After a disastrous year in 1927, the shipping empire of David MacBrayne was reorganized as David MacBrayne (1928) Ltd., becoming part of a combined Coast Lines and L.M.S. Railway enterprise. Part of the reorganization involved the construction of four new vessels for the west highland and island trade, and the first of these, the steamer Lochness, entered service in 1929 and has been featured in a previous article on the Stornoway route. Following the steamship Lochness, the company ordered two motor sister ships from the Ardrossan Dockyard Company towards the end of 1929. The Lochearn was launched April 29, 1930, and her sister, Lochmor, launched two weeks later on May 15. The ships were relatively short at 156 feet in length by 29 feet in the beam and 9 ft depth. They were powered by a twin set of Gardiner motors generating 600 b.h.p. and driving two screws. It had been planned that...