Peninsula and Oriental Steam Navigation Company: Difference between revisions
m (Bot: Automated text replacement (-Category:Businesses from the real world +Category:Companies from the real world)) |
m (Now redundant) |
||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
[[Category:Transport companies]] | [[Category:Transport companies]] | ||
[[Category:Companies from the real world]] | [[Category:Companies from the real world]] |
Latest revision as of 04:56, 4 December 2024
The Peninsula and Oriental Steam Navigation Company, often shortened to just P&O, were a global transport company active in at least 1887. They arranged at least passenger service on some of the world's longest routes, such at the multi-week journey between Tilbury and Bombay which Bernice Summerfield, the Seventh Doctor, John Watson and Sherlock Holmes once endured. This voyage, and its return, were undertaken on the SS Matilda Briggs, and involved passage by Port Said through the Suez Canal. (PROSE: All-Consuming Fire)
Behind the scenes[[edit] | [edit source]]
Whether because of Andy Lane's or his editor's mistake, All-Consuming Fire doesn't get the name of this company quite right. Still, there's no real doubt that writer Andy Lane means to evoke the Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company. In any case, most of the novel uses the abbreviation P&O, as most Britons do to this day.