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Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company

The Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company, Limited was a Scottish shipbuilding company in the Govan area on the Clyde in Glasgow. Fairfields, as it is often known, was a major warship builder, turning out many vessels for the Royal Navy and other navies through the First World War and the Second World War. It also built many transatlantic liners, including record-breaking ships for the Cunard Line and Canadian Pacific, such as the Blue Riband-winning sisters RMS Campania and RMS Lucania. At the other end of the scale, Fairfields built fast cross-channel mail steamers and ferries for locations around the world. These included ships for the Bosporus crossing in Istanbul and some of the early ships used by Thomas Cook for developing tourism on the River Nile.

Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company
TypePublic company
IndustryShipbuilding
PredecessorRandolph, Elliott and Co.
Randolph, Elder and Co.
John Elder & Co.
Founded1834
Defunct1968
FateMerged with others to form Upper Clyde Shipbuilders
SuccessorGovan Shipbuilders
HeadquartersGovan, Scotland, UK
Key people
Charles Randolph
John Elder
Sir William Pearce
Sir James Lithgow
Sir Alexander Kennedy
ProductsNaval ships
Merchant ships
Ocean liners
Marine engines
ParentNorthumberland Shipbuilding Group (1919–1935)
Lithgows (1935–1965)

John Elder & Co and predecessors

Millwright Randolph & Elliott

Charles Randolph founded the company as Randolph & Co. He had been an apprentice at the Clyde shipyard of Robert Napier, and at William Fairbairn & Sons in Manchester. With the knowledge that he acquired, he started as a millwright in partnership with his cousin Richard S. Cunliff,[1] who managed the commercial side. By 1834 it built engines and machinery in the Tradeston district of Glasgow.[2] It was the first serious local manufacturer of cog and other large wheels for driving machinery, and soon became famous for accuracy.[3]

In 1839 Mr Elliott joined the firm and it became known as Randolph, Elliott & Co. Elliott died shortly after becoming a partner.[3]

Randolph, Elder and Co starts to build ship engines

In 1852 the company became Randolph, Elder and Company when John Elder (1824-1869) joined the business.[4] Elder had a natural talent for engineering and had also worked at the Napier shipyard. It enabled the company to start diversifying into marine engineering. In this field, the company would acquire world fame. Its skills in this field also enabled it to become one of the biggest shipbuilders in the world. The story is closely connected to the application of the compound steam engine for marine use, in which the firm played a crucial role. With regard to the compound engine two specific phases can be discerned: 'low' pressure compound engines and 'high' pressure compound engines.

The compound engine with low (as it would later be called) pressure would give Randolph, Elder and Co its first renown for economic compound engines. The company's attempts centred on trying to prevent energy loss due to friction and premature condensation of steam. In July 1854 the screw steamer Brandon was fit with engines by Randolph, Elder & Co. It had a vertical geared compound engine with a patented (January 1853) arrangement of the cylinders. The crankshaft was turned by two opposite cranks (arms). One was driven by the high-pressure cylinder, the other by the low-pressure cylinder, with the pistons always moving in opposite directions. Brandon, a vessel of about 800 tons and 800 ihp made her trials in July 1854. She had a coal consumption of about 3.25 lbs per ihp per hour. At the time the lowest rate of consumption in other steamers was about 4-4.5 lbs per ihp per hour. The merits of the engine of Brandon were not enough to persuade others, and from 1854 till about 1866 Randolph, Elder and Co were the only engineers who made compound engines under their various patents.[5]

The Pacific Steam Navigation Company did become an enthusiastic customer. In 1855-1856 it operated on the west coast of South America. In that area, fuel was imported from Britain and therefore more costly. When the Crimean War broke out, freight tariffs increased to the point that the price of coal almost doubled there. The directors then conferred with the company, resulting in the 'double-cylinder engine'.[6] Inca and Valparaiso were paddle-steamers which got this engine, that got patented in March 1856. Construction of that for Inca was started in May 1856. It had two pairs of cylinders, lying so their piston rods were at a 60-90 degree angle. Each pair consisted of a high- and low-pressure cylinder lying next to each other, so they could easily exchange steam. Their pistons moved in opposite directions and drove one crank, which was attached to the crankshaft opposite the crank of the other pair. This gave the optimal balance of driving forces that could be attained for this number of cylinders. Furthermore, the cylinders were 'jacketed' at the top and bottom.[6] The jacket heated the cylinder from the outside to prevent condensation in the cylinder. It had been invented by James Watt,[7] but the company was the first to re-apply it, probably because it first understood its purpose. The company then supplied more double-cylinder engines, but with the cylinders completely jacketed. Admiral by Robert Napier, made her trial in June 1858.[8] Another ship with the same engine was Callao built by John Reid in 1858. On trials fuel consumption for these ships was: Inca 2.5 lbs/ihp/h, Callao 2.7 lbs/ihp/h, Valparaiso and Admiral 3 lbs/ihp/h. It amounted to a saving of 30-40 per cent, and this was maintained later on. It made it possible to continue steam navigation on the Pacific Ocean with profit. In fact, in 1858 the Pacific Steam Navigation Company had 7–8 years old traditional machinery removed from three of her large steamers, and replaced by compound engines. It saved 40% in fuel and 30 feet of space amidships[9] because less space was needed for coal.

