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The Savarona is the largest non-royal yacht ever built. Her length overall
is 446' (136m), her beam 52.6' (16m), her draft 20' (6.1m) and her maximum
speed is 18 knots, cruising speed 16 knots. Her 17 luxurious suites, in
addition to the master suite, average 538 square feet (50m²) in area.
The Savarona
was commissioned by Mrs. Emily Roebling Cadwallader, granddaughter of John
Roebling, the engineer who built the Brooklyn Bridge. Mrs. Cadwallader had
the Savarona built at a cost of $4 million at the Blohm and Voss shipyards
in Hamburg in 1931.
The Savarona sailed Atlantic, Mediterranean, and South African waters, but
Mrs. Cadwallader could not take her to the United States of America because
of potentially confiscatory import duties. She decided to sell the yacht,
and in 1938, the Savarona was bought by the Turkish Government.
The chain of events leading to this purchase is amusing. In 1936, King
Edward VII visited Istanbul, and was the guest of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk on
the then state yacht, the Ertuğul. Soot from the funnel so dirtied His
Majesty's white flannels that Atatürk sent the Ertuğul to be scrapped and
ordered a search for a new presidential yacht. The Turkish flag was hoisted
on the Savarona in Southampton in March 1938.
The yacht arrived in Istanbul two months later, after some brief
refurbishment, by which time Atatürk was terminally ill. During the six
weeks that he spent on the Savarona, cabinet meetings were held on board,
and important guests included King Carol of Rumania and other heads of
state. Atatürk passed away on November 10, 1938 in Dolmabahçe Palaca.
The Savarona did not sail again until after World War II, when the Turkish
Navy started to use her as a training ship. In 1989 a decision was made to
scrap her, however, Mr. Kahraman Sadikoglu obtained a last-minute stay of
execution, leased the yacht for 49 years, and begun the arduous task of
refurbishing the Savarona to more than her former glory. For almost three
years 425 men worked to refit the yacht, whose interior was designed by
Donald Starkey. Today, the Savarona is once again sailing the waters of the
world, bringing an experience of elegance and luxury to those who are so
privileged as to be her passengers.

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