History of Chatham Dockyard. Chatham
dockyard, situated on the Medway, was a major naval base for the Royal
Navy for many centuries during the reigns of Henry VIII, Elizabeth I,
James I and Charles I.
For ex-employees and families of ex-employees of
Chatham Dockyard a message board has been set up click
here to view messages. |
|
The following text is from the Navy & Army
Illustrated March - April 1902.
The Medway is shallow, with a strong tide, and pursues a winding
course through mud-flats, while in old times its channel was dangerous
owing to shoals. The river bed had to be deepened in order that the
establishment might accommodate modern leviathans, and the docks and
basins depicted in the photographs will suggest that a great work was
accomplished in that direction. The true reason for the rise of Chatham
as a Naval centre was the relative proximity of the place to London, and
the facility of access by water. The same cause gave its importance to
Deptford, which in the reign of Henry VIII, was the principal naval
yard, and long continued to do so, although judged by the expenses of
maintenance, Chatham may have been more important even in Elizabeth's
time. In 1589, including the charges for building a new storehouse, the
costs were £1,774, while the outlay at Deptford was £266, at Woolwich
£12 and at Portsmouth £64. Greater charges for Chatham were also found
in 1591, and Peter Buck, clerk of the Cheque there, had £40 a year,
while the chief clerks of Deptford and Portsmouth had only £20 each
There had been facilities for careening ships on the protected
mud-banks of the Medway in earlier times, and when Henry VIII was
threatened with a combination between France and the Empire, he set
about fortifying important places, including Queenborough, near the
mouth of the river. Upnor Castle, on the Medway, dates from Elizabeth's
reign. (The Main Gate of the Dockyard pictured right).
Whatever convenience there might have been for repairing ships at
Chatham in early days, the dockyard was founded by that Queen on the
site of the present gun-wharf, the establishment being transferred to
the present site about the year 1622. Elizabeth herself paid a visit to
the place in 1573, and Camden describes the dockyard as "stored for
the finest fleet the sun ever beheld, and ready at a minutes warning,
built lately by our most gracious sovereign Elizabeth at great expense
for the security of her subjects and the terror of her enemies, with a
fort on the shore for its defence."
In the Spanish wars of the time it was customary for ships
to lie in reserve at Chatham, and Hawkins threw a chain across the river
for protection. Burough, writing in 1588, concerning four great ships then
at Queenborough, refers to the repairing and fitting facilities at the
port "which ships are to bring up to Chatham, as soon as we can, and
then to ground them, and make them ready as we shall be appointed." Howard,
writing to Walsingham on this business, lost hope of seeing those ships on
active service, and what he says is worth quoting as illustrating the
sound views common with the seamen of that age: " If things fall out
as it is most likeliest, they shall be to keep Chatham Church, when they
should serve the turn abroad. I protest before God, I speak not for myself
any ways, but for her Majesty's service and surety; for whensoever they
should come, I mean not to change out of her I am in (the Arc Ralegh) for
any ship that ever was made. In 1586, 25 ships were laid up at Chatham
under the care of 202 men, and the port was a chief base for the Navy at
the time. In 1596, when the Spaniards were at Calais, ships were at
Chatham for the protection of home waters, and the fleet was brought round
there after the Cadiz expedition, and the port was constantly used up to
the conclusion of the war. (Photograph above left shows The Royal
Adelaide, hulk, Pembroke depot ship and others).