From 1854 till about 1866 Randolph, Elder & Co. constructed 18 sets of paddle engines and 30 sets of screw engines, all compound. A highlight was the conversion of the frigate HMS Constance to steam propulsion in 1863, and her race against two frigates with engines by John Penn and Sons and Maudslay, Sons and Field. In 1860 the company started to use surface condensation instead of the jet condenser. In 1862 it increased steam pressure to 40 lbs per square inch.[10]

Starts to build ships

In 1858 the company acquired the Govan Old Shipyard,[2] and diversified into shipbuilding. The first ship was built in 1861 as No 14. Macgregor Laird was built for the African Steamship Company.[11] Other ships soon followed, and the business moved to a new yard at the former Fairfield Farm at the Govan riverside in 1864. From 1861-1866 59 ships were built.[12]

The general breakthrough of the compound engine was not affected by Randolph, Elder & Co., but by Alfred Holt. Holt succeeded in getting the Board of Trade to lift the ban on boilers with a pressure higher than 25 lbs per square inch (psi). The use of high-pressure steam made the compound engine far more effective, and Randolph, Elder & Co. quickly adjusted. It allowed the construction of a far simpler two-cylinder compound engine that was even more effective than the low-pressure compound steam engine.[10] In 1868 Charles Randolph retired from the firm, and John Elder became sole partner.

Vast expansion as John Elder & Co

The company became known as John Elder & Co in 1869. When John Elder died in September 1869[13] his wife ran the business for a while and renamed it in his honor.[14] In 1869 she sold the company to a new partnership consisting of her brother John Francis Ure (1820-1883), J.L.K. Jamieson (1826-1883) and Sir William Pearce. It kept the name John Elder & Co. William Pearce became sole partner in 1878.[15]

The new owners continued the expansion of the shipyard in 1870 and onwards. Important customers in the 1861-1875 time slot were: the Pacific Steam Navigation Company for 40 vessels at 2,500,000 GBP, the African Mail Company and British and African Steam Navigation Company for 16 vessels at 500,000 GBP and Stoomvaart Maatschappij Nederland for 8 vessels at 600,000 GBP.[12] Some qualitative notes further explain the leading position of the company at the time. In 1870 it launched Italy, a vessel of 400 feet, 4,200 tons gross measurement and 600 nominal hp. The largest vessel then afloat except for Great Eastern. In 1870-1871 it built two steamers for the London to Aberdeen line: City of London and Ban Righ were about 20% faster than their predecessors, while their fuel consumption was less than half of theirs. In 1871 Tagus and Moselle were launched for the Royal Mail Company's West India and Brazil trade. Both big steamers almost reached 15 knots on their trials. In 1873 it launched Iberia of 4,820 tons and 650 hp, the second largest merchant steamer then afloat. In 1871 HMS Hydra was launched with engines by John Elder.[16]

Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company and successors

 
The imposing red sandstone offices of the Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company on Govan Road, which from 2013, has formed the Fairfield Heritage Centre.

In 1886 William Pearce converted the firm to a limited company, the Fairfield Shipbuilding & Engineering Co.[15] This also entailed a simultaneous name change to Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company, after the old farm.[17][18] The area of the farm itself was purchased by Isabella Elder in 1885 and donated to the people of Govan as Elder Park, dedicated to her late husband.

The shipyard's imposing red sandstone Drawing Offices were designed by John Keppie of Honeyman and Keppie, with help from a young Charles Rennie Mackintosh, and built 1889–91. The sculpted figures (The Engineer and the shipwright) flanking the entrance are by James Pittendrigh Macgillivray.

John Carmichael was manager of the Fairfield yard in 1894. He had been born in Govan in 1858 and had entered Fairfield as an apprentice in 1873. When his apprenticeship was completed seven years later, Sir William Pearce made him head draughtsman, and later he was promoted to assistant manager.[19]

In February 1897 a major fire broke out in the yard.[20][21] The fire spread rapidly and within ten minutes the vast majority of the buildings, covering several acres, were ablaze with the joiner's, pattern, and fitting shops totally destroyed.[20][21] Various ships under construction were threatened, amongst which were HMS Argonaut and RMS Empress Queen. The vessels were however separated from the buildings and no significant damage was sustained. The cost of the damage was estimated at £40,000 and caused 4,000 workmen to be thrown idle.[20][21]

