The Captain’s Table

Stories from the Golden Age of Ocean Liners to the Cruise Ships of Today

  • Tall Ship Cuauhtémoc Hits the Brooklyn Bridge

    Tall Ship Cuauhtémoc Hits the Brooklyn Bridge

    Last night, May 17, 2025, tragedy struck when the Mexican Navy tall ship Cuauhtémoc hit New York’s Brooklyn Bridge just before 8:30 pm. Onlookers captured shocking video of the incident as it unfolded before them. All three masts snapped upon hitting the bridge span, leaving crew members dangling high in the rigging. Mexican Navy officials…

  • Book Review: Phantom Fleet by Alexander Rose

    Book Review: Phantom Fleet by Alexander Rose

    Deep inside the Griffin Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago, Illinois is something rather unexpected: a World War II German U-boat. Thousands of people visit U-505’s cold, claustrophobic interiors annually and step back into the past when it and other submarines like it terrifyingly hunted the world’s oceans. The story of how U-505, built…

  • For the Love of Ships

    For the Love of Ships

    Today’s post is going to be a bit different, and I hope it doesn’t come across as too ranty. But it’s been on my mind a lot lately and I wanted to address it. On May 2, I made a post on my social media pages for the anniversary of QE2’s 1969 maiden voyage. I…

  • Book Review: Inside the Britannic by Simon Mills

    Book Review: Inside the Britannic by Simon Mills

    Britannic—Titanic’s little sister. The third Olympic-class liner, she suffered the same fate as her older sibling and sank near the Greek island of Kea on November 21, 1916. There was a (highly fictionalized) TV movie in 2000, but Britannic has still been largely overshadowed by Titanic in popular culture. But ship nerds (I use that…

  • Poem: An Elegy for Lucy on the 110th Anniversary

    Poem: An Elegy for Lucy on the 110th Anniversary

    On the 110th anniversary of the Lusitania’s sinking, I wrote an elegy for the ship and those who died in the disaster.

  • Book Review: Finding the Titanic by Dalton Rains

    Book Review: Finding the Titanic by Dalton Rains

    Growing up, I was obsessed with the Titanic. I think most ship enthusiasts are. I remember buying books like Exploring the Titanic and 882 1/2 Amazing Answers to Your Questions About the Titanic at the Scholastic Book Fair or ordering from the Scholastic Book Club and pouring over them for hours. There’s certainly something to…

How it all started…

Over a decade ago, I started a blog called The Captain’s Table to tell the stories about the ships and people involved in the Golden Age of ocean liners. I was working as a tour guide aboard the Queen Mary in Long Beach, CA at the time and it was a way to help me both deepen my knowledge and explore a topic I’d been passionate about for a long time.

With this overhauled version of the blog, I’ll continue to explore the stories, ships, and people connected to the old ocean liners. But there’ll also be a new emphasis on cruise ships as well: they continue the traditions and history made famous by such ships as Queen Mary, United States, Mauretania, Caronia, and many others. I’ll be nerding out a lot, and I really hope that you enjoy this blog.

Zach Whitlow

Writer, Ship Geek, and Avid Cruiser