River Dart Steamboat Co Ltd

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River Dart Steamboat Company Limited
Private
Industry Transport
Fate Renamed River Dart Boat and Leisure Co. Ltd
Predecessor Dartmouth & Torbay Steam Packet Co. Ltd
Successor River Dart Boat & Leisure Co. Limited
Founded Dartmouth, Devon, United Kingdom (1906 (1906))
Founder Charles Seale Hayne
Defunct 1976 (1976)
Headquarters Dartmouth, Devon , United Kingdom
Area served
South Devon
Products River Dart ferry services
Parent Evans & Reid Investment Co Ltd (1952-1976)
Subsidiaries Devon Star Shipping Co Ltd (1961-1964)

The River Dart Steamboat Co Ltd (RDSC) and its predecessors, the Dartmouth Steam Packet Company and the Dartmouth and Torbay Steam Packet Company, were the major ferry and excursion boat operators on the River Dart in South Devon for 120 years, until the company's demise in 1976. The company was famous for its distinctive paddle steamers, which were a familiar sight on the river until the late 1960s.

River Dart river in Devon, England

The River Dart is a river in Devon, England which rises high on Dartmoor, and releases to the sea at Dartmouth.

South Devon is the southern part of Devon, England. Because Devon has its major population centres on its two coasts, the county is divided informally into North Devon and South Devon. In a narrower sense "South Devon" is used to refer to the part of Devon south of Exeter and Dartmoor, including Plymouth, Torbay and the districts of South Hams, West Devon and Teignbridge.

Contents

Routes

River Dart Steamboat Co
Legend
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Normal Services
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Services operated for a short period only
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Totnes Steamer Quay
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Totnes St Peter's Quay
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Duncannon (for Stoke Gabriel)
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Greenway Quay
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Dittisham
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Dartmouth
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Kingswear
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Torquay
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to:Weymouth, Plymouth, Channel Islands

The diagram on the right illustrates the network of routes operated by the company and its predecessors.

Dartmouth–Totnes

The premier route of the company, this route operated year-round until 1929, thereafter being a summer only service. This route was around 10 miles long, and the journey time was an average of 75 minutes, though journey times of less than an hour were possible before the introduction of a 6 knot speed limit. [1] Calls were made en route at Dittisham Pier, and off Duncannon, where passengers for Stoke Gabriel and Cornworthy were embarked by small rowing boat. Totnes is tidal, and so the ferry could only run at high tide. In its early years the service was a true ferry, connecting Dartmouth with the markets and main line station at Totnes, and carried mail until 1929. As the years went by, it became more of a tourist cruise service [2]

Other routes

From time to time the company experimented with operating other ferry services. These either closed, or were taken over by other operators

Dartmouth–Greenway

For the brief period between the Dartmouth and Torbay Railway reaching Brixham Road Station in 1861 and Kingswear in 1864, a regular connecting ferry service was run four times per day between Dartmouth and Greenway Quay, where the steamers were met with a horse-drawn omnibus to the station at Brixham Road.

Churston railway station

Churston railway station is on the Dartmouth Steam Railway, a heritage railway in Torbay, Devon, England. It is situated beside the main road to Brixham and close to the villages of Churston Ferrers and Galmpton.

Dartmouth–Kingswear

On 16 August 1864 the Dartmouth and Torbay Railway reached Kingswear, across the river from Dartmouth. The Act of Parliament incorporating the railway gave the railway company the right to operate the ferry to Dartmouth. The route was a short 5 minute crossing; from the pontoon adjacent to Kingswear station, to Dartmouth Pontoon, where an unusual station was built, with ticket office and porters, but no track. Initially the ferry was leased to the Dartmouth Steam Packet Company, who built the PS Newcomin and the doubled ended PS Dolphin for the route. In 1901, the Great Western Railway (GWR) took over the running of the Kingswear Ferry, and purchased the Dolphin. As the GWR only owned one passenger vessel on the Dart, relief steamers continued to be provided by the River Dart Steamboat Company until 1957 [2]

Great Western Railway former railway company in the United Kingdom

The Great Western Railway (GWR) was a British railway company that linked London with the south-west and west of England, the Midlands, and most of Wales. It was founded in 1833, received its enabling Act of Parliament on 31 August 1835 and ran its first trains in 1838. It was engineered by Isambard Kingdom Brunel, who chose a broad gauge of 7 ft —later slightly widened to 7 ft 14 in —but, from 1854, a series of amalgamations saw it also operate 4 ft 8 12 in standard-gauge trains; the last broad-gauge services were operated in 1892. The GWR was the only company to keep its identity through the Railways Act 1921, which amalgamated it with the remaining independent railways within its territory, and it was finally merged at the end of 1947 when it was nationalised and became the Western Region of British Railways.

