It was a golden age of travel. The period from the end of the Second World War to the early 1960s saw some of the finest ocean liners ever built & until the advent of the jet the ships travelled full every trip criss-crossing the Atlantic between the Old World & the New carrying businessmen tourists emigrants & those who longed for a trip away. William H. Miller brings together a fabulous selection of images of the ships of the period the great & the famous of ocean liner travel. From the grand Cunard Queens to the fastest & longest ships afloat from the ships of state to smaller vessels from the tragedy of disaster to the triumph of record-breaking he tells the story of this glittering age of travel a time when Getting There was Half the Fun. Of course it was all to end with the advent of the Boeing 707 capable of crossing the Atlantic in hours rather than days & the liner trade went into terminal decline. One by one ships were sold or scrapped until there remained only one the QE2. She retired in 2008 but not before being replaced by the Queen Mary 2 the worlds largest ocean liner. Join Bill for a voyage back in time aboard The Last Atlantic Liners.