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Yarrow Shipbuilders

Yarrow Shipbuilders Limited (YSL), often styled as simply Yarrows, was a major shipbuilding firm based in the Scotstoun district of Glasgow on the River Clyde. It is now part of BAE Systems Surface Ships, owned by BAE Systems, which has also operated the nearby Govan shipyard (formerly Fairfields) since 1999.

Yarrow Shipbuilders Limited
TypePublic company
IndustryShipbuilding
Founded1865
FateMerged with others to form British Shipbuilders (1977–1985)
SuccessorGEC Marconi Marine (YSL) (1985–1999)
BAE Systems Marine (1999–2003)
BAE Systems Naval Ships (2003–2006)
BAE Systems Surface Fleet Solutions (2006–2008)
BVT Surface Fleet (2008–2009)
BAE Systems Surface Ships (2009–)
HeadquartersScotstoun, Glasgow, UK
Key people
Sir Alfred Yarrow
Sir Harold Yarrow
Sir Eric Yarrow
Sir Arnold Weinstock
Sir Robert Easton
Murray Easton CBE
ProductsNaval ships
Merchant ships
Marine steam engines
Marine engines
Boilers
Number of employees
Approximately 3,000
ParentUpper Clyde Shipbuilders (1968–1970)
Yarrow & Co. Ltd. (1970–1977)
British Shipbuilders (1977–1985)
GEC Marconi (1985–1999)
BAE Systems (1999–)
SubsidiariesCoventry Ordnance Works (1905–1925)

History

Origins in London

The company was founded by Alfred Yarrow, later Sir Alfred Yarrow, 1st Baronet, in the year 1865 as Yarrow & Company, Limited.[1] Originally it was based at Folly Wall, Poplar, then in 1898 as the company grew, Yarrow moved his shipyard to London Yard, Cubitt Town.[2][3] Hundreds of steam launches, lake and river vessels, and eventually the Royal Navy's first destroyers, the Havock class, were built at Yarrow's London shipyards between 1869 and 1908. Yarrow was also a builder of boilers, and a type of water-tube boiler developed and patented by the company was known as the "Yarrow boiler", first used in a torpedo boat in 1887 and later used for a number of applications, from the propulsion plant of RMS Queen Mary to the LNER Class W1 locomotive.[4] The diversification into boiler manufacturing, including large boilers for electricity generation, meant that the company survived the lean years for shipbuilding. Alfred Yarrow was an inventive naval engineer, and was responsible for a number of novel introductions into service which led to the development of increasingly fast warships. Ultimately in the Royal Navy and abroad it became known that a "Yarrow ship was a fast ship", with the company building the first naval vessel globally to exceed 30 knots and then, later, 40 knots. Sir Alfred Yarrow was knighted for services to the war effort in 1916. He was a notable benefactor to many charities.

Move to Glasgow

 
An advertisement for Yarrow & Co. Ltd. in the 1923 Brassey's Naval Annual, featuring the S-class destroyer HMS Tyrian and the Fly-class gunboat
 
General arrangement of the Charger-class destroyers built by Yarrow & Co. at Poplar, London, 1894–95.
 
A Thyella-class destroyer for the Royal Hellenic Navy being launched at Yarrow's London Yard in Cubitt Town, 1906.

Despite a move of yards, Yarrows outgrew its London site and this and the cost of land and labour in London led to a second move to what was at that time a greenfield site at Scotstoun in the west of Glasgow, beginning in 1906.[1] Between 4,000 and 5,000 tons of material had to be transported, from models to heavy machine tools. A train-load of from forty to fifty wagons left the works at Poplar every day. The first vessel launched from the new works at Scotstoun on 14 July 1908 was the lead ship of the Pará-class destroyers for the Brazilian Navy.[5] Sir Harold Yarrow, eldest son of Sir Alfred, supervised the move to Scotland whilst still in his early twenties, and ran the company in Scotland. The company also established the Coventry Ordnance Works joint venture in 1905, building a large factory near to its Scotstoun Shipyard in 1910. During the First World War, the company developed the pioneering Erskine artificial limb with Sir William Macewen and Sir Harold Yarrow was one of the founders of the Erskine Hospital for disabled ex-servicemen. Yarrow workshops were used to manufacture artificial limbs at no profit.