PS Kingswear Castle, the last remaining operational RDSC steamer, in service from Chatham. Paddle Steamer Kingswear Castle.jpg
PS Kingswear Castle, the last remaining operational RDSC steamer, in service from Chatham.

Dittisham–Greenway

This short route across the Dart was operated by local boatmen for most of it history, but the River Dart Steamboat Company operated it during the Second World War. [2]

Coastal and cross-channel routes

In the early years of the company, attempts were made to run long distance excursions from Dartmouth, to the Channel Islands, St Malo, Weymouth, Plymouth and other ports of the south coast using the PS Pilot. On the arrival of the railway, the PS Eclair was purpose built for a weekly cross-channel service, departing from Dartmouth each Monday night, and calling at Guernsey and Jersey en route to St Malo, arriving on Tuesday. The following day she would return, again via Jersey and Guernsey, arriving at Dartmouth on Saturday. These sailings were unsuccessful and ended with the sale of the Eclair in 1868. [1]

Weymouth, Dorset town in Dorset, England

Weymouth is a seaside town in Dorset, England, situated on a sheltered bay at the mouth of the River Wey on the English Channel coast. The town is 11 kilometres (7 mi) south of Dorchester and 8 kilometres (5 mi) north of the Isle of Portland. The town's population is 52,323 (2011). Weymouth has a metropolitan population of 71,083 (2016). The town is the third largest settlement in Dorset after the unitary authorities of Bournemouth and Poole.

Plymouth City and Unitary authority in England

Plymouth is a port city situated on the south coast of Devon, England, approximately 37 miles (60 km) south-west of Exeter and 190 miles (310 km) west-south-west of London. Enclosing the city are the mouths of the river Plym and river Tamar, which are naturally incorporated into Plymouth Sound to form a boundary with Cornwall.

Guernsey island in the bailiwick of Guernsey

Guernsey is an island in the English Channel off the coast of Normandy. It lies roughly north of Saint-Malo and to the west of Jersey and the Cotentin Peninsula. With several smaller nearby islands, it forms a jurisdiction within the Bailiwick of Guernsey, a British Crown dependency. The jurisdiction is made up of ten parishes on the island of Guernsey, three other inhabited islands, and many small islets and rocks.

History

Dartmouth Steam Packet Co Ltd

In 1856 John Moody and Charles Seale Hayne established a Dartmouth–Totnes steamboat service. The first vessel in the fleet was the purpose-built PS Louisa, a 90-foot paddle steamer built at Deptford on the River Thames in 1856. Two years later, two additional paddle steamers were acquired second hand - the PS Mary for the Totnes run, and PS Pilot for towage work in Dartmouth harbour. In 1859 the company was incorporated under the name the Dartmouth Steam Packet Company. The new company bought all of the shares of the Louisa and a majority of the shares in the Pilot in 1859; with the Mary returning to South Shields. For the next few years, the Pilot, having been refitted as a full-time passenger boat, ran coastal and cross-channel trips, in addition to the normal services. [3]

Seale Hayne's primary commercial interest was the establishment of the Dartmouth and Torbay railway, so when this railway reached Brixham Road, the company operated the connecting ferry service to Greenway. This service was changed to run to Kingswear in 1864, when the railway reached its terminus, and a new steamer was built for the route: the PS Newcomin. In 1865 the company took delivery of the largest ever Dartmouth-based passenger steamer - the 180-foot-long PS Eclair. This steamer was purpose-built for cross-channel services to the channel islands, which were operated in connection with the railway, but the service was unsuccessful, and the Eclair was sold in 1868

The Louisa was broken up in 1868, when only 12 years old. Her replacement in 1869 was the double ended paddle steamer Dolphin; designed for the short Kingswear route - the Newcomin now being used on the Totnes route. Also built in the same year was PS Guide - a wooden-hulled tug. In 1871 the formerly competing steamer PS Dartmouth was acquired, giving the Dartmouth Steam Packet Company a monopoly of all of the river's passenger services. From 1872, therefore, the Dartmouth-Totnes service was run by the Newcomin, Dartmouth and Pilot, with the Dolphin on the Kingswear ferry and the Guide chartered out to the West Cornwall Steam Ship Company, as a replacement for their wrecked SS Little Western. She returned to the Dart in 1876 [1]

