William Fawcett (paddle steamer)

William Fawcett was the name given to two paddle steamers that operated in British waters from the late 1820s to the mid-1840s. The first ship, constructed in 1828, is widely regarded as the inaugural vessel in the service of what eventually evolved into the Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company (P&O).

William Fawcett (paddle steamer)
William Fawcett (1828)
History
OwnerDublin and London Steam Packet Company
Port of registryCivil Ensign of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
RouteLondon and Dublin packet service
BuilderCaleb & James Smith, Liverpool
Maiden voyage1828
Out of serviceby April 1845
FateBroken up
General characteristics
Tonnage206 GRT
Length44.42 m (145.7 ft)
Beam6.76 m (22.2 ft)
Depth4.53 m (14.9 ft)
Installed powersteam, 130 hp
Propulsionpaddles

1828 ship

In 1828, William Fawcett of Liverpool and Joseph Robinson Pim of Dublin commissioned the construction of a paddle steamer named William Fawcett. The ship was built by Caleb and James Smith at the Queen's Dock, Port of Liverpool. Initially, the vessel measured 130 feet (40 m) in length and had a cargo capacity of 185 tons. However, in 1835, its length was recorded as 44.42 meters (145.7 ft), with a gross register tonnage of 206. The steam engines, rated at 130 horsepower, were provided by the firm of Fawcett, Preston, and Company, of which William Fawcett was a co-owner and manager. The ship operated in the packet trade, serving the routes between London, Cork and Dublin. In 1832, the vessel was sold to Richard Bourne and his associates for service with the Dublin and London Steam Packet Company.[1][2]

In 1835, Bourne partnered with Brodie McGhie Willcox and Arthur Anderson to charter the William Fawcett for five voyages between London and the Iberian Peninsula. This service is regarded as the beginning of the Peninsular Steam Navigation Company, which later became the P&O. The first four trips of the William Fawcett for the Peninsular company in 1835 turned around at Lisbon. The fifth trip reached Gibraltar. In 1837 and again in early 1838, the ship was chartered by the Peninsular company for a trip from London to northern Spain and return. The ship was refitted later in 1838, and afterwards chartered by the Peninsular company for two trips between London and Madeira. The William Fawcett had been broken up by April 1845.[2]

1829 ship

The second William Fawcett was a paddle steamer built in 1829 in Liverpool by Mottershead and Hayes. It was 74.3 feet (22.6 m) long, with a capacity of 48 tons. It had a 26 (or 30) horsepower engine supplied by Fawcett, Preston and Company. The ship worked as a ferry between Liverpool and Birkenhead for at least twenty years.[3][4]

Notes

  1. Smith, Crosbie (2018). Coal, Steam and Ships: Engineering, Enterprise and Empire in the Nineteenth-Century Seas. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 231. ISBN 978-1-107-19672-8.
  2. "Ship Fact Sheet: William Fawcett (1828)" (PDF). P&O Heritage. November 2008. Retrieved 24 December 2019.
  3. "William Fawcett". UK Shipbuilders. 2019. Retrieved 25 December 2019.
  4. "William Fawcett". Grace's Guide to British Industrial History. 9 June 2017. Retrieved 4 December 2019.
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