The Yarrow company was one of the world's leading builders of destroyers and frigates from early on, building ships for both the Royal Navy and numerous export customers. For many years until the 1960s Yarrow also built a large number of merchant ships, specialising particularly on Riverboat vessels for the rivers and lakes of Burma, India, Africa and South America.

Several of these vessels were built to serve on lakes that had no navigable access to deliver them by sea. They were therefore built as "knock downs"; that is, they were assembled temporarily in the shipyard, disassembled into a large number of sections and transported to the lake, and there assembled permanently and launched. Yarrow's Scotstoun yard built the "knock down" ferry MV Ilala for Nyasaland in 1949. She was completed and launched on Lake Nyasa (now Lake Malawi) in 1951. The yard built three "knock down" ferries for Lake Victoria in East Africa. RMS Victoria was built in Scotstoun in 1960[6] and reassembled at the Kenyan port of Kisumu on the lake in 1961.[7] The train ferries MV Umoja and MV Uhuru were built in Scotstoun in 1965[8][9] and reassembled at Kisumu in 1965 and 1966.

In total Yarrow built approximately 400 ships on the Clyde – these can be traced in detail in the Clyde-built Ship Database.

The yard continued to expand during the post-war period, acquiring and integrating the shipyard of the neighbouring Blythswood Shipbuilding Company, which had itself been founded in 1919, to the east of the Yarrow yard in 1964. The new acquisition was used by Yarrow to extend their Shipyard, with the construction of three covered building berths and a six-storey Technical Office Block undertaken in the former Blythswood shipyard site during the late 1960s, with the aid of a government grant. Other neighbouring yards was acquired to lengthen the waterfront and provide additional facilities,  the price of one being negotiated by Sir Eric Yarrow on the golf course with Sir John Hunter. Eric Yarrow had followed his father on his death as chairman in 1962, becoming the third generation of the family to lead the firm.

During this period, Yarrow was involved in designing and building many of the Royal Navy's post-war escort fleet; including the Type 81 Tribal class, Type 14 Blackwood class and the Type 12M Rothesay-class frigates. The company was also involved in the Leander class programme. During the 1960s ships were built for the navies of South Africa, Chile, Malaysia, Thailand, New Zealand and Iran.

Upper Clyde Shipbuilders and aftermath

In 1968 the Company became part of Upper Clyde Shipbuilders[10] which collapsed in 1971.[11] Yarrows had already left the UCS joint venture by April 1970 however, as the only profitable division of the joint venture. In 1974 it acquired the neighbouring Elderslie Dockyard, owned by Barclay Curle, which lay to the west of the Yarrow yard and included an extensive complex of three drydocks originally built in 1904 (No. 1 Dry Dock), 1933 (No. 2 Dry Dock) and 1965 (No. 3 Dry Dock). During this period Yarrow was involved in the Type 12I Leander-class frigate programme as well as the Condell-class frigate for the Chilean Navy and the design of the Nilgiri-class frigate for the Indian Navy.

The long-term investment in facilities and strong manufacturing credentials, combined with the development of the Yarrow Admiralty Research Department (YARD) ensured that when the number of warship yards was dramatically reduced by the Navy in the 1970s, Yarrows was chosen as one of mainstream contractors alongside Swan Hunter, Vosper (for the Type 21s) and Cammell Laird.  The Type 21 was the first type in the Navy to be a combined Gas Turbine and Diesel design, using the marine variant of the Rolls-Royce Olympus gas turbine (also used in Concorde). 5 out of 8 Type 21s,  10 out of 14 Type 22s,  12 out of 16 Type 23s and all the Type 45s were built at Scotstoun, demonstrating the firm's dominance in the market for medium-sized RN surface vessels. The sleek, good looks and the sporting performance of the Type 21 frigates led to the captains of the ships being called "boy racers". The vessel could stop from full speed in twice the length of the ship. HMS Ardent was destroyed by Argentinian aircraft in Falkland Sound in May 1982. All of the Yarrow built Type 21s served in the Falklands

Nationalisation

 
June 1979 Polish ships under construction.

