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Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding Company

The Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding Company, Limited was a shipyard and iron works straddling the mouth of Bow Creek at its confluence with the River Thames, at Leamouth Wharf[1] (often referred to as Blackwall) on the west side and at Canning Town on the east side. Its main activity was shipbuilding, but it also diversified into civil engineering, marine engines, cranes, electrical engineering and motor cars.[2]

Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding Company, Limited
IndustryShipbuilding
Founded1837
Defunct1912
FateDefunct
HeadquartersLondon
Warships being built at the eastern site in or slightly before 1902

The company notably produced iron work for Isambard Kingdom Brunel's Royal Albert Bridge over the Tamar in the 1850s,[2] and the world's first all-iron warship, HMS Warrior, launched in 1860.

History edit

1837–46 edit

The company originated in 1837 as the Ditchburn and Mare Shipbuilding Company, founded by shipwright Thomas J. Ditchburn and the engineer and naval architect Charles John Mare. Originally located at Deptford, after a fire destroyed their yard the company moved to Orchard Place in 1838, between the East India Dock Basin and Bow Creek in Blackwall. There they took over the premises of the defunct shipbuilders William and Benjamin Wallis.

The firm did well and within a few years occupied three sites covering an area of over 14 acres (5.7 ha).

Ditchburn and Mare were among the first builders of iron ships in the area; their partnership commenced with the construction of small paddle steamers of between 50 and 100 tons, before progressing to cross-Channel vessels and by 1840 were building ships of more than 300 tons. The company's early customers included the Iron Steamboat Company and the Blackwall Railway Company, several paddle steamers being constructed for the latter, including the Meteor and the Prince of Wales, which operated between Gravesend and the company's station on Brunswick Wharf.

In this period the company was also awarded several contracts by the Admiralty, including HMS Recruit (a 12-gun brig) which was one of the first iron warships built. They also constructed the P & O Company's steamers Ariel and Erin, along with the paddle steamer Preussischer Adler for Prussia.

1847–56 edit

Thomas Ditchburn retired in 1847 and the business was carried on by Charles Mare, under the name of C.J. Mare and Company. He was joined by naval architect James Ash, who later began his own shipyard at Cubitt Town.

From 1847 the company grew considerably and Mare purchased land in Canning Town on the Essex side of the River Lea, a ferry service being established between the two sites.[3]

Mare constructed a yard with furnaces and rolling mills that could construct vessels of 4,000 tons; because of the narrowness of the spit at the mouth of the River Lea, the Orchard Place site was limited to the construction of vessels of less than 1,000 tons. In 1853 the company launched the SS Himalaya for the Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company, briefly the world's largest passenger ship before becoming a naval troopship.

In 1855, the company which by now had more than 3000 employees, was threatened with closure following Mare's bankruptcy. It is thought by some that his financial difficulties arose from delays in payment for completed work or, alternatively, that the company had miscalculated the cost of building vessels for the Royal Navy. The business did not lack orders, having in hand six contracts for gunboats and the contract for Westminster Bridge (which was built in 1862).

1857–1912 edit

 
Map circa 1872, showing Victoria Docks, now Royal Victoria Dock, Bow Creek and the Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding Company

The company's chief creditors moved to keep the company in operation, and two employees, Joseph Westwood and Robert Baillie were appointed works managers. The main figure in saving the company was Peter Rolt, Mare's father-in-law and Conservative MP for Greenwich. Rolt was also a timber merchant and a descendant of the Pett shipbuilding family. He was supported in the venture by another company director, Lord Alan Spencer-Churchill.[4]

Rolt took control of the company's assets and in 1857 transferred them to a new limited company, named the Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding and Engineering Company Ltd.. It had a capital of £100,000 in 20 shares of £5000 each, five of which were held by Rolt who was the main shareholder and also chairman of the board.[5]

The new company was the largest shipbuilder on the Thames, its premises described by the Mechanics' Magazine in 1861 as "Leviathan Workshops".[6] Large scale Ordnance Survey maps of the 1860s show the yard occupying a large triangular site in a right-angled bend on the east bank of Bow Creek with the railway to Thames Wharf on the third side, and with a smaller site on the west bank. The main yard had a quay 1,050 feet (320m) long.[7] To the south-east the yard occupied the north bank of the Thames east of Bow Creek, with two slips giving direct access to the main river. Today the site is crossed by the A1020 Lower Lea Crossing and the Docklands Light Railway south of Canning Town station.

