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Port of Hull

The Port of Hull is a port at the confluence of the River Hull and the Humber Estuary in Kingston upon Hull, in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England.

Port of Hull
The P&O Ferries terminal at the Port of Hull
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Location
CountryEngland
LocationKingston upon Hull
Coordinates53°44′17″N 0°19′55″W / 53.738°N 0.332°W / 53.738; -0.332 (Port of Hull)
Details
Operated byAssociated British Ports

Seaborne trade at the port can be traced to at least the 13th century, originally conducted mainly at the outfall of the River Hull, known as The Haven, or later as the Old Harbour. In 1773, the Hull Dock Company was formed and Hull's first dock built on land formerly occupied by Hull town walls. In the next half century a ring of docks was built around the Old Town on the site of the former fortifications, known as the Town Docks. The first was The Dock (1778), (or The Old Dock, known as Queen's Dock after 1855), followed by Humber Dock (1809) and Junction Dock (1829). An extension, Railway Dock (1846), was opened to serve the newly built Hull and Selby Railway.

The first dock east of the river, Victoria Dock, opened in 1850. Docks along the banks of the Humber to the west were begun in 1862 with the construction of the West Dock, later Albert Dock. The William Wright extension opened in 1880, and a dock further west, St Andrew's Dock, opened in 1883. In 1885, Alexandra Dock, a new eastern dock was built connected to a new railway line constructed by the same company, the Hull Barnsley & West Riding Junction Railway and Dock Company. In 1914, King George Dock was built jointly by the competing railway companies, the Hull and Barnsley company and the North Eastern Railway; this was extended in 1969 by the Queen Elizabeth Dock extension. As of 2016 Alexandra is being modernised for use in wind farm construction, with a factory and estuary side quay under construction, a development known as Green Port Hull.

The Town Docks, Victoria Dock, and St Andrew's Dock fell out of use by the 1970s and were closed. Some were later infilled and redeveloped, with the Humber and Railway docks converted for leisure craft as Hull Marina.

Other facilities at the port included the Riverside Quay, built on the Humber banks at Albert Dock for passenger ferries and European trains, and the Corporation Pier, from which a Humber Ferry sailed to New Holland, Lincolnshire. Numerous industrial works were served by the River Hull, which also hosted several dry docks. To the east of Hull, Salt End near Hedon became a petroleum distribution point in the 20th century, with piers into the estuary for shipment, and later developed as a chemical works.

As of 2023, the main port is operated by Associated British Ports and is estimated to handle one million passengers per year; it is the main softwood timber importation port for the UK.[1]

History edit

Background edit

 
A 17th century map by Wenceslaus Hollar showing position of various staithes in the Haven and the fortifications of the City Wall.

Hull lies at a naturally advantageous position for a port on the north side of the Humber Estuary, to the west of a bend southwards giving rise to (on average) deeper water; and the River Hull flows out into the Humber at the same point.[2][map 1] The initial development of a port was undertaken by wool-producing Meaux Abbey before 1200 as a route for export.[3][4][5]

An important event in the history of Hull as a port was its acquisition by King Edward I. In 1297, it became the only port from which goods could be exported overseas from the county of Yorkshire.[6] Thus, in the 13th and 14th centuries Hull was a major English port for the export of wool,[note 1] much of it to Flanders, with wine being a major import.[7][note 2] During this period the River Hull was made navigable as far as the then important town of Beverley (1269), and roads were built connecting Hull to Beverley and Holderness and to the via regia between Hessle and Beverley near to Anlaby (about 1302).[6]

By the 15th century, trade with the Hanseatic league had become important. During the same period the growth of the English cloth industry meant that the export of cloth from Hull increased while wool exports decreased.[8] The 16th century brought a considerable reduction in the amount of cloth traded through the port, but the export of lead increased.[9] By the late 17th century Hull was the third port in the realm after London and Bristol, with the export of lead and cloth, and imports of flax and hemp as well as iron and tar from the Baltic.[10]

Until 1773, trade was conducted via the Old Harbour, also known as The Haven, a series of wharves on the west bank of the River Hull,[note 3] with warehouses and the merchants' houses backing on to the wharves along the High Street.[note 4]

Hull Dock Company edit

 
The second Hull Dock Company offices (built 1820), close to the entrance to the former Queen's Dock
 
The third Hull Dock Company offices (built 1871), at the former junction between Queen's and Prince's Dock

By the 18th century it was becoming increasingly clear that the Haven was unfit for the growing amount of trade: it was not only narrow, but tidal and prone to a build up of mud from the estuary.[12][13] An additional stimulus to change was the demand for a 'legal quay' on which customs officials could easily examine and weigh goods for export without causing excessive delay to shipments.[14]

In 1773, the Hull Corporation, Hull Trinity House and Hull merchants formed a Dock Company,[13] the first statutory dock company in Britain.[15] The Crown gave the land which contained Hull's city walls for construction of docks,[16] and an Act of Parliament was passed in 1774 allowing the Dock Company to raise up to £100,000 by shares and loans; thus Hull's first dock (the Old Dock) (a wet dock) began construction.[12][13] Three docks, known as the Town Docks, which followed the path of the town walls, were constructed by the company between 1778 and 1829: The Old Dock, later Queen's Dock, (1778), Humber Dock (1809), and Junction Dock, later Prince's Dock, (1829).[17][18][19] An extension of the Town Docks (Railway Dock) was built in 1846 just north of the terminus of the then recently opened Hull and Selby Railway.[17] The first dock in Hull east of the River Hull (Victoria Dock) was constructed between 1845 and 1850; this became the main dock for timber trade and was expanded in the next two decades including the construction of large timber ponds.[20]

In 1860, a rival company, the West Dock Company, was formed to promote and build new docks suitable for the increasing amounts of trade and the growing size of steam ships; the scheme was supported by the Hull Corporation, Hull Trinity House, the North Eastern Railway (NER) and various individuals in Hull. The site for the planned dock was on the Humber foreshore to the west of the River Hull. The Dock Company then proposed a larger dock in the same position, which was sanctioned by an Act of Parliament in 1861[note 5][22] This dock was known as the Western Dock until its opening in 1869 when it was named Albert Dock; an extension, William Wright Dock, was opened 1880.[21] A third dock (St Andrew's Dock) on the Humber foreshore west of the William Wright Dock was opened in 1883.[23] The three docks were ideally suited for trans-shipment by rail as they were directly south of and parallel with the Selby to Hull railway line that terminated in the centre of Hull.

In 1885, Alexandra Dock opened; it was owned and operated by the Hull Barnsley & West Riding Junction Railway and Dock Company. This ended the Dock Company's monopoly on dock facilities in Hull and led to price cutting competition between the two companies for dock charges. The Dock Company was operating at a loss and from 1886 sought to merge the company into a larger organisation—the obvious choice being the North Eastern Railway.[24] In 1891, the Dock Company approached the North Eastern for capital to improve its Albert Dock, leading to the North Eastern Railway acquiring the shares and debts of the Dock Company in exchange for its shares. Instead of improving Albert Dock, the North Eastern decided to expend a much greater sum on a new dock, east of Alexandra Dock; however, the proposal was opposed by both the Hull and Barnsley, and the Hull Corporation. The Dock Company and NER were legally amalgamated in 1893; one of the clauses of the Act of Parliament allowing the merger stipulated that about £500,000 would be spent on dock improvements over the next seven years.[25]

Clauses in the 1893 amalgamation bill protecting the Hull and Barnsley company prevented the NER from creating a new deep water dock without consulting the Hull and Barnsley Railway (H&BR). This led to a joint proposal for a dock east of Alexandra Dock being submitted, and passed in 1899, as the "Hull Joint Dock Act".[26] The new dock was opened in 1914 as the King George Dock.[27]

Dock ownership (1922–) edit

The Hull and Barnsley Railway became part of the North Eastern Railway in 1922,[28] making the docks in Hull the responsibility of a single company once again. The Railways Act 1921 led to the merger of the NER into the London and North Eastern Railway in 1923.[28] In 1948, much of Britain's transport operations were nationalised by the Transport Act 1947 into the British Transport Commission, including the port and railway operations of the London North Eastern Railway (LNER). In 1962, the British Transport Docks Board was formed by the Transport Act 1962. In 1981, the company was privatised by the Transport Act 1981, and Associated British Ports was formed. Later that year, the docks were struck by an F0/T0 tornado on 23 November, as part of the record-breaking nationwide tornado outbreak on that day.[29] The tornado was very weak, with damage remaining limited as a result; a second, stronger tornado struck Hull's north-eastern residential suburbs later that day.

Docks edit

 
Map of the Hull docks c. 1912 (full rail network not shown)

The Town Docks edit

The Old Dock edit

 
Queen's Dock, Hull in 1922

By the mid-1700s the overcrowding of ships on the River Hull, or Old Harbour, had reached such an extent that vessels were being damaged, in addition to causing delays in handling and shipping. Therefore, some tentative investigations were begun into expanding the facilities at Hull. It was not until the later 1760s that the Hull Corporation acted and employed surveyors to search for a suitable site for a new harbour. At the same time, HM Customs sought an end to the need to inspect cargoes handled at the private wharves and wanted customs procedures incorporated into a new dock or wharf—a "legal quay".[30][31]

An initial survey by Robert Mylne and Joseph Robson recommended a new harbour on the east side of the River Hull. Though the established development on the east bank tended to preclude a new port there, the same interests were unwilling to see the focus of trade shift away from the west bank where they were already established. In the early 1770s, John Grundy was contracted by agriculturalists owning land reliant on the drainage of the River Hull to assess the impact of the proposed new quay on the River Hull. Grundy's report of 1772 suggested either widening the river, or using the channel behind the Hull Citadel, or the moat of the Hull town walls for both harbourage and drainage. Grundy also proposed the use of gates in the channel to afford both wet and dry docks.[32] Reports were prepared on the cost (John Wooler) and the effect on the river (John Smeaton) of Grundy's proposal for a quay on the site of the town's moat. The dock was costed at between £55,000 and £60,000, and the quay between £11,000 and £12,000. Smeaton's report indicated no issues arising in terms of the flow of the river. After both reports had been provided in early 1773 the Corporation and Customs soon agreed to proceed with the plan. With limited opposition only on the grounds of the effect on drainage, an act for the construction was obtained in 1774.[33]

The Old Dock, the first dock in Hull, was built between 1775 and 1778 to a design by Henry Berry and John Grundy, Jr.; Luke Holt acted as resident engineer, appointed on John Smeaton's recommendation.[34] As built the dock was 1,703 by 254 ft (519 by 77 m) long by wide,[35][map 2] the lock 200 by 36.5 feet (61.0 by 11.1 m) long by wide at its extremities, and 24.5 feet (7.5 m) deep,[36] the lock river basin was 212 by 80 feet (65 by 24 m) in dimension.[37]

The dock entrance was on the River Hull just south of North Bridge,[map 3] and the dock itself built west-south-west along the path of the North Wall as far as the Beverley Gate.[note 6] The dock walls were of local brick, with Bramley Fall stone coping piece.[35] Cement for the lock wall's front construction was rendered waterproof through the use of pozzolana imported from Italy.[12][36] Piling for the walls consisted of piles narrowing from 12 by 9 inches (300 by 230 mm) to 3 inches (76 mm) at the bottom supporting sleepers 12 by 6 inches (300 by 150 mm) wide by deep trenailed to the piles.[39] The alluvium excavated during the dock construction was deposited mostly on land to the north, raising the ground by 5 feet (1.5 m)—the land was later sold for building upon.[35]

Some of the work proved inadequate, requiring reconstruction later.[12][40] Issues with weak ground led to displacement bulging of the dock's walls in 1776 before the dock had been completed. Both Holt and Berry had recommended extra piling at the softer ground areas but had been over-ruled. Subsequent movement of the walls proved additional piling was necessary. By 1778 some parts of the dock walls were displaced from their proper position by 3 feet (0.9 m), exacerbated by poor wall design and its buttresses. Further issues occurred on the lock to the River Hull, and the north wall of the lock basin collapsed before construction had been completed.[41] Despite these setbacks the dock was formally opened on 22 September 1778.[42] The lock required rebuilding in the 1780s to prevent total collapse,[43] and in 1814 the lock and basin were rebuilt under the guidance of John Rennie the Elder with George Miller as resident engineer.[44][45]

The lock was rebuilt of brick with pozzuolana mortar, faced with Bramley Fall stone. After rebuilding the lock was 120.75 by 38 feet (36.80 by 11.58 m) long by wide, with 24.5 feet (7.5 m) height above the sills;[46] the depth of water being between 15 and 20 ft (4.6 and 6.1 m) depending on the tide.[47] At the entrance to the dock a double drawbridge of the Dutch type, counterbalanced for ease of use, allowed people to cross the lock.[12] The main part of the bridge was cast iron, built by Ayden and Etwell of the Shelf Iron Works (Bradford).[48] The lock basin was rebuilt at the same time, to the same design as used in the new Humber Dock—the new basin was 213 feet (65 m) long, narrowing from 80.5 to 71 feet (24.5 to 21.6 m) wide from top to bottom. Both the lock and the basin were re-opened on 13 November 1815.[49]

The dock was called The Dock until the construction of further docks,[50] when it was called The Old Dock.[51] It was officially named the Queen's Dock in 1855.[note 7][note 8]

The dock closed in 1930 and was sold to the Corporation for £100,000. It was subsequently infilled and converted to ornamental gardens known as Queen's Gardens.[53][54]

Humber Dock edit

 
Humber Dock in 1952

Since the entrance to the Old Dock was via the River Hull, there were still problems with ships accessing the dock through the crowded river. In 1781, a canal was proposed to connect the Old Dock to the Humber. In general, sea-borne trade was still growing.[55] Customs commissioned three independent reports from Thomas Morris, William Jessop, and Joseph Huddart on the siting of a second dock in 1793. All three considered a dock in the southern end of the ditch of the city walls, and a dock on the site of Hull Citadel, also known as the Garrison. Two reports recommended the new dock be sited in the town ditch and proposed a canal connecting the old and new dock. The Dock Company then commissioned John Hudson and John Longbotham to examine and cost a dock in the town ditch, as well as other improvements.[44] There was some delay in making the new dock a reality, partly due to the lethargy of the Dock Company, but by 1802 a bill had been passed in Parliament for the construction of a second dock—again following the path of the City walls, this time from Hessle gate roughly northwards.[55]

John Rennie and William Chapman were employed as engineers.[56][57] They submitted an optimistic cost estimate for a dock in the town ditch with a basin onto the Humber of £84,000. Experience with the settlement and collapse of the old dock's walls led to more substantial construction of lock and dock walls, though some subsidence still occurred.[58] The dock walls now stood on angled piled foundations, with the mass of the wall at a shallow angle to the vertical opposing the weight of earth behind.[59] The lock base consisted of an inverted arch, a design also used on the rebuilt Old Dock lock of 1814.[60] During the construction of the lock pit a freshwater spring was found,[note 9] causing difficulties in construction.[61] The spring continued to cause problems in the lock pit, with some subsidence attributed to it (1812); James Walker directed further remedial work on the lock in 1830 as a result.[62]

John Harrap was the on site engineer.[63][64] Construction began in 1803 and was completed in 1809 at a cost of £220,000.[65] Mud from the excavations was used to make new ground on the banks of the Humber, with the upper clay stratum also used to manufacture bricks for the works.[61][note 10]

The dock entrance was from the Humber via an outer basin with piers.[map 4] The dock itself was 914 ft (279 m) long and 342 ft (104 m) wide, the lock was 158 ft (48 m) long and 42 ft (13 m) wide. The depth of water varied from 21 to 26 ft (6.4 to 7.9 m) seasonally depending on the tides.[65][map 5] The lock was crossed by a two leaf swing bridge, 81 feet 9 inches (24.92 m) in total length, and 8 feet 3 inches (2.51 m) wide, made of cast iron, by Ayden and Etwell, with six main ribs supporting the roadway.[68]

The dock was first filled with water on 3 December 1808 and was formally opened on 30 June 1809. The cost of construction was split between the Dock Company, the Hull Corporation and Hull Trinity House,[69] as set out in the text of the 1802 act.[70]

Humber Dock closed in 1968, it re-opened in 1983 as the Hull Marina.[64] The dock, lock and swing bridge over the lock (a replacement dated 1846[71]), are now listed structures.[72] The swing bridge (Wellington Street Bridge) was restored in 2007.[71][73]

Junction Dock edit

 
The Princes Quay shopping centre on the Junction Dock

One stipulation of the Act of 1802 for the construction of Humber Dock was that the Dock Company would build a third dock between the Old and Humber docks when the average tonnage of goods unloaded at the docks reached a certain level. This condition was satisfied in 1825. The required Act of Parliament had already been passed in 1824, and construction of the third dock began in 1826.[74]

This dock, Junction Dock, was constructed between, and connected to the Old and Humber Docks.[map 6] This made the old town of Hull an island bounded by the three docks, a river and an estuary,[51] and built roughly along the lines of the old fortifications between Beverley and Myton gates,[75] as set out in the 1802 act.[76][77]

It was designed by James Walker with Thomas Thorton and later John Timperley as resident engineer.[78][79] The construction cost £186,000.[80][note 11] The dock walls were similar in design to those of Humber Dock, as were the locks, with inverted, arched bottoms.[81] While the cofferdam used in the construction of the northern lock was being dismantled a leak caused the undermining and collapse of around 60 feet (18 m) of the Old dock wall;[78][82] the removal of debris was done using a diving bell, and the wall repaired with piling.[83]

The dock opened in 1829 and was 645 ft (197 m) long and 407 ft (124 m) wide, with a lock at each end 36 ft (11 m) wide with a bridge over each.[84] The bridges were of the balanced lifting type; both bridges and locks were from Hunter and English (Bow, London), with iron from Alfreton, Derbyshire.[85] In 1855, it was renamed Prince's Dock in honour of a visit by Queen Victoria and Albert, Prince Consort.[note 7]

The dock closed in 1968.[86] Part of the dock still exists but without a lock connection to Humber Dock. The Princes Quay shopping centre, opened in 1991,[86] was built over part of the dock on stilts. The dock now features a fountain.[87]

Railway Dock edit

The Dock Company applied to build a new branch dock in May 1844,[88] and obtained powers with the Kingston-upon-Hull Dock Act, 1844, which also enabled the construction of an east dock (later Victoria Dock). In late 1844, the company applied to expand the branch dock,[89] which was enabled by the Kingston-upon-Hull Dock Act, 1845.

The Railway Dock was connected on the west side of the Humber Dock to the north of Kingston Street and was smaller than the other town docks. The dock of 13,130 sq ft (1,220 m2),[map 7] approximately 716 by 165 feet (218 by 50 m) was constructed at a cost of £106,000. It opened on 3 December 1846.[90][91] The Dock Company's engineer was J. B. Hartley, also the engineer on the east dock.[92]

Its primary purpose was for the transfer of goods to and from the newly built Hull and Selby Railway,[17] which had its passenger terminus just west of Humber Dock facing onto Railway Street, and its goods sheds north of this (see Manor House Street railway station). Railway lines also ran from the goods shed to the Humber Dock.[93]

Like Humber Dock, the dock closed in 1968 and in 1984 became part of Hull Marina.[94]

Victoria Dock edit

 
Plan of the town docks with proposed Queen's Dock to the east (1839)

After the construction of Junction Dock in 1825, the port and its trade continued to grow substantially, leading to the requirement for a new dock.[95] In 1838, an independent company, the Queen's Dock Company, was formed to promote a new dock. The new dock, of around 12 acres (4.9 ha), to be called the Queen's Dock,[note 8] was designed by James Oldham for a site of around 30 acres (12 ha) in Drypool east of the River Hull and The Citadel and near the river's confluence with the Humber. The proposed dock had entrances onto the Humber and the Hull. Capital of £180,000 was proposed for the scheme.[90][96] Proceedings for a bill in Parliament were begun in 1838.[97][note 12]

The Queen's Dock Company abandoned the project, after the Dock Company took up a similar proposal.[98] In September 1839 James Walker was asked to design plans for a dock,[99] and proceedings for a bill in Parliament were begun at the end of that year.[100] The dock's main aim was to accommodate the increased timber trade, freeing up the town docks;[101] alternative plans were also considered including a west dock, and the conversion of the Old Harbour (River Hull) into a dock.[102] Walker's dock was broadly similar to the built dock,[note 13] with entrances onto both the Humber and the River Hull.[note 14] The design allowed for an extension to the east with timber ponds at a later date.[103]

The 1840 bill was withdrawn due to local opposition. In 1844, the company returned again to Parliament with a bill for a dock in the same location, as well as other works including the Railway Dock.[95][106] Permission to build the new east dock, and railway dock was granted in 1844; construction of this new dock began in 1845 and was completed in 1850 at a cost of £300,000.[107] The Dock Company's engineer for this project was J. B. Hartley; the plan was similar in overall form to that of James Walker's design.[92] The formal laying of the foundation stone took place on 5 November 1845, and the formal opening on 3 July 1850, with the dock given the name Victoria Dock, in honour of Queen Victoria.[90]

The dock had an area of about 12.83 acres (5.19 ha), with the Half Tide Basin 3 acres (1.2 ha), the outer basin onto the Humber 2.75 acres (1.11 ha), and the Drypool Basin 1.125 acres (0.455 ha).[note 15] In some respects the dock was of a slightly larger design than Walker's 1840 proposal. The water depth was 27.5 to 22 feet (8.4 to 6.7 m) (spring to neap tide), and the entrances to the Humber and the Hull River were 60 and 45 feet (18 and 14 m) wide respectively.[108] There were two entrances. The larger entrance was onto the Humber. From an outer basin it led via two parallel locks to the Half Tide Basin,[note 16][map 8] and then to the dock itself.[map 9] The second entrance was onto the River Hull south of the entrance to the Old Dock and of Drypool Bridge; it had an outer lock which opened directly to a second locked area known as Drypool Basin.[map 10][note 17] The first timber pond was added soon after the construction of the dock.[110]

In 1845, the York, Hull and East and West Yorkshire Junction Railway proposed a railway line from York to Hull which was to terminate at the East Dock. As a consequence, the York and North Midland Railway (Y&NMR) was forced to bring forward its own scheme to connect the east dock to the railway network.[111][112] The Y&NMR's Victoria Dock Branch Line was opened in 1853.[113]

In 1863, the dock itself was expanded eastwards by 8 acres (3.2 ha), plus another timber pond (No. 2) of 12 acres (4.9 ha) east of the dock. The original timber pond (No. 1) east of the Half Tide Basin was extended through land reclaimed from the Humber.[107] In 1875, the extent of the two ponds was 14 and 8 acres (5.7 and 3.2 ha) respectively.[108]

The western boundary of the dock was defined by the Hull Citadel, which was sold to the Dock company and demolished in 1864. The site was then used for timber storage.[20] Part of the former Citadel land was used by Martin Samuelson and Company (later Humber Iron Works) for shipbuilding,[114] and later by Cook, Welton & Gemmell (from 1883 to 1902).[115][116] C. & W. Earle also had shipbuilding facilities (established 1851) on the banks of the Humber adjacent to and south of Victoria Dock.[117]

Part of the north-west corner of the eastern timber pond (No. 2) was filled in c. 1900 because of changes to the railway layout north of the dock.[118] In the late 1930s, the London and North Eastern Railway (LNER) closed the entrance to No. 2 pond and partially filled in its south side, and expanded timber storage and sidings for the dock to the east over the site of the former shipyard of Earle's Shipbuilding, as part of wider improvements to rail connected timber handling facilities at the dock.[119][120]

By the second half of the 20th century, both ponds had been filled in creating timber yards and sidings;[118] this pattern of use was retained until closure.[121] One major use of the dock was for the trade in timber. There were also facilities for cattle imports including abattoirs and cold storage; coal was also exported through the dock.[122]

The Dock closed in the 1970s and was infilled. The land was used for the construction of a housing estate in the late 1980s.[123] The entrance basin to the dock on the Humber part remains though it is permanently sealed.[20]

The West Dock edit

Albert Dock edit

 
The modern Albert Dock (2007)

Alderman Thomas Thompson had promoted a dock along the banks of the Humber in West Hull as early as the 1830s. In 1860, the West Dock Company was formed to promote a dock in this location, backed by the Hull Corporation, North Eastern Railway, the Hull Trinity House and leading Hull figures. The company proposed a dock of around 1,000 yards (910 m) long and of 14 acres (5.7 ha) in area. In response, the Hull Dock Company promoted a rival scheme; both were put to Parliament and the Dock Company obtained an Act in 1861.[124][note 18]

The Hull Dock Act of 1861 sanctioned the building of a new dock on the Humber foreshore. While the dock was under construction two further acts were enacted: the 1866 act allowed the extension of the dock westwards, and the 1867 act allowed further expansion to the west and south.[127][note 19] The dock sanctioned in 1861 was to be 2,500 feet (760 m) long, the 1866 act increased the length to 3,350 feet (1,020 m) and the enclosed area to 22.8 acres (9.2 ha), and water depth of 29 to 24.5 feet (8.8 to 7.5 m) from high spring to neap tides. The total land area including locks, basins and reclaimed land to the west was 76 acres (31 ha).[128] The engineer was John Hawkshaw; the site engineer was J. C. Hawkshaw.[129]

Construction began in October 1862,[130] with the foundation stone of the north dock wall laid by William Wright in May 1864.[129] The southern dock walls and quays were on reclaimed land, and cofferdams were built which enclosed and split the works into three parts. Quay walls were built of sand and lime mortar with stone from Horsforth onto concrete foundations of on average 10 feet (3.0 m) thick laid on a clay strata reached by excavating down through clay and sand. During construction, on 17 September 1866 one of the south dock walls burst allowing the Humber to flood in. The breach was repaired by 13 October.[130] During the construction of the lockpit the excavation work were troubled by "boils",[note 9] which undermined the work. Boils caused a breach in the river bank on 17 September 1866, letting water into the works. In November, construction began on a dam of around 380 feet (120 m) in length from the south wall to the bank near the Humber Dock to protect the works. Boils appeared in the lockpit on 3 March 1867, and required extensive specialised remedial work to finish the foundations, taking until 20 November for the flow from the boils to be dealt with.[133] Due to the difficulties encountered during construction, the length of the lock, originally intended to be 400 feet (120 m), was reduced to 320 feet (98 m). The width was 80 feet (24 m).[134]

Machinery on the dock, including capstans and the lock gates, were worked by hydraulic power. The dock incorporated its own power supply, consisting of three 20 by 6 feet (6.1 by 1.8 m) (long by diameter) boilers supplying a 40 horsepower (30 kW) steam engine which powered both the hydraulic system via a hydraulic accumulator at 700 pounds per square inch (4,800 kPa), as well as being able to pump mains water around the dock.[135] The works also required the resiting (1864) of the goods line and sidings of the North Eastern Railway's Hull and Selby Line.[136] When completed the dock included a connection to the NER and had doubled track or wider rail sidings on both quays, with the rails crossing the lock entrance by a hydraulically operated swing girder bridge. The dock's sidings were connected to the NER's system west of the dock.[128][135]

A small wharf was built outside the main dock for the shipping activities of the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway (MS&LR). Both the wharf and main dock led into an entrance basin of 5 acres (2.0 ha), which was partially filled in c. 1875 to create more space for the MS&LR.[137] (See also Railway Creek.)

