5543 x 4412 px | 46,9 x 37,4 cm | 18,5 x 14,7 inches | 300dpi
Data acquisizione:
20 agosto 2012
Ubicazione:
Ayr, Firth of Clyde. Ayrshire. Scotland. United Kingdom.
Altre informazioni:
PS Waverley is named after Sir Walter Scott's first novel. She was built in 1946 as a replacement for an earlier PS Waverley of 1899 that took part in the WW II war effort as a minesweeper and was sunk in 1940 while helping with the evacuation of troops from Dunkirk. The new 693-tonne steamer was launched in October 1946 at builders A. & J. Inglis, Glasgow, and entered service in June 1947. She was built for the London and North Eastern Railway to sail on their Firth of Clyde steamer route from Craigendoran Pier, near Helensburgh, up Loch Long to Arrochar, and in her first year in service she wore that company's red, white and black funnel colours. Listed as part of the National Historic Fleet, Core Collection, [3] between 2000 and 2003 the ship underwent a substantial rebuild and reboilering, funded principally by the Heritage Lottery Fund. The work was done in two stages at the shipyard of George Prior at Great Yarmouth and has succeeded in returning the ship to her original 1946 livery with the inclusion of many 21st Century safety and technological improvements. In 2009 the ship was affiliated with HMS Defender, having hosted the official dignitary party at Defender’s launch on the River Clyde. And in 2011 the ship was awarded the Institution of Mechanical Engineers 65th Engineering Heritage Award.