Mr. Thomas Bollen Seath was well acquainted with Clyde shipping by the time he set up a shipbuilding concern at Meadowside in Partick in the middle of the 1850s. He had been associated with captain M‘Kellar’s Millport and Arran steamers for a number of years. His second ship was the Nelson, a small steamer that inherited the engines of the ill-fated Eclipse that was wrecked on the Gantocks. The third and last steamer he built at Partick was named the Artizan and it is about this vessel that this article first focuses. In 1856, Seath sold his yard at Meadowside and moved to a new location in Rutherglen, well above the weir on the Clyde that demarcated the extent of the harbour of Glasgow. There he planned to build ships of a size limited by the depth of the river and the tricky negotiation of the weir, something Messrs Seath & Co. accomplished with considerable success for almost...