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Port of Ipswich

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Major port in Suffolk, England

The Port of Ipswich from theOrwell Bridge. The tidal quays at the port of Ipswich include Cliff Quay to the right and the West Bank Terminal to the left.

ThePort of Ipswich can be dated to c.625. The nameIpswich was originally Gippeswyc,[1] referring to theRiver Gyppes with a suffix derived from the Scandinavian term vik, which had evolved from meaning bay or inlet to mean landing-place, following the proliferation of merchants requiring places to unload their goods and conduct trade.[2] Since 1997 the port has been run byAssociated British Ports.[3]

History

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Early Middle Ages, 7th century to 1066

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The Port of Ipswich emerged in theEarly Middle Ages. A wharf was in operation in Ipswich on a bend in theRiver Orwell in the 8th century, and was probably established during the 7th century under the protection of theWuffingas, the ruling house of theKingdom of East Anglia. Steven Plunkett has suggested that the founding of Gipeswic was associated with the reign ofRædwald (died c.624) and that it reflected his personal importance during the period of his supremacy.[4]

The importance of this wharf, and the town which grew up around it, has been recognised through excavation over the past fifty years. The early town of Ipswich (then called Gipeswic), centred upon the quay, extended over more than 52 hectares, the area later enclosed by theViking Age ramparts (which curtailed the Anglo-Saxon township), making it one of the largest new early post-Roman townships andemporia in northern Europe.[5] Imported pottery of RhenishMerovingian types, imported lavaquern-stones and barrel-timbersdendro-dated to 8th centuryGermany, and finds of continental coinage such as 'porcupine sceattas' indicate trade through theRhine port towns includingDomburg,Dorestad andAndernach, as part of the cultural engagement ofAnglo-Saxon England with theFrisian,Frankish,Alamannic,Saxon,Thuringian andBurgundian worlds.[6] The important 'Ipswich ware' pottery industry, established in the town's north-east quarter probably in the late 7th century, reflected shapes and kiln technologies based on Frisian prototypes, either in imitation of imports arriving at the quay or set up by migrant Frisian workers.[7] The Gipeswic dock was therefore the trade capital of the East Anglian Kingdom, situated not far from its royal centre atRendlesham andSutton Hoo. During the 7th and 8th centuries the two greatest English ports wereYork (Eoforwic) andLondon, and two principal new ports were Gipeswic in the east andHamwic (Southampton) in the south. Like Hamwih, Gipeswic dock was therefore a point of departure and arrival for continental travel.[8]

The early waterfront of Ipswich ran from approximatelySt Peter's Church, near the present Stoke Bridge, eastward behind the present quay or marina embankment and past the present Custom House. It lay originally nearer to the line of College Street and Salthouse Street, with new revetments being built successively further out into the river in order to achieve a sufficient depth of water for ships to moor, as the earlier embankments became silted. The area between the road and the quay, formerly occupied by warehouses, represents this area of successive embankments built upon river-mud. An extensive area of early Medieval waterfront construction was found by excavation[9] during early twenty-first century works to demolish the old industrial waterfront, and showed the footings of many projecting boardwalks,[10] in a similar way to the contemporary waterfront at Dorestad, one of its principal trading partners in those times.[11]

The original crossing was a ford, east of Stoke Bridge, linking Great Whip Street (on the south bank) with Foundation Street to the north, which then immediately branched into Lower Brook Street. The area north of the road, between St Peter's church and St Mary-at-Quay (and east of that), is thought to represent the site of the Anglo-Saxon industrial waterfront development. Its first urban catchment area extended north up to Falcon Street, Old Cattle Market, Dog's Head Street and Tacket Street, with burial grounds on rising land to the north.[12] Probably during the 8th century the Stoke Bridge crossing was created, establishing the importance of St Peter's Street as the main northern route, and urban expansion spread over the burial grounds north to include the street called Buttermarket, the Cornhill area, and the line of the prehistoric road now represented by Westgate Street, Tavern Street and Carr Street.[13] Discoveries of early sceattas in this area, and a dedication toSt Mildred, suggest that this new layout was planned during the reigns of KingsEaldwulf (664-713) and his sonÆlfwald (713-749).[14] The street plan represented by this early Medieval development still largely survives in use in the modern town of Ipswich, and is one of the oldest post-Roman street-plans to survive anywhere in Europe. Both wharf and town have remained in continuous use and occupation since that time.[15]

