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STEERAGE

  • Steerage
  • Class of passenger accommodation in a ship

    Steerage is a term for the lowest category of passenger accommodation in a ship. In the nineteenth and early twentieth century, considerable numbers of

    Steerage

    Steerage

    Steerage

  • The Steerage
  • 1907 black-and-white photograph by Alfred Stieglitz

    The Steerage is a black and white photograph taken by Alfred Stieglitz in 1907. It has been hailed by some critics as one of the greatest photographs of

    The Steerage

    The Steerage

    The_Steerage

  • Steerage (disambiguation)
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    Look up steerage in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Steerage is a lower deck of a ship Steerage may also refer to: Steering#Watercraft, the act of steering

    Steerage (disambiguation)

    Steerage_(disambiguation)

  • Steering
  • Control of the direction of motion of vehicles and other objects

    move its rudder, it does not respond to the helm and is said to have lost steerage. The motion of a ship through the water is known as making way. Boats on

    Steering

    Steering

    Steering

  • Steerage Act of 1819
  • US federal legislation

    The Steerage Act of 1819, also called the Manifest of Immigrants Act, was an Act passed by the United States federal government on March 2, 1819, effective

    Steerage Act of 1819

    Steerage Act of 1819

    Steerage_Act_of_1819

  • Sinking of the Titanic
  • 1912 maritime disaster

    hindered the steerage passengers' escape. Some of the gates were locked and guarded by crew members, apparently to prevent the steerage passengers from

    Sinking of the Titanic

    Sinking of the Titanic

    Sinking_of_the_Titanic

  • Herring Island (Victoria)
  • Island in Victoria, Australia

    Environmental Sculpture Park Scaled Stem (1999) by Robert Bridgewater Steerage (1997) by Jill Peck Stone House (1997) by Andy Goldsworthy Scaled Stem

    Herring Island (Victoria)

    Herring Island (Victoria)

    Herring_Island_(Victoria)

  • Economy class
  • Tertiary travel class

    Economy class, also called third class, coach class, steerage, or to distinguish it from the slightly more expensive premium economy class, standard economy

    Economy class

    Economy_class

  • Titanic (2012 TV series)
  • 2012 British television drama series

    steward Annie Desmond. Watson brings Lady Manton's jewel case down to steerage, and Barnes is shocked to discover why. Meanwhile, Paolo startles Annie

    Titanic (2012 TV series)

    Titanic_(2012_TV_series)

  • Guion Line
  • British shipping line

    joined the firm's New York office. The Black Star Line concentrated on the steerage trade and ultimately owned 18 sailing ships. Black Star was shut down in

    Guion Line

    Guion Line

    Guion_Line

  • Alexandrea Owens-Sarno
  • American actress who played a cameo in Titanic

    She is best known for her role as eight-year-old Cora Cartmell, a young steerage passenger in the 1997 film Titanic who dances with Jack Dawson (Leonardo

    Alexandrea Owens-Sarno

    Alexandrea_Owens-Sarno

  • SS Republic (1871)
  • Ocean liner built in 1871

    class and over 1,000 steerage passengers; under Holland America Line she could carry 150 first class, 60 second class, and 800 steerage passengers' and as

    SS Republic (1871)

    SS Republic (1871)

    SS_Republic_(1871)

  • SS Alaska (1881)
  • passengers and 1,000 steerage. Her passengers included Hugh Simpson Rodham, future grandfather of Hillary Clinton, who travelled in steerage to America with

    SS Alaska (1881)

    SS Alaska (1881)

    SS_Alaska_(1881)

  • Ship of Fools (film)
  • 1965 film by Stanley Kramer

    ship is certified to carry―and they are assigned to squalid conditions in steerage. They are all being deported back to Spain by the order of the Cuban dictator

    Ship of Fools (film)

    Ship_of_Fools_(film)

