Difference between revisions of "Yarrow and Co"
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[[Image:Im1901EnV91-p676.jpg |thumb|1901. His Majesty's Shallow. Draught Gunboat Teal. ]] | [[Image:Im1901EnV91-p676.jpg |thumb|1901. His Majesty's Shallow. Draught Gunboat Teal. ]] | ||
[[Image:Im190201Cass-Yarrow.jpg|thumb| January 1902. ]] | [[Image:Im190201Cass-Yarrow.jpg|thumb| January 1902. ]] | ||
[[Image:Im1902Cass-Yarrow.jpg|thumb| 1902. ]] | |||
[[Image:Im1903EnV96-p006.jpg|thumb| 1903. Shipyard at Poplar.]] | [[Image:Im1903EnV96-p006.jpg|thumb| 1903. Shipyard at Poplar.]] | ||
[[Image:Im1903EnV96-p007.jpg|thumb| 1903. Works at Poplar.]] | [[Image:Im1903EnV96-p007.jpg|thumb| 1903. Works at Poplar.]] | ||
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[[Image:Im1951BNAl-Yarrows.jpg|thumb| 1951.]] | [[Image:Im1951BNAl-Yarrows.jpg|thumb| 1951.]] | ||
[[image:Im1951EnV191-p295.jpg|thumb| 1951. M.V "Orinoco" ]] | [[image:Im1951EnV191-p295.jpg|thumb| 1951. M.V "Orinoco" ]] | ||
[[Image:Im195703PWE-Yarrow.jpg|thumb| March 1957. Yarrow Boilers. ]] | |||
[[Image:Imv208-p191.jpg |thumb|1959. [[RMS Victoria]] bolt Assembled on the Stocks.]] | [[Image:Imv208-p191.jpg |thumb|1959. [[RMS Victoria]] bolt Assembled on the Stocks.]] | ||
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1921 Due to lack of orders the yard closed. | 1921 Due to lack of orders the yard closed. | ||
1922 Sir [[Alfred Yarrow]] on account of his advanced age over 80, decided to retire from | 1922 Sir [[Alfred Yarrow]] on account of his advanced age over 80, decided to retire from chairmanship of the company. The firm went into voluntary liquidation with Mr [[Harold Edgar Yarrow]] as liquidator and succeeding chairman. The company '''Yarrow and Co (1922)''' was formed.<ref>The Engineer 1922/04/07</ref> | ||
1922 Public company. | 1922 Public company. | ||
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1945 After the war, the yard returned to making merchant ships and the ten years after the war was an extremely busy time for them. The Company made shallow-draft craft for countries all around the world. These were shipped out in parts and reassembled at their destination. | 1945 After the war, the yard returned to making merchant ships and the ten years after the war was an extremely busy time for them. The Company made shallow-draft craft for countries all around the world. These were shipped out in parts and reassembled at their destination. | ||
c.1947 a Research and Development Department was established; this became known as the | c.1947 a Research and Development Department was established; this became known as the [[Yarrow-Admiralty Research Department]]. | ||
1950s The Admiralty continued to be a key customer for the yard, ordering frigates and seaward defence boats. | 1950s The Admiralty continued to be a key customer for the yard, ordering frigates and seaward defence boats. | ||
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1962 Sir Harold Yarrow died. | 1962 Sir Harold Yarrow died. | ||
1963 Agreement with [[Timsons]] that [[Yarrow Engineers (Glasgow)|Yarrow of Glasgow]] would manufacture certain sizes of Timsons' web feed offset printing presses<ref>The Times, Nov 04, 1963</ref> | 1963 Agreement with [[Timsons]] that [[Yarrow Engineers (Glasgow)|Yarrow of Glasgow]] would manufacture certain sizes of Timsons' web-feed offset printing presses<ref>The Times, Nov 04, 1963</ref> | ||
1965 Acquired the [[Blythswood Shipbuilding Co|Blythswood]] yard. | 1965 Acquired the [[Blythswood Shipbuilding Co|Blythswood]] yard. | ||
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See also: [[Yarrow Engineers (Glasgow)]]. | See also: [[Yarrow Engineers (Glasgow)]]. | ||