By 1863 the company had the capacity to build 25,000 tons of warships and 10,000 tons of mail steamers simultaneously. One of its first Admiralty contracts was for HMS Warrior, launched in 1860, at the time the world's largest warship and the first iron-hulled armoured frigate. HMS Minotaur followed in 1863, 400 feet (120 m) long and 10,690 tons displacement.

Work on vessels such as Minotaur was performed on the Canning Town side of the Lea, and this is where the Thames Ironworks expanded from less than 10 acres (4.0 ha) in 1856 to 30 acres (12 ha) by 1891. While the old site at Orchard Place was still the company's official address until 1909, its presence there was minimal, by the late 1860s the company having only a 5 acres (2.0 ha) site there.

General shipbuilding on the Thames came under great pressure due to the cost advantages of northern yards with closer supplies of coal and iron, and many yards closed following the 1866 financial crisis. Of the survivors, those like the Thames Ironworks were specialised in warships and liners.[8]

 
Stern view of HMS Sans Pareil ready for launching

Following the success of HMS Warrior and HMS Minotaur, orders were placed by navies all over the world, and vessels were built for Denmark, Greece, Portugal, Russia, Spain and the Ottoman Empire. The yard also built the Prussian Navy's first iron-hulled warship, the SMS König Wilhelm in 1868 and the cruiser Afonso de Albuquerque for Portugal in 1884. A multitude of mostly small warships were also built for the Romanian Navy, most notably the brig Mircea.[9] Also notable was the tiny minelayer Alexandru cel Bun. The Iron Works also produced for the Romanian Navy a class of three small 45-ton gunboats, a class of three medium 116-ton gunboats and a class of eight 50-ton torpedo boats.[10]

In the 1890s philanthropist Arnold Hills became the managing director. He had originally joined the board of directors in 1880 at the age of 23. Hills was one of the first business directors voluntarily to introduce an eight-hour day for his workers at a time when 10- and 12-hour shifts were more common in industrial work.

In 1895 Hills helped to set up a football club for the Works' employees, Thames Ironworks F.C. and within their first two years they had entered the FA Cup and the London League. As a result of the committee's desire to employ professional players, the Thames Ironworks F.C. was wound up in June 1900 and West Ham United F.C. was formed a month later.

Merged with the engine builder John Penn and Sons in 1899 as the Thames Iron Works, Shipbuilding and Engineering Co.

During its lifetime the yard produced 144 warships and numerous other vessels. In 1911 Hills petitioned Winston Churchill, then First Lord of the Admiralty, regarding the lack of new orders. He was unsuccessful, and the yard was forced to shut in 1912.[2] Within two years the United Kingdom was at war with the German Empire, with the yard's last major ship taking part in the Battle of Jutland. Kotri Bridge in Pakistan Sindh province was also constructed in between 1897 and 1912.[11]

The premises of the Thames Iron Works and Shipbuilding Company, Greenwich, were subsequently acquired in 1915, by the Royal Flying Corps (created in 1912) for the storage of aeroplanes.[12]

Archaeology edit

Part of the company's Limmo Peninsula site was excavated during the construction of Crossrail in 2012.[13]

Notable products edit

  • In the 1850s the company produced iron work for I.K. Brunel's Royal Albert Bridge over the Tamar at Saltash.[2]
  • In 1897 to 1912 the company made the ironworks of Kotri Bridge, Sindh Province of Pakistan.
  • HMS Warrior, launched in 1860, the world's first all-iron warship. When completed in October 1861, Warrior was the largest, fastest, most heavily armed and most heavily armoured warship in the world.
  • In the 1890s the yard built two of the six British-built battleships that formed the main Japanese battle line in the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–1905.
  • The launch of HMS Albion in 1898 was marred by an accident when several observers died following a bridge collapse.
  • The last major warship built by the yard, HMS Thunderer (22,500 tons), was launched in 1911.

Ships edit

Links to West Ham United Football Club edit

Employees at the Thames Ironworks formed a works football team, called Thames Ironworks Football Club. This club was later renamed West Ham United, whose emblem of the crossed hammers represents the large riveting hammers used in the shipbuilding trade. West Ham are also known as "The Hammers" for this reason.

