Early years
Nieuw Amsterdam joined NASM's SS Potsdam (1899), USS Rijndam, SS Noordam (1902) on the route between Rotterdam and Hoboken via Boulogne. She began her maiden voyage on 7 April 1906,[1] and reached Hoboken on 16 April.[2]
On 24 August 1906, while steaming up the Nieuwe Waterweg to Rotterdam, Nieuw Amsterdam grounded near Maassluis. Her passengers were transferred to smaller vessels, and part of her cargo was discharged to lighters.She was refloated the next day.[5]
Nieuw Amsterdam's boat deck was glazed-in in 1908. She represented the Netherlands at the Hudson–Fulton Celebration in September and October 1909. Her bridge deck was extended in 1910.[1] By the middle of 1910 she was equipped for submarine signalling.
On 28 March 1910, Nieuw Amsterdam arrived at Ellis Island carrying passengers including 600 Dutch emigrants who intended to farm in the Dakotas, Iowa and Minnesota. However, one passenger was found to have smallpox, so 150 of them were quarantined at the isolation hospital on Hoffman Island.[6] On 31 October 1910, the ship arrived at Hoboken carrying passengers including the soprano Lydia Lipkowska and singers of the Boston Opera Company.[7]
On 15 April 1912 White Star Line's RMS Titanic sank with the loss of 1,517 lives. Under public scrutiny after the disaster, other companies admitted that their passenger ships carried too few lifeboats. Holland America Line was one of them, and the company duly had five more lifeboats installed aboard Nieuw Amsterdam, positioned on her poop deck.[1] By 1913 her wireless telegraph call sign was MHB, but by 1914 it had been changed to PEB.
On a westbound crossing in November 1913, a passenger in second class, Mrs Bakker, was taken ill. She was admitted to the ship's hospital, but died two days after leaving Rotterdam. The Second Class chief stewardess took care of Mrs Bakker's three children, who were aged five, seven, and nine. Nieuw Amsterdam's Master, Captain Baron, intended for Mrs Bakker's body to be buried at sea. Passengers raised a fund of $200 for the family, and asked Captain Baron to have her body embalmed for burial ashore instead. Despite having a wireless telegraph, Nieuw Amsterdam did not tell Mr Bakker of his wife's death. On 1 December he arrived at Hoboken to meet his family, and was told of his wife's death as he was meeting his eldest daughter. He thanked passengers for their generosity, and said he would have his wife's body buried in their home town of Ionia, Michigan.[8]
On a westbound crossing in February 1914, Nieuw Amsterdam weathered continuous storms all the way from the English Channel to New York Bay. On 12 February, waves swept away two of her lifeboats, damaged three others, and bent one of her steel bulkheads. On that day she made only 73 nmi in 24 hours. At times her engines were reduced to dead slow; just enough to maintain steerage into the storm. Three crew members and two passengers were injured in the voyage. One passenger suffered a broken leg and several fractured ribs. On 13 February she altered course to avoid a waterspout, which passed within 2 nmi of the ship. On 15 February she sighted an iceberg at 42.16667°N, -54.9°W. The ship reached Hoboken on 19 February, three days late. Despite the storms, she had averaged 12 kn during the voyage.[9]