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The Arrol Gantry was a large steel structure built by Sir William Arrol & Co. at the
Harland and Wolff Harland & Wolff is a British shipbuilding company based in Belfast, Northern Ireland. It specialises in ship repair, shipbuilding and offshore construction. Harland & Wolff is famous for having built the majority of the ocean liners for the W ...
shipyard in
Belfast Belfast ( , ; from ga, Béal Feirste , meaning 'mouth of the sand-bank ford') is the capital and largest city of Northern Ireland, standing on the banks of the River Lagan on the east coast. It is the 12th-largest city in the United Kingdom ...
,
Ireland Ireland ( ; ga, Éire ; Ulster-Scots: ) is an island in the North Atlantic Ocean, in north-western Europe. It is separated from Great Britain to its east by the North Channel, the Irish Sea, and St George's Channel. Ireland is the s ...
. It was built to act as overhead cranes for the building of the three ''Olympic''-class liners.


Beardmore's gantry at Dalmuir

From 1900 to 1906, Arrol had constructed a shipyard for
William Beardmore and Company William Beardmore and Company was a British engineering and shipbuilding conglomerate based in Glasgow and the surrounding Clydeside area. It was active from 1886 to the mid-1930s and at its peak employed about 40,000 people. It was founded and ...
at
Dalmuir Dalmuir (; gd, Dail Mhoire) is an area northwest of Glasgow, Scotland, on the western side of Clydebank, and part of West Dunbartonshire Council Area. The name is a lowland Scots derivation of the Gaelic meaning Big Field. The area was ori ...
on the Clyde. This included a large gantry structure over the building berth. In 1906 it was used for the construction of the
pre-dreadnought battleship Pre-dreadnought battleships were sea-going battleships built between the mid- to late- 1880s and 1905, before the launch of in 1906. The pre-dreadnought ships replaced the ironclad battleships of the 1870s and 1880s. Built from steel, protec ...
, then the largest battleship launched on the Clyde. The Beardmore gantry was long, wide and high, spanning a single building berth. The structure was of two long steel truss girders, supported on ten pairs of steel truss towers, braced by cross trusses above. Nine electric cranes were provided, with four jib cranes along each side girder, each having a 5-ton capacity and 30 foot jib. These were travelling cranes and could be moved along the girder, or grouped together to share a heavier lift. They were intended to place the main hull plates into position, with a dedicated gang for each crane, forming the plates and riveting them into place. A central 15 ton travelling gantry crane was also provided, for lifting machinery along the centreline of the hull. The Belfast gantry would be very similar to this first gantry, although larger at long and spanning two building berths. The central girder between the berths allowed the addition of a larger cantilever crane. The Beardmore gantry had used tapered towers, with size and strength proportional to the load upon them. The base of each was spread into a triangular arch, giving a more stable base and also allowing a railway line to be laid through the towers, bringing construction materials. For the Belfast gantry, the towers because more parallel, with straight inner faces. This allowed temporary working platforms to be attached and relocated upwards as a hull was constructed, giving an additional working space and easy access to the outside of the hull, even with heavy equipment. The access within the gantry was also improved, with long sloping walkways and electric lifts, rather than the previous slow and hazardous use of ladders.


