View from ESE showing ferry and NNE front of terminal
SC 791101
Description View from ESE showing ferry and NNE front of terminal
Date 1979
Collection Papers of Professor John R Hume, economic and industrial historian, Glasgow, Scotland
Catalogue Number SC 791101
Category On-line Digital Images
Scope and Content Kelvinhaugh Wharf, Kelvinhaugh Ferry, Glasgow, from east This view from the east, taken in 1979, shows one of the small, diesel-engined, double-ended ferry boats as spare boat at Kelvinhaugh. It is No 8, built in 1951 by H McLean & Sons Ltd at Renfrew. To the right are the transit sheds of the Anchor Line quay at Yorkhill. The cranes are in the Fairfield Shipyard. The establishment of this ferry coincided with the start of the development of Yorkhill Quay, built partly on the site of the Kelvinhaugh Slip Dock. The decline of trade in the upper Clyde docks led to the closure of this, the last of the pedestrian ferries, in the early 1980s. As Glasgow Harbour expanded in the 19th and early 20th centuries the Clyde Navigation Trust provided a number of passenger and vehicular ferries, as bridges were impractical. The Kelvinhaugh Ferry was one of the last pedestrian ferries to be established, in about 1900. Source: RCAHMS contribution to SCRAN.
External Reference CTH29
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/collection/791101
File Format (TIF) Tagged Image File Format bitmap
Attribution: © HES. Reproduced courtesy of J R Hume
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