History
of Steam Lighter (Clyde Puffer) 'VIC
32'
'VIC
32' was built by Dunston's
of Thorne, Yorkshire in November 1943.
This was a busy time for the Clyde
Ship building yards and the Admiralty
needed 50, (later 100) victualling
boats in a hurry. So they were built
in groups of 3 by various different
yards in England. For instance 'VIC
27' (Auld Reekie) was built at Rowhedge.
The Admiralty didn't need to design
a new craft for this purpose as the
perfect boat existed in a Clyde Puffer.
Presumably these little sea going
craft fitted the bill perfectly. The
Clyde Puffer had developed from the
Dark ages, starting off with a coracle,
through Viking longships to gabbarts.
Somebody in 1880 or so had put a steam
engine and a boiler in a sailing gabbart,
found it difficult to see over the
boiler whilst steering from a tiller
at the stern and had created a structure
on top of the boiler to steer from.
Later they put a canvas dodger around
the helmsman and finally a proper
wheelhouse. The next progressive stage
after our vessel was to create an
82 foot version. These were in my
opinion not such nice boats. In fact
they were really small ships as opposed
to 'VIC 32' which I have always felt
was a large boat. The 82 foot boats
were built because seamen in the war
were getting fed up of being torpedoed
below the waterline where their bunks
were. So the owners of ships changed
their design and put the accommodation
on the decks. When you get the steam
winch on the foredeck above a cabin
on a deck you are getting visibility
problems from the wheel house. This
was improved by putting the funnel
behind the wheelhouse. This resulted
in building and fitting a fire tube
boiler as opposed to VIC 32's water
tube vertical boiler. A water tube
boiler needs little weekly maintenance
whereas a fire tube boiler demands
its tubes sweeping regularly!
In
1976, we found a notebook in the stern
cabin which had been lost by the second
skipper of 'VIC 32'. He had put it
on the shelf beside his bunk and it
had fallen down a narrow gap and landed
up under the bunk in a very dark place.
We only found it when we were welding
doubler plates on the hull, beached
at Wapping on the Thames. I saw gentle
smoke coming out of the stern cabin
and finally found this lost gem. The
book had carbon copies of letters
written from a S.Slipper to his agent.
He had found the boat in the spring
of 1944 derelict! She had only been
built in November 1943. The first
skipper had proven to be a drunken
maniac. He had taken a cargo of cement
out to Barra to build a pier. The
boat had suffered damage all along
the starboard side, a propellor blade
had been knocked off, the crew were
in jail for stealing the shop's petty
cash, one had septic sores and another
had a nasty seaman's disease. Obviously
merchant men could, to a certain extent
during the war, choose from the Merchant
Navy Shipping Pool what type of boat
they worked on. I think a coal fired
steam Puffer on the West Coast of
Scotland, in summer and winter, day
and night was not on everybody's priority
list. So the reality wasthat the crew
were no gentlemen. On top of all this,
there was salt water in the boiler.
Captain Slipper got the boat going
again, but had constant continuing
problems and finally applied to the
Shipping Pool for another boat as
he had decided that 'VIC 32' had a
hoodoo on her. Just as things were
starting to go well, another calamity
occurred.
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