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SS Great Britain

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The SS Great Britain in dry dock in Bristol, 2003.
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The SS Great Britain in dry dock in Bristol, 2003.

SS Great Britain was the first ocean-going ship to have an iron hull and a screw propeller and, when launched in 1843, was the largest vessel afloat. She originally carried 120 first-class passengers (26 of whom were in single cabins), 132 second-class passengers and 130 officers and crew but, when an extra deck was added, it increased the number of passengers to 730.

History

The SS Great Britain was designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel, Thomas Guppy, Christopher Claxton and William Patterson for the Great Western Steamship Company and built in a specially adapted dry dock at Bristol.

In November 1846, within a few short years of being launched, the ship went aground on the sands of Dundrum Bay, Ireland and there was serious doubt as to whether she could be refloated. Brunel himself advised that if anyone could rescue the ship then the man to do it was the naval engineer James Bremner of Wick. Bremner was engaged and the Great Britain was refloated in August 1847.

Originally intended as an Atlantic steamer, she made most of her working voyages from the United Kingdom to Australia. In 1852, she made her first voyage to Melbourne, Australia, carrying 630 emigrants. She excited great interest in Melbourne, with 4,000 people paying a shilling each to see over her. During her time, she was considered the most reliable of the emigrant ships between Britain and Australia.

Between 1855 and 1858, she was also used as a troop ship, during the Crimean War and the Indian Mutiny. In 1882, she was turned into a sailing ship, to transport bulk coal but, after a fire on board, in 1886, she was found on arrival at the Falkland Islands to be damaged beyond repair. She was sold to the Falkland Islands Company and used there as a storage hulk until the 1930s, when she was scuttled and abandoned.

Remains of the mizzen mast, at Stanley.
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Remains of the mizzen mast, at Stanley.

In 1970, she was refloated on a pontoon and towed back to Bristol, where she was returned to the (then-disused) dry dock, in which she had been built, for conservation as a museum ship. The salvage operation was made possible by a large donation from Sir Jack Hayward. The original intent was to restore her to her 1843 state. However, the philosophy of the project has changed in recent years and conservation of all surviving pre-1970 material is now the aim. Over the years, it was found that her hull was continuing to corrode in the humid atmosphere of the dock so, in early 2005, work began to install glass sheeting across the dry dock at the level of her water line, with a dehumidifier, keeping the space beneath sufficiently dry to preserve the surviving material of the hull. This has now (as of August 2005) been completed and visitor access to the dock basin has been restored. Other improvements include the design and fabrication of three replacement masts, made from steel hollow sections, along with the associated fixture and fittings.

Dimensions

See also

SS Great Western

SS Great Eastern

External links

 


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