Mr Veendam06 Posted July 25, 2011 #1 Share Posted July 25, 2011 Whats your memorys of them ! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:4_Aces_1948_Print_Ad_01.jpg Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Conte Di Savoia Posted July 28, 2011 #2 Share Posted July 28, 2011 I never did sail on these fine ships although I did make a 3 week Mediterranean cruise aboard American Export's Constitution. At that time AE sent me a brochure on the two remaining vessels in the series, Exeter and Excalibur. I still have my brochure and here are a couple of pages from it. Did you sail on any of these ships? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mr Veendam06 Posted July 30, 2011 Author #3 Share Posted July 30, 2011 No i never did i was to young ! But i remember them well growing up in Hoboken ,where they were home ported !! They did make one of them a dorm for Steven's collage in Hoboken .I was on her alot back in the early 70"s !! They was such great little ocean liners !! nothing like the ships of today ! In 2 week will be doing back to back to back cruises on Carnival freedom & Royal Caribbean Allure of the seas at this point the biggest cruise ship in the world !! Will be 71st & 2nd cruises for us !! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
World Member Posted September 1, 2011 #4 Share Posted September 1, 2011 I salied AXL back in 1961 with my parents on the line from Singapore to NY somehow Tristino sticks in my mine Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Conte Di Savoia Posted September 2, 2011 #5 Share Posted September 2, 2011 Tristino sticks in my mine Perhaps it was "Trieste" the residents of which are "Triestino". Trieste is the eastern most city in Italy. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rkacruiser Posted September 2, 2011 #6 Share Posted September 2, 2011 The current issue of Power Ships, the journal of the Steamship Historical Society of America, has an interesting article on cargo liners. A small section of the article includes the 4 Aces. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RD64 Posted September 3, 2011 #7 Share Posted September 3, 2011 World Member If you sailed from Singapore, then you probably took Lloyd Triestino's (an Italian shipping company) Asia or Victoria back to Italy (Genoa or Trieste), and then connected with American export for the trip back to New York. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RD64 Posted September 3, 2011 #8 Share Posted September 3, 2011 I totally forgot, the Asia and Victoria would have been on their way back from Hong Kong. You may have been on the Australia, Oceania, or Neptunia, which would have been returning from Australia. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Post Captain Posted September 15, 2011 #9 Share Posted September 15, 2011 Hoboken, NJ, residents of a certain age, and anyone who sailed out of any of the West Side NYC piers during the late 1960s/ mid-1970s, may recall seeing the Exochorda moored in Hoboken, where she served as a floating dormitory for the Stevens Institute of Technology as the SS Stevens: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Stevens For some anecdotes about the Four Aces and for a general overview of the city Hoboken when it was a major port for passengers ships and freighters, I highly recommend On the Waterfront: The Great Ships of Hoboken, by William (Bill) H. Miller, the celebrated maritime author, lecturer, and raconteur. Incidentally, Miller recounts that James Cagney once booked all the staterooms on one of the Four Aces and made the entire 44-day voyage (the ship's regular round trip from Hoboken to the eastern Mediterranean) with a shipload of family and friends. And Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn frequently sailed aboard the Aces. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sultan65 Posted August 6, 2012 #10 Share Posted August 6, 2012 I was just Googling for anything about the ship Exeter and came across this. Yes, I traveled on the Exeter in 1952 between New York and Beirut. I was five years old and don't remember much other than how much fun it was to be on a ship with a swimming pool. It was salt water and whenever water started splashing out they emptied it and considering the ship didn't have stabilizers, that was most of the time. Also, the pool bottom was a hatch. In port they took the bottom of the pool out by crane and then lifted cargo out, mostly cars. They did the same on the America and they removed the cars the day before arriving in New York and as the ship rolled the cars would bang into the sides of the pool. Steve Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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