While the media and the general football world commonly refer to the club as The Hammers, the club's own supporters have always referred to their team as 'The Irons', which again comes from the link with Thames Ironworks. The chant 'Come on you Irons' is heard on every match day at West Ham.[citation needed]

The shape of the 16th evolution of the club badge, launched after club moved to the Olympic Stadium in 2016, is a representation of the cross-section of the bow of HMS Warrior, the first iron clad battleship, built by the Thames Ironworks in 1860.[20]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Survey of London: volumes 43 and 44, Leamouth Wharf edited by Hermione Hobhouse, 1994
  2. ^ a b c d Jim Lewis 1999, London's Lea Valley, Phillimore, ISBN 1-86077-100-9
  3. ^ Leamouth Road and Orchard Place: Historical development. Survey of London. Vol. 43 and 44: Poplar, Blackwall and Isle of Dogs. British History Online. 1994. pp. 646–655. Retrieved 8 October 2007.
  4. ^ Rolt and Spencer-Churchill entered a further consortium led by Churchward, an entrepreneur from Dover: https://doverhistorian.com/2015/08/08/packet-service-part-iii-churchward-founder-of-the-packet-yard-and-politician/ Retrieved 3 November 2016.
  5. ^ Johnson, Alan A (1978). London's Local Railways. Newton Abbott: David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-7479-6.
  6. ^ "Leviathan Workshops No. 1". The Mechanics' Magazine. 75 (6). Robertson, Brooman, & Co: 94. July–December 1861.
  7. ^ Poplar & Canning Town 1867, London Sheet 65, The Godfrey Edition Old Ordnance Survey Maps, Alan Godfrey Maps, ISBN 1-84151-261-3
  8. ^ Hostettler, Eve (1986). "Ship building and related industries on the Isle of Dogs". Dockland. NELP/GLC. p. not cited. ISBN 0-7168-1611-3.
  9. ^ Sea Breezes, Volume 11, 1951, page 58
  10. ^ Robert Gardiner, Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1906-1921, Naval Institute Press, 1985, pp. 421-422
  11. ^ http://heritage.eftsindh.com/sites/hyderabad/images/kotri-bridge-01.jpg [bare URL image file]
  12. ^ Air 29/4692 held in The National Archives, Kew
  13. ^ "BBC News London". Crossrail dig uncovers historic Limmo Peninsula shipyard remains. BBC. 23 March 2012. Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  14. ^ Illustrated London News 27 December 1845
  15. ^ Illustrated London News 1 April 1848
  16. ^ Illustrated London News 1 June 1867
  17. ^ a b c Thames Tugs, William Watkins Limited[permanent dead link]
  18. ^ Illustrated London News 20 February 1869
  19. ^ Register of Historic Vessels – J C Madge 21 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ Hopps, Kat (13 December 2015). . Newham Recorder. Archived from the original on 9 November 2017. Retrieved 9 November 2017.

Further reading edit

  • Johnston, Ian; Buxton, Ian (2013). The Battleship Builders – Constructing and Arming British Capital Ships (Hardback). Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-59114-027-6.

External links edit

  • Arnold Hills – International Vegetarian Union
  • Port of London History
  • Grace's Guide: Chronology

