Everything about Ss Great Eastern totally explained
The
SS Great Eastern was an iron sailing steam ship designed by
Isambard Kingdom Brunel. She was the largest ship ever built at the time of her 1858 launch, and had the capacity to carry 4,000 passengers around the world without refueling. She would only be surpassed in length in 1899 (by the
RMS Oceanic, and 17,274 gross tons) and in tonnage in 1901 (by the
RMS Celtic, and 21,035 gross tons). Brunel knew her affectionately as the "great babe". He died shortly after her launch in 1858.
History
Brunel entered into a partnership with
John Scott Russell, an experienced Naval Architect and ship builder, to build the
Great Eastern. Unknown to Brunel, Russell was in financial difficulties. The two men disagreed on many details. It was Brunel's final great project, and he collapsed from a stroke after being photographed on her deck, and died only ten days later, a mere four days after Great Eastern's first sea trials. About the ship, Brunel said "I have never embarked on any one thing to which I've so entirely devoted myself, and to which I've devoted so much time, thought and labour, on the success of which I've staked so much reputation."
The Great Eastern was built by Messrs Scott Russell & Co. of
Millwall, London, the keel being laid down on
May 1,
1854. She was finally launched —after many technical difficulties— on
January 31,
1858. She was 211 m (692 ft) long, 25 m (83 ft) wide, with a
draft of 6.1 m (20 ft) unloaded and 9.1 m (30 ft) fully laden, and displaced 32,000 tons fully loaded. In comparison, SS
Persia, launched in 1856, was 119 m (390 ft) long with a 14 m (45 ft) beam. She was at first named the SS
Leviathan, but her high building and launching costs ruined the Eastern Steam Navigation Company and so she lay unfinished for a year before being sold to the Great Eastern Ship Company and finally renamed SS
Great Eastern. It was decided she'd be more profitable on the
Southampton–
New York run, and she was outfitted accordingly. Her eleven-day
maiden voyage began on
June 17,
1860, with 35 paying passengers, 8 company "" (passengers who don't pay) and 418 crew.
The hull was an all-iron construction, a double hull of 19 mm (0.75 inch) wrought iron in 0.86 m (2 ft 10
in) plates with ribs every 1.8 m (6 ft). Internally the hull was divided by two 107 m (350 ft) long, 18 m (60 ft) high, longitudinal bulkheads and further transverse bulkheads dividing the ship into nineteen compartments. The
Great Eastern was the first ship to incorporate the
double-skinned hull, a feature which wouldn't be seen again in a ship for 100 years, but which is now compulsory for reasons of safety. She had sail, paddle and screw propulsion. The paddle-wheels were 17 m (56 ft) in diameter and the four-bladed screw-propeller was 7.3 m (24 ft) across. The power came from four steam engines for the paddles and an additional engine for the
propeller. Total power was estimated at 6 MW (8,000
hp). She had six masts (said to be named after the days of a week - Monday being the fore mast and Saturday the
spanker mast), providing space for 1,686
m2 (18,148 square feet) of sails (7 gaff and max. 9 (usually 4) square sails), rigged similar to a topsail schooner with a main gaff sail (
fore-and-aft sail) on each mast, one "jib" on the fore mast and three square sails on masts no. 2 and no. 3 (Tuesday & Wednesday); for a time mast no. 4 was also fitted with three yards (3 m). In later years, some of the yards were removed. According to some sources (see External links) she'd have carried 5,435 m² (58,502 sq ft). This amount of canvas is obviously too much for seven fore-and-aft sails and max. 9 square sails. This (larger) figure of sail area lies only a few square meters below that the famous
Flying P-Liner Preussen carried - with her five full-rigged masts of 30 square sails and a lot of stay sails. Setting sails turned out to be unusable at the same time as the paddles and screw were under steam, because the hot exhaust from the five (later four) funnels would set them on fire. Her maximum speed was 24 km/h (13
knots).
Two people were killed in the difficult sideways-launch of the
Great Eastern, and the ship became known to some as the unlucky ship. She was involved in a series of accidents, including an unfortunate incident in which an overheated steam pipe launched funnel no. 1 like a
rocket, killing a crew member and five boiler men in the process. It was caused by a valve being left shut by accident after a pressure test of the system. The maiden voyage from Southampton to
New York began on
17 June 1860. Among the 35 passengers, eight officials and a crew of 418, were two journalists,
Zerah Colburn and
Alexander Lyman Holley.