The cost of the dock was £559,479 of which £113,582 was for the excavations, a similar amount for the dock walls and £88,655 for the entire lock constructions excluding the lock gates and machinery.[138] The dock was opened in the presence of the Prince and Princess of Wales (Albert Edward, Prince of Wales, later Edward VII, and Alexandra, Princess of Wales) in 1869 and was named Albert Dock.[21][139][map 11]

Both the Albert and William Wright docks were closed to commercial vessels in 1972 and converted for use as fish docks. The Hull fish fleet moved to the docks in 1975.[139] As of 2010, both docks remain in use for general cargo traffic,[140] as well as being the landing point for the much reduced Hull fishing industry.[141]

In December 2013, a North Sea storm surge and high tide (Cyclone Xaver) caused overtopping of Albert Dock from the Riverside Quay waterfront and through the lockgates, resulting in flooding in Hull city centre.[142][143] As a result, a flood defence improvement scheme was brought forward by two years;[144] work on the £6.3 million flood defence improvement including a 3,120 feet (950 m) long wall 3 feet 3 inches (1 m) high began in November 2014;[145] the wall was completed by November 2015.[146]

William Wright Dock edit

While the Albert Dock was still under construction, the Dock Company obtained another act in 1866 allowing the extension of the dock westwards, and an 1867 act that allowed further expansion to the west and south.[127][note 20]

Construction began in 1873,[147] with R. A. Marillier as engineer and John Hawkshaw as consulting engineer.[137] The dock was planned as an 8-acre (3.2 ha) extension of the Albert Dock accessed via a 60 foot (18 m) channel. The foundation stone was formally laid by William Wright in 1876.[148]

The dock opened in 1880 and was named William Wright Dock after the chairman of the Dock Company.[21] The dock was 5.75 acres (2.33 ha) in size.[149][map 12]

The 2013 storm surge (Cyclone Xaver) caused damage to the north-western wall of the dock—as a result Associated British Ports (ABP) sought to infill approximately 22,000 square feet (2,000 m2) of the dock as a repair.[150]

Riverside Quay edit

 
Riverside Quay in 1922

In 1904, the North Eastern Railway (NER), then the main owner of the Hull docks, applied to Parliament for powers to build a quay along the bank of the Humber Estuary, adjacent to its Albert Dock, and related works.[151] Permission was obtained in 1905 to construct a quay of up to 5,580 feet (1,700 m) in length, and to dredge to a depth of 16 feet (4.9 m) below the low water level of ordinary spring tides.[152]

The quay was designed as a deep water quay for foodstuffs and other goods requiring rapid handling. It avoided delays in entering locks, or having to wait for a low tide to turn.[152][153] Additional works included construction of a two-storey warehouse for the fruit trade on the adjacent side of the Albert Dock, and the replacement of the single line railway swing bridge over the dock's entrance with a double track bridge.[154]

A quay of 2,500 feet (760 m) was constructed along the timbered wharf outward from Albert Dock, extending around 90 feet (27 m) farther into the estuary. The construction consisted of a bank of Middlesbrough slag around 40 feet (12 m) in depth deposited abutting the former quay wall, with about a 45° facing slope supported at the base by sheet piling. The quay's remaining support was formed on Blue Gum and Pitch pine timber pilings, spaced around 10 feet (3.0 m). The long Blue Gum piles extended above ground level to form the supports for the structure's roof. As built, the quay was equipped with hydraulically powered capstans for shunting, and electric cranes; a water supply for ship supply and fire fighting was fitted, and gas lighting used.[155] The electrical equipment was supplied by Craven Brothers. Hydraulic power was supplied via an accumulator tower which also functioned as a clock tower[156] but was demolished after the Second World War.[157]

The pier also incorporated a passenger station for continental boat trains.[153][158] 600 feet (180 m) of the quay was equipped for passenger traffic, with the quay decking raised 3 feet (0.91 m) to provide a platform.[159] The station was used as a terminus for boat trains.[160][161]

The quay came into use in 1907.[162] Initial operations were by the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway (L&YR) and NER's joint ferry to Zeebrugge, followed by ships to Norway operated by Wilson Line, and to Rotterdam by the Hull and Netherlands Steamship Company.[156] The quay was fully completed by 1911.[163]

In the Second World War Hull Blitz, the quay was destroyed by fires started by enemy bombing in May 1941.[162][164] In the 1950s, a new 1,065-foot (325 m) long concrete quay was constructed and officially opened in 1959.[162] The south side of Albert Dock was modernised to a similar design as the new Riverside Quay in 1964.[162][165][map 13]

St Andrew's Dock edit

 
The silted dock in 2005

St Andrew's Dock was constructed at the same time as the extension of Albert Dock. The initial scheme was for a 10-acre (4.0 ha) dock, 1,802 feet (549 m) in length, entered from the Humber by a 250 by 50 feet (76 by 15 m) long by wide lock. As with the Albert Dock extension, the engineers were Marillier and Hawkshaw.[137]

The dock was opened in 1883, directly to the west of William Wright Dock, with an area of over 10.5 acres (4.2 ha).[23] Originally intended to be used for coal handling, it was used entirely for the fishing industry.[166][note 21]

The dock was extended by about 10 acres (4.0 ha) after the Hull Dock Company was taken over by the North Eastern Railway, with work beginning in 1894. This work included the construction of slipways for boat repair.[23] The new dock, St Andrew's Dock Extension, was connected at the west end via a channel; the slipways were at the far west end.[167] While under construction, a cofferdam at the west end burst. This resulted in practically every vessel in the dock being damaged. The £20,000 damages included the destruction of three steamers and three other vessels.[168] The cause was thought to be underground springs released during the pile driving and excavations.[169][note 9]

In the late 1930s, plans were made for improvements and expansion at the dock.[170][171] By 1938 the major part of the plans had been postponed, with no expansion of the dock.[172] In 1947, discussions about improvements to the dock's slipways were resumed, but no work was done.[173]

The dock was in use until 1975 when the fishing industry was moved to Albert Dock at which point it closed.[174] Partial filling in of the dock began in the 1980s. The western part has been redeveloped into the St Andrews Quay retail park,[175][176] while the eastern part of the dock around the entrance was declared a conservation area in 1990 because of its social historic interest.[166] The dock entrance, and some shipping company buildings remain in situ, but the remains of the dock are completely silted up.[166][map 14]

In 2013, the charity St Andrew's Dock Heritage Park Action Group (STAND) selected a design for a memorial to the 6,000 Hull trawlermen who lost their lives in the fishing industry, to be sited next to the Humber at the dock.[177][178][179][180]

Alexandra Dock edit

 
Map of 1914 showing the Alexandra Dock, extended Victoria Dock, Town and West Docks, and the rail systems of the H&BR and the NER
 
Alexandra Dock, Hull in 1922

The Alexandra Dock was built between 1881 and 1885 on land reclaimed from the Humber as part of developments built by the Hull Barnsley & West Riding Junction Railway and Dock Company. Its design was by James Abernethy, and carried out by a partnership of engineers James Oldham and George Bohn, with A. C. Hurtzig as resident engineer. The contractors were Lucas and Aird. The dock machinery, including lock gates and unloading equipment, was hydraulically powered and supplied by Armstrong, Mitchell & Company.[181][182] Pumping machines for the dry docks, and to regulate the water level of the main dock were supplied by Gwynne and Company (London)—two 400 horsepower (300 kW) high pressure condensing engines drove centrifugal pumps, the engines powered by six Lancashire boilers.[183]

The dock was built to the east of Victoria Dock with an outlet to the Humber. Water to fill the dock came from the Holderness Drain, which was intended to minimise the silting up of the dock that would be caused by ingress of water from the Humber. The dock had an area of 46.5 acres (18.8 ha), on a site of 192 acres (78 ha) of which 152 acres (62 ha) was on land within the tidal range of the Humber, requiring the construction of a 6,000 foot (1,800 m) embankment to reclaim the land. Steam and hydraulically powered equipment was used to aid the construction of the dock.[184][181][185] Blows (or "Boils"[note 9]) were encountered during the construction of the lock foundations, and at a point in the dock wall, which threatened to undermine the foundations and required remedial work.[186] The dock walls were planned to be built of chalk rubble faced with ashlar. A strike by masons led to some lower sections of the walls being built using portland cement. The tops of the dock walls were faced with granite.[187] Dredged material from the creation of a channel from the entrance to the deep water channel in the Humber was used to infill parts of the made walls in the dock and to embank the foreshore to the east of the dock.[188]

The dock was opened on 16 July 1885 and named after Alexandra, Princess of Wales. The cost of the works was £1,355,392.[181]

The entrance lock was 550 feet (170 m) long and 85 feet (26 m) wide. Two graving docks, one 500 feet (150 m) long and 60 feet (18 m) wide, the other a little larger, were built at the north-east corner of the dock. The dock's primary purpose was the export of coal.[185][map 15]

In 1899, the dock was expanded by 7 acres (2.8 ha),[185][189] officially opened on 25 September 1899.[190] The extended area added approximately 0.5 miles (0.8 km) of quayside and was built to the same depth as the earlier dock, with the dock walls now constructed of concrete. The contractor was Whitaker and Sons of Horsforth, Leeds, under R. Pawley of the H&BR. The extension was originally fitted for the handling of coal and pit props, with four coal hoists.[191]

A pier onto the Humber Estuary (West Wharf) was added in 1911,[192] the pier was 1,350 feet (410 m) long with an 18 feet (5.5 m) minimum depth of water at spring tides and was equipped with electric conveyors for the transportation of coal.[158][map 16]

Alexandra Dock closed in 1982,[193] at which time the connection to the rail network was removed.[194] In 1991, the dock re-opened[193] but without a rail connection.[195]

In the early 1990s, part of the port land was developed as a dredged aggregate marine terminal and plant, operated as Humber Sand and Gravel Co. (est. 1993), a joint venture between Hanson (formerly ARC) and CEMEX.[196][197][198] a concrete batching plant was built on the dock land in the late 1990s for Ready Mix Concrete Ltd. (later CEMEX UK Materials[199]).[200]

In the 1990s, development of a riverside container terminal, Quay 2000, was proposed.[201] The scheme, later named Quay 2005,[202] was to be built at the site of the West Wharf.[203] A public enquiry was required, due to objections from residents of the Victoria Dock Village.[204] The inspector recommended refusal of the scheme, but the decision was over-ruled by the Department of Transport,[205] and the project gained approved in December 2005.[206] The Associated British Ports (Hull) Harbour Revision Order 2006 allowing the work came into effect in 2006.[207] Construction of the facility, renamed Hull Riverside Container Terminal, was initially planned to be complete by 2008;[208][209] construction of the terminal was delayed,[210] and the scheme was later adapted to attract an offshore wind power business to the port.[211] (See § Green Port Hull.)

As of 2010 the dock handled cargoes including aggregates, bulk agricultural products, bulk chemicals and wood, and also had a Ro-Ro terminal.[141]

Green Port Hull edit

In January 2011, Siemens and Associated British Ports signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) concerning the construction of wind energy machine manufacturing plant at Alexandra Dock.[212][213][214] Infrastructure for the proposed development would also make use of the planned Quay 2005 riverside facilities, which had already gained planning consent, and had an extant environmental mitigation at Chowder Ness.[215][216] The site was favoured because of its relative proximity to planned large-scale wind farms in the North Sea (Dogger Bank, Hornsea, and East Anglia Array wind farms), and the presence of existing port infrastructure.[217]

The Quay 2005 scheme included reclamation of 19 acres (7.5 ha) of land west of the dock entrance, on the banks of the Humber Estuary. In the original scheme the reclaimed area was roughly a right trapezoid which projected well over 330 feet (100 m) into the Humber, with a south facing front of over 1,300 feet (400 m);[218][note 22] the instrument also allowed dredging of the quay and approaches of up to 38 feet (11.5 m) below chart datum.[219]

The development, Green Port Hull, included the Quay 2005 estuary wharf, repurposed as a facility for wind turbine logistics. It also required the infilling of the dock west of the lock gates with about 28,000,000 cu ft (780,000 m3) of material to create additional land for operations. The initial plan included a nacelle factory of up to 380,000 square feet (35,000 m2), plus office, warehousing, and external storage areas, as well as a helipad and a wind turbine of up to 6 MW. The works were to take up most of the dock area except for land around, and including, dry dock facilities in the north-east corner. Businesses located in the dock were to be relocated, primarily to other sites within the Port of Hull.[220][note 23]

Initial expectations were for construction to begin in 2012 and the facility to be operational by 2014.[221] The conclusion of the agreement was delayed because of planning issues and uncertainties over the UK's renewable energy policy.[222] Relocation of existing businesses had taken place by 2012.[223]

The Siemens and ABP 2011 MOU agreement was finalised in March 2014.[224][note 24] ABP investment in the port facilities was estimated at £150 million, and Siemens investment at £160 million across the two sites. The facility was expected to become operational between 2016 and 2017.[224] Plans for the turbine factory were submitted and approved in 2014.[226][note 25] The contract (about £100 million) for dock civil engineering work was awarded to a joint venture of GRAHAM and Lagan Construction Group, with CH2M Hill as consulting engineers.[227] Official groundbreaking took place in January 2015.[228] Revised plans for the site submitted in April 2015 included only a blade manufacturing factory at the site, together with storage and other logistics facilities for wind farm installation work, with no nacelle production.[229] VolkerFitzpatrick was awarded the contract to construct the blade factory in July 2015.[230] Clugston Group was contracted to construct an associated service and logistics building in September 2015.[231]

 
"Dead Bod" graffiti on West Wharf (2007)

As part of the development, the Dead Bod graffiti, painted by Captain Len (Pongo) Rood in the 1960s on one of the West Wharf buildings, which had become a landmark to Humber shipping, was removed and saved for posterity.[232][233] In early 2017, after restoration, the Dead Bod was temporarily removed to the Humber Street Gallery in Hull as part of the City of Culture 2017 celebrations.[234]

The blade factory was formally inaugurated in the presence of Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, Greg Clark on 1 December 2016.[235] The factory scheme has an expected lifespan of around 30 years, after which the site would be returned to general port use.[236]

In August 2021, Siemans announced that a £186 million investment would be made in doubling the size of blade factory to handle larger blade sizes in excess of 330 feet (100 m) in length.[237] The scheme was expected for completion by 2023.[238]

Hull Joint Dock edit

 
Aerial view of King George and Queen Elizabeth docks (1995)

The NER began planning for a rival dock east of Alexandra Dock in the 1890s. This led eventually to a joint agreement between the NER and the Hull and Barnsley Railway (HBR), and an Act of Parliament in 1899, the Joint Dock Act. Construction of the dock was delayed until 1906 and was completed in 1914, at which point the new dock became officially known as the King George Dock. An extension arm of the dock to the south-east, sharing the same lock, was opened as the Queen Elizabeth Dock in 1969. In 1993, the dock gained a terminal outside the lock gates, on the banks of the Humber, known as River Terminal 1. It is now known as Rotterdam Terminal, used by North Sea Ferries.

King George Dock (1914–) edit

By the early 1890s further expansion of the port facilities at Hull were required, in particular dock and handling facilities for large coal carrying vessels, as well as facilities for the new steam trawlers. The NER had been in discussion with the Hull Dock Company regarding investment and working arrangements, this led to a takeover of the Dock Company by the NER.[239]

In 1892, the board of the NER had decided that a greater investment of around £1,000,000 in a new dock east of Alexandra Dock would be better spent than expending a smaller sum, of around £22,000, on expanding the entrance to the Dock Company's Albert Dock. It put Bills before Parliament for the amalgamation of the Dock Company, and for a new dock.[note 26] Both Bills were rejected; the amalgamation Bill was resubmitted in 1893, with clauses protecting the interests of the Hull and Barnsley Railway (HBR), which feared the possibility of a rival dock adjacent to their own Alexandra Dock. As such, the Bill contained clauses requiring the NER to inform the HBR of any planned dock to the east and allow them the option to join as partners in any such development. The North Eastern Railway (Hull Docks) Act was passed, and the amalgamation took place in 1893.[25] The NER submitted Bills for extensive dock improvements in Hull in 1897,[note 27] and again in 1898 with an expanded improvement scheme,[note 28] both of which were abandoned over responsibilities regarding dredging the river. The following year the NER submitted a Bill for a new dock east of Alexandra, jointly with the HBR, including new connecting rail lines[note 29]—this was passed as the Hull Joint Dock Act, 1899.[240]

The two companies estimated (1899) the cost of the development at £1,419,555, of which the dock and lock were estimated at £1,194,160; the scheme was expected to take seven years to complete.[241] The act had specified a dock of 60 acres (24 ha) which was expected to have been completed by 1906. The initial construction was reduced to 32 acres (13 ha) due to the high cost of the tenders received for the original design.[242] The Hull Joint Dock Act, 1906, made minor modifications to the original scheme, and extended the time for the construction of the dock.[note 30][242]

Construction of the dock was contracted to S. Pearson & Son in 1906,[243] with an estimated value of £850,000.[244] At the same time, the Great Central Railway's rival, Immingham Dock, was under construction on the south bank of the Humber.[245] Most of the dock site was beyond the bank of the Humber as it then existed, requiring reclamation of ground from the Humber foreshore. Two temporary banks were constructed, enclosing 30 and 50 acres (12 and 20 ha), plus a timber dam beyond the southernmost bank closing off the soon-to-be-constructed lock. The underlying glacial geology of the Humber, due to underground water pressure,[note 9] was weak and quicksand strata.[246] By early 1911 the embankments enclosing the new dock area were nearly complete. as were most of the excavations for the dock itself, and the dock's walls. The dock's lock required insertion of steel sheet piles as far as 47 feet (14 m) below the bottom of the lock to create a watertight surround for the construction, as a result of water containing gravel in the underlying geology.[247] The dock walls were of concrete, faced and coped with Staffordshire blue bricks and granite. Some dock walls were built as sloped constructions, with blue gum timber wharfing, due to poor ground conditions preventing satisfactory foundations.[246]

 
1914 single storey ferro-concrete storage shed, north-western arm, north quay.[note 31] (2007)

As built in 1914, the dock had a water area of 53 acres (21 ha) and consisted of a central area of around 1,000 by 1,050 feet (300 by 320 m) connected to the river by a lock running north-east to south-west. Two main arms to the north-east and north-west were initially constructed, both around 1,350 feet (410 m) long. The western arm had warehousing facilities,[note 31] while the central and eastern part of the northernmost quay had six coaling berths designed to allow ships to dock diagonally at the dockside. The main lock was itself 750 by 85 feet (229 by 26 m) long divided into two sections of 500 and 250 feet (152 and 76 m) by another set of gates.[map 17] Water depth in the lock would be between 19.75 and 42.25 feet (6.02 and 12.88 m) between low water and high spring tides, while the dock itself was to be maintained at a minimum depth of 32 feet 8 inches (9.96 m). The design allowed for expansion through two further arms to the south-east and south-west, giving a potential ultimate area of around 85 acres (34 ha).[249] Two graving docks were sited at the eastern end of the north-eastern arm of 550 by 66 feet (168 by 20 m) and 450 by 72 feet (137 by 22 m), each with a water depth of up to 22 feet (6.7 m).[250][251]

Much of the dock equipment was operated by electricity, supplied at 440 V from the Hull Corporation, including electric coal conveyors, cranes, and dock lighting, as well as powering pumps used to supply hydraulic power.[249][248] Hydraulic equipment (from Hathorn Davey of Leeds) was used for lock and dry dock gates, and for the coal tippers.[249][248] Cranes were supplied by Royce Limited (Manchester), Craven Brothers, and a floating crane by Werfo Gusto (A. F. Smulders); coal handling equipment was from Head Wrightson.[248] The machinery and mechanism for the lock gates were manufactured by the Hydraulic Engineering Company (Chester); the centrifugal pumps and electric motors for draining the dry docks were made by W. H. Allen of Bedford.[252]

On 26 June 1914, King George V visited Hull and formally opened the Hull Joint Dock. The dock was subsequently named King George Dock in his honour.[243][253][254] The dock's design was undertaken by Sir Benjamin Baker and Sir John Wolfe-Barry.[254][255] Its construction was supervised by T. M. Newell and R. Pawley, with W. Ebdon as resident engineer, and T. L. Norfolk as superintendent of equipment construction.[248] Architectural design of the dock's offices was by the NER's architect William Bell.[248]

The dock was home, for a period of time, to the NER's Pals Battalion, the 17th Battalion Northumberland Fusiliers. The battalion arrived for training at the dock on 22 September 1914. In November 1914, the battalion moved to stations along the East Yorkshire coast, with the headquarters remaining at the docks. On 20 June 1915, the battalion left the docks for Catterick.[256][257]

