Lloyd Sabaudo

{{Infobox company

| name = Lloyd Sabaudo

| logo = Flag of the Lloyd Sabaudo.svg

| logo_caption = House flag

| foundation = 1906

| fate =

| successor = Italia di Navigazione

| defunct = 1932

| area_served = Atlantic, Near East, and the Far East.

| industry = Shipping

| products =

| revenue =

| operating_income =

| net_income =

| num_employees =

| footnotes =

}}

File:Lloyd Sabaudo 1923.jpg

File:LloydSabaudo1932.JPGBuenos Aires ticket, April 19th, 1932.]]

The Lloyd Sabaudo was a Shipping transport line formed in Turin in 1906. It began passenger service in 1907, expanding to link Italy to ports in Asia as well as North and South America. In 1932 it merged with several other Italian shipping lines to form the Italian Line.

History

As the Company was established in Turin in 1906, it starting its service route from, Genoa, to Naples, to New York route, by 1907 it started a passenger service From Genoa to Buenos Aires.{{cite web |title=Lloyd Sabaudo |url=http://www.theshipslist.com/ships/lines/lloydsabaudo.htm}}

After the positive outcome for the Italian shipping companies of the Mediterranean Conference in Florence in 1906, some leading investors decided to enter passenger traffic to the Americas. The most important shipping company born as a result of this agreement was Lloyd Sabaudo, founded in 1906 with registered office in Turin and home port in Genoa where the operational offices of the company were located. The birth of this company created not a few discontent in the Ligurian shipowning class and, in particular, at Navigazione Generale Italiana which immediately understood that the new company would have made a ruthless competition.

In 1912, the headquarters were moved from Turin to Genoa and in 1913 a branch, "Marittima Italiana" was established to manage services to the Near East, the Red Sea, East Africa, India and the Far East. In 1919 a new connection service from the Black Sea and the Eastern Mediterranean to New York was started which was soon abandoned due to intense competition from other companies.

In 1932 the company was forced to merge with the Cosulich Line and the Navigazione Generale Italiana, to form the Italian Line.{{cite web |title=Lloyd Sabaudo - The Italian Liners |url=https://www.italianliners.com/lloyd-sabaudo-en}}

Some Ships of the Lloyd Sabaudo

class="wikitable -right toptextcells"

!valign="top"| Name !!valign="top"| Shipyard !!valign="top"| GRT !! Length
[m] !!valign="top"| Passengers !! Launch/
Enter Service!!valign="top"| Notes

Conte RossoWilliam Beardmore and Company
18,5001801,950 passengers10 February 1921
14 March 1922
Sunk in 24 May 1941 by the HMS Upholder
Conte VerdeWilliam Beardmore and Company
18,761180.12,430 passengersOctober 21, 1922
April 21, 1923
Scuttled in Shanghai by her Italian crew to prevent seizure by Japanese forces, refloated and Scrapped in 1949
Conte BiancamanoWilliam Beardmore and Company
23,562203.563,450 passengers23 April 1925
20 November 1925
Partially saved as a museum exhibit at the National Museum of Science and Technology named Leonardo da Vinci
Conte GrandeStabilimento Tecnico Triestino
25,661198.91,718 passengers29 June 1927
13 April 1928
Scrapped in 1961
Conte di SavoiaCantieri Riuniti dell'Adriatico
48,502248.252,200 passengers18 October 1931
30 November 1932
sunk in 1943, and despite being refloated was Scrapped in 1950

Gallery

File:USS Hermitage AP-54.jpg|SS Conte Biancamano as the USS Hermitage

File:ConteBiancamano reconstructed.jpg|SS Conte Biancamano after her reconstruction

File:SSConteVerde.jpg|Model of the SS Conte Verde

File:KITLV A1389 - Groot passagiersschip in de haven van Genua tijdens de reis naar Java van Henk de Heer, technisch tekenaar op het Marine Etablissement te Soerabaja, met zijn echtgenote S. Kooyman en hun, KITLV 45131.tiff|SS Conte Grande

File:SS Conte Grande.jpg|SS Conte Grande after her reconstruction

References

{{Reflist}}