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Opening of The Queen Elizabeth Dock, Falmouth, 1958

A black and white photograph of a large ship in a dry dock, a line of workers stand underneath the ship.
A black and white photograph of a large ship in a dock

By Lynne Vosper

Queen Elizabeth Dock was the Falmouth Docks and Engineering Company’s greatest achievement, representing the largest civil engineering project they had ever undertaken. At the time, it was the largest privately-owned dry dock in the country, and today it remains one of the largest docks in the UK.

The New Dock Receives Royal Assent

The new No.2 Dock was named the Queen Elizabeth Dock on 16 May 1958 by HRH Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.

Before the naming ceremony the Duke of Edinburgh made an extensive tour of the yard, visiting workshops, meeting personnel and viewing the docks from the seaward side from Mr Silley’s motor launch.

A Black and White Photograph showing a group of people gathered around equipment in the fitting shop, Queen Elizabeth Dock, Falmouth.

Fitting Shop, after presentation of Messrs TW Spurr, W Wilson and J Earle.

A Black and White Photograph showing one smartly dressed man talking to a man wearing overalls and boots, surrounded by a group of onlookers.

With a member of the Paint Gang.

A Black and White Photograph showing two smartly dressed people disembarking the docks.

Disembarking at Eastern Steps with Mr HAJ Silley.

A Black and White Photograph showing a group of people being introduced to the Duke of Edinburgh.

Presentation of Messrs AE Underwood and JD Norfolk.

A Black and White photograph showing HRH Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh and Mr HAJ Silley, Chairman of Falmouth Docks and Engineering Company at the naming ceremony of the Queen Elizabeth Dock with a crowd of onlookers.

HRH Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh and Mr HAJ Silley, Chairman of Falmouth Docks and Engineering Company at the naming ceremony of the Queen Elizabeth Dock on 16 May 1958.

A Falmouth Packet newspaper supplement dated 23 September 1960 to celebrate one hundred years of Falmouth Docks, records that the Duke of Edinburgh paid tribute to the enterprise of the Docks Company and said, “This dry-dock is ample proof that the owners are neither old-fashioned, un-enterprising, nor stick-in-the-mud.  It is quite an achievement purely as a feat of engineering, but as a gesture of confidence in the future it is of untold value.  This is a great day for Falmouth and for the ship-repairing industry in this area.  It also seems a most suitable way of celebrating the centenary of Falmouth Docks”.

A black and white photograph of the commemorative plaque at the head of the dry dock.

The commemorative plaque at the head of the dry dock.

A photograph of a commemorative plaque that reads 'This dock was named Queen Elizabeth Dock by H.R.H The Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh K.G, 16 May 1958

The commemorative plaque.

A photograph of a handwritten journal entry which records the naming ceremony on Friday 16 May 1958.

An entry in the Falmouth Harbour Master’s Journal No 36 records the naming ceremony on Friday 16 May 1958.

During the period between the naming of the Dock on 16 May 1958 and the entry of the first ship on 4 September 1958 the installation of machinery and equipment was completed.

The New Dock and Facilities

The dock was a state-of-the-art facility with new modern machinery and production methods, modernised and re-equipped workshops, two newly opened wharves and a fleet of six tugs.

A black and white photograph of a dock showing the keel blocks and traversing bilge blocks.

A black and white photograph of a dock showing the keel blocks and traversing bilge blocks.

These images of the dock show the keel blocks and traversing bilge blocks, the first of their kind to be used in a British dry dock. These blocks are positioned mechanically to suit the beam of the ship to be docked and are elevated hydraulically to suit the rise of the floor of the ship.

A black and white photograph of three 48-inch diameter, 650 horse-power electric pumps.

Three 48-inch diameter, 650 horse-power electric pumps were installed, supplied by Messrs Dysdale & Company Limited, capable of de-watering the new dock, containing 28 million gallons of water, in less than three hours if no ship was occupying the dock.

A black and white photograph of an electric capstan.

Six powerful double-speed electric capstans were installed, situated each side of the dock at the entrance, mid length and head, capable of a pull of 16 tons at the lower speed.

A black and white photograph of the dock control room in 1958.

The control room for the flooding and emptying of the Queen Elizabeth Dock. The other three docks can also be controlled from this point.

