fbpx
Wikipedia

Port of Grimsby

The Port of Grimsby is located on the south bank of the Humber Estuary at Grimsby in North East Lincolnshire. Sea trade out of Grimsby dates to at least the medieval period. The Grimsby Haven Company began dock development in the late 1700s, and the port was further developed from the 1840s onwards by the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway (MSLR) and its successors. The port has had three main dock systems:

Port of Grimsby
View across No.3 dock slipways and No.1 dock to Dock tower and Humber (2007)
Click on the map for a fullscreen view
Location
LocationGrimsby
Coordinates53°34′40″N 0°04′28″W / 53.5777798°N 0.0743294°W / 53.5777798; -0.0743294
Statistics
Website
www.portofgrimsby.com
www.abports.co.uk

The earliest dock, or Old Dock was developed in the 1790s, downriver from the medieval Haven, on the outfall of the same water course; in around 1880 it was expanded westwards, and renamed Alexandra Dock, being connected to the Royal Dock system by a short canal, named the Union Dock. From the 1880s the dock's focus was coal, later timber. From the 1970s onwards the dock has been used for large-scale car importation.

The Royal Dock was developed from the 1840s onwards, contemporary with the arrival of the railway – it was built on a large area of land reclaimed from the Humber Estuary north-east of the original town and harbour. The dock's trade has included a wide variety of goods including coal, timber and general merchandise.

The third dock system is the Fish docks, all of which exit(ed) from the same lock(s) onto the Humber close to and east of the Royal Dock lock. The first fish dock ("No.1") was built 1857, and expanded southward in 1878 with the addition of a second ("No.2"); both were built within the land reclaimed as part of the Royal Dock development. In 1934 a third fish ("No.3") dock substantially expanded the No.1 dock, and reclaimed additional land from the Humber. The Fish docks and nearby estate were devoted to the landing of fish, and maintenance, supply and repair of the Grimsby fishing fleet, which grew into one of the largest in Britain. The fishing industry collapsed in the 1970s due to outside factors.

The Grimsby Haven Company was re-incorporated as the Grimsby Dock Company, which amalgamated in 1846 with several railway companies into the MSLR, later known as the Great Central Railway (GCR). The GCR (and docks) became part of the London and North Eastern Railway (LNER) during the 1923 Grouping. In 1948 nationalisation formed the British Transport Commission from which British Transport Docks Board was split in 1962. Privatisation by the Transport Act 1981 formed Associated British Ports, the present owner of the port.

As of 2015 the port is a major car importation location, as well as an offshore wind farm servicing hub, and handles other cargos including timber, minerals, metals and dry bulks.

History edit

Early history edit

Grimsby's development as a landing place and town has an underlying basis in the area's geography – the combination of relatively (compared to surrounding land) high ground of over 16 feet (5 m), near to the Humber, and close to a water outfall (The Haven).[1]

Grimsby has been documented as a landing place dating to at least the Viking Age. According to 19th century writers Grimsby was referenced in medieval histories as the landing place of marauding Danish armies. The haven is also reputed to be the landing place of the semi-legendary figures Grim and Havelok in the town's founding myth, Havelok the Dane (written c. 13th century).[2][3] In the second year of the reign of King John (12th century) he visited the town and conferred on its inhabitants the right that "they should be exempt from toll and lastage, stallage, moorage, haustage, and passage, in every town and seaport throughout England, except the city of London ..", the town was also granted the right of a ferry in the same year.[4] Henry III granted the town a ferry across the Humber, as well as a charter of merchandise.[5]

Records of trade with Scandinavian countries date to the 11th century, with furs, wool, and falcons being traded. Importation of pine and oil from Norway is recorded from the early 13th century; grain was exported. Fish and fishmongery in Grimsby are well documented as a part of trade and business from at least the late 12th century, and continued as important until the 16th century.[6]

In the 13th century the people of Grimsby came into dispute with the people of the then-thriving port town of Ravenserodd over the alleged 'hijacking', either by persuasion or force, of trade intended for Grimsby to the port of Ravenserodd. An inquisition into the rivalry was held in 1290 by order of Edward II.[7] Later during Edward II's war with France, the Mayor and bailiffs were commanded to equip Grimsby ship, place them under the command of James Kingston, and then patrol the coast of eastern England, capturing and impounding any French or allied vessels.[8]

 
The West Haven (River Freshney) and 18th century maltings (2008)

The Haven and was prone to silting, and in 1280 proposals were made to divert the River Freshney to scour the harbour. By 1341 a new haven, the West Haven had been constructed,[map 1] excavated from former pasture land.[9]

During the 14th and 15th century, trade with Scandinavia declined, in part due to Hansa competition, whilst trade with the Low Countries increased, during this period the port faced increased competition from the developing ports at Hull and Boston. As continental trade decreased, fishing and general coastal trade increased in importance for the port.[10]

Icelandic fishing and importation of timber from Norway took place but declined from the 15th to 17th centuries. By the end of the 18th century the place had greatly decreased in importance as a port, and many of what remained of the inhabitants got a living from the land. The population had diminished from around 1,500 persons in 1400 to an estimated 850 in 1524, and 399 in the early 1700s. de la Pryme visited in 1697 and noted the towns decline.[11]

Grimsby is at present but a little poor town, not a quarter so great as heretofore. [...] Three things may be assign'd to its decay. First, the destruction of the haven, which was in former times a fine larg [sic] river [.] That which destroy'd it was the Humber's wearing away the huge cliff at Cleythorp, and bringing it and casting it all into Grimsby haven or river, and all along Grimsby coast to the north, so that the river was not onely fill'd thereby, but also a huge bay on the north side of the town[..] The second [] was the destruction of the religious houses there [..] The third thing which occasiond it's decay was the rise of Hull, which having first of all the priviledges and advantages above other towns, and a fine haven to boot, robbed them all not onely of all their traffic, but also of their chief tradesmen.

— de la Pryme (1697).[12]

De la Pryme noted efforts to unblock the haven on his visit,[12] and in the same period work was underway to divert and use the Freshney to scour the West Haven.[9]

Parts of the haven are now listed structures,[13] as are maltings on the quayside, parts of which date to the late 1700s.[14]

The Old Dock (1796–1880) edit

Great Grimsby (Lincoln) Harbour Act 1796
Act of Parliament
 
Long titleAn act for widening, deepening, enlarging, altering, and improving the haven of the town and port of Great Grimsby, in the county of Lincoln.
Citation36 Geo. 3. c. 98
Dates
Royal assent14 May 1796

Plans to re-engineer the haven and create a new dock were put forward from the late 1800s.[15] Pickernell produced a plan for a dock in 1787.[16] It was not until 1796 that an act named "An Act for Widening, Deepening, Enlarging, Altering, and Improving the Haven and Town and Port of Great Grimsby" (36 Geo. 3. c. 98) was enacted, creating the Grimsby Haven company.[17] The act noted that the River ('Haven') at Grimsby was warped (silted) up, preventing most ships docking transferring cargo subject to the state of the tides, and so, suggested widening, deepening, and straightening the haven, installing a lock to impound water within the lock, and redirecting the flow of the Freshney (and of springs known as Blow Wells[note 1]) to scour and fill the lock, allowing larger vessels reliable harbourage at the town. The act sought permission to create a company to fulfill these task, which would also be responsible for erection of wharfs, warehouses; maintenance; tolls and so on; and to gain authority for compulsory purchase of lands required for the works. The acts also set out the regulation of the said company, and gave the company certain rights to make bye-laws relating to the operation of the dock. The act permitted the raising of £20,000, and a further £10,000 in contingency.[17]

Grimsby Haven Navigation and Improvement Act 1799
Act of Parliament
 
Long titleAn act for enabling the Grimsby haven company to finish and complete the navigation of the said haven, and for amending an act passed in the thirty-sixth year of the reign of his present Majesty, for widening, deepening, enlarging, altering, and improving, the haven of the town and port of Great Grimsby, in the county of Lincoln.
Citation39 Geo. 3. c. lxx
Other legislation
Repealed byGrimsby Docks Act 1845
Status: Repealed

Construction took place from 1797 to 1800 under John Rennie.[18] George Joyce was initially resident engineer, but was replaced by James Hollinsworth who was present 1800 to 1801. The dock construction required hollow dock walls on piled foundations which were designed in account of the weak ground conditions at the dock site.[19] The cost of the works was £60,000.[18] As built the locked canal was 1.5 miles (2.4 km) long,[map 2] with a single lock 126 by 36 feet (38 by 11 m) long by wide, with a depth at the walls of 27 feet (8.2 m).[20] The dock works were carried out under the shield of a coffer dam outside the new lock, with extensive use of piling under the lock and wall constructions. Use of piles was attempted under the lock pit bottom but the ground was too fluid for this to be successful and an inverted arch was employed instead[21] Further expansion was required, and a further act, the Grimsby Haven Navigation and Improvement Act 1799 (39 Geo. 3. c. lxx) was obtained.[22] which allowed the construction of an expansion of the dock of 3 acres (1.2 ha). The expansion was completed in 1804.[20]

The dock had a depth of water of 18 feet (5.5 m) reducing to 14 feet (4.3 m) towards the town, and to 12 feet (3.7 m) on the west branch of the dock (1846); silting required the dock to be periodically cleared, which had been done in 1826, by hand, and later in the 1840s by machine dredger of approximately 30 to 40 horsepower (22 to 30 kW). Between 3 and 6 feet (0.91 and 1.83 m) of mud was removed from the dock in 1826.[23]

After opening there was an initial growth of the town, but from 1811 to 1841 the rate of expansion was no different from the rest of Lincolnshire;[24] the port lacked any rail connection until the 1840s.[25] By the 1850s the dock was involved in trade with the Baltic region, including timber, deal, tar, seeds, bones, and iron. Dock fees were less than those in Hull.[25][26]

 
1872 swing bridge

In 1869 the Grimsby Improvement Act 1869 (32 & 33 Vict. c. x) allowed the land west of the Old Dock to be developed, and a bridge, known as Corporation Bridge, built across the dock.[27][28] The bridge was constructed by Head Wrightson and the Teesdale Ironworks to the design of Charles Sacre. The bridge was supported on concrete filled screw piles, with two spans of 24 feet (7.3 m) and four of 36 feet (11 m). Situated between the two sets of spans was a horizontally turning swing bridge of 91.25 feet (27.81 m) of asymmetric hogback plate girder design with a clear space when open of 45 feet (14 m).[29] The bridge opened in 1872.[30]

In 1873 the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway was enabled by an act (36 & 37 Vict. c. lxxvii)[31] to build a short line connecting from their line (Great Grimsby and Sheffield Junction Railway) near Great Coates to the Old Dock. Logan and Hemingway obtained the contract to construct the line with a bid of £3,984, and construction began in November 1878. The line (Great Coates branch) opened 27 March 1879.[32][note 2]

In 1880 the dock was modernised and extended substantially to the west, forming the Alexandra Dock. A short canal dock, the Union Dock was opened in 1879, connecting the Old Dock system, to the Royal Dock system.

The dock's lock was closed in 1917 and later infilled.[34]

Alexandra Dock (1880–) edit

 
Grimsby, Ordnance Survey 6 inch map, Lincolnshire 22NE c. 1887. Alexandra Dock extension (centre left); Royal and Fish docks (top right)

In 1873 the dock owners, the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway acquired 105 acres (42 ha) of land to the west of the Old Dock. A scheme for dock creation at South Killingholme near Immingham by Charles Liddell was considered as an alternative, but rejected.[35][36] In December Logan and Hemingway became contractors for an expansion of the Old Dock.[37] the works included an expansion of the 1789 Old Dock, plus a large western arm 26 acres (11 ha) extending from near the entrance.[38][map 3]

In honor of a visit by the Prince and Princess of Wales (Edward VII and Alexandra of Denmark) to the town in July 1879 the new dock was named Alexandra Dock. The expanded dock was filled with water in November 1879, and reported complete in July 1880.[39] Contracts for handling equipment, and jetties and coal drops, as well as a swing bridge across the Old Dock's lock were let soon after.[39] The bridge connected rail lines from the Great Coates branch to lines on the west side of the Royal Dock.[40][41]

In the 1920s a replacement bridge across the dock (Corporation Bridge) was constructed to the design of Alfred C. Gardner, docks engineer of the LNER, constructed by Sir William Arrol & Co. (Glasgow). The bridge consists of four spans, one of which is an electrically powered lifting section on the Scherzer rolling lift principle. The bridge was formally opened by the Prince of Wales (Edward VIII) on 19 July 1925. The bridge was listed in 1999.[42][map 4]

By the 1930s one of the two original coal drops was out of operation, with coal handling at the port being transferred to new equipment at the Royal Dock. By the 1950s both coal drops had been removed, with the embankments remaining; cargo handling at the dock had shifted to timber; by the end of the 1960s the timber trade had also declined.[43]

In 1975 Grimsby was selected as the UK importation point for Volkswagen and a car terminal was opened on Alexandra Dock in 1975.[44]

Royal and Fish Docks edit

Background and construction of cofferdam (1846–48) edit

 
The new Royal and first Fish dock, c. 1864. showing (left to right) Humber, low water mark, basin piers, docks, railway and town (up is south-east)

James Rendel was requested to draw up plans for new docks in 1843.[45] His design placed docks on the extensive mudflats between high and low water north of the town – as planned 132 acres (53 ha) were to be enclosed or reclaimed, of which 27 acres (11 ha) would be water within the docks, with 20 acres (8.1 ha) for wharfage, and 85 acres (34 ha) of land for other buildings. The main dock was to be connected to the Humber by a basin of 11 acres (4.5 ha) bounded by piers of open construction to the east and west each of approximately 600 feet (180 m). The dock's entrance was to have two locks, one large and one small,[25][45] Rendel also proposed a canal connecting the old and new docks, both for ships and to supply the new docks with fresh water.[45] Part of the basis of the design was to expose the dock entrance to the flow of tides for the greatest amount of time to increase scouring of the entrance, additionally Rendel supposed that the encroachment of the dock onto the Humber might constrict the flow of water in the vicinity of the "Inner Roads" to increase the flow, and thence scouring, so as to increase the depth of the navigable channel. Rendel also suggested reclaiming and extending eastwards the shallows at the Burcom Bank shoal north-west of Grimsby to further funnel the tidal flows.[46] Total cost of the works was estimated at £500,000,[25] of which £300,000 for the dock works, and up to £200,000 for the breakwaters if carried out. To make the plan economically sensible Rendel proposed that the inner expansion of the docks would be carried out piecemeal, with only 7 acres (2.8 ha) of docks built at the initial phase.[47]

At an inquest into the state of harbours undertaken by the Tidal Harbours Commission in 1846 the opinion was expressed that if Grimsby the new dock as well as better inland communications it would become the popular and natural fishing port for the east coast.[48]

The work was enabled by the Grimsby Docks Act 1845 (8 & 9 Vict. c. ccii).[49] As part of the act the Grimsby Haven company was dissolved, and the business re-incorporated as the Grimsby Dock company.[20] The company's plans were enabled by a close association with the Great Grimsby and Sheffield Junction Railway (GG&SJ), a company planning to create railway lines from Grimsby and the north Lincolnshire coast to Gainsborough, and connections with the main rail network. The two companies shared several board members and a chairman; the Grimsby Dock company voted to amalgamate with the GG&SJ at its first general meeting.[50]

On 1 January 1847, the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway Act 1846 (9 & 10 Vict. c. cclxviii) amalgamated the Dock company, the Sheffield, Ashton-under-Lyne and Manchester Railway, the Great Grimsby and Sheffield Junction Railway, the Sheffield and Lincolnshire Junction Railway and the Sheffield and Lincolnshire Extension Railway companies into the Manchester, Sheffield & Lincolnshire Railway.[51][52]

Work on the dock began in 1846, to the designs of Rendel, with Adam Smith as resident engineer.[53] Contractors for the dock works were Hutching, Brown and Wright.[54] The initial main work was construction of a large cofferdam surrounding the worksite.[53] The dam was constructed of three rows of wooden piles of Baltic yellow pine (Memel fir.[55]), 6 and 7 feet (1.8 and 2.1 m) apart, between 18 and 15 inches (460 and 380 mm) square, piledriven until hard clay was reached. Piles were between 45 and 55 feet (14 and 17 m) with some longer – the outer row was inclined to the vertical at 1 in 24. The inner space was filed with chalkstone and clay for the first 5 feet (1.5 m) then with puddled clay.[56] The inside of the dam was buttressed by additional rows, spaced every 25 feet (7.6 m) of wall, of closely piled wooden piles extending back 18 feet (5.5 m); the intermediate space of wall was supported by horizontal diagonal struts from the inner walls to buttresses.[57] The embankments to the east and west of the dam with were made with piled stones and clay.[58]

By 1848 an area of 138 acres (56 ha) was enclosed from the sea. A 20 feet (6.1 m) wide gated opening on the east side allowed access for construction ships.[58] The dam was approximately 1,600 feet (490 m) long,[59] with a construction cost of £29 per foot.[60] The total length of dam, wharves, and embankments approached 1.5 miles (2.4 km).[61] Contractor for the cofferdams was Messrs. Lynn (Liverpool).[54] The work was described in a paper read to the Institution of Civil Engineers, obtaining a favourable reception from its vice-president:

Mr. Cubitt said [] he could offer nothing, except a general expression of admiration of the extent of the works, [] as a dam, it was the longest, strongest, the deepest, and the soundest work of the kind he had ever seen.