Construction

The Belfast gantry was commissioned by the
White Star Line The White Star Line was a British shipping company. Founded out of the remains of a defunct packet company, it gradually rose up to become one of the most prominent shipping lines in the world, providing passenger and cargo services between ...
and
Harland and Wolff Harland & Wolff is a British shipbuilding company based in Belfast, Northern Ireland. It specialises in ship repair, shipbuilding and offshore construction. Harland & Wolff is famous for having built the majority of the ocean liners for the W ...
and built by Sir William Arrol & Co. in 1908. It was feet long, feet wide and feet high. It was an essential part of the infrastructure needed for the construction of and and remained in use until it was demolished in the 1960s to create space for storage and car parking. Before the Gantry, the northern end of the Queen's Island shipyard had four building slipways, each with gantry cranes above them. The cranes formed three crosswise gantries over each slip, with jib cranes working from each upright. To make space for the two new slipways, three of the old slipways were given up. No 1 slipway remained and continued in use, with its original gantries, and was used for building liners such as the . The two new slipways were numbered 2 & 3. There were nine slipways at Queen's Island before this, eight afterwards but the other remained numbered as 5...9 and there was no longer a No 4 slipway. The Gantry was built on three rows, apart, of eleven steel truss towers with three large truss girders between them, and lighter crosswise Warren trusses above this. The large girders provided runways for a pair of 10-ton
overhead crane An overhead crane, commonly called a bridge crane, is a type of crane found in industrial environments. An overhead crane consists of two parallel rails seated on longitudinal I-beams attached to opposite steel columns by means of brackets. ...
s above each way and lighter 5-ton jib cranes from the sides. Along the centre line ran a light Titan crane, with a reach of 135 feet and able to carry a 3-ton load at full radius, and 5 tons closer in. The cranes were electrically-powered and built by Stothert & Pitt of
Bath Bath may refer to: * Bathing, immersion in a fluid ** Bathtub, a large open container for water, in which a person may wash their body ** Public bathing, a public place where people bathe * Thermae, ancient Roman public bathing facilities Plac ...
. Access to the high girders was provided by three long ramps and also electric lifts for the shipyard workers. As Harland and Wolff were primarily a commercial yard, there was no need for the huge Titan cranes being built at this time for the naval shipyards of the
Clyde Clyde may refer to: People * Clyde (given name) * Clyde (surname) Places For townships see also Clyde Township Australia * Clyde, New South Wales * Clyde, Victoria * Clyde River, New South Wales Canada * Clyde, Alberta * Clyde, Ontario, a tow ...
, where heavy lifts of armour plate, or even entire turrets, were needed.


''Olympic''-class liners

''Olympic'' and ''Titanic'' were built together, with ''Olympic'' in the No 2 slipway. ''Olympic'' was launched first, in October 1910, with ''Titanic'' seven months later. To provide better photographs against the steelwork of the gantry, ''Olympic's'' hull was painted white during building, then repainted after launch. ''Titanic'' was painted in White Star's black hull livery from the outset. was then constructed on the ''Olympic'' ways.


World War I

At the outbreak of
World War I World War I (28 July 1914 11 November 1918), often abbreviated as WWI, was List of wars and anthropogenic disasters by death toll, one of the deadliest global conflicts in history. Belligerents included much of Europe, the Russian Empire, ...
, Harland and Wolff were still engaged in building passenger liners and the Belgian Red Star Line's 27,000 ton was almost completed on the adjacent No 1 way. had been launched from the No 2 way in July, a fortnight before the outbreak of war. A further liner, yard number 470, had been laid down there, but work had hardly started.


14 inch monitors

When the
Royal Navy The Royal Navy (RN) is the United Kingdom's naval warfare force. Although warships were used by English and Scottish kings from the early medieval period, the first major maritime engagements were fought in the Hundred Years' War against Fr ...
wished to build the 14 inch monitors as coastal bombardment ships, these building ways were the most immediately available. The monitors were fairly small, of around 6,000 tons and quite short, but they also had protective
anti-torpedo bulge The anti-torpedo bulge (also known as an anti-torpedo blister) is a form of defence against naval torpedoes occasionally employed in warship construction in the period between the First and Second World Wars. It involved fitting (or retrofittin ...
s which gave them an extremely broad beam of . This would require equally wide building slips, which the Olympic slips could provide. The monitors were so short that the first two of them, ''Admiral Farragut'' and ''General Grant'', could be built simultaneously on the same slipway. ''Farragut'' was launched on 15 April 1915, with ''Grant'' following on 29 April. The limited lifting capacity of the gantry's cranes required the 4-inch armour plate to be installed in particularly small pieces, compared to in a warship building yard. To install their US-supplied
turret Turret may refer to: * Turret (architecture), a small tower that projects above the wall of a building * Gun turret, a mechanism of a projectile-firing weapon * Objective turret, an indexable holder of multiple lenses in an optical microscope * M ...
s, the hulls were taken to the COW yard on the Clyde.


