Category Archives: Steam Trawlers

S.T. Marbella H52

In Marr (Fleetwood) ownership. Did not fish from the port.

Technical

Official Number: 186678
Yard Number: 902
Completed: 1955
Gross Tonnage: 793
Net Tonnage: 279
Length: 190.2 ft
Breadth: 32.1 ft
Depth: 15.7 ft
Built: Cook, Welton & Gemmell, Beverley
Engine: T.3-cyl and boiler by C. D. Holmes & Co Ltd, Hull
Fitted for burning oil fuel, F.P. above 150° F

History

11.2.1955: Launched by Cook, Welton & Gemmell Ltd, Beverley (Yd.No.902) for J. Marr & Son Ltd, Fleetwood as MARBELLA.
16.6.1955: Completed (Geoffrey Edwards Marr, Hull, manager). Registered at Hull (H52).
1.6.1955: Sailed Hull on first trip to Iceland (Sk. W. Drever).
15.6.1955: At Hull landed 2,767 kits grossed £7,066.
1.1.1965: Sailed Hull for White Sea on last trip before sale (Sk. J. Yewster).
26.1.1965: At Hull landed 1,087 kits grossed £7,253.
1965: Sold to Boyd Line Ltd, Hull (T. W. Boyd, manager) for £124,000.
26.2.1965: Registered at Hull as ARCTIC BRIGAND (H52).
25.2.1965: Sailed Hull for Norway Coast first trip for new owners (Sk. G. Thompson).
25.2.1965: At Hull landed 1,279 kits grossed £5,775.
1967: First trawler to be awarded the Hull Distant Water Challenge Shield (value of catch on a points basis) 38,806 kits – £134,462 (Sk. Terence Thresh).
1975: Sold to Jacques Bakker en Zonen, Bruges for breaking up.
5.7.1975: Arrived Bruges. Hull registry closed.

Click to enlarge images

S.T. Marbella H52

S.T. Marbella H52
Picture courtesy of The James Cullen Collection

S.T. Marbella H52

S.T. Marbella H52
Picture courtesy of The JJ Collection

S.T. Marbella H52

S.T. Marbella H52
Picture courtesy of The JJ Collection

S.T. Arctic Brigand H52

S.T. Arctic Brigand H52
Picture courtesy of The JJ Collection

Changelog

21/06/2011: Page published. 9 updates since then.
27/12/2018: Removed FMHT watermarks from images.

S.T. Glenella H333

In Marr (Fleetwood) ownership. Did not fish from the port.

Technical

Official Number: 163950
Yard Number: 1127
Completed: 1934
Gross Tonnage: 457
Net Tonnage: 185
Length: 161.0 ft
Breadth: 26.6 ft
Depth: 14.2 ft
Built: Cochrane & Sons Ltd, Selby
Engine: T.3-cyl and boiler by C. D. Holmes & Co Ltd, Hull