  • Alfred Stieglitz
  • American photographer (1864–1946)

    also as one of the most important photographs of the 20th century: The Steerage. Stieglitz deliberately interspersed exhibitions of what he knew would

    Alfred Stieglitz

    Alfred Stieglitz

    Alfred_Stieglitz

  • Inman Line
  • 19th Century British shipping line

    with iron-hulled screw-propelled ships. In 1852, Inman established that steerage passengers could be transported in steamships. Inman's City of Paris of

    Inman Line

    Inman Line

    Inman_Line

  • Hot air ballooning
  • Activity of flying hot air balloons

    of the pilot. The ability to change direction with altitude is called steerage. In the ideal case, in the northern hemisphere, wind direction turns to

    Hot air ballooning

    Hot air ballooning

    Hot_air_ballooning

  • List of photographs considered the most important
  • Steerage, retrieved 18 February 2024 Arikoglu, Lale (5 November 2015). "Who Were They? The Truth Behind Stieglitz's Iconic Photograph 'The Steerage'

    List of photographs considered the most important

    List_of_photographs_considered_the_most_important

  • SS Oriana (1959)
  • Last of the Orient Steam Navigation Company's ocean liners

    first-class passengers, mostly elderly, had boarded at Southampton; the steerage passengers, at Nice and Naples... Orient Steam Navigation Company United

    SS Oriana (1959)

    SS Oriana (1959)

    SS_Oriana_(1959)

  • Passengers of the Titanic
  • List of the passengers of RMS Titanic

    included professors, authors, clergymen, and tourists. Third-class or steerage passengers were primarily immigrants moving to the United States and Canada

    Passengers of the Titanic

    Passengers of the Titanic

    Passengers_of_the_Titanic

  • Carriage of Passengers Act of 1855
  • United States legislation

    United States federal government on March 3, 1855, replacing the previous Steerage Act of 1819 (also known as the Manifest of Immigrants Act) and a number

    Carriage of Passengers Act of 1855

    Carriage of Passengers Act of 1855

    Carriage_of_Passengers_Act_of_1855

  • SS Kaiser Wilhelm II
  • German-built ocean liner

    photograph aboard Kaiser Wilhelm II called The Steerage. It records the crowded conditions in which steerage passengers, many of them emigrants, traveled

    SS Kaiser Wilhelm II

    SS Kaiser Wilhelm II

    SS_Kaiser_Wilhelm_II

  • SS Britannic
  • British ocean liner

    Saloon Class Passengers (title of First Class at that time) and 1,500 Steerage Passengers. Saloon Class facilities, which included a dining saloon, a

    SS Britannic

    SS Britannic

    SS_Britannic

  • Neustria (ship)
  • construction. She could carry 8 first-class passengers and 1,000 passengers in steerage. She was employed on the Marseille–New York City route with a stop in Spain

    Neustria (ship)

    Neustria_(ship)

  • SS City of Rome
  • British Ship

    quarters of especially high quality, as well as 810 in the inexpensive steerage class. She was one of the first liners to be lighted entirely by electricity

    SS City of Rome

    SS City of Rome

    SS_City_of_Rome

  • Titanic: The Legend Goes On
  • 2000 Italian animated film by Camillo Teti

    and Victoria's grandchildren reunite with William and they head with the steerage passengers to the boat deck. All of the animals escape on floating crates

    Titanic: The Legend Goes On

    Titanic:_The_Legend_Goes_On

  • Ship of Fools (Porter novel)
  • 1962 novel by Katherine Anne Porter

    Spaniards, a group of Cuban medical students, a Swiss family, and a Swede. In steerage is a large group of Spanish workers being returned to Spain from Cuba.