— Joseph Cubitt, 1849.[62]

Construction of Royal Dock (1849–1852) edit

17 April 1849 Albert, Prince Consort laid the first stone of the dock, an 11-ton stone forming part of the structure of the lock gates.[25][63] The enclosed area had been drained by two 35 horsepower (26 kW) pumps – on a number of occasions fresh water springs were encountered,[note 1] which were managed by enclosing the spring in a cast-iron pipe, and by surrounding the area with chalkstone.[64]

Two main locks were constructed, adjacent to one another, of 300 by 70 feet (91 by 21 m) and 200 by 45 feet (61 by 14 m) with the bases 6 and 6.75 feet (1.83 and 2.06 m) below low water respectively. The lock's foundations were excavated to 8 feet (2.4 m) below the bottom of the locks, supported on wooden piles 1 by 35 feet (0.30 by 10.67 m) square by long, and a bed of concrete. The lock pit invert and supports for the lock gates were of stone.[65] Each lock had a pair of outer (pen) gates and a single inner (flood) gates, all built of timber, reinforced by wrought iron.[66] The dock's quaysides were built on chalk rubble filled brick arches parallel to the dock of approximately 27 feet (8.2 m) width, with the arches on piers of 6 feet (1.8 m) width supported by piling, with wider piers under areas expected to support the heaviest loads – the walls facing the dock were faced with masonry.[67]

 
Dock hydraulic tower and locks (1999)

Moving equipment for the dock gates was supplied by W. Armstrong. The hydraulic power supply for the equipment was a 200 feet (61 m) high water tower (Grimsby Dock tower), charged by a 25 horsepower (19 kW) horizontal engine.[68] The hydraulic tower was built on the centre pier between the two locks, of plain brick, 28 feet (8.5 m) square at the base.[map 5] Its water tank was located at 200 feet (61 m) and contained 33,000 imperial gallons (150,000 L; 40,000 US gal).[69] The tower's architectural design was by J.W. Wild and was inspired by Italian buildings, in particular the town hall of Siena (Torre del Mangia in the Palazzo Pubblico).[70]

A 13 acres (5.3 ha) tidal basin outside the locks was formed by two timber piers, with an entrance 260 feet (79 m) wide.[71] The cost of the dock works (to 1863) was estimated at £600,000; rising to £1,000,000 when accounting for the cost of purchase of the Old Docks, Fish Dock, and interest payments.[72] The dock opened in 1852.[24][map 6] On 18 March a banquet was held in the large lock pit, and water was admitted on 22 March, and the dock opened on 27 May 1852. The dock's railway lines of 2 miles (3.2 km) which included lines for the Grimsby Docks railway station and Grimsby Pier railway station were completed by 1 August 1853.[73] Queen Victoria and Albert, Prince Consort visited Grimsby on 14 October 1854, arriving from Hull on the Royal Yacht Fairy, being received at the Pier station. A request for the new dock to be named Royal Dock in honour of the visit was given, and accepted.[74]

History of the Royal Dock (1852–present) edit

Installations added after the opening of the dock included a graving dock, and facilities for handling rail borne coal shipments.[75] The two coal drops and rail lines were built over the far end of the dock on timber piers.[76] the first was completed by 1856 at a cost of £3,435, the second, at £3,500, soon after.[77] The 350 feet (110 m) graving dock was built east of the dock's lock, with an entrance of 70 feet (21 m). The design was by Adam Smith, and was contracted to James Taylor (Manchester) for £32,000 in 1855, the work was completed by 1858.[77][78] Initially a Cornish engine from Perran Foundry (Cornwall) was installed to fill the dock with water from wells, but its use ended when the well's water supply failed.[79]

A short canal dock, the Union Dock was opened in 1879, connecting the Old Dock system, to the Royal Dock system

A large transit shed 900 by 178 feet (274 by 54 m) was added to the west side of the dock, opened March 1893.[80] The shed was authorised 1890 at a cost of £23,500 and contracted to Pearson and Knowles (Warrington).[81] A new hydraulic coal hoist and sidings were added to the south-west side of the dock in the last years of the 19th century at a cost of £11,000 – the installation became operational in 1899.[82][33][note 3]

A Roll-on/roll-off ramp was constructed in the north-east part of the dock c. 1966.[83] In the 1970s an access road and bridge was built across the smaller lock, restricting use of the lock.[84]

In 2013 DONG Energy selected the Royal Dock as an operation and maintenance centre for the Westermost Rough Wind Farm. As part of the agreement new pontoons and lock gates were to be installed.[85][86] In 2014 the lock gates at the dock were replaced by contractor Ravestein (Netherlands). The conversion away from gates partially supported by buoyancy lifted the opening restrictions to times of high water, allowing 24hr operations.[87][88] The floating pontoon berth was sited in the north-east corner of the dock, at the site of the (1966) roll-on/roll-of ramp.[89] The operations and maintenance centre was to be sited adjacent to the berth on the north-east corner of the quayside.[90]

Parts of the dock's wall,[91] the locks,[92][93] the dock tower,[94] and several nearby structures are all now listed structures.[95][96]

Fish Docks (1857–) edit

 
Fish docks, Grimsby (c. 1890)
In the 21st century also known as Grimsby Dock East.[97]

The Fish Docks consist of a number of docks sharing common lock entrances, east of the Royal Dock, built and expanded in stages from the mid 19th century onwards.

No.1 Dock (1857–) edit

The first fishing dock (later No.1 Fish Dock) was authorised in late 1854, and the construction contract awarded to Sissons at £6,996; the dock was completed early 1856.[77] It was constructed to the east of the Royal Dock, and incorporated the floodgates of the original cofferdam at lock gates. The dock's lock was 80 by 20 feet (24.4 by 6.1 m) with a depth at high spring tides of 15.5 feet (4.7 m). As built the dock's sides were of chalkstone covered sloped clay at with a 1 in 3 rise, at the south side a 400 feet (120 m) timber wharf was built, which was rail connected by a sunken line allowing direct loading of wagons from the wharf. A timber pier was built to the east of the dock's entrance. The dock was built at a cost of £12,000, with a water area of approximately 6 acres (2.4 ha).[98][map 7]

The new dock opened in 1857. Fishermen were encouraged to move to the new port; the Grimsby Deep Sea Fishing Company had already been established (1854) for this purpose, backed by Great Central Railway, and later Great Northern Railway and Midland Railway.[24][99][100] An ice house and worker's housing were also built in the 1850s to support the industry.[101]

The Fish Dock was extended in 1866; doubling the dock's area.[38] A second lock and further quay space and warehousing were contracted to Logan and Hemingway, c. 1871; the firm also received the contract for a graving dock, valued at £15,000 in 1872. The pier at the dock was lengthened in 1873.[102] The lock and graving dock were operational by 1875.[32]

The fish market on the dock was destroyed by fire in June 1918.[103] Contracts for new fish markets were awarded in 1919: one of £43,878 to A. Jackaman & Sons for work on the west side of the dock; and one of £13,113 to G.A. Pillatt & Son for the north side.[104] Reconstruction of the northern end of the fish market on the west side of the dock was completed by January 1921.[103] Reconstruction work on the fish market continued through 1922 to 1923.[105][106]

In 1934 a new dock, No.3, was opened, contiguous with No.1, expanded the water area of 13 acres (5.3 ha) by 37 acres (15 ha)

No.2 Dock (1878–) edit
 
No.2 dock, derelict dock buildings (2007)

In 1876 Logan and Hemingway were awarded a £23,000 contract for an expansion from the first fish dock.[32] The 11 acres (4.5 ha) No. 2 Fish Dock was opened in 1878, connecting at the south end of the extended No.1 Fish Dock.[107][map 8]

The dock was enlarged to 16 acres (6.5 ha) at the southern end between 1897 and 1900;[38] the expansion scheme included the addition of two coal hoists for loading. H.B. James (Grimsby) was awarded the dock wall and excavations contracts.[108] The dock expansion also necessitated the realignment of the Grimsby to Cleethorpes railway line to the south.[81][33]

(As of 2015) A marina (Meridian Quay Marina) uses the northern half of No.2 dock.[109][110]

No.3 Dock (1934–) edit
 
1934 diagram (The Engineer). No.3 Dock extension in the context of Nos. 1 & 2 Fish and Royal docks
Great Central Railway (Grimsby Fish Dock) Act 1912
Act of Parliament
 
Long titleAn Act to authorise the Great Central Railway Company to enlarge their fish dock at Grimsby and for other purposes.
Citation2 & 3 Geo. 5. c. clxv
Dates
Royal assent13 December 1912
Text of statute as originally enacted

A need for an additional fish dock was seen from the early 20th century – the Great Central Railway (GCR) obtained an act, the Great Central Railway (Grimsby Fish Dock) Act 1912 (2 & 3 Geo. 5. c. clxv) for a fish dock in 1912;[111] the dock was to extend No.1 dock to the east onto land reclaimed from the Humber.[112] The scheme was abandoned due to the eruption of the First World War, after which the cost of the scheme has increased from the initial estimate of £0.5 million to £1.2 million; as a result, the scheme was not proceeded with. Later the GCR's successor the London and North Eastern Railway (LNER) proposed to the Grimsby Corporation that if the Corporation built a dock, the LNER would pay rent for use of the dock, until such time as the cost of dock and loans were repaid, at which point it would take over the dock – this scheme was agreed with and the corporation applied for a bill in Parliament.[113] The Grimsby Corporation (Dock, etc.) Act 1929 (19 & 20 Geo. 5. c. lxxxiv) was passed in 1929.[114] The dock was initially designed by chief dock engineer of the LNER J. A. Wickham, who died April 1930, and was succeeded by A. Tulip. The firm of John Wolfe Barry and partners were appointed engineers. Funding was aided by a governmental grant, intended to reduce unemployment.[115]

The works included a reclamation of land to the north-east of the original fish dock, and a new river embankment of 6,800 feet (2,100 m) extending east-south-east into the district of Cleethorpes, enclosing substantial additional land in addition to the dock, including areas for railway sidings and up to 39 acres (16 ha) for industrial development. The north quay of No.1 dock (known as "Campbell's Jetty") was to be removed, making the No.1 and new fish docks contiguous with one another – the new dock water area was 37 acres (15 ha) giving a total water area of the No.1 and No.3 docks of 50 acres (20 ha).[115]

Planned dock facilities included a 2,200 feet (670 m) north quay, rail fed coaling jetties on the east quay, and outfitting jetties and slipways on the south-east side.[116] A third lock 45 feet (14 m) wide was to be constructed adjacent east and parallel with the existing locks of the fish dock; additionally the fish dock east entrance pier was to be removed, and a new pier constructed on the east side of the new lock. Other changes required included the rerouting of a sewer and its outfall channel further east.[117] The estimated cost of the works was £1.418 million of which the Corporation was enabled to raise £1.25 million, the remainder by the LNER, who agreed to a thirty-year lease on the dock. The company of Sir Lindsay Parkinson was contracted to carry out the work.[118] A.E. Tarrant was the resident engineer.[119]

Work on the dock began in November 1930.[119] The diversion of sewer, river embankment, and steel sheet pile cofferdam for construction of the new lock were all complete by May 1932.[120] The embankment was constructed primarily of tipped chalk, faced on the seaward side with concrete blocks.[121] Dock construction required excavation of approximately 1,000,000 cubic yards (760,000 m3) of material, primarily by dragline excavator, much of which was used to fill other areas of the newly enclosed land. Spoil and slag from Scunthorpe was also used as fill on the reclaimed land.[122] The new 45 ft lock was 240 feet (73 m) long total with three gates. It was built on 12 inches (300 mm) square timber piles, supporting a square bottomed concrete lock pit. 'Blows',[note 1] (underground springs) were encountered when excavating the lock's west wall foundations, undermining the work, and causing the newly laid concrete to crack. Work was delayed by remedial work to counter these springs, consisting of sunken centrifugal pumps used to draw of the water, temporarily reducing the local level of the water table. The lock was faced with granite. A pipe subway lined with cast iron segmental rings ran under part of the lock, carrying services (hydraulic, water, electricity). The initially installed gates were of oak, operated by hydraulically activated chains. The new east pier was 500 feet (150 m) long and constructed of timber, on the west side part of the old pier was removed and a new 175 feet (53 m) pier section added, meeting the old at a "V".[123]

Construction of the dock's quays was delayed due to the weak ground conditions encountered, necessitation a partial redesign, and increasing cost.[124][note 4] The north and south quays were supported on 14 inches (360 mm) square reinforced piles spaced laterally and longitudinally at a distance of 12.5 feet (3.8 m). Larssen sheet piling was used at the rear of the quays, with a tipped chalk bank behind. The north quay showed movement before it was completed, and so the quay bank was tied back to anchorages inserted into the river embankment. Approximately 327,000 cubic feet (9,300 m3) of concrete, 1,330 tons of steel reinforcement, and 1,724 piles were used in the north and south quays combined.[125]

 
Fish docks No.1 and No.3 (under construction) c. 1934 from the east. Coaling stages, and slipways (left) in foreground

The east quay was built with a 1-in-3 slope retained by concrete sheet piling,[126] and located three coaling stages supplied by the Mitchell Conveyor and Transporter Company, each extended into the dock on a pier.[127] At the south-east side of the dock were slipways. Three adjacent slipways were constructed, with the machinery by Henderson and Nichol (Aberdeen); once lifted a ship would be moved sideways on a rail traverser onto an adjacent berth. The easternmost slipway had two berths, and was capable of lifting a maximum weight of 1,080 tons, and a maximum ship length of 160 feet (49 m). The other two slipways had lifting capacities of 600 tons, the centre slipway had two berths, the other three. Slipway and yard foundations were constructed from reinforced concrete, supported by concrete piles.[128]

Main road access to the dock was by a reinforced concrete bridge from Humber Street (now Humber Bridge Street) crossing the main Grimsby to Cleethorpes railway line by five main spans. The works included the movement of existing rail sidings; plus construction of new general and coaling sidings, east of the dock.[129] The dock was supplied with power from a 6,000 V supply from the LNER's power station at Immingham. Electricity substations were supplied by Metropolitan-Vickers, and lighting by the General Electric Company Ltd.[130]

No.3 Fish Dock was opened 4 October 1934 by Sir Henry Betterton.[131][map 9]

In 2012 Centrica opened an operations and maintenance base on the north wall (fish dock), for use with the Lynn and Inner Dowsing Wind Farm and the Lincs Wind Farm.[132][133][134] In 2013 as part of the arrangements to bring E.on to the dock, the dock's lock gates were modernised.[135][136] In 2014 E.on opened an operations and maintenance base for its Humber Gateway Wind Farm.[137][138][139][140]

In 2015 work to refurbish the 1935 boat repair slipways was initiated.[141]

Grimsby Fish Market (1996–) edit

 
Fish Dock and fish market (2003)

In 1996 a new fish market (Grimsby Fish Market) was built on reclaimed land on a former fish dock (No.1).[142][map 10] The majority of the fish sold at the market was not landed at Grimsby, but imported; approximately two thirds was supplied from Icelandic fishers, the remainder from other North Sea fishing nations (2006). The market handled 30,000 tons of fresh fish in 2006, approximately one third of the Grimsby total.[143]

Union Dock (1879–) edit

The Union Dock was designed as a short canal from the end of the Royal Dock to inner of the Old Dock.[107][map 11] Logan and Hemingway were awarded the contract to build the dock, with a bid of £81,000.[102] Work on the dock began 30 August 1873, and the final stone was laid 11 July 1879. The construction was hampered by poor ground conditions leading to the weight if the dockwalls displacing the adjacent ground. The total length of the dock, including lock was 870 feet (270 m), with a water area of 7,620 square yards (6,370 m2); the lock was 304 by 45 feet (93 by 14 m) long by wide.[144] Tannet, Walker and Company were awarded a £3,677 contract for a hydraulically operated swing bridge across the dock;[32] the bridge was 76 feet (23 m) long carrying a single line of rail, plus walkways.[144] Total cost of the dock was £258,700.[144]

Union Dock was opened 22 July 1879 by the Prince and Princess of Wales (Edward VII and Alexandra of Denmark).[144]

In the 1970s the canal was widened out, as part of the arrangements to allow large car carriers into Alexandra Dock.[43]

Humber Commercial Railway and Dock (c. 1900) edit

In 1900 the Humber Commercial Railway and Dock sought powers from parliament to build a new dock west adjacent to the Royal Dock, and north of Alexandra Dock, on the banks of the Humber;[145] this development was passed in 1901 as the Humber Commercial Railway and Dock Act 1901 (1 Edw. 7. c. ccii).[146] The approach channel to the dock would have required extensive dredging, which may have had negative consequences on the adjacent docks; and as a consequence the Great Central Railway informed the promoters of the scheme it was to withdraw its support, unless the scheme was changed to one better positioned on the Humber, near Stallingborough, nearer to a deep water channel.[147] In 1903 the company submitted amended plans to replace the previous consented dock at Grimsby with a new construction at Immingham,[148][149] passed in as the Humber Commercial Railway and Dock Act 1904 (4 Edw. 7. c. lxxxv).[150] This dock act led to the construction of the Immingham Dock.

