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The Wherrymans Way
Long before the building of the last trading wherry - Ella - in 1912,
the wherry fleet's fate was sealed. The railway linking Great Yarmouth
to Norwich had opened back in 1844, and ever since had been gradually
taking business from the wherries on their most important route.
The
transition, nevertheless, was slow. Wherries continued to be built
- 30 or so were launched after 1890 - but there was a bit of the rearranging
of deckchairs about it. By then, business was irreversibly in accelerating
decline. In 1908, there were 67 wherries still working, but six years
later only 56 and by 1929, just 16. "... It was the old story of speed and efficiency brought by new technology...there was no doubt that rail was the future..." |
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There are two traders. One is Albion, built in 1898 at Oulton Broad, Lowestoft, and the only trader ever carvel built. She was rescued in 1949 by the Norfolk Wherry Trust which was formed that year after a meeting at the Norwich bookshop of Roy Clark, author of the classic work, Black Sailed Traders. The Trust's sole purpose was to preserve at least one trader to ensure that the trading heritage did not disappear completely. | |
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Albion was mastless when the Trust acquired her - at the time, her name had been changed to Plane - but after refitting, she sailed again that October and even persevered with the trader ethic, for a year or two carrying such cargoes as the Trust could get. |
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She continued to do so until 1961 but after two sinkings while loaded with sugar beet, the Trust decided that she would concentrate on passengers. So they did what some of the old skippers had done which was to sweep out her hold and go passenger chartering. Scouts or sea-scouts groups were early takers but Albion has carried passengers ever since, working regularly from spring to early autumn each year carrying groups who want to experience the old days for a week or a weekend. |
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'There
are then two pleasure wherries, built specifically to take passengers.
One is Solace, built in 1903, also at Reedham and probably conceived
originally as a trader but finally built as a pleasure wherry. She
is now based on Wroxham Broad. After the Second World War, she was
acquired by the Rudd family and remains very much in original condition
as John Rudd points out.
The
name is that of the Nile craft - a dahabeah - on which their brother died in
1897 in Egypt where the family had taken him in an attempt combat his tuberculosis.
Hathor was an Egyptian goddess of love and joy.
The Olive's sister, the Norada, was built by Collins at Wroxham in 1912 and is slightly smaller, having been designed to pass under Potter Heigham Bridge. She was chartered until 1950 when she went into private ownership, subsequently being acquired by her present owner, Barney Matthews, who bought her in 1964. She is also available for charter through Wherry Yacht Charter.
The last wherry yacht ever built is White Moth, launched in 1915
as another part of the Collins hire fleet. She remained available
for hire until 1960 when she became a houseboat before falling
into sunken dereliction. Restored in 1986, to be
for charter through the Norfolk Broads Yachting Company in conjunction
with Blakes Holidays, but now is just for private use.
There is one other pleasure wherry, Ardea, restored in 2006. Built in
Lowestoft for a local philanthropist and the last wherry of any type, she was
taken to Paris in the 1950s was spotted in the early 1990s on the Seine, dismasted
and used as a house boat.
But
the seven surviving Broads-based wherries are probably the strength
of the Broads fleet for the foreseeable future; none of the rotting
hulls to be found around the backwaters now looks like another
restoration project, even if someone with the time, application
and money were to appear. There is occasional talk about building
a new one, a small one perhaps of the size that used to work
to the villages and country towns on Broadland's small northern
rivers of Broadland. And it could happen, but don't hold your
breath. The important thing is that survivors from the old days
have been picked up and should now keep the link with the past.
Contacts:
Norfolk Wherry Trust: 01508 470992
Wherry Yacht Charter 01603 782470
White Moth 01692 631330
Maud 01277 352264.
Further Reading:
Black Sailed Traders - Roy Clark.
Wherries and Waterways - Robert Malster.
Albion; the Story of the Norfolk Trading Wherry - Martin Kirby/Norfolk Wherry
Trust.
This article originally appeared in the magazine, Traditional Boats & Tall
Ships, www.tallship.co.uk