51°30′34″N 0°0′32.8″E / 51.50944°N 0.009111°E / 51.50944; 0.009111

thames, ironworks, shipbuilding, company, limited, shipyard, iron, works, straddling, mouth, creek, confluence, with, river, thames, leamouth, wharf, often, referred, blackwall, west, side, canning, town, east, side, main, activity, shipbuilding, also, diversi. The Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding Company Limited was a shipyard and iron works straddling the mouth of Bow Creek at its confluence with the River Thames at Leamouth Wharf 1 often referred to as Blackwall on the west side and at Canning Town on the east side Its main activity was shipbuilding but it also diversified into civil engineering marine engines cranes electrical engineering and motor cars 2 Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding Company LimitedIndustryShipbuildingFounded1837Defunct1912FateDefunctHeadquartersLondon Warships being built at the eastern site in or slightly before 1902 The company notably produced iron work for Isambard Kingdom Brunel s Royal Albert Bridge over the Tamar in the 1850s 2 and the world s first all iron warship HMS Warrior launched in 1860 Contents 1 History 1 1 1837 46 1 2 1847 56 1 3 1857 1912 2 Archaeology 3 Notable products 4 Ships 5 Links to West Ham United Football Club 6 Notes 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory edit1837 46 edit The company originated in 1837 as the Ditchburn and Mare Shipbuilding Company founded by shipwright Thomas J Ditchburn and the engineer and naval architect Charles John Mare Originally located at Deptford after a fire destroyed their yard the company moved to Orchard Place in 1838 between the East India Dock Basin and Bow Creek in Blackwall There they took over the premises of the defunct shipbuilders William and Benjamin Wallis The firm did well and within a few years occupied three sites covering an area of over 14 acres 5 7 ha Ditchburn and Mare were among the first builders of iron ships in the area their partnership commenced with the construction of small paddle steamers of between 50 and 100 tons before progressing to cross Channel vessels and by 1840 were building ships of more than 300 tons The company s early customers included the Iron Steamboat Company and the Blackwall Railway Company several paddle steamers being constructed for the latter including the Meteor and the Prince of Wales which operated between Gravesend and the company s station on Brunswick Wharf In this period the company was also awarded several contracts by the Admiralty including HMS Recruit a 12 gun brig which was one of the first iron warships built They also constructed the P amp O Company s steamers Ariel and Erin along with the paddle steamer Preussischer Adler for Prussia 1847 56 edit Thomas Ditchburn retired in 1847 and the business was carried on by Charles Mare under the name of C J Mare and Company He was joined by naval architect James Ash who later began his own shipyard at Cubitt Town From 1847 the company grew considerably and Mare purchased land in Canning Town on the Essex side of the River Lea a ferry service being established between the two sites 3 Mare constructed a yard with furnaces and rolling mills that could construct vessels of 4 000 tons because of the narrowness of the spit at the mouth of the River Lea the Orchard Place site was limited to the construction of vessels of less than 1 000 tons In 1853 the company launched the SS Himalaya for the Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company briefly the world s largest passenger ship before becoming a naval troopship In 1855 the company which by now had more than 3000 employees was threatened with closure following Mare s bankruptcy It is thought by some that his financial difficulties arose from delays in payment for completed work or alternatively that the company had miscalculated the cost of building vessels for the Royal Navy The business did not lack orders having in hand six contracts for gunboats and the contract for Westminster Bridge which was built in 1862 1857 1912 edit nbsp Map circa 1872 showing Victoria Docks now Royal Victoria Dock Bow Creek and the Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding Company The company s chief creditors moved to keep the company in operation and two employees Joseph Westwood and Robert Baillie were appointed works managers The main figure in saving the company was Peter Rolt Mare s father in law and Conservative MP for Greenwich Rolt was also a timber merchant and a descendant of the Pett shipbuilding family He was supported in the venture by another company director Lord Alan Spencer Churchill 4 Rolt took control of the company s assets and in 1857 transferred them to a new limited company named the Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding and Engineering Company Ltd It had a capital of 100 000 in 20 shares of 5000 each five of which were held by Rolt who was the main shareholder and also chairman of the board 5 The new company was the largest shipbuilder