Dartmouth and Torbay Steam Packet Company

In 1877 a new syndicate, named the Dartmouth and Torbay Steam Packet Company took over the fleet from Seale Hayne's company. The Guide was immediately sold, followed by the Pilot two years later. In their place came two small screw steamers - the SS Hauley and SS Nimble. In 1879 the Dartmouth was replaced by the trend-setting paddle steamer Berry Castle whose basic design was followed for the next 44 years. In 1883 a further screw-steamer: the SS ""Dart"" was purchased, and in the following year the Newcomin was replaced by the first PS Dartmouth Castle

Following this period of fleet modernisation were ten years of stability, with the two 'castles' on the Dartmouth–Totnes run, the Dolphin on the Kingswear ferry, and the three screw steamers assisting. At this time the single fare to Totnes was one shilling in the saloon, or ninepence in the forecabin. In 1893 the Dart was sold, and a new paddle steamer: the first PS Totnes Castle entered service. Designed for the winter run, this vessel was smaller than the other paddle steamers, and was flush-decked. The Hauley was sold in 1898. [1]

The Edwardian years

In 1901 the Kingswear ferry lease was due for renewal, and the Great Western Railway decided to operate the service themselves, purchasing the Dolphin for the purpose. The 'Torbay' element in the company's name was therefore no longer relevant, and in 1904, the company was renamed the River Dart Steamboat Company. At the same time another paddle steamer was added to the fleet: the first Kingswear Castle. In 1906 the company was incorporated - it appears that the Nimble was not transferred to the incorporated company, so its fleet consisted of the four 'castle' class paddle steamers.

In 1907 the first PS Dartmouth Castle was replaced by a similar vessel of the same name. In 1912 the Totnes Castle was sold, two years later her replacement the PS Compton Castle entered service. This steamer was the first to have her deck extended out over her paddle sponsons, in the style which would become typical of the Dart paddlers. [4]

World War One

Initially there was little effect on the company services following the declaration of war, though later the service was reduced and the company's oldest steamer - PS Berry Castle was laid up, and broken up in 1917. It is worth noting that the Dartmouth–Totnes service was still a ferry route, and a Royal Mail service at this stage. [2]

Between the wars

In 1922, the company introduced their first motor vessel - the first MV Berry Castle, a 60-foot-long, twin paraffin engined vessel. The small MV Dittisham Castle was introduced in the same year, to operate a shuttle service from Dartmouth to her namesake village. The following year, two new paddle steamers: the second Totnes Castle and second PS Kingswear Castle were ordered to the same design as the Compton Castle. The second Kingswear Castle inherited the engines from the first, which became an isolation hospital ship at Dartmouth, before being burnt at Fleet Mill Quay to avoid contamination. In 1926, a third motor vessel entered service - the MV Clifton Castle.

There then followed a long period of stability, with the PS Dartmouth Castle, PS Compton Castle, PS Totnes Castle and PS Kingswear Castle running the main Totnes service, MV Dittisham Castle on the Dittisham shuttle. The MV Berry Castle and MV Clifton Castle operated the winter services, and additional services in the summer.

In 1938 a new vessel - the MV Greenway Castle – was built, but went to the Thames shortly afterwards. A further new vessel, MV Seymour Castle, entered service in the following year. [4]

World War Two

Unlike the First World War, all excursion traffic stopped immediately following the declaration of war. The Totnes Castle was used briefly as a Liberty boat at Devonport Dockyard, and during 1941 operated a limited summer service to Totnes in full peacetime colouring. She also, along with the Kingswear Castle, occasionally relieved on the Kingswear Ferry. Compton Castle was used by the Admiralty as an ammunition carrier. The Seymour Castle was requsitionned by the Admiralty, and used for marking swept channels at Ramsgate. She also took part in the Operation Dynamo to Dunkirk. The Clifton Castle was also sold to the Crown, whilst the MV Dittisham Castle was sold to the Dartmouth Coaling Company. The Berry Castle and Dartmouth Castle were laid up in Old Mill Creek for the duration of the war, by the end of the War Dartmouth Castle was in such poor condition that she never sailed again, and her remains are still in the creek. [1]

The postwar years

After the war the company was left with only the three paddle steamers and the MV Seymour Castle. The work of rebuilding the fleet commenced with the construction of the MV Dartmouth Castle in 1948, and the MV Berry Castle the following year.

