| Friday, 14th September 2007, The Scotsman Newspaper.
http://news.scotsman.com/scotland.cfm?id=1469332007

The QE2 is launched at Clydebank
Pride of the Clyde
JIM GILCHRIST
AFTER Her Majesty broke the traditional bottle of champagne on the
towering bow of that other monarch she was naming Queen Elizabeth 2, 40
years ago next Thursday, there was what this paper's report described as
"50 breathtaking seconds" while nothing appeared to happen. TV news
footage of the launch shows big John Rannie, the managing director of
John Brown's Clydebank yard, flapping his bowler at it, as if to shoo
the 10,000 tonnes of Clyde-wrought steel down the slipway.
The Scotsman of 21 September 1967 noted that some wag hanging over the
bow shouted "Gie's a push", much to the amusement of the Queen (the
human one). Then the ship began to move, imperceptibly at first, but
gradually accelerating until its 963ft of hull slid into the Clyde at
22mph, amid a mighty cloud of spray, sending 2ft high waves rolling up
and down the river.
She was magnificent, but the last of her kind: the last Clyde-built
Cunarder and the last of the great vessels that were icons of Scotland's
industrial prowess. For amid the jubilant cheers and the roar of Phantom
jets flying overhead in salute, even as the majestic leviathan was eased
to a halt by her drag chains, the future of John Brown's yard - indeed
of Britain's shipbuilding industry as a whole - was looking far from
shipshape.
At that time, John Brown's Clydebank operation was being absorbed into
Upper Clyde Shipbuilders. This in turn would go into liquidation four
years later, despite the famous UCS union's work-in, led by shop
stewards Jimmy Reid and Jimmy Airlie. The last conventional ship to be
built at the yard was a bulk grain carrier, Ailsa, completed in 1972,
after which it continued to fabricate oil-platform modules until 2001.
Back in 1967, amid the triumphalism of The Scotsman's report, was a
brief interview with one of the shipyard's caulkers, Tommy Rennie, who
remarked, with some prescience: "She's got to be finished yet, but
goodness knows that will happen after that. I don't think we'll see
another one like it."
His feelings are echoed 40 years on by Alan Adams, who was a welder at
John Brown's during the QE2 contract and now works as a part-time guide
at the Titan crane, the 150ft-high landmark which, apart from some
remnants of the slipway that can still be seen at low tide, is the only
remaining trace of the historic shipyard which produced such ocean-going
giants as the Lusitania, Aquitania, Empress of Britain, Queen Mary,
Queen Elizabeth and, of course, the QE2. "There was always that
uncertainty," says Adams. "You were always trying to find out whether
there was another job on the books."
We're standing 150ft above the cleared site, now home to the new
Clydebank College, due to be formally opened next Thursday by the First
Minister. Parallel lines of paving from the college to the Clyde's edge
trace where the yard's slipway ran. Overhead, the rumble of jet
airliners dropping towards Glasgow airport signals just one of the
reasons the slipway became obsolete.
Adams, now 58, joined John Brown's as a 16-year-old where he trained as
a welder. It was he and his pal Joe MacGonagle who "put the bow on the
QE2", he smiles. "It must have been one of the proudest things we did.
It was massive."
On the other hand, he recalls, there was the infuriatingly finicky and
endless work of welding tiny brackets into the cabins. "That was a
nightmare," he says, with less enthusiasm. He eventually left the yard,
worked for a while at the Singer sewing machine factory, then when
Singer closed down moved on to scrap burning.
Taking up his job at the crane when it opened this summer, he was "a bit
overwhelmed" to stand at the top and survey the site which, when he
worked there more than 40 years ago, had still been a byword for
shipbuilding excellence: "But I'm really glad they've kept the 'cran'.
It's amazing how many Brown's workers have come back to visit it."
As to the news that the QE2 is to be installed as a floating hotel in
Dubai, Adams regrets that it won't be making one last sailing back up
the Clyde (but it will dock at Greenock later next week); "although I
don't know what the cost of the dredging would have been. It would have
been nice to see it back in Clydebank. But at least she's not being
scrapped."
