HMS Gannet: Ship & Model
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HMS Gannet - William Mowll
Introduction
Why Gannet and why a model of this ship? To answer the two questions, there is a need to appreciate a relatively recent change in mood and attitude towards the preservation of nautical and naval history in UK. The fresh thinking really began with a single letter, written by Dr E C B Corlett to The Times newspaper in 1967, with a plea to our maritime nation to rescue SS Great Britain (1843) from the Falkland Islands before it was too late. This famous ship, designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel, was in a shocking state of decay, with only months left before disintegration beyond repair.
That seminal letter was met initially with a ready response by certain individuals and started a new wave of interest in preserving the nation’s four very special transitional ships, starting with Great Britain, quickly followed by HMS Warrior (1860), the total refurbishment of the Antarctic exploring ship SS Discovery (1901), and finishing with the repair and restoration in this century of HMS Gannet (1878). These ships were all formerly powered by steam and sail, and each of them in their different locations was just surviving, more by chance than usage.
Tourism is the other reason for their survival. Without the renewed emphasis we now place on visitor destinations, they would not have any reason to be maintained as exhibition pieces which have significantly altered the way major cities such as Bristol, Portsmouth, Dundee and Chatham have developed as tourist attractions, and each one of these ships is now presented as a prime exhibit for visitors from all over the world. They stand as talismans of pure wonder for the triumphs achieved by British nineteenth-century ship designers, builders and engineers.
From the 1970s to the 1990s, financial support for these rescue and restoration initiatives was very difficult to find, and despite what the general public may regard as high entry-ticket prices to see these wonders of a bygone age, not a single one of them would ever be able survive without extra funding. The Heritage Lottery Fund has now touched each of these preserved ships, and whilst money is still tight, they do now enjoy life and status as the proud possessions of the cities where they lie in state, rather than being strange obscurities from a past age which are of no general interest to anyone. Intriguingly, they also appeal to a wider spectrum of interests where the restoration has included the social life of the ship, with their interior furnishings and domestic details thus encompassing social and cultural history, in addition to naval history. A highly polished wardroom table and chairs with correctly laid place settings ornamented with silver cutlery, napkin rings and cut-glass decanters, all evoking a bygone age, have an appeal for many visitors which goes well beyond the serried ranks of heavy ordnance neatly arranged along a gun deck.
It is this last point which brings me directly to answering the second question of why a model of Gannet when the real ship is on display at Chatham Dockyard? At the very outset of making a detailed and scaled model of this ship, my intention is to fill the information gap aboard Gannet, where all the visitor will see, to date, is the void of an empty shell. What the full-sized Gannet lacks in her interior fittings, with the absence of the steam engine, three boilers and other internal details, it is hoped that the model will help illustrate and inform.
There are two stages to rescuing a ship – one is to prevent her from falling to pieces, which by simple neglect and decay can so easily happen and the other is to show to the visitor an exhibit from which people can learn and understand how life aboard was lived and how the ship was managed and operated. That is what a full restoration achieves.
THE UK’S COLLECTION OF SAIL AND STEAM-ASSISTED SHIPS – THE TRANSITIONALS IN HISTORICAL ORDER OF THEIR RESTORATION
We are extraordinarily fortunate in the United Kingdom to have as permanent exhibits, open to the public throughout the year, Great Britain, Warrior, Discovery and Gannet, four outstanding ships all very different from one another, but each of which shares a short period of nautical history when steam and sail went cheek by jowl, with all the joys and difficulties this presented to those who had to operate and sail them. As a group of vessels, they ushered in an entirely new concept of reliable scheduled water transport, no longer dependent on the vagaries of the weather. Their new status, however, had the serious disadvantage that they were burdened in the best quarters of the ship with noisy machinery, soot in the sails and the need to bunker large quantities of steaming coal, occupying space which in a conventional sailing ship would earn their owners good money. Commercially speaking, speed had overtaken capacity.
