Topaz Cruise Ship
In 1964 she was sold to the Greek Line and after a refit was renamed Queen Anna Maria.
Topaz cruise ship. As for the fate of the Topaz she was sold and became a Japanese peace ship and was sailed to the Olympics in Greece 2004. 32327 since 01041998 DWT. Passenger Cruise Ship during 1976 Builder.
The superyacht has a beam of 215m a draft of 56m and a volume of 12532 GT. In place of the released ships large block bookings have been made on larger more modern cruise ships of the major lines. This became more noticable when the Topaz stopped and they went on the The Emerald and TUI enforced the all inclusive drinks packages.
Ship Collision Allision. Throughout five decades of service she evolved from a cold weather transatlantic liner to a full-time cruise ship. T he passenger steamship THE TOPAZ is going to be replaced in May on the PEACEBOAT world cruise service by the CLIPPER PACIFIC a motor ship built in 1970 as the SONG OF NORWAY RCL first ship.
THE TOPAZ is the venerable surviver of a trio of liners built between 1956 and 1961 for Canadian Pacific. For 2000 they released some ships leaving only The Topaz and Emerald in their own colours. The reef was moved and the drydock quickly expanded to fit Topaz.
The ship itself was ok but the passengers were different. The Topaz is an older but well maintained ship maybe one of the oldest cruise vessel still in regular operation. 351954000 Gross tonnage.
Having been launched by a queen and later named for a queen the majestic THE TOPAZ was a rare survivor of the great postwar British shipbuilding era. After a summer season in the Western Mediterranean based out of Palma de Majorca The Topaz had when we joined her recently repositioned to a seven-day itinerary from Las Palmas and Teneriffe with flycruise and cruise-and-stay passengers embarking and disembarking at either port with calls on the following two days at Lanzarote and Agadir Morocco followed by a full day at sea a day in Madeira a. Dear All I visited the wonderful TSS THE TOPAZ on 6 June with the World Ship Society Port of New York Branch.
