Glasgow And Ships Of The Clyde

Sailing

Saturday, September 8, 1962 @ 0655
ERNEST HOLT (1948-1971 Fishery Research Trawler Pennant No GY 591 being 193 feet long 11 knots of Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries, London) Own Page

ERNEST HOLT leaves Ardrossan after bunkering with oil fuel

Sailing forSeaPort of RegistryGrimsby
Sailed from berthArdrossan Harbour (Eglinton Dock)Reg Tonnage184
Outward cargoLight - oil bunkersGross Tonnage604
Draught aft on sailing17' 6"
Master of vessel on sailingE A Binnington
Ships agentR L Alpine, Ardrossan

Hans Hasse writes
The fishery research trawler ERNEST HOLT, operated by the British Government's Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries, was named after Ernest William Lyons Holt or E.W.L. Holt (17 October 1864 – 10 June 1922) who was an eminent English marine naturalist and biologist who specialized in ichthyology, the study of fish. His work helped lay a scientific foundation for the fishery management in Ireland, and together with William Spotswood Green, he strongly influenced the development of the Irish Fisheries in its early years.

The ship ERNEST HOLT was built in 1948 by Cochrane & Sons, Selby as a fishery research trawler for the Ministry of Agriculture & Fisheries, and she looks like a commercial Arctic trawler.

Her colours were black hull with white upperworks and funnel being buff with a black top, with an overall length of 193 feet and 175 feet between perpendiculars and breadth 30 feet and draft 16 feet. Her oil-fired triple-expansion engines develop 900 IHP giving her a cruising speed of 11 knots.

In 1971 she was renamed SWITHA and became a British Government fishery patrol vessel and was wrecked on 31 January 1980 off Inchkeith Island in the Firth of Forth