PS SIRIUS (1837) AND PS GREAT WESTERN (1837)
The paddle ship Sirius predates the surviving quartet, and her story sadly ended by being lost in the fog on 16 June 1847 and wrecked on the rocky shores of Ballycotton Bay in southern Ireland. She never completed her final journey from Glasgow to Cork. It was the end of her, but it is where my story as an adult ship-modeller begins in 1977.
I had seen a model of this attractive steam and sailing ship, first in a book and then in the Science Museum, London; it was chosen by me as a subject simply because here was a vessel into whose hull a miniature steam plant would be easy to place, fit and operate, and I loved the look of that tall, thin funnel. The model was built for my two boys, then aged seven and ten, and the story was picked up by the UK magazine Model Boats, whose editor was keen to learn more about the building of the miniature working replica and her history. This was my first venture into the world of publication; up to this point in my life, I thought that publishing one’s work was something other people did, nor had I made the connection in my mind between ships and their historical significance, a subject which now fascinates me. The paddle-ship Sirius, as I discovered, snatched the Atlantic crown away from Isambard Kingdom Brunel’s much larger and better-equipped paddle steamer PS Great Western (1837), the first steamship built and designed for the Atlantic run, and also the only one of Brunel’s ships that turned in a regular profit for the Great Western Steamship Company. The rakish little Sirius managed, by the skin of her teeth, to cross the Atlantic from Cork in southern Ireland to New York under continuous steam power, arriving exhausted in Sandy Hook Bay early on Monday, 23 April 1838, and anchored in the North River immediately off the Battery. The voyage had taken eighteen days, four hours and twenty-two minutes, with ninety-four cabin passengers.
PS Sirius (1837): author’s steam-powered model of the first ship to cross the Atlantic from Britain to America under continuous steam power, arriving on 23 April 1838. This model is now housed in the American Philatelic Society building, Pennsylvania, USA.
Great Western arrived on the same day in the afternoon, having set out three days later than Sirius. A crowd of New Yorkers were lined up on the quayside, anticipating the arrival of Brunel’s ship, but instead found themselves cheering home a completely different vessel. The New York press described the scene: ‘Nothing could exceed the excitement. The river was covered during the whole day with row-boats, skiffs and yawls carrying the wondering people out to get a close view of this extraordinary vessel. While people were yet wondering how the Sirius so successfully made out, to cross the rude Atlantic, it was announced about 11.00am on Monday, from the telegraph that a huge steamship was in the offing – "The Great Western! The Great Western!" was on everybody’s tongue.’
RESCUE OF THE PRESERVED SHIPS IN THE UK
Between 1978 and 1981 the model of Great Britain was built and, as with all my model ships (except for Warrior), I used what is called the ‘plank on frame’ method, whereby miniature planks are applied to bulkhead frames, following the body line plan and giving the resultant hull its distinctive shape. It is not quite what happens in full-scale shipbuilding, but the method produces an acceptably accurate representation of the prototype for a working model.
The second preserved traditional ship, Warrior, was in 1982 just beginning a total reconstruction at the Coal Dock Wharf in West Hartlepool. Her all-iron hull was sound, but other areas were little short of ghastly after fifty long years of acting as a pontoon for oil tankers, mooring up alongside her at Llanion fuel depot (Pembroke dock) both to refuel and discharge their cargo. She was at that time totally unrecognisable from what visitors see today. You have to admire the astonishing challenge that the team of restorers in West Hartlepool faced in those early days. They almost literally brought her back from the dead, urged on by the financial backing provided by her saviour Sir John Smith, formerly an MP for the cities of London and Westminster (1965–70) and chairman of the Manifold Trust, who largely funded her rebuilding into the ship we see today.
PS Great Western: arrival in New York.