 
1919 Grain Silo (2007)

A 40,000 t (39,000 long tons; 44,000 short tons) ferro-concrete grain silo was under construction in 1914 at the end of the north-western quay[248] and was complete by 1919.[254] The main building consisted of two blocks 96 by 241 feet (29 by 73 m) wide by long, each holding 144 storage bins each 12 feet (3.7 m) square and 50 feet (15 m) deep. Each building block was connected to either the north or south quays of the north-west quay via a receiving house with weighing equipment, and by subways under the quayside, extending for 900 feet (270 m). The foundations for the building and the quay subways were constructed by the dock contractors (S. Pearson), the main building was built by the British Reinforced Concrete Engineering Company, and the grain handling equipment supplied by Henry Simon Limited (Manchester).[258]

In 1959, the British Transport Commission authorised a £4,750,000 improvement scheme for the dock. The largest part of the scheme (£2,000,000) was the extension of the north quay by the total removal of coal loading equipment, and conversion of the echelon (diagonal) berthing arrangement on the far north and north-east dock walls into standard straight dockside. Other improvements included replacement of timber quay structures with concrete ones (specifically the south-west arm), over 400,000 square feet (37,000 m2) of storage in single-storey sheds, new electric cranes, and additional grain handling equipment, as well as investment in mobile mechanical handling equipment including fork lift trucks and mobile cranes. Also included in the works were expansion of the grain silo capacity and an impounding station designed to maintain the dock water at a high level.[259][260]

In 1965, the creation of berths for use by roll-on roll-off ferries began, increasing use of the dock for unit freight transport.[254]

Queen Elizabeth Dock extension (1969–) edit

In 1968, work on a 28 acres (11 ha) extension to King George Dock built on reclaimed land to the south-east of the dock was begun. The extension was officially opened in August 1969 by Queen Elizabeth II and named Queen Elizabeth Dock.[162][map 18]

Recent history (1970–) edit

A container terminal was opened in 1971 at Queen Elizabeth Dock. Two roll on-roll off terminals were opened in 1973 and by 1975 there were six such terminals in the two docks.[162][261]

In 1984, Anglia Oils (now AarhusKarlshamn) opened an automated vegetable oil refinery on the King George Dock estate.[262]

PD Ports (originally Humberside Sea and Land Services) began operating the Hull Container Terminal in 1990. By the mid-2000s throughput was over 100,000 TEU per annum, with Samskip as the primary customer.[citation needed]

 
"Hull All Weather Terminal".[note 32] (2007)

In 1993, River Terminal 1, a terminal for large roll-on roll-off vessels, constructed at a cost of £12 million, opened on the banks of the Humber Estuary south of the King George Dock.[263][map 19] A covered terminal was opened in 1997, initially built for steel handling for British Steel Corporation.[264][note 32] It was renamed Hull All-Weather Terminal in 2009, and the facilities were expanded to allow the handling of other weather sensitive goods, including dry bulks, paper, and agribulks (fertiliser).[265][266] A covered shed for paper products (Finland Terminal), opened in 2000, had expanded to 70,000 sq ft (6,500 m2) by 2006.[267]

In 2001, new facilities were inaugurated on the banks of the Humber. The Rotterdam Terminal (on the site of the 1993 River Terminal 1), was built at a cost of £14.3 million to serve the P&O North Sea Ferries' new ships, the Pride of Rotterdam and Pride of Hull, used on the Hull-Rotterdam route.[268]

The 1919 grain silo was demolished in 2010–11.[269][270]

As of 2010, other facilities at the two docks included a 850,000 cu ft (24,000 m3) cold store and passenger services to Zeebrugge. The company AarhusKarlshamn operates a large vegetable-based oil products processing plant at the dock, and the Kingston Terminal at the south-east of Queen Elizabeth Dock is used for import of coal products. In 2010, there were ten roll on-roll off berths within the two docks.[141]

In 2013, a 1,000,000 t (980,000 long tons; 1,100,000 short tons) per year capacity sea to rail biomass facility, with a 164 foot (50 m) silo was constructed to supply Drax power station.[271][272] The facility was officially opened by Councillor Mary Glew, Lord Mayor of Hull, in December 2014.[273][274] A 160 by 390 foot (50 by 120 m) specialised biomass dry bulk warehouse was opened in late 2015.[275][276]

Other facilities edit

Dry docks edit

In addition to the dry docks in King George, Alexandra, and William Wright Docks, there were dry docks on the sides of the River Hull.[277] Hull Central Dry Dock (also known as South End Dock) on the west bank of the River Hull near to its outfall onto the Humber Estuary[map 21] was the largest, being 345 feet (105 m) long with an entrance of 51 feet (16 m),[277] the dock having been extended several times.[278] Built in 1843 and later extended, the dock has been disused since 1992 and is now a Grade II listed structure.[278][279][280] In September 2013 the City Council approved plans by Watergate Developments Ltd to turn the dock into an open-air entertainment venue.[281][282] This is part of an adjacent office space development, known as the Centre for Digital Innovation (C4Di),[283] developed by Wykeland as @TheDock.[284] Construction work on the C4Di building began late 2014.[285] In December 2014, construction began on a concrete dam wall permanently sealing the dock.[286]

On the east bank of the River Hull were Crown Dry Dock,[map 22] 104 by 21 feet (31.7 by 6.4 m)[277] halfway between the river outfall and the entrance to Victoria Dock's Drypool Basin. Farther upstream was Union Dock, 214 by 48.5 feet (65.2 by 14.8 m),[277] opposite the entrance to Queen's Dock,[map 23] dating to the first half of the 1800s,[287] and a third dock farther upstream.[map 24]

On the west bank of the River Hull, there were ship repair facilities just within the city walls at North Gate on the river dating back as far as the 15th century, with slipways by the 18th century. The entrance to Queen's Dock was later built in this area, and two dry docks remain: North Bridge Dry Dock and No. 1 Dry Dock to the north and south of Queen's Dock basin, respectively. North Bridge Dry Dock[map 25] and No. 1 Dry Dock[map 26] were smaller dry docks of around 150 feet (46 m) long and with entrances less than 40 feet (12 m) wide.[277] Both were extended in the latter part of the 19th century.[288][289] The northernmost of the two docks is a Grade II listed structure.[290] Additionally, the former Queen's Dock basin was converted to an enclosed dock after the main dock was infilled.[291][292][map 3]

Quays, wharfs and piers edit

 
Victoria Pier, Minerva Pier behind, Albert Dock entrance lock and Riverside Quay in distance

In addition to the Riverside Quay at Albert Dock, the former pier at Alexandra Dock, and the roll-on roll-off river terminal at King George Dock, there are other water side berths at the port, both on the Humber and on the River Hull.

The Corporation Jetty (or Old Corporation Pier, also known as Brownlow's Jetty) was between Limekiln Creek and the Humber Dock west pier.[map 27] The construction of the West Dock necessitated the demolition of the old pier.[293][294] The Hull and Selby Railway (1840) had a wharf at Limekiln Creek, a small north-south running harbour. This was also used by the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway (MS&LR) which operated a lighter service from it.[295][296][map 28] The Creek was stopped up as a result of the building of the West Dock in the 1860s.[297] As a provision of the 1861 act replacement facilities were provided for the railway companies, at a place called Railway Creek.[298][299] The Railway Creek was constructed as part of the works for the new West Dock (Albert Dock); beginning in 1863, a new harbour was formed east of Limekiln Creek; the Limekiln Creek was kept open until the alternative provision for the NER and MS&LR companies had been made.[300] Following the completion of the works, the small east-west running Railway Creek harbour connected at its east end to the Albert Dock basin.[301][map 29] In 1873, the NER had a warehouse built at the site, designed by Thomas Prosser and modified by Benjamin Burley, both NER architects.[302][note 33]

Corporation Pier, constructed in 1810, was parallel to the mainland but not directly connected to it;[303] it was converted to a T-shaped pier in 1847.[303] It was used as the terminus of the Hull to New Holland ferry, initially run by the MS&LR and later by the LNER and British Rail, until the service ended in 1981 because of the opening of the Humber Bridge.[304] It was renamed Victoria Pier in 1854.[66][note 34][map 30] A railway booking office latterly named Hull Victoria Pier was established here c. 1849 by the MS&LR, and closed on 25 June 1981 with the cessation of the ferry service.[305] The pier has been altered several times. A floating pontoon was added in 1877 and removed in 1980;[303] an upper Promenade was added in 1882,[306] and removed in the mid-20th century. As of 2005, the primary wooden structure is L-shaped.[303]

To the west of Victoria Pier were the L-shaped piers enclosing the Humber Dock basin,[307][308] The Humber Dock piers were modified from a diagonal arrangement (NE/SW) to a pier square to the dock (N/S) in around 1840.[309][310][note 35] The West Pier became defunct c. 1875 when the entrance basin of the Albert Dock was partially filled to provide more accommodation for the MS&LR, creating Island Wharf. Island Wharf was separated from the mainland by a channel known as Albert Channel which was filled-in during the 1960s.[137][311][312] In 2004, construction began on an office development known as Humber Quays on the site. The first building was completed in 2006, a second office building was completed in 2007.[313]

The eastern pier was a wooden structure, from the 1920s known as the 'Minerva Pier';[314] it was replaced by a steel walled pier in the latter part of the 20th century.[315][316]

As of 2010, the remaining piers are still used to harbour vessels, but are not used for cargo handling.

The River Hull had extensive staithes, wharfs and warehouses along its length; the Old Harbour could accommodate vessels up to 200 feet (61 m), the river being navigable for vessels up to 180 feet (55 m) for 2 miles (3.2 km).[317] As of 2010, cargo handling has mostly ceased in the Old Harbour. Barges are still used for transportation of vegetable and mineral oils farther upstream within the boundaries of Hull including to J. R. Rix & Sons Ltd,[318] the Croda chemicals vegetable oil chemical processing plant[319] and to the Cargill vegetable oil plant in Stoneferry.

Salt End jetties edit

At Salt End, a jetty (No. 1 Oil Jetty) for the importation of bulk mineral oil was constructed in 1914 by the North Eastern and Hull and Barnsley railway companies, connected to a tank farm at Salt End. The jetty was constructed extending 1,500 feet (460 m) into the Humber, giving a water depth of 30 ft (9.1 m) at low spring tides.[158][320] Chemical industrial development fed by the oil imports would develop into the chemical site at Salt End, now known as BP Saltend.

No. 2 Jetty was constructed in 1928 westward of No. 1, and a reinforced concrete structure, No. 3 Jetty, was built in 1958. The original No. 1 jetty was demolished and replaced with a new structure in 1959.[162] No. 2 jetty was demolished in 1977.[321] As of 2010, both Nos. 1 and 3 jetties remain in use.[map 31]

Port welfare edit

Seafarers arriving at the port are provided with practical and welfare support via the services of a port chaplain.[322]

Disasters, accidents and war damage edit

Explosion of the PS Union edit

In 1837 the packet steamer Union exploded in the Humber Dock basin,[323] resulting in the death of over twenty people including bystanders on the dock side, and many injuries; the vessel itself sank.[324][325]

R38 airship disaster edit

In 1921, an R38-class airship broke apart while performing a sharp turn near Victoria Pier. It then exploded, and the flaming wreckage crashed into the Humber near the Victoria Pier, killing 45 of the 49 passengers on board.[326]

Second World War edit

During the Second World War, the Hull docks were actively targeted. In addition to mines in the Humber,[327] the docks in Hull were bombed. All of them were damaged. The wooden Riverside Quay at Albert Dock was totally destroyed in 1941.[328]

Fires edit

Major fires destroyed the fish market at St Andrews Dock in 1929, and a general cargo shed at Humber Dock in 1951.[329] In 1970, a vehicle carrying liquefied gas struck the top of a road subway leading to the William Wright and St Andrew's docks, resulting in a gas explosion and fire. The incident caused two deaths and 17 serious injuries.[330][331]

Acid leak edit

On 18 September 2017, emergency crews attended a large-scale acid leak which had caused a vapour cloud to form over King George Dock. Humberside Fire and Rescue Service warned nearby residents to close doors and windows as a precautionary measure, after a tank containing 580 t (570 long tons; 640 short tons) of hydrochloric acid sprang a leak at the dock late in the day. By the early hours of 19 September 2017, firefighters confirmed that wind was blowing the vapour away from houses near the United Molasses site, where the leak occurred and declared the area near the dock safe.

However, within 24 hours emergency crews had returned to the site following a change in wind direction. A number of emergency service vehicles, including an ambulance could be seen waiting on standby nearby. The acid was later transferred on to tankers to be taken away safely. Eight people reported feeling unwell as a result of the incident. Four were assessed at the scene and discharged immediately and four were taken to hospital for further assessment. All were ultimately discharged after showing no further symptoms. The Environment Agency confirmed that there appeared to be no leakage into the Humber or any other environmental impact.[332]

See also edit

Museums in Hull with exhibits relevant to the port

Notes edit

  1. ^ Much of it from the North Yorkshire Moors then called Blackhower Moor, additionally wheat, corn, lead and leather were exported, and later in the 14th century also cloth.
  2. ^ Also dyestuffs – Madder, Woad as well as Alum for mordant, as well as wood, iron and iron ore and a wide variety of foreign goods.
  3. ^ The east of the river not being developed until later
  4. ^ The High Street still contains merchant buildings, most from a later date; Wilberforce House dates to 1660, and was once used for this purpose.[11]
  5. ^ One clause of the Hull Docks Act of 1861 was that the Dock Company could be converted to a municipally owned dock trust by the Hull Corporation, additionally the dividends paid by the company were restricted: the Dock Company had been created as a private "for profit" company, and was subject to widespread prejudice in the town of Hull that it better served the interests of the shareholders rather than the port itself; the shareholders were characterised as being uninterested in the development of the port.[21]
  6. ^ The walls were demolished, but not all of the gate, which was rediscovered in the 20th century—the part occupying the gap between the constructions of Queen's and Prince's Dock.[38]
  7. ^ a b The docks were renamed in honour of Queen Victoria and the Prince Consort's (Prince Albert) visit to Hull in 1854, during which the Royal Party toured the docks on the steam-yacht "Fairy".[52]
  8. ^ a b The "Queen's Dock" proposal of 1838, forerunner of the Victoria Dock, should not be confused with the original Hull Dock of 1778, named "Queen's Dock" in 1854.
  9. ^ a b c d e Underground streams forcing up through sand, with an origin in the aquifers of the Yorkshire Wolds.[131][132] (See also Artesian aquifer.)
  10. ^ The land made was in the area of the Victoria Pier, south-east of the dock,[66] creating Nelson Street, and to the south and west of the dock, creating Wellington Street.[67]
  11. ^ £165,000 in Baldwin 1973, p. 9
  12. ^ See footnote in Bethell (1841, p. 27) quote "The London Gazette of 16 November, containing the notice for a bill to make the Queen's Dock, was put in."
  13. ^ Walker's 1840 dock was 14 acres (5.7 ha) in area with a quay area of around 21 acres (8.5 ha). The water depths were 23 to 17 feet (7.0 to 5.2 m) (high to low tides) in 9 acres (3.6 ha) of the dock nearer to the Humber lock, with the remainder of the dock shallower with depths of 20 to 14 feet (6.1 to 4.3 m). His cost estimate was £300,000. The dock was to have a 5 acres (2.0 ha) entrance basin on the Humber, and a lock suitable for the largest paddle steamers of the day, 210 by 60 feet (64 by 18 m), and a 36 feet (11 m) wide passage onto the Old Harbour.[103]
  14. ^ Wright (1875, p. 87) states that "it was originally intended to construct this dock [...] with an entrance from the Humber only ...", however the original notice in The London Gazette of 1839 describes a link to the Old Harbour,[100] as do the Minutes of the June 1840 parliamentary committee examining the bill.[104] The link to the River Hull for the built dock was not constructed until the early 1850s.[105]
  15. ^ Dock: 12 acres 3 rods 13 perch; Half Tide Basin: 3 acres; Victoria Dock Basin: 2 acres 3 rods; and the Drypool Basin 1 acre 20 perch. Sheahan (1864, p. 293)
  16. ^ One lock was narrower and intended for barges.[109]
  17. ^ The Drypool Basin and connection to the River Hull was completed in the early 1850s; the entrance on the River Hull had not been sanctioned at the time of the formal opening (1850), it was completed soon after, being under construction by 1852.[105]
  18. ^ See: the 1860 West Dock Company notice in The London Gazette,[125] and the 1860 Hull Dock Company notice in The London Gazette.[126]
  19. ^ The 1865 and 1866 notices in The London Gazette:
    • "Hull Docks. (Enlargement of Western Dock and Works ..." The London Gazette (23042): 5714. 24 November 1865.
    • "Hull Docks; Enlargement and Extension of Works in connection with the Western Dock ..." The London Gazette (23189): 6358–6359. 23 November 1866.
  20. ^ Allison (1969) gives an incorrect date of 1865 for the authority to build the William Wright Dock.
  21. ^ Wright (1875, p. 90) says the dock was intended for general trade.
  22. ^ Roughly approximating to the outline of the 1911 "West Wharf".
  23. ^ Hull City Council planning applications:
    • "(11/01178/PAAD) Infilling of parts of Alexandra Dock (7.68 Ha; 19 Acres), construction of 2 roll on-roll off ramps within the Dock, and refurbishment of existing eastern lead in jetty to Alexandra Dock [...]". Hull City Council. 14 December 2011. Retrieved 4 July 2014.
    • "(11/01180/LBC) Listed Building Consent Application for works associated with the Green Port Hull development involving [...]". Hull City Council. 14 December 2011. Retrieved 4 July 2014.
    • "(11/01177/OUT) Development of land at Alexandra Dock, including the demolition of existing buildings (excluding the listed hydraulic engine house and tower and adjacent unlisted chimney), for use as a facility for the manufacture, assembly, storage, handling and testing of wind turbine components for the offshore power industry [...]". Hull City Council. 14 December 2011. Retrieved 4 July 2014.
    • "(11/01176/S73) Green Port Hull: Application under section 73 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 to carry out works authorised by The Associated British Ports (Hull) Harbour Revision Order 2006 [...]". Hull City Council. 14 December 2011. Retrieved 4 July 2014.
    • "(11/01179/FULL) Demolition of existing building and full planning permission for the erection of a 3 MW operational wind turbine [...]". Hull City Council. 15 December 2011. Retrieved 4 July 2014.
  24. ^ An additional site near Paull, East Riding of Yorkshire, east of King George Dock, Hull was added to the plans, intended to manufacture rotor blades for turbines.[224] In late 2014 modified plans combined the two production facilities at Alexandra Dock.[225]
  25. ^ Hull City Council planning application:
    • "(14/00777/FULL) Demolition/partial demolition of existing buildings; erection of buildings (including a single building of 22.991m high) [...]". Hull City Council. 19 June 2014. Archived from the original on 7 November 2014. Retrieved 4 July 2014.
    • . Hull City Council. 19 June 2014. Archived from the original on 24 December 2014. Retrieved 4 July 2014.
    • . Hull City Council. 19 June 2014. Archived from the original on 15 May 2015. Retrieved 4 July 2014.
  26. ^ The dock proposals were submitted as part of a wider number of schemes. See "North Eastern Railway. Additional Powers with reference to new and existing Railways, Dock, Roads, Footpaths, and other Works and Lands in Northumberland, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Durham, York (North East and West Ridings), and Kingston-upon-Hull; [...]". The London Gazette (26226). pp. 6270–71, § 8–12. 23 November 1891.
  27. ^ Submitted as part of a wider number of schemes, see "North-Eastern Railway. Power to make Dock Works at Kingston-upon-Hull and Middlesbrough; Additional Powers with reference to new and existing Railways, Roads, Footpaths and other Works [...]". The London Gazette (26797). p. 6724, § 1–10; p. 6725, §A-C. 24 November 1896.
  28. ^ Submitted as part of a wider number of schemes, see "North Eastern Railway. Power to make Dock Works at Kingston-upon-Hull; Additional Powers with reference to new and existing Railways, Roads, Footpaths, and other Works, [...]". The London Gazette (26913). pp. 6704–05, §1–14. 23 November 1897.
  29. ^ See "North Eastern and Hull and Barnsley Railways (Joint Dock). Power to the North Eastern Railway Company and the Hull, Barnsley and West Riding Junction Railway and Dock Company, Jointly and Separately, to Make a New Dock Railways and Works at Kingston-upon-Hull; Constitution of Joint Committee; Running Powers to North Eastern Railway Company over part of Hull and Barnsley Railway; Agreements between the said Companies; Additional Capital Powers for the said Companies; Application of Funds and Amendment of Acts". The London Gazette (27025): 7252–55. 22 November 1898., also "Harbours and Waterways" (PDF). The Engineer. Vol. 85. 15 April 1898. p. 348.
  30. ^ See "Hull Joint Dock. Power to the Hull Joint Dock Committee to make an Alteration of the authorized River Wall and Dock Works at Kingston-upon-Hull; Extension of Time for completion of authorized Dock Works and Railways; Power to North Eastern Railway Company to make new Railways and Works at Kingston-Upon-Hull and to abandon part of Victoria Dock Branch.; Agreements with Corporation of Kingston-upon-Hull; Acquisition of Lands; Application of Funds; and Amendment of Acts". The London Gazette (27855): 7717–18. 17 November 1905.
  31. ^ a b Three 375 by 90 feet (114 by 27 m) single-storey on the north side, and three 375 by 70 feet (114 by 21 m) two-storey ferro-concrete warehouses on the south side, each with flat roof areas also usable for storage.[248]
  32. ^ a b The terminal was built over the unlocked former dry dock.[map 20]
  33. ^ The Railway Creek was filled in c. 1906s. (Ordnance Survey 1:10000 1970) See also Albert Channel
  34. ^ Both names were commonly used
  35. ^ See also Ordnance Survey Town Plans 1:1056 c. 1850.

Acts and legislation edit

Kingston-upon-Hull Port Act 1774
Act of Parliament
 
Long titleAn Act for making and establishing publick Quays or Wharfs at Kingston upon Hull, for the better securing His Majesty's Revenues of Customs, and for the Benefit of Commerce in the Port of Kingston upon Hull; for making a Bason or Dock, with Reservoirs, Sluices, Roads, and other Works, for the Accommodation of Vessels using the said Port; and for appropriating certain Lands belonging to His Majesty, and for applying certain Sums of Money out of His Majesty’s Customs at the said Port for those Purposes; and for establishing other necessary Regulations within the Town and Port of Kingston upon Hull.
Citation14 Geo. 3. c. 56
Dates
Royal assent20 May 1774
  • 14 Geo. 3. c. 56 (1774), Kingston-upon-Hull Dock Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link): Creation of the Hull dock company; creation of a dock (later Queen's dock); establishment of a legal quay; other rights and responsibilities.[333]

Hull Market Place and Dock Improvement Act 1801
Act of Parliament
 
Long titleAn Act for enlarging and improving the Market-Place of the town of Kingston-Upon-Hull, and for making a commodious Street from thence to the river Humber, with a Dock and Wharf or Landing Place for the Ferry and Market Boats belonging and resorting to the said town.
Citation41 Geo. 3. (U.K.) c. lxv
Text of the Hull Market Place and Dock Improvement Act 1801 as in force today (including any amendments) within the United Kingdom, from legislation.gov.uk.
  • 41 Geo. 3. (U.K.) c. lxv (1801), An Act for enlarging and improving the Market-Place of the town of Kingston-Upon-Hull, and for making a commodious Street from thence to the river Humber, with a Dock and Wharf or Landing Place for the Ferry and Market Boats belonging and resorting to the said town.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link): Containing clauses relating to the establishment of a ferry boat dock on land near Humber Street.[334]
  • 42 Geo. 3. c. 91 (1802), Kingston-upon-Hull Dock Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link): Further docks and basin to be named Humber Dock; a third dock between Myton and Beverley gates (later Junction Dock); transfer of the Garrison Ground excluding the Citadel from the Crown to town.[335]
    • 5 Geo. 4. c. 52 (1824), Kingston-Upon-Hull Dock Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link): Amendment of Hull Dock Act of 1802; transfer of part of Garrison Ground from the town of Hull to the Royal Ordnance.[336]
  • 45 Geo. 3. c. 42 (1805), Kingston-upon-Hull Dock Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link): Raising of additional funds for the construction of the docks mentioned in Hull Dock Act, 1802.[337]
  • 7 & 8 Vict. c. 103 (1844), Kingston-upon-Hull Dock Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link): A fourth dock with timber pond (later Victoria Dock); and a fifth dock (Railway Dock); plus additional setting out of authorities in the port
  • 8 & 9 Vict. c. 5 (1845), Kingston-upon-Hull Dock Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link): Enlargement of the Railway dock
  • 10 & 11 Vict. c. 283 (1847), Kingston-upon-Hull Dock Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link); 12 & 13 Vict. c. 69 (1849), Kingston-upon-Hull Dock Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link); 17 & 18 Vict. c. 13 (1854), Kingston-upon-Hull Dock Amendment Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link): Clarity as to land purchases; raising of funds; further financial arrangements
  • 15 & 16 Vict. c. 136 (1852), Hull Dues Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link): Relating to the Hull Dock Company; 15 & 16 Vict. c. 130 (1852), Humber Conservancy Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link); 17 & 18 Vict. c. 101 (1854), Kingston-upon-Hull Improvement Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • 24 & 25 Vict. c. 79 (1861), Hull Docks Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link): Construction of a sixth dock (later Albert Dock), and alterations and connections to the Hull and Selby Railway line.
  • 27 & 28 Vict. c. 2 (1864), Hull Docks Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link): Raising of capital for expansion of Victoria Dock
  • 29 & 30 Vict. c. 77 (1866), Hull Docks Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link): Enlargement of the western dock; 30 & 31 Vict. c. 25 (31 May 1867), Hull Docks Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link): further extension of the western dock
  • 43 & 44 Vict. c. 199 (1880), Hull, Barnsley, and West Riding Junction Railway and Dock Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link): Construction of a railway and dock (Alexandra Dock)
  • 55 & 56 Vict. c. 198 (1893), North Eastern Railway (Hull Docks) Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link): Acquisition of the Hull Dock company by the NER
  • 62 & 63 Vict. c. 242 (1899), Hull Joint Dock Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link); 6 Edw. 7. c. 46 (1906), Hull Joint Dock Act{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link): Construction of a joint dock (later King George Dock) by the NER and H&BR
  • British Transport Docks (Hull Docks) 1973 (c.xxviii)
  • Associated British Ports (Hull) 1989 (c.x)
  • "The Associated British Ports (Hull) Harbour Revision Order 2006". www.legislation.gov.uk. The National Archives. 2006. Retrieved 20 January 2013.

