PS Earl of Ulster (1878)

PS Earl of Ulster was a paddle steamer passenger vessel operated by the London and North Western Railway and the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway from 1878 to 1894.[1]

History
Name1878–1895: P.S. Earl of Ulster
Owner1878–1894: Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway
Operator1878–1894: Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway
Port of registryUnited Kingdom
Route1878–1894: BelfastFleetwood
BuilderBarrow-in-Furness
Launched24 November 1878
FateBroken up December 1895
General characteristics
Tonnage1,107 gross register tons (GRT)

History

She operated on services from Fleetwood to Belfast.

On 30 June 1883, she was involved in a collision off the Isle of Man with the schooner Susanna.[2]

On 12 March 1889, she collided with the Holywood Lighthouse in Belfast Lough and destroyed it.[3]

After being sold to A M Carlisle in 1894, Earl of Ulster passed into the ownership of J McCausland of Portaferry and was briefly put into service on Strangford Lough running excursion trips for one season before being broken up.[4]

References

  1. Duckworth, Christian L. D. (1968). Railway and Other Steamers (2nd ed.). T. Stephenson & Sons. ISBN 978-0-90131412-3.
  2. Manchester Evening News, Friday 17 August 1883.
  3. Belfast News-Letter, Wednesday 13 March 1889.
  4. Greenway, Ambrose (2014). Cross Channel and Short Sea Ferries: An Illustrated History. Seaforth Publishing. p. 28. ISBN 978-1-84832170-0.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.