Grace's Guide

The Best of British Engineering 1750-1960s

Ferguson Brothers

From GracesGuide

(Redirected from Ferguson Bros)
Jump to: navigation, search

Ferguson Shipbuilders of Port Glasgow is a shipbuilder

  • 1903 The company was founded in 1903 as Ferguson Brothers when the four Ferguson brothers Peter, Daniel, Louts and Robert broke away from their Fleming and Ferguson ship yard at Paisley and set up on their own as consultants before leasing the Newark Shipyard, Port Glasgow, at £500 per year securing in March, 1903, an order from Clyde Shipping Co. Ltd. for the building of 2 steam tugs. They began building tugs, hoppers and dredgers.
  • About 1907 the site was purchased from Messrs. W. Hamilton
  • 1912 The company registered as a limited liability company in 1912 under the name Ferguson Brothers (Port Glasgow) Ltd.
  • 1920s The yard was bought up by John Slater and the main output was cargo ships, hopper dredgers, along with an Antarctic scientific and exploration ship Discovery II. By the end of the 1920s the Ferguson’s had managed to regain control of the yard.
  • WWII The yard built trawlers, corvettes, boom defence vessels, naval tugs and a twin-screw suction/trailing dredger. In addition, four passenger and vehicle ferries were built for Turkey
  • 1950s The yard continued making bucket and grab dredgers and variants on these carried the company through to the late 1970s.
  • In 1955 Lithgow’s began their quest for full control of the yard, by initially buying a minority interest, which led to full control in 1961. The yard was now part of the Scott-Lithgow with the Ferguson Brothers displaced from any management control.
  • In 1989 the yard was sold again by British Shipbuilders to the HLD Group under the control of Kvaerner A/S of Norway. The yard traded again as Ferguson Shipbuilders Ltd.
  • 1990s The yard was sold privately again, and became Ferguson Marine.


[edit] Sources of Information

  • [1] Wikipedia
  • British Shipbuilding Yards. 3 vols by Norman L. Middlemiss
  • [2] Ferguson Shipbuilders