London's Thames & ROYAL DOCKS cruise 1966
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- čas přidán 8. 09. 2024
- Aboard one of a pair of London’s tourist trip boats we travel from Tower Pier down-river to enter and explore the Royal group of docks.
Back in the 1960s the River Thames and its docks were busy with cargo ships and barges. Since then the container revolution and road traffic congestion have lead to London’s docks becoming disused.
The docks seem rather quiet as this was filmed at the weekend, and back then dockers didn't work at weekends.
The ground between King George the Fifth and Royal Albert Docks has since become London City Airport, and the ExCel Exhibition Centre occupies much of the north side of Royal Victoria Dock.
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Great film. I was born in 66, so don't have a memory of 'this' London. Wish I did.
What a perfect moment to capture London at and at the perfect angle too. A city with a foot in two eras. Thank you!
Don't remember it but already miss it.
So glad to see my old ship “ Taupo “ New Zealand Shipping Co , I sailed on her to NZ and then up to Japan and back ! Then off to Africa and the Med . Happy days as an Engineer .
Brings back so many memories of shipping out of the Royal Docks on Port Line, New Zealand Shipping Company, and Shaw Saville. Thank you.
This brings back happy memories of 60 years ago as a kiwi seaman in the British merchant navy.Port line and Blue Star were two lines l sailed with.
Wonderful. Thanks so much
A lovely piece of history. My Dad (aged 71) always talks about how industrialised London was and it is more than evident in this film! My great-grandfather used to work at the East Greenwich gas works
Unfortunately we don't burn gas from Gas Works nowadays - but (when we can get it) we use Gas made from Oil - which the Rusans have lots of, but we've decided not to buy it, due to what the Russians are doing to the Ukrainians.😩🪖⚔🏴☠
No chance of doing that boat trip again, no ships to see, a whole different London and a whole different Great Britain now gone forever !
Well said you ! 😊
Thank you for the trip down memory lane, evoking the times in the 60s and 70s when I worked a number of those vessels by HF wireless from the southern end of New Zealand. The Taupo, Port Burnie, Port Adelaide, etc, plus a lot of Blue Star ships, too. Then the Box Boats took over.
I guess "Box Boats" is your name for Container Ships. How is it that one never hears of the fixig of the "Boxes" failing in a Gale ?
I can still smell the London docks after 50 years =it's something that never leaves you although the years gone.
In the 1960s most of NZ trade went to the UK.The ships in those days had character.
City of Exeter and City of St Albans were owned by Ellerman Lines. London's riverside as changed a lot but not for the better I don't think
The Taupo was a New Zealand Shipping Company vessel. I worked for them in the city and at the Royal Albert Dock in the late 60s. The red funnel with black top and white square with red cross and blue square in the centre were either New Zealand Shipping or Federal Steam Navigation vessels.
Sailed on the Taupo in the early 70's. NZSCo, Federal line was a great company to work for prior to P&O and the demise of the British Merchant Navy. A snap shot in history, thanks for sharing Snowden's
Barry - we're Snowdon-s NOT Snowden-s. A common error we've learned to put up with. But we're glad you liked it.
Dear Snowdons,
many many thanks for your outstanding videos and this one is a gem.
Your commentors Chris Hulin and Andrew Bolton are quite correct; The City vessels ( St. Albans and Exeter) were indeed ships of the Ellerman Line. (Black, White and Amber funnels)
These are fascinating records of an amazing line and indeed an amazing family. In the 1960's it was the 2nd Baronet, Sir John Ellerman in charge.
He is often recorded as being Britain's wealthiest man. He was a scientist, philanthropist and humanist as well as a shipping line chairmain. For example he and his sister managed the rescue of many Jewish people from Nazi Germany as so was even attacked by name by the infamous Lord Haw Haw during the second world war. He is succeed by his charitable foundations as he left no heirs. A much missed and noble English man.
The lovely City of St Albans was a cruise ship and curiously a refrigerated cargo vessel.
It only carried about 80 people but in exquisite luxury.
Silver service throughout. A cruise from London to Cape Town took forever but stopped at delightful ports including St. Helena.
Both vessels were built in Scotland incidentally.
This line declined as the Empire nations began to compete with Britain and containerising became normal.
The history of this line and it's family ( father and son ) who managed it from the 1800's and through both world wars is a record of determination and hard work.
Your videos brought back so many memories and a jolt of nostalgia.
Perhaps we shouldn't forget this historic treasure of a golden past of our mercantile and passenger shipping industry and the owners and captains who plied the oceans bearing our nations flag.
Many Thanks.
ML
Many Thanks for such a long and detailed comment. Shipping is a subject of which I know little.
@@AlanSnowdonArchive The funnel colours of the City Line ships were black, white and buff. The St Albans was approx 4500 tons and only carried cargo no passengers, I was 3rd mate back in the 70's. The City of Exeter was passenger carrying and worked between UK an S Africa one of Ellerman Lines 'Big 4'. A great trip down memory lane.
A superb look at our maritime and industrial past. Great viewing.
sailed out of here 1960 to 65 RANGITOTO OTAKI WAIPAIWA MENDOZA STAR CEDRIC NEWCASTLE STAR SANTOS STAR such great memories
Yes Alan, now living in Victoria BC, Canada, although when I was with Canadian Pacific in the late 60’s I lived in the UK as did all the CP crews and Officers. I emigrated to Canada in ‘74.
