hotel behind the Kodak theatre.
It was pre-uber and no taxi company would drive us to Long Beach.
Had to get the public transport system via Compton.
We had armed security sat next to us.
Hollywood Boulevard has the only McDonald's I have ever been in with armed guards on the door.
Really amazing hot dogs just down the Road at Pinks.
Thanks for posting this video Tim.
Have you done the Orient Express?
I’ve stayed on the “Queen Mary” twice. I’m a bit of an ocean liner aficionado so it was a must-see for me when I was in Southern California. I stayed on her back in August 2001 and again in 2002 so the room where I stayed was in a bit better shape than yours. I don’t remember any issues with cleanliness but there were areas that looked a bit worn which I just chalked up to the overall age of the ship. I loved being able to walk around late at night, too, when all the day tourists had gone. The promenade deck is beautiful and you really do get the feeling you’ve stepped back in time. I loved all the Art Deco, too. Considering her fate was very much up in the air a few short years ago, I’m just glad her future is more or less secure. She really is a treasure. I’m glad you had the opportunity to stay on her. A unique experience for sure.
Iam glad they are restoring her because i think she is the closest to Titanic. I did not stay on the Queen Mary but i did the ghost tour which was epic.
I’ve always got the feeling that for all the people who loved the ship and want to preserve it. There’s an equally sized element down there in Long Beach at the city would love to get rid of it and develop that area into something else.
@@DaveP-uv1ml I agree, Dave. I’m sure it’s quite the money pit. I hope the revenue and tourism it brings to Long Beach is equal to the amount of money required for its upkeep.
@@cak813 , I don’t think I’ll be ever buying a yacht in my life, but the one person who gave me advice about that who owned one, which was a surprise to me because I never saw the use it and didn’t even know they had it. Told me never to buy one, that they were the worst investment you can make they were all money pits. I tend to think that’s probably true of the queen Mary, even though she’s not ever going to be going anywhere but still sitting in that saltwater I’m sure necessitates a lot of maintenance just to keep her afloat.
@@DaveP-uv1ml Wouldn't surprise me...money takes precedence over style and history.
Hope she is kept in better condition than this
I stayed in May 2024 and enjoyed a couple of the historical tours as well as a ghost hunting tour from 10pm - 1 a.m. We explored parts of the infirmary, engine room, swimming pool and B340. It's not really a haunted room as it was set up with things to fool people into believing it was truly haunted. The room is not available for guests as it is specially decorated with occult items and a part of their ghost tours. However, we did experience a few things that were unsettling on our tour and put me on edge when heading back to my room in the early hours of the morning. The most extraordinary part of that ship, in addition to the history, is the wood and art. It really is a living museum. I enjoyed a cocktail in the main bar area, which was absolutely beautiful. I also had a lovely dinner at one of their restaurants. Yes, this was expensive, but truly worth the experience.
What experiences did you have ? It’s like tell but , keep it to yourself..
What experiences did you have ? It’s like tell but , keep it to yourself..
What experiences did you have ? It’s like tell but , keep it to yourself..
How great it is to be taken back in time to yesteryear and to experience the luxury of such an iconic ship. How pleasing that so much of the original has been retained. I agree that your suite did leave a few things that should have been attended to but overall a tour of this ship is much appreciated. The total cost, actually, didn't seem too bad although breakfast seemed a bit steep.
I was watching this video this morning and just when Tim got to the door of the most haunted room a loud advert came on! I jumped out of my skin😂 Great tour of the ship Tim, and I agree that doll is scary, am glad Casper wasn't around on this trip to see it!
I had to cancel staying on this ship because I was sick, we went straight to Disneyland. Our Disney VIP tour guide said he worked on the QM for 7 years and claims that it's definitely haunted. What an awesome piece of history to visit!
I was excited about the great liners in the 1950s and 1960s. In the 1970s through the 1980s I spent time on the Queen Mary. The original restoration in the 1970s was exciting with a Jaques Cousteau Ocean Museum. Back then the engine room and an underwater exhibit of a propeller was available. The general interiors and the number of interiors available is greatly expanded today and much fresher. I started sailing on the QE2 in the 1990s and met the QM2 on its first visit to New York. I went on to sailing several times on the QM2. All this great liners experience is one of the great successes of my life. Thanks for bringing back the memories.
The way tim says "wow look at that" is my reaction to his blue and white striped shirt in the morning...lol 😅
I like that nautical themed t-shirt 😄
My late husband and I visited the Queen Mary twice. I loved it! It is a beautiful walk through history.
I love the original features but I think the upkeep and hygiene are dreadful..that doll comes alive... creepy as hell. Couldn't stay there in a million 😮 Thanks Tim for excellent video as always. 😮❤
I LOVE this old-time ship and its 1920s tap fittings. Gorgeous bed. All polished timber and marble.tops. Fabulous mirrors. NO PLASTIC. This was the way to sea travel before they decided to cram space and treat EVERYTHING, humans included, as a cost/profit unit.
Fun fact Tim. The one ballroom has a moving map with two ships on it which moved during the voyage and when the Queen Mary ship passed her sister ship the Elizabeth on the ocean guests could see it from moving map and crew would have champagne ready to toast as the ships passed. I do believe they filmed some corridor shots for the movie titanic on the Mary.