In 991 a fleet of 93Viking ships swept up the river Orwell and sacked the port.[16]

High Middle Ages, 1066 to 1306

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TheNorman Conquest of England broughtRoger Bigod to Ipswich. Amongst his holdings in East Anglia, he established Bigod's Quay in Ipswich. The stone buildings of this establishment stood out amongst the largely wooden buildings of its neighbours. These included a house and was located in the area of Key Street, which was close to the bank of the Orwell, the river being broader at that time. The trade was to a great extent based aroundwool,cloth,hides andskins.[17]

During this period the records refer to thePort of Orwell, which was located on a tongue of land near modern dayLandguard Fort stretching towardsHarwich.[17]

Common Quay in 1820 byGeorge Frost

Late Middle Ages, 1306 to 1485

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During theLate Middle Ages Ipswich developed as a port and developed a flourishing trade with cities of theHanseatic League.

1797 Report

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During the seventeenth century the management and control of the port and River Orwell was the responsibility ofIpswich Corporation. However many local merchants and other inhabitants felt that the corporation had been neglecting their duties. Funds generated by the port facilities were being misappropriated and trade was being affected. In consequence a committee was formed to take active measures to correct the abuses and manage the resources. They decided to commissionWilliam Chapman to write a report, which was duly submitted in May 1797. This report included two costed possible plans for development.

In 1803 the Committee organised a public meeting at which they pushed for the implementation of Plan 2, as far as funds would permit. Despite opposition from Ipswich Corporation the Committee was given responsibility for the port and river.[18]

The coming of the Wet Dock, 1837

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Main article:Ipswich Dock
View of Ipswich Lock and entrance to Wet Dock. Orwell Navigation Service building pictured (R) on east side of lock.

With the creation of the Wet Dock in 1837, the management of the port was significantly altered.[19] No longer was Common Quay the only place goods could legally be unloaded.

Since 1997: Associated British Ports

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A view of the Port of Ipswich, showing a medium sized cargo vessel entering port under the Orwell Bridge.
Cargo ship 'Arklow Vale' entering the Port of Ipswich under Orwell Bridge.
Tug 'Gray Salvor' berthed on West Bank, Port of Ipswich

In 1997 the port was sold by Ipswich Ports Ltd toAssociated British Ports.[3] They operate both the 'West Bank' terminal (to the south of the New Cut, on the west bank of the Orwell) and 'Cliff Quay' (on the east bank of the Orwell). The West Bank has two transit sheds totalling 6,377 sq m, plus areas available for open storage and 4 berths; West Bank North,Ro-Ro 1, Ro-Ro 2, and West Bank South. There is also a small tug berth located on the West Bank.

Port of Ipswich, aerial view, 2012.

Cliff Quay handles and stores liquid and dry bulks and has 67,583 sq m of covered storage and additional open storage.[20] Cliff Quay has 9 berths; Bulk Liquid Terminal, Ipswich Grain Terminal, East Bank Terminal North, East Bank Terminal, 500' North, 500' South, 1 Shed, 2 Shed and Power Station. There is a daily freight service linking Ipswich with thePort of Rotterdam. While the port no longer handles containers, it can accept out-of-gauge and heavy lift cargoes and is equipped to accommodate short to mid-sea operations.[3] The cargo products and services provided at the port are agribulks, bulk energy, liquid bulks, project cargo, construction, forest products, and rail freight.[21]

The port can handle vessels up to approximately 155m in length and a maximum draught of 8.5m. The mainRiver Orwell navigation channel is dredged to a charted depth of 5.6m below Admiralty Chart datum.[22] There is an availableair draught of 43.07m above Admiralty Chart datum (under theOrwell Bridge). Orwell Navigation Service (callsign 'Ipswich Port Radio') provide local port services, operate Ipswich Lock and maintain a continuous 24 hour watch on marine VHF channel 68.[23]

Welfare and practical services for seafarers arriving at the port are available via the services of a portchaplain.

Associated British Ports also operates the Ipswich Haven Marina[24] (located inIpswich Dock) with mooring for 250 private boats. Also located on the island site (west side of dock) are two boatbuilders (Fairline Yachts andSpirit Yachts).