The Naval importance of Chatham is shown by the institution of the
Chatham Chest by Hawkins, Drake and others in 1590, for the relief and
support for injured or disabled sailors. The semen were generously minded
after 1588, and a contribution of sixpence a month from able seamen, and
fourpence from ordinary seamen, with threepence for boys, was mulcted from
their wages. It was stated that by their service at sea "masters,
mariners, shipwrights, and seafaring men, by reason of hurts and maims
received in the service, were driven into great poverty, extremities, and
want, to their great discouragement." Every visible precaution was
taken for the safe custody of the money, and in 1625 an iron chest with
five locks was ordered for the purpose, the keys to be kept by five
representative officers of different grades, who could only open it when
together, and who were to be changed every 12 months. The chest still
exists in Greenwich Hospital, where it was placed by the Admiralty in
1846. Notwithstanding all safeguards, there were great leakages. The very
year after the chest was bought, Russell, Treasurer of the Navy, took
£2,600 out of it to pay wages, and the sum abstracted was slowly
restored, but there is the best reason to believe that the chest suffered
very heavily from malversation of money. Pepys was anxious about the state
of affairs in 1662. He was informed that the fund had been much abused,
and that it would be a meritorious act to look after it, "which I am
resolved to do, if God bless me". A committee was appointed and he
discovered many things which did not please him. French rules were,
therefore, laid down, but abuse was not altogether checked. Yet, as Mr
Oppenheim says, the administration of the Chatham Chest in early Stuart
times was undoubtedly in a condition of ideal purity compared with the
depths of organised infamy to which it sank during the eighteenth century.
The chest continued to exist under varying regulations until 1803, when it
was transferred to the Directors of the Chest at Greenwich and practically
became a part of the relief fund of Greenwich Hospital.
James I took much interest in Chatham, and visited it in
1606 with King Christian of Denmark and many noblemen, being received with
a great salute, and they dined on board one of the ships. The growing
importance of the place was marked by the fact that in 1619 and 1620 it
obtained two mast docks, and that much additional ground was bought, on
which a dock, storehouse, and various brick and lime kilns might be
erected. Another dock was in hand in 1623, in which year Hawkin's chain
was replaced by a boom of masts, iron, cordage, and the hulls of two
ships, and two pinnacles. This defensive arrangement was further improved
about 1645. Two of Elizabeth's ships, the Garland, of 1590, and the Mary
Rose, 1598, had been used in construction of a wharf. (Photograph below
right shows the Great Sheers at Chatham Yard - The battleships
Irresistible and Goliath in No.2 basin.) .
The early officers of the establishment were interesting
personages. Phineas Pett, the great shipbuilder, was appointed keeper of
the plank-yard in 1600, and assistant to the master shipwright in 1601.
Four years later he became himself one of the King's master shipwrights,
and was the designer of the famous Prince Royal, and in 1630 he was
appointed assistant to the Principal Officers and Commissioners of the
Navy, to reside at Chatham, and he died there in 1647. His son Peter
succeeded him in 1647 or 1648, but was removed from his office of
commissioner in 1667, owing to the blame cast upon him in regard to the
success of the Dutch fleet in the Medway. Sir John Cox, who fought in the
4 days action with the Dutch in June 1666, and was killed in the battle of
Solebay in 1672, was appointed resident commissioner at Chatham in 1669.
Another Pett, Sir Phineas, grand-nephew of the first commissioner at
Chatham, was appointed master shipwright at the yard in July 1660. He was
dismissed a few years later for misbehaviour in office, but was restored
to favour, became a member of the Navy Board, was transferred to Chatham
again in 1686, and was dismissed for political reasons in 1689.
The pages of Pepys are full of interesting matter
concerning Chatham Dockyard. On July 11 1663 he writes: "By barge to
St Mary's Creek, where commissioner Pett (doubtful of the growing
greatness of Portsmouth by the finding of those creeks there) do design a
wet dock at no great charge, and yet no little one; he thinks towards
£10,000. And the place indeed is likely to be a very fit place when the
king hath money to do with." Pepys was at Chatham again, viewing the
yard with Commissioner Pett on October 2nd 1665. "And among other
things, a team of four horses come close by us, he being with me drawing a
piece of timber that I am confident one man could easily have carried upon
his back. I made the horses be taken away, and a man or two to take the
timber away with their hands." Pepys did not entirely trust Pett, and
the disgrace of the Commissioner came with the Dutch raid of 1667. De
Ruyter's detached squadron attacked Sheerness, and took it, creating a
panic in London, and orders were given to sink ships in the river, with
the intention of blocking the channel to Chatham, but on June 12 De Ruyter
advanced up the Medway, passed Upnor Castle with little opposition, and
attacked a number of our ships lying above that point. These were given to
the flames, and some of the finest vessels in the navy, including the
Royal James, 82, the Loyal London, 90, and the Royal Oak, 76, perished,
while the Royal Charles, 90, was captured and carried off. Thus, at
Chatham befel one of the most humiliating incidents in all our naval
history. On the last day of the gloomy month, Pepys was there and heard
that there had been but one man killed on shore. "Thence by barge, it
raining hard, down to the chain; and in our way did see the sad wrecks of
the poor Royal Oak, James and London and several others of our ships by us
sunk, and several of the enemy's, whereof three men-of-war that they could
not get off, and so burnt. So to the chain, and there saw it fast at the
end on the Upnor side of the river; and where it broke nobody can tell
me."