    Ship of Fools (Porter novel)

    Ship_of_Fools_(Porter_novel)

  • SS Ascania
  • British passenger ship (1911–1918)

    built, she had the capacity to carry 200 second class passengers and 1,500 steerage passengers. Ascania departed on her maiden voyage from London to Montreal

    SS Ascania

    SS Ascania

    SS_Ascania

  • RMS Empress of China (1890)
  • accommodation for 770 passengers (120 first class, 50 second class and 600 steerage). Empress of China left Liverpool on 15 July 1891 on her maiden voyage

    RMS Empress of China (1890)

    RMS Empress of China (1890)

    RMS_Empress_of_China_(1890)

  • RMS Hesperian
  • British passenger ship (1907–1915)

    she had the capacity to carry 210 1st-class, 250 2nd-class and 1,000 steerage passengers. She had a sister ship named Grampian. For her maiden voyage

    RMS Hesperian

    RMS Hesperian

    RMS_Hesperian

  • 1931 Empress of Canada stabbings
  • 1931 mass stabbing aboard ''Empress of Canada'' off Japan

    m. (UTC+09:00) on 5 June 1931, Graciano Bilas, a 42-year-old Filipino steerage passenger, began stabbing people randomly with a pocketknife aboard the

    1931 Empress of Canada stabbings

    1931_Empress_of_Canada_stabbings

  • Ellen Shine
  • Survivor of the RMS Titanic (d. 1993)

    they were met by members of the crew who endeavored to keep them in the steerage quarters. The women, however, rushed past the men and finally reached the

    Ellen Shine

    Ellen_Shine

  • SS La Bourgogne
  • French transatlantic liner that sank in 1898

    Second class had berths for 72 passengers in 12 cabins. Third class or steerage had berths for 900 people. Her public rooms included a first class grand

    SS La Bourgogne

    SS La Bourgogne

    SS_La_Bourgogne

  • SS Tenyo Maru
  • Ocean liner (1908–1933)

    first-class, 54 second-class, and 800 steerage passengers, and could carry over 8,000 tons of cargo. The steerage class had an opium den for Chinese passengers

    SS Tenyo Maru

    SS Tenyo Maru

    SS_Tenyo_Maru

  • SS Imperator
  • Ocean liner from 1913 to 1938

    passengers, 647 second-class passengers, 648 third-class passengers, 1,495 in steerage, and 1,332 crew. The ship returned to Europe from Hoboken, New Jersey,

    SS Imperator

    SS Imperator

    SS_Imperator

  • SS Tauric
  • Ocean liner in service from 1891 to 1929

    livestock carrier, Tauric carried a small amount of cabin-(second-) and steerage-(third-) class passengers. Her maiden voyage began at Liverpool on 22 May

    SS Tauric

    SS Tauric

    SS_Tauric

  • SS Batavier II (1897)
  • Ductch steam packet

    321 passengers: 44 in first class, 27 in second class, and up to 250 in steerage. She was listed at 1,136 gross register tons (GRT). Upon completion in

    SS Batavier II (1897)

    SS Batavier II (1897)

    SS_Batavier_II_(1897)

  • SS Monroe (1902)
  • 16 knots (30 km/h). The ship had accommodations for 150 first class, 78 steerage and 53 deck passengers. That service was between New York pier 26, North

    SS Monroe (1902)

    SS Monroe (1902)

    SS_Monroe_(1902)

  • SS Ausonia (1909)
  • British passenger ship (1909–1918)

    funnel. As built, she had the capacity to carry 37 1st-class and 1,000 steerage passengers. For her maiden voyage she sailed from Middlesbrough on 22 October

    SS Ausonia (1909)

    SS Ausonia (1909)

    SS_Ausonia_(1909)

  • RMS Quetta
  • British ocean liner wrecked in the Torres Strait

    to accommodate the increasing number of migrants bound for Australia in steerage.The steam engine and two 500-ton coal bunkers were amidship. According

    RMS Quetta

    RMS Quetta

    RMS_Quetta

  • Deng Xiaoping
  • Leader of China from 1978 to 1989

    School. He and 80 schoolmates travelled by ship to France (travelling steerage) to participate in the Diligent Work-Frugal Study Movement, a work-study

    Deng Xiaoping

    Deng Xiaoping

    Deng_Xiaoping

  • Blue Riband
  • Fastest transatlantic passenger liner award

    Starting in 1850, the Inman Line built numerous reduced versions for the steerage trade. In 1866, Inman started to commission single screw express liners

    Blue Riband

    Blue Riband

    Blue_Riband

  • Rubber-tyred tram
  • Development of the guided bus

    Guidance and steerage in a Translohr tram 1995. Rubber tyres support the vehicle, while metal wheels and a single rail provide guidance.

