Maritime history of Scotland

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The Maritime history of Scotland involves events including

shipping, ports, navigation, and seamen
, as well as marine sciences, exploration, trade, and maritime themes in the arts of Scotland.

Royal Scots Navy

The Scottish Red Ensign, flown by ships of the Royal Scots Navy

James I was responsible for developing the shipping interests of the country, establishing a shipbuilding yard at Leith. His successor, James II, developed the use of gunpowder and artillery in Scotland and, in consequence, ships were built with hulls thick enough to resist artillery, and with high forecastles to carry guns. The pioneer in Scotland's newer type of warship was Bishop Kennedy of St. Andrews who was responsible for the building of the St Salvator, which cost £10,000. James IV continued the policy of building up the navy, having 38 ships built for his fleet and founding two new dockyards. His greatest achievement was the construction of Great Michael, the largest ship up to that time launched in Scotland, the building of which cost £30,000.

As Scotland and England moved closer during the seventeenth century, following the Union of the Crowns, the need for a navy to protect Scotland from the English Royal Navy lessened and by the time of the

Union with England in 1707, the Royal Scottish Navy possessed just three ships: The Royal William, The Royal Mary, and Dumbarton Castle
.

Famous ships

The River Clyde was at one time the greatest shipbuilding centre in the world (some 30,000 ships were constructed there in the 19th and 20th centuries) and unsurprisingly many famous ships were built in Scotland.

Great Michael

The

Lindsay of Pitscottie). She had Sir Andrew Wood as quartermaster and Robert Barton
as skipper. The ship was sold to France in 1514.

Cutty Sark

The Cutty Sark was a clipper ship built in 1869 in Dumbarton, Scotland, to carry 600 tons of cargo. She raced the Thermopylae and other clippers in the tea trade from China and later in the wool trade from Australia. She was capable of sailing at over 17 knots (31 km/h). Built as a full-rigged ship, she spent her final trading years as a barquentine. She was dismasted in 1916 but restored in 1922 then used as a training ship. Cutty Sark was taken over by a preservation society in 1952 and moved to Greenwich. In 2007 she was damaged by fire during restoration work but is to be repaired.

Queen Mary

RMS Queen Mary was built in 1936 by John Brown & Company in Clydebank, Scotland, for what is now the Cunard Line. She made runs across the Atlantic between Southampton, Cherbourg and New York City in partnership with Queen Elizabeth. The Queen Mary was used as a troop ship in the Second World War, carrying 16,082 people on one voyage. After the war she resumed Atlantic runs but these became loss making. She was withdrawn from service in 1967 and is now in Long Beach California as a hotel and tourist attraction.

HMY Britannia

Queen Elizabeth II
on 16 April 1953 and commissioned on 11 January 1954. The ship was designed with three masts, a 133-foot (41 m) foremast, a 139-foot (42 m) mainmast, and a 118-foot (36 m) mizzenmast. The top 20 feet (6.1 m) of the foremast and mainmast were hinged, to allow the ship to pass under bridges.

The Mighty Hood

HMS Hood was the flagship of the Royal Navy between the Wars.

Comet

Built in 1812, PS Comet was the first commercially successful steamboat in Europe.

RMS Lusitania

RMS Lusitania was famously sunk by a U-boat, presaging the entry of the USA into the First World War.

Several Queen Elizabeths

HMS Queen Elizabeth (R08), the new aircraft carrier, and her sister ship HMS Prince of Wales (R09). Also Queen Elizabeth 2 and RMS Queen Elizabeth. Note that these are named after a number of different Queen Elizabeths.

HMS Duke of York

HMS Duke of York (17) winner of the last battleship action in European waters.

RRS Discovery

RRS Discovery Antarctic explorer, built at Dundee.


Honourable mentions

Maritime disasters

See also

References