Alexander Cleghorn FRSE became the Fairfield manager in 1909.[22] The company also established the Coventry Ordnance Works joint venture with Yarrow Shipbuilders and others in 1905. Sir Alexander Gracie, who was born in Dunvegan, worked at various other Clydeside shipbuilders before he started at Fairfield in 1896, where amongst other things he worked with Jack Fisher to develop the Invincible class for the Royal Navy, including the Indomitable, which was built at Fairfield. In 1909 Sir Alexander became chairman and managing director of the company, posts he held for a decade. Fisher described him as Britain’s greatest naval architect. He died in 1933. Dorothy Rowntree, the first woman in UK to qualify in naval architecture and to graduate in engineering from the University of Glasgow worked for the company between 1926 and 1928.[23]

The Fairfield Titan was built for the yard in 1911 by Sir William Arrol & Co., with a maximum lift capacity of 200 tons. It was acknowledged for many years as the largest crane in the world. It was employed in lifting the engines and boilers aboard ships in the fitting-out basin. The crane was a Category B listed building but was demolished in 2007 in yard modernisation works.

Subsidiary of Northumberland Shipbuilding Company

In 1919 the company became part of the Northumberland Shipbuilding Company, with Alexander Kennedy installed as managing director.[24] In 1921 Alexander Kennedy was knighted. Sir Alexander became Fairfield chairman in 1930 and remained so until 1937.

The Fairfield West Yard had been added at the outbreak of the First World War for submarine construction, but closed after ten years due to severe recession and was demolished by National Shipbuilders Securities in 1934. The Fairfield West yard site was later used by the United States Army Corps of Engineers in 1944 to build four landing craft.

In 1924, the company bought a shipyard at Chepstow on the River Wye in South Wales, previously developed as National Shipyard No.1 in the First World War and then taken over by the Monmouthshire Shipbuilding Company. The works later specialised in assembling bridges and other major structures.

Subsidiary of Lithgows

In 1935 Fairfield was taken over by Lithgows of Port Glasgow after it had become entangled with the insolvency of the Anchor Line[24]

In the 1950s the yard underwent a major £4million modernisation programme which was implemented slowly over a period of ten years to minimise disruption to the yard. In 1963, the Fairfield engine building division merged with another Lithgow subsidiary, David Rowan & Company, to form Fairfield Rowan Ltd. Soon after the decade long shipyard modernisation works were completed, Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Ltd and Fairfield Rowan Ltd were placed into receivership and was subsequently sold by Lithgow's in 1965. Fairfield's Chepstow works was sold to the Mabey Group in 1966.[25][26][27] The marine engine-building subsidiary Fairfield Rowan was closed in 1966.

Fairfield (Glasgow) Ltd

 
The former Fairfield shipyard continues in operation as part of BAE Systems Surface Ships.

The recently modernised shipbuilding operation was reconstituted as Fairfield (Glasgow) Ltd in 1966, under its founding chairman and industrialist Sir Iain Maxwell Stewart who was also chairman of Thermotank Ltd. It became known as the famous Fairfield Experiment, into new ways of improving productivity through new reforms to industrial relations and the application of scientific management methods to improve productivity. [28] The era of the Fairfield experiment was captured by Sean Connery in his documentary The Bowler and the Bunnet.

Further decline and nationalization

In 1968 the company was made part of Upper Clyde Shipbuilders,[29] which collapsed in 1971[30] when a strike and work-in received national press attention.[31] As part of the recovery deal, Fairfields was formed into Govan Shipbuilders in 1972, which was itself later nationalised and subsumed into British Shipbuilders in 1977.[32]

The shipyard as part of BAE

On the break-up of British Shipbuilders under denationalisation in 1988, the former Fairfield yard was sold to the Norwegian Kværner group and renamed Kvaerner Govan.[33] The yard passed to BAE Systems Marine in 1999 and is now part of BAE Systems Surface Ships.[33]

Ships built

 
HMS Delight, a Daring-class Destroyer launched at Fairfield in 1950, was the Royal Navy's first all-welded warship.

Some of the better-known ships built by Fairfield's include:

Two of three ships that were lost in the action of 22 September 1914 were built at Fairfield's. These ships alongside HMS Hogue were the first vessels ever to be sunk by a German U-boat (SM U-9).

HMS Cressy

HMS Aboukir

  • Passenger steam ships for Şehir Hatları (Turkish Maritime Lines):
    • S/S Tarzi Nevin (Bosphorus No.47)
    • S/S Dilnisin (Bosphorus No.48)
    • P/S Hale (Bosphorus No.49)
    • P/S Seyyale (Bosphorus No.50)
    • S/S Sureyya (Bosphorus No.51)
    • S/S Sihap (Bosphorus No.52)
    • S/S Tarabya (Bosphorus No.57)
    • S/S Nimet (Bosphorus No.58)
    • S/S Sarayburnu (Bosphorus No.65)
    • S/S Bogazici (Bosphorus No.66)
    • S/S Halas (Bosphorus No.71)
    • S/S Altinkum (Bosphorus No.74)
    • S/S Kuzguncuk (Yard No:802)
    • S/S Kanlıca (Yard No:803)
    • S/S Pendik (Yard No:804)
    • S/S Anadolu Kavağı (Yard No:805)
    • S/S Ataköy (Yard No:806)
    • S/S İnkılap (Yard No:807)
    • S/S Harbiye (Yard No:808)
    • S/S Teğmen Ali İhsan Kalmaz (Yard No:809)
    • S/S Turan Emeksiz (Yard No:810)
  • Clyde paddle steamers:
  • Union Castle Line – RMS Gloucester Castle launched 13 May 1911 requisitioned as HMHS Gloucester Castle 31 March 1917
  • Tankers
  • Icebreaker

