Ward Line

New York and Cuba Mail Steamship Company (Ward Line)
Company typePartnership
IndustryShipping, transportation
Founded1841 (1841) in New York, United States
Defunct1954
FateLiquidated
SuccessorWard-García Line
Four Seasons Apartments of Paramount
Area served
Transatlantic

The New York and Cuba Mail Steamship Company, commonly called the Ward Line, was a shipping company that operated from 1841 until liquidated in 1954. The line operated out of New York City's Piers 15, 16, and 17—land which later became the site of the South Street Seaport and also the Manhattan terminal of the IKEA-Red Hook ferry route. The company’s steamers linked New York City with Nassau, Havana, and Mexican Gulf ports. The company had a good reputation for safety until a series of disasters in the mid-1930s, including the SS Morro Castle disaster. Soon after, the company changed its name to the Cuba Mail Line. In 1947, the Ward Line name was restored when service was resumed after World War II, but rising fuel prices and competition from airlines caused the company to cease operation in 1954.[1]