I enjoy Alan's movies so very much. Thank you.
Brilliant bit of nostalgia now changed beyond recognition. The Almar at about 8.40 had the look of a WW2 Liberty ship, turns out she was, ex William M Eastland, scrapped in '69.
City of Exeter also an Ellerman Lines ship, built 1953 on the Tyne
I was taken on just such a trip in that very year. I was nine.
P.S. Queen of the South was originally called Jeanie Deans and was a sister ship to P.S. Waverley (though Waverley was built sixteen years later). The funnels had the old LNER colors of red and black tops separated by a band of white between the red and the black. Unlike Waverley, Queen of the South (QoS) was manned by amateurs (except one officer who was Merchant Navy as was required by law), this included the captain (who had a masters ticket but had only done screw driven ships, paddle steamer were much more difficult to control). The ship did voyages to Southend but only completed seven trips. QoS lasted two seasons and bankrupted the owners. Waverley, which is properly crewed did a large (and still do) number of voyages over the same stretch.
I noticed the Ben Avon I sailed on her sister ship Ben Alder from the Royal Docks in 1964/65
Very cool
I worked for Scruttons Maltby in the early 70s at the muster point offices next to the Connaught pub. Outside the entrance to the royal Albert dock. Halfway up the dock Scruttons had an office at 17 shed and Ellermans were at 13 shed . Everything went to Tibury and containers .
My lovely old dad used to take me down to Erith near us in the early 60s, and there was a beautiful framed list of ships funnels, and l had to identify each one as they passed! Ten years later there was hardly any river traffic!
Vanoc
A wonderful reminder when my dad was a tug master and I used go on the tug
Seeing the rowing at Greenwich reminds me of rowing and sculling at Poplar Blackwell and District
Taupo belonged to New Zealand Shipping Co. Built 1966.
i sailed on the Taupo sister ship the West Moreland
After the gain silo, the boat passes a Canadian Pacific ‘Beaverboats’ we used to call them - Beaveroak, Beaverash, Beaverelm etc. I couldn’t read the name on the stern on that one. I served three very happy years with CP as Second Officer 1969 - 1972
So I guess you must be Canadian and watching this in Canada, am I right?
Yet another gem !! 👍 Interesting how many of the names are now stations on the Overground or DLR. Yet, when the docks were fully operational, there were few stations to serve the workforce.
I can also remember seeing HMS Belfast brought into the King George the Fifth dry dock , for painting and a refit. She was a blue green colour before being taken up to where she is now.
I sailed on the TAUPO after Vesty purchased 3 of the class and she had been renamed MANDAM my brother sailed on Tongariro and Uncle Frank Kent was Comodore Chief Engineer on the Westmorland all sister ships Happy Days!!. I went to Royal Docks on the Mataura as first trip Engineer Cadet. rgds
A most entertaining film. Well done.
Thank you.
Much busier then it was a major highway. Now I can canoe there and hardly see a soul except for the Thames clippers which do about 30 knots and make huge wash waves. But in the lock down the river is as flat as a mill pond.
City of St Albans belonged to Ellerman Lines. Built 1960.
Dunedin Star , Blue Star line, Port Townsville Port Line
Great to ponder and recall seeing Blue Star Ships and NZ Shipping Company, also Shaw Savill Office I actually tied up in King E docks twice once on MV Iberic and MV Zealandic both Shaw Savill an Albion known by seafaring lads as ( S---T Starvation and Agony )
A bit like the railway's Sand T department. Other railway departments said we were the Sick and Tired !
The City of Exeter and the City of At Alban's were both Ellerman lines ships, then the largest privately owned shiping company and run by Sir John Ellerman, the son of the founder.. Both are diesel engine ships built in the 1950s. The St. Alban's had 7 cylinder Zalzer engine and was my first ship. I went on her to Bombay Karachi in 1961.
Certainly changed a bit today!
Superb my late father in law would have been able name the lines as he worked in docks till closure for Mowlem jetty and driving posts just by hand with sledgehammer Hard Graft !!
The entire docks standing idle on a Sunday. Not a single cargo being handled. The Dockers Union signed their own death warrant.
The ship aground at 12.14 was one of the LCC sludge carriers, known as bovril boats, called the Sir Joseph Rawlinson, she had been sunk in collision, raised and converted into a cargo ship.
Very accurate commentary - well done. I spent 5 years sailing in and out of those royal docks in my youth, as a Deck Hand in the once magnificent British Merchant Navy - like the docks virtually non existent. A very happy time in my life - thanks for the memories.
It is also shown at 1.42. It sank on 9 September 1965 with the loss of 9 crew at Oaze Deep and raised in 1966.
Benavon Ben Line replaced by larger Container ship with the same name.
Port Line Cunard, Big Blue Star Line (8 years on the ships) Joined Taupo in Dubai Shaw Savill great shipping companies sadly all gone like the London Docks. 43 years at sea only a couple left for this old sea dog 👨🍳👨🍳👍👍🤣
what about more old railway videos?
It shows how much our politicians have frittered away