Grimsby River Terminal (2013–) edit

In 2011 ABP received planning consent for a two berth terminal on the Humber outside the locked docks connected to the estate via a pier from the northwest corner of Royal Dock. The terminal was designed to increase the car importation ship capacity from 800 to 30,000 cars. Capital cost of the project was estimated at £25.1 million.[151]

Construction was undertaken by Graham construction. The terminal consisted of an approach jetty approximately 820 feet (250 m) long; a floating concrete pontoon of 262 by 98 feet (80 by 30 m), 16 feet (5 m) deep weighing over 7,000 ton; a 230 feet (70 m) linkspan bridge connecting the pontoon to jetty; and a finger pier dividing the two berthing positions. The installation was constructed using 165 tubular steel piles between 30.0 and 55.9 inches (762 and 1,420 mm) diameter, up to 125 feet (38 m) long.[152][153]

The terminal was completed and commissioned on 22 July 2013.[154] The first vessel to dock at the terminal was the MV Ems Highway in July 2013.[155] Official opening took place in September 2013.[156][157]

Marine Control Centre (2015–) edit

In 2016 ABP, in its role as Statutory Harbour Authority for the Humber Estuary and for the ports of Immingham, Grimsby, Hull and Goole, began work on relocating its Vessel Traffic Services (VTS) centre at Spurn Point to a new Marine Control Centre in Grimsby, following deterioration of road access to Spurn. The new control centre was to be located at the northern edge of the docks, between Royal and Fish docks.[158][159][160][161][map 12]

Port employment, trade and tonnage edit

After connection to the rail network, coupled with expansion of the port, and wider industrial development the tonnage handled through the port increased from around 160 kilotons in 1854, to nearly 3,800 kilotons in 1911. The opening and growth of Immingham Dock coupled with a wider decline in exports reduced tonnage to around 620 kilotons by 1938. After the Second World War the tonnage peaked at 1,500 kilotons in 1956, and declined to 640 kilotones by 1962.[162]

Growth of the Grimsby fishing fleet caused the tonnage of fish landed to increase from 0.188 kilotons in 1855; to 30 kilotons in 1871, with 302 vessels operating from the port. Steam fishing began c. 1881, and this, coupled with diminishing North Sea fish stocks caused fishing to take place increasingly further afield – in 1911 landings from UK boats at the port were 190 kilotons. Demand was reduced in the interwar period, though recovered to 198 kilotons in 1951. Grimsby landed approximately 20% of UK fish in this period.[163]

In the mid 1960s the fishing fleet employed directly several thousands of men, with over 250 fishing vessels, with many more people employed indirectly. £13 million worth of fish was landed at the port in 1965, out of a UK total of £40 million.[164]

The problems of declining catches and increased fuel costs were exacerbated by the introduction of fishing zone limits (Exclusive economic zones) by several North Atlantic nations, as well fishing limits introduced with the membership of the European Economic Community. Landings dropped to 24 kilotons of fish by 1983.[30][165] In 1976, prior to the collapse of the Humber fishing fleet the fishing industry employed 11,750 people in Grimsby, including land based work, representing 17% of employment.[166] Grimsby's fishing industry was less affected than the Port of Hull due to a more diversified fishing fleet, in comparison to the Hull fleet's reliance on deep water fishing. Though fish continued to be imported into Grimsby for processing, much of it began to arrive by road from other ports, and not via the docks.[167][168] Fish processing activities remained an important employment sector in the town after the collapse of the sea-based fishing industry – with over 6,000 persons employed in 1984, representing a nationally significant percentage of all fish processing based employment in the UK in the 1980s, with extensive cold storage facilities on and off the dock estates.[169]

In the 1980s major freight imports included Volkswagen cars, timber from the Scandinavia and Russia, Danish food produce; exports included manufactured goods, and steel slab from Scunthorpe.[170]

Other structures edit

Historic edit

Many buildings were constructed on and around the dock estate servicing related industries.

The streets west of the fish dock was one such area, with a concentration of fish processing related activities and businesses – several buildings in the area are now listed due to their relationship to the fishing industry; these include: a fish processing and smoking factory, brick, late 19th century, on Fish Dock Road;[171] two fish smoking factories on Henderson Street: one of yellow brick with red brick dressing, late 19th century;[172] the other in red brick with concrete tile roof, late 19th and early 20th century;[173] two fish processing and smoking factories on Sidebottom Street : one dating to around 1900 in red brick (with rendering) with 20th century alterations;[174] the other in yellow brick (rendered) dating to the early 20th century;[175] a fish processing and smoking factory on Riby Street, in yellow and red brick, with render, dating to the early 20th century;[176] and a fish processing and smoking factory on Maclure Street, dating from the interbellum, converted from late 19th/early 20th century smithy building.[177]

The fishing industry required ice to preserve the caught fish, and Grimsby had a number of ice factories, one of which, also on the dock estate west of the fish dock, now known as the Grimsby Ice Factory, is now a listed building. The building dates to the beginning of the 20th century, is of red brick, and was formerly the factory of the Grimsby Ice Company Limited.[178]

On the east side of Royal Dock, the former flour mill, "Victoria Mills", is also listed. The building by architect Alfred Gelder was built in a Flemish style using red brick with blue brick and terracotta dressings, it dates to builds in 1889 and 1905.[179] Part of the mill has been converted into flat accommodation, whilst, as of 2015, the other part is unoccupied and derelict.[180]

The directly dock related Dock Offices and Customs House are also listed, located near the junction of the Royal and Union docks, close to Cleethorpes Road: The Dock Offices were built in 1885 by Mills and Murgatroyd for the Grimsby Dock Company, an H plan building of three storeys, in brick with stone and terracotta dressing; the Customs House dates to 1874, two storeys with five bays, in red brick, with stone and black brick dressings.[181][182][183] To the front of the Dock Office is a bronze statue of Albert, Prince Consort commissioned to William Theed in celebration of the Royal visit to the opening of the Union Dock in 1879.[184][185]

The sites of the Royal Dock cofferdam, and of the Royal Dock's graving dock are also now listed as historic monuments by Historic England.[186][187]

Modern edit

In 2013 a two-year project of construction of a 2.2-mile (3.5 km) flood wall around the docks began, with an estimated cost of around £20 million.[188][189]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Commonly known as "blows" or "boils" when encountered in dock construction – freshwater springs are commonly found when excavating below the level of clay in the low lying areas adjacent to the Yorkshire and Lincolnshire wolds. Also common on the north bank of the Humber. See also Artesian Well
  2. ^ On the 1889 OS map labelled as the M.S.L.R Grimsby Docks Branch.[33]
  3. ^ The Brickpit Coal sidings were added on the Great Coates branch on the site of former timber yards.[33]
  4. ^ See earlier plans ie The Engineer & 5 June 1931, illus. p.618.

Acts edit

  • 36 Geo. 3. c. 98 (1796), An Act for Widening, Deepening, Enlarging, Altering, and Improving the Haven and Town and Port of Great Grimsby, in the County of Lincoln{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link); Incorporation of the Grimsby Haven company
  • 39 Geo. 3. c. lxx (1799), An Act for enabling the Grimsby Haven Company to finish and complete the navigation of the said haven, and for amending an Act, passed in the thirty-sixth year of the reign of His present Majesty, for widening, deepening, enlarging, altering, and improving the haven of the town and port of Great Grimsby, in the county of Lincoln{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • 6 Geo. 4. c. 114 (1825), An Act for amending and rendering more effectual two Acts of the thirty-sixth and thirty-ninth years of His late Majesty, for improving the haven of Great Grimsby, in the county of Lincoln{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • 8 & 9 Vict. c. ccii (1845), Grimsby Docks Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link); Grimsby Haven company dissolved and undertaking transferred to Grimsby Dock company, construction of further docks.[190]
  • 9 & 10 Vict. c. cclxviii (1846), Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link), amalgamation of several railway companies and the Grimsby Dock company into the new Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway.[191]
  • 32 & 33 Vict. c. x (1869), Grimsby Improvement Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link); Construction on West Marshes, a bridge over the Old Dock, etc.[27]
  • 36 & 37 Vict. c. lxxvii (1873), Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link); Railway No.3 in the London Gazette announcement refers to the Great Coates branch.[192]
  • 1 Edw. 7. c. 202 (1901), Humber Commercial Railway and Dock Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link); Act for a nw dock in Grimsby.[145]
    • amended by 4 Edw. 7. c. 85 (1904), Humber Commercial Railway and Dock Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link), a proposed dock to be sited instead at a site in Immingham;[149] further act in 1908 (8 Edw. 7. c. 49);[193] amended 1909 by the Great Central Railway (Various Powers) Act 1909 (9 Edw. 7. c. 85);[194] and Humber Commercial Railway and Dock Act 1913 (3 & 4 Geo. 5. c. 20).[195]
  • 2 & 3 Geo. 5. c. 165 (1912), Great Central Railway (Grimsby Fish Dock) Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)[112]
  • 19 & 20 Geo. 5. c. 84 (1929), Grimsby Corporation (Dock, etc.) Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link); enabling the construction of (No.3) Fish dock.[196]


