Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series Editor's Foreword
- About the Author
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 British Coastal Shipping: A Research Agenda for the European Perspective
- Chapter 2 The Significance of Coastal Shipping in British Domestic Transport, 1550-1830
- Chapter 3 The British Coastal Fleet in the Eighteenth Century: How Useful Are the Admiralty's Registers of Protection from Impressment?
- Chapter 4 Management Response in British Coastal Shipping Companies to Railway Competition
- Chapter 5 Conferences in British Nineteenth-Century Coastal Shipping
- Chapter 6 Coastal Shipping: The Neglected Sector of Nineteenth- Century British Transport History
- Chapter 7 Railways and Coastal Shipping in Britain in the Later Nineteenth Century: Cooperation and Competition
- Chapter 8 The Crewing of British Coastal Colliers, 1870-1914
- Chapter 9 Late Nineteenth-Century Freight Rates Revisited: Some Evidence from the British Coastal Coal Trade
- Chapter 10 Liverpool to Hull - By Sea?
- Chapter 11 Government Regulation in the British Shipping Industry, 1830-1913: The Role of the Coastal Sector
- Chapter 12 An Estimate of the Importance of the British Coastal Liner Trade in the Early Twentieth Century
- Chapter 13 The Role of Coastal Shipping in UK Transport: An Estimate of Comparative Traffic Movements in 1910
- Chapter 14 Climax and Climacteric: The British Coastal Trade, 1870- 1930
- Chapter 15 The Shipping Depression of 1901 to 1911: The Experience of Freight Rates in the British Coastal Coal Trade
- Chapter 16 The Coastal Trade of Connah's Quay in the Early Twentieth Century: A Preliminary Investigation
- Chapter 17 The Cinderella of the Transport World: The Historiography of the British Coastal Trade
- Bibliography of Writings by John Armstrong
Chapter 10 - Liverpool to Hull - By Sea?
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series Editor's Foreword
- About the Author
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 British Coastal Shipping: A Research Agenda for the European Perspective
- Chapter 2 The Significance of Coastal Shipping in British Domestic Transport, 1550-1830
- Chapter 3 The British Coastal Fleet in the Eighteenth Century: How Useful Are the Admiralty's Registers of Protection from Impressment?
- Chapter 4 Management Response in British Coastal Shipping Companies to Railway Competition
- Chapter 5 Conferences in British Nineteenth-Century Coastal Shipping
- Chapter 6 Coastal Shipping: The Neglected Sector of Nineteenth- Century British Transport History
- Chapter 7 Railways and Coastal Shipping in Britain in the Later Nineteenth Century: Cooperation and Competition
- Chapter 8 The Crewing of British Coastal Colliers, 1870-1914
- Chapter 9 Late Nineteenth-Century Freight Rates Revisited: Some Evidence from the British Coastal Coal Trade
- Chapter 10 Liverpool to Hull - By Sea?
- Chapter 11 Government Regulation in the British Shipping Industry, 1830-1913: The Role of the Coastal Sector
- Chapter 12 An Estimate of the Importance of the British Coastal Liner Trade in the Early Twentieth Century
- Chapter 13 The Role of Coastal Shipping in UK Transport: An Estimate of Comparative Traffic Movements in 1910
- Chapter 14 Climax and Climacteric: The British Coastal Trade, 1870- 1930
- Chapter 15 The Shipping Depression of 1901 to 1911: The Experience of Freight Rates in the British Coastal Coal Trade
- Chapter 16 The Coastal Trade of Connah's Quay in the Early Twentieth Century: A Preliminary Investigation
- Chapter 17 The Cinderella of the Transport World: The Historiography of the British Coastal Trade
- Bibliography of Writings by John Armstrong
Summary
In 1884 Thomas Wilson and Son ran the steamship Humber between Hull and Liverpool carrying a mixed cargo of goods. Wilsons has long been recognized as Hull's largest shipowner, involved in many overseas trades, although no full-scale history of its business has been published. Passing reference has also been made to its occasional engagement in the coastal trade between Hull and Newcastie but not to its participation in the coastal trade between Hull and Liverpool. Yet by the 1880s the railway network was at its peak, and the distance by rail between the two cities was about 120 miles, whereas the distance by sea was nearly 1000 miles. On the face of it, this seems an absurd situation and a misallocation of resources. Why send the goods nearly eight times as far by a mode with a lower maximum speed, especially when the steamer took the northern route around the United Kingdom via the choppy and perilous passage to the north of Scodand, which included the Pentland Firth where “navigation is rendered difficult and dangerous by the rate of the tidal current – six to ten knots - and the existence of eddies and whirlpools“? The length and peril of the journey could be abated if the ships went through the Caledonian Canal, which was opened in the early nineteenth century and properly navigable by the mid-1840s. Such a route reduced the distance by over 150 miles, making the journey about 820 miles. However, the maximum length of the locks on the Caledonian was 160 feet; the vast majority of the ships employed by Wilson in this trade were too big to traverse the canal and had to use the longer and less safe voyage around the north of Scotland. Only the Torpedo at 151-feet-long was small enough to fit the Caledonian's locks. This article outlines the dimensions of this problem and then seeks to provide an explanation for this apparently perverse use of transport modes.
First, let us stress that this was no flash in the pan or one-off speculation to ascertain if there was demand for the service. Wilsons ran steamers between Hull and Liverpool from March 1884 to the First World War, i.e., over thirty years, very much the long term. In addition, this was a liner service with posted dates and times of departure and anticipated times of arrival.
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- Information
- The Vital SparkThe British Coastal Trade, 1700-1930, pp. 181 - 204Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2017