on the Thames its premises described by the Mechanics Magazine in 1861 as Leviathan Workshops 6 Large scale Ordnance Survey maps of the 1860s show the yard occupying a large triangular site in a right angled bend on the east bank of Bow Creek with the railway to Thames Wharf on the third side and with a smaller site on the west bank The main yard had a quay 1 050 feet 320m long 7 To the south east the yard occupied the north bank of the Thames east of Bow Creek with two slips giving direct access to the main river Today the site is crossed by the A1020 Lower Lea Crossing and the Docklands Light Railway south of Canning Town station By 1863 the company had the capacity to build 25 000 tons of warships and 10 000 tons of mail steamers simultaneously One of its first Admiralty contracts was for HMS Warrior launched in 1860 at the time the world s largest warship and the first iron hulled armoured frigate HMS Minotaur followed in 1863 400 feet 120 m long and 10 690 tons displacement Work on vessels such as Minotaur was performed on the Canning Town side of the Lea and this is where the Thames Ironworks expanded from less than 10 acres 4 0 ha in 1856 to 30 acres 12 ha by 1891 While the old site at Orchard Place was still the company s official address until 1909 its presence there was minimal by the late 1860s the company having only a 5 acres 2 0 ha site there General shipbuilding on the Thames came under great pressure due to the cost advantages of northern yards with closer supplies of coal and iron and many yards closed following the 1866 financial crisis Of the survivors those like the Thames Ironworks were specialised in warships and liners 8 nbsp Stern view of HMS Sans Pareil ready for launching Following the success of HMS Warrior and HMS Minotaur orders were placed by navies all over the world and vessels were built for Denmark Greece Portugal Russia Spain and the Ottoman Empire The yard also built the Prussian Navy s first iron hulled warship the SMS Konig Wilhelm in 1868 and the cruiser Afonso de Albuquerque for Portugal in 1884 A multitude of mostly small warships were also built for the Romanian Navy most notably the brig Mircea 9 Also notable was the tiny minelayer Alexandru cel Bun The Iron Works also produced for the Romanian Navy a class of three small 45 ton gunboats a class of three medium 116 ton gunboats and a class of eight 50 ton torpedo boats 10 In the 1890s philanthropist Arnold Hills became the managing director He had originally joined the board of directors in 1880 at the age of 23 Hills was one of the first business directors voluntarily to introduce an eight hour day for his workers at a time when 10 and 12 hour shifts were more common in industrial work In 1895 Hills helped to set up a football club for the Works employees Thames Ironworks F C and within their first two years they had entered the FA Cup and the London League As a result of the committee s desire to employ professional players the Thames Ironworks F C was wound up in June 1900 and West Ham United F C was formed a month later Merged with the engine builder John Penn and Sons in 1899 as the Thames Iron Works Shipbuilding and Engineering Co During its lifetime the yard produced 144 warships and numerous other vessels In 1911 Hills petitioned Winston Churchill then First Lord of the Admiralty regarding the lack of new orders He was unsuccessful and the yard was forced to shut in 1912 2 Within two years the United Kingdom was at war with the German Empire with the yard s last major ship taking part in the Battle of Jutland Kotri Bridge in Pakistan Sindh province was also constructed in between 1897 and 1912 11 The premises of the Thames Iron Works and Shipbuilding Company Greenwich were subsequently acquired in 1915 by the Royal Flying Corps created in 1912 for the storage of aeroplanes 12 Archaeology editPart of the company s Limmo Peninsula site was excavated during the construction of Crossrail in 2012 13 Notable products editIn the 1850s the company produced iron work for I K Brunel s Royal Albert Bridge over the Tamar at Saltash 2 In 1897 to 1912 the company made the ironworks of Kotri Bridge Sindh Province of Pakistan HMS Warrior launched in 1860 the world s first all iron warship When completed in October 1861 Warrior was the largest fastest most heavily armed and most heavily armoured warship in the world In the 1890s the yard built two of the six British built battleships that formed the main Japanese battle line in the Russo Japanese War of 1904 1905 The launch of HMS Albion in 1898 was marred by an accident when several observers died following a bridge collapse The last major warship built by the yard HMS Thunderer 22 500 tons was launched in 1911 Ships editHMS Trident Royal Navy 1845 Ditchburn amp Mare 14 HMS Recruit Royal Navy 1846 iron brig DS Rigi 1847 In continuous service on Lake Lucerne Switzerland until 1952 Since being decommissioned she has been on display at the Swiss Transport Museum Verkehrshaus PS Vladimir 1848 C J Mare Russian War Steamer 