The first rescue, 1970: SS Great Britain (1843) was the first ship of the preserved transitional ships now resident in the UK. Author’s working model of Brunel’s Great Britain in the 1846 rig, placed in the Brunel Institute Library, alongside the prototype in the dockyard at Bristol, UK.
Gannet was launched from the Royal Naval Dockyard at Sheerness in Kent, UK, coming down the slip on 31 August 1878. As with so many of these composite vessels designed by Nathaniel Barnaby, at that time chief architect of the Royal Navy, she was by no means unique. In total there were fourteen ships in her class built between 1876 and 1880 and although they all enjoyed the same basic specifications, some of the Osprey/Doterel class had a bow with a straight stem; others, like Gannet and Osprey, were built with the much more graceful clipper bow.
Gannet as a gun vessel is not merely a survivor of her class, but also represents the only remaining example of well over a hundred warships built at Sheerness during the long and distinguished service of that royal dockyard. There is, sadly, almost nothing left of the original dockyard site these days, where once it was a major centre of activity. By the turn of the twentieth century, the Admiralty had reorganised the dockyard mainly for the fitting and maintenance of warships, with a great emphasis on torpedo boats, which were quite rightly seen as the new weapon of choice against the rising threat of warships being built in Germany. Sheerness launched their last built ship in 1902.
In her state as launched, Gannet appeared rather different from the way she looks now, having no raised quarterdeck fitted, and only a flying bridge for conning the ship; the poop and other refinements were added in the major refit of 1885, and her present appearance follows these later plans, from whose details the model was also built.
RESEARCH
My research on the Gannet began in 2013, and some of the most interesting and illuminating research for the model arose from personal contact with those involved in restoring the full-size ship.
I was able to consult Richard Holdsworth, Preservation and Education Director at Chatham and Chris Jones, the man called upon for the daily practical issues which the dockyard presents, and with his own particular interest in Gannet.
You will read in the acknowledgements the name of Commander Alastair Wilson RN, who has been at the heart of many projects to do with ship restoration in the UK. I first met him in connection with HMS Warrior, of which he is the current historian, but he had also been involved in the early days of Chatham Dockyard’s new role as an officially recognised National Heritage Site after the Royal Navy’s departure. It was he who introduced me to Fred M Walker, the man chosen to be the official naval architect for the whole of Gannet’s restoration programme. After what I can only describe as one of the most intriguing and engaging meetings of my life, Mr Walker loaned me the equivalent of ‘gold, frankincense and myrrh’: namely the 1885 ship’s plans, the original Admiralty Specifications for the building of the ship, and the Draft Conservation Plan, prepared for and accepted by the Heritage Lottery Fund. These are the three documents which lie at the very heart of this book.
HMS Warrior (1860), returned to Portsmouth. Original watercolour painting by Benjamin Mowll, 15 June 2007.
The second rescue, 1979: the author’s working steam-powered model of Warrior (1:48 scale) sailing in the English Channel. The model, which is over 3m (10ft) in length, is now on permanent display at Portsmouth Historic Dockyard.
Late in the building project of the Gannet model I was also able to meet Tommi Nielsen of T Nielsen & Company, the specialist shipbuilders undertaking the restoration project. With an astonishing generosity of spirit this busy shipbuilder, surrounded by the paraphernalia of a working dockyard, in a highly personalised office steeped in the work and detail of many traditionally restored yachts and barges still on the water today in the UK, was prepared to give his precious time to an amateur model-maker whom he had never previously met. The gentle nature and enthusiasm of Tommi Nielsen shone through his every word. Humility is the key to greatness, and when asked what was the most difficult aspect of the reconstruction, he simply replied, ‘Interpreting the plans.’ I was also introduced to Dominic Mills and Nigel Patrick, who had worked on the project. They gave me the sort of details which can only be provided by true witnesses, present and hands on, during the whole venture in the dockyard at Chatham. I learned from them of the foul stench of machining masts and yards which had been seasoned in the mast pond for three years; of the pitch