Albion (wherry) explained

Albion is a Norfolk wherry. Built in 1898, she served as a trading vessel and then as a lighter, until being acquired by the Norfolk Wherry Trust for restoration and preservation in 1949. Since 1981 she has been moored at the Norfolk Wherry Trust wherry base at Womack Water near Ludham. She is listed on the register of National Historic Ships in the United Kingdom as part of the National Historic Fleet.

Appearance

Albions construction is unique amongst Norfolk trading wherries as she is carvel built (smooth hulled), whereas all others are clinker built. Apart from her hull construction, her general appearance follows that of a typical trading wherry with a forward counterbalanced mast of Oregon pine, a large cargo hold in the centre of the hull and crew quarters aft. She is steered from a small aft well by rudder and tiller.

Albions registered tonnage is 22.78 and her length overall is 65feet with a 58feet hull. Her beam is 15feet and she draws 4feet. Her mast is 42feet tall. Her sail area is 1200square feet.

History

Albion was built by William 'Billy' Brighton at his shipyard on Lake Lothing between Oulton Broad and Lowestoft for W.D. and A.E. Walker, a firm of Bungay maltsters. She cost £455 to build and was launched in October 1898 in a livery of green with a brown oxide top.[1] Her crew consisted a man and a boy.

Albion was nearly lost in January 1929 when she sank near Great Yarmouth Bridge, but was raised 3 days later. She had a further mishap in 1931 when she lost her mast but had it replaced with that of the wherry Sirius.

Shortly afterwards she was bought by the General Steam Navigation Company, which changed her name to Plane and appointed a new master, George Farrow, who remained with her until the Second World War when she was stripped down and used as a lighter.[1] Albion was allocated the United Kingdom Official Number 148735.

Although designed to carry 36LT of cargo, she is recorded as carrying 41LT of cargo on one occasion. In normal service, Albion made 3to, with 7to being considered her normal maximum. It is rumored that she achieved 9to in a race on Breydon Water when her mast snapped.

In 1949 she was acquired by the then newly formed Norfolk Wherry Trust which renamed her Albion, restored her and operated her full-time as a trading wherry until 1953 when, unable to support a full-time crew, Albions hold was swept out and she spent summers as a crewed charter accommodating groups of young people sleeping in hammocks. She continued to ply as a trading wherry. However, after sinking a further two times, it was recognised that this was economically unsustainable and in 1961 the Trust decided that Albion would never carry 'dirty' cargo again.[1]

In 2010, Albion was awarded the runner-up position by National Historic Ships in its annual Flagship competition. An award of £250 was made to the Norfolk Wherry Trust in recognition of this.[2] Albion flew a pennant during the 2010 season denoting this achievement.[3]

Albion's Known Masters[4] ! Name !! Dates
Jimmy Lacey 1898 - 1900
Jack Powley 1900 - c1920
George Farrow1931 - c1940

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Martin Kirby . Albion; the Story of the Norfolk Trading Wherry . Norfolk Wherry Trust.
  2. Web site: 75 year old yacht becomes National Flagship . National Historic Ships . 19 May 2010 . 22 September 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20101003094831/http://www.nationalhistoricships.org.uk/news.php/97/75-year-old-yacht-becomes-national-flagship . 3 October 2010 . dead.
  3. Web site: News. Norfolk Wherry Trust. 22 September 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20100902052703/http://www.wherryalbion.com/albion/news.shtml. 2 September 2010.
  4. Web site: Albion's working life. Norfolk Wherry Trust. 22 September 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20100823192443/http://www.wherryalbion.com/history/albionworkinglife.shtml. 23 August 2010.