I’m impressed with this suite. It is in poor condition but it’s how it originally was. The bathroom fixtures are actually original so they look old. Thanks for this tour.
Love that they've kept so much of its history ... more grandeur than I was prepared to see. Dated but also beautiful. Ty Tim!
kinda liked the taps & older stuff . Salt water has peeled that enamel over the years .
One of my favourite episodes of AIRWOLF was shot in and around the Queen Mary. Great shots with Airwolf on a rescue mission.
Plug sockets English to American... The ship was built in Clydebank Scotland and we are very proud of her.
When news came out 4 years ago about proposals to scrap the QM, the UK's prime minister wrote a letter of protest---I think the complaint was sent to some department in Washington DC. I've always felt the ship is in public trust & is a tribute to its builders, including the people of Clydesbank. Some say the QM should have been moored in the UK instead of the US, but the weather of Southern Calif since 1967 has been generally less tough on her then if she had been stationed in, say, Southhampton. When the QE (circa 1930s) was retired & briefly stationed north of Miami in the late 1960s, the climate of Florida was reportedly hard on the ship.
I am a Bankie, and my grandfather worked on her when she was built in John Brown's shipyard. The Pride of the Clyde as you say :)
@@traceclip1 Now thats cool
@@traceclip1 Mine too, as a ship’s plumber, before migrating to Australia with his family, including my father.
The ship was originally powered with a 225vdc system
Thank you for this wonderful video. Made me unexpectedly emotional. My late grandfather worked on the Queen Mary and met many of the VIP’s that sailed on her. I would love to have more time with him to hear his stories. I was too young to appreciate them before he passed.
I spent a night on the Queen Mary in May of 2017. I was assigned to Stateroom A113. The food exceeded expectations. The bed was comfortable, but you could hear everything through the bulkhead (wall).
I really enjoyed the tour. The engine room was awesome.
I really enjoyed my time on the Queen Mary.
Wow, thank you for this video. We stayed at Queen Mary in the early 80s, during our first trip to LA. My wife started to complain the moment we got into our room ! She thought our room with a tiny window was like a dungeon while we were staying in sunny California. We stayed only one night and checked out early. We did enjoy the ship tour, including the engines, restaurants, etc. It was a great place for a day out, not as a "hotel" unless for the sake of memory lane or for ship enthusiasts. The Spruce Goose was also on display next to the QM in those days.
One thing I would like to point out is that you have the opportunity to stay in a piece of history. It must be quite expensive and also difficult to run a historical hotel to keep it updated but also historical. A friend of mine hates visiting countries that don't have high end restaurants or amenities like back home. I always try to explain to him he is experiencing their culture. I view it the same with the bathrooms and carpets. You're experiencing the history. Of course things need repairs but they get to them when the money is available. Im simply saying being judgemental over the small things may deter some folks from experiencing these amazing hotels.Keep on filming my UK brother. Cheers from Canada 🇨🇦
Well said, he nitpicks so much
I stayed on the Queen Mary in Long Beach CA about a year ago and it was a nice stay. I took a tour of the ship and the history. The breakfast was good and also the lunch. My room was dated and comfortable. I agree on the bathroom needs to be renovated. My bathroom had fixtures that worked while also having the oldtime fixtures. There was a gentleman playing the piano in the lobby when I was on the Queen Mary and people gathered around as he played. I was on the A Deck. Glad that you enjoyed your stay on the Queen Mary.
Those hallways are definitely giving Shining vibes! Lovely, historic ship! Definitely been Americanized with a Starbucks and all...
Tim you have excelled yourself. This reminds me of scenes from the Shining. Who knows what celebrities & royalty have taken a bath in that Royal suite. The stunning 1930's wood decor, the art deco and never seen before ballrooms, smoking rooms, gyms and fancy restaurants is reminiscent of the RMS Titanic. I won't be visiting California anytime soon due to the civil unrest and crime but I wish I had back when I visited in 2019.
I love the Queen Mary, I have a friend that used to work there. I’ve never stayed overnight, but I’ve had two very spooky experiences on it, and neither one was on one of their ghost tours because I’ve never been on one.
What happened?
Do tell!
What happened . Just use speaker phone
What happened . Just use speaker phone
What happened . Just use speaker phone
10:12 "Is that old soap from 1930?" Cracked me up big time 😅😅😅😂😂😂😂I laughed with tears 😂😂😂You are so funny, Tim! I just love you and your videos!❤
Totally agree! Yes, it is almost 100 years old but for such an iconic vessel and the price paid, the attention to detail is very bad and the general upkeep of the ship is bad overall. Painting, cleanliness, etc. should be up to scratch. The bath and showerhead are inexcusable.