A black and white photograph of the dock pump room, showing pumps and viewing platform.

The pump room for Queen Elizabeth Dock. The three 48-inch diameter electric pumps can pump out the 28 million gallons of water in the dock in three hours.

The First Vessel Enters the Queen Elizabeth Dock

A black and white photograph of a large Tanker entering the dry dock atFalmouth Docks. Employees of Falmouth Docks can be seen lining the sides of the dock to watch.

The 28,598 -ton BP Tanker British Realm entering the enlarged dry dock at Falmouth Docks on 4 September 1958. Employees of Falmouth Docks can be seen lining the sides of the dock to witness this momentous event.

On 4 September 1958 BP Tanker SS British Realm became the first ship to enter the new dry dock at Falmouth Docks. In the words of the Falmouth Packet newspaper of July 1957 Falmouth was ‘ready to deal with supertankers’. The Queen Elizabeth Dock was the largest civil engineering project ever undertaken by the Falmouth Docks and Engineering Company and the company’s greatest achievement.

A photograph of a handwritten journal entry that records that SS British Realmwas the first ship to enter Queen Elizabeth Dock on Thursday 4 September 1958.

An entry in the Falmouth Harbour Master’s Journal No 36 records that SS British Realm was the first ship to enter Queen Elizabeth Dock on Thursday 4 September 1958.

A black and white photograph taken from inside the dry dock showing the large tanker British Realm in the background, with a group of dock workers in the foreground lined up.

This dramatic image shows the 28,598-ton British Realm in the enlarged dry dock at Falmouth Docks during September 1958.

A commemorative booklet ‘Queen Elizabeth Dock, Falmouth’ was sent to the home address of every employee of Falmouth Docks as a souvenir of the naming of the dock on 16 May 1958 which gives full technical details of all the equipment installed at the dock.  It was produced by Falmouth Docks & Engineering Co. Ltd., and Silley Cox & Co. Ltd.

At that time, the Queen Elizabeth Dock was the largest privately owned dry dock in the country and today the dock remains one of the largest in the UK.

The images in this Bartlett Blog are from two NMMC archive photograph collections.  The first is a collection of officially commissioned original photographs of the construction of the Queen Elizabeth Dock at Falmouth from start to finish from 1956 to 1958. They were taken by R & H Green and Silley Wier Limited of Plaistow for the Falmouth Docks and Engineering Company Limited.

There are also photographs taken at the official naming ceremony of the Dock by the Duke of Edinburgh on 16 May 1958.  Detailed information in a speech by Mr W Walton Lund, MIME, MINE, Director and General Manager of Messrs Silley, Cox & Company, made to the Royal Institution of Cornwall on 27 February 1959, and a commemorative booklet entitled ‘Queen Elizabeth Dock, Falmouth’, issued to all employees on the completion of the Dock, have been invaluable in providing captions to accompany the photographs.

Further reading available in the Bartlett Maritime Research Centre and Library:

Typed copy of a speech by Mr W Walton Lund, MIME, MINE, Director and General Manager of Messrs Silley, Cox & Company, made to the Royal Institution of Cornwall on 27 February 1959.

Port of Enterprise, the Story of Falmouth by ER Forestier-Walker.

Queen Elizabeth Dock, Falmouth  –  A commemorative booklet issued to all employees on the completion of the dock.

Sailing Ship to Super Liner, Falmouth Docks 1860-2010 by David Barnicoat.

Falmouth Docks 1859-2007, From Sailing Ships to Super Tankers and Cruise Liners.  Unpublished MA Dissertation (University of Exeter) by Lynne Vosper, 2007

The Bartlett Blog

The Bartlett Blog is written and produced by the volunteers who staff The Bartlett Maritime Research Centre and Library of National Maritime Museum Cornwall. This blog post was written by Lynne Vosper, a Bartlett Library volunteer.

The Bartlett Maritime Research Centre & Library holds a Collection of over 20,000 volumes and offers access to one of the finest collections of maritime reference books, periodicals and archival material. The Bartlett Blog reflects the diversity of material available in The Bartlett Library.

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Cornwall Trust
Discovery Quay
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Cornwall
TR11 3QY

Tel: +44(0)1326 313388

Email: enquiries@nmmc.co.uk