    Rubber-tyred tram

    Rubber-tyred tram

    Rubber-tyred_tram

  • SS Tubantia
  • Dutch ocean liner that a U-boat sank in 1916

    passengers: 252 first class, 236 second class, 135 third class and 854 steerage. Her holds had capacity for 357,000 cu ft (10,100 m3) of baled cargo. Tubantia

    SS Tubantia

    SS Tubantia

    SS_Tubantia

  • Oceanic-class ocean liner
  • Iron-hulled ocean liner class

    carry 166 crew, plus 166 saloon, or first class passengers, and 1,000 steerage, or third class passengers. The saloon passenger accommodation was luxuriously

    Oceanic-class ocean liner

    Oceanic-class ocean liner

    Oceanic-class_ocean_liner

  • SS Utopia
  • British transatlantic passenger steamship (1874–1900)

    Alsatia (1876), designed to carry 120 first class, 60 second class and 600 steerage (third class) passengers. She was launched on 14 February 1874 and sailed

    SS Utopia

    SS Utopia

    SS_Utopia

  • Titanic (1943 film)
  • 1943 German propaganda film

    ex-lover Sigrid Olinsky (Sybille Schmitz), and several German passengers in steerage behave bravely and with dignity. With Sigrid's assistance, Petersen manages

    Titanic (1943 film)

    Titanic_(1943_film)

  • S.O.S. Titanic
  • 1979 television film by William Hale

    they hesitantly become involved in a romantic interest in the other. In steerage, the plot focuses on the experiences of eight Irish immigrants, who board

    S.O.S. Titanic

    S.O.S._Titanic

  • USS Freedom (ID-3024)
  • Cargo and transport ship in the United States Navy in World War I

    Hamburg for North German Lloyd's Roland Line, which was a fortnightly steerage and freight service between Bremen and New York. Launched on 3 February

    USS Freedom (ID-3024)

    USS Freedom (ID-3024)

    USS_Freedom_(ID-3024)

  • Titanic
  • British passenger liner that sank in 1912

    along the Starboard side of F-Deck Third Class (commonly referred to as steerage) accommodations aboard Titanic were not as luxurious as First or Second

    Titanic

    Titanic

    Titanic

  • The Amateur Emigrant
  • Book by Robert Louis Stevenson

    California. Leaving by ship from Glasgow, Scotland, he determined to travel in steerage class to see how the working classes fared. At the last minute he was convinced

    The Amateur Emigrant

    The Amateur Emigrant

    The_Amateur_Emigrant

  • SS Elbe (1881)
  • Transatlantic ocean liner

    accommodation for 179 First Class passengers, 142 in Second Class, and 796 in Steerage. She was a very popular ship with immigrants from Central and Eastern Europe

    SS Elbe (1881)

    SS Elbe (1881)

    SS_Elbe_(1881)

  • Cuddy (cabin)
  • Small room, particularly on a boat

    ships, where wealthy immigrants could travel in greater comfort than the steerage passengers below. A cuddy boat is a boat with a small shelter cabin with

    Cuddy (cabin)

    Cuddy (cabin)

    Cuddy_(cabin)

  • RMS Empress of Ireland
  • Canadian ocean liner that sank in 1914

    separated, with the 'new' steerage, more commonly referred to as third class, providing for 494 passengers, and the 'old' steerage providing for 270 passengers

