MV Reina del Pacifico was a 17,707 GRT ocean liner of the Pacific Steam Navigation Company.
[8] Reina del Pacifico had no sisters, but her appearance was typical of Harland and Wolff passenger motor ships of her time.
[14] In 1939, a British expedition to the Central Andes in Peru shipped to South America with the MV Reina del Pacifico.
[14] On 28 January 1945 the ship sailed from Liverpool[18] to Ceylon with Royal Navy personnel destined for the Far East theatre of war.
In either September 1946[19] or January 1947[14] the Ministry of Transport returned the ship to her owners, who had Harland and Wolff refit her in Belfast for civilian service.
[16] On sea trials on 11 September 1947 she suffered a serious crankcase explosion in her engine room off the Copeland Islands in the North Channel.
[22] On 27 April 1958 Reina del Pacifico reached Liverpool at the end of her final passenger voyage before being withdrawn from service.
[12] Reina del Pacifico's bell is preserved in the Williamson Art Gallery and Museum, Birkenhead.
The ornate wood panelling from her Cigar Lounge forms part of the interior of The Cornmarket public house in Liverpool.