References edit

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  • Baldwin, M. W. (1973). "The Engineering History of Hull's Earliest Docks" (PDF). Transactions of the Newcomen Society. 46: 1. doi:10.1179/tns.1973.001.
  • Bethell, Richard, ed. (1841). Kingston-Upon-Hull Docks Bill – Minutes of Evidence. Reports of the Committees, House of Commons Papers. Vol. 9.
  • British Transport Docks Board (1975). Hull Docks Official handbook.
  • Ellis, S.; Crowther, D. R., eds. (1990). Humber Perspectives: A Region through the Ages. Hull University Press. ISBN 0-85958-484-4.
  • Gibson, Paul (2009) [1998]. . Archived from the original on 26 January 2011.
  • Gillett, Edward; MacMahon, Kenneth A. (1980). A History of Hull. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-713436-X.
  • Hawkshaw, J. C. (1875). "The Construction of the Albert Dock at Kingston-upon-Hull. (Includes Plates and Appendix)". Minutes of the Proceedings. 41 (1875): 92. doi:10.1680/imotp.1875.22677.
  • Hull Port & Commercial Handbook. Lloyd's of London Press Ltd. 1995. ISBN 1-85978-021-0.
  • Hurtzig, A. C. (1888). "The Alexandra Dock, Hull. (Includes Plate and Appendices)". Minutes of the Proceedings. 92 (1888): 144. doi:10.1680/imotp.1888.20924., illustrative plates at commons.wikimedia.org
  • "Hull and Humber: York and Beverley". The land we live in, a pictorial and literary sketch-book of the British Empire. Vol. 4. Charles Knight. c. 1850.
  • Jackson, Gordon (1972). Hull in the Eighteenth Century: A study in economic and social history. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-713415-7. includes detailed history of the events leading to the construction of the Old and Humber docks, as well as statistics of imports and exports
  • Lewis, M. J. T. (1991). "Chapter 11 "Ports and Harbours"". In Lewis, David B (ed.). The Yorkshire Coast. Normandy Press. pp. 156–161. ISBN 0-9507665-3-4.
  • McGarey, D. G. (1964). "King George Dock, Hull: Major Developments, 1959–1963". ICE Proceedings. 27 (3): 465. doi:10.1680/iicep.1964.10273.
  • Moss, W. H.; Dyson and Co. (23 November 1860). "Kingston-upon-Hull Docks (New Works". The London Gazette (22450): 4483–86.
  • "Old Town (Southern part) Conservation Area Character Appraisal". www.arc-online.co.uk. Hull City Council. November 2005.
  • Parkes, G. D. (1970) [1946]. The Hull & Barnsley Railway. The Oakwood Press.
  • Parsons, Edward (1835). "IX "Hull continued"". The tourist's companion, or, The history of the scenes and places on the route by the rail-road and steam-packet from Leeds and Selby to Hull. pp. 211–223., 1835 account of three docks then extant, and related subjects including the Trinity House
  • Pevsner, Nikolaus; Neave, David (1995). "The Docks". Yorkshire: York And the East Riding, Second Edition. Yale University Press. pp. 528–, also pp. 89, 106, 501, 519, 534, 539, 541. ISBN 0-300-09593-7.
  • "The New Docks at Hull". Railway News. 12 (291): 85. 24 July 1869.
  • Scott Wilson; URS (March 2011). (PDF). Associated British Ports. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 September 2012. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
  • Sheahan, James Joseph (1864). "The Port". General and concise history and description of the town and port of Kingston-upon-Hull. Simpson, Marshall and Co. (London). pp. 275–298.
  • Simpson, John (1 August 2009). "Humber Pilots – Important Dates" (PDF). www.humberpilots.com. Retrieved 6 April 2010.
  • Skempton, Alec W.; Rennison, R. W.; Cox, R. C.; Ruddock, Ted; Cross-Rudkin, P.; Chrimes, M. M. (2002). A biographical dictionary of civil engineers in Great Britain and Ireland. Vol. 1: 1500–1830. Thomas Telford Publishing Limited, Institute of Civil Engineers. ISBN 072772939X.
  • Symes, David, ed. (1987). Humberside in the Eighties. ISBN 0859581195.
  • "The Hull Joint Dock" (PDF). The Engineer. Vol. 117. 30 January 1914. pp. 123–24; illus. p. 122.
  • "The Hull Joint Dock, No. 1" (PDF). The Engineer. Vol. 117. 19 June 1914. pp. 674–76; illus. pp. 675, 678.
  • "The Hull Joint Dock, No. 2" (PDF). The Engineer. Vol. 117. 26 June 1914. pp. 701–704.
  • Thompson, Michael (1990). Hull Docklands: An Illustrated History of the Port of Hull. Hutton Press. ISBN 1-872167-08-X.
  • Tomlinson, William Weaver (1914). "XX: Twenty-Five Years of Progress (1880–1904); "Developments at Hull"". North Eastern Railway, Its Rise and Development. David & Charles. pp. 703–721.
  • Timperley, J. (1836). "An Account of the Harbour and Docks at Kingston-Upon-Hull. (Including Plates)". ICE Transactions. 1 (1836): 1. doi:10.1680/itrcs.1836.24437.
  • Vernon-Harcourt, Leveson Francis (1885). "XXIV. Descriptions of Docks". Harbours and docks, their physical features, history, construction... Vol. 2 vols. Oxford: Clarendon press. Hull Docks, pp. 520–424, and other pages, also plates. OL 6917798M.
  • Wright, H. R., ed. (1932). The City and Port of Hull. A. Browns & Sons Ltd.
  • Wright, William (1875). "The Hull Docks". Minutes of the Proceedings. 41 (1875): 83. doi:10.1680/imotp.1875.22676.
  • "Riverside Quay, Hull" (PDF). The Engineer. Vol. 110. 1 July 1910. pp. 6–7.
  • Wood, Thomas, ed. (23 October 1845). The Humber, its roads, shoals, and capabilities. Importance and improvement of the Port of Hull (report). Tidal Harbours Commission.
  • Woolley, William (1830). A Collection of Statutes Relating to the Town of Kingston-upon-Hull, the County of the Same Town, and the Parish of Sculcoates, in the County of York. Simpkin and Marshall.