    RMS Empress of Ireland

    RMS Empress of Ireland

    RMS_Empress_of_Ireland

  • RMS Homeric
  • Ocean Liner

    crew of racism. These accusations were denied strenuously. Built with the steerage trade in mind, Homeric had a huge portion of her accommodations devoted

    RMS Homeric

    RMS Homeric

    RMS_Homeric

  • Ross Martin
  • American actor (1920–1981)

    1920, and arrived at the Port of New York on September 18. As they were steerage passengers, they were obliged to go to Ellis Island to undergo immigrant

    Ross Martin

    Ross Martin

    Ross_Martin

  • MV Connemara
  • Roll-on/roll-off passenger and freight ferry

    boat Tapuhi towed it back to Wellington while a second tug Tiaki provided steerage in the early hours of 20 September. Regulatory body Maritime New Zealand

    MV Connemara

    MV Connemara

    MV_Connemara

  • J. Paul Getty Museum
  • Art museum in Los Angeles, California, US

    SW, 1881 Alfred Stieglitz, The Hand of Man, 1902 Alfred Stieglitz, The Steerage, 1907 Eugène Atget, Staircase, Montmartre, 1921 Kansuke Yamamoto, A Chronicle

    J. Paul Getty Museum

    J. Paul Getty Museum

    J._Paul_Getty_Museum

  • Churchill: The Hollywood Years
  • 2004 film

    by Tommy Trinder The presence of "Irish Cockneys" is a reference to the steerage passengers in Titanic Churchill's final exit in a Spitfire references the

    Churchill: The Hollywood Years

    Churchill:_The_Hollywood_Years

  • RMS Slavonia
  • British passenger liner that was first to use the SOS code

    She was assessed at 8,831 GRT. Accommodation for 40 first class and 800 steerage class passengers was provided. Yamuna was built as yard number 600 by Sir

    RMS Slavonia

    RMS Slavonia

    RMS_Slavonia

  • Geoffrey Wellum
  • British fighter pilot (1921–2018)

    three ships come through the harbour entrance, just about maintaining steerage way, the cheering of the Maltese who have to welcome her in slowly subsides

    Geoffrey Wellum

    Geoffrey Wellum

    Geoffrey_Wellum

  • Patrick Henry (packet)
  • 19th-century square-rigged sailing ship

    25£ in 1846; the price for one adult steerage ticket is between $500 and $750 today, or 4£ and 6£ in 1846. Steerage refers to the cargo hold. The gross

    Patrick Henry (packet)

    Patrick Henry (packet)

    Patrick_Henry_(packet)

  • Second- and third-class facilities on the Titanic
  • with simple meals three times a day, at a time when many ships forced steerage passengers to bring their own food provisions for the voyage. The bulk

    Second- and third-class facilities on the Titanic

    Second-_and_third-class_facilities_on_the_Titanic

  • Deck (ship)
  • Part of a ship or boat

    holds. Steerage: The lower deck of a ship, where the cargo is stored above the closed hold. In the late 19th and early 20th century, steamship steerage decks

    Deck (ship)

    Deck (ship)

    Deck_(ship)

  • Nathan Handwerker
  • Polish-American restaurateur (1892–1974)

    11. He later lived with his brother in Belgium, and saved enough for a steerage ticket from Holland to Ellis Island. "Inventor of Coney Islands Cut Hot

    Nathan Handwerker

    Nathan_Handwerker

  • SS Vedic
  • British ocean liner

    Line, constructed as a purpose-built immigrant transport ship in an all steerage configuration. Vedic had a career spanning 16 years from 1918 to 1934.