The vessel was sold for £25,000 (her build cost has been estimated at £500,000) and converted into a cable-laying ship. Funnel no. 4 and some boilers were removed as well as great parts of the passenger rooms and saloons to give way to open top tanks for taking up the coiled cable. She laid 4,200 km (2,600
statute miles) of the 1865
transatlantic telegraph cable. Under Captain
Robert Halpin, from 1866 to 1878 the ship laid over 48,000 km (26,000
nautical miles) of submarine telegraph cable including from
Brest, France to
Saint Pierre and Miquelon in 1869, and from
Aden to
Bombay in 1869 and 1870.
Notable accidents
The accident of December 1861
This accident was caused by breaking of the main rudder shaft. One of the passengers on the ship, an American engineer by the name of Hamilton Ela Towle who was returning to the states after completing his contract working as a supervising engineer on the
Danube River dry-docks in Austria, was instrumental in saving the ship. He devised a sort of spider gear on a sling that could be lowered down into the rudder shaft well and was used to remove the broken rudder shaft. Without this device the ship's crew wouldn't have been able to remove the broken rudder shaft. Mr. Towle claimed that his effort saved the ship, and filed a claim under the laws of salvage to receive compensation for his efforts. The case was taken to court, and Mr. Towle was awarded the sum of $15,000, which was quite a considerable sum for that period. The
Scientific American published an account of the incident and a description of Mr. Towle's device. It is uncertain if Mr. Towle ever actually received any of the money awarded to him by the court.
The Great Eastern Rock
On
August 27 1862, the
Great Eastern suffered an accident similar to that of the
Titanic, but didn't sink. She scraped on an uncharted rock needle (afterwards named the
Great Eastern Rock) a mile east of
Montauk, New York on
Long Island, opening a gash in the outer hull over wide and long. However, the
Great Eastern's inner hull was unbroken, and she made her way into New York the next day under her own steam. Nobody was hurt, indeed the passengers never even knew what had happened. A smaller rip sank the Titanic. The enormous size of the
Great Eastern precluded the use of any drydock repair facility in the US, and the brothers Henry and
Edward S. Renwick devised a daring plan to build a watertight
cofferdam. Repairs took five months.
Because of this accident, some analysts claim that the
Titanic wasn't so much an unsinkable ship, but rather a symbol of the diminishing safety standards of the late 19th century.
In October 2007, the recovery of a anchor in of water about four miles (6 km) from the rock has stirred speculation that it may have belonged to the Great Eastern.
Break up
At the end of her cable laying career she was refitted once again as a liner but once again efforts to make her a commercial success failed. She was used as a showboat, a floating palace/concert hall and gymnasium. By the time she was sold piecemeal at auction in 1888 she'd become an embarrassment.
She was broken up for scrap at
Rock Ferry on the
River Mersey by
Henry Bath & Son Ltd
in 1889–1890 —it took 18 months to take her apart.
While it's rumoured that a skeleton was found inside the
Great Eastern's double hull, the same thing has been said of the
Titanic and the
Hoover Dam (among others); and inspection hatches in the inner hull would have provided an easy escape. The ship was the subject of one programme in the
BBC documentary series
Seven Wonders of the Industrial World which repeated the tale about two dead bodies in the hull, including a child worker, presenting it as fact (even though stating it as a rumour). An episode of
Haunted History also implied that the find of the skeleton was indeed factual. One of the narrators of the segment read an article published from the time when the
Great Eastern was being dismantled. The article stated that the workers broke into a compartment in the inner shell on the port side, and did find a skeleton. The idea of one or more skeletons sealed inside the hull traces back to the construction of the
Great Eastern, when it was discovered that two of the riveters, a worker and his apprentice, had mysteriously vanished. It was believed that they'd been sealed on the inside by accident.
Liverpool Football Club were looking for a flag pole for their
Anfield ground, at the time of her local break up and consequently purchased the top mast. It still stands there today, at the
Kop end.
Further Information
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