In 1952, following the death of the managing director: John Tolman two years earlier, the company was taken over by Evans & Reid Investment Co Ltd of Cardiff. The new company valued the three motor vessels at a collective £17,311, whilst the three steamers were valued at a scrap value of just £797. Nevertheless, the service ran unchanged until 1961, when a controlling interest was bought in the Devon Star Shipping Co Ltd, operators of the MV Torbay Prince from Torquay. This interest was sold three years later.

After the 1962 season the PS Compton Castle was refused a passenger certificate, and was replaced with a new motor vessel: the MV Conway Castle. The following year the PS Totnes Castle also required major work, and was replaced with a sister to the Conway Castle - the MV Cardiff Castle. The final steamer PS Kingswear Castle remained in service until the end of the 1965 season, when she was sold to the Paddle Steamer Preservation Society. [3]

Decline

Despite having a modern fleet of five motor vessels, the company continued to decline in the late 1960s, with various factors including the sinking of the Torrey Canyon, poor weather and unemployment contributing to poor seasons. In a diversification, two pilot boats were bought for chartering. MV Berry Castle and MV Seymour Castle were sold after the 1972 season, and the 1974 season was to be the company's last as an operator of pleasure boats. The following year saw the introduction of a new operator on the river: Dart Pleasure Craft, who introduced three motor vessels from the River Thames. The MV Dartmouth Castle was sold in 1975 to Millbrook Steamboat & Trading Co Ltd of Plymouth, who also bought the last RDSC vessel, MV Cardiff Castle in 1977, the MV Conway Castle having been sold earlier in the year. [3]

After the closure of passenger services the company was renamed River Dart Boat and Leisure Co Ltd. It still survives today as part of Evans & Reid Investment Co Ltd, with its activities listed as development and sale of real estate. [5] The diagram below illustrates the transfer of vessels between the various ferry companies of South Devon during the following years.

South Devon Ferries 1972 - 1987
This table shows the transfer of passenger vessels between various operators in South Devon, caused by the demise of the River Dart Steamboat Company (RDSC) and Millbrook Steamboat and Trading Company (MSTC), and the formation of Dart Pleasure Craft (DPC), Plymouth Boat Cruises (PBC) and Tamar Cruising (TC)
Vessel 1972 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87
Conway Castle River Dart Steamboat Co River Severn
Seymour Castle RDSC Various Riddalls
Berry Castle RDSC Various Dart Pleasure Craft PBC
Dartmouth Castle RDSC MSTC Dart Pleasure Craft
Cardiff Castle River Dart Steamboat Co MSTC Dart Pleasure Craft
Humphrey Gilbert Dartmouth Council Various MSTC Dart Pleasure Craft
Adrian Gilbert Dartmouth Council Var Dart Pleasure Craft
My Queen River Thames Dart Pleasure Craft PBC Riddalls
Queen Boadiciea River Thames Dart Pleasure Craft MSTC Scrapped
Queen Boadiciea II River Thames Dart Pleasure Craft Tamar Cruising
Plymouth Sound Newbuilding TC
Northern Belle Millbrook Steamboat & Trading Co Tamar Cruising
Western Belle Millbrook Steamboat & Trading Co Dart Pleasure Craft
Plymouth Belle Millbrook Steamboat & Trading Co Dart Pleasure Craft
Eastern Belle Millbrook Steamboat & Trading Co DPC PBC Riddalls
Southern Belle Millbrook Steamboat & Trading Co PBC
Devon Belle Millbrook Steamboat & Trading Co River Fal
Lady Elizabeth Millbrook Steamboat & Trading Co Kingsbridge Estuary
Plymouth Princess River Thames Plymouth Boat Cruises
Plymouth Venturer Newbuilding Plymouth Boat Cruises
Queen of Helford River Fal Riddalls
Vessel 1972 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87

The River Dart paddle steamer

PS Kingswear Castle, showing the classic lines of a River Dart Paddle Steamer. PS Kingswear Castle - geograph.org.uk - 716073.jpg
PS Kingswear Castle, showing the classic lines of a River Dart Paddle Steamer.

PS Berry Castle was the first of a series of paddle steamers specifically designed for River Dart service. They were a maximum length of 108 feet, in order to allow them to swing in the river at Totnes. Each was fitted with a two-cylinder compound engine (PS Bery Castle and the first PS Dartmouth Castle had two-cylinder oscillating engines), located forward of the boiler.