See also

References

  1. ^ Philosophical Society of Glasgow 1879, p. 560.
  2. ^ a b "Charles Randolph". University of Glasgow. Retrieved 5 May 2020.
  3. ^ a b Philosophical Society of Glasgow 1879, p. 561.
  4. ^ Macquorn Rankine 1871, p. 6.
  5. ^ Mayer 1876, p. 155.
  6. ^ a b Mayer 1876, p. 156.
  7. ^ Macquorn Rankine 1871, p. 20.
  8. ^ Macquorn Rankine 1871, p. 38.
  9. ^ Mayer 1876, p. 157.
  10. ^ a b Mayer 1876, p. 158.
  11. ^ Mayer 1876, p. 160.
  12. ^ a b Mayer 1876, p. 161.
  13. ^ "John Elder". University of Glasgow. Retrieved 5 May 2020.
  14. ^ "John Elder and Co". Grace's Guide. Retrieved 5 May 2020.
  15. ^ a b "Biography of Sir William Pearce 1st Baronet". University of Glasgow website. Retrieved 5 May 2020.
  16. ^ Mayer 1876, p. 162.
  17. ^ Payne 1967, p. 57.
  18. ^ Payne 1967, p. 58.
  19. ^ Payne 1967, pp. 57–58.
  20. ^ a b c Isle of Man Times, Saturday, February 13, 1897; Page: 5
  21. ^ a b c Isle of Man Times, Tuesday, February 09, 1897; Page: 12
  22. ^ "Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company". Journal of the American Society of Naval Engineers. American Society of Naval Engineers. 20: 9. 1909.
  23. ^ "5: dorothy rowntree". Magnificent Women. Retrieved 4 January 2023.
  24. ^ a b "Alexander Kennedy". 2004.
  25. ^ "Chepstow National Shipyard No.1". National Monuments Record of Wales. Retrieved 24 February 2012.
  26. ^ Daly, Sarah (4 May 2011). "Building Bridges". Chepstow Review. Archived from the original on 20 April 2013. Retrieved 24 February 2012.
  27. ^ "Cabinet Papers 1965" (PDF). National Archives.
  28. ^ Whatever Happened at Fairfields? by Sydney Paulden & Bill Hawkins, published by Gower Press, 1969
  29. ^ "Government's shipbuilding crisis". BBC News. 1 January 2002.
  30. ^ "Parliamentary debates". Hansard. 4 June 1971.
  31. ^ . BAE Systems. Archived from the original on 26 May 2010.
  32. ^ . Evening Times. Archived from the original on 5 July 2008.
  33. ^ a b . BAE Systems. Archived from the original on 26 May 2010.
  34. ^ Tragic tale behind K13 submarine memorial in Glasgow's Elder Park, Ann Fotheringhay, Glasgow Times, 11 September 2021
  35. ^ K13 Memorial | Mitchell Library, Glasgow Collection, Bulletin Photographs, The Glasgow Story
  36. ^ a b c "Anchor Line". ssMaritime. Retrieved 1 September 2022.
  37. ^ "HMS Worcestershire (F 29)". uboat.net. Retrieved 10 May 2021.

Further reading

  • Payne, Peter Lester (1967). Studies in Scottish Business History. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-7146-1349-9.
  • Johnston, Ian; Buxton, Ian (2013). The Battleship Builders - Constructing and Arming British Capital Ships. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-59114-027-6.
  • Macquorn Rankine, W.J. (1871). A Memoir of John Elder, Engineer and Ship-builder. William Blackwood and sons, Edinburgh and London.
  • Philosophical Society of Glasgow (1879). "Obituary Notices". Proceedings of the Philosophical Society of Glasgow. John Smit and Son, Glasgow. 11: 560.
  • Mayer, John (1876). Notices of some of the Principal Manufactures of the West of Scotland. Blackie & Son, Glasgow.

