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Deptford Wharf

Coordinates:51°29′30″N0°01′54″W / 51.491769°N 0.031789°W /51.491769; -0.031789
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

51°29′30″N0°01′54″W / 51.491769°N 0.031789°W /51.491769; -0.031789

Ordnance Survey of Deptford Wharf 1914
Excerpt of the paintingA view from the waters of Messrs Barnard andDudman's Shipyard, Deptford by John Cleveley, exhibited by The Society of Artists, 1774

Deptford Wharf inLondon,United Kingdom, is on theThames Path southeast ofSouth Dock Marina, across theculverted mouth of theEarl's Sluice and north ofAragon Tower. In the late 18th and early 19th century this area was used for shipbuilding with severalbuilding slips. With the coming of the railway in 1848 Deptfordwharf anddocks were used to import coal and for other goods. The housing here, completed in 1992, is on the site of formerrailway sidings and riverside wharves.[1][2]

Dock and shipyard

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The river wall at Deptford Wharf

The dock built was by John Winter in 1704[3] and belonged to theEvelyn family. Described in 1726 as having a great depth of water, and as being the best private dock upon the river.[4][5][6]

Slipway remains and the culverted mouth of the Earl's Sluice.

William Dudman established the yard. To complete some contracts he went into partnership withHenry Adams ofBucklers Hard and William Barnard ofIpswich. When William died in 1772 his son John Dudman took over. From about 1808, the yard was shown as Dudman & Son. By 1814, the yard had five building slips and two double dry docks.[7][8]

Between 1783 and 1812, they built 23 warships and twoEast Indiamen. From about 1825, Gordon & Co shipbuilders ran the yard. Then in 1838, it was owned by A. Gordon.[7] Gordon built a number of small steamships (typically 50 to 100 tons), and then sold up in 1842. The sale included "a valuable freehold and leashold wharf with 128 feet river frontage" as well as foundry, warehouses, engine house, yard and other items associated with their shipbuilding business.[9]

In March 1846, theLondon and Croydon Railway announced they had "made arrangements for possession of a large wharf and dock adjoining Her Majesty's victualling yard at Deptford".[10] Later that year a merger of railway companies meant this became a project of theLondon, Brighton and South Coast Railway (LB&SCR), who in 1848 reported the purchase from the Surrey Dock Company had given them "400 feet of river frontage; a wharf of 500 feet at which they would be able to discharge 15 or 16 ships at a time". With the building of a railway branch (see below) and associated infrastructure Deptford Wharf became a thriving commercial dock, and c1900 a new jetty was built into the wet dock, and covered wharfage provided for goods that would be spoiled by rain.

The rail link was lost in the early 1960s, in a period when all usage of the Surrey Docks was in decline following the move to larger vessels and to containerised transport of goods. Eventually this led to the Deptford docks being filled in and the area being redeveloped, with the emphasis being on housing. Main article :Surrey Commercial Docks

By 1807, the wet dock was in use forconvict transports by ship toAustralia.[11]

Ships built at Deptford Wharf

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This is not a complete list of the ships built at Dudman's yard.

NameDateNotes
HMSCarnatic1783Paid for by the East India Company, presented to the Navy
HMSPhoebe1795
HMSSirius1797
HMSLady Nelson[12]1798
HMSNorthumberland1798
HMSRenown1798
HMSApollo1799
HMSAmaranthe1804
HMSManly1804
HMSCalypso1805
HMSSultan1807
HMSRoyal Oak1809
HMSDuncan1811
HMSIndus1812
Princess Charlotte1812East Indiaman[13]
Duke of Sussex1826East Indiaman, builder Mr Gordon[14]
Queen Adelaide1830West Indiaman, builder Mr Gordon, slip at St George's stairs[15]

Railways

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A 1908Railway Clearing House map showing the LB&SC line from New Cross to Deptford Wharf

The project to own a wharf and build a branch line to it came from theLondon and Croydon Railway, who in March 1846 announced they had "made arrangements for possession of a large wharf and dock adjoining Her Majesty's victualling yard at Deptford"..."and a bill is now before parliament to enable the company to construct a line from thence to New Cross".[16] They referred to the branch line as the "Thames Junction Branch". Later that year a merger of railway companies meant this became a project of theLondon, Brighton and South Coast Railway (LB&SCR).

