Swan Hunter, formerly known
as "Swan Hunter & Wigham Richardson", was one
of the best known shipbuilding
companies in the United
Kingdom
. Based in Wallsend
, Tyne and Wear, the company was responsible for
some of the greatest ships of the early 20th century — most
famously, the RMS
Mauretania which held the Blue
Riband for the fastest crossing of the Atlantic
, and the RMS
Carpathia which rescued the survivors from the
RMS
Titanic
.
As the name suggests, the company represented the combined forces
of three powerful shipbuilding families: Swan, Hunter and Wigham
Richardson.
History
Swan &
Hunter was founded by George Burton
Hunter who formed a partnership with the widow of Charles Sheridan Swan (who had become
the owner of a Wallsend
Shipbuilding
business established in 1852 by Dr Charles Mitchell) under the name
C.S. Swan & Hunter in 1880.
In 1903, it merged with
Wigham
Richardson (founded by
John
Wigham Richardson as Neptune Works in 1860), specifically to
bid for the prestigious contract to build the
RMS Mauretania on behalf of
Cunard. Their bid was successful, and the new
company,
Swan Hunter and Wigham Richardson Ltd,
went on to build what was to become, in its day, the most famous
ocean going liner in the world. Also in 1903 the Company took a
controlling interest in the
Wallsend Slipway
& Engineering Company, which was an early licensed
manufacturer of
Parsons turbine engines, which enabled the
Mauretania to achieve its great speed.
The
Mauretania was launched from Wallsend
on 20
September 1906 by the Duchess of
Roxburghe. It expanded rapidly in the early part of the
twentieth century acquiring
Barclay
Curle in 1912.
In 1966 Swan Hunter & Wigham Richardson merged with
Smith's Dock Co to form
Associated
Shipbuilders, later to become
Swan Hunter Group.
Following
the publication of the Geddes Report recommending
rationalisation in British
shipbuilding, the Company went on to acquire Clelands Shipbuilding Company
and John Readhead &
Sons in 1967. Meanwhile Swan Hunter inherited both the
Naval Yard at High Walker on the
River Tyne of Vickers-Armstrongs and the Hebburn
Yard of
Hawthorn Leslie in
1968. In 1973 further expansion came with the
purchase of Palmers Dock at
Hebburn
from Vickers-Armstrongs.
Then in 1977 Swan Hunter Group was
nationalised.The current flagship of the
Royal Navy,
HMS Ark Royal was built at Swan
Hunter during this period, entering service in 1985.
The Company was
privatised again in 1987
but decided to close its Neptune Yard in 1988.
It was then forced to
call in the receivers when the UK government awarded the contract
for HMS Ocean to Kværner in Govan
in
1993. The Receiver took steps to break up the business.
However
the main shipyard in Wallsend
was bought
out from receivership by Jaap Kroese, a Dutch
millionaire. The yard subsequently
undertook several ad-hoc ship repair and conversion projects for
private-sector customers.
A view of the yard shortly after its closure
In 2000, however, Swan Hunter was awarded the contract to design
and build 2 (Auxiliary) Landing Ship Dock ships for the
Royal Fleet Auxiliary with 2 other
ships being built by
BAE Systems
Naval Ships: the cost of the 2 Swan Hunter ships was to be £210
million including £62 million for lead yard services, with an
inservice date of 2004. By July 2006, the costs had risen to £309
million and only one ship had been delivered. As result of this,
the second ship
RFA Lyme
Bay was transferred to
BAE Govan for
completion.
In 2001
Swan Hunter acquired Kvaerner's Port Clarence
offshore yard at Teeside
but then in
2006 sold it to Wilton Engineering Group.
In November 2006, after the failure to complete
RFA Lyme Bay within budget and resulting
exclusion from future
Royal Navy
shipbuilding projects, Jaap Kroese announced that the business was
effectively finished and placed the Wallsend Yard's iconic cranes
up for sale. He also said that he was actively looking for a buyer
for the the land.
In April 2007, Swan Hunter's cranes, along
with its floating dock and other equipment, were sold to Bharati
Shipyards, India
's second
largest private sector shipbuilder. The entire plant
machinery and equipment from Swan Hunter was dismantled and
transported to India
over six
months to be rebuilt at Bharati Shipyards.
In 2008 the company said it was concentrating on ship design with
just under 200 people employed.
Operations
The Company owned three main yards:
All three were on the North side of
River
Tyne.
At various times Swan Hunter also owned
Palmers Hebburn
Yard, Hawthorn Leslie
Hebburn Yard and Readheads at South Shields
which were all on the South side of the River Tyne.
Ships built by Swan Hunter
References
- Swan Hunter: History Page 2
- Swan Hunter: History Page 3
- History of Atlantic Cable
- Swan Hunter: History Page 4
- Maxtone-Graham, John (1972), Page 25, The Only Way to Cross.
New York: Collier Books, ISBN 978-0760706374
- Fears for Tyneside tradition as Swan Hunter ship is
towed to Govan for completion Guardian, 15 July 2006
- Tyne & Wear Archives
- Swan Hunter: History Page 5
- Swan Hunter: History Page 6
- Remembering Swan Hunter BBC News, 30 January
2008
- Royal Navy Ship may bring work for 100's
Evening Chronicle, 30 August 2008
- Duce, Richard (1993-05-12). "Barrow ship order dismays
Tyneside". The Times (Times Newspapers).
- Receiver breaks up Swan Hunter The Independent,
14 October 1994
- Making waves again The Independent, 22 June
1996
- Swan Hunter wins ALSL order Jane's Defence
Weekly, 22 December 2000
- Lyme Bay gets going at Govan Maritime Journal,
1 April 2007
- Jobs hope as Swan Hunter prepares to buy shipyard
Northern Echo, 12 May 2001
- Ten years ago Port Clarence was an empty shell -
now it's a hive of activity Evening Gazette, 27 May 2008
- Demise of Swan Hunter? BBC News, 18 January
2007
- Bharati buys out UK shipyard major Swan
Business Standard, 10 April 2007
- People blame the MoD for Swan Hunter's decline, not
me. But I Know better Evening Chronicle, 14 February 2008
See also
External links