Ships Monthly

SHIPBREAKING AT FASLANE

Shipbreaking Industries’ yard at Faslane on the Gareloch was the largest in the UK over its 35-year life. The company had made its name before World War II as shipbreaker Metal Industries (MI) operating at Rosyth Dockyard, where it had broken up Cunard’s Mauretania, US Lines’ Leviathan (jointly with T.W. Ward) and made huge profits from salvaging and demolishing the German warships scuttled at Scapa Flow in 1919. Unable to resume operations at Rosyth post-World War II, it leased from the British Government the wartime Emergency Port on the Clyde, with its deepwater berths.

Commodore Thomas Mackenzie, who had been in charge of salvage operations at Scapa pre-war and had supervised Admiralty salvage operations during the war, converted Faslane from a cargo-handling port into a breakers’ yard by installing suitable cranes, an oxygen plant and workshops.

The first two vessels taken in hand, both towed from Scapa, were the former British battleship and the German battlecruiser , salvaged in, MI bought the surplus Admiralty Floating Dock No.4, as they no longer had access to graving docks needed to demolish the awkward upside-down hull.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Ships Monthly

Ships Monthly1 min read
Ships Monthly
Editor • Nicholas Leach sm.ed@kelsey.co.uk Art Editor • Mark Hyde Group Commercial Manager • Mason Ponti Telephone • 01732 920499 Email • mason@talk-media.uk Managing Director • Phil Weeden Finance Director • Joyce Parker-Sarioglu Retail Distribution
Ships Monthly1 min read
Big Deck News
The third Flight I America class amphibious assault ship is to be named USS Helmand Province (LHA-10). The naming follows the convention of naming USN amphibious assault ships after US Marine Corps battles. Both LHA-10 and LHA-9, named after the firs
Ships Monthly1 min read
Hydrogen Power For Vestfjord Pair
Norway’s Torghatten Nord has placed a contract with builders Mylleburst Wharf for two hydrogen-powered passenger and vehicle ferries to operate on the exposed Vestfjord route between Bodo and Lofoton, one of the world’s most challenging. The 117m ves

Related