Paddle Steamer Resources by Tramscape
The Internet's largest database of
mainly European Paddle Steamers past and present
IMPORTANT : You are viewing the old version
of the Paddle Steamer Resources website WHICH IS NO LONGER BEING UPDATED and
will not include the latest information and photographs. Please do not use the
links below which are now not activated, but go straight to the new, regularly
updated version of the website by clicking on the link in red immediately below.
Please also change any bookmarks you may have.
To
go to the new website homepage, please click here
Hull-New
Holland / Humber Estuary
|
|
|
|
Lincoln Castle at Hull in 1959. Photos by courtesy of Ian
Stenton
|
Steam navigation on
the Humber dates back to 1814. John Robertson, engineer of the
pioneering PS Comet of 1812 in the Clyde had built PS Caledonia and
PS Humber built at Dundee in 1814 to house his engines. The ships
were operated on his own account for eigtheen months between Hull on
the Humber estuary and Selby on the River Ouse and Gainsborough on
the River Trent, the two rivers forming the Humber. Later, a healthy
trade developed on the Trent, reaching out on to the east coast of
England.
The direct ferry crossing from Yorkshire to Lincolnshire was
inaugurated in 1820 from Hull to New Holland by PS Magna Carta.
Railway ownership of the ferry dates from 1845, and after Britain's
railways were amalgamated into major regional groupings in 1923, the
service came under the control of the London & North Eastern
Railway (LNER).
The sisters Wingfield Castle and Tattershall Castle, built in 1934,
proved to be successful steamers, with a large open main deck aft
which was used for cars, cargo and cattle. Their success prompted the
building of the similarly-shaped Lincoln Castle and deferred
discussion about the construction of a bridge across the estuary. A
partliamentary bill giving powers for the construction of the bridge
was passed in 1959 but the final government go-ahead did not come
until ten years later. Construction finally started in 1973.
The bridge was opened in 1981, spelling the death knell for the last
remaining ferry, the diesel-electric paddler Farringford which had
been transferred from the Isle of Wight
Excursions were also scheduled, but restricted to Sunday afternoons
from Hull in 1964 and withdrawn totally after the 1967
season.
Paddlers introduced between 1888 and1923
Grimsby
(1888-)
Cleethorpes (1903-)
Brocklesby (1912-1934)
Killingholme (1912-1940)
Frodingham
(1928-1936)
Paddlers introduced by the London
& North Eastern Railway
(1923-1947):
Tattershall
Castle (1934-1972)
Wingfield Castle (1934-1974)
Lincoln Castle (1940-1978)
Diesel paddle car ferry transferred from British
Rail's Lymington-Yarmouth ferry route:
Farringford
(1974-1981)
Go to
Other
Humber Operators
Return
to:
Historical
Database
Main Menu