Result for: gabbarts
Gabbert - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gabbarts: Boats of from 30 to 40 tons, which, before the railway was opened to Balloch , carried coals etc., from the Clyde, up the Loch Leven , to various places on the banks of the Loch, taking back ...- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabbert
Shipyard at Dumbarton (BHC1792) - National Maritime Museum
Object name: Painting We have 1361 objects of this type online: BHC1792, Gabbarts and Iron-Ship Yard, Dumbarton ? National Maritime Museum, London- www.nmm.ac.uk/collections/explore/object.cfm?ID=BHC1792
BHC1792 : Shipyard at Dumbarton
Gabbarts are Scottish sailing barges which were also made in this yard. The painting's view is taken from a point opposite Dumbarton Quay. The south-west portion of the quay on the extreme left ...- www.nmm.ac.uk/mag/pages/mnuExplore/PaintingDetail.cfm?letter=S&ID=BHC1792
Clyde Steamers
Puffers From The Gabbarts to The VIC's and The Diesels. The supreme marine achievement of man?s invention ! JOIN THE CLYDE PUFFER FORUM. The puffer was a descendant of two vessels, the scow and the ...- groups.msn.com/clydesteamers/puffers.msnw
Gabbert: Information from Answers.com
Gabbarts: Boats of from 30 to 40 tons, which, before the railway was opened to Balloch , carried coals etc., from the Clyde, up the Loch Leven , to various places on the banks of the Loch, taking back ...- www.answers.com/topic/gabbert
Save the Puffer
... Puffer had developed from the Dark ages, starting off with a coracle, through Viking longships to gabbarts.- www.noots.org.uk/savethepuffer/history.htm
PUFFERS-"AULD REEKIE"
The name originated from the steam-powered vessels which, in the second half of the nineteenth century, took over the work of the smacks and gabbarts that plied between the ...- iancoombe.tripod.com/id23.html
Words Starting With G :: FindTheWord.info -- Crossword Help ...
Show information about gabbarts Search for 'gabbarts' in: Answers.com Google Britannica Online Bartleby.com ...- www.findtheword.info/resultat.php?stype=begins&sword=G
Amazon.co.uk: Loch Lomond and the Trossachs in History and Legend ...
The story of how Loch Lomond and the fast-flowing River Leven were used as a highway for trade and commerce - by galleys, birlinns, sailing gabbarts and, on the loch, paddle-steamers - is told more ...- www.amazon.co.uk/Loch-Lomond-Trossachs-History-Legend/dp/0859765865
TGS - 1560 to 1770s - Industry and Technology - Shipbuilding
These would have mostly been heavily-built sailing gabbarts (or barges) designed to withstand the fierce squalls common on the west coast, ferry boats, and rafts for transporting cattle.- www.theglasgowstory.com/story.php?id=TGSBE07&PHPSESSID=73110930d7bd6dc32b4362ebe5d02eec
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