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Description: | Scale: 1:38.4. Waterline model of the 'Great Britain' (1843), a single-screw passenger liner. Built plank on frame to exhibition standard. The model is decked, fully equipped, rigged with sails furled, and complete with scale figures. The hull is inscribed with ?The Great Britain? on stern, ?Mon Droit? on port and starboard bow trail boards. It is also rigged with two flags, flying a ?GB? on topsail pennant and the red ensign from the peak of the mizzen gaff. The hull and deck has a number of sections cut away to show the layout of both the machinery in the engine room and passenger accommodation. To give an idea of scale, a number of figures are displayed on board throughout.
Designed by the famous engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel, the ?Great Britain? was built at Bristol by the Great Western Steamship Company and launched in 1843. The hull was constructed of riveted iron and measured 322 feet in length by 48 feet in the beam and had a tonnage of 2936 gross. In addition to the five-masted sailing rig, it was fitted with a single-screw steam engine capable of producing a speed of 12 knots.
The ?Great Britain? was the first large iron ship built as a transatlantic liner and the first to be screw-propelled. On her first voyage to New York, she carried 60 first-class passengers, together with a full complement of steerage passengers and a cargo of 600 tons. Later, she was employed as a cargo and passenger ship to Australia, and after a total of 40 years service, she was damaged in a severe gale off Cape Horn in 1884, beached at Port Stanley and subsequently used as a coal hulk. In 1970, it was decided to bring the hulk back to Bristol for restoration. ?Great Britain? is currently displayed in the original building dock and open to the public.
CA: AAA.
Designed by the famous engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel, the Great Britain was built at Bristol by the Great Western Steamship Company and launched in 1843. The hull was constructed of riveted iron and measured 322 feet in length by 48 feet in the beam and had a tonnage of 2936 gross. In addition to the five-masted sailing rig, it was fitted with a single-screw steam engine capable of producing a speed of 12 knots.
The Great Britain was the first large iron ship built as a transatlantic liner and the first to be screw-propelled. On her first voyage to New York, she carried 60 first-class passengers, together with a full complement of steerage passengers and a cargo of 600 tons. Later, she was employed as a cargo and passenger ship to Australia, and after a total of 40 years service, she was damaged in a severe gale off Cape Horn in 1884, beached at Port Stanley and subsequently used as a coal hulk. In 1970, it was decided to bring the hulk back to Bristol for restoration. Great Britain is currently displayed in the original building dock and open to the public.
caption: SS Great britain 1843 - port broadside
caption: SS Great britain 1843 - starboard broadside
caption: SS Great britain 1843 - bow three quarter
caption: SS Great britain 1843 - stern quarter
caption: Detail of deck view snowing cutaway to saloon and engine room
caption: Stern detail
caption: Model of the SS Great Britain in 1843 - Bow to Stern view
caption: Great Britain Model - detail of stern
caption: Model of Great Britain - detail of port 3/4 broadside | Publisher: | "http://collections.rmg.co.uk/" | Rights holder: | "Royal Museums Greenwich" | Subjects: | Greenwich Great Britain 1843 Ship models : their purpose and development from 1650 to the present : illustrated from the ship model collection of the National Maritime Museum waterline models The National Maritime Museum - The Collections models (representations) | Source: | Royal Museums Greenwich | Identifier: | http://collections.rmg.co.uk/collections... | Go to resource |
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