Maps and landmark coordinates edit

port, hull, port, confluence, river, hull, humber, estuary, kingston, upon, hull, east, riding, yorkshire, england, ferries, terminal, click, fullscreen, viewlocationcountryenglandlocationkingston, upon, hullcoordinates53, detailsoperated, byassociated, britis. The Port of Hull is a port at the confluence of the River Hull and the Humber Estuary in Kingston upon Hull in the East Riding of Yorkshire England Port of HullThe P amp O Ferries terminal at the Port of HullClick on the map for a fullscreen viewLocationCountryEnglandLocationKingston upon HullCoordinates53 44 17 N 0 19 55 W 53 738 N 0 332 W 53 738 0 332 Port of Hull DetailsOperated byAssociated British Ports Seaborne trade at the port can be traced to at least the 13th century originally conducted mainly at the outfall of the River Hull known as The Haven or later as the Old Harbour In 1773 the Hull Dock Company was formed and Hull s first dock built on land formerly occupied by Hull town walls In the next half century a ring of docks was built around the Old Town on the site of the former fortifications known as the Town Docks The first was The Dock 1778 or The Old Dock known as Queen s Dock after 1855 followed by Humber Dock 1809 and Junction Dock 1829 An extension Railway Dock 1846 was opened to serve the newly built Hull and Selby Railway The first dock east of the river Victoria Dock opened in 1850 Docks along the banks of the Humber to the west were begun in 1862 with the construction of the West Dock later Albert Dock The William Wright extension opened in 1880 and a dock further west St Andrew s Dock opened in 1883 In 1885 Alexandra Dock a new eastern dock was built connected to a new railway line constructed by the same company the Hull Barnsley amp West Riding Junction Railway and Dock Company In 1914 King George Dock was built jointly by the competing railway companies the Hull and Barnsley company and the North Eastern Railway this was extended in 1969 by the Queen Elizabeth Dock extension As of 2016 Alexandra is being modernised for use in wind farm construction with a factory and estuary side quay under construction a development known as Green Port Hull The Town Docks Victoria Dock and St Andrew s Dock fell out of use by the 1970s and were closed Some were later infilled and redeveloped with the Humber and Railway docks converted for leisure craft as Hull Marina Other facilities at the port included the Riverside Quay built on the Humber banks at Albert Dock for passenger ferries and European trains and the Corporation Pier from which a Humber Ferry sailed to New Holland Lincolnshire Numerous industrial works were served by the River Hull which also hosted several dry docks To the east of Hull Salt End near Hedon became a petroleum distribution point in the 20th century with piers into the estuary for shipment and later developed as a chemical works As of 2023 the main port is operated by Associated British Ports and is estimated to handle one million passengers per year it is the main softwood timber importation port for the UK 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 Hull Dock Company 1 3 Dock ownership 1922 2 Docks 2 1 The Town Docks 2 1 1 The Old Dock 2 1 2 Humber Dock 2 1 3 Junction Dock 2 1 4 Railway Dock 2 2 Victoria Dock 2 3 The West Dock 2 3 1 Albert Dock 2 3 2 William Wright Dock 2 3 3 Riverside Quay 2 4 St Andrew s Dock 2 5 Alexandra Dock 2 5 1 Green Port Hull 2 6 Hull Joint Dock 2 6 1 King George Dock 1914 2 6 2 Queen Elizabeth Dock extension 1969 2 6 3 Recent history 1970 3 Other facilities 3 1 Dry docks 3 2 Quays wharfs and piers 3 3 Salt End jetties 3 4 Port welfare 4 Disasters accidents and war damage 4 1 Explosion of the PS Union 4 2 R38 airship disaster 4 3 Second World War 4 4 Fires 4 5 Acid leak 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Acts and legislation 8 References 8 1 Sources 8 2 Maps and landmark coordinates 9 External linksHistory editBackground edit nbsp A 17th century map by Wenceslaus Hollar showing position of various staithes in the Haven and the fortifications of the City Wall Hull lies at a naturally advantageous position for a port on the north side of the Humber Estuary to the west of a bend southwards giving rise to on average deeper water and the River Hull flows out into the Humber at the same point 2 map 1 The initial development of a port was undertaken by wool producing Meaux Abbey before 1200 as a route for export 3 4 5 An important event in the history of Hull as a port was its acquisition by King Edward I In 1297 it became the only port from which goods could be exported overseas from the county of Yorkshire 6 Thus in the 13th and 14th centuries Hull was a major English port for the export of wool note 1 much of it to Flanders with wine being a major import 7 note 2 During this period the River Hull was made navigable as far as the then important town of Beverley 1269 and roads were built connecting Hull to Beverley and Holderness and to the via regia between Hessle and Beverley near to Anlaby about 1302 6 By the 15th century trade with the Hanseatic league had become important During the same period the growth of the English cloth industry meant that the export of cloth from Hull increased while wool exports decreased 8 The 16th century brought a considerable reduction in the amount of cloth traded through the port but the export of lead increased 9 By the late 17th century Hull was the third port in the realm after London and Bristol with the export of lead and cloth and imports of flax and hemp as well as iron and tar from the Baltic 10 Until 1773 trade was conducted via the Old Harbour also known as The Haven a series of wharves on the west bank of the River Hull note 3 with warehouses and the merchants houses backing on to the wharves along the High Street note 4 Hull Dock Company edit nbsp The second Hull Dock Company offices built 1820 close to the entrance to the former Queen s Dock nbsp The third Hull Dock Company offices built 1871 at the former junction between Queen s and Prince s Dock By the 18th century it was becoming increasingly clear that the Haven was unfit for the growing amount of trade it was not only narrow but tidal and prone to a build up of mud from the estuary 12 13 An additional stimulus to change was the demand for a legal quay on which customs officials could easily examine and weigh goods for export without causing excessive delay to shipments 14 In 1773 the Hull Corporation Hull Trinity House and Hull merchants formed a Dock Company 13 the first statutory dock company in Britain 15 The Crown gave the land which contained Hull s city walls for construction of docks 16 and an Act of Parliament was passed in 1774 allowing the Dock Company to raise up to 100 000 by shares and loans thus Hull s first dock the Old Dock a wet dock began construction 12 13 Three docks known as the Town Docks which followed the path of the town walls were constructed by the company between 1778 and 1829 The Old Dock later Queen s Dock 1778 Humber Dock 1809 and Junction Dock later Prince s Dock 1829 17 18 19 An extension of the Town Docks Railway Dock was built in 1846 just north of the terminus of the then recently opened Hull and Selby Railway 17 The first dock in Hull east of the River Hull Victoria Dock was constructed between 1845 and 1850 this became the main dock for timber trade and was expanded in the next two decades including the construction of large timber ponds 20 In 1860 a rival company the West Dock Company was formed to promote and build new docks suitable for the increasing amounts of trade and the growing size of steam ships the scheme was supported by the Hull Corporation Hull Trinity House the North Eastern Railway NER and various individuals in Hull The site for the planned dock was on the Humber foreshore to the west of the River Hull The Dock Company then proposed a larger dock in the same position which was sanctioned by an Act of Parliament in 1861 note 5 22 This dock was known as the Western Dock until its opening in 1869 when it was named Albert Dock an extension William Wright Dock was opened 1880 21 A third dock St Andrew s Dock on the Humber foreshore west of the William Wright Dock was opened in 1883 23 The three docks were ideally suited for trans shipment by rail as they were directly south of and parallel with the Selby to Hull railway line that terminated in the centre of Hull In 1885 Alexandra Dock opened it was owned and operated by the Hull Barnsley amp West Riding Junction Railway and Dock Company This ended the Dock Company s monopoly on dock facilities in Hull and led to price cutting competition between the two companies for dock charges The Dock Company was operating at a loss and from 1886 sought to merge the company into a larger organisation the obvious choice being the North Eastern Railway 24 In 1891 the Dock Company approached the North Eastern for capital to improve its Albert Dock leading to the North Eastern Railway acquiring the shares and debts of the Dock Company in exchange for its shares Instead of improving Albert Dock the North Eastern decided to expend a much greater sum on a new dock east of Alexandra Dock however the proposal was opposed by both the Hull and Barnsley and the Hull Corporation The Dock Company and NER were legally amalgamated in 1893 one of the clauses of the Act of Parliament allowing the merger stipulated that about 500 000 would be spent on dock improvements over the next seven years 25 Clauses in the 1893 amalgamation bill protecting the Hull and Barnsley company prevented the NER from creating a new deep water dock without consulting the Hull and Barnsley Railway H amp BR This led to a joint proposal for a dock east of Alexandra Dock being submitted and passed in 1899 as the Hull Joint Dock Act 26 The new dock was opened in 1914 as the King George Dock 27 Dock ownership 1922 edit The Hull and Barnsley Railway became part of the North Eastern Railway in 1922 28 making the docks in Hull the responsibility of a single company once again The Railways Act 1921 led to the merger of the NER into the London and North Eastern Railway in 1923 28 In 1948 much of Britain s transport operations were nationalised by the Transport Act 1947 into the British Transport Commission including the port and railway operations of the London North Eastern Railway LNER In 1962 the British Transport Docks Board was formed by the Transport Act 1962 In 1981 the company was privatised by the Transport Act 1981 and Associated British Ports was formed Later that year the docks were struck by an F0 T0 tornado on 23 November as part of the record breaking nationwide tornado outbreak on that day 29 The tornado was very weak with damage remaining limited as a result a second stronger tornado struck Hull s north eastern residential suburbs later that day Docks edit nbsp Map of the Hull docks c 1912 full rail network not shown The Town Docks edit The Old Dock edit nbsp Queen s Dock Hull in 1922 By the mid 1700s the overcrowding of ships on the River Hull or Old Harbour had reached such an extent that vessels were being damaged in addition to causing delays in handling and shipping Therefore some tentative investigations were begun into expanding the facilities at Hull It was not until the later 1760s that the Hull Corporation acted and employed surveyors to search for a suitable site for a new harbour At the same time HM Customs sought an end to the need to inspect cargoes handled at the private wharves and wanted customs procedures incorporated into a new dock or wharf a legal quay 30 31 An initial survey by Robert Mylne and Joseph Robson recommended a new harbour on the east side of the River Hull Though the established development on the east bank tended to preclude a new port there the same interests were unwilling to see the focus of trade shift away from the west bank where they were already established In the early 1770s John Grundy was contracted by agriculturalists owning land reliant on the drainage of the River Hull to assess the impact of the proposed new quay on the River Hull Grundy s report of 1772 suggested either widening the river or using the channel behind the Hull Citadel or the moat of the Hull town walls for both harbourage and drainage Grundy also proposed the use of gates in the channel to afford both wet and dry docks 32 Reports were prepared on the cost John Wooler and the effect on the river John Smeaton of Grundy s proposal for a quay on the site of the town s moat The dock was costed at between 55 000 and 60 000 and the quay between 11 000 and 12 000 Smeaton s report indicated no issues arising in terms of the flow of the river After both reports had been provided in early 1773 the Corporation and Customs soon agreed to proceed with the plan With limited opposition only on the grounds of the effect on drainage an act for the construction was obtained in 1774 33 The Old Dock the first dock in Hull was built between 1775 and 1778 to a design by Henry Berry and John Grundy Jr Luke Holt acted as resident engineer appointed on John Smeaton s recommendation 34 As built the dock was 1 703 by 254 ft 519 by 77 m long by wide 35 map 2 the lock 200 by 36 5 feet 61 0 by 11 1 m long by wide at its extremities and 24 5 feet 7 5 m deep 36 the lock river basin was 212 by 80 feet 65 by 24 m in dimension 37 The dock entrance was on the River Hull just south of North Bridge map 3 and the dock itself built west south west along the path of the North Wall as far as the Beverley Gate note 6 The dock walls were of local brick with Bramley Fall stone coping piece 35 Cement for the lock wall s front construction was rendered waterproof through the use of pozzolana imported from Italy 12 36 Piling for the walls consisted of piles narrowing from 12 by 9 inches 300 by 230 mm to 3 inches 76 mm at the bottom supporting sleepers 12 by 6 inches 300 by 150 mm wide by deep trenailed to the piles 39 The alluvium excavated during the dock construction was deposited mostly on land to the north raising the ground by 5 feet 1 5 m the land was later sold for building upon 35 Some of the work proved inadequate requiring reconstruction later 12 40 Issues with weak ground led to displacement bulging of the dock s walls in 1776 before the dock had been completed Both Holt and Berry had recommended extra piling at the softer ground areas but had been over ruled Subsequent movement of the walls proved additional piling was necessary By 1778 some parts of the dock walls were displaced from their proper position by 3 feet 0 9 m exacerbated by poor wall design and its buttresses Further issues occurred on the lock to the River Hull and the north wall of the lock basin collapsed before construction had been completed 41 Despite these setbacks the dock was formally opened on 22 September 1778 42 The lock required rebuilding in the 1780s to prevent total collapse 43 and in 1814 the lock and basin were rebuilt under the guidance of John Rennie the Elder with George Miller as resident engineer 44 45 The lock was rebuilt of brick with pozzuolana mortar faced with Bramley Fall stone After rebuilding the lock was 120 75 by 38 feet 36 80 by 11 58 m long by wide with 24 5 feet 7 5 m height above the sills 46 the depth of water being between 15 and 20 ft 4 6 and 6 1 m depending on the tide 47 At the entrance to the dock a double drawbridge of the Dutch type counterbalanced for ease of use allowed people to cross the lock 12 The main part of the bridge was cast iron built by Ayden and Etwell of the Shelf Iron Works Bradford 48 The lock basin was rebuilt at the same time to the same design as used in the new Humber Dock the new basin was 213 feet 65 m long narrowing from 80 5 to 71 feet 24 5 to 21 6 m wide from top to bottom Both the lock and the basin were re opened on 13 November 1815 49 The dock was called The Dock until the construction of further docks 50 when it was called The Old Dock 51 It was officially named the Queen s Dock in 1855 note 7 note 8 The dock closed in 1930 and was sold to the Corporation for 100 000 It was subsequently infilled and converted to ornamental gardens known as Queen s Gardens 53 54 Humber Dock edit nbsp Humber Dock in 1952 Since the entrance to the Old Dock was via the River Hull there were still problems with ships accessing the dock through the crowded river In 1781 a canal was proposed to connect the Old Dock to the Humber In general sea borne trade was still growing 55 Customs commissioned three independent reports from Thomas Morris William Jessop and Joseph Huddart on the siting of a second dock in 1793 All three considered a dock in the southern end of the ditch of the city walls and a dock on the site of Hull Citadel also known as the Garrison Two reports recommended the new dock be sited in the town ditch and proposed a canal connecting the old and new dock The Dock Company then commissioned John Hudson and John Longbotham to examine and cost a dock in the town ditch as well as other improvements 44 There was some delay in making the new dock a reality partly due to the lethargy of the Dock Company but by 1802 a bill had been passed in Parliament for the construction of a second dock again following the path of the City walls this time from Hessle gate roughly northwards 55 John Rennie and William Chapman were employed as engineers 56 57 They submitted an optimistic cost estimate for a dock in the town ditch with a basin onto the Humber of 84 000 Experience with the settlement and collapse of the old dock s walls led to more substantial construction of lock and dock walls though some subsidence still occurred 58 The dock walls now stood on angled piled foundations with the mass of the wall at a shallow angle to the vertical opposing the weight of earth behind 59 The lock base consisted of an inverted arch a design also used on the rebuilt Old Dock lock of 1814 60 During the construction of the lock pit a freshwater spring was found note 9 causing difficulties in construction 61 The spring continued to cause problems in the lock pit with some subsidence attributed to it 1812 James Walker directed further remedial work on the lock in 1830 as a result 62 John Harrap was the on site engineer 63 64 Construction began in 1803 and was completed in 1809 at a cost of 220 000 65 Mud from the excavations was used to make new ground on the banks of the Humber with the upper clay stratum also used to manufacture bricks for the works 61 note 10 The dock entrance was from the Humber via an outer basin with piers map 4 The dock itself was 914 ft 279 m long and 342 ft 104 m wide the lock was 158 ft 48 m long and 42 ft 13 m wide The depth of water varied from 21 to 26 ft 6 4 to 7 9 m seasonally depending on the tides 65 map 5 The lock was crossed by a two leaf swing bridge 81 feet 9 inches 24 92 m in total length and 8 feet 3 inches 2 51 m wide made of cast iron by Ayden and Etwell with six main ribs supporting the roadway 68 The dock was first filled with water on 3 December 1808 and was formally opened on 30 June 1809 The cost of construction was split between the Dock Company the Hull Corporation and Hull Trinity House 69 as set out in the text of the 1802 act 70 Humber Dock closed in 1968 it re opened in 1983 as the Hull Marina 64 The dock lock and swing bridge over the lock a replacement dated 1846 71 are now listed structures 72 The swing bridge Wellington Street Bridge was restored in 2007 71 73 Junction Dock edit nbsp The Princes Quay shopping centre on the Junction Dock One stipulation of the Act of 1802 for the construction of Humber Dock was that the Dock Company would build a third dock between the Old and Humber docks when the average tonnage of goods unloaded at the docks reached a certain level This condition was satisfied in 1825 The required Act of Parliament had already been passed in 1824 and construction of the third dock began in 1826 74 This dock Junction Dock was constructed between and connected to the Old and Humber Docks map 6 This made the old town of Hull an island bounded by the three docks a river and an estuary 51 and built roughly along the lines of the old fortifications between Beverley and Myton gates 75 as set out in the 1802 act 76 77 It was designed by James Walker with Thomas Thorton and later John Timperley as resident engineer 78 79 The construction cost 186 000 80 note 11 The dock walls were similar in design to those of Humber Dock as were the locks with inverted arched bottoms 81 While the cofferdam used in the construction of the northern lock was being dismantled a leak caused the undermining and collapse of around 60 feet 18 m of the Old dock wall 78 82 the removal of debris was done using a diving bell and the wall repaired with piling 83 The dock opened in 1829 and was 645 ft 197 m long and 407 ft 124 m wide with a lock at each end 36 ft 11 m wide with a bridge over each 84 The bridges were of the balanced lifting type both bridges and locks were from Hunter and English Bow London with iron from Alfreton Derbyshire 85 In 1855 it was renamed Prince s Dock in honour of a visit by Queen Victoria and Albert Prince Consort note 7 The dock closed in 1968 86 Part of the dock still exists but without a lock connection to Humber Dock The Princes Quay shopping centre opened in 1991 86 was built over part of the dock on stilts The dock now features a fountain 87 Railway Dock edit The Dock Company applied to build a new branch dock in May 1844 88 and obtained powers with the Kingston upon Hull Dock Act 1844 which also enabled the construction of an east dock later Victoria Dock In late 1844 the company applied to expand the branch dock 89 which was enabled by the Kingston upon Hull Dock Act 1845 The Railway Dock was connected on the west side of the Humber Dock to the north of Kingston Street and was smaller than the other town docks The dock of 13 130 sq ft 1 220 m2 map 7 approximately 716 by 165 feet 218 by 50 m was constructed at a cost of 106 000 It opened on 3 December 1846 90 91 The Dock Company s engineer was J B Hartley also the engineer on the east dock 92 Its primary purpose was for the transfer of goods to and from the newly built Hull and Selby Railway 17 which had its passenger terminus just west of Humber Dock facing onto Railway Street and its goods sheds north of this see Manor House Street railway station Railway lines also ran from the goods shed to the Humber Dock 93 Like Humber Dock the dock closed in 1968 and in 1984 became part of Hull Marina 94 Victoria Dock edit nbsp Plan of the town docks with proposed Queen s Dock to the east 1839 After the construction of Junction Dock in 1825 the port and its trade continued to grow substantially leading to the requirement for a new dock 95 In 1838 an independent company the Queen s Dock Company was formed to promote a new dock The new dock of around 12 acres 4 9 ha to be called the Queen s Dock note 8 was designed by James Oldham for a site of around 30 acres 12 ha in Drypool east of the River Hull and The Citadel and near the river s confluence with the Humber The proposed dock had entrances onto the Humber and the Hull Capital of 180 000 was proposed for the scheme 90 96 Proceedings for a bill in Parliament were begun in 1838 97 note 12 The Queen s Dock Company abandoned the project after the Dock Company took up a similar proposal 98 In September 1839 James Walker was asked to design plans for a dock 99 and proceedings for a bill in Parliament were begun at the end of that year 100 The dock s main aim was to accommodate the increased timber trade freeing up the town docks 101 alternative plans were also considered including a west dock and the conversion of the Old Harbour River Hull into a dock 102 Walker s dock was broadly similar to the built dock note 13 with entrances onto both the Humber and the River Hull note 14 The design allowed for an extension to the east with timber ponds at a later date 103 The 1840 bill was withdrawn due to local opposition In 1844 the company returned again to Parliament with a bill for a dock in the same location as well as other works including the Railway Dock 95 106 Permission to build the new east dock and railway dock was granted in 1844 construction of this new dock began in 1845 and was completed in 1850 at a cost of 300 000 107 The Dock Company s engineer for this project was J B Hartley the plan was similar in overall form to that of James Walker s design 92 The formal laying of the foundation stone took place on 5 November 1845 and the formal opening on 3 July 1850 with the dock given the name Victoria Dock in honour of Queen Victoria 90 The dock had an area of about 12 83 acres 5 19 ha with the Half Tide Basin 3 acres 1 2 ha the outer basin onto the Humber 2 75 acres 1 11 ha and the Drypool Basin 1 125 acres 0 455 ha note 15 In some respects the dock was of a slightly larger design than Walker s 1840 proposal The water depth was 27 5 to 22 feet 8 4 to 6 7 m spring to neap tide and the entrances to the Humber and the Hull River were 60 and 45 feet 18 and 14 m wide respectively 108 There were two entrances The larger entrance was onto the Humber From an outer basin it led via two parallel locks to the Half Tide Basin note 16 map 8 and then to the dock itself map 9 The second entrance was onto the River Hull south of the entrance to the Old Dock and of Drypool Bridge it had an outer lock which opened directly to a second locked area known as Drypool Basin map 10 note 17 The first timber pond was added soon after the construction of the dock 110 In 1845 the York Hull and East and West Yorkshire Junction Railway proposed a railway line from York to Hull which was to terminate at the East Dock As a consequence the York and North Midland Railway Y amp NMR was forced to bring forward its own scheme to connect the east dock to the railway network 111 112 The Y amp NMR s Victoria Dock Branch Line was opened in 1853 113 In 1863 the dock itself was expanded eastwards by 8 acres 3 2 ha plus another timber pond No 2 of 12 acres 4 9 ha east of the dock The original timber pond No 1 east of the Half Tide Basin was extended through land reclaimed from the Humber 107 In 1875 the extent of the two ponds was 14 and 8 acres 5 7 and 3 2 ha respectively 108 The western boundary of the dock was defined by the Hull Citadel which was sold to the Dock company and demolished in 1864 The site was then used for timber storage 20 Part of the former Citadel land was used by Martin Samuelson and Company later Humber Iron Works for shipbuilding 114 and later by Cook Welton amp Gemmell from 1883 to 1902 115 116 C amp W Earle also had shipbuilding facilities established 1851 on the banks of the Humber adjacent to and south of Victoria Dock 117 Part of the north west corner of the eastern timber pond No 2 was filled in c 1900 because of changes to the railway layout north of the dock 118 In the late 1930s the London and North Eastern Railway LNER closed the entrance to No 2 pond and partially filled in its south side and expanded timber storage and sidings for the dock to the east over the site of the former shipyard of Earle s Shipbuilding as part of wider improvements to rail connected timber handling facilities at the dock 119 120 By the second half of the 20th century both ponds had been filled in creating timber yards and sidings 118 this pattern of use was retained until closure 121 One major use of the dock was for the trade in timber There were also facilities for cattle imports including abattoirs and cold storage coal was also exported through the dock 122 The Dock closed in the 1970s and was infilled The land was used for the construction of a housing estate in the late 1980s 123 The entrance basin to the dock on the Humber part remains though it is permanently sealed 20 The West Dock edit Albert Dock edit nbsp The modern Albert Dock 2007 Alderman Thomas Thompson had promoted a dock along the banks of the Humber in West Hull as early as the 1830s In 1860 the West Dock Company was formed to promote a dock in this location backed by the Hull Corporation North Eastern Railway the Hull Trinity House and leading Hull figures The company proposed a dock of around 1 000 yards 910 m long and of 14 acres 5 7 ha in area In response the Hull Dock Company promoted a rival scheme both were put to Parliament and the Dock Company obtained an Act in 1861 124 note 18 The Hull Dock Act of 1861 sanctioned the building of a new dock on the Humber foreshore While the dock was under construction two further acts were enacted the 1866 act allowed the extension of the dock westwards and the 1867 act allowed further expansion to the west and south 127 note 19 The dock sanctioned in 1861 was to be 2 500 feet 760 m long the 1866 act increased the length to 3 350 feet 1 020 m and the enclosed area to 22 8 acres 9 2 ha and water depth of 29 to 24 5 feet 8 8 to 7 5 m from high spring to neap tides The total land area including locks basins and reclaimed land to the west was 76 acres 31 ha 128 The engineer was John Hawkshaw the site engineer was J C Hawkshaw 129 Construction began in October 1862 130 with the foundation stone of the north dock wall laid by William Wright in May 1864 129 The southern dock walls and quays were on reclaimed land and cofferdams were built which enclosed and split the works into three parts Quay walls were built of sand and lime mortar with stone from Horsforth onto concrete foundations of on average 10 feet 3 0 m thick laid on a clay strata reached by excavating down through clay and sand During construction on 17 September 1866 one of the south dock walls burst allowing the Humber to flood in The breach was repaired by 13 October 130 During the construction of the lockpit the excavation work were troubled by boils note 9 which undermined the work Boils caused a breach in the river bank on 17 September 1866 letting water into the works In November construction began on a dam of around 380 feet 120 m in length from the south wall to the bank near the Humber Dock to protect the works Boils appeared in the lockpit on 3 March 1867 and required extensive specialised remedial work to finish the foundations taking until 20 November for the flow from the boils to be dealt with 133 Due to the difficulties