With fares from Southampton to Lisbon starting at £23 including meals, and an extra £6 for a car, its popularity is no surprise.
The MS Eagle introductory brochure covered all bases by calling her “the new cruise liner car ferry” and, operating a Southampton-Lisbon-Tangier service, she sailed direct to Portugal, one of the most fashionable holiday destinations of the time, until the 1974 revolution put a temporary stop to tourism. The recessionary aftermath of the OPEC oil crisis in 1973 did little to help, fuel costs increased dramatically.
Algeciras in Southern Spain was later added to the schedule. The ship’s hull lines were designed by ferry specialists Knud E Hansen, and supposedly optimised for the Bay of Biscay though she had a rather bad reputation for not handling the bay in much comfort. According to rumours at the time, the builders had shortened the hull by a few metres and this didn’t result in a comfortable ‘cruise’ as many of her regulars will tell you. The total journey time to Lisbon was 42 hours.
Some passenger recollections from the time tell the story well, Sheilah Cardno recollected, “I almost went down with the Eagle in September 1974, when she was hit by a freak wave in the Bay of Biscay. A tough old tub, she managed to right herself – bulkhead of 1st. class cabins dented in, engine room flooded as water poured down funnel, captain injured when he was thrown across the wheel house – we limped back to Falmouth to dry her out”.
A lady called Kate Baxter wrote: “I was on the Eagle in the spring of 1973. Got caught in a hurricane. Massive amounts of damage and everything tied in the corners of the lounge. I fell down the stairs and broke my foot. I still have newspaper cuttings and a few pictures of the damaged vehicles on the quay in Lisbon. Frozen peas and green paint I remember. Never been so terrified in my whole life”.
Despite that, the low fares and direct route to Lisbon was a huge advantage. A press report at the time said, “The passenger accommodation was rather intriguingly finished, much use being made of bold colours and vinyl wall coverings, with the Red Room Lounge Bar and the lime-green Panoramic Lounge particularly notable although the choice of a quite distracting paisley orange and green colour scheme in the ten cabins deluxe was maybe regrettable”. Lime green décor and a rough sea doesn’t sound a good combination. The best accommodation, a suite cost the ‘bank breaking’ sum of £60 or £90 return, and don’t forget that included your meals, if you happened to be hungry! An edition of ‘Shipping World & Shipbuilder’ not unreasonably described the cabin décor as ‘startling’.
The other interesting rumour of the months following the revolution was that certain high-profile people, who the new regime felt should not leave Portugal, found it much easier to board the Eagle than to try to fly out of Lisbon airport. Appropriate documentation seemed less of a problem if you knew the ‘right people’ at the quayside.
Despite all this, it would seem to prove that if you offer a good route at a reasonable price, people will put up with a lot.
With much attention these days being given to environmentally friendly travel, you could speculate that a modern and presumably economic car ferry serving the UK to Lisbon route might be an extremely attractive proposition. Longer stay visitors like to have their own cars, it saves the cost of car rentals. Also, no limits on how much baggage you can bring for a long stay. The Algarve is only a couple of hours drive away, and in fact Southern Spain is closer to Lisbon than Santander.
Resident in Portugal for 50 years, publishing and writing about Portugal since 1977. Privileged to have seen, firsthand, Portugal progress from a dictatorship (1974) into a stable democracy.
At the time the Eagle was the transport of choice, inexpensive and reliable, though frequently far from comfortable. At that tike, early 70's flights were far from frequent, far from cheap, and no charter flights or low cost airlines. It was BA or TAP to the UK, take it or leave it. Take a look at the myriad of car ferries criss crossing the med, Why cant we have a car ferry service UK to Lisbon again? It would be popular.
By James from Lisbon on 07 May 2021, 09:19
fantastic idea bring the cruise liner back to service I will use it
By tony from UK on 09 May 2021, 13:57
I remember it well, docking at Alcântara. Yes, bring it back. I will use it too. With all the Brits who live all over Portugal and the Portuguese who live in the UK and go to Portugal for their summer holiday, it can only be a success now, as it was in the 70s.
By Maria from UK on 13 May 2021, 08:16
Looks like your prayers have been heard: https://www.jornaldenegocios.pt/empresas/turismo---lazer/detalhe/brittany-ferries-quer-fazer-ligacao-entre-plymouth-e-o-porto-num-ferry
By Joao from Lisbon on 13 May 2021, 10:53
It looks like it will be happening with Britanny ferries next month from Portsmouth and Plymouth so your wishes have been granted. I would like to say its only for car crossing no pedestrians which is a pity and saying it will be around min £150 so lets wait and see?
By Sean from UK on 13 May 2021, 11:31
Fond memories of p&o Eagle lovely ship but boy it was rough over bay of biscay.of course its well known for this stretch of water. One day a lorry broke free from chains and waiters had to damp down table cloths stop plates and cutlery sliding off.only a boy at the time but remember it well. She was a good looking ship though and quite new at the time.i think 72 or 73 good old days!
By Michael Hickinbottom from UK on 10 Mar 2024, 23:28