Shipping of the Midland Railway
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Midland Railway (MR) operated ships from Heysham to Douglas and Belfast.[1]
| Ship | Launched | Tonnage (GRT) |
Notes and references |
|---|---|---|---|
| SS Antrim | 1904 | 2,100[2] | Built by John Brown & Company at Clydebank, the first of a series of four similar ships.
She was the first vessel to use the new facilities at Heysham and made her maiden voyage in September 1904. She was the first cross-channel ship with wireless. Sold in 1928 to the Isle of Man Steam Packet Company and renamed Ramsey Town. |
| SS City of Belfast | 1893 | 1,055[4] | Built by Laird Bros. of Birkenhead. Bought from Barrow Steam Navigation Company in 1907. In war service named HMS City of Belfast. Transferred to LMS in 1923. |
| SS Donegal | 1904 | 1,997[6] | A sister of Antrim built by Caird & Company of Greenock. Requisitioned during the First World War as a hospital ship. Torpedoed and sunk on 17 April 1917 near Spithead.[3][6] |
| PS Duchess of Buccleuch | 1888 | 838 | Built by Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company at Govan for the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway and named Rouen. Sold to J. W. and R. P. Little for the Barrow S. N. Company and renamed Duchess of Buccleuch. Served the Barrow-Douglas route. |
| SS Duchess of Devonshire | 1897 | 1,265[7] | Built by Naval & Armament Construction Co., at Barrow for James Little and the Barrow S. N. Company. Taken over by MR in 1907. Requisitioned for war service and used as an armed boarding vessel. Suffered a boiler explosion in 1919 that killed three people. |
| SS Londonderry | 1904 | 2,086[9] | Built by William Denny and Brothers of Dumbarton, the first ship with Lodge-Muirhead wireless telegraphy. Requisitioned for trooping in 1914 and in 1923 transferred to the LMS. Sold in 1927 to Angleterre-Lorraine-Alsace, renamed Flamand. |
| SS Manxman | 1904 | 2,174[10] | Built by Vickers, Sons and Maxim Ltd of Barrow-in-Furness. Similar in design to the other 1904 built vessels but slightly longer and faster. Requisitioned in 1914 for trooping and purchased in 1915 by the Admiralty as HMS Manxman and converted to an aircraft carrier. |
| PS Manx Queen | 1880 | 989 | Built by J. & G. Thomson Ltd of Glasgow for the South Eastern Railway as the Duchess of Edinburgh. On delivery she failed to perform at the contracted design speed and after a short time in service was returned to her builders. She re-entered service in May 1841 following a compromise agreement between the builder and owner but after only five days in service she broke a paddle wheel, resulting in the owners returning her again to her builders. |
| SS Wyvern | 1905 | 232[12] | Built as a tug by Ferguson Bros. of Port Glasgow. Used for pleasure excursions from Heysham to Fleetwood until the Second World War. Transferred to London, Midland and Scottish Railway(LMS) in 1923 and British Transport Commission- London Midland Region in 1948. Scrapped in June 1960.[13] |