References edit

  1. ^ Ellis & Crowther 1990, pp. 227–9.
  2. ^ Oliver 1825, pp. 10–15, 86–89.
  3. ^ Shaw 1897, pp. 1–5, 22–24.
  4. ^ Oliver 1825, p. 78.
  5. ^ Oliver 1825, pp. 78–9.
  6. ^ Ellis & Crowther 1990, pp. 231–233.
  7. ^ Shaw 1897, pp. 79–86.
  8. ^ Shaw 1897, p. 89.
  9. ^ a b Ellis & Crowther 1990, p. 236.
  10. ^ Ellis & Crowther 1990, pp. 233–4.
  11. ^ Ellis & Crowther 1990, pp. 235–6; Fig.17.1, p. 237.
  12. ^ a b The Diary of Abraham De La Pryme, Surtees Society, 1870, pp. 154–6
  13. ^ Historic England. "GRIMSBY HAVEN LOCK AND DOCK WALL 58 METRES LONG ADJOINING TO WEST (1379856)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  14. ^ Historic England. "WEST HAVEN MALTINGS AND GARTH BUILDINGS (1379841)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  15. ^ Ellis & Crowther 1990, pp. 236, 238.
  16. ^ Skempton 2002, Pickernell Jonathan, p.525, col.1.
  17. ^ a b 36 Geo. 3. c. 98 1796.
  18. ^ a b Skempton 2002, John Rennie, p.566.
  19. ^ Skempton 2002, Hollingsworth, p331, col.2.
  20. ^ a b c Priestly, Joseph (1831), "Grimsby Port or Haven", Historical Account of the Navigable Rivers, Canals, and Railways of Great Britain, p. 325
  21. ^ Bentham, Samuel (1847), Weale, John (ed.), "On the mode of forming foundations under water and on bad ground", Quarterly Papers on Engineering, 6 Pt.1: 4–9
  22. ^ 39 Geo. 3. c. lxx 1799.
  23. ^ Tidal Harbours Commission 1846, p. 424.
  24. ^ a b c Ellis & Crowther 1990, p. 238.
  25. ^ a b c d e The land we live in, a pictorial and literary sketch-book of the British Islands, vol. 1 – The Midland Counties and the East Coast of England, 1856, p. 346
  26. ^ Tidal Harbours Commission 1846, pp. 424–5.
  27. ^ a b "Grimsby Corporation. Powers as to Building, &c., on West Marshes; Construction of Bridge over Old Dock, and of Foot Bridge over Manchester, Sheffield, and Lincolnshire Railway; [...]", The London Gazette (23442): 5951–5952, 17 November 1868
  28. ^ 32 & 33 Vict. c. x 1869.
  29. ^ "Swing Bridge at Great Grimsby" (PDF). The Engineer. 31: 247, illus. p.248. 14 April 1871.
  30. ^ a b Ellis & Crowther 1990, p. 241.
  31. ^ 36 & 37 Vict. c. lxxvii 1873.
  32. ^ a b c d Dow 1985a, p. 164.
  33. ^ a b c d Ordnance Survey 1:2500. 1889–90, 1908
  34. ^ NE Lincs planning application & DC/578/13/WMA, Design and access statement, §2.20, p.5.
  35. ^ Dow 1985a, p. 163.
  36. ^ Dow 1965, p. 229.
  37. ^ Dow 1985a, p. 165.
  38. ^ a b c Ellis & Crowther 1990, p.238; Fig.17.5, p.239.
  39. ^ a b Dow 1985a, p. 167.
  40. ^ Dow 1985a, p. 169.
  41. ^ Ordnance Survey 1888–1889. 1:2500
  42. ^ Historic England. "CORPORATION BRIDGE, CORPORATION ROAD (1379432)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  43. ^ a b Beedham 2013.
  44. ^ Symes 1987, p. 101.
  45. ^ a b c Tidal Harbours Commission 1846a, p. 426.
  46. ^ Tidal Harbours Commission 1846a, pp. 426–7.
  47. ^ Tidal Harbours Commission 1846a, p. 427.
  48. ^ Tidal Harbours Commission 1846, p. 426.
  49. ^ 8 & 9 Vict. c. ccii 1845.
  50. ^ Dow 1985, pp. 84–6.
  51. ^ "Grimsby Haven Company". The National Archives. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  52. ^ 9 & 10 Vict. c. cclxviii 1846.
  53. ^ a b Neate 1849, pp. 1–2.
  54. ^ a b Clark 1864, p. 52.
  55. ^ Clark 1864, p. 39.
  56. ^ Neate 1849, p. 3.
  57. ^ Neate 1849, pp. 4–5.
  58. ^ a b Neate 1849, pp. 6–7.
  59. ^ Neate 1849, p. 10.
  60. ^ Neate 1849, p. 12.
  61. ^ Clark 1864, p. 38.
  62. ^ Neate 1849, p. 9.
  63. ^ Dow 1985, pp. 123–125.
  64. ^ Clark 1864, p. 41.
  65. ^ Clark 1864, pp. 41–43.
  66. ^ Clark 1864, pp. 44–45.
  67. ^ Clark 1864, p.42; Plate 2, figs. 4–6.
  68. ^ Clark 1864, p.46; Plate 3. figs 18–19.
  69. ^ Clark 1864, pp. 50–51.
  70. ^ Pevsner, Harris & Antram 2002, p. 343.
  71. ^ Clark 1864, p.47; Plate 3, figs. 14–15; Appendix, p.53.
  72. ^ Clark 1864, pp. 57–58.
  73. ^ Dow 1985, pp. 151–153, 175.
  74. ^ Dow 1985, pp. 161–163.
  75. ^ Clark 1864, pp. 48–50.
  76. ^ Clark 1864, pp. 49–50.
  77. ^ a b c Dow 1985, p. 175.
  78. ^ Clark 1864, pp.48–49; Plate 1, fig. 2; Plate 3, figs 10–13.
  79. ^ Clark 1864, p. 51.
  80. ^ "_". The Railway Year Book: 93. 1899.
  81. ^ a b Dow 1985a, p. 168.
  82. ^ Dow 1985a, p. 171.
  83. ^ NE Lincs planning application & DC/578/13/WMA, Design and access statement, §2.23, p.6.
  84. ^ "Wind firm harbours a grand plan for Grimsby's Royal Dock". Grimsby Telegraph. 26 February 2013. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  85. ^ "New lock gates for dock as Dong Energy commits to Grimsby". Grimsby Telegraph. 13 December 2013. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  86. ^ "100 jobs as Danish energy giant Dong commits to Grimsby for offshore wind operations and maintenance". Grimsby Telegraph. 11 December 2013. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  87. ^ NE Lincs planning application & DC/578/13/WMA, Design and access statement, §3.10–3.13, p.8.
  88. ^ Laister, David (25 September 2014). "VIDEO AND PICTURES: Grimsby's new Royal Dock lock gates installed as renewables revolution further embraced with £5m investment". Grimsby Telegraph. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  89. ^ NE Lincs planning application & DC/579/13/EMA, Design and access statement, §3.04–3.09, p.7-8.
  90. ^ NE Lincs planning application & DC/401/13/EMA, Design and Access statement.
  91. ^ Historic England. "QUAYSIDE WALLS AT ROYAL DOCK (1379867)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  92. ^ Historic England. "EAST LOCK TO ROYAL DOCK INCLUDING RAILINGS AND BOLLARDS (1379868)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  93. ^ Historic England. "WEST LOCK TO ROYAL DOCK INCLUDING RAILINGS AND BOLLARDS (1379869)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  94. ^ Historic England. "THE DOCK TOWER (1379870)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  95. ^ Historic England. "HYDRAULIC ACCUMULATOR TOWER TO WEST OF THE DOCK TOWER (1379871)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  96. ^ Historic England. "LOCK KEEPERS OFFICE 3 METRES EAST OF THE HYDRAULIC TOWER (1379872)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  97. ^ Hall, Katie (29 October 2013). "Grimsby: Harnessing the power of renewable energy". BBC News – Humberside. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  98. ^ Clark 1864, pp.51–52; Plate 1, fig.2; Plate 3, figs. 16–17;.
  99. ^ Greaves, John Neville (2005). Sir Edward Watkin, 1819–1901 : Last of the Railway Kings. p. 162.
  100. ^ Dow 1985, p. 176.
  101. ^ Dow 1985, pp. 176–177.
  102. ^ a b Dow 1985a, p. 162.
  103. ^ a b "Great Central" (PDF). The Engineer. 131: 8. 7 January 1921.
  104. ^ Dow 1965, p. 337.
  105. ^ "Grimsby" (PDF). The Engineer. 133: 17. 6 January 1922.
  106. ^ "Humber Ports" (PDF). The Engineer. 135: 29. 12 January 1923.
  107. ^ a b Ellis & Crowther 1990, Fig.17.5, p.239.
  108. ^ Dow 1985a, pp. 168, 171.
  109. ^ "Meridian Quay Marina". www.harbourguides.com. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
  110. ^ Reeds Nautical Almanac 2015. Adlard Coles Nautical. 2014. p. 56. ISBN 9781472906991.
  111. ^ 2 & 3 Geo. 5. c. 165 1912.
  112. ^ a b "GREAT CENTRAL RAILWAY (GRIMSBY FISH DOCK). Construction of Fish Dock Extension at Grimsby; Reclamation of Land from the River Humber; Power to Dredge; Compulsory Purchase of Lands and Buildings; [...]", The London Gazette (28590): 1927–1929, 15 March 1912
  113. ^ The Engineer & 5 June 1931, p.619, cols.1–2.
  114. ^ 19 & 20 Geo. 5. c. 84 1929.
  115. ^ a b The Engineer & 5 June 1931, p.619, col.2.
  116. ^ The Engineer & 5 June 1931, p.619, col.3 – p.620, col.1; illustration, p.619;.
  117. ^ The Engineer & 5 June 1931, p.620, cols.1–2; illustration, p.619.
  118. ^ The Engineer & 5 June 1931, p.620, col.2.
  119. ^ a b The Engineer & 7 December 1934, p.559, col.1.
  120. ^ The Engineer & 7 December 1934, p.559, cols.2–3.
  121. ^ The Engineer & 7 December 1934, p.559, fig.4; p.560, cols.1–2.
  122. ^ The Engineer & 7 December 1934, p.560, cols.2–3.
  123. ^ The Engineer & 7 December 1934, p.560, col.3 – p.561, col.1; p.559, figs.8, 9.
  124. ^ The Engineer & 14 December 1934, p.584, col.1; p.585, col.3.
  125. ^ The Engineer & 14 December 1934, p.584, cols.1–2.
  126. ^ The Engineer & 14 December 1934, p.584, cols.2–3.
  127. ^ The Engineer & 14 December 1934, p.585, cols.1–3 – p.586, col.1; p.585, fig.16.
  128. ^ The Engineer & 14 December 1934, p.584, col.3 – p.585, col.1.
  129. ^ The Engineer & 14 December 1934, p.585, col.1.
  130. ^ The Engineer & 14 December 1934, p.585, cols.2–3.
  131. ^ The Engineer & 7 December 1934, p. 558.
  132. ^ NE Lincs planning application & DC/938/10/EMA, Planning statement.
  133. ^ "Jobs boost in Grimsby docks wind farm project". BBC News – Humberside. 4 May 2011. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  134. ^ "'Beautiful friendship' between Centrica and Grimsby toasted at launch of wind energy facility". Grimsby Telegraph. 6 September 2012. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  135. ^ "Official launch of new lock gates to enable further O&M opportunities". North East Lincolnshire Council. March 2013. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  136. ^ "Energy firm's base 'is great for Grimsby'". Scunthorpe Telegraph. 9 March 2013. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  137. ^ NE Lincs planning application & DC/453/12/EMA, Planning statement.
  138. ^ . Grimsby Telegraph. 5 July 2012. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  139. ^ "E.ON Humber Gateway Grimsby". www.isgplc.com. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  140. ^ "Eric Pickles: E.on's £4m investment in Grimsby wind farm facility puts Humber in the driving seat". Grimsby Telegraph. 2 August 2014. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  141. ^ "Slipways project boost for Port of Grimsby aids offshore industry". Grimsby Telegraph. 9 July 2015. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  142. ^ "Grimsby fish docks redevelopment". World Fishing. IPC Industrial Press. 45 (1–6): 33-. 1996. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  143. ^ Cantillon, Sophie; Prenkert, Frans; Hakansson, Hakan; Folgesvold, Atle; Haugnes, Svanhild (2006). "8. The UK Seafood Network – recent developments and the role of Norwegian exporters". In Asche, Frank (ed.). Primary Industries Facing Global Markets: The Supply Chains and Markets for Norwegian Food and Forest Products. Copenhagen Business School Press DK. p. 205. ISBN 978-87-630-0192-2.
  144. ^ a b c d "Opening of the New Dock at Grimsby" (PDF). Engineering. 28. p.79, cols.2–3. 25 July 1879. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  145. ^ a b "Humber Commercial Railway and Dock. Incorporation/ of Company; Power to make Dock and Entrance with Sea Walls Railways and other Works adjoining the existing Docks at Grimsby [...]", The London Gazette (27249): 7423–7426, 23 November 1900
  146. ^ 1 Edw. 7. c. 202 1901.
  147. ^ "Humber Commercial Dock, Grimsby" (PDF), The Engineer, 94: 168, 15 August 1902, retrieved 20 July 2015
  148. ^ "HUMBER COMMERCIAL RAILWAY AND DOCK. New Dock with Entrance into River Hu'mber, with River Walls, Piers or Jetties, Railways, and other Works in connection therewith, near Grimsby in the county of Lincoln; Powers as to diverting Water and Dredging; Power to stop up and divert Drain and Outfall at Immingham Haven; Abandonment of Works authorized by Humber Commercial Railway and Dock Act 1901; Cancellation of existing Agreements and Arrangements and release of Money Deposit under Act, of 1901; Application of provisions of Act of 1901 to New Works; General Dock and other Powers;[...]", The London Gazette (27496): 7411–7413, 18 November 1902
  149. ^ a b "HUMBER COMMERCIAL RAILWAY AND DOCK. New Dock with Entrance into River Humber, with River Embankments, Walls, Piers, Jetties, Railways and other Works in connection therewith near Grimsby, in the County of Lincoln; Powers as to taking and diverting Water and Dredging; Power to stop up and divert Drains; Abandonment of Works authorized by Humber Commercial Railway and Dock Act, 1901; Cancellation of existing Agreements and Arrangements and release of Money Deposit under Act of 1901; Application of Provisions of Act of 1901 to New Works; [...]", The London Gazette (27619): 7621–7623, 24 November 1903
  150. ^ 4 Edw. 7. c. 85 1904.
  151. ^ "ABPA Holdings Limited Results of year ended 31st December 2011" (PDF). ABP. Major Projects : Grimsby River Terminal Project, p. 12. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  152. ^ "Grimsby River Terminal". www.graham.co.uk. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  153. ^ "ABP's Grimsby River Terminal reaches milestone with delivery of custom-built pontoon". www.abports.co.uk (press release). 28 May 2013. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  154. ^ "ABPA Holdings Limited 2013 Year End Summary" (PDF). ABP. Major capital expenditure projects – Grimsby River Terminal, p.18. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  155. ^ "First vessel discharges at £26m car terminal". Grimsby Telegraph. 24 July 2013. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  156. ^ "£26m Grimsby River Terminal officially launched". Grimsby Telegraph. 20 September 2013. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  157. ^ "Opening of Grimsby River Terminal 'a momentous day'". Grimsby Telegraph. 21 September 2013. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  158. ^ "DM/0555/15/SCR – VTS Watch Facility and Grimsby Marine Control Centre" (planning application). North East Lincolnshire Council. 27 June 2015. Retrieved 2 February 2016.
  159. ^ "ABP invests in Grimsby control centre". www.portstrategy.com. 29 January 2016. Retrieved 2 February 2016.
  160. ^ Pantry, Lindsay (28 January 2016). "Spurn Point 'deterioration' sparks £5m maritime base move". Yorkshire Post. Retrieved 2 February 2016.
  161. ^ "Grimsby Marine Control Centre build starts as vessel traffic booms". Grimsby Telegraph. 28 January 2016. Retrieved 2 February 2016.
  162. ^ Ellis & Crowther 1990, pp. 238, 240.
  163. ^ Ellis & Crowther 1990, pp. 240–241.
  164. ^ Beddis, Rex Antony (1972) [1967]. Focal Points in Geography: Case Studies 1. CUP Archive. p. 22. ISBN 0340074175.
  165. ^ Symes 1987, pp. 24–5.
  166. ^ Symes 1987, p. 23.
  167. ^ Symes & Haughton 1987.
  168. ^ Symes 1987, pp. 23–26.
  169. ^ Symes 1987, pp. 30, 101.
  170. ^ Symes 1987, pp. 101–2.
  171. ^ Historic England. "MTL MEDAL FISHERIES FISH PROCESSING AND SMOKING FACTORY (1379834)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
  172. ^ Historic England. "FISH SMOKING FACTORY (QUALITY FISH COMPANY) (1379847)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
  173. ^ Historic England. "PETERSONS FISH PROCESSING AND SMOKING FACTORY (1379848)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
  174. ^ Historic England. "FISH PROCESSING AND SMOKING FACTORY (GH ABERNETHIE LIMITED) (1379882)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
  175. ^ Historic England. "FISH PROCESSING AND SMOKING FACTORY (KEITH GRAHAM LIMITED) (1379883)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
  176. ^ Historic England. "RUSSELL FISH PROCESSING AND SMOKING FACTORY (RUSSELL FISH CURING COMPANY LIMITED) (1379908)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
  177. ^ Historic England. "Alfred Enderby Ltd Fish Smoking and Processing Factory (1402339)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
  178. ^ Historic England. "THE GRIMSBY ICE FACTORY INCLUDING RAILINGS (1379842)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
  179. ^ Historic England. "VICTORIA MILLS, VICTORIA STREET NORTH (1379892)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
  180. ^ "Victoria Mills building to undergo urgent repair work", Grimsby Telegraph, 25 June 2015, retrieved 22 June 2015
  181. ^ Historic England. "DOCK OFFICES (1379873)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
  182. ^ Historic England. "THE CUSTOMS HOUSE AND ATTACHED RAILINGS (1379417)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
  183. ^ Pevsner, Harris & Antram 2002, p. 342.
  184. ^ Dow 1985a, pp. 165–166.
  185. ^ Historic England. "STATUE OF PRINCE ALBERT IN FRONT OF DOCK OFFICES (1379874)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 21 September 2015.
  186. ^ Historic England. "Coffer Dam at Grimsby Dock (1543046)". Research records (formerly PastScape). Retrieved 22 July 2015.
  187. ^ Historic England. "Site of Graving Dock (1543074)". Research records (formerly PastScape). Retrieved 22 July 2015.
  188. ^ "£14.5m flood defences in Grimsby", BBC News – Humberside, 7 February 2013, retrieved 20 July 2015
  189. ^ "Grimsby flood alleviation work to start", BBC News – Humberside, 10 August 2013, retrieved 20 July 2015
  190. ^ "NOTICE is hereby given..", The London Gazette (20401): 3801, 8 November 1844
  191. ^ "Sheffield, Ashton-under-Lyne, and Manchester Railway; Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway; Great Grimsby and Sheffield Junction Railway; Grimsby Docks; Huddersfield and Manchester Railway and Canal (Amalgamation)", The London Gazette (20542): 6155–6, 25 November 1845
  192. ^ "Manchester, Sheffield, and Lincolnshire Railway (Additional Powers). Construction of New Railways in the Counties of Lancaster, Lincoln, and York; [...]", The London Gazette (23922): 5495–6, 22 November 1872
  193. ^ "HUMBER COMMERCIAL RAILWAY AND DOCK Power to Humber Commercial Railway and Dock Company to Make a New Road and Road Diversions; Compulsory Purchase of Additional Lands at South Killingholme and Immingham by Humber Dock Company and Great Central Railway Company; Revival and Extension of Time for Compulsory Purchase of Lands for Humber Commercial Dock Undertaking [..]", The London Gazette (28083): 8239–8240, 26 November 1907
  194. ^ "GREAT CENTRAL RAILWAY (VARIOUS POWERS). New Railways for Great Central Railway Company in Counties of Lancaster and York (West Riding); Tolls, &c.; Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Company to afford Facilities for Traffic; Stopping up and Diversion of Footpaths at Wath-upon-Dearne and Wombwell; Street Improvement in Lincoln by Great Central Railway Company and Corporation of Lincoln; Additional Lands for Great Central Railway Company in Counties of Buckingham, Denbigh, Lancaster, Leicester, Northampton, Stafford and York (West Riding); Additional Lands for Great Central Railway and North Lindsey Light Railways Companies, in the County of Lincoln (Parts of Lindsey); Closing of Level Crossings at Hexthorpe and Harwarden; Alteration of Powers as to Building at Hampstead; Stopping up and Diversion of Footpath at Aylesbury by the Metropolitan and Great Central Joint Committee and Agreements with Local Authority; Altering Site for Electrical Generating Station of Seaforth and Sefton Junction Railway Company and Additional Lands for that Company in County of Lancaster; Power to Seaforth Company to increase Rate of Interest payable out of Capital; Lease of Seaforth and Sefton Junction Railway to Great Central Railway Company; Additional Lands for Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway Company and further Provisions as to Surplus Lands; Compulsory Powers for Purchase of Lands and Execution of Works, Purchase of Parts only of Houses, &c.; Extinguishment of Rights of Way; Extension of Time for Sale of Great Central and Midland Committee's Surplus Lands; Revival of Powers and Extension of Time for Purchase of Lands and Construction of Works by Great Central, North Lindsey and Seaforth and Sefton Junction Railway Companies; Additional Capital for Great Central Railway Company and Humber Dock Company; Incorporation and Amendment of Acts and other Purposes.", The London Gazette (28199): 8904–8910, 24 November 1908
  195. ^ "HUMBER COMMERCIAL RAILWAY AND DOCK. Power to Humber Commercial Railway and Dock Company to make River Embankments at Immingham; Compulsory Purchase of Land; [...]", The London Gazette (28666): 9005–9006, 26 November 1912
  196. ^ "GRIMSBY CORPORATION (DOCK &c.).", The London Gazette (33442): 7798–7799, 27 November 1928

Maps and landmark coordinates edit

Map this section's coordinates using: OpenStreetMap
  1. ^ 53°34′02″N 0°05′06″W / 53.567135°N 0.085054°W / 53.567135; -0.085054 (West haven c.1341), West Haven, c.1341
  2. ^ 53°34′18″N 0°04′57″W / 53.571611°N 0.082539°W / 53.571611; -0.082539 (Old Dock, 1801), Old Dock, 1801
  3. ^ 53°34′33″N 0°05′13″W / 53.575954°N 0.086841°W / 53.575954; -0.086841 (Alexandra Dock, 1880 (Old Dock west extension)), Alexandra Dock, 1880 (Old Dock west extension)
  4. ^ 53°34′15″N 0°04′58″W / 53.570787°N 0.082883°W / 53.570787; -0.082883 (Corporation Bridge (1872)), Corporation Bridge (1872)
  5. ^ 53°34′59″N 0°04′13″W / 53.583185°N 0.070410°W / 53.583185; -0.070410 (Dock tower (Royal Dock locks central pier)), Dock tower (Royal Dock locks central pier)
  6. ^ 53°34′49″N 0°04′21″W / 53.580318°N 0.072563°W / 53.580318; -0.072563 (Royal Dock (1852)), Royal Dock (1852)
  7. ^ 53°34′54″N 0°03′56″W / 53.581588°N 0.065642°W / 53.581588; -0.065642 (No.1 Fish Dock (1857)), No.1 Fish Dock (1857)
  8. ^ 53°34′40″N 0°04′04″W / 53.577898°N 0.067701°W / 53.577898; -0.067701 (No.2 Fish Dock (1878)), No.2 Fish Dock (1878)
  9. ^ 53°34′44″N 0°03′45″W / 53.578991°N 0.062449°W / 53.578991; -0.062449 (No.3 Fish Dock (1934)), No.3 Fish Dock (1934)
  10. ^ 53°34′52″N 0°04′00″W / 53.581104°N 0.066676°W / 53.581104; -0.066676 (Grimsby Fish Market (1996)), Grimsby Fish Market (1996)
  11. ^ 53°34′36″N 0°04′40″W / 53.576671°N 0.077821°W / 53.576671; -0.077821 (Union Dock (1879)), Union Dock (1879)
  12. ^ 53°35′00″N 0°04′04″W / 53.58320°N 0.06787°W / 53.58320; -0.06787 (Marine Control Centre / VTS Watch Facility), Marine Control Centre / VTS Watch Facility (2016)

