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TRADITIONAL MAIL BOATS
Main Fleet Features Traditional Mail Boats
 TRADITIONAL MAIL BOATS
A fairly rare reminder of the pre Ro-Ro days when David MacBrayne Ltd operated traditional mail boats to the Western Isles...
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In this view from summer 1972 the Inner Isles mailboat Claymore and the hitherto Stornoway mailboat Loch Seaforth are berthed at Oban Railway Pier. Both vessels were products of the famous Dumbarton shipyard of William Denny & Brothers, the Seaforth in 1947 and the second Claymore, 8 years later. Both vessels carried MacBraynes' famous Highlander on their bows - something that didn't return until the recent Clansman

A rather dull but nonetheless evocative view of David MacBrayne's mailboat Claymore being towed out of James Lamont's East India drydock on 31 December 1974. She was to berth alongside Caledonian MacBrayne's turbine steamer King George V on the right. It was a raw, dreich Hogmanay that one!

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Claymore alongside KGV in the East India Harbour on a rather nicer day, 12th October 1974. In the left hand drydock in the car ferry Arran with the MacBrayne cargo boat Loch Carron in the new drydock

View looking the other way on the same day, 12 October 1974 - Claymore, King George V and Queen Mary II - all Denny-built.

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The last time that I saw the 1955 Claymore in service - at Oban Railway pier on 1 Nov 1975

Claymore's (by then) archaic method of loading cars for the Isles, typical of the unhurried and relaxed lifestyle that prevailed in the Hebrides until the early 70s.
Everything was about to change, forever.


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In 1976 the car ferry revolution rendered Claymore redundant at the tender age of 21 years. So she forsook the Sea of the Hebrides for the more temperate waters of the Mediterranean Sea, where, transformed into the small cruise ship City of Andros - later City of Hydra - she offered cruises in the Greek islands. Although she was significantly altered in appearance her Denny funnel was still recognisable. By this time she was sailing for Cycladic Cruises SA and boasted a small swimming pool on her upper deck - not something that would have been particularly well utilised on her winter sailings to Lochboisdale.After several years laid up in Pireaus she sank at he moorings 2-3 years ago.

Finest of MacBrayne's three Claymores - the 1881 Glasgow - Stornoway mail steamer built by the Thomson brothers in their new Clydebank shipyard in 1881. This vessel was the favourite of the great doyan of Scottish West Coast shipping Graham Easton Langmuir. In his 'West Highland Steamers' Mr Langmuir compared the vessel in beauty with the larger Denny-built Antipodean steamer Rotomahana of the Union Steamship Company of New Zealand. This fine picture of the first Claymore in Oban Bay was the work of the late John Nicholson.

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All photographs of the above ships by Stuart Cameron. The picture of CLAYMORE 1881  by J. Nicholson.


 View the vessels mentioned above here:
LOCH SEAFORTH CLAYMORE KING GEORGE V LOCH CARRON ARRAN QUEEN MARY II


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