(Redirected from John Brown Shipyard)'John Brown and Company' of
Clydebank,
West Dunbartonshire,
Scotland, was a pre-eminent
shipbuilder, responsible for building many notable ships.
Origins
The shipyard was founded by the James and
George Thomson, brothers who had worked for the famous engineer
Robert Napier. The Thomson brothers named the yard ''J&G Thomson'' after their
Glasgow foundry, established in Anderston in
1847.
In
1851 they opened a shipyard at Cessnock, launching their first ship, ''the Jackal'' in
1852. They quickly established a reputation in building prestigious passenger ships, building the ''Jura'' for Cunard in 1854 and the record breaking'' Russia'' in
1867.
The company moved to the Barns o' Clyde (later re-named Clydebank) near the village of Dalmuir in
1871. The location at the confluence of the
River Clyde, with the tributary
River Cart at Newshot Isle, allowed very large ships to be launched.
Despite severe financial difficulties the company developed a reputation based on engineering quality and innovation.
In the early 1900s, the company innovated marine engineering technology through the development of the
Brown-Curtis turbine, which had been originally developed and patented by the U.S. company
International Curtis Marine Turbine Co. The performance of these engines impressed the Royal Navy which, as a consequence, placed orders for many of its major warships with John Brown.
Golden Age
''John Brown and Company'', a
Sheffield steel-maker took over the yard in
1899, and it became one of the leading
shipbuilding yards in the world. Many notable
warships and
liners were built here including:
★
RMS ''Lusitania'' -
Cunard Liner (torpedoed and sunk in 1915)
★
RMS ''Aquitania'' - Cunard Liner
★
HMS ''Hood'' - iconic pre-WW2
battlecruiser
★
HMS ''Tiger'' - battlecruiser
★
HMS ''Repulse'' - battlecruiser
★
HMS ''Barham'' - ''Queen Elizabeth'' class
battleship
Interwar recession

RMS ''Queen Mary'' arriving in
New York Harbor, June 20, 1945, with thousands of U.S. troops.
The end of the war, and the subsequent famine of naval orders hit British shipbuilding extremely hard, and John Brown only just survived. Two great ships saved the yard, they were the giant Cunard White Star Liners:
★
RMS ''Queen Mary''
★
RMS ''Queen Elizabeth''
World War II and After
The yard made a valuable contribution to the war effort, building amongst others:
★
HMS ''Duke of York'' - battleship
★
HMS ''Vanguard'' - the last battleship built in the world
★
HMS ''Indefatigable'' -
aircraft carrier
The immediate post war period saw a severe reduction in warship orders which was balanced by a prolonged boom in merchant shipbuilding. By the end of the
1950s, however, the rise of other shipbuilding nations, recapitalised and highly productive, made many
European yards uncompetitive. At Clydebank, a series of loss-making contracts were booked in the hope of weathering the storm. By the mid
1960s, John Brown & Co, warned that its shipyard was uneconomic and potentially faced closure.
The last passenger liner order came from Cunard with
RMS ''Queen Elizabeth 2'', but the yard had since merged into
Upper Clyde Shipbuilders, which collapsed amidst much controversy in
1971. The last true ship to be built at the yard, the bulk grain carrier, ''Alisa'', was completed in
1972. The Clydebank facility continued to operate under various owners until
2001, constructing
oil platforms in support of the
North Sea oil fields. The commercially successful John Brown Engineering division of the company was acquired by
Trafalgar House. In 1996 it was purchased by
Kvaerner. It later was split, with
Kvaerner retaining the some assets, and [Yukos] obtaining John Brown Hydrocarbons and Davy Process Technology, both in London (Paddington). John Brown Hydrocarbons was sold to
CB&I in 2003. The business was renamed CB&I John Brown, and later CB&I UK Limited.
Regeneration of the site
A comprehensive regeneration plan for the site is currently being implemented by
West Dunbartonshire Council and
Scottish Enterprise. The masterplan is based around making the
Clydebank waterfront more accessible to the public, and the plans include; restoring the historic Titan Crane originally designed by Sir
William Arrol for the Clyde shipyard, the construction of a new campus for the local college, improved infrastructure, modern offices and a light industrial estate, and new housing, retail and leisure facilities. It was hoped that the ''Queen Elizabeth 2'' would have been brought back to the city and the river of her birth as part of the plan. Sadly, on June 18, 2007, the
Cunard Line announced that the ship would be sold to
Dubai as a floating hotel.
Other notable ships built by John Brown and Company

HMY ''Britannia'' at pierhead on the River Mersey, Liverpool.
★
HMY ''Britannia'' - the Royal Yacht ''Britannia'',
Ocean Terminal,
Edinburgh
★
HMS ''Enterprise''
★
HMS ''Lynx''
★
HMAS ''Australia'' (1911)
★
HMAS ''Australia'' (1927)
★
HMS ''Icarus''
★
''Gangut'' class battleship
References
★
Clydebank Restoration Trust - Restoring Heritage & Pride
★ http://www.theclydebankstory.com/story_TCSC03.php - A summary of the history of the company.
★ R.D. Thomas, B.Patterson, Dreadnoughts in Camera 1905-1920, 1998, Sutton Publishing
★ Clyde built ships data base - lists all ships built on the Clyde - http://www.clydesite.co.uk/clydebuilt/index.asp
★
Regeneration Masterplan