History

11.9.1934: Launched by Cochrane & Sons Ltd, Selby (Yd.No.1127) for Hudson Steam Fishing Co Ltd, Hull as CAPE BARFLEUR.
23.10.1934: Registered at Hull (H105). Archibald Hudson, Hessle, appointed manager.
30.10.1934: Completed at a cost of £20,000 ex fishing gear.
5.11.1934: Sailed Hull on first trip to Bear Island grounds (Sk. James Myers).
28.11.1934: At Hull landed 2,000 kits grossed £1,020.
9.1935: As a result of the Abyssinian crisis and failure of British diplomacy, the Government authorised The Admiralty to procure twenty modern trawlers for conversion to minor war vessels.
1938: In the Naval Estimates The Admiralty was authorised to purchase further modern trawlers for conversion to anti submarine vessels.
2.1939: Sold to The Admiralty (£19,260) following successful trials.
27.2.1939: Hull registry closed. Fitted out as a “Gem” class anti-submarine trawler. Renamed HMTrawler AMBER (1-4”, AA weapons, ASDIC, DC) (P.No.T.88).
1.9.1939: Based Alexandria/Port Said with 4th Anti Submarine Group.
6.1940: At Aden (Boatswain H W Clark).
1.1941: At Aden (Actg S/Lieut. P Le M Andrews RNR).
7.1941: At Port Said (Act Ty Lieut. S. Barrie RNR).
4.1946: Sold to Eton Fishing Co Ltd, Hull (George Gillard, manager).
9.1946: Completed refit and classified as steam trawler.
9.1946: Remeasured after re-classification 473g 188n.
8.10.1946: Registered at Hull as ETONIAN (H333).
9.10.1946: Sailed Hull on first trip to Bear Island (Sk. H. Lead).
5.11.1946: At Hull landed 2,011 kits grosed £4,662.
19.9.1950: Sold to Boyd Line Ltd, Hull (T. W. Boyd, manager).
12.10.1950: Registered at Hull as ARCTIC CRUSADER (H333).
19.5.1952: Sold to Eton Fishing Co Ltd, Hull (George Gillard, manager).
29.3.1952: Registered at Hull as ETONIAN (H333).
5.3.1954: Sailed Hull for Iceland last trip before sale (Sk.A. Hinchcliffe).
27.3.1954: Sold to J. Marr & Son Ltd, Fleetwood (Geoffrey Edwards Marr, Hull, manager) for £27,250.
29.3.1954: At Hull landed 2,311 kits grossed £3,642.
1.4.1954: Sailed Hull for Iceland first trip for new owners (Sk. A. Hinchcliffe).
23.4.1954: At Hull landed 1,502 kits grossed £4,541.
6.4.1955: Registered at Hull as GLENELLA (H333).
19.12.1956: Laid up.
1957: Sold to BISCO and allocated to J. J. King & Co Ltd, Gateshead for breaking up.
13.5.1957: Arrived River Tyne.
19.10.1957: Hull registry closed.

Click to enlarge images

S.T. Cape Barfleur H105

S.T. Cape Barfleur H105
Picture courtesy of The JJ Collection

S.T. Cape Barfleur H105

S.T. Cape Barfleur H105
Picture courtesy of The JJ Collection

S.T. Glenella H333

S.T. Glenella H333
Picture courtesy of The JJ Collection

S.T. Glenella H333

S.T. Glenella H333
Picture courtesy of The JJ Collection

Changelog

20/06/2011: Page published. 10 updates since then.
06/06/2018: Removed FMHT watermarks from images.
13/11/2020: Updated history.

S.T. Ocean Drift LH73

Additional information courtesy of Andy Hall

Technical

Official Number: 130214
Yard Number: 145
Completed: 1916
Gross Tonnage: 227
Net Tonnage: 98
Length: 117.2 ft
Breadth: 22.1 ft
Depth: 12.6 ft
Engine: T.3-cyl by Hawthorns & Co Ltd, Leith
Built: Hawthorns & Co Ltd, Leith

