Glasgow And Ships Of The Clyde

List Arrivals, Sailings and Events


What/When Ship

News Event

Friday, June 1, 1900 @ 1800
Own Page

Summer nights on South Beach Ardrossan, around 1900

SUMMER NIGHTS ON SOUTH BEACH

Walking across South Beach green in Ardrossan at this time of year, dodging the waves breaking over the promenade, head down against the biting wind, sliding on the frosty flagstones, or with boots slithering on the sodden grass, it is difficult to picture the green packed with Sunday School trips basking in the sun with their buns and milk.

If the grass is used mainly now for car parking, picnics and civic week services, in former years it was the scene of more diverse entertainments.

Before the turn of the century there were generally minstrel troupes on the green, one of the first being Ben Storey and his company. Our reporter of the time wrote that on the whole they provided very poor fare, but as they had no platform and only the flat ground to perform on this was no doubt a drawback to their success. They managed to struggle through a season but their profits were apparently small.

Storey was a singer and the favourite song with his audiences was one beginning ?Oh Annabella come under my umbrella? - perhaps not inappropriate to an Ardrossan summer.

STRONG MAN

Another well know entertainer was a strong man called ?The Mexican Spaniard? who had a perpetual smile on his face. He performed a few gymnastic tricks, but is favourite feat was to grip a rope between his teeth, invite several men to grip the ends of it and pull it from his teeth. They never could.

For a couple of summers before the first war a group of four university students became very popular. They erected a small platform at South Beach and with two singing, the third playing the banjo and the fourth the piano; they always attracted large crowds with their comic songs and banjo selections. Present day students might care to note that their songs and jokes were clean.

Over the years the Burgh Pipe Band have given concerts on the green, but a regular visitor years ago was the Motherwell Mission Silver Band who would march through the town to South Beach where they played selections and their male voice choir sang gospel songs.

Troupes of minstrels also performed on the castle hill in Edwardian summers. The most popular would give a musical concert until darkness fell, then finish their programme with a short cinema exhibition. However they did not get much support, and the hill, which seemed a natural spot for this type of performance has seldom been used by other groups. There were suggestions that the Ardrossan pageant produced on Coronation Day in 1953 might be staged at the castle but the venue was changed to Winton Park.

SERVICES

Without intention to appear irreverent, this may be an appropriate article in which to refer to another form of outdoor entertainment which has held sway on our shores for may years, the religious services conducted by revivalists or evangelists untrammelled by any order of service decreed by a general assembly, and perhaps the most famous of these in Ardrossan was the Albatross Mission.

There were, we believe, a group of young people who voyaged from resort to resort on a private yacht called ?ALBATROSS? in the 1920s and held evangelistic meetings at their ports of call - in Ardrossan mostly on South Beach green.

They had vanished from the scene before the lifetime of the present writer who?s knowledge of them is confined to recalling that his father was addicted to singing one of their hymns while shaving on Sunday mornings:-

I was drifting along on life?s pitiless sea
And the angry waves threatened my ruin to be
When away at my side there I dimly described
A stately old vessel, and loudly I cried
Ship ahoy! Ship ahoy!

Or words to that effect, with due respect, that hymn held more emotional promise than the unlikely chorus of ?Jesus wants me for a sunbeam?, in which we used to join with considerable doubts 30 years ago.

Scribe Tango

Also see: Local Stories/Spare info

(EArdrossanships)

Ship Event

Wednesday, June 6, 1900 @ 0800
Alfred Nobel Own Page
Ship's locationArdrossan

SS Alfred Nobel entering Ardrossan

Harbour Event

Friday, July 6, 1900 @ 0700
Own Page

Harbour workers end their strike at Ardrossan Harbour

A harbour-workers strike has ended.
They claimed an advance of 1/2p per ton for the discharge of iron ore, and have accepted 1/4p which will raise the rate to 3d per ton.