I am so glad you honred the amazing parts of her and it is just a huge project that never gets fully caught up with paint and upkeep mistakes but clean enough to sleep over and enjoy being right there to take a cruise from that port for a pre or post stay and i have toured her 2 times due to taking cruises close from there,,,never have stayed over...thank you for donating to her ...she has amazing art and wood and history worth preserving...thank you. I have been able twice to just do a lot of self guided looking...found the old chappel...it seemed more torn up this time...i saw a bunch of pople dressed to the nines and they used to have a more working barr either forward or aft. I hope they get the sweites especially up to par. I thing those long poles in your suite ere how they hang the probably 1- 2 times a week or so papers they could get printed on board from press or pick up when in port...this was rigged in middle of her time as a mega World War Transfer ship and she so deserves to be honored...thank you.
I was fortunate to spend several days on her back in 2000. I was lucky to get to know the general manager and staff. There was a fine gentleman who presented a daily talk in the engine room and had served on the crew while the ship was at sea. He and his wife invited me to tea a few of the afternoons and we exchanged cards for years afterwards.He showed me that actual keel at the ship's bottom and noted that there were no hull leaks . . . amazingly watertight. It was a great experience.I am so relieved that it's once again being cared for.
Love this! My daughter and I stayed on her in 2008. It was October so super spooky! We took the ghost tour and neither one of us slept at all. 👻
Thanks as always Tim for another great tour of a unique place. Your hard work is appreciated :) Keep it up
means alot thank you
I spent a night on that old ship back in the 1980s the room was musty and made me congested. He talks about the smell of the wood. But I recall the musty/mouldy smells.
Tim's tours are nothing short than the Superbowl IMO.
I spent some time on the QM, and can say for or certain that she is haunted! Lovely beautiful grand art deco ship that is almost certainly an asset to long beach! I loved my time there and hope one day soon to return.
First time aboard was in March, 1983 when the Spruce Goose exhibit opened in the dome built for it adjacent to the ship. Have spent more than 400 nights aboard since then, in everything from original inside single bed cabins to suites like in this video, on Main, A and B deck. Never experienced ghosts or paranormal activity to date... but the ship is still amazing. Years ago, it was easier to get into the pool and other lower deck areas like the boiler rooms, cargo hold and turbo generator rooms. Now it is much more difficult because they keep access to these areas locked up to explorers, and only available through specific tours. At least the aft engine room, steering hydraulics and propeller are still part of the self guided tour.
Regarding the 'rough' condition of some areas of the ship and even the hotel rooms... the Queen Mary was shut to the public and essentially abandoned from March, 2020 until May, 2023. It is remarkable they have gotten things at least back to this state. Many rooms on the ship had been taken over by pigeons and seagulls. A lot of work had to be done, and more is ongoing. I stayed aboard for a week in May this year, and the room I was in was totally original with the wood paneled walls and Shanks bathroom fixtures. It had undergone full detailing since I was last in it in 2020, and had new carpet, curtains, and mattresses and bed covers for the two single beds. The room looked real sharp, in fact the best I've seen a Queen Mary cabin look in 20 years... so they are working on it, but progress is slow with so many rooms.
Enjoy that the ship is still with us to appreciate.
The lower portions where the engines etc are was scary enough for me even without it being Halloween. I just felt creeped out down there the whole time. The humming noises etc all really make it eerie if you’re alone down there alone as I was.
Hi Tim, loved this video (I’m a big history nerd and I love this period in time!). Where you noticed the worn carpet, I’m pretty sure is actually carpet mites!
Oh my goodness the birdseye maple in the suite was beautiful ...
This ship is amazing Tim. It is much bigger than i thought. Hope it was fun staying aboard such a treasure.
So big it can take a good day to walk around
@WalkWithMeTim I believe that. It looked huge Tim.
Loved the video, I quite often wonderd what it would be like on board, it was so lovely a little bit worn in places but very nostalgic ❤
My family stayed on her for three nights way back in the early 2000's to attend a model railroad convention held there yearly. While exploring the ship one evening by myself, I was in one of the midship elevators and the thing mysteriously stopped at a deck not of my selection. The door opened and I was dumbfounded thinking that if I walked out into the dark hallway before me, and the door closed behind me, I would be screwed. As the door stayed open, I yelled out to possibly get someone's attention and heard nothing in reply to my question, "Is there anyone here." so I stepped back in, selected the deck I wanted to get to and in seconds later, there I was, in a well lit deck hallway with people there.
While checking out, I mentioned the elevator scare to the desk attendant and all she said was, " Well, it is a haunted ship sir." And a blank face was staring back at me. Spooky....
The exhibit room you were in at the end of the video was previously the Princess Diana exhibit. Lots of her dresses.
This grand old lady looks a lot better than the QE2. I’d love to spend a night there. Great tour, thanks Tim!
The QE2 is a by-product of the late 1960s, a totally different cultural & visual vibe from the 1930s. The 1960s-70s was Woodstock, the Vietnam War, polyester leisure suits & more TV glitz than movie glamour.
I saw this ship as a tourist 45 years ago at Long Beach. It looks like it hasn’t deteriorated much during that time.
My wife`s uncle was one of a team which plastered below the waterline with a rubber compound to smooth out the rivets making her faster through the water .She took the blue riband for fastest crossing in 1938 and held it until 1952 .
Loved this Tim, thanks for the journey back in time 👍🙂
Glad you enjoyed it