Sources edit

  • An Act for Widening, Deepening, Enlarging, Altering, and Improving the Haven and Town and Port of Great Grimsby, in the County of Lincoln, 1796
  • Beedham, Jeff (27 March 2013), "From coal to new cars", Grimsby Telegraph, retrieved 22 July 2015
  • Clark, E. H. (1864), "Description of the Great Grimsby (Royal) Docks", Minutes of the Proceedings, Institute of Civil Engineers, 24: 38–53, doi:10.1680/imotp.1865.23231
  • Dow, George (1985) [1959], Great Central, vol. 1
  • Dow, George (1985a) [1962], Great Central, vol. 2
  • Dow, George (1965), Great Central, vol. 3
  • Ellis, S.; Crowther, D.R., eds. (1990), Humber Perspectives – A region through the ages, Hull University Press, ISBN 0859584844
  • Neate, Charles (1849), "Description of the Coffer-dam at Great Grimsby", Minutes of the Proceedings, Institute of Civil Engineers, 9: 1–9, doi:10.1680/imotp.1850.24117
  • Oliver, George (1825), The Monumental Antiquties of Great Grimsby
  • Pevsner, Nikolaus; Harris, John; Antram, Nicholas (2002) [1989], "Lincolnshire", Pevsner Architectural Guides (2nd ed.), Yale University Press, ISBN 9780300096200
  • Shaw, George (1897), Old Grimsby
  • Skempton, A. W., ed. (2002), A Biographical Dictionary of Civil Engineers in Great Britain and Ireland, vol. 1 : 1500–1830, Institute of Civil Engineers / Thomas Telford, ISBN 072772939X
  • Symes, David, ed. (1987), Humberside in the Eighties, ISBN 0859581195
  • Symes, D. G.; Haughton, G. F. (June 1987), "Decline and continuity in the Humber fish industry", Geography, 72 (3): 241–242, JSTOR 40571626
  • Tidal Harbours Commission (1846), "Port of Grimsby", Second Report of the Commissioners, no. 222, pp. 424–426
  • Tidal Harbours Commission (1846a), "Report by J.M. Rendel Esq., C.E., on the best means of Improving the Port of Grimsby, and Estimate", Second Report of the Commissioners, no. 223, pp. 426–428
  • "New Fish Dock For Grimsby" (PDF), The Engineer, 151, pp.619–620; illus. p.618, 5 June 1931
  • "The New Fish Dock, Grimsby (No.I)" (PDF), The Engineer, 158, pp.558–561, illus. p.568, 7 December 1934
  • "The New Fish Dock, Grimsby (No.II)" (PDF), The Engineer, 158: 584–586, 14 December 1934
  • (DC/938/10/EMA) Demolition of existing buildings and erection of an operations and maintenance facility building with associated ancillary parking, open storage, fencing, gates, condensers, generator, fuel tank, LPG bulk tank and security floodlighting in connection with north sea wind farms (Planning application), North East Lincolnshire Council, 4 November 2010
  • (DC/453/12/EMA) Erection of an operations & maintenance building with warehouse and offices, ancillary storage building, car parking, open storage, fencing, accesses, 27m high (maximum) aerial, lighting and 10m high micro turbines (Planning application), North East Lincolnshire Council, 27 June 2012
  • (DC/401/13/EMA) Construction of new operations and maintenance facility to serve offshore windfarm (Planning application), North East Lincolnshire Council, 28 May 2013
  • (DC/578/13/WMA) Installation of new lock gates to West Lock of Royal Dock (Planning application), North East Lincolnshire Council, 17 July 2013
  • (DC/579/13/EMA) Installation of new pontoon berth in north-east corner of the Royal Dock adjoining quay side walls, including removal of steel section of C20 roll on / roll off ramp (Planning application), North East Lincolnshire Council, 17 July 2013

Further reading edit

  • "A two-hundred ton ice-making plant" (PDF), The Engineer, 109, p.168; illus. p.169, 174, 18 February 1910
  • "300-Ton Ice Factory at Grimsby" (PDF), The Engineer, 133: 71–3, 17 February 1922
  • "The Grimsby Ice Factory" (PDF), The Engineer, 155, pp.596–598; illus. p.602, 16 June 1933

