DescriptionConstantinople, King Alexander II (same ship), built in 1896 in Germany by the North German Lloyd Line and originally named the Bremen. Operated as the Bremen until after World War One when Germany ceded it to Great Britain, it was purchased by the Byron Line in 1920. Byron renamed it the Constantinople because it ran service between Turkey, Greece and New York from 1921 to 1924. In 1923, the Byron Line sold its first ship named the King Alexander, which had been the largest Greek passenger liner, to the United American Lines. Desiring to continue honoring the late King, the company changed the name of the Constantinople to the King Alexander. It was withdrawn from service in 1925, c.1920's.
CollectionRemembering Newark's Greeks: An American Odyssey
Organization NameNewark Public Library
RightsThis object has been provided to the NJDH after a copyright, permissions, and usage rights evaluation. The object may be copyright protected. You may make use of the NJDH-held copyright information under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.5 license (see creativecommons.org/licenses/ny-nc/2.5/). If undeclared, you may need to contact the rights holder for permission for further use. If you can provide further information on the rights or history of this work, please click on this link. For guidance on attribution or citing this object, please check at http://www.njdigitalhighway.org/contact.php.