encountered during construction the length of the lock originally intended to be 400 feet 120 m was reduced to 320 feet 98 m The width was 80 feet 24 m 134 Machinery on the dock including capstans and the lock gates were worked by hydraulic power The dock incorporated its own power supply consisting of three 20 by 6 feet 6 1 by 1 8 m long by diameter boilers supplying a 40 horsepower 30 kW steam engine which powered both the hydraulic system via a hydraulic accumulator at 700 pounds per square inch 4 800 kPa as well as being able to pump mains water around the dock 135 The works also required the resiting 1864 of the goods line and sidings of the North Eastern Railway s Hull and Selby Line 136 When completed the dock included a connection to the NER and had doubled track or wider rail sidings on both quays with the rails crossing the lock entrance by a hydraulically operated swing girder bridge The dock s sidings were connected to the NER s system west of the dock 128 135 A small wharf was built outside the main dock for the shipping activities of the Manchester Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway MS amp LR Both the wharf and main dock led into an entrance basin of 5 acres 2 0 ha which was partially filled in c 1875 to create more space for the MS amp LR 137 See also Railway Creek The cost of the dock was 559 479 of which 113 582 was for the excavations a similar amount for the dock walls and 88 655 for the entire lock constructions excluding the lock gates and machinery 138 The dock was opened in the presence of the Prince and Princess of Wales Albert Edward Prince of Wales later Edward VII and Alexandra Princess of Wales in 1869 and was named Albert Dock 21 139 map 11 Both the Albert and William Wright docks were closed to commercial vessels in 1972 and converted for use as fish docks The Hull fish fleet moved to the docks in 1975 139 As of 2010 both docks remain in use for general cargo traffic 140 as well as being the landing point for the much reduced Hull fishing industry 141 In December 2013 a North Sea storm surge and high tide Cyclone Xaver caused overtopping of Albert Dock from the Riverside Quay waterfront and through the lockgates resulting in flooding in Hull city centre 142 143 As a result a flood defence improvement scheme was brought forward by two years 144 work on the 6 3 million flood defence improvement including a 3 120 feet 950 m long wall 3 feet 3 inches 1 m high began in November 2014 145 the wall was completed by November 2015 146 William Wright Dock edit While the Albert Dock was still under construction the Dock Company obtained another act in 1866 allowing the extension of the dock westwards and an 1867 act that allowed further expansion to the west and south 127 note 20 Construction began in 1873 147 with R A Marillier as engineer and John Hawkshaw as consulting engineer 137 The dock was planned as an 8 acre 3 2 ha extension of the Albert Dock accessed via a 60 foot 18 m channel The foundation stone was formally laid by William Wright in 1876 148 The dock opened in 1880 and was named William Wright Dock after the chairman of the Dock Company 21 The dock was 5 75 acres 2 33 ha in size 149 map 12 The 2013 storm surge Cyclone Xaver caused damage to the north western wall of the dock as a result Associated British Ports ABP sought to infill approximately 22 000 square feet 2 000 m2 of the dock as a repair 150 Riverside Quay edit nbsp Riverside Quay in 1922 In 1904 the North Eastern Railway NER then the main owner of the Hull docks applied to Parliament for powers to build a quay along the bank of the Humber Estuary adjacent to its Albert Dock and related works 151 Permission was obtained in 1905 to construct a quay of up to 5 580 feet 1 700 m in length and to dredge to a depth of 16 feet 4 9 m below the low water level of ordinary spring tides 152 The quay was designed as a deep water quay for foodstuffs and other goods requiring rapid handling It avoided delays in entering locks or having to wait for a low tide to turn 152 153 Additional works included construction of a two storey warehouse for the fruit trade on the adjacent side of the Albert Dock and the replacement of the single line railway swing bridge over the dock s entrance with a double track bridge 154 A quay of 2 500 feet 760 m was constructed along the timbered wharf outward from Albert Dock extending around 90 feet 27 m farther into the estuary The construction consisted of a bank of Middlesbrough slag around 40 feet 12 m in depth deposited abutting the former quay wall with about a 45 facing slope supported at the base by sheet piling The quay s remaining support was formed on Blue Gum and Pitch pine timber pilings spaced around 10 feet 3 0 m The long Blue Gum piles extended above ground level to form the supports for the structure s roof As built the quay was equipped with hydraulically powered capstans for shunting and electric cranes a water supply for ship supply and fire fighting was fitted and gas lighting used 155 The electrical equipment was supplied by Craven Brothers Hydraulic power was supplied via an accumulator tower which also functioned as a clock tower 156 but was demolished after the Second World War 157 The pier also incorporated a passenger station for continental boat trains 153 158 600 feet 180 m of the quay was equipped for passenger traffic with the quay decking raised 3 feet 0 91 m to provide a platform 159 The station was used as a terminus for boat trains 160 161 The quay came into use in 1907 162 Initial operations were by the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway L amp YR and NER s joint ferry to Zeebrugge followed by ships to Norway operated by Wilson Line and to Rotterdam by the Hull and Netherlands Steamship Company 156 The quay was fully completed by 1911 163 In the Second World War Hull Blitz the quay was destroyed by fires started by enemy bombing in May 1941 162 164 In the 1950s a new 1 065 foot 325 m long concrete quay was constructed and officially opened in 1959 162 The south side of Albert Dock was modernised to a similar design as the new Riverside Quay in 1964 162 165 map 13 St Andrew s Dock edit nbsp The silted dock in 2005 St Andrew s Dock was constructed at the same time as the extension of Albert Dock The initial scheme was for a 10 acre 4 0 ha dock 1 802 feet 549 m in length entered from the Humber by a 250 by 50 feet 76 by 15 m long by wide lock As with the Albert Dock extension the engineers were Marillier and Hawkshaw 137 The dock was opened in 1883 directly to the west of William Wright Dock with an area of over 10 5 acres 4 2 ha 23 Originally intended to be used for coal handling it was used entirely for the fishing industry 166 note 21 The dock was extended by about 10 acres 4 0 ha after the Hull Dock Company was taken over by the North Eastern Railway with work beginning in 1894 This work included the construction of slipways for boat repair 23 The new dock St Andrew s Dock Extension was connected at the west end via a channel the slipways were at the far west end 167 While under construction a cofferdam at the west end burst This resulted in practically every vessel in the dock being damaged The 20 000 damages included the destruction of three steamers and three other vessels 168 The cause was thought to be underground springs released during the pile driving and excavations 169 note 9 In the late 1930s plans were made for improvements and expansion at the dock 170 171 By 1938 the major part of the plans had been postponed with no expansion of the dock 172 In 1947 discussions about improvements to the dock s slipways were resumed but no work was done 173 The dock was in use until 1975 when the fishing industry was moved to Albert Dock at which point it closed 174 Partial filling in of the dock began in the 1980s The western part has been redeveloped into the St Andrews Quay retail park 175 176 while the eastern part of the dock around the entrance was declared a conservation area in 1990 because of its social historic interest 166 The dock entrance and some shipping company buildings remain in situ but the remains of the dock are completely silted up 166 map 14 In 2013 the charity St Andrew s Dock Heritage Park Action Group STAND selected a design for a memorial to the 6 000 Hull trawlermen who lost their lives in the fishing industry to be sited next to the Humber at the dock 177 178 179 180 Alexandra Dock edit nbsp Map of 1914 showing the Alexandra Dock extended Victoria Dock Town and West Docks and the rail systems of the H amp BR and the NER nbsp Alexandra Dock Hull in 1922 See also Hull Barnsley amp West Riding Junction Railway and Dock Company The Alexandra Dock was built between 1881 and 1885 on land reclaimed from the Humber as part of developments built by the Hull Barnsley amp West Riding Junction Railway and Dock Company Its design was by James Abernethy and carried out by a partnership of engineers James Oldham and George Bohn with A C Hurtzig as resident engineer The contractors were Lucas and Aird The dock machinery including lock gates and unloading equipment was hydraulically powered and supplied by Armstrong Mitchell amp Company 181 182 Pumping machines for the dry docks and to regulate the water level of the main dock were supplied by Gwynne and Company London two 400 horsepower 300 kW high pressure condensing engines drove centrifugal pumps the engines powered by six Lancashire boilers 183 The dock was built to the east of Victoria Dock with an outlet to the Humber Water to fill the dock came from the Holderness Drain which was intended to minimise the silting up of the dock that would be caused by ingress of water from the Humber The dock had an area of 46 5 acres 18 8 ha on a site of 192 acres 78 ha of which 152 acres 62 ha was on land within the tidal range of the Humber requiring the construction of a 6 000 foot 1 800 m embankment to reclaim the land Steam and hydraulically powered equipment was used to aid the construction of the dock 184 181 185 Blows or Boils note 9 were encountered during the construction of the lock foundations and at a point in the dock wall which threatened to undermine the foundations and required remedial work 186 The dock walls were planned to be built of chalk rubble faced with ashlar A strike by masons led to some lower sections of the walls being built using portland cement The tops of the dock walls were faced with granite 187 Dredged material from the creation of a channel from the entrance to the deep water channel in the Humber was used to infill parts of the made walls in the dock and to embank the foreshore to the east of the dock 188 The dock was opened on 16 July 1885 and named after Alexandra Princess of Wales The cost of the works was 1 355 392 181 The entrance lock was 550 feet 170 m long and 85 feet 26 m wide Two graving docks one 500 feet 150 m long and 60 feet 18 m wide the other a little larger were built at the north east corner of the dock The dock s primary purpose was the export of coal 185 map 15 In 1899 the dock was expanded by 7 acres 2 8 ha 185 189 officially opened on 25 September 1899 190 The extended area added approximately 0 5 miles 0 8 km of quayside and was built to the same depth as the earlier dock with the dock walls now constructed of concrete The contractor was Whitaker and Sons of Horsforth Leeds under R Pawley of the H amp BR The extension was originally fitted for the handling of coal and pit props with four coal hoists 191 A pier onto the Humber Estuary West Wharf was added in 1911 192 the pier was 1 350 feet 410 m long with an 18 feet 5 5 m minimum depth of water at spring tides and was equipped with electric conveyors for the transportation of coal 158 map 16 Alexandra Dock closed in 1982 193 at which time the connection to the rail network was removed 194 In 1991 the dock re opened 193 but without a rail connection 195 In the early 1990s part of the port land was developed as a dredged aggregate marine terminal and plant operated as Humber Sand and Gravel Co est 1993 a joint venture between Hanson formerly ARC and CEMEX 196 197 198 a concrete batching plant was built on the dock land in the late 1990s for Ready Mix Concrete Ltd later CEMEX UK Materials 199 200 In the 1990s development of a riverside container terminal Quay 2000 was proposed 201 The scheme later named Quay 2005 202 was to be built at the site of the West Wharf 203 A public enquiry was required due to objections from residents of the Victoria Dock Village 204 The inspector recommended refusal of the scheme but the decision was over ruled by the Department of Transport 205 and the project gained approved in December 2005 206 The Associated British Ports Hull Harbour Revision Order 2006 allowing the work came into effect in 2006 207 Construction of the facility renamed Hull Riverside Container Terminal was initially planned to be complete by 2008 208 209 construction of the terminal was delayed 210 and the scheme was later adapted to attract an offshore wind power business to the port 211 See Green Port Hull As of 2010 the dock handled cargoes including aggregates bulk agricultural products bulk chemicals and wood and also had a Ro Ro terminal 141 Green Port Hull edit In January 2011 Siemens and Associated British Ports signed a memorandum of understanding MOU concerning the construction of wind energy machine manufacturing plant at Alexandra Dock 212 213 214 Infrastructure for the proposed development would also make use of the planned Quay 2005 riverside facilities which had already gained planning consent and had an extant environmental mitigation at Chowder Ness 215 216 The site was favoured because of its relative proximity to planned large scale wind farms in the North Sea Dogger Bank Hornsea and East Anglia Array wind farms and the presence of existing port infrastructure 217 The Quay 2005 scheme included reclamation of 19 acres 7 5 ha of land west of the dock entrance on the banks of the Humber Estuary In the original scheme the reclaimed area was roughly a right trapezoid which projected well over 330 feet 100 m into the Humber with a south facing front of over 1 300 feet 400 m 218 note 22 the instrument also allowed dredging of the quay and approaches of up to 38 feet 11 5 m below chart datum 219 The development Green Port Hull included the Quay 2005 estuary wharf repurposed as a facility for wind turbine logistics It also required the infilling of the dock west of the lock gates with about 28 000 000 cu ft 780 000 m3 of material to create additional land for operations The initial plan included a nacelle factory of up to 380 000 square feet 35 000 m2 plus office warehousing and external storage areas as well as a helipad and a wind turbine of up to 6 MW The works were to take up most of the dock area except for land around and including dry dock facilities in the north east corner Businesses located in the dock were to be relocated primarily to other sites within the Port of Hull 220 note 23 Initial expectations were for construction to begin in 2012 and the facility to be operational by 2014 221 The conclusion of the agreement was delayed because of planning issues and uncertainties over the UK s renewable energy policy 222 Relocation of existing businesses had taken place by 2012 223 The Siemens and ABP 2011 MOU agreement was finalised in March 2014 224 note 24 ABP investment in the port facilities was estimated at 150 million and Siemens investment at 160 million across the two sites The facility was expected to become operational between 2016 and 2017 224 Plans for the turbine factory were submitted and approved in 2014 226 note 25 The contract about 100 million for dock civil engineering work was awarded to a joint venture of GRAHAM and Lagan Construction Group with CH2M Hill as consulting engineers 227 Official groundbreaking took place in January 2015 228 Revised plans for the site submitted in April 2015 included only a blade manufacturing factory at the site together with storage and other logistics facilities for wind farm installation work with no nacelle production 229 VolkerFitzpatrick was awarded the contract to construct the blade factory in July 2015 230 Clugston Group was contracted to construct an associated service and logistics building in September 2015 231 nbsp Dead Bod graffiti on West Wharf 2007 As part of the development the Dead Bod graffiti painted by Captain Len Pongo Rood in the 1960s on one of the West Wharf buildings which had become a landmark to Humber shipping was removed and saved for posterity 232 233 In early 2017 after restoration the Dead Bod was temporarily removed to the Humber Street Gallery in Hull as part of the City of Culture 2017 celebrations 234 The blade factory was formally inaugurated in the presence of Secretary of State for Business Energy and Industrial Strategy Greg Clark on 1 December 2016 235 The factory scheme has an expected lifespan of around 30 years after which the site would be returned to general port use 236 In August 2021 Siemans announced that a 186 million investment would be made in doubling the size of blade factory to handle larger blade sizes in excess of 330 feet 100 m in length 237 The scheme was expected for completion by 2023 238 Hull Joint Dock edit nbsp Aerial view of King George and Queen Elizabeth docks 1995 The NER began planning for a rival dock east of Alexandra Dock in the 1890s This led eventually to a joint agreement between the NER and the Hull and Barnsley Railway HBR and an Act of Parliament in 1899 the Joint Dock Act Construction of the dock was delayed until 1906 and was completed in 1914 at which point the new dock became officially known as the King George Dock An extension arm of the dock to the south east sharing the same lock was opened as the Queen Elizabeth Dock in 1969 In 1993 the dock gained a terminal outside the lock gates on the banks of the Humber known as River Terminal 1 It is now known as Rotterdam Terminal used by North Sea Ferries King George Dock 1914 edit By the early 1890s further expansion of the port facilities at Hull were required in particular dock and handling facilities for large coal carrying vessels as well as facilities for the new steam trawlers The NER had been in discussion with the Hull Dock Company regarding investment and working arrangements this led to a takeover of the Dock Company by the NER 239 In 1892 the board of the NER had decided that a greater investment of around 1 000 000 in a new dock east of Alexandra Dock would be better spent than expending a smaller sum of around 22 000 on expanding the entrance to the Dock Company s Albert Dock It put Bills before Parliament for the amalgamation of the Dock Company and for a new dock note 26 Both Bills were rejected the amalgamation Bill was resubmitted in 1893 with clauses protecting the interests of the Hull and Barnsley Railway HBR which feared the possibility of a rival dock adjacent to their own Alexandra Dock As such the Bill contained clauses requiring the NER to inform the HBR of any planned dock to the east and allow them the option to join as partners in any such development The North Eastern Railway Hull Docks Act was passed and the amalgamation took place in 1893 25 The NER submitted Bills for extensive dock improvements in Hull in 1897 note 27 and again in 1898 with an expanded improvement scheme note 28 both of which were abandoned over responsibilities regarding dredging the river The following year the NER submitted a Bill for a new dock east of Alexandra jointly with the HBR including new connecting rail lines note 29 this was passed as the Hull Joint Dock Act 1899 240 The two companies estimated 1899 the cost of the development at 1 419 555 of which the dock and lock were estimated at 1 194 160 the scheme was expected to take seven years to complete 241 The act had specified a dock of 60 acres 24 ha which was expected to have been completed by 1906 The initial construction was reduced to 32 acres 13 ha due to the high cost of the tenders received for the original design 242 The Hull Joint Dock Act 1906 made minor modifications to the original scheme and extended the time for the construction of the dock note 30 242 Construction of the dock was contracted to S Pearson amp Son in 1906 243 with an estimated value of 850 000 244 At the same time the Great Central Railway s rival Immingham Dock was under construction on the south bank of the Humber 245 Most of the dock site was beyond the bank of the Humber as it then existed requiring reclamation of ground from the Humber foreshore Two temporary banks were constructed enclosing 30 and 50 acres 12 and 20 ha plus a timber dam beyond the southernmost bank closing off the soon to be constructed lock The underlying glacial geology of the Humber due to underground water pressure note 9 was weak and quicksand strata 246 By early 1911 the embankments enclosing the new dock area were nearly complete as were most of the excavations for the dock itself and the dock s walls The dock s lock required insertion of steel sheet piles as far as 47 feet 14 m below the bottom of the lock to create a watertight surround for the construction as a result of water containing gravel in the underlying geology 247 The dock walls were of concrete faced and coped with Staffordshire blue bricks and granite Some dock walls were built as sloped constructions with blue gum timber wharfing due to poor ground conditions preventing satisfactory foundations 246 nbsp 1914 single storey ferro concrete storage shed north western arm north quay note 31 2007 As built in 1914 the dock had a water area of 53 acres 21 ha and consisted of a central area of around 1 000 by 1 050 feet 300 by 320 m connected to the river by a lock running north east to south west Two main arms to the north east and north west were initially constructed both around 1 350 feet 410 m long The western arm had warehousing facilities note 31 while the central and eastern part of the northernmost quay had six coaling berths designed to allow ships to dock diagonally at the dockside The main lock was itself 750 by 85 feet 229 by 26 m long divided into two sections of 500 and 250 feet 152 and 76 m by another set of gates map 17 Water depth in the lock would be between 19 75 and 42 25 feet 6 02 and 12 88 m between low water and high spring tides while the dock itself was to be maintained at a minimum depth of 32 feet 8 inches 9 96 m The design allowed for expansion through two further arms to the south east and south west giving a potential ultimate area of around 85 acres 34 ha 249 Two graving docks were sited at the eastern end of the north eastern arm of 550 by 66 feet 168 by 20 m and 450 by 72 feet 137 by 22 m each with a water depth of up to 22 feet 6 7 m 250 251 Much of the dock equipment was operated by electricity supplied at 440 V from the Hull Corporation including electric coal conveyors cranes and dock lighting as well as powering pumps used to supply hydraulic power 249 248 Hydraulic equipment from Hathorn Davey of Leeds was used for lock and dry dock gates and for the coal tippers 249 248 Cranes were supplied by Royce Limited Manchester Craven Brothers and a floating crane by Werfo Gusto A F Smulders coal handling equipment was from Head Wrightson 248 The machinery and mechanism for the lock gates were manufactured by the Hydraulic Engineering Company Chester the centrifugal pumps and electric motors for draining the dry docks were made by W H Allen of Bedford 252 On 26 June 1914 King George V visited Hull and formally opened the Hull Joint Dock The dock was subsequently named King George Dock in his honour 243 253 254 The dock s design was undertaken by Sir Benjamin Baker and Sir John Wolfe Barry 254 255 Its construction was supervised by T M Newell and R Pawley with W Ebdon as resident engineer and T L Norfolk as superintendent of equipment construction 248 Architectural design of the dock s offices was by the NER s architect William Bell 248 The dock was home for a period of time to the NER s Pals Battalion the 17th Battalion Northumberland Fusiliers The battalion arrived for training at the dock on 22 September 1914 In November 1914 the battalion moved to stations along the East Yorkshire coast with the headquarters remaining at the docks On 20 June 1915 the battalion left the docks for Catterick 256 257 nbsp 1919 Grain Silo 2007 A 40 000 t 39 000 long tons 44 000 short tons ferro concrete grain silo was under construction in 1914 at the end of the north western quay 248 and was complete by 1919 254 The main building consisted of two blocks 96 by 241 feet 29 by 73 m wide by long each holding 144 storage bins each 12 feet 3 7 m square and 50 feet 15 m deep Each building block was connected to either the north or south quays of the north west quay via a receiving house with weighing equipment and by subways under the quayside extending for 900 feet 270 m The foundations for the building and the quay subways were constructed by the dock contractors S Pearson the main building was built by the British Reinforced Concrete Engineering Company and the grain handling equipment supplied by Henry Simon Limited Manchester 258 In 1959 the British Transport Commission authorised a 4 750 000 improvement scheme for the dock The largest part of the scheme 2 000 000 was the extension of the north quay by the total removal of coal loading equipment and conversion of the echelon diagonal berthing arrangement on the far north and north east dock walls into standard straight dockside Other improvements included replacement of timber quay structures with concrete ones specifically the south west arm over 400 000 square feet 37 000 m2 of storage in single storey sheds new electric cranes and additional grain handling equipment as well as investment in mobile mechanical handling equipment including fork lift trucks and mobile cranes Also included in the works were expansion of the grain silo capacity and an impounding station designed to maintain the dock water at a high level 259 260 In 1965 the creation of berths for use by roll on roll off ferries began increasing use of the dock for unit freight transport 254 Queen Elizabeth Dock extension 1969 edit In 1968 work on a 28 acres 11 ha extension to King George Dock built on reclaimed land to the south east of the dock was begun The extension was officially opened in August 1969 by Queen Elizabeth II and named Queen Elizabeth Dock 162 map 18 Recent history 1970 edit A container terminal was opened in 1971 at Queen Elizabeth Dock Two roll on roll off terminals were opened in 1973 and by 1975 there were six such terminals in the two docks 162 261 In 1984 Anglia Oils now AarhusKarlshamn opened an automated vegetable oil refinery on the King George Dock estate 262 PD Ports originally Humberside Sea and Land Services began operating the Hull Container Terminal in 1990 By the mid 2000s throughput was over 100 000 TEU per annum with Samskip as the primary customer citation needed nbsp Hull All Weather Terminal note 32 2007 In 1993 River Terminal 1 a terminal for large roll on roll off vessels constructed at a cost of 12 million opened on the banks of the Humber Estuary south of the King George Dock 263 map 19 A covered terminal was opened in 1997 initially built for steel handling for British Steel Corporation 264 note 32 It was renamed Hull All Weather Terminal in 2009 and the facilities were expanded to allow the handling of other weather sensitive goods including dry bulks paper and agribulks fertiliser 265 266 A covered shed for paper products Finland Terminal opened in 2000 had expanded to 70 000 sq ft 6 500 m2 by 2006 267 In 2001 new facilities were inaugurated on the banks of the Humber The Rotterdam Terminal on the site of the 1993 River Terminal 1 was built at a cost of 14 3 million to serve the P amp O North Sea Ferries new ships the Pride of Rotterdam and Pride of Hull used on the Hull Rotterdam route 268 The 1919 grain silo was demolished in 2010 11 269 270 As of 2010 other facilities at the two docks included a 850 000 cu ft 24 000 m3 cold store and passenger services to Zeebrugge The company AarhusKarlshamn operates a large vegetable based oil products processing plant at the dock and the Kingston Terminal at the south east of Queen Elizabeth Dock is used for import of coal products In 2010 there were ten roll on roll off berths within the two docks 141 In 2013 a 1 000 000 t 980 000 long tons 1 100 000 short tons per year capacity sea to rail biomass facility with a 164 foot 50 m silo was constructed to supply Drax power station 271 272 The facility was officially opened by Councillor Mary Glew Lord Mayor of Hull in December 2014 273 274 A 160 by 390 foot 50 by 120 m specialised biomass dry bulk warehouse was opened in late 2015 275 276 Other facilities editDry docks edit In addition to the dry docks in King George Alexandra and William Wright Docks there were dry docks on the sides of the River Hull 277 Hull Central Dry Dock also known as South End Dock on the west bank of the River Hull near to its outfall onto the Humber Estuary map 21 was the largest being 345 feet 105 m long with an entrance of 51 feet 16 m 277 the dock having been extended several times 278 Built in 1843 and later extended the dock has been disused since 1992 and is now a Grade II listed structure 278 279 280 In September 2013 the City Council approved plans by Watergate Developments Ltd to turn the dock into an open air entertainment venue 281 282 This is part of an adjacent office space development known as the Centre for Digital Innovation C4Di 283 developed by Wykeland as TheDock 284 Construction work on the C4Di building began late 2014 285 In December 2014 construction began on a concrete dam wall permanently sealing the dock 286 On the east bank of the River Hull were Crown Dry Dock map 22 104 by 21 feet 31 7 by 6 4 m 277 halfway between the river outfall and the entrance to Victoria Dock s Drypool Basin Farther upstream was Union Dock 214 by 48 5 feet 65 2 by 14 8 m 277 opposite the entrance to Queen s Dock map 23 dating to the first half of the 1800s 287 and a third dock farther upstream map 24 On the west bank of the River Hull there were ship repair facilities just within the city walls