1910s
She was built at Chantiers de l'Atlantique,[5] she was launched at the 20th of September 1910 into the river Loire.[6] The spectacle was watched by scores of cheering Frenchmen who had gathered for the occasion. In the following months, her machinery was installed and her interiors were fitted. Finally completed in 1912, she attained a speed of 25.09 kn on her trials. She left on her maiden voyage from her homeport of Le Havre on 20 April 1912, just five days after the sinking of RMS Titanic.[7] She tied up at the French Line Pier directly adjacent to the White Star Pier where Titanic would have docked if her voyage to New York had been successful.[8] France weathered the fallout from the disaster better than other liners because she was the first large liner to be equipped with enough lifeboats for all passengers.[9]
She did much to improve the image of the CGT which, to date, had not had much influence in the North Atlantic. Cuisine onboard was said to have been amongst the finest at sea. Sailing at a service speed of 23.5 kn, she was faster than any ship afloat save for Mauretania and Lusitania. At 23,769 tons, France was half the size of the newest British liners, such as RMS Olympic, but what she lacked in size, she made up for in opulence. Her first class interiors were amongst the most lavish seen at sea and were decorated in style Louis quatorze, earning the nickname "Château" or "Versailles of the Atlantic".[5] Despite her successes, the new France was not without problems; she suffered from disturbing vibrations, and had a marked tendency to roll, even when the seas were flat calm. She was withdrawn from service after just a few crossings to have these two serious issues addressed. She was sent to the Harland & Wolff Shipyard in Northern Ireland, where longer and wider bilge keels were fitted to her hull to reduce rolling and new propellers were fitted to reduce vibrations, making her not only more comfortable to travel aboard, but faster as well.
When World War I erupted in 1914, France was immediately requisitioned by the French Navy for use as an armed merchant cruiser and renamed France IV.[4] Her time as a cruiser was short-lived as she was too large and burned too much coal to be of good use, and was consequently reconfigured to carry troops. On 18 June 1916, France was involved in a collision with the British destroyer HMS Eden (1903) in the English Channel. Eden sank with the loss of 43 officers and men, including her commander, with France rescuing the remaining 33 survivors. Later that year, she was painted white and used as a hospital ship in the Dardanelles, operating in tandem with White Star's, and Cunard's RMS Aquitania. During her time as a hospital ship she was converted to accommodate 2,500 injured troops. When Britannic was lost in late 1916, the need for high-capacity hospital ships was even more dire, and she continued in this role until the United States entered the war in 1917, when she was deployed back to the Atlantic to ferry American troops to the continent with space for some 5,000 individuals. In 1918, her military service was cut short by an engine room explosion that killed nine crew members and required extensive repairs.[4]
1920s
She Returned to the CGT in March 1919, her name reverted to France, although she was kept busy repatriating American troops until that autumn. She was sent for refurbishment that winter, returning to commercial service in early 1920. In 1921, she passed flagship status on to the newer and larger SS Paris (1916), but continued to be a popular means of travel, with a near club-like following among the wealthy.[10] Her affluent passenger loads swayed the CGT in 1924 to convert her to an all first-class ship, save for just 150 third class berths.[10] During the conversion, the boilers were modified to burn fuel oil, allowing her engine room staff to be greatly reduced. She sailed without incident, crossing the Atlantic during the peak months and cruising in the winter until 1927.[10] With the advent of the new SS Ile de France, France was diverted almost totally to cruising.
Final years
The Great Depression sounded the death knell for the liner. Many of the millionaires she had carried over the years had been financially impoverished and the general downturn in business cut deeply into transatlantic travel. France spent more and more time idle, until she finally was withdrawn from service in 1932. Laid up at Le Havre, she sat unattended until January 1933, when a fire was discovered by a night watchman. Although it was rapidly extinguished, the fire had caused some minor damage, but by now she was outclassed by her newer running-mates. CGT had by then commissioned a new flagship, the SS Normandie which was nearing completion.[1] As a result, the company decided it was time to retire the 21-year-old liner. On 15 April 1935, the France departed Le Havre under her own steam to the shipbreakers at Dunkirk, France.[4]