In 1977 the Labour government of James Callaghan passed the Aircraft and Shipbuilding Industries Act 1977 which nationalised Yarrow (Shipbuilders), Limited, and grouped it with other major British shipyards as a division within British Shipbuilders.[12] Nationalisation was opposed by the owners, and by the minority Conservative party. The last ship launched under private ownership was HMS Battleaxe, a Type 22 launched by Audrey Callaghan, wife of the Prime Minister. Investment continued in the yard, with the construction of a large GRP fabrication hall at the western end of the yard, adjacent to the Elderslie dry docks during the late 1970s. Dry dock No.1 was also covered over. This was in preparation for the Hunt-class mine countermeasures vessel project, although only two vessels of the class were eventually built at Yarrow. The long-disused hall was subsequently demolished in 2008. The parent company, Yarrow PLC, retained ownership of non-shipbuilding assets, including YARD Ltd. Yarrow plc was subsequently sold to CAP Ltd in the mid-1980s, and in turn was owned by Sema Group PLC and Schlumberger.

Privatisation

 
Launch of HMS Daring, a Type 45 destroyer from the former YSL yard, now BAE Systems in 2006.

The succeeding government of Margaret Thatcher began a privatisation programme and the profitable Yarrow was one of British Shipbuilders' early divestitures. It was sold in 1985 to GEC's GEC-Marconi division, becoming Marconi Marine (YSL). GEC began a programme of major capital investment, culminating in the construction of a large Module Hall, north of the covered building berths, in 1987.[12] The principal work undertaken during this period was on the Type 22 Broadsword class and Type 23 Duke class frigates for the Royal Navy and the Lekiu-class frigate for the Royal Malaysian Navy as well as the Type 45 Destroyers for the Royal Navy. In 1999 Marconi Electronic Systems was sold to British Aerospace, creating BAE Systems. Marconi Marine (YSL) then became part of BAE Systems Marine.[12] Since 2009, YSL is part of BAE Systems Surface Ships, a BAE Systems subsidiary.

Yarrows in Canada

Yarrows Ltd. was a major ship yard located in Esquimalt, British Columbia on the west coast of Vancouver Island, Canada. Established in 1893 as the Esquimalt Marine Railway Co., later B.C. Marine Railway Co., by W. Fitzherbert Bullen, it ran small marine railways in Victoria and Vancouver. Sir Alfred Yarrow purchased the yard in 1913, renamed it Yarrows Ltd., and installed as manager his son, Norman Yarrow. From its early start building ships for the Canadian Pacific Railway, the yard expanded during the First World War to repair and refit many vessels for the Royal Navy, employing up to 800 men. In the late 1920s, the larger Esquimalt graving dock was completed. During the Second World War the company produced corvettes, frigates, landing ships, and transport ferries for the Royal Navy and Royal Canadian Navy, as well as freighters. Other work included arming civilian ships and refitting at least one as a troop carrier. At its peak, 3,500 men and women worked for Yarrows in the yard. After the war, the Yarrow family sold the yard to Burrard Dry Dock.[13] The yard was closed in 1994 and the graving dock and property are now part of the Canadian Forces Base Esquimalt.[14]

Ships built by Yarrow

Built in London Built in Glasgow Built in Canada

Clyde-class RNLI lifeboats

  • Charles H Barrett (70-001)
  • Grace Paterson Ritchie (70-002)