1970s Also acquired [[Barclay, Curle and Co|Barclay Curle Shipping]] | |||
1974 Yarrows was purchased by [[GEC]] | 1974 Yarrows was purchased by [[GEC]] | ||
1977 The government passed the Aircraft and Shipbuilding Industries Act which nationalised YSL and grouped it with other major British shipyards as [[British Shipbuilders]]. They continued making Type 22 frigates, 16 of which were made between 1979 and 1994. | 1977 The government passed the Aircraft and Shipbuilding Industries Act which nationalised YSL and grouped it with other major British shipyards as [[British Shipbuilders]]. They continued making Type 22 frigates, 16 of which were made between 1979 and 1994. | ||
c.1985 The yard was privatised; a proposed buy-out by the workers was unsuccessful. | |||
Presumably re-acquired by [[GEC]] | |||
Became part of ''Marconi Marine''' | |||
1999 November 30th. [[BAE Systems]] was formed incorporating [[Marconi Electronic Systems]]. | |||
2003 Part of [[BAE Systems|BAe Systems Marine]] | 2003 Part of [[BAE Systems|BAe Systems Marine]] |
Revision as of 14:34, 20 February 2020
Yarrow, shipbuilders and marine engineers, of Poplar, London.
of Scotstoun, Glasgow (1908); and Canada.
The Yarrow company was one of the world's leading builders of Destroyers from its inception until after World War 2, building ships for both the Royal Navy and export customers. Yarrow was also a builder of boilers, and a type of water-tube boiler developed by the company was known as the "Yarrow type boiler".
1865/6 Alfred Yarrow established the partnership of Yarrow and Hedley at Folly Wall, Poplar on the Isle of Dogs to build steam river launches.
1870s Built torpedo boats for the Argentine and Japanese navies
1875 The Hedley partnership was dissolved; the company was then known as Yarrow and Co
1876 Stern wheel steamboat for South Africa. [1]
1879 Built the first torpedo boat, 85 ft long, for the British Navy.
1888 Built four petroleum spirit steam launches. [2]
1890 Built gunboats for the Zambesi and Shire rivers. Details and illustrations in 'The Engineer'. [3]
1892 built two destroyers for the Royal Navy: Havock and Hornet.
1894 Description and illustrations of their works on the Thames. [4]
1897 Incorporated as a limited company.
1898 moved out of Folly shipyard to the nearby London Yard
1900s The yard manufactured torpedo boat destroyers for the Royal Navy.
1903 or 1904 Inverted vertical triple expansion rotative engine built at Poplar for the Metropolitan Water Board (Wanstead Station). Maintained in superb condition when photographed by George Watkins in 1954. Cylinders 20", 32" & 53", 3' 6" stroke [5]
1906–1908 The operation was moved to Scotstoun on the Clyde over a period of 2 years; the London shipyard closed in 1908.
1911 Motor yacht 'Felicitas'. [6]
1914 Listed as engineers and shipbuilders. Specialities: torpedo boats and torpedo boat destroyers, vessels of shallow draft for military and trading purposes, "Yarrow" water-tube boilers, naval craft, screw steamers with speeds ranging up to forty miles an hour, paddle and screw steamers for shallow waters with drafts as low as six inches. [7]
WWI As the First World war began, the company enjoyed an advantage in that it had already begun manufacturing ships for the military. It was able to begin mass production and at its peak the yard employed over 2,000 workers. The yard was able to make 29 destroyers, 16 gunboats, a submarine, three hospital ships and a floating workshop for the Navy.
1918 The yard began courting merchant orders and built yachts, cargo ships and coasters. River steamers were also made for Chinese use too.