History

17.6.1916: Launched by Hawthorns & Co Ltd, Leith (Yd.No.145) for Peterhead Trawling Co Ltd, Peterhead & Aberdeen as PITFOUR.
19.10.1916: Registered at Peterhead (PD241). James Glennie Adam, Aberdeen designated manager.
10.1916: Completed. Requisitioned for war service as a minelayer (1-6pdr) (Ad.No.2976).
1917: Converted for minesweeping (1-6pdr, 1-7.5” Howitzer). Based Dover.
Post 12.3.1919: Returned to owner at Aberdeen.
22.1.1925: At Aberdeen Sheriff Court , James Abbot, Aberdeen was charged with wilfully refusing or omitting to carry out his duties as cook on 14th, 15th, 16th October. He pleaded not guilty and in defence stated that he had fallen and struck his head on the pump and became sick, taking to his bunk. The skipper, William Rix, tried to combine his own duties with that of cooking but the crew complained and he had no option but to put back to port. The Sheriff found the charge proved and said that imprisonment was the proper penalty, however Abbot was given the opportunity to forfeit £1.18.11d, his pay for the four days at sea, with £2.16.1d for expenses or 14 days imprisonment.
9.(?).1927: Sold to James Glennie Adam, Aberdeen. James Glennie Adam designated managing owner.
1929: Sold to Alexander Flockhart, Leith, Edinburgh. Alexander Flockhart designated managing owner.
26.02.1931: While working onboard at West Pier, William Henry (47), Leith, engineer was struck on the head by falling derrick and fatally injured. Rushed to Leith hospital in an unconscious state but died later.
7.2.1935: Sold to Alexander & William Flockhart, Newhaven, Edinburgh.
13.2.1935: Peterhead registry closed.
5.3.1935: Registered at Leith as OCEAN DRIFT (LH73). Alexander Flockhart designated managing owner.
27.3.1939: Connected to OCEAN EDDY (LH62) disabled with machinery problems and delivered Lerwick after 30 mile tow.
20.7.1939: Off Peterhead in collision with steam drifter LANNER (LT1176) sustaining damage.
Pre 1939: Carnie & Gibb, Newhaven appointed managing agents.
7.1.1940: Sold to Boston Deep Sea Fishing & Ice Co Ltd, Fleetwood. Basil Arthur Parkes, Thornton-le-Fylde designated manager.
9.3.1940: Sold to William Carnie Jnr, Thomas Y. Carnie & Liston Carnie, Newhaven, Edinburgh. William Carnie Jnr, Glasgow designated manager.
17.3.1940: Foundered 50 miles NE of Kinnaird Head following collision with HMS INTREPID (P.No. D.10). Two crew missing* remainder including Sk. George Ratcliffe picked up by HMS INTREPID.
25.3.1940: Leith registry closed.

Crew picked up by INTREPID – Sk. George Ratcliffe; James Paterson, Eyemouth, mate; George Nisbet, Granton, 2nd fisherman; William Roxburgh, Edinburgh; J. B. Irvine, Cockenzie; M. Jolly, Leith; William McPhail, Leith and J. Mason, Ayr, cook.)

(Missing* – Ch.Eng A. Cunningham, Port Seton and Deckhand R. Liston, Newhaven.)Newhaven.)

Changelog

20/06/2011: Page published. 7 updates since then.
29/06/2019: Updated information.

S.T. Lancella H290

In Marr (Fleetwood) ownership. Did not fish from the port.
Additional material courtesy of Mike Thompson

Technical

Official Number: 185151
Yard Number: 880
Completed: 1953
Gross Tonnage: 790
Net Tonnage: 286
Length: 190.2 ft
Breadth: 32.1 ft
Depth: 15.7 ft
Engine: T.3-cyl and boiler by C. D. Holmes & Co Ltd, Hull
Fitted for burning oil fuel, F.P. above 150°F