Passenger accommodation was located in saloons both forward and aft of the engine room. Open passenger decks were situated above the saloons, with small cockpits at the bow and stern. On the PS Compton Castle and later vessels the deck was widened over long sponsons to the edge of the paddle boxes, and a flying after deck was provided above the aft cockpit. The second PS Dartmouth Castle was later refitted with these features. [6]

The one paddle steamer built to a differing design was the first PS Totnes Castle, which was smaller, and flush-decked, as she was designed mainly for the winter service

Fleet list

NameBuiltCompany ServiceNotes
PS Louisa18561856–1868
PS Mary18521858–1859
PS Pilot18521877–1879Long distance excursions including Channel Islands
PS Newcomin18641877–1884
PS Eclair18651865–1868Long distance excursions including Channel Islands
PS Guide18691869–1877
PS Dolphin18691877–1901Double ended Paddle Steamer built for Kingswear Ferry. Sold to GWR 1901
PS Dartmouth18561877–1881
SS Hauley18771877–1898
SS Nimble18781879–1910
PS Berry Castle (I)18801880–1917
SS Dart18831883–1893
PS Dartmouth Castle (I)18851885–1907
PS Totnes Castle (I)18941894–1912Winter Boat for Totnes Service
PS Kingswear Castle (I)19041904–1924Engines and some other components re-used in construction of PS Kingswear Castle II.
PS Dartmouth Castle (II)19071907–1947
PS Compton Castle19141914–1964Moored in Truro since 1982, after 14 years in Kingsbridge and 4 years in Looe. [7]
MV Berry Castle (II)19211922–1947
MV Dittisham Castle19221922–1947Dartmouth–Dittisham Ferry
PS Totnes Castle (II)19231923–1964
PS Kingswear Castle (II)19241924–1967Now owned by the Paddle Steamer Preservation Society and operated under charter by the Dartmouth Steam Railway and Riverboat Company on the River Dart.
MV ''Clifton Castle'' 19261926–1942
MV Greenway Castle19371937–1938?
MV Seymour Castle 19381938–1973
MV Dartmouth Castle (III)19481948–1975Sold to Millbrook Steamboat & Trading Co Ltd but now owned by Dartmouth Steam Railway and Riverboat Company and operating on the River Dart.
MV Berry Castle 19481948–1975
MV Conway Castle 19631963–1977Now operating on the River Severn, based at Upton-on-Severn MV Cardiff Castle 19641964–1977Sold to Millbrook Steamboat & Trading Co Ltd but now owned by Dartmouth Steam Railway and Riverboat Company and operating on the River Dart.

RDSC vessels today

The remains of the first PS Kingswear Castle. River Dart.jpg
The remains of the first PS Kingswear Castle.

The remains of two RSBC paddle steamers can still be seen on the Dart. the first PS Kingswear Castle was burnt in 1924 after being used as a fever hulk, and beached on the bank of the Dart south of Totnes at Fleet Mill Quay. Her remains (pictured) can still be seen today, from a boat on the river. [2] The second PS Dartmouth Castle was laid up in Old Mill Creek, near Dartmouth for the Second World War, and never returned to service. Her remains now form a retaining wall in the creek. [1]

PS Compton Castle in 1974 - then a cafe at Kingsbridge PS Compton Castle.jpg
PS Compton Castle in 1974 - then a cafe at Kingsbridge

The PS Compton Castle was used for a succession of ventures after being sold by the RDSC, including periods as cafes in Kingsbridge and Truro. She has also been a floating flower shop at Truro, [8] but bears little resemblance to her original condition. Her engines have fared rather better, having survived in museum condition on the Isle of Wight, at Blackgang Chine . [1] In 2015 the engines were acquired by the Paddle Steamer Preservation Society and are currently in store.

The second PS Kingswear Castle is the best preserved of all of the company's vessels, being owned by the Paddle Steamer Preservation Society. The society operated her out of Chatham Dockyard on the River Medway in full passenger service from 1985 until 2012. [9] Since 2013 the society has chartered her to the Dartmouth Steam Railway and Riverboat Company who operate her back on her home waters of the River Dart.