External links edit

  • "Grimsby Fish Market", www.grimsbyfishmarket.co.uk

port, grimsby, located, south, bank, humber, estuary, grimsby, north, east, lincolnshire, trade, grimsby, dates, least, medieval, period, grimsby, haven, company, began, dock, development, late, 1700s, port, further, developed, from, 1840s, onwards, manchester. The Port of Grimsby is located on the south bank of the Humber Estuary at Grimsby in North East Lincolnshire Sea trade out of Grimsby dates to at least the medieval period The Grimsby Haven Company began dock development in the late 1700s and the port was further developed from the 1840s onwards by the Manchester Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway MSLR and its successors The port has had three main dock systems Port of GrimsbyView across No 3 dock slipways and No 1 dock to Dock tower and Humber 2007 Click on the map for a fullscreen viewLocationLocationGrimsbyCoordinates53 34 40 N 0 04 28 W 53 5777798 N 0 0743294 W 53 5777798 0 0743294StatisticsWebsitewww portofgrimsby com www abports co ukThe earliest dock or Old Dock was developed in the 1790s downriver from the medieval Haven on the outfall of the same water course in around 1880 it was expanded westwards and renamed Alexandra Dock being connected to the Royal Dock system by a short canal named the Union Dock From the 1880s the dock s focus was coal later timber From the 1970s onwards the dock has been used for large scale car importation The Royal Dock was developed from the 1840s onwards contemporary with the arrival of the railway it was built on a large area of land reclaimed from the Humber Estuary north east of the original town and harbour The dock s trade has included a wide variety of goods including coal timber and general merchandise The third dock system is the Fish docks all of which exit ed from the same lock s onto the Humber close to and east of the Royal Dock lock The first fish dock No 1 was built 1857 and expanded southward in 1878 with the addition of a second No 2 both were built within the land reclaimed as part of the Royal Dock development In 1934 a third fish No 3 dock substantially expanded the No 1 dock and reclaimed additional land from the Humber The Fish docks and nearby estate were devoted to the landing of fish and maintenance supply and repair of the Grimsby fishing fleet which grew into one of the largest in Britain The fishing industry collapsed in the 1970s due to outside factors The Grimsby Haven Company was re incorporated as the Grimsby Dock Company which amalgamated in 1846 with several railway companies into the MSLR later known as the Great Central Railway GCR The GCR and docks became part of the London and North Eastern Railway LNER during the 1923 Grouping In 1948 nationalisation formed the British Transport Commission from which British Transport Docks Board was split in 1962 Privatisation by the Transport Act 1981 formed Associated British Ports the present owner of the port As of 2015 the port is a major car importation location as well as an offshore wind farm servicing hub and handles other cargos including timber minerals metals and dry bulks Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 The Old Dock 1796 1880 1 2 1 Alexandra Dock 1880 1 3 Royal and Fish Docks 1 3 1 Background and construction of cofferdam 1846 48 1 3 2 Construction of Royal Dock 1849 1852 1 3 3 History of the Royal Dock 1852 present 1 3 4 Fish Docks 1857 1 3 4 1 No 1 Dock 1857 1 3 4 2 No 2 Dock 1878 1 3 4 3 No 3 Dock 1934 1 3 5 Grimsby Fish Market 1996 1 4 Union Dock 1879 1 5 Humber Commercial Railway and Dock c 1900 1 6 Grimsby River Terminal 2013 1 7 Marine Control Centre 2015 2 Port employment trade and tonnage 3 Other structures 3 1 Historic 3 2 Modern 4 See also 5 Notes 6 Acts 7 References 7 1 Maps and landmark coordinates 7 2 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory editEarly history edit Grimsby s development as a landing place and town has an underlying basis in the area s geography the combination of relatively compared to surrounding land high ground of over 16 feet 5 m near to the Humber and close to a water outfall The Haven 1 Grimsby has been documented as a landing place dating to at least the Viking Age According to 19th century writers Grimsby was referenced in medieval histories as the landing place of marauding Danish armies The haven is also reputed to be the landing place of the semi legendary figures Grim and Havelok in the town s founding myth Havelok the Dane written c 13th century 2 3 In the second year of the reign of King John 12th century he visited the town and conferred on its inhabitants the right that they should be exempt from toll and lastage stallage moorage haustage and passage in every town and seaport throughout England except the city of London the town was also granted the right of a ferry in the same year 4 Henry III granted the town a ferry across the Humber as well as a charter of merchandise 5 Records of trade with Scandinavian countries date to the 11th century with furs wool and falcons being traded Importation of pine and oil from Norway is recorded from the early 13th century grain was exported Fish and fishmongery in Grimsby are well documented as a part of trade and business from at least the late 12th century and continued as important until the 16th century 6 In the 13th century the people of Grimsby came into dispute with the people of the then thriving port town of Ravenserodd over the alleged hijacking either by persuasion or force of trade intended for Grimsby to the port of Ravenserodd An inquisition into the rivalry was held in 1290 by order of Edward II 7 Later during Edward II s war with France the Mayor and bailiffs were commanded to equip Grimsby ship place them under the command of James Kingston and then patrol the coast of eastern England capturing and impounding any French or allied vessels 8 nbsp The West Haven River Freshney and 18th century maltings 2008 The Haven and was prone to silting and in 1280 proposals were made to divert the River Freshney to scour the harbour By 1341 a new haven the West Haven had been constructed map 1 excavated from former pasture land 9 During the 14th and 15th century trade with Scandinavia declined in part due to Hansa competition whilst trade with the Low Countries increased during this period the port faced increased competition from the developing ports at Hull and Boston As continental trade decreased fishing and general coastal trade increased in importance for the port 10 Icelandic fishing and importation of timber from Norway took place but declined from the 15th to 17th centuries By the end of the 18th century the place had greatly decreased in importance as a port and many of what remained of the inhabitants got a living from the land The population had diminished from around 1 500 persons in 1400 to an estimated 850 in 1524 and 399 in the early 1700s de la Pryme visited in 1697 and noted the towns decline 11 Grimsby is at present but a little poor town not a quarter so great as heretofore Three things may be assign d to its decay First the destruction of the haven which was in former times a fine larg sic river That which destroy d it was the Humber s wearing away the huge cliff at Cleythorp and bringing it and casting it all into Grimsby haven or river and all along Grimsby coast to the north so that the river was not onely fill d thereby but also a huge bay on the north side of the town The second was the destruction of the religious houses there The third thing which occasiond it s decay was the rise of Hull which having first of all the priviledges and advantages above other towns and a fine haven to boot robbed them all not onely of all their traffic but also of their chief tradesmen de la Pryme 1697 12 De la Pryme noted efforts to unblock the haven on his visit 12 and in the same period work was underway to divert and use the Freshney to scour the West Haven 9 Parts of the haven are now listed structures 13 as are maltings on the quayside parts of which date to the late 1700s 14 The Old Dock 1796 1880 edit Great Grimsby Lincoln Harbour Act 1796Act of Parliament nbsp Parliament of Great BritainLong titleAn act for widening deepening enlarging altering and improving the haven of the town and port of Great Grimsby in the county of Lincoln Citation36 Geo 3 c 98DatesRoyal assent14 May 1796Plans to re engineer the haven and create a new dock were put forward from the late 1800s 15 Pickernell produced a plan for a dock in 1787 16 It was not until 1796 that an act named An Act for Widening Deepening Enlarging Altering and Improving the Haven and Town and Port of Great Grimsby 36 Geo 3 c 98 was enacted creating the Grimsby Haven company 17 The act noted that the River Haven at Grimsby was warped silted up preventing most ships docking transferring cargo subject to the state of the tides and so suggested widening deepening and straightening the haven installing a lock to impound water within the lock and redirecting the flow of the Freshney and of springs known as Blow Wells note 1 to scour and fill the lock allowing larger vessels reliable harbourage at the town The act sought permission to create a company to fulfill these task which would also be responsible for erection of wharfs warehouses maintenance tolls and so on and to gain authority for compulsory purchase of lands required for the works The acts also set out the regulation of the said company and gave the company certain rights to make bye laws relating to the operation of the dock The act permitted the raising of 20 000 and a further 10 000 in contingency 17 Grimsby Haven Navigation and Improvement Act 1799Act of Parliament nbsp Parliament of Great BritainLong titleAn act for enabling the Grimsby haven company to finish and complete the navigation of the said haven and for amending an act passed in the thirty sixth year of the reign of his present Majesty for widening deepening enlarging altering and improving the haven of the town and port of Great Grimsby in the county of Lincoln Citation39 Geo 3 c lxxOther legislationRepealed byGrimsby Docks Act 1845Status RepealedConstruction took place from 1797 to 1800 under John Rennie 18 George Joyce was initially resident engineer but was replaced by James Hollinsworth who was present 1800 to 1801 The dock construction required hollow dock walls on piled foundations which were designed in account of the weak ground conditions at the dock site 19 The cost of the works was 60 000 18 As built the locked canal was 1 5 miles 2 4 km long map 2 with a single lock 126 by 36 feet 38 by 11 m long by wide with a depth at the walls of 27 feet 8 2 m 20 The dock works were carried out under the shield of a coffer dam outside the new lock with extensive use of piling under the lock and wall constructions Use of piles was attempted under the lock pit bottom but the ground was too fluid for this to be successful and an inverted arch was employed instead 21 Further expansion was required and a further act the Grimsby Haven Navigation and Improvement Act 1799 39 Geo 3 c lxx was obtained 22 which allowed the construction of an expansion of the dock of 3 acres 1 2 ha The expansion was completed in 1804 20 The dock had a depth of water of 18 feet 5 5 m reducing to 14 feet 4 3 m towards the town and to 12 feet 3 7 m on the west branch of the dock 1846 silting required the dock to be periodically cleared which had been done in 1826 by hand and later in the 1840s by machine dredger of approximately 30 to 40 horsepower 22 to 30 kW Between 3 and 6 feet 0 91 and 1 83 m of mud was removed from the dock in 1826 23 After opening there was an initial growth of the town but from 1811 to 1841 the rate of expansion was no different from the rest of Lincolnshire 24 the port lacked any rail connection until the 1840s 25 By the 1850s the dock was involved in trade with the Baltic region including timber deal tar seeds bones and iron Dock fees were less than those in Hull 25 26 nbsp 1872 swing bridgeIn 1869 the Grimsby Improvement Act 1869 32 amp 33 Vict c x allowed the land west of the Old Dock to be developed and a bridge known as Corporation Bridge built across the dock 27 28 The bridge was constructed by Head Wrightson and the Teesdale Ironworks to the design of Charles Sacre The bridge was supported on concrete filled screw piles with two spans of 24 feet 7 3 m and four of 36 feet 11 m Situated between the two sets of spans was a horizontally turning swing bridge of 91 25 feet 27 81 m of asymmetric hogback plate girder design with a clear space when open of 45 feet 14 m 29 The bridge opened in 1872 30 In 1873 the Manchester Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway was enabled by an act 36 amp 37 Vict c lxxvii 31 to build a short line connecting from their line Great Grimsby and Sheffield Junction Railway near Great Coates to the Old Dock Logan and Hemingway obtained the contract to construct the line with a bid of 3 984 and construction began in November 1878 The line Great Coates branch opened 27 March 1879 32 note 2 In 1880 the dock was modernised and extended substantially to the west forming the Alexandra Dock A short canal dock the Union Dock was opened in 1879 connecting the Old Dock system to the Royal Dock system The dock s lock was closed in 1917 and later infilled 34 Alexandra Dock 1880 edit nbsp Grimsby Ordnance Survey 6 inch map Lincolnshire 22NE c 1887 Alexandra Dock extension centre left Royal and Fish docks top right In 1873 the dock owners the Manchester Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway acquired 105 acres 42 ha of land to the west of the Old Dock A scheme for dock creation at South Killingholme near Immingham by Charles Liddell was considered as an alternative but rejected 35 36 In December Logan and Hemingway became contractors for an expansion of the Old Dock 37 the works included an expansion of the 1789 Old Dock plus a large western arm 26 acres 11 ha extending from near the entrance 38 map 3 In honor of a visit by the Prince and Princess of Wales Edward VII and Alexandra of Denmark to the town in July 1879 the new dock was named Alexandra Dock The expanded dock was filled with water in November 1879 and reported complete in July 1880 39 Contracts for handling equipment and jetties and coal drops as well as a swing bridge across the Old Dock s lock were let soon after 39 The bridge connected rail lines from the Great Coates branch to lines on the west side of the Royal Dock 40 41 In the 1920s a replacement bridge across the dock Corporation Bridge was constructed to the design of Alfred C Gardner docks engineer of the LNER constructed by Sir William Arrol amp Co Glasgow The bridge consists of four spans one of which is an electrically powered lifting section on the Scherzer rolling lift principle The bridge was formally opened by the Prince of Wales Edward VIII on 19 July 1925 The bridge was listed in 1999 42 map 4 By the 1930s one of the two original coal drops was out of operation with coal handling at the port being transferred to new equipment at the Royal Dock By the 1950s both coal drops had been removed with the embankments remaining cargo handling at the dock had shifted to timber by the end of the 1960s the timber trade had also declined 43 In 1975 Grimsby was selected as the UK importation point for Volkswagen and a car terminal was opened on Alexandra Dock in 1975 44 Royal and Fish Docks edit Background and construction of cofferdam 1846 48 edit nbsp The new Royal and first Fish dock c 1864 showing left to right Humber low water mark basin piers docks railway and town up is south east James Rendel was requested to draw up plans for new docks in 1843 45 His design placed docks on the extensive mudflats between high and low water north of the town as planned 132 acres 53 ha were to be enclosed or reclaimed of which 27 acres 11 ha would be water within the docks with 20 acres 8 1 ha for wharfage and 85 acres 34 ha of land for other buildings The main dock was to be connected to the Humber by a basin of 11 acres 4 5 ha bounded by piers of open construction to the east and west each of approximately 600 feet 180 m The dock s entrance was to have two locks one large and one small 25 45 Rendel also proposed a canal connecting the old and new docks both for ships and to supply the new docks with fresh water 45 Part of the basis of the design was to expose the dock entrance to the flow of tides for the greatest amount of time to increase scouring of the entrance additionally Rendel supposed that the encroachment of the dock onto the Humber might constrict the flow of water in the vicinity of the Inner Roads to increase the flow and thence scouring so as to increase the depth of the navigable channel Rendel also suggested reclaiming and extending eastwards the shallows at the Burcom Bank shoal north west of Grimsby to further funnel the tidal flows 46 Total cost of the works was estimated at 500 000 25 of which 300 000 for the dock works and up to 200 000 for the breakwaters if carried out To make the plan economically sensible Rendel proposed that the inner expansion of the docks would be carried out piecemeal with only 7 acres 2 8 ha of docks built at the initial phase 47 At an inquest into the state of harbours undertaken by the Tidal Harbours Commission in 1846 the opinion was expressed that if Grimsby the new dock as well as better inland communications it would become the popular and natural fishing port for the east coast 48 The work was enabled by the Grimsby Docks Act 1845 8 amp 9 Vict c ccii 49 As part of the act the Grimsby Haven company was dissolved and the business re incorporated as the Grimsby Dock company 20 The company s plans were enabled by a close association with the Great Grimsby and Sheffield Junction Railway GG amp SJ a company planning to create railway lines from Grimsby and the north Lincolnshire coast to Gainsborough and connections with the main rail network The two companies shared several board members and a chairman the Grimsby Dock company voted to amalgamate with the GG amp SJ at its first general meeting 50 On 1 January 1847 the Manchester Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway Act 1846 9 amp 10 Vict c cclxviii amalgamated the Dock company the Sheffield Ashton under Lyne and Manchester Railway the Great Grimsby and Sheffield Junction Railway the Sheffield and Lincolnshire Junction Railway and the Sheffield and Lincolnshire Extension Railway companies into the Manchester Sheffield amp Lincolnshire Railway 51 52 Work on the dock began in 1846 to the designs of Rendel with Adam Smith as resident engineer 53 Contractors for the dock works were Hutching Brown and Wright 54 The initial main work was construction of a large cofferdam surrounding the worksite 53 The dam was constructed of three rows of wooden piles of Baltic yellow pine Memel fir 55 6 and 7 feet 1 8 and 2 1 m apart between 18 and 15 inches 460 and 380 mm square piledriven until hard clay was reached Piles were between 45 and 55 feet 14 and 17 m with some longer the outer row was inclined to the vertical at 1 in 24 The inner space was filed with chalkstone and clay for the first 5 feet 1 5 m then with puddled clay 56 The inside of the dam was buttressed by additional rows spaced every 25 feet 7 6 m of wall of closely piled wooden piles extending back 18 feet 5 5 m the intermediate space of wall was supported by horizontal diagonal struts from the inner walls to buttresses 57 The embankments to the east and west of the dam with were made with piled stones and clay 58 By 1848 an area of 138 acres 56 ha was enclosed from the sea A 20 feet 6 1 m wide gated opening on the east side allowed access for construction ships 58 The dam was approximately 1 600 feet 490 m long 59 with a construction cost of 29 per foot 60 The total length of dam wharves and embankments approached 1 5 miles 2 4 km 61 Contractor for the cofferdams was Messrs Lynn Liverpool 54 The work was described in a paper read to the Institution of Civil Engineers obtaining a favourable reception from its vice president Mr Cubitt said he could offer nothing except a general expression of admiration of the extent of the works as a dam it was the longest strongest the deepest and the soundest work of the kind he had ever seen Joseph Cubitt 1849 62 Construction of Royal Dock 1849 1852 edit 17 April 1849 Albert Prince Consort laid the first stone of the dock an 11 ton stone forming part of the structure of the lock gates 25 63 The enclosed area had been drained by two 35 horsepower 26 kW pumps on a number of occasions fresh water springs were encountered note 1 which were managed by enclosing the spring in a cast iron pipe and by surrounding the area with chalkstone 64 Two main locks were constructed adjacent to one another of 300 by 70 feet 91 by 21 m and 200 by 45 feet 61 by 14 m with the bases 6 and 6 75 feet 1 83 and 2 06 m below low water respectively The lock s foundations were excavated to 8 feet 2 4 m below the bottom of the locks supported on wooden piles 1 by 35 feet 0 30 by 10 67 m square by long and a bed of concrete The lock pit invert and supports for the lock gates were of stone 65 Each lock had a pair of outer pen gates and a single inner flood gates all built of timber reinforced by wrought iron 66 The dock s quaysides were built on chalk rubble filled brick arches parallel to the dock of approximately 27 feet 8 2 m width with the arches on piers of 6 feet 1 8 m width supported by piling with wider piers under areas expected to support the heaviest loads the walls facing the dock were faced with masonry 67 nbsp Dock hydraulic tower and locks 1999 Moving equipment for the dock gates was supplied by W Armstrong The hydraulic power supply for the equipment was a 200 feet 61 m high water tower Grimsby Dock tower charged by a 25 horsepower 19 kW horizontal engine 68 The hydraulic tower was built on the centre pier between the two locks of plain brick 28 feet 8 5 m square at the base map 5 Its water tank was located at 200 feet 61 m and contained 33 000 imperial gallons 150 000 L 40 000 US gal 69 The tower s architectural design was by J W Wild and was inspired by Italian buildings in particular the town hall of Siena Torre del Mangia in the Palazzo Pubblico 70 A 13 acres 5 3 ha tidal basin outside the locks was formed by two timber piers with an entrance 260 feet 79 m wide 71 The cost of the dock works to 1863 was estimated at 600 000 rising to 1 000 000 when accounting for the cost of purchase of the Old Docks Fish Dock and interest payments 72 The dock opened in 1852 24 map 6 On 18 March a banquet was held in the large lock pit and water was admitted on 22 March and the dock opened on 27 May 1852 The dock s railway lines of 2 miles 3 2 km which included lines for the Grimsby Docks railway station and Grimsby Pier railway station were completed by 1 August 1853 73 Queen Victoria and Albert Prince Consort visited Grimsby on 14 October 1854 arriving from Hull on the Royal Yacht Fairy being received at the Pier station A request for the new dock to be named Royal Dock in honour of the visit was given and accepted 74 History of the Royal Dock 1852 present edit Installations added after the opening of the dock included a graving dock and facilities for handling rail borne coal shipments 75 The two coal drops and rail lines were built over the far end of the dock on timber piers 76 the first was completed by 1856 at a cost of 3 435 the second at 3 500 soon after 77 The 350 feet 110 m graving dock was built east of the dock s lock with an entrance of 70 feet 21 m The design was by Adam Smith