External links

  • Randolph, Elder and Co at Grace's Guide
  • John Elder and Co at Grace's Guide

fairfield, shipbuilding, engineering, company, limited, scottish, shipbuilding, company, govan, area, clyde, glasgow, fairfields, often, known, major, warship, builder, turning, many, vessels, royal, navy, other, navies, through, first, world, second, world, a. The Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company Limited was a Scottish shipbuilding company in the Govan area on the Clyde in Glasgow Fairfields as it is often known was a major warship builder turning out many vessels for the Royal Navy and other navies through the First World War and the Second World War It also built many transatlantic liners including record breaking ships for the Cunard Line and Canadian Pacific such as the Blue Riband winning sisters RMS Campania and RMS Lucania At the other end of the scale Fairfields built fast cross channel mail steamers and ferries for locations around the world These included ships for the Bosporus crossing in Istanbul and some of the early ships used by Thomas Cook for developing tourism on the River Nile Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering CompanyTypePublic companyIndustryShipbuildingPredecessorRandolph Elliott and Co Randolph Elder and Co John Elder amp Co Founded1834Defunct1968FateMerged with others to form Upper Clyde ShipbuildersSuccessorGovan ShipbuildersHeadquartersGovan Scotland UKKey peopleCharles RandolphJohn ElderSir William PearceSir James LithgowSir Alexander KennedyProductsNaval shipsMerchant shipsOcean linersMarine enginesParentNorthumberland Shipbuilding Group 1919 1935 Lithgows 1935 1965 Contents 1 John Elder amp Co and predecessors 1 1 Millwright Randolph amp Elliott 1 2 Randolph Elder and Co starts to build ship engines 1 3 Starts to build ships 1 4 Vast expansion as John Elder amp Co 2 Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company and successors 2 1 Subsidiary of Northumberland Shipbuilding Company 2 2 Subsidiary of Lithgows 2 3 Fairfield Glasgow Ltd 2 4 Further decline and nationalization 2 5 The shipyard as part of BAE 3 Ships built 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksJohn Elder amp Co and predecessors EditMillwright Randolph amp Elliott Edit Charles Randolph founded the company as Randolph amp Co He had been an apprentice at the Clyde shipyard of Robert Napier and at William Fairbairn amp Sons in Manchester With the knowledge that he acquired he started as a millwright in partnership with his cousin Richard S Cunliff 1 who managed the commercial side By 1834 it built engines and machinery in the Tradeston district of Glasgow 2 It was the first serious local manufacturer of cog and other large wheels for driving machinery and soon became famous for accuracy 3 In 1839 Mr Elliott joined the firm and it became known as Randolph Elliott amp Co Elliott died shortly after becoming a partner 3 Randolph Elder and Co starts to build ship engines Edit In 1852 the company became Randolph Elder and Company when John Elder 1824 1869 joined the business 4 Elder had a natural talent for engineering and had also worked at the Napier shipyard It enabled the company to start diversifying into marine engineering In this field the company would acquire world fame Its skills in this field also enabled it to become one of the biggest shipbuilders in the world The story is closely connected to the application of the compound steam engine for marine use in which the firm played a crucial role With regard to the compound engine two specific phases can be discerned low pressure compound engines and high pressure compound engines The compound engine with low as it would later be called pressure would give Randolph Elder and Co its first renown for economic compound engines The company s attempts centred on trying to prevent energy loss due to friction and premature condensation of steam In July 1854 the screw steamer Brandon was fit with engines by Randolph Elder amp Co It had a vertical geared compound engine with a patented January 1853 arrangement of the cylinders The crankshaft was turned by two opposite cranks arms One was driven by the high pressure cylinder the other by the low pressure cylinder with the pistons always moving in opposite directions Brandon a vessel of about 800 tons and 800 ihp made her trials in July 1854 She had a coal consumption of about 3 25 lbs per ihp per hour At the time the lowest rate of consumption in other steamers was about 4 4 5 lbs per ihp per hour The merits of the engine of Brandon were not enough to persuade others and from 1854 till about 1866 Randolph Elder and Co were the only engineers who made compound engines under their various patents 5 The Pacific Steam Navigation Company did become an enthusiastic customer In 1855 1856 it operated on the west coast of South America In that area fuel was imported from Britain and therefore more costly When the Crimean War broke out freight tariffs increased to the point that the price of coal almost doubled there The directors then conferred with the company resulting in the double cylinder engine 6 Inca and Valparaiso were paddle steamers which got this engine that got patented in March 1856 Construction of that for Inca was started in May 1856 It had two pairs of cylinders lying