"We could still build ships but we just couldn't compete, building them
the way we did then," he says, referring to the yard's decline. "Our
standards were really high. I remember tacking bulkheads: if a weld was
just a fraction out [the gaffer] would snap it so it had to be done
again. There was no cutting corners."
Five minutes' drive from the yard site, in the offices of the Dalmuir
Park Housing Association, artist and former shipyard worker Tom
McKendrick finds himself shipbuilding once again, in a manner of
speaking. He's working on a six-metre steel model of the dreadnought
Ramillies, built at the nearby - and similarly long-vanished - Beardmore
yard. It will be the crowning piece of a massive sculpture he is
creating as a monument to the town's shipbuilding heritage.
McKendrick worked on the QE2 as an apprentice loftsman, making the
timber templates from which the steel components of the vessel were
shaped. "I wouldn't say we were blasé," he says, "but when the QE2 order
came along there was a feeling that, well, all the big Cunarders had
been built by John Brown, and we deserved this one, almost as a divine
right."
He remembers the scale of the vessel as being "quite extraordinary;
everything about it was unique". The revolutionary design of the
vessel's streamlined funnel came as a shock to many: "We were used to a
funnel being a big tube with smoke coming out of it. This was like the
Starship Enterprise."
But even as they were working on it, there was an awareness of the
declining industry and a lack of investment. "I worked on the bulbous
bow, with two guys called Fat Rab and Skinny Rab, and the rollers for
the plates had been made by Beardmore in 1895 or something. There we
were in the 1960s, building a state-of-the-art ship with rollers built
70 or 80 years before. There was a feeling that an era was passing and
we were being left behind."
It was Glasgow School of Art's Digital Design studio which produced
digital animation for the restored Titan crane - recently re-opened as a
visitor centre - showing the launch of the Queen Mary in 1936 and the
QE2 in 1967. The studio's deputy director, Ian Johnston, unrolls some of
the original 1/16th scale design drawings for the QE2. Some are detailed
cross-sections; another bears elegantly swooping lines delineating the
hull shape.
Johnston, who has written histories of the John Brown and Fairfield
shipyards, says: "The whole object was to go as fast and as cheaply as
possible. The QE2 was built to go very fast, 33½ knots, but she was also
a cruise liner, and that needs economy. Subsequently nobody needed to
cross the Atlantic at that speed because they were all flying, so she
became a cruiser."
But what was really poignant about the QE2, he says, was what was
happening around it, even as it was emerging from the stocks: "It's fair
to say there was absolute chaos in British shipbuilding at that time.
After 100 years of Britain being the leading shipbuilding nation, we
very quickly lost all that in the most remarkable and rapid decline of
any of our traditional industries.
"In the mid-1950s, Britain was producing 50 per cent of the world's
ships; ten years later she was producing only 8 per cent. And this
continued... with astonishing speed. It wasn't that we couldn't do it,
but we couldn't make money at it any more.
"In the case of John Brown's, there was this expectation that the yard
could build a prestigious liner like the QE2 because they'd built all
the flagships for Britain's merchant marine, but since the early 1960s,
profitability had escaped them."
As Johnston tells it, "there was one ship in particular that broke
Clydebank, and it wasn't the QE2. It was the ship before it, a beautiful
liner called the Kungsholm they built for the Swedish-Amerika line.
Because John Brown's whole approach was to build classy vessels, it was
crucial that they kept their skilled workforce in place. They knew the
order for the new Cunarder would be coming up, and they were concerned
that if they didn't have any work for their fitting out crew, they'd
lose them, so they bid for the Kungsholm at a very keen price indeed.
"During its construction, prices just went through the roof, labour
costs spiralled and there were severe penalty payments for late
delivery. The Kungsholm tender price had been £6 million and they got
that. But it had cost them £9 million to build, so they lost £3 million
and that was a colossal sum in these days. Lord Aberconway, chairman of
John Brown and Company, said that if losses of this order continued, it
would be the end of shipbuilding at Clydebank."