    SS Vedic

    SS Vedic

    SS_Vedic

  • SS Rotterdam (1872)
  • the ship created quite a stir as she arrived minus her foremast and her steerage quarters completely wrecked. The ship had left Rotterdam on 8 November

    SS Rotterdam (1872)

    SS Rotterdam (1872)

    SS_Rotterdam_(1872)

  • Swinburne Island
  • Island in Lower New York Bay, United States

    Retrieved December 11, 2008. A case of cholera developed today in the steerage of the Hamburg-American liner 'Moltke,' which has been detained at quarantine

    Swinburne Island

    Swinburne Island

    Swinburne_Island

  • SS City of Glasgow (1850)
  • British passenger ship

    After a refit in 1852, she was also the first Atlantic steamship to carry steerage passengers, representing a significant improvement in the conditions experienced

    SS City of Glasgow (1850)

    SS City of Glasgow (1850)

    SS_City_of_Glasgow_(1850)

  • SS Atlantic (1870)
  • Transatlantic liner, sank disastrously 1873

    passengers were free to come on deck. There was also provision for 1,000 steerage passengers. Single males were housed forward of the cabin class area, aft

    SS Atlantic (1870)

    SS Atlantic (1870)

    SS_Atlantic_(1870)

  • Scudding
  • alternatively "top and tackle" or "under bare poles" (without sails set). To aid steerage, a sea anchor was often dragged behind or lines were put out at the stern

    Scudding

    Scudding

  • Jewish Museum (Manhattan)
  • Art museum in Manhattan, New York

    Adam and Eve Driven From Paradise, c. 1896–1902 Alfred Stieglitz, The Steerage, 1907 Reuven Rubin, Goldfish Vendor, 1928 Marc Chagall, Old Man with Beard

    Jewish Museum (Manhattan)

    Jewish Museum (Manhattan)

    Jewish_Museum_(Manhattan)

  • SS Mongolia (1903)
  • US-Passenger liner

    shipping lines of that era: 350 first-class, 68 second-class, and 1,300 steerage. In early August 1915, Pacific Mail announced it could not affordably meet

    SS Mongolia (1903)

    SS Mongolia (1903)

    SS_Mongolia_(1903)

  • William E. Carter
  • American Titanic survivor (1875–1940)

    conduct are an injustice to him. …The women that were in the boat were from steerage, with their children. I guess there were about forty of them. Mr. Ismay

    William E. Carter

    William E. Carter

    William_E._Carter

  • Augustus Earle
  • English painter (1793–1838)

    Ocean Representing the Usual Occupations of the Young Officers in the Steerage of a British Frigate at Sea, c. 1836 Napoleon's Grave, c. 1829 Bungaree:

    Augustus Earle

    Augustus Earle

    Augustus_Earle

  • Richard Bartholdt
  • American politician (1855–1932)

    companies to belligerent countries. He wrote an autobiography entitled From Steerage to Congress (Philadelphia: Dorrance, 1930). He died in St. Louis, Missouri

    Richard Bartholdt

    Richard Bartholdt

    Richard_Bartholdt

  • Helen Ford
  • American actress (1894–1982)

    Drivers Woman at Dance The Naked Truth Dinner Guest 1958 A Night to Remember Steerage Passenger 1960 Village of the Damned Villager 1966 The Ghost Goes Gear

    Helen Ford

    Helen Ford

    Helen_Ford

  • USS Antigone (ID-3007)
  • U.S. Navy transport vessel

    expansion engines. During 1900–1914, she was the third largest transporter of steerage passengers (nearly all immigrants) to the United States, most of whom disembarked

    USS Antigone (ID-3007)

    USS Antigone (ID-3007)

    USS_Antigone_(ID-3007)

  • Charlotte Jane
  • Ship of the Canterbury Association

    from land to land. She carried 26 chief cabin, 24 intermediate, and 104 steerage passengers including a chaplain and a surgeon. There were one birth, one

    Charlotte Jane

    Charlotte_Jane

  • New York City
  • Most populous city in the United States

    they discover to their sorrow, and very natural discontent, that the foul steerage of some ocean-tossed ship is to form the filthy receptacle of persons,