News Event

Sunday, July 15, 1900 @ 1230
ANTONIO LEMOS (1900-1904 Stern paddle wheeler steam river passenger / cargo steamer 170 feet long of Amazon Steam Navigation Company, Para, Brasil) Own Page

Stern paddle wheel steamer ANTONIO LEMOS launched on the Clyde for service on the Amazon, Brasil

Ship's locationLobnitz & Company, Renfrew, River Clyde (Scotland, U.K.)Port of RegistryPara (Brasil)
Gross Tonnage300
Deadweght Tonnage200 tons of cargo

Ship Event

Friday, July 19, 1901 @ 0800
Lancing Own Page

Lancing ex P'eriere

July 19th 1901 P'eriere sold to A/S Lancing (J Johanson & C0), Kristiana, for ?6300 renamed Lancing
Capt S B Johnsen

News Event

Sunday, June 1, 1902 @ 1000
THIS DATE IS APPROXIMATE, and is our best estimate of the correct date
Own Page

Advertisment for sailings in 1902 from Ardrossan to Belfast and Portrush (Northern Ireland)

Ship Event

Thursday, June 12, 1902 @ 1430
GREEK (1902 - Steam general cargo lighter - Clyde puffer - of J & J Hay, Glasgow) Own Page

Steam lighter GREEK launched by J & J Hay Shipyard, Kirkintilloch, near Glasgow

Ship's locationMessrs. J & J Hay Shipyard, Kirkintilloch (on the Forth & Clyde Canal near Glasgow) ScotlandPort of RegistryGlasgow (Scotland, UK)

Ship Event

Monday, June 23, 1902 @ 1800
Cadweens Own Page

Ship "Cadweens" crashes into the quay

From "The Irvine and Fullarton Times" dated 27th June 1902.

The S.S. "Cadweens" met with a slight accident in the Eglinton Dock on Monday evening.
Whilst changing her berth, the vessel, which was steaming at "Dead slow" crashed into the quay, and the noise soon collected a crowd of spectators.
Little damage beyond a twist in the blades of the anchor was sustained.

Harbour Event

Friday, June 27, 1902 @ 0900
Own Page

"Caley" to run two boats to Arran on Saturdays

From "The Irvine and Fullarton Times" dated 27th June 1902.

The "Caley" means to run two boats to Arran on Saturdays.
One of them will call at Brodick and Corrie only.

News Event

Wednesday, August 27, 1902 @ 1000
Own Page

1902 Advertisment by Allan Line and State Line for their services from Glasgow to USA and Canada

News Event

Tuesday, September 2, 1902 @ 0600
Own Page

Girl Agnes Dorian drowns herself at Saltcoats Harbour

From "The Ardrossan & Saltcoats Herald" dated Friday 5thSeptember 1902

The fishermen going out to the salmon nets on Tuesday morning found the body of Agnes Dorian in the sea.
It appears that the young woman had been in a depressed state of mind for some time, and on Monday night when walking with two girl companions at Saltcoats quay she left them and jumped into the water.
The girls raised an alarm, and a boat put out and searched in the vicinity of the harbour without result.
The deceased was an orphan, and was employed as a domestic servant in the country.

Agnes Dorian drowns at Saltcoats Harbour - Newspaper report

News Event

Friday, September 5, 1902 @ 0900
AZALEA (1878-1920 Passenger / cargo steamer 218 feet long of Alex A Laird & Company, Glasgow : 1939 scrapped)) Own Page

1902 Advertisment by Alex A Laird for sailings by his steamer AZALEA from Ardrossan to Portrush

Port of RegistryGlasgow (UK)
Net Tonnage353
Gross Tonnage706

Ship Event

Friday, September 5, 1902 @ 1000
Adder (1890-1918) Own Page

Adder : Advert for daylight Ardrossan - Belfast sailings September 1902

Port of RegistryGlasgow

From "The Ardrossan & Saltcoats Herald" dated Friday 5th September 1902

Advert for the daylight sailings from Ardrossan to Belfast, and return the same day, by the "Adder."

Adder : Advert for September 1902 sailings Ardrossan - Belfast

Ship Event

Friday, September 5, 1902 @ 1000
Adder (1890-1918) Own Page

Adder : Advert for Ardrossan to Portrush sailings, September 1902

Port of RegistryGlasgow

From "The Ardrossan & Saltcoats Herald" dated Friday 5th September 1902

Advert for sailings Ardrossan to Portrush, via Belfast, by "Adder" and "Vulture"

Adder : Courtesy of Colin Campbell Adder : Advert for Ardrossan to Portrush sailings, September 1902

Ship Event

Friday, September 5, 1902 @ 1000
Vulture Own Page

Vulture : Advert for Ardrossan to Portrush sailings September 1902

Port of RegistryGlasgow

From "The Ardrossan & Saltcoats Herald" dated Friday 5th September 1902

Advert for Ardrossan to Portrush sailings by "Vuture" September 1902

Adder : Advert for Ardrossan to Portrush sailings, September 1902