so their piston rods were at a 60 90 degree angle Each pair consisted of a high and low pressure cylinder lying next to each other so they could easily exchange steam Their pistons moved in opposite directions and drove one crank which was attached to the crankshaft opposite the crank of the other pair This gave the optimal balance of driving forces that could be attained for this number of cylinders Furthermore the cylinders were jacketed at the top and bottom 6 The jacket heated the cylinder from the outside to prevent condensation in the cylinder It had been invented by James Watt 7 but the company was the first to re apply it probably because it first understood its purpose The company then supplied more double cylinder engines but with the cylinders completely jacketed Admiral by Robert Napier made her trial in June 1858 8 Another ship with the same engine was Callao built by John Reid in 1858 On trials fuel consumption for these ships was Inca 2 5 lbs ihp h Callao 2 7 lbs ihp h Valparaiso and Admiral 3 lbs ihp h It amounted to a saving of 30 40 per cent and this was maintained later on It made it possible to continue steam navigation on the Pacific Ocean with profit In fact in 1858 the Pacific Steam Navigation Company had 7 8 years old traditional machinery removed from three of her large steamers and replaced by compound engines It saved 40 in fuel and 30 feet of space amidships 9 because less space was needed for coal From 1854 till about 1866 Randolph Elder amp Co constructed 18 sets of paddle engines and 30 sets of screw engines all compound A highlight was the conversion of the frigate HMS Constance to steam propulsion in 1863 and her race against two frigates with engines by John Penn and Sons and Maudslay Sons and Field In 1860 the company started to use surface condensation instead of the jet condenser In 1862 it increased steam pressure to 40 lbs per square inch 10 Starts to build ships Edit In 1858 the company acquired the Govan Old Shipyard 2 and diversified into shipbuilding The first ship was built in 1861 as No 14 Macgregor Laird was built for the African Steamship Company 11 Other ships soon followed and the business moved to a new yard at the former Fairfield Farm at the Govan riverside in 1864 From 1861 1866 59 ships were built 12 The general breakthrough of the compound engine was not affected by Randolph Elder amp Co but by Alfred Holt Holt succeeded in getting the Board of Trade to lift the ban on boilers with a pressure higher than 25 lbs per square inch psi The use of high pressure steam made the compound engine far more effective and Randolph Elder amp Co quickly adjusted It allowed the construction of a far simpler two cylinder compound engine that was even more effective than the low pressure compound steam engine 10 In 1868 Charles Randolph retired from the firm and John Elder became sole partner Vast expansion as John Elder amp Co Edit The company became known as John Elder amp Co in 1869 When John Elder died in September 1869 13 his wife ran the business for a while and renamed it in his honor 14 In 1869 she sold the company to a new partnership consisting of her brother John Francis Ure 1820 1883 J L K Jamieson 1826 1883 and Sir William Pearce It kept the name John Elder amp Co William Pearce became sole partner in 1878 15 The new owners continued the expansion of the shipyard in 1870 and onwards Important customers in the 1861 1875 time slot were the Pacific Steam Navigation Company for 40 vessels at 2 500 000 GBP the African Mail Company and British and African Steam Navigation Company for 16 vessels at 500 000 GBP and Stoomvaart Maatschappij Nederland for 8 vessels at 600 000 GBP 12 Some qualitative notes further explain the leading position of the company at the time In 1870 it launched Italy a vessel of 400 feet 4 200 tons gross measurement and 600 nominal hp The largest vessel then afloat except for Great Eastern In 1870 1871 it built two steamers for the London to Aberdeen line City of London and Ban Righ were about 20 faster than their predecessors while their fuel consumption was less than half of theirs In 1871 Tagus and Moselle were launched for the Royal Mail Company s West India and Brazil trade Both big steamers almost reached 15 knots on their trials In 1873 it launched Iberia of 4 820 tons and 650 hp the second largest merchant steamer then afloat In 1871 HMS Hydra was launched with engines by John Elder 16 Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company and successors Edit The imposing red sandstone offices of the Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company on Govan Road which from 2013 has formed the Fairfield Heritage Centre In 1886 William Pearce converted the firm to a limited company the Fairfield Shipbuilding amp Engineering Co 15 This also entailed a simultaneous name change to Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company after the old farm 17 18 The area of the farm itself was purchased by Isabella Elder in 1885 and donated to the people of Govan as Elder Park dedicated to her late husband The shipyard s imposing red sandstone Drawing Offices were designed by John Keppie of Honeyman and Keppie with help from a young Charles Rennie Mackintosh and built 1889 91 The sculpted figures The Engineer and the shipwright flanking the entrance