History

3.4.1953: Launched by Cook, Welton & Gemmell Ltd, Beverley (Yd.No.880) for J. Marr & Son Ltd, Fleetwood as LANCELLA.
18.7.1953: Completed at a cost of £170,067 (Geoffrey Edwards Marr, Hull, manager).
18.7.1953: Registered at Hull (H290).
21.7.1953: Sailed Hull on first trip to Bear Island (Sk. Leo Romyn DSC).
10.8.1953: At Hull landed 2,760 kits grossed £5,586 (Hull fishing industry slump).
1.1955: Sailed Hull for Icelandic grounds (Sk. William Turner).
24.1.1955: At 2000 RODERIGO (H135) (Sk. George Coverdale) and LORELLA (H455) (Sk. Stephen J. Blackshaw) informed YORK CITY (GY153) that they were proceeding to try to find KINGSTON GARNET (H106) (Sk. Norman Trolle), which was understood to be disabled in very heavy weather with fouled propeller some 40 miles N of Ritur Huk. In fact by 1600 KINGSTON GARNET had freed obstruction and proceeded to shelter; message announcing this was not received by RODERIGO and LORELLA. Having reached approximate position of KINGSTON GARNET and found nothing the pair could not turn due to weather and headed into wind to dodge.
25.1.1955: At 0900 RODERIGO informed LANCELLA “Been blowing a hurricane all night and still blowing very very hard. Wind E, not freezing as much now. Last bearing Cape SW by S at 0815, 300 fathoms”.
At 1650 LORELLA reported to LANCELLA “Wind E force 10 since breakfast time. About same position as yesterday. We dodged back a bit early this morning when it fined a bit. Now blowing very very hard and also continous snow.”
At 2115 Roderigo reported “Still dodging ENE gale force 10.”
26.1.1955: At 0910 RODERIGO reported to LANCELLA “Been dodging full speed and half speed at night to keep her up. Been trying to get round but no go. Wind freshening again.”
At 1421 RODERIGO spoke to KINGSTON ZIRCON (H108) (Sk. R. Rivett) “weather very bad and freezing”.
At 1435 a Mayday was faintly heard from LORELLA by CONAN DOYLE (H251) (Sk. A. Thompson) and getting fainter “Heeling right over and can’t get back”. This was her last transmission.
At 1633 RODERIGO reported that she was manoeuvring with difficulty.
At 1650 LANCELLA received a further message from RODERIGO “ We are listing badly to starboard would like you to come to us.”
At 1652 left shelter of Ritur Huk to join with CONAN DOYLE (H251), REIGHTON WYKE (H425) (Sk. Ian Turner), KINGSTON ONYX (H140) (Sk. J. Howson) and GRIMSBY TOWN (GY246) to proceed towards supposed position with USAF aircraft airborne.
At 1700. IMPERIALIST (H2) (Sk. T. Hanold) picked up distress call, “90 miles NE of North Cape, listing heavily to starboard and going over, unable to abandon ship, wind NE force 11-12, freezing hard”.
At 1705: “She is going over and can’t get her back.”
At 1710 RODERIGO sent out an S.O.S. on w/t “Heeling right over, please acknowledge”, followed some minutes later by “Going over, going over.”
At 1712 messages ceased.
27.1.1955: In mid morning when some 50 miles N of North Cape and fearing for own safety in storm/hurricane force conditions, nil visibility, and icing, LANCELLA terminated search after consultation with RN and USAF. (one newspaper report stated “one vessel refused to be beaten by conditions, the LANCELLA continued her search in the worst weather conditions imaginable until mid morning on the 27th 18 hours after LORELLA’S last distress message had been picked up.”).
11.8.1955: At Formal Investigation at Hull (No.S.432) the Court found that RODERIGO and LORELLA capsized and foundered due to an unusual and unpredictable combination of heavy gales, high seas and loss of stability due to heavy accumulation of ice on their upper structures.
1956: Silver Cod Challenge Trophy winner – Sk. William Turner 340 days/45,936 kits, £131,633.
1.1974: Sold to Hughes Bolckow Ltd, Blyth for breaking up.
27.2.1974: Commenced breaking up at Blyth.
12.6.1974: Hull registry closed.

From Yorkshirepride.co.uk

The conditions were appalling.
Hurricane force winds lashed the seas into a frenzy. Blizzards swept down from the Arctic the true intensity of the swirling white-out apparent only in the deck lights.
On the Hull trawlers LORELLA and RODERIGO, both several miles off Iceland’s North Cape, the skippers put their trawlers head into wind and prayed for the only thing they knew could save them – a moderation in the weather.
Each vessel fought its own battle to survive, the forepeak smashing downwards into the angry, mountainous seas and erupting in a mass of spray. They had no choice in which direction they could take. They sailed onwards – ever more northerly.
Neither trawler could turn and to do so would mean instant disaster. And they knew that their position became every more dangerous by the hour.
The vessels faced another problem, too, that of the relentless build-up of ice on their upperworks . The air temperature was 23F and the sea temperature 34F. The spray froze as it fell on the trawlers.
The time was early in the morning. From the LORELLA came a message to the RODERIGO:
“Boat deck frozen with solid snow, Lads digging it out since breakfast. Terrible lot on bridge top and they are going out there in daylight if possible.
“RODERIGO: “Same here. The whaleback is a solid mass.”
And so into the day..
14.21, RODERIGO: One side of our aerial is down. Weather very bad and freezing.
14.36, LORELLA: Heeling over.
14.39, LORELLA: Going down. Heeling over. LORELLA going down. Heeling over…
There was no further transmission.
15.43, RODERIGO: Calling all ships, we are now taking heavy water.
16.30, Aerials now icing up.
16.45: Can anyone take a bearing on this frequency?
From the trawler LANCELLA, which was in shelter and listening into the broadcasts: Bearing as near as can say north east.
16.50, RODERIGO to LANCELLA: Come to us. Position becoming serious now.
16.52, LANCELLA to RODERIGO: We are coming to you.
An American aircraft from the USAF base on Iceland now asked Lancella for RODERIGO’S position. LANCELLA replied: RODERIGO is 90 miles NE of Iceland’s North Cape. Wind NE force 11-12, visibility nil to one cable.
Aircraft to RODERIGO: What are your intentions?
1704, RODERIGO: No intentions. Going further over. No visibility. Still going over to starboard.
17.05: Still going over to starboard. Cannot get her back.
17.08: Still going over. Going over.
17.09: RODERIGO going over…
The message was repeated in Morse until, after three minutes transmission ceased.
Two vessels were missing.
And 40 Hull fishermen were dead.
Seven months later the calm of a Hull inquiry heard a witness say: “They could only hope for a moderation in weather or a rise in temperature.”