Royal Malaysian Navy

References

  1. ^ a b University of Glagow Archive Service: Yarrow Shipbuilders[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ History of London Yard by Angela Brown and Ron Coverson, 2001
  3. ^ BAE Systems, 1842 Alfred Yarrow
  4. ^ Barnes, Eleanor C.,Alfred Yarrow: His Life and Work, P126, Kessinger Publishing, 2005, ISBN 1-4179-5263-6
  5. ^ Bridges, T.C, Kings of commerce, P286, Ayer Publishing, 1928, ISBN 0-8369-0102-9
  6. ^ Brown, D.C. (1960). "Check Point". IMechE Proceedings. Institution of Mechanical Engineers. 50.
  7. ^ von Kienlin, Markus (17 December 2007). "RMS Victoria". Katalog. Deutsche Gesellschaft für Eisenbahngeschichte. Retrieved 18 May 2011.
  8. ^ Cameron, Stuart (2004). . Clyde-built Database. Archived from the original on 23 September 2006. Retrieved 17 May 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  9. ^ Cameron, Stuart (2004). . Clyde-built Database. Archived from the original on 23 September 2006. Retrieved 17 May 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  10. ^ Government's shipbuilding crisis BBC News, 1 January 002
  11. ^ Parliamentary debates Hansard, 4 June 1971
  12. ^ a b c What do you know about Govan? 5 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine Evening News
  13. ^ Roland H. Webb, Burrard Drydock Co. Ltd.: The Rise and Demise of Vancouver's Biggest Shipyard, The Northern Mariner, Vol. Vi, 1996. Retrieved 10 October 2010
  14. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 14 June 2012. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
  15. ^ Leon Steyn, "Old Older Oldest - Long Serving Ships of the South African Navy", Military History Journal Vol 18 No 3 December 2018, SA ISSN 0026-4016.
  16. ^ MacPherson, Ken; Milner, Marc (1993). Corvettes of the Royal Canadian Navy, 1939–1945. St. Catharines, ON: Vanwell Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-0920277836.