Amid these unsettling times, the yard bid for "Q4", as the QE2 was
originally known, from its quotation number. "To ensure they got it,"
says Johnston, "they put in a tender price which was to cover all the
costs, but there wasn't a penny of profit in it."
The ship's sea trials brought further anguish to an already fraught
yard, as worrying vibrations from the turbines caused the vessel to limp
home, to Cunard's fury and "Ship of shame" headlines. Turbine faults
were the fault of the designer, not the yard, but it also emerged that
there were still 200 John Brown workmen onboard finishing the cabins.
It was the last thing Upper Clyde Shipbuilders needed. Struggling with
massive restructuring to become a profit-making concern again, in 1971
it hit a liquidity crisis which ultimately closed it, despite the UCS
work-in.
"So the QE2 was the last of these iconic structures that sailed the
oceans of the world," says Johnston. "People would look at them with
this enormous sense of pride and say, 'That came from the Clyde.' And
we've not been able to replace that with anything as readily
identifiable as these fabulous ocean liners."
McKendrick, too, remembers the pride, but also the downside of life in
the yards. "There was great camaraderie, but there was also hostility.
You had sectarianism, confrontational management, inter-union conflicts,
the doubt about orders...
"But at that very second when the champagne bottle cracks on the bow,
all that aggravation is gone. All the thousands of men who worked on
that ship are unified, because they all made their contribution. That's
the magic of a launch."
QUEEN OF THE OCEANS
- REGARDED by many as the last of the great transatlantic ocean
liners, RMS Queen Elizabeth 2 was the flagship of the Cunard line
from 1969 until 2004, when it was succeeded by the (French-built)
RMS Queen Mary 2.
- Following widely reported teething troubles, and the enforced
cancellation of her scheduled maiden voyage, the QE2 officially
joined the Cunard fleet in April 1969 and finally sailed from
Southampton to New York on 2 May. Her first captain was Commodore
Ronald Warwick.
- The QE2 is 963ft (294m) long, with a beam of 105 feet (32m) and
has a gross tonnage of 70,327. With a cruising speed of 28.5 knots,
her top speed is 33 knots.
- She is powered by nine nine-cylinder turbocharged diesel
engines, having been converted from steam to diesel power in Germany
in 1986. Before the conversion, which made her one of the fastest
passenger ships in the world, she was the last oil-fired
transatlantic passenger steamship in scheduled service.
- Her distinctive funnel incorporates a wind scoop that forces air
up its sides, to catch exhaust fumes and disperse them clear of the
aft passenger decks
- As a cruise liner carrying some 1,750 passengers, plus more than
1,000 officers and crew, the ship boasts five restaurants, two
cafés, three swimming pools and numerous bars plus a nightclub and a
48-seat cinema (as well as its own daily TV channel). For the
seaborne consumer there is a branch of Harrods, as well as a health
club and beauty salon.
- Among the many artworks and artefacts on board the QE2 are a
frieze depicting the words of TS Eliot, John Masefield and Sir
Francis Drake. The Royal Family, and their visits to the QE2, are
commemorated in oil paintings, pastels, photographs and silver
plaques.
- In keeping with the Space Age in which she was launched, the
QE2's original interior used modern materials such as plastic
laminates and aluminium. Modular furniture and abstract art
underlined the forward-looking theme.
- An episode of Coronation Street was filmed on board the QE2 in
1995, as was a special episode of the sitcom Keeping Up Appearances
in 1993. Her aft decks were the setting for a scene aboard an
unnamed liner in the 1981 TV adaptation of Brideshead Revisited.
- In May 1982, during the Falklands conflict, the QE2 was
requisitioned as a troopship, carrying 3,000 troops to the south
Atlantic.
QE2 - The Last Great Liner is on BBC2 on Monday, 9pm
Clydebuilt Luxury: The Story of the QE2 is on BBC Radio Scotland on
Wednesday, 11:30am
Related topic
Glasgow history
http://heritage.scotsman.com/topics.cfm?tid=1395
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Last updated: 14-Sep-07 11:02 BST
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