In the reign of Charles I the first wet dock or basin was
constructed at Chatham, and the same monarch erected large storehouses and
a sail loft, and enlarged the yard. Yet,
at the same time, the Crown was very short of money, and the Chatham
shipwrights threatened to cease work unless they were paid, the men being
so turbulent that they actually besieged the Navy Commissioners. The
unhappy commissioners were constantly ordered to perform impossibilities,
and, when it was asked at what cost ships were built, the Chatham
dockyardmen said they had been twelve months "without one penny being
paid, neither having any allowance for meat or drink, by which many of
them, having pawned all they can, others turned out of doors for
nonpayment of rent, which, with the cries of their wives and children for
food and necessaries, doth utterly dishearten them." Driven to
desperation, the Chatham men at last marched up to London in a body,
whereupon the Treasurer of the Navy made a promise which was not
fulfilled, while, as Mr Oppenheim says, "the ragged misery of the
visitors was an outrage on the scented decorum of the Court." (
Photograph left shows the building of the ship - a battleship receiving
her skin plating.)
But Chatham was growing in importance, though there was
manifest need for docking accommodation. Defoe visited the place in 1705,
and speaks with an enthusiasm of its achievements which may pass belief.
"So great is the order and application there that a first-rate vessel
of war of 106 guns, ordered to be commissioned by Sir Cloudesley Shovell,
was ready in three days. At the time the order was given the vessel was
entirely unrigged; yet the masts were raised, sails bent, anchors and
cables on board, in that time. |
| The outbreak of war with France and Spain had
demonstrated the need for expansion in that quarter, and in 1710 land was
ordered to be bought to improve the establishment. The largest classes of
ships were built at Chatham in the years that followed. Thus the Plymouth,
80, was built in 1722, and the Royal Sovereign, 100, in 1728, both from
designs by J Rosewell. The Ramillies, 74 was launched in 1763, the
Victory, 100, in 1765, the Barfleur, 98, in 1768, the Queen Charlotte,
100, in 1789, and the Ville de Paris, 110, in 1795. By the year 1770 the
establishment had so grown that, including the gun wharf it extended a
mile in length, had an area of over 95 acres, and possessed four slips and
four large docks. The officers and men employed in the yard had also
greatly increased, and it may be interesting to say that in 1798 they
numbered 1,664, including 49 officers and clerks, and 624 shipwrights. The
others were blockmakers, caulkers, pitch-heaters, blacksmiths, joiners,
carpenters, sail makers, riggers, and ropemakers (these last number 274),
as well as bricklayers, labourers and others. since that time the men
employed at Chatham have more than quadrupled in number, as the
establishment has increased in extent.
The importance of the dockyard in the days of the Great War and the
menaces of the time forced upon the authorities in the latter half of the
eighteenth century the necessity of creating adequate defences for the
place in the shape of earthworks and forts. These were the well known
Chatham Lines. The Inner Lines enclosed the dockyard, barracks, St Mary's
Church, and the town of Old Brompton, while the Outer Lines was a name
given to the open space devoted to sports and military manoeuvres. Charles
Dickens, who knew Chatham well, spoke of the defences in an article in
Household Words, which may be quoted:
"I took a walk upon these Lines, and mused among the
fortifications, grassy and innocent on the surface at present, but tough
subjects at the core. Here I saw the artfullest pits and drawbridges, the
slyest batteries in most unexpected angles and turnings, the lowest,
deepest-set, beetle-browed little windows down among the stinging nettles
at the bottom of trenches. Steeped in these mysteries, I wandered round
the trenches of Fort Pitt, and then away to Fort Clarence, and, looking
down the river from the sloping bank, I saw even there, upon the shore, a
stranded little fort, with its weather beaten brick face staring at the
mud."
