Cunard White Star Line launched the RMS Queen Mary in 1936, with the intention of making her part of the first weekly express Southampton to New York service. The construction began in 1930 by John Brown and Company in Scotland, but was abandoned during the Great Depression in 1931 and not recommenced until 1934, when Cunard and White Star merged as a condition of the loan given to them to complete the ship.
After an adventurous role in the war, Queen Mary served as a passenger liner for another twenty years and then retired to her final berth in Long Beach, California. She functioned as a museum for some time, and now features a hotel, restaurants, a marina and shops.
The ghost stories only began after the Queen Mary retired and have been used to commercial advantage ever since, making it difficult to differentiate between exaggerations, inventions and apparently genuine paranormal occurrences. They include the ghost of an 18-year-old fireman, who was crushed by an engine room door during a fire drill, the spirits of small children crying in what used to be the third-class nursery, and a phantom dog howling for its dead owner.