External links

    yarrow, shipbuilders, limited, often, styled, simply, yarrows, major, shipbuilding, firm, based, scotstoun, district, glasgow, river, clyde, part, systems, surface, ships, owned, systems, which, also, operated, nearby, govan, shipyard, formerly, fairfields, si. Yarrow Shipbuilders Limited YSL often styled as simply Yarrows was a major shipbuilding firm based in the Scotstoun district of Glasgow on the River Clyde It is now part of BAE Systems Surface Ships owned by BAE Systems which has also operated the nearby Govan shipyard formerly Fairfields since 1999 Yarrow Shipbuilders LimitedTypePublic companyIndustryShipbuildingFounded1865FateMerged with others to form British Shipbuilders 1977 1985 SuccessorGEC Marconi Marine YSL 1985 1999 BAE Systems Marine 1999 2003 BAE Systems Naval Ships 2003 2006 BAE Systems Surface Fleet Solutions 2006 2008 BVT Surface Fleet 2008 2009 BAE Systems Surface Ships 2009 HeadquartersScotstoun Glasgow UKKey peopleSir Alfred YarrowSir Harold YarrowSir Eric YarrowSir Arnold WeinstockSir Robert EastonMurray Easton CBEProductsNaval shipsMerchant shipsMarine steam enginesMarine enginesBoilersNumber of employeesApproximately 3 000ParentUpper Clyde Shipbuilders 1968 1970 Yarrow amp Co Ltd 1970 1977 British Shipbuilders 1977 1985 GEC Marconi 1985 1999 BAE Systems 1999 SubsidiariesCoventry Ordnance Works 1905 1925 Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins in London 1 2 Move to Glasgow 1 3 Upper Clyde Shipbuilders and aftermath 1 4 Nationalisation 1 5 Privatisation 1 6 Yarrows in Canada 2 Ships built by Yarrow 2 1 Clyde class RNLI lifeboats 2 2 Royal Malaysian Navy 3 References 4 External linksHistory EditOrigins in London Edit The company was founded by Alfred Yarrow later Sir Alfred Yarrow 1st Baronet in the year 1865 as Yarrow amp Company Limited 1 Originally it was based at Folly Wall Poplar then in 1898 as the company grew Yarrow moved his shipyard to London Yard Cubitt Town 2 3 Hundreds of steam launches lake and river vessels and eventually the Royal Navy s first destroyers the Havock class were built at Yarrow s London shipyards between 1869 and 1908 Yarrow was also a builder of boilers and a type of water tube boiler developed and patented by the company was known as the Yarrow boiler first used in a torpedo boat in 1887 and later used for a number of applications from the propulsion plant of RMS Queen Mary to the LNER Class W1 locomotive 4 The diversification into boiler manufacturing including large boilers for electricity generation meant that the company survived the lean years for shipbuilding Alfred Yarrow was an inventive naval engineer and was responsible for a number of novel introductions into service which led to the development of increasingly fast warships Ultimately in the Royal Navy and abroad it became known that a Yarrow ship was a fast ship with the company building the first naval vessel globally to exceed 30 knots and then later 40 knots Sir Alfred Yarrow was knighted for services to the war effort in 1916 He was a notable benefactor to many charities Move to Glasgow Edit An advertisement for Yarrow amp Co Ltd in the 1923 Brassey s Naval Annual featuring the S class destroyer HMS Tyrian and the Fly class gunboat General arrangement of the Charger class destroyers built by Yarrow amp Co at Poplar London 1894 95 A Thyella class destroyer for the Royal Hellenic Navy being launched at Yarrow s London Yard in Cubitt Town 1906 Despite a move of yards Yarrows outgrew its London site and this and the cost of land and labour in London led to a second move to what was at that time a greenfield site at Scotstoun in the west of Glasgow beginning in 1906 1 Between 4 000 and 5 000 tons of material had to be transported from models to heavy machine tools A train load of from forty to fifty wagons left the works at Poplar every day The first vessel launched from the new works at Scotstoun on 14 July 1908 was the lead ship of the Para class destroyers for the Brazilian Navy 5 Sir Harold Yarrow eldest son of Sir Alfred supervised the move to Scotland whilst still in his early twenties and ran the company in Scotland The company also established the Coventry Ordnance Works joint venture in 1905 building a large factory near to its Scotstoun Shipyard in 1910 During the First World War the company developed the pioneering Erskine artificial limb with Sir William Macewen and Sir Harold Yarrow was one of the founders