The rotting ghost ships of Mallows Bay

Ghost Fleet of Mallows Bay, Maryland

This is an extraordinary story. When the USA entered the World War I in 1917, it had warships by lacked transport vessels – so President Woodrow Wilson ordered the building of 1,000 300-ft long steamships to be built in just 18 months. Because the job had to be done in a hurry and to keep costs down, the ships were built in wood rather than expensive steel – but even then by the time the Germans surrendered in November 1918 only 76 of the 130 completed vessels had been used to carry cargo as intended.

The moment the peace was declared, the vessels became redundant – but production continued for a period. In the end some 264 were completed, and many ended up in Mallows bay. Read the whole sorry tale here.

The astonishing whaleback steamships

Whaleback-Steamships-3

Whaleback steamship – photo courtesy of Retronaut

Imagine a steam ship designed with minimum superstructure to allow seas to slip over it… and there you have the whaleback, a type originally developed by a Scottish-born Great Lakes seaman and ship’s master Captain Alexander McDougall (1845–1923).

Some 44 of these striking half-submarine-half-ship vessels are said to have been built between 1887 and 1898. Some 42 were built for use carrying freight on the North American Great Lakes, some for towing but many were steamships with their own propulsive power.

In use, it’s said they were both handy and quick, and they certainly an example of shipbuilding’s quickly forgotten mistakes.

One example, was built at Sunderland, in England, apparently without the designer’s permission, though this seems to be an area of doubt. I wonder what her story might have been? I’d guess that a vessel designed for the short sharp waves of the Great Lakes might also make sense in the similar waves of the relatively 0shallow North Sea.

Another, the SS Christopher Columbus was built to carry passengers on the Great Lakes instead of freight. This had a considerable amount of superstructure and seems quite at odds with the whaleback principle – though it was designed by MacDougall himself.

The whaleback SS Meteor built in 1896 remained in service until 1969 and is now a museum ship – she’s the only surviving example of this strange and remarkable series of vessels.

Read more about the whalebacks at the Wikipedia pages Whaleback, SS Christopher Columbus and SS Meteor. There are also outstanding photographs at the Retronaut website and at the Sunderland Site pages here and here.

My thanks to Malcolm Woods for tipping me off about there striking vessels.

Captain Flint’s houseboat explained

Sophie Neville on Captain Flint's houseboat

 

Weblogger, author and TV producer Sophie Neville unpicks the real story behind the legend of Captain Flint’s houseboat.

‘When people see the SY Gondola on Coniston today, in all her re-built glory, she seems rather plush to have been cast by Arthur Ransome as Captain Flint’s houseboat. The main reason for assuming that she was used as the model for the illustrations is because Arthur Ransome grabbed a post card of the Gondola and drew on it to give the first illustrators of Swallows and Amazons some idea of his vision. However Ransome’s biographer Roger Wardale tells me it was a former steamer on Windermere that he had in mind: the SL Esperance.’

Read more here.