References

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  1. ^Alsford, Stephen."Ipswich - Origins".users.trytel.com. Stephen Alsford. Retrieved15 February 2020.
  2. ^Alsford, Stephen."Origins : wiks, burhs and ports".users.trytel.com. Stephen Alsford. Retrieved15 February 2020.
  3. ^abc"Modern ports: A UK policy - Annex 2: Case studies (Ipswich)". Department for Transport. Archived fromthe original on 5 June 2011. Retrieved16 January 2010.
  4. ^Plunkett, Steven (2005).Suffolk in Anglo-Saxon Times. Stroud: Tempus.ISBN 0-7524-3139-0.: 76–78 
  5. ^K. Wade, 'Gipeswic - East Anglia's first economic capital, 600-1066', in N. Salmon and R. Malster (eds),Ipswich From The First To The Third Millennium (Ipswich, 2001), 1-6.
  6. ^R. Hodges,Dark Age Economics: The Origins of Town and Trade AD 600-1000 (London 1982): R. Hodges,The Anglo-Saxon Achievement (London 1988).
  7. ^Norman Scarfe,The Suffolk Landscape (New Edition, Phillimore, Chichester 2002), p. 71-72. Wade (cited above).
  8. ^S. Plunkett,Suffolk in Anglo-Saxon Times (Tempus, Stroud 2005), 76-78, 129-133.ISBN 0-7524-3139-0.
  9. ^For illustrations of the Anglo-Saxon revetments under excavation, see J. Fairclough,Boudica to Raedwald: East Anglia's Relations with Rome (Malthouse Press, Ipswich 2010), pp. 238-39, colour plates.ISBN 978-0-9539680-3-9.
  10. ^Plunkett (cited above), 130. See Rhodri Gardner, 'Ipswich, Cranfield's Mill', in 'Archaeology in Suffolk 2005',Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology and History 41 Part 2, 2006, p.251.
  11. ^A. E. Verhulst,The Rise of Cities in North-Western Europe (Cambridge University Press 1999), pp. 27-30.
  12. ^R. Malster,A History of Ipswich (Phillimore, Chichester 2000), pp. 5-10. Cemeteries, see C. Scull,Early medieval (late 5th-early 8th centuries AD) Cemeteries at Boss Hall and Buttermarket, Ipswich, Suffolk: The Society for Medieval Archaeology, Monograph 27 (Leeds: The Society for Medieval Archaeology 2009).ISBN 978-1-906540-18-0.
  13. ^Wade (cited above).
  14. ^Scarfe 2002 (cited above), 72-74.
  15. ^Malster 2000, Wade 2001, Plunkett 2005 (cited above).
  16. ^"Ipswich". Orwell River Cruises. Archived fromthe original on 29 January 2010. Retrieved16 January 2010.
  17. ^abThe History of Engineering in Ipswich. Ipswich:Ipswich Engineering Society. 1949.
  18. ^Hurwood, George (January 1861)."On the River Orwell and the Port of Ipswich"(PDF).Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers.20 (1861):4–13.doi:10.1680/imotp.1861.23436.
  19. ^"Quays and Wharves of Ipswich"(PDF).Ipswich Maritime Trust. Ipswich Maritime Trust. Retrieved16 February 2020.
  20. ^"Port of Ipswich - facilities". Associated British Ports. Retrieved16 January 2010.
  21. ^"Associated British Ports | Ipswich".www.abports.co.uk. Retrieved19 January 2022.
  22. ^Office., Great Britain. Admiralty, Hydrographic (1961),England - East Coast. Approaches to Harwich. With the Rivers Stour, Orwell and Deben. From Admiralty surveys to 1964. With additions and corrections to 1965. The topography is taken chiefly from the Ordnance Survey. (1st ed.), Hydrographic Office,OCLC 538253021, retrieved19 January 2022{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  23. ^Department., Great Britain. Hydrographic (1981).Admiralty list of radio signals. Hydrographer of the Navy.OCLC 35552584.
  24. ^"Home - Ipswich Haven Marina".www.ipswichhavenmarina.co.uk. Retrieved19 January 2022.
Wikimedia Commons has media related toPort of Ipswich.
Members of theHanseatic League by quarter, and trading posts of the Hanseatic League
Wendish
Lübeck
Principal trading routes of the Hanseatic League

Lubeck — a main city of the Hanseatic League
Saxon
Baltic
Westphalian

Kontore
Vitten
Factories
  • 1Cologne andDortmund were both chief city of the Westphalian Quarter at different times.
  • 2 The kontor was moved toAntwerp onceBruges became inaccessible due to the silting of theZwin channel.
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