of the Erskine Hospital for disabled ex servicemen Yarrow workshops were used to manufacture artificial limbs at no profit The Yarrow company was one of the world s leading builders of destroyers and frigates from early on building ships for both the Royal Navy and numerous export customers For many years until the 1960s Yarrow also built a large number of merchant ships specialising particularly on Riverboat vessels for the rivers and lakes of Burma India Africa and South America Several of these vessels were built to serve on lakes that had no navigable access to deliver them by sea They were therefore built as knock downs that is they were assembled temporarily in the shipyard disassembled into a large number of sections and transported to the lake and there assembled permanently and launched Yarrow s Scotstoun yard built the knock down ferry MV Ilala for Nyasaland in 1949 She was completed and launched on Lake Nyasa now Lake Malawi in 1951 The yard built three knock down ferries for Lake Victoria in East Africa RMS Victoria was built in Scotstoun in 1960 6 and reassembled at the Kenyan port of Kisumu on the lake in 1961 7 The train ferries MV Umoja and MV Uhuru were built in Scotstoun in 1965 8 9 and reassembled at Kisumu in 1965 and 1966 In total Yarrow built approximately 400 ships on the Clyde these can be traced in detail in the Clyde built Ship Database The yard continued to expand during the post war period acquiring and integrating the shipyard of the neighbouring Blythswood Shipbuilding Company which had itself been founded in 1919 to the east of the Yarrow yard in 1964 The new acquisition was used by Yarrow to extend their Shipyard with the construction of three covered building berths and a six storey Technical Office Block undertaken in the former Blythswood shipyard site during the late 1960s with the aid of a government grant Other neighbouring yards was acquired to lengthen the waterfront and provide additional facilities the price of one being negotiated by Sir Eric Yarrow on the golf course with Sir John Hunter Eric Yarrow had followed his father on his death as chairman in 1962 becoming the third generation of the family to lead the firm During this period Yarrow was involved in designing and building many of the Royal Navy s post war escort fleet including the Type 81 Tribal class Type 14 Blackwood class and the Type 12M Rothesay class frigates The company was also involved in the Leander class programme During the 1960s ships were built for the navies of South Africa Chile Malaysia Thailand New Zealand and Iran Upper Clyde Shipbuilders and aftermath Edit In 1968 the Company became part of Upper Clyde Shipbuilders 10 which collapsed in 1971 11 Yarrows had already left the UCS joint venture by April 1970 however as the only profitable division of the joint venture In 1974 it acquired the neighbouring Elderslie Dockyard owned by Barclay Curle which lay to the west of the Yarrow yard and included an extensive complex of three drydocks originally built in 1904 No 1 Dry Dock 1933 No 2 Dry Dock and 1965 No 3 Dry Dock During this period Yarrow was involved in the Type 12I Leander class frigate programme as well as the Condell class frigate for the Chilean Navy and the design of the Nilgiri class frigate for the Indian Navy The long term investment in facilities and strong manufacturing credentials combined with the development of the Yarrow Admiralty Research Department YARD ensured that when the number of warship yards was dramatically reduced by the Navy in the 1970s Yarrows was chosen as one of mainstream contractors alongside Swan Hunter Vosper for the Type 21s and Cammell Laird The Type 21 was the first type in the Navy to be a combined Gas Turbine and Diesel design using the marine variant of the Rolls Royce Olympus gas turbine also used in Concorde 5 out of 8 Type 21s 10 out of 14 Type 22s 12 out of 16 Type 23s and all the Type 45s were built at Scotstoun demonstrating the firm s dominance in the market for medium sized RN surface vessels The sleek good looks and the sporting performance of the Type 21 frigates led to the captains of the ships being called boy racers The vessel could stop from full speed in twice the length of the ship HMS Ardent was destroyed by Argentinian aircraft in Falkland Sound in May 1982 All of the Yarrow built Type 21s served in the Falklands Nationalisation Edit June 1979 Polish ships under construction In 1977 the Labour