at North Gate on the river dating back as far as the 15th century with slipways by the 18th century The entrance to Queen s Dock was later built in this area and two dry docks remain North Bridge Dry Dock and No 1 Dry Dock to the north and south of Queen s Dock basin respectively North Bridge Dry Dock map 25 and No 1 Dry Dock map 26 were smaller dry docks of around 150 feet 46 m long and with entrances less than 40 feet 12 m wide 277 Both were extended in the latter part of the 19th century 288 289 The northernmost of the two docks is a Grade II listed structure 290 Additionally the former Queen s Dock basin was converted to an enclosed dock after the main dock was infilled 291 292 map 3 Quays wharfs and piers edit nbsp Victoria Pier Minerva Pier behind Albert Dock entrance lock and Riverside Quay in distance In addition to the Riverside Quay at Albert Dock the former pier at Alexandra Dock and the roll on roll off river terminal at King George Dock there are other water side berths at the port both on the Humber and on the River Hull The Corporation Jetty or Old Corporation Pier also known as Brownlow s Jetty was between Limekiln Creek and the Humber Dock west pier map 27 The construction of the West Dock necessitated the demolition of the old pier 293 294 The Hull and Selby Railway 1840 had a wharf at Limekiln Creek a small north south running harbour This was also used by the Manchester Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway MS amp LR which operated a lighter service from it 295 296 map 28 The Creek was stopped up as a result of the building of the West Dock in the 1860s 297 As a provision of the 1861 act replacement facilities were provided for the railway companies at a place called Railway Creek 298 299 The Railway Creek was constructed as part of the works for the new West Dock Albert Dock beginning in 1863 a new harbour was formed east of Limekiln Creek the Limekiln Creek was kept open until the alternative provision for the NER and MS amp LR companies had been made 300 Following the completion of the works the small east west running Railway Creek harbour connected at its east end to the Albert Dock basin 301 map 29 In 1873 the NER had a warehouse built at the site designed by Thomas Prosser and modified by Benjamin Burley both NER architects 302 note 33 Corporation Pier constructed in 1810 was parallel to the mainland but not directly connected to it 303 it was converted to a T shaped pier in 1847 303 It was used as the terminus of the Hull to New Holland ferry initially run by the MS amp LR and later by the LNER and British Rail until the service ended in 1981 because of the opening of the Humber Bridge 304 It was renamed Victoria Pier in 1854 66 note 34 map 30 A railway booking office latterly named Hull Victoria Pier was established here c 1849 by the MS amp LR and closed on 25 June 1981 with the cessation of the ferry service 305 The pier has been altered several times A floating pontoon was added in 1877 and removed in 1980 303 an upper Promenade was added in 1882 306 and removed in the mid 20th century As of 2005 the primary wooden structure is L shaped 303 To the west of Victoria Pier were the L shaped piers enclosing the Humber Dock basin 307 308 The Humber Dock piers were modified from a diagonal arrangement NE SW to a pier square to the dock N S in around 1840 309 310 note 35 The West Pier became defunct c 1875 when the entrance basin of the Albert Dock was partially filled to provide more accommodation for the MS amp LR creating Island Wharf Island Wharf was separated from the mainland by a channel known as Albert Channel which was filled in during the 1960s 137 311 312 In 2004 construction began on an office development known as Humber Quays on the site The first building was completed in 2006 a second office building was completed in 2007 313 The eastern pier was a wooden structure from the 1920s known as the Minerva Pier 314 it was replaced by a steel walled pier in the latter part of the 20th century 315 316 As of 2010 the remaining piers are still used to harbour vessels but are not used for cargo handling The River Hull had extensive staithes wharfs and warehouses along its length the Old Harbour could accommodate vessels up to 200 feet 61 m the river being navigable for vessels up to 180 feet 55 m for 2 miles 3 2 km 317 As of 2010 cargo handling has mostly ceased in the Old Harbour Barges are still used for transportation of vegetable and mineral oils farther upstream within the boundaries of Hull including to J R Rix amp Sons Ltd 318 the Croda chemicals vegetable oil chemical processing plant 319 and to the Cargill vegetable oil plant in Stoneferry Salt End jetties edit At Salt End a jetty No 1 Oil Jetty for the importation of bulk mineral oil was constructed in 1914 by the North Eastern and Hull and Barnsley railway companies connected to a tank farm at Salt End The jetty was constructed extending 1 500 feet 460 m into the Humber giving a water depth of 30 ft 9 1 m at low spring tides 158 320 Chemical industrial development fed by the oil imports would develop into the chemical site at Salt End now known as BP Saltend No 2 Jetty was constructed in 1928 westward of No 1 and a reinforced concrete structure No 3 Jetty was built in 1958 The original No 1 jetty was demolished and replaced with a new structure in 1959 162 No 2 jetty was demolished in 1977 321 As of 2010 both Nos 1 and 3 jetties remain in use map 31 Port welfare edit Seafarers arriving at the port are provided with practical and welfare support via the services of a port chaplain 322 Disasters accidents and war damage editExplosion of the PS Union edit In 1837 the packet steamer Union exploded in the Humber Dock basin 323 resulting in the death of over twenty people including bystanders on the dock side and many injuries the vessel itself sank 324 325 R38 airship disaster edit Main article R38 class airship In 1921 an R38 class airship broke apart while performing a sharp turn near Victoria Pier It then exploded and the flaming wreckage crashed into the Humber near the Victoria Pier killing 45 of the 49 passengers on board 326 Second World War edit See also Hull Blitz During the Second World War the Hull docks were actively targeted In addition to mines in the Humber 327 the docks in Hull were bombed All of them were damaged The wooden Riverside Quay at Albert Dock was totally destroyed in 1941 328 Fires edit Major fires destroyed the fish market at St Andrews Dock in 1929 and a general cargo shed at Humber Dock in 1951 329 In 1970 a vehicle carrying liquefied gas struck the top of a road subway leading to the William Wright and St Andrew s docks resulting in a gas explosion and fire The incident caused two deaths and 17 serious injuries 330 331 Acid leak edit On 18 September 2017 emergency crews attended a large scale acid leak which had caused a vapour cloud to form over King George Dock Humberside Fire and Rescue Service warned nearby residents to close doors and windows as a precautionary measure after a tank containing 580 t 570 long tons 640 short tons of hydrochloric acid sprang a leak at the dock late in the day By the early hours of 19 September 2017 firefighters confirmed that wind was blowing the vapour away from houses near the United Molasses site where the leak occurred and declared the area near the dock safe However within 24 hours emergency crews had returned to the site following a change in wind direction A number of emergency service vehicles including an ambulance could be seen waiting on standby nearby The acid was later transferred on to tankers to be taken away safely Eight people reported feeling unwell as a result of the incident Four were assessed at the scene and discharged immediately and four were taken to hospital for further assessment All were ultimately discharged after showing no further symptoms The Environment Agency confirmed that there appeared to be no leakage into the Humber or any other environmental impact 332 See also editMuseums in Hull with exhibits relevant to the port Arctic Corsair Hull Maritime Museum Spurn Lightship Streetlife Museum of Transport Lagoon HullNotes edit Much of it from the North Yorkshire Moors then called Blackhower Moor additionally wheat corn lead and leather were exported and later in the 14th century also cloth Also dyestuffs Madder Woad as well as Alum for mordant as well as wood iron and iron ore and a wide variety of foreign goods The east of the river not being developed until later The High Street still contains merchant buildings most from a later date Wilberforce House dates to 1660 and was once used for this purpose 11 One clause of the Hull Docks Act of 1861 was that the Dock Company could be converted to a municipally owned dock trust by the Hull Corporation additionally the dividends paid by the company were restricted the Dock Company had been created as a private for profit company and was subject to widespread prejudice in the town of Hull that it better served the interests of the shareholders rather than the port itself the shareholders were characterised as being uninterested in the development of the port 21 The walls were demolished but not all of the gate which was rediscovered in the 20th century the part occupying the gap between the constructions of Queen s and Prince s Dock 38 a b The docks were renamed in honour of Queen Victoria and the Prince Consort s Prince Albert visit to Hull in 1854 during which the Royal Party toured the docks on the steam yacht Fairy 52 a b The Queen s Dock proposal of 1838 forerunner of the Victoria Dock should not be confused with the original Hull Dock of 1778 named Queen s Dock in 1854 a b c d e Underground streams forcing up through sand with an origin in the aquifers of the Yorkshire Wolds 131 132 See also Artesian aquifer The land made was in the area of the Victoria Pier south east of the dock 66 creating Nelson Street and to the south and west of the dock creating Wellington Street 67 165 000 in Baldwin 1973 p 9 See footnote in Bethell 1841 p 27 quote The London Gazette of 16 November containing the notice for a bill to make the Queen s Dock was put in Walker s 1840 dock was 14 acres 5 7 ha in area with a quay area of around 21 acres 8 5 ha The water depths were 23 to 17 feet 7 0 to 5 2 m high to low tides in 9 acres 3 6 ha of the dock nearer to the Humber lock with the remainder of the dock shallower with depths of 20 to 14 feet 6 1 to 4 3 m His cost estimate was 300 000 The dock was to have a 5 acres 2 0 ha entrance basin on the Humber and a lock suitable for the largest paddle steamers of the day 210 by 60 feet 64 by 18 m and a 36 feet 11 m wide passage onto the Old Harbour 103 Wright 1875 p 87 states that it was originally intended to construct this dock with an entrance from the Humber only however the original notice in The London Gazette of 1839 describes a link to the Old Harbour 100 as do the Minutes of the June 1840 parliamentary committee examining the bill 104 The link to the River Hull for the built dock was not constructed until the early 1850s 105 Dock 12 acres 3 rods 13 perch Half Tide Basin 3 acres Victoria Dock Basin 2 acres 3 rods and the Drypool Basin 1 acre 20 perch Sheahan 1864 p 293 One lock was narrower and intended for barges 109 The Drypool Basin and connection to the River Hull was completed in the early 1850s the entrance on the River Hull had not been sanctioned at the time of the formal opening 1850 it was completed soon after being under construction by 1852 105 See the 1860 West Dock Company notice in The London Gazette 125 and the 1860 Hull Dock Company notice in The London Gazette 126 The 1865 and 1866 notices in The London Gazette Hull Docks Enlargement of Western Dock and Works The London Gazette 23042 5714 24 November 1865 Hull Docks Enlargement and Extension of Works in connection with the Western Dock The London Gazette 23189 6358 6359 23 November 1866 Allison 1969 gives an incorrect date of 1865 for the authority to build the William Wright Dock Wright 1875 p 90 says the dock was intended for general trade Roughly approximating to the outline of the 1911 West Wharf Hull City Council planning applications 11 01178 PAAD Infilling of parts of Alexandra Dock 7 68 Ha 19 Acres construction of 2 roll on roll off ramps within the Dock and refurbishment of existing eastern lead in jetty to Alexandra Dock Hull City Council 14 December 2011 Retrieved 4 July 2014 11 01180 LBC Listed Building Consent Application for works associated with the Green Port Hull development involving Hull City Council 14 December 2011 Retrieved 4 July 2014 11 01177 OUT Development of land at Alexandra Dock including the demolition of existing buildings excluding the listed hydraulic engine house and tower and adjacent unlisted chimney for use as a facility for the manufacture assembly storage handling and testing of wind turbine components for the offshore power industry Hull City Council 14 December 2011 Retrieved 4 July 2014 11 01176 S73 Green Port Hull Application under section 73 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 to carry out works authorised by The Associated British Ports Hull Harbour Revision Order 2006 Hull City Council 14 December 2011 Retrieved 4 July 2014 11 01179 FULL Demolition of existing building and full planning permission for the erection of a 3 MW operational wind turbine Hull City Council 15 December 2011 Retrieved 4 July 2014 An additional site near Paull East Riding of Yorkshire east of King George Dock Hull was added to the plans intended to manufacture rotor blades for turbines 224 In late 2014 modified plans combined the two production facilities at Alexandra Dock 225 Hull City Council planning application 14 00777 FULL Demolition partial demolition of existing buildings erection of buildings including a single building of 22 991m high Hull City Council 19 June 2014 Archived from the original on 7 November 2014 Retrieved 4 July 2014 14 00778 FULL Demolition of existing buildings and erection of service and logistics building Hull City Council 19 June 2014 Archived from the original on 24 December 2014 Retrieved 4 July 2014 14 00776 FULL Erection of 6 x electricity sub stations Hull City Council 19 June 2014 Archived from the original on 15 May 2015 Retrieved 4 July 2014 The dock proposals were submitted as part of a wider number of schemes See North Eastern Railway Additional Powers with reference to new and existing Railways Dock Roads Footpaths and other Works and Lands in Northumberland Newcastle upon Tyne Durham York North East and West Ridings and Kingston upon Hull The London Gazette 26226 pp 6270 71 8 12 23 November 1891 Submitted as part of a wider number of schemes see North Eastern Railway Power to make Dock Works at Kingston upon Hull and Middlesbrough Additional Powers with reference to new and existing Railways Roads Footpaths and other Works The London Gazette 26797 p 6724 1 10 p 6725 A C 24 November 1896 Submitted as part of a wider number of schemes see North Eastern Railway Power to make Dock Works at Kingston upon Hull Additional Powers with reference to new and existing Railways Roads Footpaths and other Works The London Gazette 26913 pp 6704 05 1 14 23 November 1897 See North Eastern and Hull and Barnsley Railways Joint Dock Power to the North Eastern Railway Company and the Hull Barnsley and West Riding Junction Railway and Dock Company Jointly and Separately to Make a New Dock Railways and Works at Kingston upon Hull Constitution of Joint Committee Running Powers to North Eastern Railway Company over part of Hull and Barnsley Railway Agreements between the said Companies Additional Capital Powers for the said Companies Application of Funds and Amendment of Acts The London Gazette 27025 7252 55 22 November 1898 also Harbours and Waterways PDF The Engineer Vol 85 15 April 1898 p 348 See Hull Joint Dock Power to the Hull Joint Dock Committee to make an Alteration of the authorized River Wall and Dock Works at Kingston upon Hull Extension of Time for completion of authorized Dock Works and Railways Power to North Eastern Railway Company to make new Railways and Works at Kingston Upon Hull and to abandon part of Victoria Dock Branch Agreements with Corporation of Kingston upon Hull Acquisition of Lands Application of Funds and Amendment of Acts The London Gazette 27855 7717 18 17 November 1905 a b Three 375 by 90 feet 114 by 27 m single storey on the north side and three 375 by 70 feet 114 by 21 m two storey ferro concrete warehouses on the south side each with flat roof areas also usable for storage 248 a b The terminal was built over the unlocked former dry dock map 20 The Railway Creek was filled in c 1906s Ordnance Survey 1 10000 1970 See also Albert Channel Both names were commonly used See also Ordnance Survey Town Plans 1 1056 c 1850 Acts and legislation editKingston upon Hull Port Act 1774Act of Parliament nbsp Parliament of Great BritainLong titleAn Act for making and establishing publick Quays or Wharfs at Kingston upon Hull for the better securing His Majesty s Revenues of Customs and for the Benefit of Commerce in the Port of Kingston upon Hull for making a Bason or Dock with Reservoirs Sluices Roads and other Works for the Accommodation of Vessels using the said Port and for appropriating certain Lands belonging to His Majesty and for applying certain Sums of Money out of His Majesty s Customs at the said Port for those Purposes and for establishing other necessary Regulations within the Town and Port of Kingston upon Hull Citation14 Geo 3 c 56DatesRoyal assent20 May 1774 14 Geo 3 c 56 1774 Kingston upon Hull Dock Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Creation of the Hull dock company creation of a dock later Queen s dock establishment of a legal quay other rights and responsibilities 333 Hull Market Place and Dock Improvement Act 1801Act of Parliament nbsp Parliament of the United KingdomLong titleAn Act for enlarging and improving the Market Place of the town of Kingston Upon Hull and for making a commodious Street from thence to the river Humber with a Dock and Wharf or Landing Place for the Ferry and Market Boats belonging and resorting to the said town Citation41 Geo 3 U K c lxvText of the Hull Market Place and Dock Improvement Act 1801 as in force today including any amendments within the United Kingdom from legislation gov uk 41 Geo 3 U K c lxv 1801 An Act for enlarging and improving the Market Place of the town of Kingston Upon Hull and for making a commodious Street from thence to the river Humber with a Dock and Wharf or Landing Place for the Ferry and Market Boats belonging and resorting to the said town a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Containing clauses relating to the establishment of a ferry boat dock on land near Humber Street 334 42 Geo 3 c 91 1802 Kingston upon Hull Dock Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Further docks and basin to be named Humber Dock a third dock between Myton and Beverley gates later Junction Dock transfer of the Garrison Ground excluding the Citadel from the Crown to town 335 5 Geo 4 c 52 1824 Kingston Upon Hull Dock Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Amendment of Hull Dock Act of 1802 transfer of part of Garrison Ground from the town of Hull to the Royal Ordnance 336 45 Geo 3 c 42 1805 Kingston upon Hull Dock Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Raising of additional funds for the construction of the docks mentioned in Hull Dock Act 1802 337 7 amp 8 Vict c 103 1844 Kingston upon Hull Dock Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link A fourth dock with timber pond later Victoria Dock and a fifth dock Railway Dock plus additional setting out of authorities in the port 8 amp 9 Vict c 5 1845 Kingston upon Hull Dock Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Enlargement of the Railway dock 10 amp 11 Vict c 283 1847 Kingston upon Hull Dock Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link 12 amp 13 Vict c 69 1849 Kingston upon Hull Dock Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link 17 amp 18 Vict c 13 1854 Kingston upon Hull Dock Amendment Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Clarity as to land purchases raising of funds further financial arrangements 15 amp 16 Vict c 136 1852 Hull Dues Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Relating to the Hull Dock Company 15 amp 16 Vict c 130 1852 Humber Conservancy Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link 17 amp 18 Vict c 101 1854 Kingston upon Hull Improvement Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link 24 amp 25 Vict c 79 1861 Hull Docks Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Construction of a sixth dock later Albert Dock and alterations and connections to the Hull and Selby Railway line 27 amp 28 Vict c 2 1864 Hull Docks Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Raising of capital for expansion of Victoria Dock 29 amp 30 Vict c 77 1866 Hull Docks Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Enlargement of the western dock 30 amp 31 Vict c 25 31 May 1867 Hull Docks Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link further extension of the western dock 43 amp 44 Vict c 199 1880 Hull Barnsley and West Riding Junction Railway and Dock Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Construction of a railway and dock Alexandra Dock 55 amp 56 Vict c 198 1893 North Eastern Railway Hull Docks Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Acquisition of the Hull Dock company by the NER 62 amp 63 Vict c 242 1899 Hull Joint Dock Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link 6 Edw 7 c 46 1906 Hull Joint Dock Act a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Construction of a joint dock later King George Dock by the NER and H amp BR British Transport Docks Hull Docks 1973 c xxviii Associated British Ports Hull 1989 c x The Associated British Ports Hull Harbour Revision Order 2006 www legislation gov uk The National Archives 2006 Retrieved 20 January 2013 References edit Locations Hull Associated British Ports Archived from the original on 22 June 2020 Retrieved 28 July 2020 Lewis 1991 p 158 Medieval Hull British History Online Retrieved 10 November 2021 Kingston upon Hull History Page 1 www riverhumber com Retrieved 10 November 2021 What s in a name www mytonlaw co uk Retrieved 10 November 2021 a b MacTurk G G 1879 Chapter I Early Approaches to Hull A History of the Hull Railways Gillett amp MacMahon 1980 Chapter 2 The Medieval Trade of Hull Gillett amp MacMahon 1980 Chapter 6 The Market the Ferries and Foreign Trade Gillett amp MacMahon 1980 Chapter 8 Hull in the Early 16th century Gillett amp MacMahon 1980 Chapter 15 Hull under Charles II and James II Wilberforce House and Hull s High Street Hull City Council Retrieved 19 January 2013 a b c d e Gillett amp MacMahon 1980 pp 219 222 Chapter 17 The Beginnings of the Modern Port a b c Lewis 1991 pp 158 159 Chapter 11 Ports and Harbours Jackson 1972 pp 234 243 Chapter X The Provision of Modern Port Facilities Hull s docks and trade Hull City Council Archived from the original on 1 July 2008 Retrieved 19 January 2013 Government of George III 1780 Publick quays of wharfs to be established at Kingston upon Hull for the better securing his Majesty s revenues A collection of all the statutes now in force relating to the revenue and officers of the customs in Great Britain and the plantations Vol 2 C Eyre and W Strahan pp 1411 1416 p 1414 XVIII Crown land granted for the above purpose a b c Lewis 1991 p 159 Ellis amp Crowther 1990 p 423 Chapter 30 Development of the Humber during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries J North Waterston William 1846 Dock III Docks at other ports of the United Kingdom p 256 A cyclopaedia of commerce mercantile law finance commercial geography and navigation Henry G Bohn London a b c SPG Note 27 Heritage amp Development Management at Garrison Side Hull PDF Hull City Council 15 July 2004 sections 27 5 to 27 13 Historical Background pp 167 168 Archived from the original PDF on 5 July 2015 Retrieved 19 January 2013 also historical maps of the near area and information on the Hull Citadel a b c d Allison 1969 The Corporation and the Dock Company 1835 70 Sheahan 1864 pp 293 295 a b c Tomlinson 1914 pp 715 716 Tomlinson 1914 pp 707 708 a b Tomlinson 1914 pp 711 715 Tomlinson 1914 pp 716 721 Tomlinson 1914 p 767 a b Parkes 1970 p 6 Selected data from the database European Severe Weather Database Retrieved 6 July 2018 Baldwin 1973 pp 1 2 Timperley 1836 pp 1 2 Baldwin 1973 pp 2 3 Baldwin 1973 pp 3 4 Sources Baldwin 1973 p 4 Jarvis Adrian 1998 Port and harbour engineering Studies in the history of civil engineering Ashgate p 162 OCLC 237318455 Labrum E A 1994 2 Humberside and North Lincolnshire 3 Hull Town Docks Civil Engineering Heritage Eastern and Central England Thomas Telford ISBN 07277 1970 X Skempton et al 2002 pp 333 34 HOLT Luke c 1723 1804 Skempton et al 2002 p 54 BERRY Henry 1719 1812 Skempton et al 2002 p 283 Grundy John Jr 1719 1783 a b c Timperley 1836 p 4 a b Timperley 1836 p 5 Timperley 1836 p 6 Coast Walk Point 8 Beverley Gate BBC Humberside BBC Retrieved 20 January 2013 Timperley 1836 pp 4 5 Timperley 1836 pp 4 6 9 11 Baldwin 1973 pp 4 5 Baldwin 1973 p 5 Baldwin 1973 p 6 a b Baldwin 1973 p 7 Timperley 1836 pp 9 11 Timperley 1836 p 10 Parsons 1835 p 219 Timperley 1836 pp 11 12 Timperley 1836 p 12 Sheahan 1864 pp 287 289 The Docks a b Head George 1836 Hull A home tour through the manufacturing districts of England in the summer of 1835 Vol 1 John Murray London p 235 Sheahan 1864 pp 190 289 Port of Hull Hull Docks Page 1 website lineone net Queens Dock Archived from the original on 26 May 2013 Retrieved 20 January 2013 Coast Walk Point 1 Queen s Gardens BBC Humberside BBC Retrieved 20 January 2013 a b Gillett amp MacMahon 1980 pp 222 224 Skempton et al 2002 pp 126 132 CHAPMAN William MRIA 1749 1832 Skempton et al 2002 pp 554 566 RENNIE John FRS FRSE 1761 1821 Baldwin 1973 p 8 Baldwin 1973 Fig 3 p 5 Baldwin 1973 pp 9 7 a b Timperley 1836 p 15 Baldwin 1973 pp 8 9 Skempton et al 2002 p 298 HARRAP John 1769 1812 a b A Guide to the City s Heritage Plaques PDF Waterfront Communities Project Hull City Council No 9 Humber Dock Archived from the original PDF on 19 April 2013 Retrieved 19 January 2013 a b Parsons 1835 p 220 a b Coast Walk Point 5 Victoria Pier BBC Humberside BBC Retrieved 20 January 2013 Old Town Southern part section 6 7 p 4 Timperley 1836 pp 19 20 Timperley 1836 p 25 42 Geo 3 c 91 1802 5 amp 28 a b Taylor A Dickerson J Plant C 2009 Wellington Street Swing Bridge Hull UK Proceedings of the ICE Engineering History and Heritage 162 2 67 doi 10 1680 ehh 2009 162 2 67 Historic England Humber Dock and Swing Bridge and Lock at south entrance 1197718 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 17 July 2015 Wellington Street Bridge PDF www davymarkham com 15 July 2010 Archived from the original PDF on 20 July 2015 Retrieved 17 July 2015 Gillett amp MacMahon 1980 pp 223 225 Gillett amp MacMahon 1980 p 224 Beginnings of the Modern Port Woolley 1830 p 294 42 Geo 3 c 91 1802 56 58 61 62 a b Baldwin 1973 p 9 Skempton et al 2002 p 708 Timperley John 1796 1856 Sheahan 1864 pp 290 291 Baldwin 1973 Fig 3 p 5 p 9 Timperley 1836 pp 43 44 Timperley 1836 p 44 Parsons 1835 p 221 Timperley 1836 pp 39 40 a b A Guide to the City s Heritage Plaques PDF Waterfront Communities Project Hull City Council No 4 Prince s Dock Archived from the original PDF on 19 April 2013 Retrieved 20 January 2013 Gibson Paul January 2010 A short history of Hull s fountains A personal history of Hull Archived from the original on 10 August 2010 Retrieved 1 February 2013 Notice is hereby given The London Gazette 20345 1728 21 May 1844 Notice is hereby given The London Gazette 20410 4426 4427 20 November 1844 a b c Sheahan 1864 p 292 Wood 1845 p 37 a b Wood 1845 p 45 Tomlinson 1914 pp 337 343 Chapter X The Opening of Many Lines 1836 41 A Guide to the City s Heritage Plaques PDF Waterfront Communities Project Hull City Council No 29 Railway Dock Archived from the original PDF on 19 April 2013 Retrieved 20 January 2013 a b Wright 1875 p 87 Plan of a Proposed New Dock at Kingston Upon Hull The Civil Engineers and Architect s Journal 2 16 1839 Hull Dock Act Solicitor Thomas Holden 1st November 1838 The London Gazette 19674 2565 16 November 1838 Bethell 1841 488 506 pp 25 26 Bethell 1841 541 554 p 28 a b Hull Dock Act Solicitor for the Dock Company Charles Frost 7th October 1839 The London Gazette 19781 1971 22 October 1839 Bethell 1841 24 39 p 6 63 70 p 7 445 446 pp 23 24 Bethell 1841 a b Bethell 1841 541 709 pp 28 34 Bethell 1841 165 pp 11 12 644 p 31 a b Sources Hodgson Henry Scotland Colley Harman Russell Francis 1852 The Queen v the Dock Company at Kingston upon Hull 1852 April 21 Reports of cases relating to the poor laws the criminal law and other subjects chiefly connected with the duties and office of magistrates decided principally in the court of the Queen s bench and the court for Crown cases reserved from Michaelmas term 1851 to Trinity term 1852 The Law Journal Reports new series vol 21 Vol pt 3 of v 30 Edward Bret Ince pp 153 160 The Victoria Dock which is on the east side of the River Hull communicates through its basin with the River Humber to the south and it is also intended and by the last recited act required to communicate with the River Hull or Old Harbour to the west by means of a cut or communication which is not yet completed but which is in the course of construction and is expected to be completed in about a year Upon the completion of that cut or communication vessels entering the Victoria Dock basin from the Humber will be able to pass through and use all the docks and to return into the Humber by the Humber Dock basin or vice versa Urban Sylvanus ed 1850 Historical Chronicle The Gentleman s Magazine Vol 34 John Bower Nichols and Son Provincial Intelligence Yorkshire July 3 p 198 The plans for the last link of the present series of docks at Hull namely the Drypool Basin and entrance to Victoria Dock await the sanction of the Admiralty which is expected forthwith Notice is hereby given The London Gazette 20280 3753 3754 15 November 