The Answer:
Launched in 1858, the magnificent steamship was first known as
the Leviathan, and was designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel.
The largest ship in the world at the time, she weighed 18,000 tons;
was 700 feet long, and 85 feet wide. Used for the trade between Great
Britain, Australia, and the Far East, the Leviathan could carry 4,000
passengers and go great distances without stopping to refuel. Later
the Great Eastern Navigation Company renamed her Great Eastern.
Despite her huge capacity, the Great Eastern was a financial failure
and by 1864 she was docked.
However, the Great Eastern had a second life as a cable-laying
ship. Between July 13 and July 27, 1866, the crew of the Great
Eastern, under the command of Captain James Anderson, laid 1,686
nautical miles of electric communications cable between Valencia (or
Valentia), Ireland, and Heart's
Content, Newfoundland.
Historians have said the endeavor was the Victorian equivalent of the
Apollo space
program.
Cyrus W. Field, an investor and organizer of the project, sent
the following message after the cable had been secured: "We arrived
here at nine o'clock this morning. All well. Thank God, the cable is
laid, and is in perfect working order."
The first news message sent on the cable - the signing of the
peace agreement ending the war between Prussia and Austria - soon
followed. The cable was then open for commercial business at a cost of
$1 per letter, payable in gold, pretty steep at a time when the
average laborer might earn $20 per month.
The Great Eastern was permanently docked at Liverpool in 1872.
She rusted away until she was scrapped in 1889. Even then, no longer
steamship was built until 1899. No steamship that was as large in bulk
appeared until 1906.
Check out this link for more facts and information about other famous vessels.
—The Editors
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