and was contracted to James Taylor Manchester for 32 000 in 1855 the work was completed by 1858 77 78 Initially a Cornish engine from Perran Foundry Cornwall was installed to fill the dock with water from wells but its use ended when the well s water supply failed 79 A short canal dock the Union Dock was opened in 1879 connecting the Old Dock system to the Royal Dock systemA large transit shed 900 by 178 feet 274 by 54 m was added to the west side of the dock opened March 1893 80 The shed was authorised 1890 at a cost of 23 500 and contracted to Pearson and Knowles Warrington 81 A new hydraulic coal hoist and sidings were added to the south west side of the dock in the last years of the 19th century at a cost of 11 000 the installation became operational in 1899 82 33 note 3 A Roll on roll off ramp was constructed in the north east part of the dock c 1966 83 In the 1970s an access road and bridge was built across the smaller lock restricting use of the lock 84 In 2013 DONG Energy selected the Royal Dock as an operation and maintenance centre for the Westermost Rough Wind Farm As part of the agreement new pontoons and lock gates were to be installed 85 86 In 2014 the lock gates at the dock were replaced by contractor Ravestein Netherlands The conversion away from gates partially supported by buoyancy lifted the opening restrictions to times of high water allowing 24hr operations 87 88 The floating pontoon berth was sited in the north east corner of the dock at the site of the 1966 roll on roll of ramp 89 The operations and maintenance centre was to be sited adjacent to the berth on the north east corner of the quayside 90 Parts of the dock s wall 91 the locks 92 93 the dock tower 94 and several nearby structures are all now listed structures 95 96 Fish Docks 1857 edit nbsp Fish docks Grimsby c 1890 In the 21st century also known as Grimsby Dock East 97 The Fish Docks consist of a number of docks sharing common lock entrances east of the Royal Dock built and expanded in stages from the mid 19th century onwards No 1 Dock 1857 edit The first fishing dock later No 1 Fish Dock was authorised in late 1854 and the construction contract awarded to Sissons at 6 996 the dock was completed early 1856 77 It was constructed to the east of the Royal Dock and incorporated the floodgates of the original cofferdam at lock gates The dock s lock was 80 by 20 feet 24 4 by 6 1 m with a depth at high spring tides of 15 5 feet 4 7 m As built the dock s sides were of chalkstone covered sloped clay at with a 1 in 3 rise at the south side a 400 feet 120 m timber wharf was built which was rail connected by a sunken line allowing direct loading of wagons from the wharf A timber pier was built to the east of the dock s entrance The dock was built at a cost of 12 000 with a water area of approximately 6 acres 2 4 ha 98 map 7 The new dock opened in 1857 Fishermen were encouraged to move to the new port the Grimsby Deep Sea Fishing Company had already been established 1854 for this purpose backed by Great Central Railway and later Great Northern Railway and Midland Railway 24 99 100 An ice house and worker s housing were also built in the 1850s to support the industry 101 The Fish Dock was extended in 1866 doubling the dock s area 38 A second lock and further quay space and warehousing were contracted to Logan and Hemingway c 1871 the firm also received the contract for a graving dock valued at 15 000 in 1872 The pier at the dock was lengthened in 1873 102 The lock and graving dock were operational by 1875 32 The fish market on the dock was destroyed by fire in June 1918 103 Contracts for new fish markets were awarded in 1919 one of 43 878 to A Jackaman amp Sons for work on the west side of the dock and one of 13 113 to G A Pillatt amp Son for the north side 104 Reconstruction of the northern end of the fish market on the west side of the dock was completed by January 1921 103 Reconstruction work on the fish market continued through 1922 to 1923 105 106 In 1934 a new dock No 3 was opened contiguous with No 1 expanded the water area of 13 acres 5 3 ha by 37 acres 15 ha No 2 Dock 1878 edit nbsp No 2 dock derelict dock buildings 2007 In 1876 Logan and Hemingway were awarded a 23 000 contract for an expansion from the first fish dock 32 The 11 acres 4 5 ha No 2 Fish Dock was opened in 1878 connecting at the south end of the extended No 1 Fish Dock 107 map 8 The dock was enlarged to 16 acres 6 5 ha at the southern end between 1897 and 1900 38 the expansion scheme included the addition of two coal hoists for loading H B James Grimsby was awarded the dock wall and excavations contracts 108 The dock expansion also necessitated the realignment of the Grimsby to Cleethorpes railway line to the south 81 33 As of 2015 A marina Meridian Quay Marina uses the northern half of No 2 dock 109 110 No 3 Dock 1934 edit nbsp 1934 diagram The Engineer No 3 Dock extension in the context of Nos 1 amp 2 Fish and Royal docksGreat Central Railway Grimsby Fish Dock Act 1912Act of Parliament nbsp Parliament of the United KingdomLong titleAn Act to authorise the Great Central Railway Company to enlarge their fish dock at Grimsby and for other purposes Citation2 amp 3 Geo 5 c clxvDatesRoyal assent13 December 1912Text of statute as originally enactedA need for an additional fish dock was seen from the early 20th century the Great Central Railway GCR obtained an act the Great Central Railway Grimsby Fish Dock Act 1912 2 amp 3 Geo 5 c clxv for a fish dock in 1912 111 the dock was to extend No 1 dock to the east onto land reclaimed from the Humber 112 The scheme was abandoned due to the eruption of the First World War after which the cost of the scheme has increased from the initial estimate of 0 5 million to 1 2 million as a result the scheme was not proceeded with Later the GCR s successor the London and North Eastern Railway LNER proposed to the Grimsby Corporation that if the Corporation built a dock the LNER would pay rent for use of the dock until such time as the cost of dock and loans were repaid at which point it would take over the dock this scheme was agreed with and the corporation applied for a bill in Parliament 113 The Grimsby Corporation Dock etc Act 1929 19 amp 20 Geo 5 c lxxxiv was passed in 1929 114 The dock was initially designed by chief dock engineer of the LNER J A Wickham who died April 1930 and was succeeded by A Tulip The firm of John Wolfe Barry and partners were appointed engineers Funding was aided by a governmental grant intended to reduce unemployment 115 The works included a reclamation of land to the north east of the original fish dock and a new river embankment of 6 800 feet 2 100 m extending east south east into the district of Cleethorpes enclosing substantial additional land in addition to the dock including areas for railway sidings and up to 39 acres 16 ha for industrial development The north quay of No 1 dock known as Campbell s Jetty was to be removed making the No 1 and new fish docks contiguous with one another the new dock water area was 37 acres 15 ha giving a total water area of the No 1 and No 3 docks of 50 acres 20 ha 115 Planned dock facilities included a 2 200 feet 670 m north quay rail fed coaling jetties on the east quay and outfitting jetties and slipways on the south east side 116 A third lock 45 feet 14 m wide was to be constructed adjacent east and parallel with the existing locks of the fish dock additionally the fish dock east entrance pier was to be removed and a new pier constructed on the east side of the new lock Other changes required included the rerouting of a sewer and its outfall channel further east 117 The estimated cost of the works was 1 418 million of which the Corporation was enabled to raise 1 25 million the remainder by the LNER who agreed to a thirty year lease on the dock The company of Sir Lindsay Parkinson was contracted to carry out the work 118 A E Tarrant was the resident engineer 119 Work on the dock began in November 1930 119 The diversion of sewer river embankment and steel sheet pile cofferdam for construction of the new lock were all complete by May 1932 120 The embankment was constructed primarily of tipped chalk faced on the seaward side with concrete blocks 121 Dock construction required excavation of approximately 1 000 000 cubic yards 760 000 m3 of material primarily by dragline excavator much of which was used to fill other areas of the newly enclosed land Spoil and slag from Scunthorpe was also used as fill on the reclaimed land 122 The new 45 ft lock was 240 feet 73 m long total with three gates It was built on 12 inches 300 mm square timber piles supporting a square bottomed concrete lock pit Blows note 1 underground springs were encountered when excavating the lock s west wall foundations undermining the work and causing the newly laid concrete to crack Work was delayed by remedial work to counter these springs consisting of sunken centrifugal pumps used to draw of the water temporarily reducing the local level of the water table The lock was faced with granite A pipe subway lined with cast iron segmental rings ran under part of the lock carrying services hydraulic water electricity The initially installed gates were of oak operated by hydraulically activated chains The new east pier was 500 feet 150 m long and constructed of timber on the west side part of the old pier was removed and a new 175 feet 53 m pier section added meeting the old at a V 123 Construction of the dock s quays was delayed due to the weak ground conditions encountered necessitation a partial redesign and increasing cost 124 note 4 The north and south quays were supported on 14 inches 360 mm square reinforced piles spaced laterally and longitudinally at a distance of 12 5 feet 3 8 m Larssen sheet piling was used at the rear of the quays with a tipped chalk bank behind The north quay showed movement before it was completed and so the quay bank was tied back to anchorages inserted into the river embankment Approximately 327 000 cubic feet 9 300 m3 of concrete 1 330 tons of steel reinforcement and 1 724 piles were used in the north and south quays combined 125 nbsp Fish docks No 1 and No 3 under construction c 1934 from the east Coaling stages and slipways left in foregroundThe east quay was built with a 1 in 3 slope retained by concrete sheet piling 126 and located three coaling stages supplied by the Mitchell Conveyor and Transporter Company each extended into the dock on a pier 127 At the south east side of the dock were slipways Three adjacent slipways were constructed with the machinery by Henderson and Nichol Aberdeen once lifted a ship would be moved sideways on a rail traverser onto an adjacent berth The easternmost slipway had two berths and was capable of lifting a maximum weight of 1 080 tons and a maximum ship length of 160 feet 49 m The other two slipways had lifting capacities of 600 tons the centre slipway had two berths the other three Slipway and yard foundations were constructed from reinforced concrete supported by concrete piles 128 Main road access to the dock was by a reinforced concrete bridge from Humber Street now Humber Bridge Street crossing the main Grimsby to Cleethorpes railway line by five main spans The works included the movement of existing rail sidings plus construction of new general and coaling sidings east of the dock 129 The dock was supplied with power from a 6 000 V supply from the LNER s power station at Immingham Electricity substations were supplied by Metropolitan Vickers and lighting by the General Electric Company Ltd 130 No 3 Fish Dock was opened 4 October 1934 by Sir Henry Betterton 131 map 9 In 2012 Centrica opened an operations and maintenance base on the north wall fish dock for use with the Lynn and Inner Dowsing Wind Farm and the Lincs Wind Farm 132 133 134 In 2013 as part of the arrangements to bring E on to the dock the dock s lock gates were modernised 135 136 In 2014 E on opened an operations and maintenance base for its Humber Gateway Wind Farm 137 138 139 140 In 2015 work to refurbish the 1935 boat repair slipways was initiated 141 Grimsby Fish Market 1996 edit nbsp Fish Dock and fish market 2003 In 1996 a new fish market Grimsby Fish Market was built on reclaimed land on a former fish dock No 1 142 map 10 The majority of the fish sold at the market was not landed at Grimsby but imported approximately two thirds was supplied from Icelandic fishers the remainder from other North Sea fishing nations 2006 The market handled 30 000 tons of fresh fish in 2006 approximately one third of the Grimsby total 143 Union Dock 1879 edit The Union Dock was designed as a short canal from the end of the Royal Dock to inner of the Old Dock 107 map 11 Logan and Hemingway were awarded the contract to build the dock with a bid of 81 000 102 Work on the dock began 30 August 1873 and the final stone was laid 11 July 1879 The construction was hampered by poor ground conditions leading to the weight if the dockwalls displacing the adjacent ground The total length of the dock including lock was 870 feet 270 m with a water area of 7 620 square yards 6 370 m2 the lock was 304 by 45 feet 93 by 14 m long by wide 144 Tannet Walker and Company were awarded a 3 677 contract for a hydraulically operated swing bridge across the dock 32 the bridge was 76 feet 23 m long carrying a single line of rail plus walkways 144 Total cost of the dock was 258 700 144 Union Dock was opened 22 July 1879 by the Prince and Princess of Wales Edward VII and Alexandra of Denmark 144 In the 1970s the canal was widened out as part of the arrangements to allow large car carriers into Alexandra Dock 43 Humber Commercial Railway and Dock c 1900 edit Main article Immingham Dock In 1900 the Humber Commercial Railway and Dock sought powers from parliament to build a new dock west adjacent to the Royal Dock and north of Alexandra Dock on the banks of the Humber 145 this development was passed in 1901 as the Humber Commercial Railway and Dock Act 1901 1 Edw 7 c ccii 146 The approach channel to the dock would have required extensive dredging which may have had negative consequences on the adjacent docks and as a consequence the Great Central Railway informed the promoters of the scheme it was to withdraw its support unless the scheme was changed to one better positioned on the Humber near Stallingborough nearer to a deep water channel 147 In 1903 the company submitted amended plans to replace the previous consented dock at Grimsby with a new construction at Immingham 148 149 passed in as the Humber Commercial Railway and Dock Act 1904 4 Edw 7 c lxxxv 150 This dock act led to the construction of the Immingham Dock Grimsby River Terminal 2013 edit In 2011 ABP received planning consent for a two berth terminal on the Humber outside the locked docks connected to the estate via a pier from the northwest corner of Royal Dock The terminal was designed to increase the car importation ship capacity from 800 to 30 000 cars Capital cost of the project was estimated at 25 1 million 151 Construction was undertaken by Graham construction The terminal consisted of an approach jetty approximately 820 feet 250 m long a floating concrete pontoon of 262 by 98 feet 80 by 30 m 16 feet 5 m deep weighing over 7 000 ton a 230 feet 70 m linkspan bridge connecting the pontoon to jetty and a finger pier dividing the two berthing positions The installation was constructed using 165 tubular steel piles between 30 0 and 55 9 inches 762 and 1 420 mm diameter up to 125 feet 38 m long 152 153 The terminal was completed and commissioned on 22 July 2013 154 The first vessel to dock at the terminal was the MV Ems Highway in July 2013 155 Official opening took place in September 2013 156 157 Marine Control Centre 2015 edit In 2016 ABP in its role as Statutory Harbour Authority for the Humber Estuary and for the ports of Immingham Grimsby Hull and Goole began work on relocating its Vessel Traffic Services VTS centre at Spurn Point to a new Marine Control Centre in Grimsby following deterioration of road access to Spurn The new control centre was to be located at the northern edge of the docks between Royal and Fish docks 158 159 160 161 map 12 Port employment trade and tonnage editAfter connection to the rail network coupled with expansion of the port and wider industrial development the tonnage handled through the port increased from around 160 kilotons in 1854 to nearly 3 800 kilotons in 1911 The opening and growth of Immingham Dock coupled with a wider decline in exports reduced tonnage to around 620 kilotons by 1938 After the Second World War the tonnage peaked at 1 500 kilotons in 1956 and declined to 640 kilotones by 1962 162 Growth of the Grimsby fishing fleet caused the tonnage of fish landed to increase from 0 188 kilotons in 1855 to 30 kilotons in 1871 with 302 vessels operating from the port Steam fishing began c 1881 and this coupled with diminishing North Sea fish stocks caused fishing to take place increasingly further afield in 1911 landings from UK boats at the port were 190 kilotons Demand was reduced in the interwar period though recovered to 198 kilotons in 1951 Grimsby landed approximately 20 of UK fish in this period 163 In the mid 1960s the fishing fleet employed directly several thousands of men with over 250 fishing vessels with many more people employed indirectly 13 million worth of fish was landed at the port in 1965 out of a UK total of 40 million 164 The problems of declining catches and increased fuel costs were exacerbated by the introduction of fishing zone limits Exclusive economic zones by several North Atlantic nations as well fishing limits introduced with the membership of the European Economic Community Landings dropped to 24 kilotons of fish by 1983 30 165 In 1976 prior to the collapse of the Humber fishing fleet the fishing industry employed 11 750 people in Grimsby including land based work representing 17 of employment 166 Grimsby s fishing industry was less affected than the Port of Hull due to a more diversified fishing fleet in comparison to the Hull fleet s reliance on deep water fishing Though fish continued to be imported into Grimsby for processing much of it began to arrive by road from other ports and not via the docks 167 168 Fish processing activities remained an important employment sector in the town after the collapse of the sea based fishing industry with over 6 000 persons employed in 1984 representing a nationally significant percentage of all fish processing based employment in the UK in the 1980s with extensive cold storage facilities on and off the dock estates 169 In the 1980s major freight imports included Volkswagen cars timber from the Scandinavia and Russia Danish food produce exports included manufactured goods and steel slab from Scunthorpe 170 Other structures editHistoric edit Many buildings were constructed on and around the dock estate servicing related industries The streets west of the fish dock was one such area with a concentration of fish processing related activities and businesses several buildings in the area are now listed due to their relationship to the fishing industry these include a fish processing and smoking factory brick late 19th century on Fish Dock Road 171 two fish smoking factories on Henderson Street one of yellow brick with red brick dressing late 19th century 172 the other in red brick with concrete tile roof late 19th and early 20th century 173 two fish processing and smoking factories on Sidebottom Street one dating to around 1900 in red brick with rendering with 20th century alterations 174 the other in yellow brick rendered dating to the early 20th century 175 a fish processing and smoking factory on Riby Street in yellow and red brick with render dating to the early 20th century 176 and a fish processing and smoking factory on Maclure Street dating from the interbellum converted from late 19th early 20th century smithy building 177 The fishing industry required ice to preserve the caught fish and Grimsby had a number of ice factories one of which also on the dock estate west of the fish dock now known as the Grimsby Ice Factory is now a listed building The building dates to the beginning of the 20th century is of red brick and was formerly the factory of the Grimsby Ice Company Limited 178 On the east side of Royal Dock the former flour mill Victoria Mills is also listed The building by architect Alfred Gelder was built in a Flemish style using red brick with blue brick and terracotta dressings it dates to builds in 1889 and 1905 179 Part of the mill has been converted into flat accommodation whilst as of 2015 the other part is unoccupied and derelict 180 The directly dock related Dock Offices and Customs House are also listed located near the junction of the Royal and Union docks close to Cleethorpes Road The Dock Offices were built in 1885 by Mills and Murgatroyd for the Grimsby Dock Company an H plan building of three storeys in brick with stone and terracotta dressing the Customs House dates to 1874 two storeys with five bays in red brick with stone and black brick dressings 181 182 183 To the front of the Dock Office is a bronze statue of Albert Prince Consort commissioned to William Theed in celebration of the Royal visit to the opening of the Union Dock in 1879 184 185 The sites of the Royal Dock cofferdam and of the Royal Dock s graving dock are also now listed as historic monuments by Historic England 186 187 nbsp Dock Offices 1885 statue of Albert Prince Consort 1879 to front 2007 nbsp The Old Customs House 1874 2007 nbsp Victoria Mills 2008 nbsp Grimsby ice factory 2008 Modern edit In 2013 a two year project of construction of a 2 2 mile 3 5 km flood wall around the docks began with an estimated cost of around 20 million 188 189 See also editCod War Industry of the South Humber BankNotes edit a b c Commonly known as blows or boils when encountered in dock construction freshwater springs are commonly found when excavating below the level of clay in the low lying areas adjacent to the Yorkshire and Lincolnshire wolds Also common on the north bank of the Humber See also Artesian Well On the 1889 OS map labelled as the M S L R Grimsby Docks Branch 33 The Brickpit Coal sidings were added on the Great Coates branch on the site of former timber yards 33 See earlier plans ie The Engineer amp 5 June 1931 illus p 618 Acts edit36 Geo 3 c 98 1796 An Act for Widening Deepening Enlarging Altering and Improving the Haven and Town and Port ofGreat Grimsby in the County ofLincoln a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Incorporation of the Grimsby Haven company 39 Geo 3 c lxx 1799 An Act for enabling the Grimsby Haven Company to finish and complete the navigation of the said haven and for amending an Act passed in the thirty sixth year of the reign of His present Majesty for widening deepening enlarging altering and improving the haven of the town and port of Great Grimsby in the county of Lincoln a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link 6 Geo 4 c 114 1825 An Act for amending and rendering more effectual two Acts of the thirty sixth and thirty ninth years of His late Majesty for improving the haven of Great Grimsby in the county of Lincoln a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link 8 amp 9 Vict c ccii 1845 Grimsby Docks Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Grimsby Haven company dissolved and undertaking transferred to Grimsby Dock company construction of further docks 190 9 amp 10 Vict c cclxviii 1846 Manchester Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link amalgamation of several railway companies and the Grimsby Dock