Early Gareloch Steamers—Part 2

on Apr 2, 2021

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...

Rhu or is it Row?

on Mar 24, 2021

The village of Row at the entrance to the Gareloch owes its origins to the adjacent Gareloch narrows, a convenient if treacherous crossing point for people, goods and cattle. The Parish of Row encompasses the east shore of the Gareloch and was formed in 1648 when the M‘Aulays of Ardencaple built a church. The present building dates from 1851, and dominates the village that grew up around it. Early volumes of Hugh MacDonald’s “Days at the Coast” provide an engraving of the village in the late 1850s. The village is surrounded by large houses, many built for summer residences by the wealthy members of Glasgow society. Row Early photographs also feature the church. Editions of MacDonald’s book from around 1868 contain albumen photographs by Thomas Annan. A photograph by Beckett shows almost the same scene. Row village (Annan) Row village (Beckett) The ferry between Row point and Roseneath...

Early Gareloch Steamers

on Feb 17, 2021

Although the pioneer steamboat on the Clyde, Comet, was placed on the river by the owner of the Bath’s Hotel in Helensburgh, the steamboat ran from the Broomielaw to Greenock. To get the additional distance from Greenock to Helensburgh, a sailing packet was required. Regular steamboat service to the north bank of the estuary began in 1815 with the Joint Stock Company in Dumbarton that provided the steam-boat, Duke of Wellington, to run between that town and the Broomielaw. By that time the steam boats Prince of Orange, Captain M‘Innes, and Princess Charlotte, Captain Duncan, and Clyde, Captain M‘Kenzie, every lawful day on the busy route to Greenock extended their sailings to include Helensburgh. Two years later, on May 26, 1817.—“The Marion steamboat will commence sailing to-morrow for Greenock and Helensburgh, and every lawful day at 8 o’clock morning and on Saturday evening at 6...

Innen’s Quay—A note on Tigh-na-bruaich

on Jan 16, 2021

The origins of some of the piers and landing places on the Clyde are shrouded in mist, perhaps none more so than Tighnabruaich. The previous article on the pier cited 1843 as the date when the pier was erected. This information came from Frank Arneil Walker’s tome, “The Buildings of Scotland, Argyll and Bute,” published by Penguin in 2000, and generally an impeccable source as it accesses architectural plans that are well-dated. The plans are presented in Ian McCrorie’s book “Tighnabruaich Pier,” published by the Tighnabruaich Pier Association in 2002. Indeed the plans for the quay at Tighnabruaich were likely drawn up in 1843 for the Castle Steamboat Company, but the construction of the pier was a year or so later. In the Glasgow Herald in February 1844, there is an advertisement for feuing of the shore at Over Innens that mentions the ferry at Tigh-na-Bruaich, and a year or so later,...

Roseneath and Kilcreggan

on Dec 24, 2020

The ferry at Roseneath was in existence long before steamboats graced the waters of the Gareloch. William Mauchan in his book “Rosneath Past and Present,” (Alexander Gardner, Paisley, 1893) recalls that the boat was large open wherry that was generally put under sail and took, sheep, cattle, horses and farm produce as well as passengers to Greenock. A similar craft was operated from the more exposed village of Kilcreggan by the M‘Farlane family of ferrymen. The Duke of Argyll used a six-oared barge to cross from Roseneath to Cairndhu between Row (Rhu) and Helensburgh, across the mouth of the Gareloch. The Helensburgh and Gareloch steamboats called at Roseneath Ferry, lying off the Ferry Inn, but it was expansion of feuing that brought about the promise of new piers to encourage the construction of summer residences for the affluent of Glasgow. In the Glasgow Herald of March 16, 1846,...

The Greenock and Helensburgh Steamboat Company

on Nov 26, 2020

The Clyde in 1865 had seen the long-awaited opening of the Wemyss Bay Railway that was expected to provide a convenient terminus for sailings to Rothesay, Largs, Millport, and Arran. The Largs, Millport and Arran routes had been the province of the steamers of Captain Duncan M‘Kellar and his sons, John and Alex, sailing from Glasgow. Anticipating the competition from the Railway, their steamers had been sold; their two flyers, Jupiter and Juno, going to the Confederates to run the blockade. However, the expected strong competition from the railway owned steamers did not immediately materialize, largely through mismanagement, and there were opportunities for an enterprising steamboat owner. On the north bank of the Clyde, the railway had reached Helensburgh in 1858 and efforts had been made to improve the town’s pier. Again, the coming of the railway had resulted in a running-down of...