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Ruth Patterson
A blog about Henry Robb's Ltd. Shipbuilders and repairers from 1918 to 1984 at Leith.
All comments, corrections and extra information very welcome as this blog is the starting point towards my writing a book about the yaird, the workers and the ships of Robb's.
My personal interest? The Henry Robb who started the firm was my great grandfather.
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Recent Posts
Henry Robb Shipyard
May 2024 M T W T F S S 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Henry Robb Shipyard
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Tag Archives: methods of shipbuilding
Build the ships – chapter three – The Shipyards Turn to War
In my view, this is where things start to get particularly interesting, as the author turns his attention to the range and output of the hundreds of yards which contributed ships of all shapes and sizes to WWII and describes the changes which took place to methods of shipbuilding due to wartime needs. Continue reading →
Posted in British War Ships, Shipbuilding, Shipyards, WWII
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Tagged Admiralty, aircraft carrier, American methods of shipbuilding, American prefabricated ships, asphalt armour, barges, Barrow, Belfast, Birkenhead, Build the Ships, Clyde, Durham mines, English Channel, English V American shipbuilding, fast cargo liner, gun emplacements, hand-crafted British ships, Liberty ship, light metals, location of shipbuilding, methods of shipbuilding, Middlesbrough, minesweepers, Ministry of War Transport, motor torpedo boat, Northumberland, plastics, prefabricated ships, prefabrication, proportion of the world’s tonnage, right angle launch, riveting, Russian icebreakers, Scottish coast yards, secret instruments, shipbuilders, shipbuilding businesses, shipbuilding methods, shipyards at war, shipyards in Britain, simple engines, Small Beginnings post, specialised ships, tank landing vessels, tanker, Tees, Tyne, Tyneside, US prefabricated ships, wartime, wartime ship design, wartime ship requisitioning, Wear, welding, welding v riveting, welding/riveting debate, World War Two, WWII
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