Sir Edward Gregory, who retired in 1703 (Clerk of the Cheque at
Chatham for nearly 20 years), had been the last civilian to hold office as
Commissioner of the yard. The last Resident Commissioner was Captain
Charles Cunningham on whose retirement, in 1829, the dockyard was placed
temporarily under the inspection of Captain J M Lewes, Resident
Commissioner at Sheerness. Captain, afterwards Admiral, Sir Charles Bullen
was the first Superintendent, being appointed in December 1831, and being
invested with the same power and authority as the Commissioners, his
predecessors, except in matters which were required by Act of Parliament
to be done by the Commissioner of the Navy. As is well known, the Navy
Board was abolished shortly afterwards, its powers being transferred to
the Admiralty, and the Resident Commissioners at all the yards were
replaced by admirals or captains as Superintendents.
In 1879, when the new system was working, and when the Chief
Constructor had long replaced the old Master Builder, there were 3,800 men
at Chatham yard, and yet only one Chief Constructor, whereas under the
older system the supervision would have been under many more officers. At
the same time the dockyard had increased in extent from 95 to 500 acres.
In the first years of the nineteenth century Sir Robert Seppings, who was
a Master Builder at Chatham, attained great eminence as a naval
constructor. Since his time a revolution has taken place in the
constructive work at the yard, and many of the conditions that existed
even 20 years ago have changed.
The resources of the dockyard had been fully employed, and an
ever-increasing strain at length forced upon the attention of the
authorities the necessity for the expansion of the establishments. Sir J
Rennie, the eminent engineer who was so greatly concerned in the
Portsmouth works, was consulted in regard to the necessities, and an
important plan for an enlargement was prepared by him. It was not,
however, until 1853 that the Admiralty became possessed of the whole of St
Mary's Island and some neighbouring land, upon which the extension was to
be made. Three years later the Navy Estimates bore a charge of £160,000
towards the work, and a large employment of convict labour was
contemplated. Progress was slow, and little was done until 1864, when
General Sir A Clarke, who was then Director of Works at the Admiralty,
took up the matter energetically. The works were in hand about 18 years,
the estimates of 1884-1885 bearing a small charge practically for
completion.  The huge crane which is
depicted (top left, the largest crane at Chatham), the dockyard railway
as a great facility for work (top right a working party leave
the storehouse by the dockyard railway), and the vast basins and docks, are thus
accounted for. It is a proud record
of a great work done, and does not take any account of the cruisers built
at the yard. Chatham on the other hand has many memorials of the old navy,
including a large collection of figureheads, which almost rivals that at
Devonport. We see also that there is still scope for the deft hands of
women in the naval service. (below right women
making flags in the Chatham loft), and they do good work
in the spinning of hemp for cables (above left women spinning hemp for
cables). |
The great extension of the Chatham Dockyard initiated in
1853, gave us the establishment as it exists today. The
old establishment still exists, however, with some modifications from its
former state, and possesses its old wooden slips and docks. There are four
iron slips dating from about 40 years ago, and the old saw-pits are there,
with other evidences of the Navy in the early part of the last century and
century before. The fine figureheads which are illustrated indicate
how the evidences of the past are are treasured at Chatham (See top right
and below left), and it would have been a pleasure to describe some other
relics of the place. There was a discovery of a vessel some 36 ft below
the ground level, made a few years ago when the excavation for the present
basins was in progress. There can be little doubt that this was one of the
Dutch ships which made the raid up the Medway in 1667. She
stood upright in the mud, still possessing her guns and large quantities
of shot in her lockers, many of which relics have their place in the
dockyard museum.
But it is now time to turn to the extension works of the present day.