are by James Pittendrigh Macgillivray John Carmichael was manager of the Fairfield yard in 1894 He had been born in Govan in 1858 and had entered Fairfield as an apprentice in 1873 When his apprenticeship was completed seven years later Sir William Pearce made him head draughtsman and later he was promoted to assistant manager 19 In February 1897 a major fire broke out in the yard 20 21 The fire spread rapidly and within ten minutes the vast majority of the buildings covering several acres were ablaze with the joiner s pattern and fitting shops totally destroyed 20 21 Various ships under construction were threatened amongst which were HMS Argonaut and RMS Empress Queen The vessels were however separated from the buildings and no significant damage was sustained The cost of the damage was estimated at 40 000 and caused 4 000 workmen to be thrown idle 20 21 Alexander Cleghorn FRSE became the Fairfield manager in 1909 22 The company also established the Coventry Ordnance Works joint venture with Yarrow Shipbuilders and others in 1905 Sir Alexander Gracie who was born in Dunvegan worked at various other Clydeside shipbuilders before he started at Fairfield in 1896 where amongst other things he worked with Jack Fisher to develop the Invincible class for the Royal Navy including the Indomitable which was built at Fairfield In 1909 Sir Alexander became chairman and managing director of the company posts he held for a decade Fisher described him as Britain s greatest naval architect He died in 1933 Dorothy Rowntree the first woman in UK to qualify in naval architecture and to graduate in engineering from the University of Glasgow worked for the company between 1926 and 1928 23 The Fairfield Titan was built for the yard in 1911 by Sir William Arrol amp Co with a maximum lift capacity of 200 tons It was acknowledged for many years as the largest crane in the world It was employed in lifting the engines and boilers aboard ships in the fitting out basin The crane was a Category B listed building but was demolished in 2007 in yard modernisation works Subsidiary of Northumberland Shipbuilding Company Edit In 1919 the company became part of the Northumberland Shipbuilding Company with Alexander Kennedy installed as managing director 24 In 1921 Alexander Kennedy was knighted Sir Alexander became Fairfield chairman in 1930 and remained so until 1937 The Fairfield West Yard had been added at the outbreak of the First World War for submarine construction but closed after ten years due to severe recession and was demolished by National Shipbuilders Securities in 1934 The Fairfield West yard site was later used by the United States Army Corps of Engineers in 1944 to build four landing craft In 1924 the company bought a shipyard at Chepstow on the River Wye in South Wales previously developed as National Shipyard No 1 in the First World War and then taken over by the Monmouthshire Shipbuilding Company The works later specialised in assembling bridges and other major structures Subsidiary of Lithgows Edit In 1935 Fairfield was taken over by Lithgows of Port Glasgow after it had become entangled with the insolvency of the Anchor Line 24 In the 1950s the yard underwent a major 4million modernisation programme which was implemented slowly over a period of ten years to minimise disruption to the yard In 1963 the Fairfield engine building division merged with another Lithgow subsidiary David Rowan amp Company to form Fairfield Rowan Ltd Soon after the decade long shipyard modernisation works were completed Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Ltd and Fairfield Rowan Ltd were placed into receivership and was subsequently sold by Lithgow s in 1965 Fairfield s Chepstow works was sold to the Mabey Group in 1966 25 26 27 The marine engine building subsidiary Fairfield Rowan was closed in 1966 Fairfield Glasgow Ltd Edit The former Fairfield shipyard continues in operation as part of BAE Systems Surface Ships The recently modernised shipbuilding operation was reconstituted as Fairfield Glasgow Ltd in 1966 under its founding chairman and industrialist Sir Iain Maxwell Stewart who was also chairman of Thermotank Ltd It became known as the famous Fairfield Experiment into new ways of improving productivity through new reforms to industrial relations and the application of scientific management methods to improve productivity 28 The era of the Fairfield experiment was captured by Sean Connery in his documentary The Bowler and the Bunnet Further decline and nationalization Edit In 1968 the company was made part of Upper Clyde Shipbuilders 29 which collapsed in 1971 30 when a strike and work in received national press attention 31 As part of the recovery deal Fairfields was formed into Govan Shipbuilders in 1972 which was itself later nationalised and subsumed into British Shipbuilders in 1977 32 The shipyard as part of BAE Edit On the break up of British Shipbuilders under denationalisation in 1988 the former Fairfield yard was sold to the Norwegian Kvaerner group and renamed Kvaerner Govan 33 The yard passed to BAE Systems Marine in 1999 and is now part of BAE Systems Surface Ships 33 Ships built Edit HMS Delight a Daring class Destroyer launched at Fairfield in 1950 was the Royal Navy s first all welded warship Some of the better known ships built by