Friday, June 26, 2020

Clydebuilt: The Ships That Made the Commonwealth



#The cutty Sark has been on public display at G
reenwich since 1957 | Clydebuilt: The ships that made the Commonwealth will air on BBC One Scotland in early March and also be available on iPlayer

Following in the wake of the original globetrotters at peak of its powers, more than 80 percent of the world’s big ships were constructed on clydeside in Glasgow.  These vessels ventured out into a fast-expanding world to establish trade links and help shape global events-for better or worse.
For this four-part series, Glasgow-born actor David Hayman follows the divergent courses of a quartet of the city’s finest. He travels to Nova Scotia, from where CS Mackay-Bennet played a major role in establishing the transatlantic underwater cable network, and was also tasked with retrieving bodies fro m the Titanic.
In Bermuda, David dives the ghostly remains of the Nola, which sank en route to North California in 1863. She was one of the notorious ‘blockade runners’-super quick paddle steamers that resupplied the confederate South in the American Civil War, perpetuating the conflict by an estimated two years.
But there’s little doubting the Clyde’s most famous creation. The Cutty Sark was built to compete in the tea races to China, and later led the way in the burgeoning wool trade with Australia-recording the then-fastest time for a Sydney to London voyage of 73 days.
‘She’s a thing of extraordinary beauty,’ says David. ‘When she was damaged by fire in Greenwich in 2007, the emotional reaction of the public really showed the esteem in which she is held.’ Watchout for David trying his hand at shearing in australia.