The three great basins, lying in a west and east line, give access in both
directions to the Medway, the eastern opening - from No.3 basin - being
through two large locks, which can be used in case of necessity for
docking ships. the first basin, that to the west, was opened in 1872 with
much ceremony, as well as two of the four docks on its south side. These
new graving docks are more than 400 ft long and 100 ft wide, and the basin
itself has a length of about 1,600 ft by 900 ft. At its eastern end is an
opening into No.2 basin, which is about 1,500 ft long by 800 ft wide, and
from this again into basin No. 3, which has an extreme length of about
1,800 ft, its width except towards the east, where it is wider and
irregular in shape, being some 800 ft. It is from the basin last mentioned
that access is gained to the Medway through the two locks, outside of
which are the collier dock, with slips, and other important parts of the
establishment. This immense addition to Chatham dockyard, which was
practically the creation of a new establishment fitted to cope with
the growing needs of the Fleet, was completed in 1885, when a simple
inaugural ceremony took place in September.
The extension of the dockyard was not confined to basins and docks.
With the larger future designed for the establishment, many factories,
workshops, and stores became necessary, these being erected in convenient
positions adjacent to the basins. The gunnery, torpedo and engine shops
and other factories and storehouses, are of great size, and the
manufacturing establishments are fitted with the latest appliances for
work of every description. There
is a mighty Hydraulic crane capable of lifting about 200 tons, and the
equipment in apparatus of that kind is very complicated indeed. As in
other Naval establishments there are steam-hammers, punching machines (see
right), sheering machines, steam saw-mills amongst others. The creating of
such an establishment where lay an expanse of some 400 acres of desolate
marsh, abounding in swamps and dykes, was an achievement to be proud of,
and we cannot withhold admiration from the energy with which the work was
undertaken and the zeal with which it was executed. It had been foreseen
that with the enlargement of the dockyard, and the creation of facilities
for building and repairing the largest classes of vessels, the channel of
the Medway would have to be improved. That ancient waterway, winding
through level tracts, and abounding in creeks, was too shallow for our
modern leviathans, and a very great work has since been completed in
dredging the bed of the river. Ten years ago the work was in progress, and
it was completed in 1896, though, of course, dredging operations are
continually necessary to prevent the silting up of the passage.
The last ten years have seen further progress in the establishment.
No.5 dock has been lengthened in order that it may accommodate cruisers of
the Diadem class (435ft), this work having been completed about September
1898. A new coaling depot is being created to facilitate and expedite the
work. The reconstruction of the foundry also became necessary, but
considerable difficulties occurred, and it was at length decided that a
new foundry should be constructed. As a matter of fact, the foundations of
the old structure had given way, thus illustrating one of the great
difficulties which have been encountered at the Chatham yard. Provision
was made for the new foundry in the Estimates of 1899-1900, as also for a
new building slip. Some delay, however, occurred in completing the
plans for the latter, but good progress is being made, as also with other
works in progress at the yard, and the foundry will be completed in 1902.
Progress is also being made with the coaling establishment, and a new dock
is to be added. (Below right a plan of Chatham Dockyard)
The increase in Chatham Dockyard has not been in material matters only.
The additions made to the fleet have involved a great augmentation in the
number of officers and men at port, and the necessity for larger
accommodation became a pressing need six or seven years ago. The extension
works had been partly executed by convict labour, and the convict prison
became available for conversion into barracks. There was, however, a great
need for suitable new buildings, and the inconvenience of putting seamen
into hulks at the port was strongly urged in 1894. It was then proposed to
commence a new Naval barracks to accommodate 3,500 officers and men, and
after which it would be possible to remove the old hulks, and to find
space for the berthing of modern vessels, and designs were prepared, but a
difficulty arose in regard to the necessary land, and a long delay
resulted. Negotiations were entered into with the War Office for a site,
upon part of which the Brennan torpedo factory stood, but in 1898 the
military authorities were still reconstructing the factory, so that the
land might be made available. Meanwhile the contract was signed for the
construction of the barracks, and considerable progress has since been
made, the western block having been completed, while two other blocks are
well above ground. The delay has been unfortunate, for the inconvenience
and discomfort of a seaman's life on board a hulk are an important
consideration in these days, when the comforts of the shore exercise such
a powerful attraction upon the men of the fleet. (below left cruisers are
berthed for repair and refit)
The necessity of extending the hospital accommodation was also
recognised by the authorities, and a proposal was formulated in 1896 for
building a new hospital, with 600 beds; the old building, besides being
too small, was obsolete in design and defective in construction. In
particular there was no provision for the isolation of infectious cases,
and no wards were arranged for the seriously injured patients. Moreover,
the grounds in which the hospital stood were limited in size, and did not
admit of any extension of the old building. The foundations of the main
building of the new hospital were laid by the beginning of 1900, and the
establishment is now approaching completion. With these increased
facilities, soon to be made available, we may link an improvement in the
water supply which has been effected. Much has, indeed, been done for the
increased number of seamen retained in reserve at the port, and when the
barracks and hospital are in use, one great disadvantage of Chatham will
have been removed.
