SS Great Britain



         


The Steam Ship Great Britain was the first ocean-going ship to have an iron hull, or a screw propeller, and when launched in 1843 was the largest vessel afloat.

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History

The SS Great Britain was designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel, Thomas Guppy, Christopher Claxton and William Patterson for the Great Western Steamship Company and built in a specially adapted dry dock at Bristol.

Originally intended as an Atlantic steamer, she made most of her working voyages from Britain to Australia. She was also used as a troop ship during the Crimean War and the Indian Mutiny. In 1882 she was turned into a sailing ship to transport bulk coal, but after a fire on board in 1886 she was found to be damaged beyond repair. She was sold to the Falkland Islands Company and used as a storage hulk until the 1930s, when she was scuttled and abandoned.

In 1970 she was refloated on a pontoon and towed back to Bristol, where she was returned to the (then-disused) dry dock in which she was built, for conservation as a museum ship. As of 2003, reconstruction is underway and guided tours are available for visitors, who must wear hard hats.

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Dimensions

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