With the exception of the first MV Berry Castle, all of the larger RDSC motor vessels are still in service. All have had major alterations, with the addition of a deck house saloon of various designs, with the exception of the MV Seymour Castle, which remains in original condition. The MV Cardiff Castle is in service on the River Dart for Dart Pleasure Craft, whilst The MV Dartmouth Castle is laid up at Torquay. The MV Conway Castle is operating on the River Severn for Severn Leisure Cruises. The MV Seymour Castle (now named Devon Belle) and the MV Clifton Castle are operating on the Thames, for Thames Rivercruise of Reading and Colliers Launches of Richmond respectively. Finally, the MV Berry Castle, renamed MV Lady Wakefield is operating on Ullswater in the Lake District for Ullswater 'Steamers'. [10]

Livery

The early steamers had a black hull and cabin sides and a black funnel. On the incorporation of the company in 1906, the funnel colour was changed to yellow, with a black top. Wheelhouses and companionways, where fitted were of varnished wood. Early motor vessels also followed this livery, though none were fitted with funnels. a black hull - none were fitted with a funnel. By the time of the introduction of the MV Dartmouth Castle of 1948, the motor vessels had their hulls and cabin sides painted white. [1]

Nomenclature

Early steamers had a variety of names, the two interesting ones being PS Newcomin, named after Thomas Newcomen, an early steam engine pioneer, and SS Hauley, named after John Hawley, a fourteenth-century privateer

Most of the vessels built for the company had names ending with 'Castle'. Of these, Dartmouth and Kingswear Castles are the pair of small fortifications which protect the mouth of the River Dart from attack by sea. Totnes Castle is a Norman motte and bailey castle, high above the town of Totnes, whilst Compton Castle is a fortified manor house some 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) to the northeast of the river. Berry Castle refers to Berry Pomeroy Castle, a ruin some 3.5 kilometres (2.2 mi) to the northeast of the Dart, whilst Greenway Castle is a house at Greenway, home to the Gilbert family, and later to Agatha Christie.

The other castles are somewhat more esoteric. There is no such place as Seymour Castle, but the Seymour family owned both Totnes and Berry Pomeroy castles. Clifton is an ancient part of the town of Dartmouth, so Clifton Castle may refer to Dartmouth Castle, or to Bayard's Cove Fort, a small fortification nearer the town centre, designed to be a second line of defence for the town. There is no Dittisham Castle, this name simply indicated the vessels normal destination. [1]

The final two vessels of the company broke with tradition, and were named after Cardiff Castle and Conway Castle, both large castles in Wales, reflecting the company's Welsh ownership. [4]

Related Research Articles

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MV <i>Cardiff Castle</i>

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MV <i>Devon Belle II</i>

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MV <i>Karina</i>

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The MV Edgecumbe Belle is a single screw passenger vessel, operating from Mt Edgcumbe and Stonehouse Plymouth running 7 days a week half hour service also carrys Marley the ferry dog.

MV <i>Western Belle</i>

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MV <i>Lady Wakefield</i>

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Great Western Railway ships

The Great Western Railway's ships operated in connection with the company's trains to provide services to Ireland, the Channel Islands and France. Powers were granted by Act of Parliament for the Great Western Railway (GWR) to operate ships in 1871. The following year the company took over the ships operated by Ford and Jackson on the route between Wales and Ireland. Services were operated between Weymouth, the Channel Islands and France on the former Weymouth and Channel Islands Steam Packet Company routes. Smaller GWR vessels were also used as tenders at Plymouth and on ferry routes on the River Severn and River Dart. The railway also operated tugs and other craft at their docks in Wales and South West England.

MV <i>Dartmouth Castle</i>

MV Dartmouth Castle is a passenger ship operating on the River Dart for the Dartmouth Steam Railway and River Boat Company. She is listed on the National Register of Historic Ships

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Clammer, R & Kittridge, A. (1987). Passenger Steamers of the River Dart & Kingsbridge Estuary. The Paddle Steamer Preservation Society in association with Twelveheads Press.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Langley, M & Small, S. (1984). Estuary & River Ferries of South West England. Waine Research Publications.
  3. 1 2 3 Boyle, I. "River Dart Steamboat Company". Simplon Postcards. Retrieved 13 November 2009.
  4. 1 2 3 Kittridge, A. (2003). South Devon Steamers & Ferries. Tempus Publishing Limited.
  5. "WebCHeck". Companies House. Retrieved 13 November 2009.
  6. Simmonds, C. (1987) Cutaway Diagram of PS Kingswear Castle drawn for the Paddle Steamer Preservation Society
  7. A 50 page website with photos and history of Compton Castle.
  8. http://pscomptoncastle.com/page72.html
  9. "National Historic Ships Register" . Retrieved 6 November 2009.
  10. Hamer, G. (2005). Trip Out 2005/06. Self Published.