In this period, size became more than a technical fact: it was a public statement of seriousness, industrial confidence, and comparative standing among the great lines.
Research Collections group ship guides and interpretive themes into curator-framed pathways that emphasize shared ambitions and historical meanings. The superliner race was one of the most concentrated moments of escalation in liner history: a period when the pursuit of size itself became a public measure of national and corporate seriousness.
This collection follows the years in which major lines moved beyond the already-large express liners of the turn of the century into a new category of ship: immense, symbolically charged, and often presented as floating monuments to company power, industrial capacity, and national prestige. The race was short-lived, but its legacy shaped the most famous liners of the twentieth century.
Curator’s Note
Collection Themes
Superliners served as floating symbols of national ambition and company prestige, often carrying meaning far beyond their practical commercial function.
The superliner race reached its most dramatic form just before the First World War, which abruptly transformed the conditions that had produced it.
These ships were not simply faster passenger vessels; they increasingly embodied a new idea of the liner as a monumental object of prestige, image, and modern spectacle.
Core Objects in This Collection
A defining ship of the race, representing White Star’s move toward enormous scale and controlled prestige rather than pure speed-record rivalry.
The most famous ship of the superliner moment, remembered for disaster but also central to understanding the scale logic and symbolic ambitions of the era.
A flagship-scale German response in the race for monumental passenger ships, projecting grandeur and national confidence through sheer physical presence.
Cunard’s great answer in the final prewar phase of superliner escalation, combining large scale with the company’s established prestige identity.
Context and Timeline
- 1906–1907: The new giant Cunard express liners raise expectations for what a flagship passenger ship can signify in public and competitive terms.
- 1908: White Star commits to the Olympic-class program, moving the contest decisively toward a new level of ship scale.
- 1911–1912: Olympic and Titanic bring the superliner idea to extraordinary visibility in the North Atlantic world.
- 1913: German flagship ambition reaches new theatrical scale with Imperator and the emerging HAPAG response.
- 1914: Aquitania enters service just as war begins to interrupt the competitive environment that produced the superliner race.