    New York City

    New York City

    New_York_City

  • Vere Foster
  • British philanthropist and educationist (1819–1900)

    conditions of passage for emigrants. These he, himself, experienced travelling steerage to the United States. Later, he supported national schools in Ireland and

    Vere Foster

    Vere Foster

    Vere_Foster

  • Gottlieb Wehrle
  • American politician

    and became a farmer. He came to the United States on March 10, 1854, in steerage, having embarked in Le Havre, eventually moved to Wisconsin in 1855 and

    Gottlieb Wehrle

    Gottlieb_Wehrle

  • Sheila Murphy (poet)
  • American text and visual poet (born 1951)

    Short Poems. Isobar Press, 2019. Litscapes: Collected US Writings 2015. Steerage Press, 2015. Yesterday's Music Today. The Knives, Forks, and Spoons Press

    Sheila Murphy (poet)

    Sheila Murphy (poet)

    Sheila_Murphy_(poet)

  • SS Ophir
  • Dutch steamship that served in the US Navy and was gutted by fire

    146 passengers: 60 first class, 32 second class, 24 third class, and 30 steerage. Ophir had a single screw, driven by a three-cylinder triple-expansion

    SS Ophir

    SS Ophir

    SS_Ophir

  • South Island
  • One of the two main New Zealand islands

    104 steerage passengers. Same day, ship Randolph, 761 tons, Dale, master, from Plymouth Sep. 7, with 34 cabin, 15 intermediate, and 161 steerage passengers

    South Island

    South Island

    South_Island

  • SS Normannia (1890)
  • German ocean liner (1890–1906)

    houses were damaged, along with part of her promenade deck, and parts of steerage area were flooded with six feet of water. Seven men and the second officer

    SS Normannia (1890)

    SS Normannia (1890)

    SS_Normannia_(1890)

  • RMS Hecla
  • Cunard line ocean liner, 1860 to 1954

    who would take holiday trips on these ships. However, these vessels had steerage, unlike most transatlantic Cunarders. This resulted in her being transferred

    RMS Hecla

    RMS Hecla

    RMS_Hecla

  • Becoming Bond
  • 2017 American film

    of an Australian politician. When she moved to London, he followed as a steerage passenger, hoping to win her heart. Upon his arrival, he discovered she

    Becoming Bond

    Becoming_Bond

  • Frank Powell
  • Canadian actor and director

    Releases/Astray from the Steerage", Wid's Daily, May 8, 1921, p. 20. Internet Archive. Retrieved December 5, 2019. "Astray from the Steerage", University of California

    Frank Powell

    Frank Powell

    Frank_Powell

  • SS Pennsylvania (1872)
  • with a typical small winter-passage complement of two saloon and twelve steerage-class passengers, and some $250,000 of cargo. On the night of February

    SS Pennsylvania (1872)

    SS Pennsylvania (1872)

    SS_Pennsylvania_(1872)

  • Michael Joyce (writer)
  • American academic and writer (born 1945)

    Joyce and review of Liam’s Going from Trace Online Writing Centre Archive Joyce's Twelve Blue, a hypertext story Disappearance: A Novel on Steerage Press

    Michael Joyce (writer)

    Michael_Joyce_(writer)

  • Joseph Murphy (writer)
  • American writer (1898–1981)

    prayer led him to leave the Jesuits and emigrate in 1922. He journeyed as a steerage passenger on board the RMS Cedric, sailing from Liverpool, England, to

    Joseph Murphy (writer)

    Joseph Murphy (writer)

    Joseph_Murphy_(writer)

  • Owen Moore
  • American actor (1886–1939)

    Matt, and Joe, and sister Mary, he emigrated to the United States as a steerage passenger on board the S.S. Anchoria. The Moore family were inspected on

    Owen Moore

    Owen Moore

    Owen_Moore

  • Vasa (ship)
  • 17th-century Swedish warship

    turn is attached to the top of the rudder. The steering position (the "steerage") is immediately in front of the entrance to the great cabin, on the upper