12 inch monitors

A second group of monitors was also built. These were the 12 inch monitors and used guns taken from ''Majestic''-class
pre-dreadnought battleship Pre-dreadnought battleships were sea-going battleships built between the mid- to late- 1880s and 1905, before the launch of in 1906. The pre-dreadnought ships replaced the ironclad battleships of the 1870s and 1880s. Built from steel, protec ...
s. Although their 12-inch guns were now quite old, they had been sufficiently advanced over other guns at the time that they were still worth re-using. They had been the first British battleship main guns to use
wire-wound This article explains terms used for the British Armed Forces' ordnance (i.e.: weapons) and also ammunition. The terms may have slightly different meanings in the military of other countries. BD Between decks: applies to a naval gun mounting in ...
construction and also the first to fire
cordite Cordite is a family of smokeless propellants developed and produced in the United Kingdom since 1889 to replace black powder as a military propellant. Like modern gunpowder, cordite is classified as a low explosive because of its slow burn ...
propelling charges. As originally mounted, their elevation of 13½° only permitted a range of , which would leave the monitors within range of German coastal defences; with this increased to 30°, a range of was expected. Eight of these monitors were built, five by Harland and Wolff and four of them on slips 1 and 3 of the Queen's Island yard. Like the 14 inch monitors, these monitors had prominent anti-torpedo bulges to their hulls and required a wide building slip, but were short enough that two could be built simultaneously on the large liner slips.


''Glorious''

was laid down as a ' large, light cruiser' on 1 May 1915 and launched almost a year later on 20 April 1916. A class of small 6 inch gun-armed monitors was also designed, to use the secondary armament removed from the ''Queen Elizabeth'' battleships. As the 14-inch monitors were now almost complete, it was hoped to build this whole class of five on a single large slipway. However the number 2 slipway was needed immediately for ''Glorious''. Slipway 5, at the southern end of Queen's Island, was used instead to build three of them, working around the keel of the postponed , and the other two at the Workman, Clark yard across the water.


''Terror''

A second batch of 15 inch-armed monitors were built, with a more developed design than the earlier ''Marshals''. Both were built by Harland and Wolff, at the Govan yard and on the third slip at Queen's Island. The ''Marshal'' monitors had been so unsuccessful, largely owing to their slow speed and their unreliable diesel engines, particularly for , that it was decided to remove their turrets for re-use on the new high-speed monitors. ''Ney's'' turret was removed at Elswick and the mount converted for greater elevation, then shipped to Belfast for installation by Harland and Wolff's floating crane. Both of these monitors had a successful WWI career and served into WWII.


Berth plan


Disuse

The Gantry was in use into the 1960s, but the shipyard was then reorganised to provide a larger building space. Work on large ships then took place in a large
dry dock A dry dock (sometimes drydock or dry-dock) is a narrow basin or vessel that can be flooded to allow a load to be floated in, then drained to allow that load to come to rest on a dry platform. Dry docks are used for the construction, maintenance, ...
at the end of the Musgrave channel on the south-eastern side of Queen's Island, served by a pair of
Goliath crane There are a number of shipyard cranes called Goliath around the world: * Goliath (Mangalia), in Romania * Samson and Goliath (cranes) Samson and Goliath are the twin shipbuilding gantry cranes situated at Queen's Island, Belfast, Northern Irel ...
s, ''Samson'' and ''Goliath''. A gallery at
Titanic Belfast ''Titanic'' Belfast is a visitor attraction opened in 2012, a monument to Belfast's maritime heritage on the site of the former Harland & Wolff shipyard in the city's Titanic Quarter where the RMS ''Titanic'' was built. It tells the stories ...
is dominated by a steel scaffold which stands high and alludes to the Arrol Gantry: however, the original gantry was nearly four times the height of the gallery's representation.


In popular culture

The Gantry dominated the skyline of Belfast and became an important local landmark, as ''Samson'' and ''Goliath'' would do again fifty years later. The poet
Louis MacNeice Frederick Louis MacNeice (12 September 1907 – 3 September 1963) was an Irish poet and playwright, and a member of the Auden Group, which also included W. H. Auden, Stephen Spender and Cecil Day-Lewis. MacNeice's body of work was widely ...
's autobiographical poem ''
Carrickfergus Carrickfergus ( , meaning " Fergus' rock") is a large town in County Antrim, Northern Ireland. It sits on the north shore of Belfast Lough, from Belfast. The town had a population of 27,998 at the 2011 Census. It is County Antrim's oldest ...
'' describes his birthplace: "I was born in Belfast between the mountain and the gantries To the hooting of lost sirens and the clang of trams:" This is somewhat anachronistic, as MacNeice was born just before the construction of the Gantry and his family had moved to nearby
Carrickfergus Carrickfergus ( , meaning " Fergus' rock") is a large town in County Antrim, Northern Ireland. It sits on the north shore of Belfast Lough, from Belfast. The town had a population of 27,998 at the 2011 Census. It is County Antrim's oldest ...
before ''Olympic's'' launch.


Notes


References

{{Coord, 54.6096, -5.9090, display=title History of Belfast Cranes (machines) RMS Titanic