15 Argo 1853 first steamship to circumnavigate the world SS Himalaya 1853 C J Mare for Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company later HMS Himalaya Royal Navy HMS Warrior Royal Navy 1860 Yavari and Yapura Peruvian Navy 1862 exported in sections for assembly on Lake Titicaca Mahmudiye Ottoman Navy 1863 HMS Minotaur Royal Navy 1863 RUS Pervenetz Imperial Russian Navy 1863 HMS Valiant Royal Navy 1863 Victoria frigate 1865 16 SNS Vitoria Spanish Navy 1865 HMS Serapis Royal Navy troopship 1866 Anglia 1866 iron paddle tug 17 SMS Konig Wilhelm 1869 Prussian Navy 18 Avnillah Ottoman Navy 1869 Feth i Bulend Ottoman Navy 1870 HMS Magdala Royal Navy 1870 Hamidiye Ottoman Navy 1872 purchased by the Royal Navy as HMS Superb Mesudiye Ottoman Navy 1872 PS Castalia English Channel Steamship Company 1874 Mindello Portuguese Navy 1875 Rainha De Portugal Portuguese Navy 1875 Vasco da Gama Portuguese Navy 1876 Fox 1877 iron tug 17 Canada 1880 Screw Tug 17 HMS Linnet Royal Navy 1880 NRP Afonso de Albuquerque Portuguese Navy 1884 HMS Benbow Royal Navy 1885 HMS Sans Pareil Royal Navy 1887 HMS Blenheim Royal Navy 1890 SS Robin Arthur Ponsonby 1890 HMS Grafton Royal Navy 1892 HMS Theseus Royal Navy 1892 Battleship IJN Fuji 1896 Battleship Shikishima 1898 HMS Albion Royal Navy 1898 HMS Cornwallis Royal Navy 1901 HMS Duncan Royal Navy 1901 Cromer Lifeboat Louisa Heartwell ON 495 RNLI 1902 HMS Black Prince Royal Navy 1904 J C Madge RNLI Sheringham lifeboat 1904 19 HMS Nautilus Royal Navy 1910 later named HMS Grampus HMS Thunderer Royal Navy 1911 Links to West Ham United Football Club edit Employees at the Thames Ironworks formed a works football team called Thames Ironworks Football Club This club was later renamed West Ham United whose emblem of the crossed hammers represents the large riveting hammers used in the shipbuilding trade West Ham are also known as The Hammers for this reason While the media and the general football world commonly refer to the club as The Hammers the club s own supporters have always referred to their team as The Irons which again comes from the link with Thames Ironworks The chant Come on you Irons is heard on every match day at West Ham citation needed The shape of the 16th evolution of the club badge launched after club moved to the Olympic Stadium in 2016 is a representation of the cross section of the bow of HMS Warrior the first iron clad battleship built by the Thames Ironworks in 1860 20 Notes edit Survey of London volumes 43 and 44 Leamouth Wharf edited by Hermione Hobhouse 1994 a b c d Jim Lewis 1999 London s Lea Valley Phillimore ISBN 1 86077 100 9 Leamouth Road and Orchard Place Historical development Survey of London Vol 43 and 44 Poplar Blackwall and Isle of Dogs British History Online 1994 pp 646 655 Retrieved 8 October 2007 Rolt and Spencer Churchill entered a further consortium led by Churchward an entrepreneur from Dover https doverhistorian com 2015 08 08 packet service part iii churchward founder of the packet yard and politician Retrieved 3 November 2016 Johnson Alan A 1978 London s Local Railways Newton Abbott David amp Charles ISBN 0 7153 7479 6 Leviathan Workshops No 1 The Mechanics Magazine 75 6 Robertson Brooman amp Co 94 July December 1861 Poplar amp Canning Town 1867 London Sheet 65 The Godfrey Edition Old Ordnance Survey Maps Alan Godfrey Maps ISBN 1 84151 261 3 Hostettler Eve 1986 Ship building and related industries on the Isle of Dogs Dockland NELP GLC p not cited ISBN 0 7168 1611 3 Sea Breezes Volume 11 1951 page 58 Robert Gardiner Conway s All the World s Fighting Ships 1906 1921 Naval Institute Press 1985 pp 421 422 http heritage eftsindh com sites hyderabad images kotri bridge 01 jpg bare URL image file Air 29 4692 held in The National Archives Kew BBC News London Crossrail dig uncovers historic Limmo Peninsula shipyard remains BBC 23 March 2012 Retrieved 24 March 2012 Illustrated London News 27 December 1845 Illustrated London News 1 April 1848 Illustrated London News 1 June 1867 a b c Thames Tugs William Watkins Limited permanent dead link Illustrated London News 20 February 1869 Register of Historic Vessels J C Madge Archived 21 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine Hopps Kat 13 December 2015 How a new West Ham United crest is keeping strong links between the football club and HMS Warrior Newham Recorder Archived from the original on 9 November 2017 Retrieved 9 November 2017 Further reading edit Johnston Ian Buxton Ian 2013 The Battleship Builders Constructing and Arming British Capital Ships Hardback Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 59114 027 6 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding Company Arnold Hills International Vegetarian Union Port of London History Grace s Guide Chronology 51 30 34 N 0 0 32 8 E 51 50944 N 0 009111 E 51 50944 0 009111 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding Company amp oldid 1220940568, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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