In a previous article, the early development of the Helensburgh and Gareloch steamers was outlined. By 1843, Helensburgh, a popular summer watering place with the wealthier residents of Glasgow, was beginning to develop as a year-round residence from which there was a steady business traffic. The burgh pier was, however, problematic. The Gareloch, long a pastoral backwater, was attracting feuars, few at first, but adding to the local residents and the traffic in agricultural produce and the movement of animals. The two main lines of steamboats; the Shandon & Glasgow Steam Packet Co., with the Superb, and Messrs Henderson & M‘Kellar with the British Queen, Sultan, and the new Emperor, competed for the traffic sailing from Glasgow and connecting with Greenock. The Greenock Railway, opened in 1841, attracted some traffic with the steamboats Dumbuck and Royal Victoria, connecting...