government of James Callaghan passed the Aircraft and Shipbuilding Industries Act 1977 which nationalised Yarrow Shipbuilders Limited and grouped it with other major British shipyards as a division within British Shipbuilders 12 Nationalisation was opposed by the owners and by the minority Conservative party The last ship launched under private ownership was HMS Battleaxe a Type 22 launched by Audrey Callaghan wife of the Prime Minister Investment continued in the yard with the construction of a large GRP fabrication hall at the western end of the yard adjacent to the Elderslie dry docks during the late 1970s Dry dock No 1 was also covered over This was in preparation for the Hunt class mine countermeasures vessel project although only two vessels of the class were eventually built at Yarrow The long disused hall was subsequently demolished in 2008 The parent company Yarrow PLC retained ownership of non shipbuilding assets including YARD Ltd Yarrow plc was subsequently sold to CAP Ltd in the mid 1980s and in turn was owned by Sema Group PLC and Schlumberger Privatisation Edit Launch of HMS Daring a Type 45 destroyer from the former YSL yard now BAE Systems in 2006 The succeeding government of Margaret Thatcher began a privatisation programme and the profitable Yarrow was one of British Shipbuilders early divestitures It was sold in 1985 to GEC s GEC Marconi division becoming Marconi Marine YSL GEC began a programme of major capital investment culminating in the construction of a large Module Hall north of the covered building berths in 1987 12 The principal work undertaken during this period was on the Type 22 Broadsword class and Type 23 Duke class frigates for the Royal Navy and the Lekiu class frigate for the Royal Malaysian Navy as well as the Type 45 Destroyers for the Royal Navy In 1999 Marconi Electronic Systems was sold to British Aerospace creating BAE Systems Marconi Marine YSL then became part of BAE Systems Marine 12 Since 2009 YSL is part of BAE Systems Surface Ships a BAE Systems subsidiary Yarrows in Canada Edit Yarrows Ltd was a major ship yard located in Esquimalt British Columbia on the west coast of Vancouver Island Canada Established in 1893 as the Esquimalt Marine Railway Co later B C Marine Railway Co by W Fitzherbert Bullen it ran small marine railways in Victoria and Vancouver Sir Alfred Yarrow purchased the yard in 1913 renamed it Yarrows Ltd and installed as manager his son Norman Yarrow From its early start building ships for the Canadian Pacific Railway the yard expanded during the First World War to repair and refit many vessels for the Royal Navy employing up to 800 men In the late 1920s the larger Esquimalt graving dock was completed During the Second World War the company produced corvettes frigates landing ships and transport ferries for the Royal Navy and Royal Canadian Navy as well as freighters Other work included arming civilian ships and refitting at least one as a troop carrier At its peak 3 500 men and women worked for Yarrows in the yard After the war the Yarrow family sold the yard to Burrard Dry Dock 13 The yard was closed in 1994 and the graving dock and property are now part of the Canadian Forces Base Esquimalt 14 Ships built by Yarrow EditThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items August 2008 Built in London Built in Glasgow Built in CanadaNMS Randunica Colo Colo class spar torpedo boats Colo Colo Tucapel Șoimul class spar torpedo boats NMS Șoimul NMS Vulturul Kotaka 1885 Havock class destroyers HMS Havock 1893 HMS Hornet 1893 Corrientes class torpedo boat destroyers derivative of Havock Class destroyers ARA Corrientes 1897 ARA Misiones 1897 ARA Entre Rios 1896 ARA Santa Fe 1896 Ikazuchi class destroyers Ikazuchi 1898 Inazuma 1899 Niji 1899 Akebono 1899 Oboro 1899 Sazanami 1899 PS Aotea later renamed PS Waimarie 1899 restored and operating in Wanganui New Zealand SS Ilala 1875 SS later MV Wairua 1904 restored and operating in Wanganui New Zealand SS later MV Waione 1898 scrapped in the 1960s SS later MV Ohura 1898 wrecked and later scrapped MV Ongarue 1903 awaiting restoration Wanganui SS later MV Waiora 1904 sunk on the river in Wanganui River class destroyers HMS Teviot 1903 HMS Usk 1903 HMS Ribble 1904 HMS Welland 1904 HMS Gala 1905 HMS Garry 1905 Thyella class destroyers Royal Hellenic Navy Nafkratousa 1906 Thyella 1907 Lonchi 1907 Sfendoni 1907 Para class destroyers Black Swan class sloop HMS Wild