    Vasa (ship)

    Vasa (ship)

    Vasa_(ship)

  • Assad Zaman
  • English actor (born 1990)

    Close-Up Cinema in London. Film Television Stage "Assad Zaman". FilmFreeway. "Steerage (24:7 Festival)". WhatsOnStage. 25 July 2011. Autumn Brown [@SmokieMoonpie]

    Assad Zaman

    Assad Zaman

    Assad_Zaman

  • Arthur T. Gregorian
  • hakim or herbal doctor to earn food for his family. After traveling by steerage to India, Italy and France, he finally reached Boston and settled in New

    Arthur T. Gregorian

    Arthur T. Gregorian

    Arthur_T._Gregorian

  • SS Waikato
  • Cargo ship

    flagstaff, as they were continually blowing away without giving the ship steerage-way and, though several sea-anchors were tried, none of them were successful

    SS Waikato

    SS Waikato

    SS_Waikato

  • RMS City of Chester
  • over 1,500 passengers; 125 in 1st class, 80 in second class, and 1,310 in steerage. The first-class passengers enjoyed luxurious facilities; a walnut-panelled

    RMS City of Chester

    RMS City of Chester

    RMS_City_of_Chester

  • Economy (disambiguation)
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    Economy class (also called cattle class, scum class, standard class, or steerage class, as well as third class or fourth class on railways, or tourist class

    Economy (disambiguation)

    Economy_(disambiguation)

  • SS Grecian (1879)
  • 820 passengers including 50 in First class, 270 in Second class & 500 in Steerage. Grecian sailed on her maiden voyage from Glasgow to Quebec and Montreal

    SS Grecian (1879)

    SS_Grecian_(1879)

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Online names & meanings

  • Bhadrapriya | பத்ரப்ரியா
  • Girl/Female

    Tamil

    Bhadrapriya | பத்ரப்ரியா

    Goddess Durga

  • Keme
  • Boy/Male

    Gaelic Native American

    Keme

    Little dark.

  • Irven
  • Boy/Male

    American, Australian, British, Celtic, English

    Irven

    Sea Friend; White

  • Yafeen
  • Girl/Female

    Indian

    Yafeen

    Yafeen

  • Rishiraj
  • Boy/Male

    Bengali, Indian

    Rishiraj

    King of the Saints

  • Ghunaim |
  • Boy/Male

    Muslim

    Ghunaim |

    A person who takes booty na

  • Rubina
  • Girl/Female

    English

    Rubina

    Ruby (precious stone).

  • Poloma
  • Girl/Female

    Native American

    Poloma

    Bow.

  • Jebisha
  • Girl/Female

    Hindu, Indian

    Jebisha

    Prayerful

  • Harsimranjot
  • Boy/Male

    Indian, Punjabi, Sikh

    Harsimranjot

    Light of Remembrance of God

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Other words and meanings similar to

STEERAGE

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STEERAGE

  • Steerage
  • n.

    The hinder part of a vessel; the stern.

  • Steerage
  • n.

    Properly, the space in the after part of a vessel, under the cabin, but used generally to indicate any part of a vessel having the poorest accommodations and occupied by passengers paying the lowest rate of fare.

  • Steerage
  • n.

    The act or practice of steering, or directing; as, the steerage of a ship.

  • Steward
  • n.

    A person employed in a hotel, or a club, or on board a ship, to provide for the table, superintend the culinary affairs, etc. In naval vessels, the captain's steward, wardroom steward, steerage steward, warrant officers steward, etc., are petty officers who provide for the messes under their charge.

  • Steerage
  • n.

    Direction; regulation; management; guidance.

  • Steerage
  • n.

    That by which a course is directed.

  • Steerage
  • n.

    The effect of the helm on a ship; the manner in which an individual ship is affected by the helm.

  • Steerageway
  • n.

    A rate of motion through the water sufficient to render a vessel governable by the helm.