SS Anthracite
1880 Loftus Perkins (1834–1891), having experimented with the application to steam engines of the use of steam at very high pressures, constructed a 7-ton yacht, the SS Anthracite. The Anthracite was fitted with a Perkins boiler. She was built by Schlesinger, Davies and Co of Wallsend with engines by Hawks, Crawshay and Co.[1]
1880 W. W. Harris, Acting Secretary of The Perkins' Engine Company, Limited, of 19 and 21, Queen Victoria-street, wrote to The Engineer, announcing the arrival of the ship in St Johns, New Brunswick after an 18 day voyage.[2] She was the smallest steam-powered vessel to have crossed the Atlantic.
1881 Description and drawings of compound engines on the Perkins Engine Co (of London) system, made by Hawks, Crawshay and Sons. [3]
1881 The vessel was owned by Frederick Power of Franks Hall, Farmingham, Kent. [4]