Click to enlarge images

S.T. Lancella H290

S.T. Lancella H290
Picture from the Internet

S.T. Lancella H290

S.T. Lancella H290
Picture from the Internet

S.T. Lancella H290

S.T. Lancella H290
Picture from the Internet

S.T. Lancella H290

S.T. Lancella H290
Picture courtesy of The JJ Collection

Changelog

19/06/2011: Page published. 10 updates since then.
26/12/2018: Removed FMHT watermarks from images.

S.D/T. Ocean Lover YH107 (Seasonal)

Additional material courtesy of Barry Banham

Technical

Admiralty Number: 4125
Official Number: 137613
Yard Number: 566
Completed: 1919
Gross Tonnage: 96
Net Tonnage: 41
Length: 86.2 ft
Breadth: 18.5 ft
Depth: 9.3 ft
Engine: T.3-cyl by A. Hall & Co Ltd, Aberdeen
Boiler: James Abernethy & Co Ltd, Aberdeen
Built: A. Hall & Co Ltd, Aberdeen

History

3.1919: Launched by A. Hall & Co Ltd, Aberdeen (Yd.No.566) (“Admiralty drifter”) for The Admiralty as GALE (Ad.No.4125).
5.1919: Sold to W. J. E. Green Ltd, Great Yarmouth (William J. E. Green, manager).
6.6.1919: Completed as OCEAN LOVER.
7.6.1919: Registered at Yarmouth (YH107).
30.10.1925: Landed at IJmuiden 125 crans grossed £285.
13.1.1926: Landed 5 tons of white fish at Yarmouth having been delayed two days by fog.
1930s: Seasonal fishing from Fleetwood (Alex Keay, Fleetwood/Lowestoft Fish Selling Co Ltd, Lowestoft, managing agent) (Notable skipper, Arthur Cobb, Lowestoft).
17.3.1940: Requisitioned for war service under Naval control (Hire rate £32.0.0d/month). Based Southend.
15.11.1945: Returned to owner.
9.1.1946: Sold to Arthur P. Buchan (22/64), Peter Buchan (21/64) & John F. Buchan (21/64), Peterhead.
6.3.1946: Yarmouth registry closed.
3.1945: Registered at Peterhead (PD157).
6.1950: Off Rattray Head (Sk. Arthur Buchan) in thick fog, foundered after being in collision with steam trawler CUNNINGHAM (GY86). Nine crew picked up but Sk. Buchan who was taking this trip as a relief for his son Peter Buchan, was lost. Survivors landed at Peterhead.
7.1950: Peterhead registry closed.

Click to enlarge images

S.D/T. Ocean Lover YH107

S.D/T. Ocean Lover YH107
Picture courtesy of The Barry Banham Maritime Photo Collection

S.D/T. Ocean Lover YH107

S.D/T. Ocean Lover YH107
Picture courtesy of The Greenday Collection

S.D/T. Ocean Lover PD157

S.D/T. Ocean Lover PD157
Picture from the Internet

Changelog

14/06/2011: Page published. 5 updates since then.
24/12/2018: Removed FMHT watermarks from images.