Goose HMS Flamingo HMS Black Swan HMS Whimbrel Weapon class destroyers HMS Battleaxe HMS Broadsword Daring class destroyers HMS Decoy HMS Diana Lake Malawi ferry MV Ilala 1949 Tribal class frigate HMS Ashanti Lake Victoria ferries RMS Victoria 1960 MV Uhuru 1965 MV Umoja 1965 Hecla class survey vessel HMS Hecla 1964 HMS Hecate A137 1965 HMS Hydra 1965 SAS Protea 1971 15 Leander class frigate HMS Apollo HMS Ariadne HMS Dido HMS Diomede HMS Hermione HMS Jupiter HMS Naiad HMNZS Canterbury F421 BAE Moran Valverde ex HMS Danae ex Almirante Lynch PFG 07 BAE Eloy Alfaro ex Almirante Condell PFG 06 Type 21 frigates HMS Ambuscade HMS Arrow HMS Alacrity HMS Ardent HMS Avenger Type 22 frigates HMS Broadsword HMS Battleaxe HMS Brilliant HMS Brazen HMS Boxer HMS Beaver HMS Brave HMS London HMS Cornwall HMS Cumberland Type 23 frigates HMS Norfolk HMS Argyll HMS Lancaster HMS Iron Duke HMS Monmouth HMS Montrose HMS Somerset HMS Grafton HMS Sutherland HMS Kent HMS Portland HMS St Albans Type 45 destroyers HMS Daring 2006 HMS Dauntless 2007 HMS Diamond 2007 HMS Dragon 2008 HMS Defender 2009 HMS Duncan 2010 Converted Civilian Vessels HMCS Tuna originally built as Tarantula Ferries note ships without hull numbers were built for another company before BC Ferries Hull Unknown MV Pender Queen 1923 Built as MV Motor Princess and served the Canadian Pacific Railway Hull Unknown MV Salt Spring Queen 1949 Built as the MV Delta Princess and crossed the Fraser River where the George Massey Tunnel is now Hull Unknown MV Kwuna 1975 Hull 371 MV Queen of Cowichan 1976 Hull 550 MV Queen of Oak Bay 1981 MV Spirit of British Columbia 1993 MV Spirit of Vancouver Island 1994 Warships River class frigates for the Royal Canadian Navy 16 vessels 1942 1944 Flower class corvettes for the Royal Canadian Navy 5 vessels 1940 1941 16 HMCS Alberni K103 1940 HMCS Nanaimo K101 1940 HMCS Edmundston K106 1941 HMCS Timmins K223 1941 HMCS Vancouver K240 1941 Landing craft Converted civilian vessels 14 Auxiliary cruiser SS Rajputana 1939 RMS Empress of Russia RMS Empress of Japan RMS Empress of Asia RMS Empress of Canada CCGS Tanu CCGS VectorClyde class RNLI lifeboats Edit Charles H Barrett 70 001 Grace Paterson Ritchie 70 002 Royal Malaysian Navy Edit KD Hang Tuah F76 ex Black Star ex HMS Mermaid KD Rahmat F24 Lekiu class frigates KD Jebat F29 KD Lekiu F30 References Edit a b University of Glagow Archive Service Yarrow Shipbuilders permanent dead link History of London Yard by Angela Brown and Ron Coverson 2001 BAE Systems 1842 Alfred Yarrow Barnes Eleanor C Alfred Yarrow His Life and Work P126 Kessinger Publishing 2005 ISBN 1 4179 5263 6 Bridges T C Kings of commerce P286 Ayer Publishing 1928 ISBN 0 8369 0102 9 Brown D C 1960 Check Point IMechE Proceedings Institution of Mechanical Engineers 50 von Kienlin Markus 17 December 2007 RMS Victoria Katalog Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Eisenbahngeschichte Retrieved 18 May 2011 Cameron Stuart 2004 Umoja Clyde built Database Archived from the original on 23 September 2006 Retrieved 17 May 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Cameron Stuart 2004 Uhuru Clyde built Database Archived from the original on 23 September 2006 Retrieved 17 May 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Government s shipbuilding crisis BBC News 1 January 002 Parliamentary debates Hansard 4 June 1971 a b c What do you know about Govan Archived 5 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine Evening News Roland H Webb Burrard Drydock Co Ltd The Rise and Demise of Vancouver s Biggest Shipyard The Northern Mariner Vol Vi 1996 Retrieved 10 October 2010 a b Dave Obee Shipyards played key role in war effort Times Colonist newspaper 27 June 2010 Archived from the original on 14 June 2012 Retrieved 10 October 2010 Leon Steyn Old Older Oldest Long Serving Ships of the South African Navy Military History Journal Vol 18 No 3 December 2018 SA ISSN 0026 4016 MacPherson Ken Milner Marc 1993 Corvettes of the Royal Canadian Navy 1939 1945 St Catharines ON Vanwell Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 0920277836 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Yarrow Shipbuilders The Clyde built ships data base lists over 22 000 ships built on the Clyde Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yarrow Shipbuilders amp oldid 1128862995, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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