It might appear to the casual observer, seeing the immense mass and
variety of stores lying alongside a ship, that some confusion must exist,
but it would not be long before they discerned that a thorough system of
organisation evolves order and progress out of apparent chaos. Each man
knows exactly his work, and everything is done with order and regularity.
The building of a ship takes place accordance with plans prepared at the
Admiralty, and the operation is conducted under the immediate orders of
the Chief Constructor of the Dockyard. The calculations for displacement
have already been made, and the conditions which affect the draught of
water have been fully taken into account. A matter of extreme importance,
therefore, is that the intended weights shall actually be built into the
ship and no more, a matter which in former times, owing to modifications
of plans, was sometimes neglected, with the result that ships have not
floated at their intended waterline and that the armouring upon them has
not afforded the protection designed and required.
In the picture (right) which illustrates the mast of the Irresistible,
the Goliath will be seen completing at her berth in the basin. It will be
noticed that an office is provided for that important functionary the
recorder of weights, whose business is to keep a very accurate account. A
notification is also affixed on the office in these words: "All
materials to be weighed before being taken on board." Thus is assurance
made in the matter of displacement, and it is truly astonishing how closely
the calculated displacement approximates the to the real. The responsibility
for launching a ship also devolves to the Chief Constructor of the yard,
but, as soon as she is in the water, it is the duty of the King's
harbourmaster to bring her alongside the wharf, where the work of structural
completion and equipment goes on. The recent launch of the Prince of Wales
at Chatham Dockyard brought to the minds of many the very great importance
of all the functions which attend building, launching and completing. The
smallest miscalculation may lead to serious difficulties, and it is
therefore, always with a sense of relief that the good ship is seen gliding
down the ways into the element which she is to grace and command. Cabins
have then to be provided, mess-places and storerooms to be arranged, the
engines, boilers, hydraulic and electrical gear to be fitted, and a vast
deal of other work to be done, and a ship in this stage is, therefore,
always a scene of bustling activity. All the officers of the yard have
important functions in regard to the building and equipping of ships, and it
is the custom for them to meet each morning at the office of the Admiral
Superintendent to learn the orders from the Admiralty, and then to decide
how they shall be carried into execution - a system that conduces much to
rapidity and efficiency of work. Finally let it be said that Rear-Admiral
Swinton C Holland is the Superintendent at Chatham, and Captain Archibald G
Douglas the Staff Captain and King's Harbourmaster, while the Chief
Constructor is W James, Esq. the Chief Engineer W G Littlejohns, and the
Naval Store Officer H J Laslett. (Above left shows the Pembroke Gate). |
|
The battleship Albemarle being built at Chatham in
1901. |

The Parade Ground at Chatham.
Sent in by Ian Anderson |
|

Rugby Team of HMS Tenedos II (Training Establishment
at Chatham) 1907-8.
A
reproduction of this original photo / photo-postcard size 10" x
7" approx available. Order photograph here © Walker
Archive. Order Code PHX639 |
|

HMS Pembroke, Chatham, 1941.
A
reproduction of this original photo / photo-postcard size 10" x
7" approx available. Order photograph here © Walker
Archive. Order Code LGE4 |
|

HMS Pembroke, Chatham - Air Mechanics, 532 Class,
Hawke Block, RN Barracks, Borstal, Rochester, June 1940.
All rows left to right; Back: Hall, Ambrose,
Eade, Savill; Middle: Hughes, Thrusstle, Barnard, Lalley, Wing,
Buchan, White, Garbutt; Front: Tumber, Foster, Chesterman, P.O.
