Tag: SSBR (Page 2 of 2)

Richard Walsh’s SB Dorcas Fire

I mentioned before that among my surprise gifts from a friend who had finished with them, were the 2006/7 editions (40 and 41) of the magazine “Topsail” of the Society for Sailing Barge Research. Those of you who were members of SSBR back in 2006 may recall edition 40 for being jammed full of articles and items about fire. There is “The Night the Thames Caught Fire” by Richard Walsh, “Burning Ambition” and “Before and After the Fire” (both these two are photo features) and “Some Old Flames” by Capt. Mark Boyle, to name but a few.

 

LotL and Cambria

Lady of the Lea and Cambria in the Thames Match 2012; photo by Phillip Barnes Warden

It was the Thames piece which caught my eye and then had me gripped. It is the amazing story of the Sailing Barge Dorcas, in 1900 a hoy barge making regular runs to Sandwich for the Sandwich Hoy Company and on this occasion loaded above and below decks with barrels of petrol. The lack of attention to safety, says Richard Walsh, was “incomprehensible”. The coal range was alight in the aft cabin for cooking, there was a stove for’d, navigation lamps were lit, there was “probably a binnacle oil lamp” and cabin lights; “collectively enough naked flame to create an enormous risk for barge, cargo and crew” but they had been transporting petrol this way for 20 years without incident.

 

With 20/20 hindsight it seems almost inevitable that there was a huge explosion, a massive fire and many more blasts as the cargo started to go up. The barge had been heading downstream and now, with skipper and crew blown overboard or having abandoned ship in a bit of a hurry went drifting off down the Thames on a strong ebb with a tailwind, burning furiously like a fire ship in the days of the old ‘Man of War’ naval battles. It bounced off Woolwich Ferry landing stage setting fire to a steam ferry, a sailing barge, 7 dumb barges and drove on surrounded by burning river towards Woolwich Arsenal wharf setting fire to ten fire engines, 2 warehouses a stationery store and various railway trucks. It took just over an hour to sink. It’s an amazing story and well worth either a read if you can get hold of it, or a re-read if it’s sitting gathering dust on your book shelves. Well done to Richard Walsh, the SSBR and the editorship of Topsail.

New Compendium

Compendium

New SSBR Compendium pre-order form. Provided by William Collard.

Project Manager for the Rebuild Phase and friend of Cambria, William Collard has emailed me this useful link, actually a pre-order form for a new Compendium of Sailing Barges publiushed by the Society for Sailing Barge Research. The ‘blurb’ says the Compendium is the culmination of 50 years of research and carries details of over 4000 sailing barges, their names, official numbers, tonnage, Ports of Registry, ownership and final fates. The price is £20 plus £5 P+P and you are invited to post off this form along with your cheque. This does not seem to be up on SSBR’s website yet, so if you can’t use the one here, comment me and I will email you the original I have from William.

 

On Brightlingsea Hard

Beached on Brightlingsea Hard; Photo by John White of SSBRAs we know, Cambria is currently making a small tour of waterfront pubs in  Essex and Suffolk delivering the Mighty Oak beer “Captain Bob”. She was last reported parked up on Brightlingsea “Hard” (this being a bit of flat, hard beach where you can safely ground a barge as the tide drops to enable loading and unloading over the sides, and a bit of hull scraping too). On Brightlingsea Hard unloading; photo by John White of SSBRHere John White of the Society for Sailing Barge Research (SSBR) managed to get these striking photo’s which he has given us permission to use. Thank you John. Brighlingsea Hard Horse and Cart; photo by John White of SSBRIn days gone by the loading and unloading would have been by horse and cart, driven down onto the hard alongside the barge, so the Sea Change team have had a bit of fun recreating this using the small pony and trap pictured and the Youth Trainees have been learning to use the rigging and winches to lower the beer barrels down. Brilliant!

Tricia loves a Power Station

Cambria drops a topsail. Mark Chapman Photo

Cambria drops a topsail in this pic by Mark Chapman. Tilbury Power Station looms

It’s become something of a standing joke on the Facebook barge-orientated pages that our friend Tricia Gurnett of the Society for Sailing Barge Research gets wound up by the fact that power stations spoil the view from the river(s) and so often get into the background of barge photographs. This started last year when Cambria was alongside St Andrew’s Wharf in Gravesend and then later moored just off shore on the trot moorings. She was in such a position that it was hard to avoid the big Tilbury power station on the north bank of the river. We published a few pictures with Tilbury in unawares and Tricia started gently ribbing us. Soon, naturally, we were doing it deliberately to tease her, with captions along the lines “and another shot especially for Tricia Gurnett” or even, in some cases deliberately framing Tilbury in bits of rigging, through ratlines or life belts etc. All good clean fun.

 

Today’s picture is a lovely one by Mark C and has something in the background which may strike you as familiar. Sorry, Tricia G!

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