SS Virginia

Panama Pacific Line · 1928 · Ship Guide

Overview

SS Virginia was one of Panama Pacific Line’s modern U.S.-built intercoastal liners, created for the New York–California service via the Panama Canal. She belonged to the distinctive American coastal-and-canal passenger world rather than the classic North Atlantic express-liner tradition. Her significance lies in that route system, in her modern turbo-electric machinery, and in her later transformation into the South American liner Brazil.

In collecting and interpretation, Virginia is best divided into three main phases: Panama Pacific Line intercoastal service, post-1938 South American service as Brazil, and wartime transport service. Material from those phases should be distinguished carefully rather than treated as a single undifferentiated ship identity.

Key Facts

Owner (as built)
American Line Steamship Corporation
Operator (as built)
Panama Pacific Line
Later name
Brazil (from 1938)
Later operators
American Republics Line, War Shipping Administration agents, and later Moore-McCormack
Builder
Newport News Shipbuilding & Drydock Company
Yard number
326
Laid down
14 November 1927
Launched
18 August 1928
Delivered
28 November 1928
Maiden voyage
8–24 December 1928
Maiden voyage route
New York – San Francisco
Primary route context
New York – Havana – Panama Canal – Los Angeles – San Francisco
Later route context
New York – Barbados / Trinidad – Rio de Janeiro – Santos – Montevideo – Buenos Aires (as Brazil)
Type
Ocean liner, later transport and troopship
Gross tonnage
20,773 GRT as Virginia; later commonly cited as 20,614 GRT or 18,298 GRT after rebuilding as Brazil
Length
613 ft 3 in overall
Beam
80.3 ft
Registry length
586.4 ft
Propulsion
Turbo-electric transmission driving twin screws
Installed power
2,833 NHP
Service speed
About 18 knots
Passenger accommodation (as built)
400 first / cabin class and 400 tourist class passengers
Cargo capacity
About 450,000 pounds of cargo, including refrigerated space
Sister ships
California and Pennsylvania
Final fate
Laid up in 1958 and scrapped in 1964 as Brazil

Published tonnage figures vary because sources may describe the ship as built, after 1938 rebuilding, or under different registry conventions. For cataloging purposes, preserve the exact wording used by the source or artifact being cited. [oai_citation:1‡Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Brazil_%281928%29)

Design & Construction Context

Virginia was part of the trio of modern Panama Pacific liners that replaced earlier intercoastal ships and gave the route a distinctly up-to-date American profile. Her route world was not the classic immigrant Atlantic but the canal-connected domestic passenger trade between the U.S. East and West Coasts, with stops that could include Havana and the Panama Canal zone. [oai_citation:2‡Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panama_Pacific_Line)

She was also technically significant as a turbo-electric liner, part of the wider American embrace of that propulsion system in the late 1920s. In that sense, Virginia helps represent a specifically American interwar style of passenger-ship modernity. [oai_citation:3‡Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Brazil_%281928%29)

Service History (Summary)

1927–1928 construction and entry into service: Built at Newport News, Virginia was laid down in November 1927, launched in August 1928, delivered in November, and sailed from New York for San Francisco on her maiden voyage in December 1928. [oai_citation:4‡Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Brazil_%281928%29)

Panama Pacific service: In her original identity she served the New York–California route via Havana and the Panama Canal. This is the correct interpretive frame for passenger lists, brochures, deck plans, luggage labels, and route ephemera tied to the Virginia name. [oai_citation:5‡Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Brazil_%281928%29)

Intercoastal identity: Unlike most famous liners discussed in transatlantic terms, Virginia belonged to the intercoastal world shaped by canal transit, West Coast arrival, and domestic long-distance travel. That route geography should shape interpretation more than Atlantic comparisons. [oai_citation:6‡Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Brazil_%281928%29)

1937–1938 transition: When U.S. maritime mail subsidies ended and Panama Canal toll revisions increased costs, Panama Pacific shut down its New York–California liner service. Virginia and her sisters were then taken over by the U.S. Maritime Commission and transferred into South American service after rebuilding. [oai_citation:7‡Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panama_Pacific_Line)

As Brazil: Rebuilt with one funnel instead of two and significantly altered accommodations, the ship entered the New York–River Plate trade under her new name. This phase should be treated separately from her Panama Pacific identity, even though it involved the same hull. [oai_citation:8‡Ibiblio](https://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/OnlineLibrary/photos/sh-civil/civsh-b/brazil.htm)

Wartime service: From 1942 to 1946 she served as a troop transport under War Shipping Administration arrangements, making more than 30 overseas voyages during the Second World War. This belongs to a military transport framework rather than a civilian passenger one. [oai_citation:9‡Ibiblio](https://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/OnlineLibrary/photos/sh-civil/civsh-b/brazil.htm)

Postwar and end of career: After a postwar reconversion she returned to commercial South American service, was laid up in 1958, and was eventually scrapped in 1964. Her long afterlife as Brazil means later material must be cataloged carefully to avoid collapsing it into the earlier Panama Pacific phase. [oai_citation:10‡Ibiblio](https://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/OnlineLibrary/photos/sh-civil/civsh-b/brazil.htm)

Interpretive Notes

This is a Panama Canal intercoastal liner first: Virginia should be understood chiefly within the New York–California via Panama Canal passenger system, not through North Atlantic assumptions. [oai_citation:11‡Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Brazil_%281928%29)

The later Brazil identity matters just as much: because the ship had a substantial second life under another name, artifacts and photographs must be dated carefully or they can be misattributed. [oai_citation:12‡Ibiblio](https://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/OnlineLibrary/photos/sh-civil/civsh-b/brazil.htm)

Route context is especially important here: Panama Pacific material, River Plate service ephemera, and wartime transport records belong to three quite different historical worlds. [oai_citation:13‡Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Brazil_%281928%29)

This ship represents American interwar liner modernity: turbo-electric machinery, automobile-conscious service, and canal-route operation all set her apart from more familiar Atlantic examples. [oai_citation:14‡Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panama_Pacific_Line)

Name reuse can obscure the Panama Pacific phase: because many later sources emphasize Brazil, the original Virginia identity deserves explicit preservation in catalogs and interpretation. [oai_citation:15‡Ibiblio](https://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/OnlineLibrary/photos/sh-civil/civsh-b/brazil.htm)

Evidence-first ship guide

Sources (Selected)