Berry, Sands, Holgate, Fretwell.
A
reproduction of this original photo / photo-postcard size 10" x
7" approx available. Order photograph here © Walker
Archive. Order Code PHX706 |
|

Chatham Barrack, c.1905.
A
reproduction of this original photo / photo-postcard size 10" x
7" approx available. Order photograph here © Walker
Archive. Order Code PHX710 |
| |
|
Naval Historians,
Ex-Employees & Family Message Board
Message Board for
naval enthusiasts, ex-employees & descendents of workers at the
Chatham Dockyard.
This website is not part of any governmental body or official websites.
Photographs and information on historical events about Chatham
Dockyard will be welcome. If you have any information you
would like to send us including photographs please e-mail them to
us at: mail@militaryart.freeserve.co.uk
MESSAGES
CHARLES BARTHOLOMEW BUTLER... My
grandfather Charles Bartholomew Butler was
employed at Chatham Dockyard when I was living with my grandparents at No.
1
Maidstone Road, from when I was 6 months old (January 1942) until his
death
somewhere between 1946-50 - can't remember the exact year. I don't
know
what his work was at the dockyard either - too young to remember much at
all,
just really anxious to trace his descendants and not having any luck at
all so
far. I do hope somebody out there can help.
ADMIRAL JOHN F WALKER.... I
am interested in any information anyone may possess about my Grandfather,
Admiral John F. Walker, Construction Manager at Chatham from the early
1930s (or so) until 1945, and/or the contemporaneous ships built or
repaired there. I never met the man, but have heard numerous stories about
my mother's childhood and the times, and would appreciate anything that
could add to my understanding. Please E-Mail me at Uberdada@wsg.net
. Thanks for your help. David Schneiderman. Albany, NY USA
WILLIAM MCCRACKEN.. I
am trying to trace any information about my Great
Grandfather William McCracken who was employed as a stoker in HM Dockyard
Chatham from around 1912 onwards. He married a local lady, Elsie Coombs in
Minster, Isle of Sheppey in 1913 and went on to work for the Electric
Power
Company in Sheerness before his death in 1936 aged 53. If
anyone has any information that will help me
trace his
employment / life I would be thrilled to hear from
them. Gail Robinson Gail26robinson@btinternet.com
PAUL SMITH: Ex Coppersmith apprentice 1970
/1975 saint Marys Island and New Pipe Shop. looking for Adds, Ned, Erick,
Melob, Frankie (Dirk) and any other ex apprentices from plumbing or
coppersmith at Chatham. contact me at smiffit@otenet.gr
ALAN PEDERSEN.. I would like to make
contact with anyone that worked in the sail loft in the 1950s. Contact me
at Cheralan1@bigpond.com
(posted 19/05/03)
OLVER FAMILY... Does anyone have information
on the three generations of the Olver family that worked at Chatham
dockyard from about 1880 to 1970. Names are George Olver, Stanley Olver
and Harold Olver. George lived on board the Challenger in the dockyard at
the end of the 1880s. Stanley was born on board. Contact me at john@sherlock42.freeserve.co.uk
Brian Jenkins, I am looking for Bob
Strickland who was a recorder at Chatham Dockyard during the 1970'sand
1980's, as I was. I didn't know at the time he is my cousin so I would
like to get in touch. Please contact Brian at brian.e.jenkins@btinternet.com
IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO LEAVE A MESSAGE EMAIL ME AT military@military-art.com |
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The Royal Navy at Chatham 1900-2000 by
John Whatling
This volume continues a major series of books featuring the activities
of the Royal Navy at its various bases, both at home and abroad throughout
the last century.
Post: UK- £4.00 (max post for multiple books
£6.00).
For Europe £6.00 (each plus one charge of £3.00 recorded fee per
total shipment)
Rest of World £8.00 (each plus one charge of £3.00 recorded fee
per total shipment) |
Book serial number BK1975. Price £19.95. Fully illustrated hardback book with
105
pages.
ONE COPY AVAILABLE.
To order your copy: secure
order form |
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