company into the new Manchester Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway 191 32 amp 33 Vict c x 1869 Grimsby Improvement Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Construction on West Marshes a bridge over the Old Dock etc 27 36 amp 37 Vict c lxxvii 1873 Manchester Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Railway No 3 in the London Gazette announcement refers to the Great Coates branch 192 1 Edw 7 c 202 1901 Humber Commercial Railway and Dock Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Act for a nw dock in Grimsby 145 amended by 4 Edw 7 c 85 1904 Humber Commercial Railway and Dock Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link a proposed dock to be sited instead at a site in Immingham 149 further act in 1908 8 Edw 7 c 49 193 amended 1909 by the Great Central Railway Various Powers Act 1909 9 Edw 7 c 85 194 and Humber Commercial Railway and Dock Act 1913 3 amp 4 Geo 5 c 20 195 2 amp 3 Geo 5 c 165 1912 Great Central Railway Grimsby Fish Dock Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link 112 19 amp 20 Geo 5 c 84 1929 Grimsby Corporation Dock etc Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link enabling the construction of No 3 Fish dock 196 References edit Ellis amp Crowther 1990 pp 227 9 Oliver 1825 pp 10 15 86 89 Shaw 1897 pp 1 5 22 24 Oliver 1825 p 78 Oliver 1825 pp 78 9 Ellis amp Crowther 1990 pp 231 233 Shaw 1897 pp 79 86 Shaw 1897 p 89 a b Ellis amp Crowther 1990 p 236 Ellis amp Crowther 1990 pp 233 4 Ellis amp Crowther 1990 pp 235 6 Fig 17 1 p 237 a b The Diary of Abraham De La Pryme Surtees Society 1870 pp 154 6 Historic England GRIMSBY HAVEN LOCK AND DOCK WALL 58 METRES LONG ADJOINING TO WEST 1379856 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 20 July 2015 Historic England WEST HAVEN MALTINGS AND GARTH BUILDINGS 1379841 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 20 July 2015 Ellis amp Crowther 1990 pp 236 238 Skempton 2002 Pickernell Jonathan p 525 col 1 a b 36 Geo 3 c 98 1796 a b Skempton 2002 John Rennie p 566 Skempton 2002 Hollingsworth p331 col 2 a b c Priestly Joseph 1831 Grimsby Port or Haven Historical Account of the Navigable Rivers Canals and Railways of Great Britain p 325 Bentham Samuel 1847 Weale John ed On the mode of forming foundations under water and on bad ground Quarterly Papers on Engineering 6 Pt 1 4 9 39 Geo 3 c lxx 1799 Tidal Harbours Commission 1846 p 424 a b c Ellis amp Crowther 1990 p 238 a b c d e The land we live in a pictorial and literary sketch book of the British Islands vol 1 The Midland Counties and the East Coast of England 1856 p 346 Tidal Harbours Commission 1846 pp 424 5 a b Grimsby Corporation Powers as to Building amp c on West Marshes Construction of Bridge over Old Dock and of Foot Bridge over Manchester Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway The London Gazette 23442 5951 5952 17 November 1868 32 amp 33 Vict c x 1869 Swing Bridge at Great Grimsby PDF The Engineer 31 247 illus p 248 14 April 1871 a b Ellis amp Crowther 1990 p 241 36 amp 37 Vict c lxxvii 1873 a b c d Dow 1985a p 164 a b c d Ordnance Survey 1 2500 1889 90 1908 NE Lincs planning application amp DC 578 13 WMA Design and access statement 2 20 p 5 Dow 1985a p 163 Dow 1965 p 229 Dow 1985a p 165 a b c Ellis amp Crowther 1990 p 238 Fig 17 5 p 239 a b Dow 1985a p 167 Dow 1985a p 169 Ordnance Survey 1888 1889 1 2500 Historic England CORPORATION BRIDGE CORPORATION ROAD 1379432 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 20 July 2015 a b Beedham 2013 Symes 1987 p 101 a b c Tidal Harbours Commission 1846a p 426 Tidal Harbours Commission 1846a pp 426 7 Tidal Harbours Commission 1846a p 427 Tidal Harbours Commission 1846 p 426 8 amp 9 Vict c ccii 1845 Dow 1985 pp 84 6 Grimsby Haven Company The National Archives Retrieved 20 July 2015 9 amp 10 Vict c cclxviii 1846 a b Neate 1849 pp 1 2 a b Clark 1864 p 52 Clark 1864 p 39 Neate 1849 p 3 Neate 1849 pp 4 5 a b Neate 1849 pp 6 7 Neate 1849 p 10 Neate 1849 p 12 Clark 1864 p 38 Neate 1849 p 9 Dow 1985 pp 123 125 Clark 1864 p 41 Clark 1864 pp 41 43 Clark 1864 pp 44 45 Clark 1864 p 42 Plate 2 figs 4 6 Clark 1864 p 46 Plate 3 figs 18 19 Clark 1864 pp 50 51 Pevsner Harris amp Antram 2002 p 343 Clark 1864 p 47 Plate 3 figs 14 15 Appendix p 53 Clark 1864 pp 57 58 Dow 1985 pp 151 153 175 Dow 1985 pp 161 163 Clark 1864 pp 48 50 Clark 1864 pp 49 50 a b c Dow 1985 p 175 Clark 1864 pp 48 49 Plate 1 fig 2 Plate 3 figs 10 13 Clark 1864 p 51 The Railway Year Book 93 1899 a b Dow 1985a p 168 Dow 1985a p 171 NE Lincs planning application amp DC 578 13 WMA Design and access statement 2 23 p 6 Wind firm harbours a grand plan for Grimsby s Royal Dock Grimsby Telegraph 26 February 2013 Retrieved 20 July 2015 New lock gates for dock as Dong Energy commits to Grimsby Grimsby Telegraph 13 December 2013 Retrieved 20 July 2015 100 jobs as Danish energy giant Dong commits to Grimsby for offshore wind operations and maintenance Grimsby Telegraph 11 December 2013 Retrieved 20 July 2015 NE Lincs planning application amp DC 578 13 WMA Design and access statement 3 10 3 13 p 8 Laister David 25 September 2014 VIDEO AND PICTURES Grimsby s new Royal Dock lock gates installed as renewables revolution further embraced with 5m investment Grimsby Telegraph Retrieved 20 July 2015 NE Lincs planning application amp DC 579 13 EMA Design and access statement 3 04 3 09 p 7 8 NE Lincs planning application amp DC 401 13 EMA Design and Access statement Historic England QUAYSIDE WALLS AT ROYAL DOCK 1379867 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 20 July 2015 Historic England EAST LOCK TO ROYAL DOCK INCLUDING RAILINGS AND BOLLARDS 1379868 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 20 July 2015 Historic England WEST LOCK TO ROYAL DOCK INCLUDING RAILINGS AND BOLLARDS 1379869 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 20 July 2015 Historic England THE DOCK TOWER 1379870 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 20 July 2015 Historic England HYDRAULIC ACCUMULATOR TOWER TO WEST OF THE DOCK TOWER 1379871 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 20 July 2015 Historic England LOCK KEEPERS OFFICE 3 METRES EAST OF THE HYDRAULIC TOWER 1379872 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 20 July 2015 Hall Katie 29 October 2013 Grimsby Harnessing the power of renewable energy BBC News Humberside Retrieved 20 July 2015 Clark 1864 pp 51 52 Plate 1 fig 2 Plate 3 figs 16 17 Greaves John Neville 2005 Sir Edward Watkin 1819 1901 Last of the Railway Kings p 162 Dow 1985 p 176 Dow 1985 pp 176 177 a b Dow 1985a p 162 a b Great Central PDF The Engineer 131 8 7 January 1921 Dow 1965 p 337 Grimsby PDF The Engineer 133 17 6 January 1922 Humber Ports PDF The Engineer 135 29 12 January 1923 a b Ellis amp Crowther 1990 Fig 17 5 p 239 Dow 1985a pp 168 171 Meridian Quay Marina www harbourguides com Retrieved 23 July 2015 Reeds Nautical Almanac 2015 Adlard Coles Nautical 2014 p 56 ISBN 9781472906991 2 amp 3 Geo 5 c 165 1912 a b GREAT CENTRAL RAILWAY GRIMSBY FISH DOCK Construction of Fish Dock Extension at Grimsby Reclamation of Land from the River Humber Power to Dredge Compulsory Purchase of Lands and Buildings The London Gazette 28590 1927 1929 15 March 1912 The Engineer amp 5 June 1931 p 619 cols 1 2 19 amp 20 Geo 5 c 84 1929 a b The Engineer amp 5 June 1931 p 619 col 2 The Engineer amp 5 June 1931 p 619 col 3 p 620 col 1 illustration p 619 The Engineer amp 5 June 1931 p 620 cols 1 2 illustration p 619 The Engineer amp 5 June 1931 p 620 col 2 a b The Engineer amp 7 December 1934 p 559 col 1 The Engineer amp 7 December 1934 p 559 cols 2 3 The Engineer amp 7 December 1934 p 559 fig 4 p 560 cols 1 2 The Engineer amp 7 December 1934 p 560 cols 2 3 The Engineer amp 7 December 1934 p 560 col 3 p 561 col 1 p 559 figs 8 9 The Engineer amp 14 December 1934 p 584 col 1 p 585 col 3 The Engineer amp 14 December 1934 p 584 cols 1 2 The Engineer amp 14 December 1934 p 584 cols 2 3 The Engineer amp 14 December 1934 p 585 cols 1 3 p 586 col 1 p 585 fig 16 The Engineer amp 14 December 1934 p 584 col 3 p 585 col 1 The Engineer amp 14 December 1934 p 585 col 1 The Engineer amp 14 December 1934 p 585 cols 2 3 The Engineer amp 7 December 1934 p 558 NE Lincs planning application amp DC 938 10 EMA Planning statement Jobs boost in Grimsby docks wind farm project BBC News Humberside 4 May 2011 Retrieved 20 July 2015 Beautiful friendship between Centrica and Grimsby toasted at launch of wind energy facility Grimsby Telegraph 6 September 2012 Retrieved 20 July 2015 Official launch of new lock gates to enable further O amp M opportunities North East Lincolnshire Council March 2013 Retrieved 20 July 2015 Energy firm s base is great for Grimsby Scunthorpe Telegraph 9 March 2013 Retrieved 20 July 2015 NE Lincs planning application amp DC 453 12 EMA Planning statement E ON to create 50 Grimsby jobs in Humber Gateway wind farm project Grimsby Telegraph 5 July 2012 Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 20 July 2015 E ON Humber Gateway Grimsby www isgplc com Retrieved 20 July 2015 Eric Pickles E on s 4m investment in Grimsby wind farm facility puts Humber in the driving seat Grimsby Telegraph 2 August 2014 Retrieved 20 July 2015 Slipways project boost for Port of Grimsby aids offshore industry Grimsby Telegraph 9 July 2015 Retrieved 20 July 2015 Grimsby fish docks redevelopment World Fishing IPC Industrial Press 45 1 6 33 1996 Retrieved 20 July 2015 Cantillon Sophie Prenkert Frans Hakansson Hakan Folgesvold Atle Haugnes Svanhild 2006 8 The UK Seafood Network recent developments and the role of Norwegian exporters In Asche Frank ed Primary Industries Facing Global Markets The Supply Chains and Markets for Norwegian Food and Forest Products Copenhagen Business School Press DK p 205 ISBN 978 87 630 0192 2 a b c d Opening of the New Dock at Grimsby PDF Engineering 28 p 79 cols 2 3 25 July 1879 Retrieved 20 July 2015 a b Humber Commercial Railway and Dock Incorporation of Company Power to make Dock and Entrance with Sea Walls Railways and other Works adjoining the existing Docks at Grimsby The London Gazette 27249 7423 7426 23 November 1900 1 Edw 7 c 202 1901 Humber Commercial Dock Grimsby PDF The Engineer 94 168 15 August 1902 retrieved 20 July 2015 HUMBER COMMERCIAL RAILWAY AND DOCK New Dock with Entrance into River Hu mber with River Walls Piers or Jetties Railways and other Works in connection therewith near Grimsby in the county of Lincoln Powers as to diverting Water and Dredging Power to stop up and divert Drain and Outfall at Immingham Haven Abandonment of Works authorized by Humber Commercial Railway and Dock Act 1901 Cancellation of existing Agreements and Arrangements and release of Money Deposit under Act of 1901 Application of provisions of Act of 1901 to New Works General Dock and other Powers The London Gazette 27496 7411 7413 18 November 1902 a b HUMBER COMMERCIAL RAILWAY AND DOCK New Dock with Entrance into River Humber with River Embankments Walls Piers Jetties Railways and other Works in connection therewith near Grimsby in the County of Lincoln Powers as to taking and diverting Water and Dredging Power to stop up and divert Drains Abandonment of Works authorized by Humber Commercial Railway and Dock Act 1901 Cancellation of existing Agreements and Arrangements and release of Money Deposit under Act of 1901 Application of Provisions of Act of 1901 to New Works The London Gazette 27619 7621 7623 24 November 1903 4 Edw 7 c 85 1904 ABPA Holdings Limited Results of year ended 31st December 2011 PDF ABP Major Projects Grimsby River Terminal Project p 12 Retrieved 20 July 2015 Grimsby River Terminal www graham co uk Retrieved 20 July 2015 ABP s Grimsby River Terminal reaches milestone with delivery of custom built pontoon www abports co uk press release 28 May 2013 Retrieved 20 July 2015 ABPA Holdings Limited 2013 Year End Summary PDF ABP Major capital expenditure projects Grimsby River Terminal p 18 Retrieved 20 July 2015 First vessel discharges at 26m car terminal Grimsby Telegraph 24 July 2013 Retrieved 20 July 2015 26m Grimsby River Terminal officially launched Grimsby Telegraph 20 September 2013 Retrieved 20 July 2015 Opening of Grimsby River Terminal a momentous day Grimsby Telegraph 21 September 2013 Retrieved 20 July 2015 DM 0555 15 SCR VTS Watch Facility and Grimsby Marine Control Centre planning application North East Lincolnshire Council 27 June 2015 Retrieved 2 February 2016 ABP invests in Grimsby control centre www portstrategy com 29 January 2016 Retrieved 2 February 2016 Pantry Lindsay 28 January 2016 Spurn Point deterioration sparks 5m maritime base move Yorkshire Post Retrieved 2 February 2016 Grimsby Marine Control Centre build starts as vessel traffic booms Grimsby Telegraph 28 January 2016 Retrieved 2 February 2016 Ellis amp Crowther 1990 pp 238 240 Ellis amp Crowther 1990 pp 240 241 Beddis Rex Antony 1972 1967 Focal Points in Geography Case Studies 1 CUP Archive p 22 ISBN 0340074175 Symes 1987 pp 24 5 Symes 1987 p 23 Symes amp Haughton 1987 Symes 1987 pp 23 26 Symes 1987 pp 30 101 Symes 1987 pp 101 2 Historic England MTL MEDAL FISHERIES FISH PROCESSING AND SMOKING FACTORY 1379834 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 22 July 2015 Historic England FISH SMOKING FACTORY QUALITY FISH COMPANY 1379847 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 22 July 2015 Historic England PETERSONS FISH PROCESSING AND SMOKING FACTORY 1379848 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 22 July 2015 Historic England FISH PROCESSING AND SMOKING FACTORY GH ABERNETHIE LIMITED 1379882 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 22 July 2015 Historic England FISH PROCESSING AND SMOKING FACTORY KEITH GRAHAM LIMITED 1379883 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 22 July 2015 Historic England RUSSELL FISH PROCESSING AND SMOKING FACTORY RUSSELL FISH CURING COMPANY LIMITED 1379908 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 22 July 2015 Historic England Alfred Enderby Ltd Fish Smoking and Processing Factory 1402339 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 22 July 2015 Historic England THE GRIMSBY ICE FACTORY INCLUDING RAILINGS 1379842 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 22 July 2015 Historic England VICTORIA MILLS VICTORIA STREET NORTH 1379892 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 22 July 2015 Victoria Mills building to undergo urgent repair work Grimsby Telegraph 25 June 2015 retrieved 22 June 2015 Historic England DOCK OFFICES 1379873 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 22 July 2015 Historic England THE CUSTOMS HOUSE AND ATTACHED RAILINGS 1379417 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 22 July 2015 Pevsner Harris amp Antram 2002 p 342 Dow 1985a pp 165 166 Historic England STATUE OF PRINCE ALBERT IN FRONT OF DOCK OFFICES 1379874 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 21 September 2015 Historic England Coffer Dam at Grimsby Dock 1543046 Research records formerly PastScape Retrieved 22 July 2015 Historic England Site of Graving Dock 1543074 Research records formerly PastScape Retrieved 22 July 2015 14 5m flood defences in Grimsby BBC News Humberside 7 February 2013 retrieved 20 July 2015 Grimsby flood alleviation work to start BBC News Humberside 10 August 2013 retrieved 20 July 2015 NOTICE is hereby given The London Gazette 20401 3801 8 November 1844 Sheffield Ashton under Lyne and Manchester Railway Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway Great Grimsby and Sheffield Junction Railway Grimsby Docks Huddersfield and Manchester Railway and Canal Amalgamation The London Gazette 20542 6155 6 25 November 1845 Manchester Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway Additional Powers Construction of New Railways in the Counties of Lancaster Lincoln and York The London Gazette 23922 5495 6 22 November 1872 HUMBER COMMERCIAL RAILWAY AND DOCK Power to Humber Commercial Railway and Dock Company to Make a New Road and Road Diversions Compulsory Purchase of Additional Lands at South Killingholme and Immingham by Humber Dock Company and Great Central Railway Company Revival and Extension of Time for Compulsory Purchase of Lands for Humber Commercial Dock Undertaking The London Gazette 28083 8239 8240 26 November 1907 GREAT CENTRAL RAILWAY VARIOUS POWERS New Railways for Great Central Railway Company in Counties of Lancaster and York West Riding Tolls amp c Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Company to afford Facilities for Traffic Stopping up and Diversion of Footpaths at Wath upon Dearne and Wombwell Street Improvement in Lincoln by Great Central Railway Company and Corporation of Lincoln Additional Lands for Great Central Railway Company in Counties of Buckingham Denbigh Lancaster Leicester Northampton Stafford and York West Riding Additional Lands for Great Central Railway and North Lindsey Light Railways Companies in the County of Lincoln Parts of Lindsey Closing of Level Crossings at Hexthorpe and Harwarden Alteration of Powers as to Building at Hampstead Stopping up and Diversion of Footpath at Aylesbury by the Metropolitan and Great Central Joint Committee and Agreements with Local Authority Altering Site for Electrical Generating Station of Seaforth and Sefton Junction Railway Company and Additional Lands for that Company in County of Lancaster Power to Seaforth Company to increase Rate of Interest payable out of Capital Lease of Seaforth and Sefton Junction Railway to Great Central Railway Company Additional Lands for Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway Company and further Provisions as to Surplus Lands Compulsory Powers for Purchase of Lands and Execution of Works Purchase of Parts only of Houses amp c Extinguishment of Rights of Way Extension of Time for Sale of Great Central and Midland Committee s Surplus Lands Revival of Powers and Extension of Time for Purchase of Lands and Construction of Works by Great Central North Lindsey and Seaforth and Sefton Junction Railway Companies Additional Capital for Great Central Railway Company and Humber Dock Company Incorporation and Amendment of Acts and other Purposes The London Gazette 28199 8904 8910 24 November 1908 HUMBER COMMERCIAL RAILWAY AND DOCK Power to Humber Commercial Railway and Dock Company to make River Embankments at Immingham Compulsory Purchase of Land The London Gazette 28666 9005 9006 26 November 1912 GRIMSBY CORPORATION DOCK amp c The London Gazette 33442 7798 7799 27 November 1928 Maps and landmark coordinates edit Map this section s coordinates using OpenStreetMapDownload coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates 53 34 02 N 0 05 06 W 53 567135 N 0 085054 W 53 567135 0 085054 West haven c 1341 West Haven c 1341 53 34 18 N 0 04 57 W 53 571611 N 0 082539 W 53 571611 0 082539 Old Dock 1801 Old Dock 1801 53 34 33 N 0 05 13 W 53 575954 N 0 086841 W 53 575954 0 086841 Alexandra Dock 1880 Old Dock west extension Alexandra Dock 1880 Old Dock west extension 53 34 15 N 0 04 58 W 53 570787 N 0 082883 W 53 570787 0 082883 Corporation Bridge 1872 Corporation Bridge 1872 53 34 59 N 0 04 13 W 53 583185 N 0 070410 W 53 583185 0 070410 Dock tower Royal Dock locks central pier Dock tower Royal Dock locks central pier 53 34 49 N 0 04 21 W 53 580318 N 0 072563 W 53 580318 0 072563 Royal Dock 1852 Royal Dock 1852 53 34 54 N 0 03 56 W 53 581588 N 0 065642 W 53 581588 0 065642 No 1 Fish Dock 1857 No 1 Fish Dock 1857 53 34 40 N 0 04 04 W 53 577898 N 0 067701 W 53 577898 0 067701 No 2 Fish Dock 1878 No 2 Fish Dock 1878 53 34 44 N 0 03 45 W 53 578991 N 0 062449 W 53 578991 0 062449 No 3 Fish Dock 1934 No 3 Fish Dock 1934 53 34 52 N 0 04 00 W 53 581104 N 0 066676 W 53 581104 0 066676 Grimsby Fish Market 1996 Grimsby Fish Market 1996 53 34 36 N 0 04 40 W 53 576671 N 0 077821 W 53 576671 0 077821 Union Dock 1879 Union Dock 1879 53 35 00 N 0 04 04 W 53 58320 N 0 06787 W 53 58320 0 06787 Marine Control Centre VTS Watch Facility Marine Control Centre VTS Watch Facility 2016 Sources edit An Act for Widening Deepening Enlarging Altering and Improving the Haven and Town and Port ofGreat Grimsby in the County ofLincoln 1796 Beedham Jeff 27 March 2013 From coal to new cars Grimsby Telegraph retrieved 22 July 2015 Clark E H 1864 Description of the Great Grimsby Royal Docks Minutes of the Proceedings Institute of Civil Engineers 24 38 53 doi 10 1680 imotp 1865 23231Dow George 1985 1959 Great Central vol 1 Dow George 1985a 1962 Great Central vol 2 Dow George 1965 Great Central vol 3 Ellis S Crowther D R eds 1990 Humber Perspectives A region through the ages Hull University Press ISBN 0859584844 Neate Charles 1849 Description of the Coffer dam at Great Grimsby Minutes of the Proceedings Institute of Civil Engineers 9 1 9 doi 10 1680 imotp 1850 24117Oliver George 1825 The Monumental Antiquties of Great Grimsby Pevsner Nikolaus Harris John Antram Nicholas 2002 1989 Lincolnshire Pevsner Architectural Guides 2nd ed Yale University Press ISBN 9780300096200 Shaw George 1897 Old Grimsby Skempton A W ed 2002 A Biographical Dictionary of Civil Engineers in Great Britain and Ireland vol 1 1500 1830 Institute of Civil Engineers Thomas Telford ISBN 072772939X Symes David ed 1987 Humberside in the Eighties ISBN 0859581195 Symes D G Haughton G F June 1987 Decline and continuity in the Humber fish industry Geography 72 3 241 242 JSTOR 40571626 Tidal Harbours Commission 1846 Port of Grimsby Second Report of the Commissioners no 222 pp 424 426 Tidal Harbours Commission 1846a Report by J M Rendel Esq C E on the best means of Improving the Port of Grimsby and Estimate Second Report of the Commissioners no 223 pp 426 428 New Fish Dock For Grimsby PDF The Engineer 151 pp 619 620 illus p 618 5 June 1931 The New Fish Dock Grimsby No I PDF The Engineer 158 pp 558 561 illus p 568 7 December 1934 The New Fish Dock Grimsby No II PDF The Engineer 158 584 586 14 December 1934 DC 938 10 EMA Demolition of existing buildings and erection of an operations and maintenance facility building with associated ancillary parking open storage fencing gates condensers generator fuel tank LPG bulk tank and security floodlighting in connection with north sea wind farms Planning application North East Lincolnshire Council 4 November 2010 DC 453 12 EMA Erection of an operations amp maintenance building with warehouse and offices ancillary storage building car parking open storage fencing accesses 27m high maximum aerial lighting and 10m high micro turbines Planning application North East Lincolnshire Council 27 June 2012 DC 401 13 EMA Construction of new operations and maintenance facility to serve offshore windfarm Planning application North East Lincolnshire Council 28 May 2013 DC 578 13 WMA Installation of new lock gates to West Lock of Royal Dock Planning application North East Lincolnshire Council 17 July 2013 DC 579 13 EMA Installation of new pontoon berth in north east corner of the Royal Dock adjoining quay side walls including removal of steel section of C20 roll on roll off ramp Planning application North East Lincolnshire Council 17 July 2013Further reading edit A two hundred ton ice making plant PDF The Engineer 109 p 168 illus p 169 174 18 February 1910 300 Ton Ice Factory at Grimsby PDF The Engineer 133 71 3 17 February 1922 The Grimsby Ice Factory PDF The Engineer 155 pp 596 598 illus p 602 16 June 1933External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Port of Grimsby Grimsby Fish Market www grimsbyfishmarket co uk Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Port of Grimsby amp oldid 1179323065 Alexandra Dock, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.