1843 a b Sheahan 1864 pp 292 93 a b Wright 1875 p 89 Local buildings list PDF Hull City Council 2014 p 46 Archived from the original PDF on 5 July 2015 Retrieved 26 July 2014 Allison 1969 Economy 1835 70 York and North Midland Railway Company 3 November 1849 Conclusion of the York and North Midland Committee s Third Report Herapath s Railway Journal 11 543 p 1114 cols 1 2 Wood 1845 footnote p 37 Historic England Victoria Dock Branch Line 1375093 Research records formerly PastScape Retrieved 27 May 2020 A Tale of Two Rivers PDF The Deep A History of Sammy s Point Archived from the original PDF on 6 December 2010 Retrieved 22 February 2011 and when Victoria Dock was built in 1850 the dug out mud was used to reclaim even more land at the point Martin Samuelson set up a shipyard in 1857 on this new piece of land 1864 the point was sold to the Humber Iron Works and Ship Building Company 1872 was bought by Bailey and Leetham Ship Owners 1903 it was bought by Thomas Wilson and Son Exhibition keeps river shipyard s fame afloat The Yorkshire Post 15 March 2004 Retrieved 19 January 2013 Cook Welton and Gemmel and their successors Access to Archives The National Archives Retrieved 20 January 2013 History of the Dock Victoria Dock Village Hall Community Association Archived from the original on 13 October 2011 Retrieved 20 January 2013 a b Ordnance Survey Sheet 240NE 1888 1950 Air and Water PDF The Engineer Vol 163 18 June 1937 p 701 The North East Coast and Humber Ports PDF The Engineer Vol 165 14 January 1938 p 41 Ordnance Survey 1 2500 1951 1969 70 Thompson 1990 pp 32 35 Victoria Dock 1850 1970 Kingston upon Hull Docks Page Two www riverhumber com Victoria Dock Archived from the original on 4 November 2013 Retrieved 20 January 2013 Sheahan 1864 p 294 Hull West Dock The London Gazette 22446 4197 4202 13 November 1860 Moss amp Dyson and Co 1860 a b Hawkshaw 1875 pp 92 93 a b Hawkshaw 1875 pp 94 95 a b Wright 1875 pp 89 90 a b Hawkshaw 1875 pp 95 98 Hawkshaw 1875 pp 101 102 Hurtzig 1888 pp 167 168 Hawkshaw 1875 pp 98 109 Vernon Harcourt 1885 pp 522 523 524 a b Railway News amp 24 July 1869 Hawkshaw 1875 p 93 a b c d Wright 1875 p 90 Hawkshaw 1875 p 113 a b Thompson 1990 pp 36 43 Albert and William Wright Docks 1869 Port of Hull facilities Associated British Ports Archived from the original on 26 May 2010 Retrieved 19 January 2013 see also Commodities a b c Port of Hull Commodities Associated British Ports Archived from the original on 30 January 2010 Retrieved 19 January 2013 Agency urged to fix flaw in Hull s flood defences The Yorkshire Post 4 February 2014 Retrieved 19 June 2014 Young Angus 4 February 2014 Hull floods report Raise level of Albert Dock defences Hull Daily Mail Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 19 June 2014 Young Angus 5 February 2014 Flood defence work at Hull s Albert Dock to be brought forward Hull Daily Mail Archived from the original on 15 July 2014 Retrieved 19 June 2014 Albert Dock flood defence improvement work to start www gov uk Environment Agency 6 November 2014 Retrieved 9 July 2015 6 6m flood wall at Hull s Albert Dock completed BBC News Humberside 26 November 2015 Retrieved 26 November 2015 Simpson 2009 p 27 1873 Dock Extension at Hull PDF The Engineer Vol 41 28 April 1876 p 327 Allison 1969 The Corporation and the Docks 1870 1914 3m plan to fill in part of William Wright dock after tidal surge damage Hull Daily Mail 3 June 2015 Archived from the original on 10 July 2015 Retrieved 9 July 2015 North Eastern Railway Additional powers with reference to New and Existing Railways Roads Footpaths and other Works and Lands Power to make Dock Works at Hartlepool and Kingston upon Hull and a Pier in the River Humber The London Gazette 27736 7493 97 18 November 1904 A river wall or quay on the foreshore of the River Humber commencing at the south eastern corner of the Albert Dock entrance and terminating at a point in the existing river wall or embankment about 20 yards east of a line drawn in a southerly direction from the western end of the Company s William Wright Dock a To deepen dredge scour cleanse alter and improve from time to time the bed shores and channel of the River Humber adjoining or near to the said intended pier in the River Humber and the said intended river wall or quay at Kingston upon Hull b To re arrange re construct alter and divert the existing railway sidings bridges staiths roads footpaths and other works a b The Engineer amp 1 July 1910 p 6 cols 2 3 a b Wright 1932 p 69 illustration p 71 Improvements at the Port of Hull PDF The Engineer Vol 102 9 October 1906 p 396 The Engineer amp 1 July 1910 p 6 col 3 p 7 col 1 a b The Engineer amp 1 July 1910 p 7 col 2 Fawcett Bill 2005 A History of North Eastern Railway Architecture Vol 3 North Eastern Railway Association p 24 a b c Appleby 1921 pp 17 22 The Engineer amp 1 July 1910 p 6 col 3 Mason Eric 1954 The Lancashire amp Yorkshire Railway in the Twentieth Century I Allan p 38 The Railway Gazette Vol 32 1920 p 95 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Missing or empty title help a b c d e f g British Transport Docks Board 1975 pp 21 25 History of the Port of Hull The Humber PDF The Engineer Vol 111 6 January 1911 p 4 See Hull Blitz 1941 Thompson 1990 pp 36 43 Albert and William Wright Docks 1869 a b c Urban Conservation and Design St Andrews Dock Conservation Area Character Statement PDF Hull City Council 23 October 1996 Archived from the original PDF on 30 April 2012 Retrieved 19 January 2013 Ordnance Survey Sheet 240NW 1906 1908 Singular Accident at Hull Docks The Guardian 16 May 1896 p 7 Miscellanea PDF The Engineer Vol 81 22 May 1896 p 519 Rail and Road PDF The Engineer Vol 161 26 June 1936 p 677 Archived from the original PDF on 8 October 2014 The North East Coast and Humber Ports PDF The Engineer Vol 163 8 January 1937 pp 34 35 Hull Fish Dock Improvement Modified Scheme The Guardian 30 December 1938 p 3 St Andrew s Dock Hull Reconstruction House of Commons Sitting Parliamentary Debates Hansard 474 cc1649 58 1 August 1957 Thompson 1990 pp 44 49 St Andrews Dock The Junction St Andrews Quay Retail Park Clive Sullivan Way Hull HU3 4SA Phase 1 PDF Completely Retail Archived from the original PDF on 9 June 2012 Retrieved 12 June 2012 The Junction St Andrews Quay Retail Park Clive Sullivan Way Hull HU3 4SA Phase 2 PDF Completely Retail Archived from the original PDF on 9 June 2012 Retrieved 12 June 2012 Sykes Alan 22 March 2013 Hull seeks designer for a memorial to its lost trawler crews The Guardian Retrieved 22 March 2013 Hull s lost trawlermen memorial designs go on display BBC News BBC 19 July 2013 Retrieved 23 August 2013 Hull s lost trawlermen memorial competition winner unveiled BBC News BBC 29 July 2013 Retrieved 23 August 2013 Finding the right words to remember Hull s lost trawlermen Hull Daily Mail 5 December 2013 Archived from the original on 14 December 2013 Retrieved 8 December 2013 a b c Abernerthy John Scott 1897 The life and work of James Abernethy pp 186 192 Hurtzig 1888 pp 144 145 Pumping Machinery for the New Graving Docks Alexandra Docks Hull PDF The Engineer Vol 62 3 September 1886 pp 195 illus p 187 Hurtzig 1888 pp 145 148 a b c Parkes 1970 Docks and Piers pp 12 13 Hurtzig 1888 pp 148 150 152 152 153 Hurtzig 1888 pp 154 155 Hurtzig 1888 pp 156 158 Hobson Bernard 1924 16 Shipping and Trade The East Riding of Yorkshire with York Cambridge County Geographies p 81 ISBN 9781107690356 Miscellanea PDF The Engineer Vol 88 22 September 1899 p 297 Miscellanea PDF The Engineer Vol 88 28 July 1899 Kingston upon Hull City Docks Page Three www riverhumber com Alexandra Dock Archived from the original on 15 July 2011 Retrieved 20 February 2011 a b Simpson 2009 p 28 1885 16th July Dodsworth Ted 1990 The train now standing Vol 1 The Life and Times of the Hull and Barnsley Railway Hutton Press p 21 Chapman Stephen ed 1999 Railway Memories No 12 The Hull amp Barnsley Railway Bellcode Books pp 7 10 46 51 ISBN 1871233119 URS January 2014 Marine Aggregates Study PDF Leeds City Council p 8 2 2 pp 17 18 2 3 pp 19 21 4 4 2 p 34 7 1 p 52 Photo 1 3 pp 70 71 Archived from the original PDF on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 4 July 2014 Hanson Group 1 February 2013 Aggregates RMX And Cement Mir Hanson Response To The Updated Issues Statement PDF 4 7 3 p 9 Retrieved 4 July 2014 90 01271 PF 1 Change Of Use From Dock Land To Marine Dredged Aggregate Depot For Storage Washing Crushing Grading And Distribution Of Aggregates 2 Hull City Council 10 January 1990 Retrieved 4 July 2014 Hull Plant www agg net com Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 4 July 2014 95 01147 PF 1 Change Of Use Of Vacant Dock Land To Concrete Batching Plant 2 Hull City Council 15 March 1995 Retrieved 4 July 2014 Port of Hull The Dock and Harbour Authority 283 84 1996 Wang James Jixian Olivier Daniel Notteboom Theo Slack Brian eds 2007 Ports Cities and Global Supply Chains Ashgate Publishing Table 5 2 p 60 ISBN 978 0 7546 7054 4 00 01209 ZZ Harbour Revision Order Under Section 14 Of The Harbours Act 1964 Authorising The Construction Of A New Facility In The River Humber Adjoining Alexandra Dock Hull To Replace The Existing Pier In The River Quay 2005 Hull City Council 17 October 2000 Retrieved 4 July 2014 Quay 2005 future decision end of year www planningresource co uk 25 July 2003 Retrieved 5 July 2014 Atkinson David 2007 Kitsch geographies and the everyday spaces of social memory PDF Environment and Planning 39 3 Defending maritime kitsch Quay 2005 pp 535 37 doi 10 1068 a3866 S2CID 143800838 Archived from the original PDF on 14 July 2014 Hull Port Project Gets Go ahead www gov news org 21 December 2005 Archived from the original on 26 July 2011 Retrieved 20 February 2011 ABP harbour revision order 2006 Notes Of The 4th Humber Liaison Sub Committee Meeting Held At Port House Hull On Wednesday 26 July 2006 PDF www humber com 26 July 2006 pp 2 5 Retrieved 4 July 2014 First port of call www europeanoilandgas co uk 21 August 2008 Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 4 July 2014 Easy as ABP New riverside terminal delays www globmaritime com 20 February 2008 Retrieved 4 July 2014 Docks battle paves way for golden chance Hull Daily Mail 3 December 2010 Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 4 July 2014 Bounds Andrew 20 January 2011 Hull for wind turbine plant Financial Times Retrieved 22 January 2011 subscription required Siemens selects ABP as preferred bidder for UK wind turbine factory www siemens co uk Press release Siemens 20 January 2011 Retrieved 22 January 2011 Webb Tim 20 January 2011 Siemens chooses Hull for wind turbine plant generating 700 jobs The Guardian Retrieved 22 January 2011 Green Port Hull to transform the Humber economy Hello from Hull and East Yorkshire Bondholderscheme Ltd 6 December 2010 Retrieved 20 January 2013 Green Port Hull aims to transform economy Maritime Journal 8 December 2010 Archived from the original on 14 July 2011 Retrieved 20 January 2013 Scott Wilson amp URS 2011 2 15 pp 4 5 ABP harbour revision order 2006 4 Work No 1 p 3 ABP harbour revision order 2006 9 Power to dredge in Humber p 4 Scott Wilson amp URS 2011 pp i vi 2 5 2 6 p 3 2 16 2 17 pp 5 6 figs 2 2 2 4 2 5 3 1 Scott Wilson amp URS 2011 2 21 2 26 pp 6 7 Delay in signing Hull Green Port wind turbine factory deal BBC News Humberside 11 October 2012 Retrieved 4 July 2014 Coggan Allison 4 December 2012 Hull firms relocate to make way for Siemens Hull Daily Mail Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 4 July 2014 a b c Sources Siemens confirm Green Port Hull wind turbine factory to be built BBC News 25 March 2014 Retrieved 25 March 2014 Siemens to construct factory for offshore wind power in Great Britain PDF Press release Siemens 25 March 2014 Retrieved 16 April 2014 Siemens Hull A view of things to come on the Humber Hull Daily Mail 26 March 2014 Archived from the original on 29 March 2014 Retrieved 16 April 2014 Siemens combines Humber sites renews biz 14 November 2014 Archived from the original on 28 November 2014 Retrieved 14 November 2014 Siemens submits detailed plans for Hull offshore wind turbine plant bigger than Wembley pitch Hull Daily Mail 1 July 2014 Archived from the original on 1 July 2014 Retrieved 4 July 2014 GRAHAM Lagan Construction Group Joint Venture named main contractor for Green Port Hull build www laganconstructiongroup com 7 November 2014 Retrieved 7 November 2014 Siemens fires Hull starter pistol renews biz 22 January 2015 Retrieved 22 January 2015 Pringle Brandon Perkins Will Blue Sky Planning Siemens Green Port Hull Alexandra Dock 30 March 2015 Planning and Design and Access Statement PDF 15 00393 RES Demolition of buildings and the erection of new buildings including part of a single building of 22 476m high 73 9 for the manufacture of wind turbine blades and the assembly maintenance storage and distribution Use Class B1 B2 and B8 of wind turbine components planning application Hull City Council 01 1 01 2 pp 6 7 Retrieved 21 April 2015 permanent dead link Burton James 16 July 2015 Construction of Siemens blade factory in Hull to start within weeks creating 200 jobs Hull Daily Mail Archived from the original on 17 July 2015 Retrieved 16 July 2015 Burton James 28 September 2015 Clugston wins Siemens building contract in Hull Hull Daily Mail Archived from the original on 30 September 2015 Retrieved 29 September 2015 Shute Joe 20 February 2015 Save Dead Bod and other great accidents of public art The Telegraph Retrieved 1 February 2016 Sources Saving Dead Bod won t be easy ABP say Hull Daily Mail 24 February 2015 Archived from the original on 25 October 2015 Retrieved 1 February 2016 Roberts Alice 20 February 2015 ABP in bid to save Dead Bod dock graffiti that entered Hull s folklore Hull Daily Mail Archived from the original on 12 August 2015 Retrieved 1 February 2016 Young Angus 18 January 2016 Fears Hull s Dead Bod graffiti may end up in wrong place Hull Daily Mail Retrieved 1 February 2016 permanent dead link Dead Bod to be on display at Humber Street gallery Hull UK City of Culture 2017 30 January 2017 Retrieved 30 January 2017 Siemens officially inaugurates new wind turbine blade factory in the British city of Hull Press release Siemens 1 December 2016 Retrieved 2 December 2016 Scott Wilson amp URS 2011 2 38 p 8 Game changer plan to expand Hull wind turbine factory BBC News 19 February 2021 Retrieved 9 August 2021 UK renewable energy Major expansion confirmed on Humber BBC News Retrieved 9 August 2021 Tomlinson 1914 pp 707 711 Tomlinson 1914 pp 717 721 Railway Matters PDF The Engineer Vol 87 3 February 1899 p 119 a b The Humber PDF The Engineer Vol 102 4 January 1907 p 3 a b Gillett amp MacMahon 1980 p 355 Chapter 25 Pre War Railway Matters PDF The Engineer Vol 101 30 March 1906 p 322 The North Eastern and Hull and Barnsley Railway Agreement PDF The Engineer Vol 108 19 November 1909 p 528 a b The Engineer amp 19 June 1914 p 674 The Humber PDF The Engineer Vol 111 6 January 1911 a b c d e f g The Engineer amp 19 June 1914 p 676 a b c The Engineer amp 30 January 1914 p 123 col 1 The Engineer amp 30 January 1914 p 123 col 2 The Engineer amp 19 June 1914 pp 674 676 The Engineer amp 26 June 1914 p 702 Hull Joint Dock PDF Graces Guide 118 1 3 July 1914 a b c d King George Dock Hull Engineering Timelines Retrieved 20 January 2013 Unknown 1907 Obituary Sir Benjamin Baker Kcb Kcmg Dsc Lld Mai Frs 1840 1907 Minutes of the Proceedings 170 1907 377 383 doi 10 1680 imotp 1907 17263 Shakespear Lt Col July 2003 A Record of the 17th and 32nd Battalions Northumberland Fusiliers 1914 1919 N E R Pioneers Uckfield The Naval amp Military Press Ltd ISBN 9781843426875 Langham Rob 2015 The North Eastern Railway in the First World War Fonthill Media ISBN 9781781554555 Grain Silo at Hull PDF The Engineer Vol 128 10 October 1919 pp 364 366 illus pp 360 360 facing McGarey 1964 pp 465 466 Improvements at King George Dock Hull PDF The Engineer Vol 208 30 October 1959 p 526 British Transport Docks Board 1975 pp 43 47 Symes 1987 p 105 Hull Port amp Commercial Handbook 1995 pp 11 12 New steel terminal increases cranage www hoistmagazine com 10 November 1998 Retrieved 4 July 2014 Port of Hull launches all weather terminal www porttechnology org 8 September 2009 Retrieved 4 July 2014 Port of Hull s All Weather Terminal handles first bulk fertiliser shipment www ukwa org uk news 11 February 2010 Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 4 July 2014 ABP Invests 4 8 million in new developments for Port of Hull s Finland Terminal Press release Associated British Ports 30 March 2006 Archived from the original on 28 September 2011 Retrieved 19 January 2013 New Passenger Terminal For Associated British Ports Port Of Hull www abports co uk 1 May 2001 Archived from the original on 16 July 2011 Retrieved 4 July 2014 Final days for King George Dock grain silo that helped feed the world This is Hull and East Riding 27 December 2010 Archived from the original on 30 December 2010 Retrieved 17 January 2013 End of an era for silos used in Geldof s famine relief This is Hull and East Riding 5 January 2011 Archived from the original on 5 May 2013 Retrieved 17 January 2013 Portz Tim 16 July 2013 Preparing for a Pellet Tide Biomass Magazine Retrieved 29 October 2013 Covill Rachel 30 May 2013 New landmark as Spencer Group constructs biomass loading facility TheBusinessDesk Retrieved 29 October 2013 registration required Hull s new biomass fuel plant for Drax power station BBC News BBC 3 December 2014 Retrieved 6 December 2014 Official opening of biomass terminal at Port of Hull signals start of City s renewables revolution Press release ABP 4 December 2014 Retrieved 6 December 2014 Fonseca Joseph R 11 December 2015 Port of Hull Opens Multi purpose Warehouse www marinelink com Retrieved 22 December 2015 Burton James 11 December 2015 ABP opens 4m biomass warehouse in King George Dock Hull Daily Mail Archived from the original on 23 December 2015 Retrieved 22 December 2015 a b c d e Appleby 1921 p 28 Table of Dry Dock Information a b Gibson 1998 South End Graving Dock Historic England Central Dry Dock Sand Southend Wharf 1375866 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 5 December 2012 Old Town Southern part section 14 13 p 20 Hull Central Dry Dock amphitheatre plan approved BBC News BBC 4 September 2013 Retrieved 4 September 2013 13 00683 LBC Creation of terraced amphitheatre provision of pedestrian footbridge creation of native reed bed in base of dry dock Planning application Hull City Council 10 July 2013 Retrieved 9 July 2015 13 00684 FULL Erection of 2 3 and 4 storey buildings to provide B1 office accommodation formation of seating terrace within former dry dock for public performances or general public use Planning application Hull City Council 10 July 2013 Retrieved 9 July 2015 TheDock www wykeland co uk Archived from the original on 10 July 2015 Retrieved 9 July 2015 Work to start on Hull 14m TheDock digital hub which will transform Fruit market Hull Daily Mail 3 September 2014 Archived from the original on 10 July 2015 Retrieved 9 July 2015 Young Angus 15 December 2014 Work starts on 650 tonne concrete wall to hold Humber back from Fruit Market in Hull Hull Daily Mail Archived from the original on 10 July 2015 Retrieved 9 July 2015 Conservation list PDF Hull City Council Archived from the original PDF on 11 March 2008 Retrieved 20 February 2011 Gibson 1998 No 1 Dry Dock Gibson 1998 North Bridge Yard Historic England Dry Dock on South Side of Charlotte Street 1208717 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 5 December 2012 Harrop Paul TA1029 Former dry dock Hull Geograph Retrieved 21 February 2011 The 11 acre Queen s Dock was opened in 1778 and closed in 1930 The main dock was filled in to create Queen s Gardens and the dock basin was reused as a dry dock from 1957 up until the end of the 20th century Pevsner amp Neave 1995 p 528 The Docks Ordnance Survey Town plans 1 1056 1855 6 Town plans 1 500 1891 Moss amp Dyson and Co 1860 para 2 Tomlinson 1914 pp 340 341 490 491 MS amp LR Limekiln Creek service Dow G Great Central Vol 1 p 172 Allison 1969 Communications Railways Moss amp Dyson and Co 1860 para 3 Moss amp Dyson and Co 1860 paras 11 amp 12 24 amp 25 Vict c 79 1861 40 41 44 51 Hawkshaw 1875 pp 93 95 96 Ordnance Survey Town Plans 1 500 1891 Fawcett Bill 2003 A History of North Eastern Railway Architecture Vol 2 North Eastern Railway Association pp 83 85 a b c d Old Town Southern part section 14 12 4 Victoria Pier p 19 Catford Nick Dyson Mark 20 April 2010 Station Name Hull Corporation Pier Disused Stations Subterranea Britannica Retrieved 20 January 2013 Butt R V J October 1995 The Directory of Railway Stations details every public and private passenger station halt platform and stopping place past and present 1st ed Sparkford Patrick Stephens Ltd p 125 ISBN 978 1 85260 508 7 OCLC 60251199 OL 11956311M Miles Philip C Hull s Waterfront Victoria Pier and the Humber Ferries pp 58 63 5 Hull to Withernsea Handbook for Travellers in Yorkshire John Murray London 1867 The Humber Dock p 91 Ordnance Survey Map 1856 57 1 1056 Bethell 1841 754 755 p 36 Wood 1845 p 48 Ordnance Survey Map 1891 93 1 2500 Old Town Southern part section 14 11 p 18 Sources Work starts on Island Wharf BBC News 1 February 2004 Retrieved 11 July 2014 Two Humber Quays www hull co uk Retrieved 11 July 2014 The construction of Two Humber Quays developed by Priority Sites was completed in November 2007 Engineering firm buys landmark Humber Quays building Hull Daily Mail 21 September 2011 Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 11 July 2014 One Humber Quays has been acquired by a thriving Humber based firm The move will see the building fully occupied for the first time since it opened in 2006 Ordnance Survey maps 1 2500 1910 and 1928 editions also Wright 1932 p 62 Old Town Southern part section 14 12 5 Minerva Pier p 19 Minerva Pier amp Island Wharf Hull PDF Alan Wood amp Partners Archived from the original PDF on 4 November 2013 Retrieved 19 January 2013 Wright 1932 pp 73 74 The River Hull Domestic Heating Oil amp Commercial Fuels www rix co uk Retrieved 26 July 2014 Corporate Social Responsibility Croda 2007 p 23 Archived from the original on 13 September 2011 Retrieved 10 July 2014 The Engineer amp 26 June 1914 p 704 cols 1 2 Thompson 1990 pp 82 84 Salt End Oil Jetties 1914 World Map Retrieved 22 August 2016 Packet Boats and Steamers www humberpacketboats co uk P S Union Retrieved 19 January 2013 Dodsley J 1838 Chronicle June 7 Dreadful Explosion of a Steam Vessel Hull The annual register 1837 Vol 79 pp 53 5 4 Sources Schroder Henry 1851 Explosion of a Steam Packet Boiler at Hull The annals of Yorkshire from the earliest period to the present time Vol 1 Crosby amp Co Leeds pp 303 4 Abstract of the evidence at the inquest relating to the explosion of the boiler of the Union steam packet at Hull The Mechanics magazine museum register journal and gazette Vol 27 W A Robertson London 1837 pp 189 192 Timperley J Cubitt W MacNeill J Buddle J Field J 1838 On the Explosion of One of the Boilers of the Union Steam Packet at Hull Includes Discussion Minutes of the Proceedings 1 1838 41 doi 10 1680 imotp 1838 24811 Humber airship accident BBC Humberside BBC 10 September 2008 Retrieved 17 January 2013 Simpson 2009 pp 52 53 1940 to 1945 Thompson 1990 pp 126 131 Chapter 7 The 1939 45 War Thompson 1990 pp 132 136 Chapter 8 Dock Estate Fires at the Port of Hull Safety fears could close tunnel leading to Hull s former fish dock This is Hull and East Riding 27 September 2012 Archived from the original on 29 September 2012 Retrieved 17 January 2013 Once part of Subway Street it used to be the main road link off the fish docks It was the scene of a massive explosion in 1970 which killed two people and left 17 others in hospital with serious burns when a tanker carrying liquid gas struck the roof of the tunnel Scene straight out of the Blitz This is Hull and East Riding 27 September 2012 Archived from the original on 21 April 2013 Retrieved 17 January 2013 Perraudin Frances 19 September 2017 Hull firefighters return to scene of acid leak at King George dock The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 19 September 2017 Woolley 1830 pp 237 271 Woolley 1830 pp 322 Woolley 1830 pp 276 297 Woolley 1830 pp 303 305 Woolley 1830 pp 297 302 Sources edit Allison K J ed 1969 A History of the County of York East Riding Volume 1 The City of Kingston upon Hull Victoria County History Yorkshire Institute of Historical Research Appleby H N ed 1921 The Port of Hull Official Handbook of tides rates and general information Hull and Barnsley Railway Company Hull Baldwin M W 1973 The Engineering History of Hull s Earliest Docks PDF Transactions of the Newcomen Society 46 1 doi 10 1179 tns 1973 001 Bethell Richard ed 1841 Kingston Upon Hull Docks Bill Minutes of Evidence Reports of the Committees House of Commons Papers Vol 9 British Transport Docks Board 1975 Hull Docks Official handbook Ellis S Crowther D R eds 1990 Humber Perspectives A Region through the Ages Hull University Press ISBN 0 85958 484 4 Gibson Paul 2009 1998 The Origins of Hull s Dry Docks Archived from the original on 26 January 2011 Gillett Edward MacMahon Kenneth A 1980 A History of Hull Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 713436 X Hawkshaw J C 1875 The Construction of the Albert Dock at Kingston upon Hull Includes Plates and Appendix Minutes of the Proceedings 41 1875 92 doi 10 1680 imotp 1875 22677 Hull Port amp Commercial Handbook Lloyd s of London Press Ltd 1995 ISBN 1 85978 021 0 Hurtzig A C 1888 The Alexandra Dock Hull Includes Plate and Appendices Minutes of the Proceedings 92 1888 144 doi 10 1680 imotp 1888 20924 illustrative plates at commons wikimedia org Hull and Humber York and Beverley The land we live in a pictorial and literary sketch book of the British Empire Vol 4 Charles Knight c 1850 Jackson Gordon 1972 Hull in the Eighteenth Century A study in economic and social history Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 713415 7 includes detailed history of the events leading to the construction of the Old and Humber docks as well as statistics of imports and exports Lewis M J T 1991 Chapter 11 Ports and Harbours In Lewis David B ed The Yorkshire Coast Normandy Press pp 156 161 ISBN 0 9507665 3 4 McGarey D G 1964 King George Dock Hull Major Developments 1959 1963 ICE Proceedings 27 3 465 doi 10 1680 iicep 1964 10273 Moss W H Dyson and Co 23 November 1860 Kingston upon Hull Docks New Works The London Gazette 22450 4483 86 Old Town Southern part Conservation Area Character Appraisal www arc online co uk Hull City Council November 2005 Parkes G D 1970 1946 The Hull amp Barnsley Railway The Oakwood Press Parsons Edward 1835 IX Hull continued The tourist s companion or The history of the scenes and places on the route by the rail road and steam packet from Leeds and Selby to Hull pp 211 223 1835 account of three docks then extant and related subjects including the Trinity House Pevsner Nikolaus Neave David 1995 The Docks Yorkshire York And the East Riding Second Edition Yale University Press pp 528 also pp 89 106 501 519 534 539 541 ISBN 0 300 09593 7 The New Docks at Hull Railway News 12 291 85 24 July 1869 Scott Wilson URS March 2011 Green Port Hull Environmental Impact Assessment Scoping Report Final PDF Associated British Ports Archived from the original PDF on 6 September 2012 Retrieved 20 January 2013 Sheahan James Joseph 1864 The Port General and concise history and description of the town and port of Kingston upon Hull Simpson Marshall and Co London pp 275 298 Simpson John 1 August 2009 Humber Pilots Important Dates PDF www humberpilots com Retrieved 6 April 2010 Skempton Alec W Rennison R W Cox R C Ruddock Ted Cross Rudkin P Chrimes M M 2002 A biographical dictionary of civil engineers in Great Britain and Ireland Vol 1 1500 1830 Thomas Telford Publishing Limited Institute of Civil Engineers ISBN 072772939X Symes David ed 1987 Humberside in the Eighties ISBN 0859581195 The Hull Joint Dock PDF The Engineer Vol 117 30 January 1914 pp 123 24 illus p 122 The Hull Joint Dock No 1 PDF The Engineer Vol 117 19 June 1914 pp 674 76 illus pp 675 678 The Hull Joint Dock No 2 PDF The Engineer Vol 117 26 June 1914 pp 701 704 Thompson Michael 1990 Hull Docklands An Illustrated History of the Port of Hull Hutton Press ISBN 1 872167 08 X Tomlinson William Weaver 1914 XX Twenty Five Years of Progress 1880 1904 Developments at Hull North Eastern Railway Its Rise and Development David amp Charles pp 703 721 nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article An Account of the Harbour and Docks at Kingston upon Hull Timperley J 1836 An Account of the Harbour and Docks at Kingston Upon Hull Including Plates ICE Transactions 1 1836 1 doi 10 1680 itrcs 1836 24437 Vernon Harcourt Leveson Francis 1885 XXIV Descriptions of Docks Harbours and docks their physical features history construction Vol 2 vols Oxford Clarendon press Hull Docks pp 520 424 and other pages also plates OL 6917798M Wright H R ed 1932 The City and Port of Hull A Browns amp Sons Ltd Wright William 1875 The Hull Docks Minutes of the Proceedings 41 1875 83 doi 10 1680 imotp 1875 22676 Riverside Quay Hull PDF The Engineer Vol 110 1 July 1910 pp 6 7 Wood Thomas ed 23 October 1845 The Humber its roads shoals and capabilities Importance and improvement of the Port of Hull report Tidal Harbours Commission Woolley William 1830 A Collection of Statutes Relating to the Town of Kingston upon Hull the County of the Same Town and the Parish of Sculcoates in the County of York Simpkin and Marshall Maps and landmark coordinates edit Map this section s coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates 53 44 17 N 0 19 55 W 53 738 N 0 332 W 53 738 0 332 Confluence of River Hull and Humber Estuary Confluence of River Hull and Humber Estuary 53 44 43 N 0 20 07 W 53 74520 N 0 33534 W 53 74520 0 33534 Queen s Dock Old Dock or The Dock now Queen s Gardens Queen s Dock Old Dock or The Dock now Queen s Gardens a b 53 44 48 N 0 19 47 W 53 746607 N 0 32973 W 53 746607 0 32973 spa, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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