P & A
Campbell's
White Funnel Fleet
Peter &
Alex Campbell's Clyde-based paddle steamer company
transferred its operations from Glasgow to the Bristol
Channel in 1888, following a successful charter of the
'Waverley' to Bristol the previous year. The 'Waverley',
built in Paisley for Campbells in 1885, was the first White
Funnel steamer to work the Bristol Channel, and many more
were to follow.
During
almost a century of operating in the Bristol Channel and on
the south coast of England P & A Campbell used more than
twenty different ships, and almost half of these worked out
of Swansea at some time or another. Up to the First World
War, most passenger sailings between Swansea and other ports
in the Bristol Channel had been undertaken by Pockett's
Bristol Channel Steam Packet Company, but Pockett's last
remaining paddle steamer, the 'Brighton', was requisitioned
for war service in 1915 and never returned to Swansea.
Following
the demise of Pockett's, P & A Campbell took on the role of
providing excursions between Swansea and Ilfracombe,
beginning with the paddle steamer 'Glen Gower' in 1922. Also
included were occasional trips to Porthcawl, Minehead,
Lynmouth, Tenby, Lundy, Clovelly and Bideford, together with
evening cruises around the Gower Peninsula. The 'Glen
Gower', as with later White Funnel steamers, would berth in
the River Tawe, at either Pockett's Wharf or the South Dock
Jetty.
The 'Glen
Gower' had been built for Campbells by Ailsa Shipbuilding in
1922 specifically for the Swansea to Ilfracombe service.
Apart from the Second World War when she was requisitioned
for war service as HMS 'Glenmore', she worked continuously
out of Swansea until being laid up in 1957. Although
extensively reconditioned after the war, the 'Glen Gower'
was considered beyond economic repair, and was sold to
Belgian breakers in 1960.
Another
White Funnel paddle steamer working regularly out of Swansea
in the 1920's and early 1930's was the 'Lady Moyra', built
as the 'Gwalia' in 1905 by Clyde shipbuilder John Brown & Co
Ltd. Acquired by Campbells in 1922, the 'Lady Moyra' was
transferred to the south coast in 1933 and renamed the
'Brighton Queen'. She was lost to enemy aircraft attack
during the Dunkirk evacuation of 1940. Replacing 'Lady Moyra'
from 1933 on the Swansea to Ilfracombe run was the 'Devonia',
also built by John Brown in 1905, and also lost to enemy
action in the Dunkirk evacuation.
Campbell's
paddle steamer 'Britannia' often worked out of Swansea in
the early to mid 1950's but she was, by then, nearing the
end of her useful life. Built in Ayr by S McKnight & Co. in
1896, she had been requisitioned for war service in both
World Wars, firstly as HMS 'Briton' and then as HMS 'Skiddaw'.
Long considered the flagship of the White Funnel fleet, the
'Britannia' had spent most of her working life on the
Bristol to Ilfracombe run. After the war she continued on
various Bristol Channel routes until being taken out of
service in 1956. She was scrapped at Newport that same year.
Campbell’s
steam turbine twin screw ship 'Empress Queen' also worked in
the Bristol Channel after the war, sailing out of Swansea on
many occasions. Built by the Ailsa Shipbuilding Company in
1939, she was requisitioned for war service as HMS 'Queen
Eagle'. In 1955, the 'Empress Queen' was sold to a Greek
shipping company and renamed 'Phillipos'. After many years
of cruising in the Mediterranean and the Black Sea, she was
destroyed by fire in 1972.
The last
two paddle steamers to be built for P & A Campbell were the
'Bristol Queen' and the 'Cardiff Queen'. The 'Bristol Queen'
was built by Charles Hill & Sons of Bristol in 1946 and
sailed mainly between Bristol, Cardiff and Ilfracombe,
although she worked out of Swansea on several occasions
during the 1960's. Taken out of service due to a damaged
paddle wheel 1967, she was broken up in Antwerp the
following year.
The
'Cardiff Queen', built by Fairfields Shipbuilding &
Engineering Co. of Govan in 1947, worked many seasons out of
Swansea throughout the 1950's and 1960's until taken out of
service 1966. She was scrapped at Newport in 1968. The
passing of the 'Bristol Queen' and the 'Cardiff Queen'
marked the end of the era of White Funnel paddle steamers in
the Bristol Channel after a period of almost 80 years.
The final
chapter in P & A Campbell's link with Swansea began in 1970
with the chartering of two former Red Funnel twin-screw
diesel ships - the 'Westward Ho' and the 'Balmoral' - to run
excursions to Ilfracombe from the new Swansea Ferryport
Terminal. The 'Westward Ho' operated from Swansea until 1972
and the 'Balmoral' until 1980 when the service was
eventually withdrawn. These days, however, along with the
paddle steamer 'Waverley', the 'Balmoral' is operated by the
Paddle Steamer Preservation Society, and remains a regular
visitor to Swansea during the summer months. No doubt as a
gesture to the memory of P & A Campbell’s famous fleet, she
is painted in the traditional White Funnel colours.
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