In 1846, the board of the LB&SCR requested Chief EngineerRobert Jacomb-Hood to construct a branch line fromNew Cross to the River Thames at Deptford, where he was to also design, survey and manage the construction of a new dock system. Jacomb-Hood instructed his recently appointed assistantFrederick Banister to design, survey and manage the construction of the branch line and dock, which was completed in 1849.[17]

The reception and marshalling sidings were separated from the docks by Grove Street and this crossing was controlled by crossing gates that had to cross 5 tracks, some of the widest level crossing gates in the country.[18]

The ordnance survey map for 1894/5 shows a dockyard branch North to the granary onGreenland Dock, and the 1913 map shows a branch added South running along the centre of Grove Street to theHM Victualling Yard, Deptford opposite Junction Road (which had its own internal tramway), and to the adjacentForeign Cattle Market (under an act of 1869 imported live cattle had to be slaughtered at the port to prevent cattle diseases being brought into the country). The Grove Street rail link was planned in 1871 (when the cattle market opened), but was not built until 1899.[19] It was owned by London Corporation, and was referred to as the Grove Street Light Railway in an application in 1902 to widen the gap between rail and check rail.[20] Several photos exist of the unusual sight of a steam locomotive (LB&SCR D1 class) and wagons travelling down the middle of this residential street. The import of live cattle dropped dramatically in 1912 due to changes in the law, and in 1914 the foreign cattle market with its 23 acres and 360 yards of river side wharves and jetties, and its rail link, was sold back to the War Office (the site was originally part of the Navy Victualling yard).[21]

The dock included two berths for colliers of up to 2500 tons capacity, and coal fromNewcastle upon Tyne was regularly unloaded and moved by rail to the gas works atWaddon Marsh (and other smaller gas making facilities). Other goods were transferred to and fromNew Cross Marshalling yard before despatch around the country.[18]

Deptford Wharf was visited by a rail tour in 1958, which showed that the docks and railway were still in active use, and the branch down Grove Street to the victualling yard was still connected.[22] However, the victualling yard was closed in June 1961, and the rail branch serving Deptford docks was closed a year or two later with the tracks being lifted in 1963.

References

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  1. ^Plaque at entrance to Tariff Crescent
  2. ^Banbury, Philip (1971).Shipbuilders of the Thames and Medway. Newton Abbot:David & Charles. p. 127.ISBN 0715349961.
  3. ^"Greenwich Industrial History, Volume 3, Issue 3, April 2000". Archived fromthe original on 5 January 2015. Retrieved9 March 2013.
  4. ^In the 1726 grant from Sir Frederic Evelyn to Sir John Evelyn.
  5. ^The Environs of London, volume 4, Counties of Herts, Essex & Kent, Deptford, St Paul by Daniel Lysons, 1796, pp. 386-393.
  6. ^A topographical dictionary of England by Samuel Lewis, 1831
  7. ^abBuilding Britain's Wooden Walls: Barnard Dynasty c.1697-1851 by John Barnard,ISBN 0904614638
  8. ^Deptford Ship Builders circa 1798 forum post at Rootsweb
  9. ^"Messrs Ellis and Son auction advert".West Kent Guardian. London. 15 October 1842. p. 1.
  10. ^"London and Croydon Railway".Saint James's Chronicle. London. 12 March 1846.
  11. ^Diprose, Graham; Craig, Charles; Seaborne, Mike (2009).London's Changing Riverscape: Panoramas from London Bridge to Greenwich.Frances Lincoln.ISBN 978-0711229419.
  12. ^True Briton (London, England), Saturday, 17 November 1798; Issue 1842
  13. ^"Untitled".Morning Post. London. 31 January 1812. p. 2.
  14. ^"Launch of an East Indiaman".Morning Post. London. 14 August 1830. p. 3.
  15. ^"Launch of the Queen Adelaide West Indiaman".Lancaster Gazette. London. 18 December 1826. p. 3.
  16. ^"London and Croydon Railway".Saint James's Chronicle. London. 12 March 1846.
  17. ^"Federick Dale Banister".GracesGuide.co.uk. Retrieved10 February 2013.
  18. ^abRugman, W.J. (July 1973). "Deptford Wharf in the 1920s".Railway World. UK: Ian Allan.
  19. ^"London, Brighton, and South Coast Railway".Morning Post. London. 20 January 1871. p. 3.
  20. ^"Grove Street Light Railway".Woolwich Gazette. London. 24 January 1902.
  21. ^"Deptford Market".Globe. London. 5 August 1914. p. 8.
  22. ^Freeman, Leslie R. (12 March 2021)."The RCTS London River Rail Tour".Steam Days (April Edition).

Further reading

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  • Building Britain's Wooden Walls: Barnard Dynasty c.1697–1851 by John Barnard,ISBN 0904614638
  • Shipbuilders of the Thames & Medway by Philip Banbury,ISBN 9780715349960

External links

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