TSMV Brading

TSMV Brading was a passenger ferry that operated between Portsmouth and the Isle of Wight between 1948 and 1986.[1]

Sealink ferry Brading
History
United Kingdom
Name: TSMV Brading
Operator:
Builder: William Denny and Brothers, Dumbarton
Yard number: 1412
Launched: 11 March 1948
Completed: October 1948
In service: 2 December 1948
Out of service: 21 February 1986
Identification: IMO number: 5050050
Fate: Scrapped
General characteristics
Class and type: Twin Screw Motor Vessel Passenger Ferry
Tonnage: 988
Length: 200 feet (61 m)
Beam: 46 feet (14 m)
Draught: 7 feet (2.1 m)
Propulsion: 2 x Sulzer 8 MD 32 two-stroke 950 bhp diesel engines
Speed: 14.5 knots
Capacity: 1135
Crew: 33

Background and construction

Following the Second World War, Southern Railway, which operated passenger and vehicle ferry services to the Isle of Wight, decided to supplement and replace the existing coal burning paddle steamers that operated on the Portsmouth to Ryde route with modern twin screw diesel powered vessels.

Initial plans, incorrectly based on a predicted downward trend in passenger numbers, were to order the construction of two such vessels. These were to be the identical ships Southsea and Brading built by William Denny and Brothers in Dumbarton on Clydeside. They were launched on 11 March 1948[2] and went into service with British Railways, Brading being the second to enter service, on 2 December 1948. One of the existing paddle steamers, Merstone, was replaced (two having been sunk during World War Two) and four were retained initially. The two ships were the first on the route to be fitted with radar which quickly proved itself in foggy conditions that had previously left the Isle of Wight cut off from the mainland.[2]

Increasing numbers of passengers quickly led to the order for a third sister ship, Shanklin, in 1951. She entered service as a one-class ship and her two sisters became one-class at the same time. The ships all received a major overhaul in 1967 with an extra passenger deck, as a continuation of the bridge deck, and improved seating and catering facilities.[2]

Brading and Southsea outlasted their newer sister on the Portsmouth to Ryde run, being replaced in 1986 by new catamaran-type ferries, Our Lady Pamela and Our Lady Patricia.

She was scrapped at Pounds Scrapyard in Portsmouth in the 1990s.

Incidents

On 13 May 1960 a navy liberty boat, D11, was crossing Portsmouth harbour from Gosport to HMS Vernon with civilian workers on the way home. In attempting to avoid a yacht entering harbour it was run down by Brading on its way to Ryde. Four people from the boat were killed.[3]

gollark: There are just so many of them.
gollark: Deservolcanocoasjungleforesalpine?
gollark: Magic!
gollark: ***BANNED***
gollark: π Maybe it's for attention.

See also

British Railways ships
Wightlink

Notes

  1. "M/S BRADING". Retrieved 31 December 2018.
  2. Hendy, John (1989). Sealink Isle of Wight. Kent: Ferry Publications. pp. 30–35. ISBN 0 9513093 3 1.
  3. "960: Four died as navy liberty boat collided with ferry in harbour". The News. Retrieved 20 February 2019.
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