Shipbuilding in Frindsbury
Frindsbury TQ744697 is a parish on the River Medway, on the opposite bank to Chatham Dockyard in Kent, England. It was a centre of ship building before 1820, building at least six 74 gun third rate ships of the line and many smaller vessels. From 1820, until recent times, the ship yards built over 100 Thames sailing barges. Shipbuilding stopped but in 2006, one yard was still active in ship repair.
Ships
Quarry House Yard
Edward Greaves and Nicholson set up at the Quarry House yard in c.1745. The full list of ships built is unknown but two of the later ones were:- 1785 —32 gun frigate was part of a squadron off the coast of Genoa in 1794 under the command of Captain Horatio Nelson.
- 1786 —74 gun designed by Sir Thomas Slade. Laid down in 1783, she was launched on 6 October 1786 and commissioned on 19 July 1790. Nicknamed the "Billy Ruffian". She destroyed the French flagship L'Orient at the Battle of the Nile. Fought at Trafalgar. On 15 July 1815 she received the surrender of Napoleon Bonaparte. She was renamed Captivity and served as a prison hulk off Sheerness. She was sold to breakers at Plymouth for £4030 and broken up in 1834. The construction of the Bellerophon features in a by the American Imagist poet Amy Lowell.
they lost their shipyards and all their other businesses. It had been thought that Josiah and Thomas Brindley were nephews of Lord Nelson but the Nelson family has said there is no relationship.
- 1794 —16 gun
- 1794 —12 gun
- 1794 —12 gun
- 1803 —36 gun – commissioned in September 1803, and wrecked 10 December 1803.
- 1804 —12 gun
- 1804 —12 gun
- 1805 —38 gun
- 1806 —38 gun – Launched 5 May 1806, HMS Shannon, commanded by Captain Philip Broke, received the surrender of the USS Chesapeake in Boston Bay on 1 June 1813, after a fight of 15 minutes.
- 1807 —74 gun
- 1808 —10 gun
- 1809 —18 gun
- 1809 —18 gun
- 1810 —74 gun
- 1811 —74 gun
- 1811 transport
- 1813 —36 gun
- 1813 —36 gun
- 1813 —20 gun
- 1814 —20 gun
- 1814 —26 gun
- 1814 —26 gun
- 1794 —16 gun
- 1796 —18 gun
- 1797 —12 gun
- 1797 —12 gun
- 1807 —36 gun
- 1808 —10 gun
- 1808 —10 gun
- 1809 —18 gun
- 1809 —18 gun
- 1812 —20 gun
- 1812 —58 gun
- 1801 —10 gun
- 1801 —10 gun
- 1801 —10 gun
- 1801 —10 gun
- 1801 —10 gun
- 1809 —18 gun
- 1809 —18 gun
- 1809 —74 gun third rate ship of the line.
- 1810 —10 gun
- 1810 —12 gun
- 1810 —Cutter
- 1810 - merchant ship that twice transported convicts to Van Diemen's Land
- 1812 —18 gun
- 1812 —18 gun
- 1812 —74 gun
- 1813 —36 gun
- 1814 —20 gun
Barge Building
Frindsbury was an important centre for building of Thames sailing barges, using the land vacated by the shipbuilders. Barges were needed for many reasons; on the Medway it was for cement, brick and lime.Curel's
- In c. 1820 the lease of Quarry Yard,, passed to John Curel. George H. Curel took over the business around 1870. He expanded the yard in 1887 leasing the yard by Strood Basin.
Little
- William Burgess Little
- James Little
- Gill Family, George Gill, of Cheetham Gill and Company. Canal shipyard.
- LRTC- Crescent Shipping- Canal Road, this yard was still operating in 2006, being used for ship repair.
List of Barges
Here are some Frindsbury-built barges grouped by their owners. From 1870 to 1990 the Register of Shipping shows just over 100 Frindsbury Built Barges.Phoenix Portland Cement Company, Frindsbury.
- Hawk—43 ton
- Cerf—58 ton
- Phoenix—51 ton
- Robert Bladen—33 ton
- Eliza—41 ton
- Sara—39 ton
- Pink—43 ton
- Queen—43 ton
- Neptune—40 ton
- Whitewall—37 ton
- Vauxhall—40 ton
- Eclipse—39 ton
- Margaret Louise—45 ton
- Ella Vicars—43 ton
- James—42 ton
- John—40 ton
- Ann—40 ton
- Varnes—41 ton
- The Gun—44 ton
- William—41 ton
- John—38 ton
- William—39 ton
- Overcomer—44 ton
- Monkwood—46 ton
- Ninety Nine—57 ton
- John Tinworth—43 ton
- William and Sarah—41 ton
- George—45 ton
- Ambrose—40 ton
- Bella—35 ton
- Edward and William—40 ton
- Stratford—42 ton
- Stanley Margretts—44 ton
- Cecil Margretts—46 ton
- Harold Margretts—45 ton
- Gundulph—44 ton
- Sarah—38 ton
- Flower of Kent—44 ton
- Trent—42 ton
- Ada Mary—41 ton
- Alumina—60 ton
- Mosquito—40 ton
- William Bennet—42 ton
- 1845 George and Eliza
- 1852 Frederick and Mary Ann
- 1857 Ann and Frances
- 1862 Arthur and Eliza
- 1872 Onward
- 1876 Atlanta
- 1879 Hawk
- 1881 Banff
- 1884 Plover
- 1886 ''Snipe''