Fairfield s include This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources Two of three ships that were lost in the action of 22 September 1914 were built at Fairfield s These ships alongside HMS Hogue were the first vessels ever to be sunk by a German U boat SM U 9 HMS CressyHMS Aboukir Battlecruisers HMS Indomitable HMS New Zealand HMS Renown Battleships HMS Commonwealth HMS Valiant HMS Howe Cruisers HMS Liverpool Norfolk Destroyers HMS Cameleon HMS Comet HMS Goldfinch HMS Maori Torpedo boat destroyers HMAS Parramatta Submarines HMS K13 34 35 HMS K14 HMS L15 HMS L16 HMS L55 HMS L56 Aircraft carriers HMS Implacable HMS Theseus Passenger ships SS Assiniboia SS Arizona John Elder amp Co Athenia RMS Caledonia 1948 36 SS Campania PS Cardiff Queen Cheshire RMS Cilicia 36 RMS Circassia 36 RMS Empress Queen SS Keewatin SS Koning der Nederlanden John Elder amp Co SS Leicestershire RMS Lucania SS Montrose RMS Orontes SS Prins Hendrik I John Elder amp Co SS Prins Hendrik II John Elder amp Co SS Prins van Oranje II John Elder amp Co SS Stirling Castle John Elder amp Co SS Volturno TEV Wahine SS Willem III John Elder amp Co Worcestershire 37 Passenger steam ships for Sehir Hatlari Turkish Maritime Lines S S Tarzi Nevin Bosphorus No 47 S S Dilnisin Bosphorus No 48 P S Hale Bosphorus No 49 P S Seyyale Bosphorus No 50 S S Sureyya Bosphorus No 51 S S Sihap Bosphorus No 52 S S Tarabya Bosphorus No 57 S S Nimet Bosphorus No 58 S S Sarayburnu Bosphorus No 65 S S Bogazici Bosphorus No 66 S S Halas Bosphorus No 71 S S Altinkum Bosphorus No 74 S S Kuzguncuk Yard No 802 S S Kanlica Yard No 803 S S Pendik Yard No 804 S S Anadolu Kavagi Yard No 805 S S Atakoy Yard No 806 S S Inkilap Yard No 807 S S Harbiye Yard No 808 S S Tegmen Ali Ihsan Kalmaz Yard No 809 S S Turan Emeksiz Yard No 810 Clyde paddle steamers PS Jeanie Deans PS Jupiter PS Juno PS Marchioness of Lorne Union Castle Line RMS Gloucester Castle launched 13 May 1911 requisitioned as HMHS Gloucester Castle 31 March 1917 Tankers ARA Santa Cruz Icebreaker CGS StanleySee also EditOcean liners for Canadian Pacific Steamships RMS Empress of Britain RMS Empress of Ireland RMS Empress of Asia RMS Empress of Russia RMS Empress of Canada RMS Empress of JapanReferences Edit Philosophical Society of Glasgow 1879 p 560 a b Charles Randolph University of Glasgow Retrieved 5 May 2020 a b Philosophical Society of Glasgow 1879 p 561 Macquorn Rankine 1871 p 6 Mayer 1876 p 155 a b Mayer 1876 p 156 Macquorn Rankine 1871 p 20 Macquorn Rankine 1871 p 38 Mayer 1876 p 157 a b Mayer 1876 p 158 Mayer 1876 p 160 a b Mayer 1876 p 161 John Elder University of Glasgow Retrieved 5 May 2020 John Elder and Co Grace s Guide Retrieved 5 May 2020 a b Biography of Sir William Pearce 1st Baronet University of Glasgow website Retrieved 5 May 2020 Mayer 1876 p 162 Payne 1967 p 57 Payne 1967 p 58 Payne 1967 pp 57 58 a b c Isle of Man Times Saturday February 13 1897 Page 5 a b c Isle of Man Times Tuesday February 09 1897 Page 12 Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company Journal of the American Society of Naval Engineers American Society of Naval Engineers 20 9 1909 5 dorothy rowntree Magnificent Women Retrieved 4 January 2023 a b Alexander Kennedy 2004 Chepstow National Shipyard No 1 National Monuments Record of Wales Retrieved 24 February 2012 Daly Sarah 4 May 2011 Building Bridges Chepstow Review Archived from the original on 20 April 2013 Retrieved 24 February 2012 Cabinet Papers 1965 PDF National Archives Whatever Happened at Fairfields by Sydney Paulden amp Bill Hawkins published by Gower Press 1969 Government s shipbuilding crisis BBC News 1 January 2002 Parliamentary debates Hansard 4 June 1971 Heritage 1968 Upper Clyde Shipbuilders BAE Systems Archived from the original on 26 May 2010 What do you know about Govan Evening Times Archived from the original on 5 July 2008 a b Heritage 1973 Govan Shipbuilders BAE Systems Archived from the original on 26 May 2010 Tragic tale behind K13 submarine memorial in Glasgow s Elder Park Ann Fotheringhay Glasgow Times 11 September 2021 K13 Memorial Mitchell Library Glasgow Collection Bulletin Photographs The Glasgow Story a b c Anchor Line ssMaritime Retrieved 1 September 2022 HMS Worcestershire F 29 uboat net Retrieved 10 May 2021 Further reading EditPayne Peter Lester 1967 Studies in Scottish Business History London Routledge ISBN 978 0 7146 1349 9 Johnston Ian Buxton Ian 2013 The Battleship Builders Constructing and Arming British Capital Ships Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 59114 027 6 Macquorn Rankine W J 1871 A Memoir of John Elder Engineer and Ship builder William Blackwood and sons Edinburgh and London Philosophical Society of Glasgow 1879 Obituary Notices Proceedings of the Philosophical Society of Glasgow John Smit and Son Glasgow 11 560 Mayer John 1876 Notices of some of the Principal Manufactures of the West of Scotland Blackie amp Son Glasgow External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company Randolph Elder and Co at Grace s Guide John Elder and Co at Grace s Guide Fairfield Heritage Project Elder Park Govan monument to John Elder Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company amp oldid 1131479319, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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