1921 Due to lack of orders the yard closed.
1922 Sir Alfred Yarrow on account of his advanced age over 80, decided to retire from chairmanship of the company. The firm went into voluntary liquidation with Mr Harold Edgar Yarrow as liquidator and succeeding chairman. The company Yarrow and Co (1922) was formed.[8]
1922 Public company.
1922 Alfred Yarrow's son, Harold Edgar Yarrow, moved the yard towards producing water-tube boilers for power stations and industrial uses. The yard was reopened with a much reduced staff of 24 to begin doing this.
1924 Advert. Mentions HMS Tyrian and the Tigris gunboat flotilla plus patent water tube boilers. [9]
1925 See Aberconway for information on shipbuilding h.p produced in 1904 and 1925
1926 Yarrow are to build four river gunboats to the order of the Admirality
1926 Name changed.
Late 1920s orders began coming in again for tankers and the yard's fortunes revived with more Royal Navy orders arriving for destroyers and gunboats.
1930s The military build-up continued and more orders came in from the Royal Navy for ships to meet this demand. In the late 30s Yarrow also began operating two overseas yards in British Columbia and Yugoslavia.
WWII The yard built eighteen destroyers, eight sloops and two river gunboats.
1941 The yard was bombed and badly damaged. 47 shipyard workers were also killed.
1945 After the war, the yard returned to making merchant ships and the ten years after the war was an extremely busy time for them. The Company made shallow-draft craft for countries all around the world. These were shipped out in parts and reassembled at their destination.
c.1947 a Research and Development Department was established; this became known as the Yarrow-Admiralty Research Department.
1950s The Admiralty continued to be a key customer for the yard, ordering frigates and seaward defence boats.
By 1954, the workforce was up to 2,500.
Late 1950s: research into the application of nuclear power to marine uses.
1961 Marine engineers, shipbuilders and boiler makers. Extensive research carried out on nuclear propulsion units. 2,300 employees. [10]
1962 Sir Harold Yarrow died.
1963 Agreement with Timsons that Yarrow of Glasgow would manufacture certain sizes of Timsons' web-feed offset printing presses[11]
1965 Acquired the Blythswood yard.
1966 Yarrow (Shipbuilders) Ltd came into being in 1966, as the yard was expanded. In the 60s the yard continued with merchant orders making three survey ships and then 'Leander' class frigates.
See also: Yarrow Engineers (Glasgow).
1970s Also acquired Barclay Curle Shipping
1974 Yarrows was purchased by GEC
1977 The government passed the Aircraft and Shipbuilding Industries Act which nationalised YSL and grouped it with other major British shipyards as British Shipbuilders. They continued making Type 22 frigates, 16 of which were made between 1979 and 1994.
c.1985 The yard was privatised; a proposed buy-out by the workers was unsuccessful.
Presumably re-acquired by GEC
Became part of Marconi Marine'
1999 November 30th. BAE Systems was formed incorporating Marconi Electronic Systems.
2003 Part of BAe Systems Marine
See Also
Sources of Information
- British Shipbuilding Yards. 3 vols by Norman L. Middlemiss
- [1] Wikipedia
- The Steam Engine in Industry by George Watkins in two volumes. Moorland Publishing. 1978. ISBN 0-903485-65-6
- ↑ The Engineer of 1st September 1876 p144
- ↑ The Engineer of 25th May 1888 p421 & p427
- ↑ The Engineer of 30th May 1890. p440 and p445
- ↑ The Engineer of 22nd June 1894 p535-9
- ↑ 'Stationary Steam Engines of Great Britain' Vol 9, by George Watkins, Landmark Publishing Ltd
- ↑ The Engineer of 27th October 1911 p431
- ↑ 1914 Whitakers Red Book
- ↑ The Engineer 1922/04/07
- ↑ 1924 Naval Annual Advert page vii
- ↑ 1961 Dun and Bradstreet KBE
- ↑ The Times, Nov 04, 1963