PS Great Western ship model

ship model

Details of model

  • Exhibition model, rigged, wood
  • Scale 1:96 (1/8 inch to 1 foot)
  • Made by the Sunderland Model Making Company, 1938
  • Based on contemporary paintings, prints and ship plans
  • Model size (overall) 85 cm (l) x 20cm (w) x 43cm (h)
  • Commissioned 1938

Coastal passenger liner, Great Western Steamship Company, Bristol

The wooden paddle steamer 'Great Western' was built in 1837 by William Patterson and Company, Bristol, for the Great Western Steam Ship Company of that port. On completion she was the first true ocean-going steamship and the largest steamer in the world. Designed for the transatlantic trade by Isambard Kingdom Brunel, she completed her first Atlantic crossing in April 1838 just hours after the 'Sirius', carrying just seven passengers and a small amount of cargo.

'Great Western', and not 'Sirius', would thence provide the first regular passenger and cargo service on this route. Sailing initially from Bristol, then from Liverpool, she was for several years the most popular and successful steamer on the Atlantic. In 1847 she was sold to the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company for service on its Southampton-West Indies mail run. In 1856 she was chartered by the Admiralty for troop transport. She twice carried men, horses and equipment to the Black Sea. She was sold to shipbreakers in 1857 and scrapped at Vauxhall, on the Thames.

If you like this model why not decorate your desktop with a wallpaper design. Several items from the Merseyside Maritime Museum's collections are now available.

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