SS Blanche
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SS Blanche was the first ship built by A and J Inglis at Pointhouse, Glasgow as Yard No.1 and launched on 8 April 1863.[1] She was a cargo steamer and entered service in May 1863 with Glasgow shipowner, Hermann L Seligmann on his Glasgow-Dunkirk service.[1][2][3] Seligmann sold Blanche in 1864 to Mathew Langlands of M Langlands & Sons, Glasgow, and in 1867 she was resold to London-based Joseph Weatherley.[3] In 1888 the ship was purchased by Christopher Furness of West Hartlepool, who employed her as a coastal collier.[3][4] Furness' shipping business was incorporated in October 1891 as Furness, Withy & Company Ltd but, before formal transfer of her ownership, Blanche was sold to Osborn & Wallis of Bristol.[3][4]
- 1863 H L Seligmann, Glasgow
- 1864 M Langlands & Sons, Glasgow
- 18xx (foreign)
- 1872 Joseph Weatherley, John Mead & Edward Hussey, London
- 1889 Furness Withy.
- 1892 Osborn & Wallis
| History | |
|---|---|
| Name | SS Blanche |
| Owner |
|
| Builder | A. & J. Inglis, Pointhouse, Glasgow, Scotland |
| Yard number | 1 |
| Launched | 8 April 1863 |
| Fate | Wrecked 15 July 1901 |
| General characteristics | |
| Type | Iron steamship – collier |
| Tonnage | 246grt (1872: 234grt, 145net) |
| Length | 121 feet (1872: 146.1 feet) |
| Beam | 20 feet (1872: 20.1 feet) |
| Draught | (Depth) 12 feet (1872: 12.0 feet) |
| Propulsion | Steam |
Blanche was wrecked on 15 July 1901 on Île-Tudy on her passage from Cardiff to Quimper, Brittany, with a cargo of bran.[3][5]